Meet the Felgenhauers

Stefan & Kathy Felgenhauer with their children Louisa, Ana & Benjamin

Stefan Felgenhauer has recently been hired to serve WELS Missions in Africa as the Director of Operations for One Africa Team. Stefan and his wife Kathy have lived in Malawi previously and served WELS through the Kingdom Workers organization. Listen to Stefan as he (re)introduces himself in this week’s post:

Felgs on the move…..this has become our theme.  We’re about to move to Africa for the 3rd time and we couldn’t be more excited!  My wife and I met in Bali, Indonesia, got married in New Ulm, MN and lived in Germany, Canada, the USA and in Malawi (twice).  When we sat down to think about it we realize we’ve never lived in the same house for more than 2 years.  Currently we live in Kansas and it’s true that we there is “no place like home” – we are in this world but not of it and heaven will be where we completely settle down for eternity.

Having grown up in Communist East Germany, I certainly couldn’t have imagined the plans the Lord had for me.  Looking back at my experiences I see God’s hand in leading me to this new opportunity to work as the Director of Mission Operations for One Africa Team.  My love for Africa really began when my wife and I were engaged.  She was teaching in Lippo Karawaci, Indonesia and I was in the military in Germany – together we traveled to Blantyre, Malawi to visit my in-laws.  My father-in-law, Missionary Ron Uhlhorn, was the first WELS urban missionary to Malawi (1998-2003).  It was an awesome experience to travel around with them seeing the mission work first hand, and a year or so later after we were married. Soon we returned for another visit to this intriguing place, which was already growing on our hearts.

Everyone loves to play duck, duck, goose!

In time I heard about a position opening to be the Business Manager for our mission in Malawi. This position description encompassed engaging in all “non-Word work” to free the missionaries for their “Word-work”.   We moved from Germany with our newborn daughter Louisa with the intent of staying only 2 years. We left 6 wonderful years (and 3 houses) later with two more children, Benjamin and Anna, who were born in Blantyre.  The idea of a business manager on field was a success and the Warm Heart of Africa had become home.

Stefan greeting a new VBS group

We then engaged in a four year adventure to Canada, Germany and the USA, calling several more houses and apartments home before another opportunity came knocking that brought us back to Malawi.  This time I worked directly for Kingdom Workers as their Field Manager. My wife and I developed short term volunteer opportunities for VBS events in rural villages, and eventually a ministry to the disabled using Jesus Cares materials translated into the Chichewa language.  Our growing children attended the international school and we felt right back at home.

Beginnings of Jesus Cares Ministry

Two houses and three years later we returned to the USA to live in Manhattan, KS and then Salina, KS where my wife held calls as preschool director and teacher. Our children picked up the American way of life and I found continued work in serving those with special needs.

I appreciate all the different fields of service that the Lord has given me. All of these experiences have helped me develop continued skills to now lead my family to Lusaka, Zambia in the coming months.  Working for One Africa Team, I look forward to the challenge of supporting the mission and ministries in many different African countries!

The Felgenhauer family in Malawi

Stefan Felgenhauer and his family will be based in Lusaka, Zambia

Please pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story, engage with future news and receive updates. Go to this link to learn more about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in people’s hearts  https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa




All Glory, Laud and Honor!

No one had to tell the crowd to be exuberant with praise. They just were. (Luke 19:37-38)

No one had to convince the people to shout. They just did. (John 12:13)

No one had to force them to make a welcome carpet out of their clothes. They just had to. (Luke 19:36)

You can no more prevent a song gushing up from the depths of a heart than you can stop Old Faithful from erupting from the deep of the earth.

It just comes up and sprays out.

Did the Palm Sunday throng fully “get” what was happening when Jesus traveled to Jerusalem on the back of a donkey?  Were they understanding the real reason for His entrance into their city?  Or the deeper meaning of their cries of Hosanna? (Matthew 21:9) Hardly.

But the 38 choir members at the Lutheran Bible Institute do. They know what Palm Sunday is all about. And it’s not about palms.

It’s about Jesus, the humble King.  It’s about the Christ coming to Jerusalem to fulfill His Father’s will.  It’s about the Suffering Servant, the Lamb of God, the Ultimate Sacrifice for sin.  No one was taking Jesus’ life from Him, He was willingly and obediently giving it up.

Ride on, ride on in majesty!

No one has to tell the nineteen men and their wives to be enthusiastic to worship with song.

They just are.

Sopranos, Altos, Tenors and Basses all coming together in a chorus of harmony and a symphony of sound.  These Lutheran Bible Institute (LBI) families have every reason to sing as they do because they know what happened, not only to Jesus but to themselves:

Baptized into Jesus’ name.
Redeemed by Christ’s blood.
Saved by grace through faith.

LBI Choir members on Palm Sunday, March 25, 2018

Their voices are Yellowstone geysers.

That’s why I apologize for the pictures.  You are merely seeing what I prefer you would be hearing.  The photos just don’t do justice to the experience itself.  It’s like passing in front of you a dinner plate heaped with a tantalizing meal but not allowing you to taste the flavors nor smell the aroma.

I’m sorry.  This article should be audio.

I wish I could have given, not your eyes but your ears a chance to be the pathway to walk alongside Jesus as He rides into Jerusalem with the crowds shouting and singing and praising.  Christ-centered psalms, hymns and spiritual songs are tour guides for the heart. They know the way and escort us up close to the main attraction: the Fountain of Life. (Psalm 36:9) Stand under the spray and feel the mist.

The medium is the music but the message is the Messiah!  Not only does it have the power to move us but has the ability to stir within us and from us our own gush of praise.

A hymn we can’t help but sing out…
From a voice we can’t help but lift up…
With a gratitude we can’t help but express forth!

And out it comes.

All Glory, Laud and Honor!

Walking by faith the Jerusalem road we see Jesus for who He really is (the Savior from sin) and for whom He really came (the entire world!)  We realize that the song of salvation, composed by Christ with His life and death and resurrection, was already welled deep within.

On Palm Sunday, out it came. (Just imagine what’s going to happen on Easter Sunday!)

No one cut down branches or waved palms at Crown of Life on the 25th of March 2018.  No one spread their cloaks on the road.  But all the LBI choir members did wear brand new ones.  The tailoring was finished just a week or so ago. The sewing machine is still warm from use.  The 25th of March 2018 was the first time the choir wore the crisp new robes.

Palm-branch green.

The color was stunning but not near as much as the singing.

Instruments?  None.
Pitch pipe?  No need.
Sheet music? Not that either.

Just a God-gifted, “pitch perfect” choir with exquisite harmony singing praises to God.

LBI Choir Members taking Holy Communion

But the LBI choir members were not the only ones raising their voices in song on Palm Sunday.  So did the children, the women’s choir as well as the congregation itself.  Though one of the hymns we sang on Palm Sunday is actually found in the Advent section of Christian Worship, the words are most fitting:

The advent of our King
Our prayers must now employ,
And we must hymns of welcome sing
In strains of holy joy.

The everlasting Son
Incarnate deigns to be,
Himself a servant’s form puts on
To set his servants free.
(CW 1:1-2)

Lord Jesus, Redeemer King, to whom the lips of children made sweet hosannas sing (CW 131), please accept our hymns and our hosannas as our worship to You. Not just on Palm Sunday but every day!  Even if we keep quiet, somehow in some way, as you said on that first Palm Sunday, the stones will cry out (Luke 19:40).

All Glory, Laud and Honor!

With Palm Sunday joy,

Missionary John Holtz
Your Malawi Mission Partner

John Holtz and his wife live in Lilongwe, Malawi

Please pray for those working in fields that are ripe for harvest. Share their story, engage with future news and receive updates. Go to this link to learn more about our mission fields in Africa and how the Holy Spirit is working faith in people’s hearts  https://wels.net/serving-others/missions/africa




Prayer request for Yvonne Janosek

Prayers are requested on behalf of Yvonne Janosek, who suffered a stroke on Thursday. Yvonne and her husband John served the WELS mission in Malawi for for decades.

The following is an update from her daughter, Alex:
He is risen indeed!

Mom has been moved to the Progressive Care Unit now. It means she doesn’t need the intensity of care they provide in ICU. The doctor is surprised that she is doing as well as she is, considering the extent of the damage to the left hemisphere of her brain.
I believe that she recognizes us though – both our voices and names. At least, when I brought Eleora to her room yesterday and told her, “Look. Eleora is here.” She moved her eyes to look at Eleora immediately. I suppose that could be her looking to see who Eleora was and not recognizing her. It’s hard to tell as she can’t talk or smile. She can show pain or discomfort though, and is getting better control over her left side of her body. Well, it appears so to these untrained eyes.
I wish you a blessed Easter!
Alex.

Surely God is my salvation; I will trust and not be afraid. The Lord, the Lord himself, is my strength and my defense ; he has become my salvation. ” – Isaiah 12:2