Manna from Heaven
It’s Sunday morning. You wake up and get yourself dressed
and ready to go to church, just like you do every Sunday. You arrive at church
and quickly get caught up in a conversation about your favorite football team’s
chances of winning the Super Bowl this season. The bell starts ringing and you
quickly slip into the fourth pew from the front on the left side, where you
always sit next to Mr. & Mrs. Keaton, the delightful retired couple from
Michigan. The quiet rumble of friendly chit chat immediately ceases when the
organist introduces the first hymn…and then you notice that the pastor’s chair
is empty.
Have you ever been to a church service without a pastor? Maybe your pastor is on vacation and has left an elder in charge of conducting worship. Maybe your pastor has taken a call to another congregation and you’re in the process of calling a new one. Maybe your congregation shares your pastor with another congregation, and you listen to his sermons online.
It is possible to worship God at church without a pastor in
the pulpit. But what if there’s no sermon? What if the person leading worship
is unable to present an encouraging message from God’s Word to you? Even if
every hymn that day is one of your favorites, and the choir’s anthem echoes the
praises in heaven, and you hear the lessons and the Psalm read with dignity and
clarity, you’ll come away from church that Sunday still hungry, as if you’d
just finished a vegetarian Thanksgiving dinner. The sermon is the part of the
service you look forward to most.
On any Sunday in the LCCA Malawi, an ordained pastor serves at worship in only a quarter of the congregations, and laymen lead worship in all the rest. Although the LCCA is diligently training new church workers, there are only so many pastors that the church body can support. Many pastors serve parish unions of four or more congregations. These congregations pool their limited financial resources to pay the pastor’s salary. These parish unions would dissolve without lay leaders conducting worship on the Sundays when their pastors are serving elsewhere.
Lay worship leaders are spiritually mature men with a good
name in their local community, but most of them live in remote areas and are
not well educated. To ensure that church members are being spiritually fed with
the pure word of God, the LCCA has relied on books of sermons that the lay
leaders can read during worship. The sermons were written by American
missionaries, translated into the local languages and then edited by an
American missionary responsible for overseeing the publications program.
But the multitude of new opportunities for outreach are driving OAT missionaries to reexamine their mission strategy in Africa, and to engage their local partners in much different ways. There is no longer one missionary dedicated to publications work in Malawi. Instead, one missionary is responsible for facilitating publications work across the entire continent, working closely together with local pastors and publications committees to produce the materials they need the most.
In Malawi, a national pastor oversees the production of new
sermon books. This pastor sets up a schedule and assigns sermon texts to other
Malawian pastors, who are able to write sermons in their native tongue and to
include examples from everyday life. The Malawian pastors produce sermons that
flow much more naturally than anything an American outsider could ever write. It is somewhat of a challenge to collect and
compile the sermons, since most LCCA pastors do not make regular use of email
or internet in their homes. Still, under this new system the LCCA has published
five volumes of sermon books so far, and the plan is to keep producing new
books once a quarter in two of the languages spoken in Malawi.
In the West, we are drowning in a daily deluge of downloads
and data. It’s hard for us to imagine the life of a Malawian villager, who
might listen to the radio every once in awhile but otherwise has little
connection to the outside world. For that Malawian villager, attending church
on a Sunday morning to sing hymns, to sway with the choir, and to hear a
Gospel-centered sermon on Sunday is the highlight of the week, the place where he
may “eat what is good, and delight in the richest of fare” (Isaiah 55:2).
Missionary John Roebke lives in Malawi and manages
Communications and Publications for One Africa Team
Please
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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