We had our usual 7am breakfast
at Rosa Mystica and then made our way back to the Lutheran Church in the slum
of Kawangware. Linda opened our day with
a beautiful prayer over the team and our volunteers. We had a pretty busy morning once again and
were visited by Sam from Concordia University, Irvine, California, whom we had
met previously and a biology professor named Ken who was a classmate of our
very own Larry Meissner. We showed him
around the clinic and he took a few pictures of our setup. Later in the day, our Nairobi LCMS missionary
Shauen Trump paid us a visit. He had his
two young boys in tow. He was also
joined by our friends Mike and Cindy Rodewald, who head up the LCMS missions in
Africa. They toured the clinic and we
were able to visit briefly with them. We
saw about the same number of people as on Wednesday and now have seen somewhere
in the neighborhood of 1300 patients for the week so far. More importantly, at least 30 people became
new believers or were seriously interested in learning more about Christ or the
church today. This trip has been
absolutely outstanding from the evangelism standpoint.
We learned today that the first
young boy who came to us for help in Kiambu for kerataconitis did get the
operations on his eyes and was healed.
Praise God that Robert will now be able to lead a full life! I pray that the Lord will lead him to make
the most of his second chance.
The television crew never showed
up to film the clinic for World Vision Day, so I guess we will all have to wait
for another chance at fame…
We had dinner at a Brazilian
steak house as planned. We had 10 adults
and Shauen’s 2 kids. The group included
our team of four and our driver Steven, Mike and Cindy, Shauen, Catherine and
Shara. It was a real blessing to break
bread and eat massive amounts of very good meat with them. There was a salad bar with 16 different types
of salad and there were at least 12 different meats including crocodile,
chicken, turkey, beef ribs, roast beef and the list went on and on. The conversation and fellowship were great, a
good time was had by all. We are truly
blessed to have our LCMS people in Africa to smooth the way for our mission
trips. They are a great
encouragement. After all that meat, I
will either sleep like a baby or have a rough night. Either way, it was worth it!
Tomorrow will be the last day of
the clinic and so we will be packing up all of our equipment, loading it up on
a truck for transport back to our lodge and will say our goodbyes. More to follow tomorrow.
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