Sunday, April 27, 2014

4-27-2014 Sunday evening reflections on a good day

We did help the other teams get on their ways and then left the Little Daughters of St Joseph at around 9am.  We had enough time to drop our luggage off at Rosa Mystica, because Sunday morning traffic was very light.  We arrived at the Springs of Life compound around 9:35am and were met by Pastor James.  It was very good to see him.  Sofia, Bishop Bakari’s wife was also on hand and we caught up with her on the happenings of the last 2 years since we had been able to serve in Kibera.  Worship got under way promptly at 10am and it was once again a very moving multi-faceted experience.  There was liturgy with chanting by the pastors.  There were children’s choirs, children’s solos, praise band music, adult choirs doing both standard hymns and native Swahili songs with incredible harmonies and the hypnotic songs that were lead of by female leads and choir responses.  The sermon was delivered by a guest preacher and Pastor James translated it from very good English into Swahili, with some humorous results at times.  No one laughed louder than Pastor James.  The service ended after nearly 3 hours with us singing the last hymn, filing down the stairs while still singing and going outside to form a large prayer circle.  After the prayer, we were dismissed with the Benediction.  We spent about the next half hour catching up with old friends, introducing the new team members to some of the people we will be working with this week and making arrangements for the start of the clinic on Monday.  We will be at the church by 7:30am, traffic will be light because there is a school break at this time, so we won’t need to leave Rosa Mystica until about 7:15.  We should have the physical layout of the clinic in place by about 8am, have a devotion and last minute instructions for our team and the volunteers and hope to be in operation by 9am. 

After church, we went to the Junction Mall, right by our lodgings, and had lunch with Catherine and Shara, one of our LCMS missionaries based in Nairobi.  I bought some Kenyan coffee and had the beans ground for my drip coffee maker.  I like the Kenya AA coffee, one of five varieties.  I think it stacks up to pure Kona coffee in Hawaii.  The Kona we get on the mainland is a blend made with Columbian coffee to hold the high price down.  My pure Kenyan will beat that any day of the week.  It was 990 shiilings for half a kilogram, or about $12 for a little more than a pound.  A little treat to myself!  We got our water, snacks, hand sanitizer and paper goods for the clinic at Nakumatt in the mall, a store that is very similar to Wal-Mart.  Business is very good there, since the recent attack on the nearby Westgate Mall has put the main competition in the area out of business.  No one knows at this point if and when Westgate will reopen.  We got back to our rooms around 4:30 and everyone got much needed naps and showers.
We are about to have dinner at 7pm.  I’ll lead a short devotion on what it means to be a missionary, we’ll do some refresher training on the autorefractor and we’ll finalize what we think the beginning layout of the clinic should be for good traffic flow and for sharing the Gospel effectively.  We’ll turn in early tonight to keep our energy up for what I hope proves to be a very tiring first day of the clinic.

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