We had a wonderful worship service, following the liturgy in
Swahili, their choirs singing for us and we returning the favor. Jane led us in singing a song for the
congregation and we followed up with the Doxology in 4-part Lutheran harmony,
always a favorite everywhere we have been in Kenya. Pastor Kevin was asked to preach and he gave
a sermon based on 2 Kings Chapters 6 and 7, using my travel Bible as a
reference. Although it was not the
appointed reading from the church calendar, it was a very special message, the
main theme of which was that it’s not right to keep a gift as precious as the
Gospel to ourselves, but instead are called to share it. I had the pleasure of introducing the team
and said a few word to the congregation.
That wasn’t quite enough for Pastor James, so he had each team member
say hello to the congregation. It was
fun. After worship, we got the schedule
down for the first day of the clinic with Pastor James and Michael. We unloaded the footlockers and stowed them
in the church, where local security will keep an eye on them until our return
on Monday.
We went to Africa Heart, the lodge we will stay in all week,
and checked in before finishing our day by going to the Java House Café, a
really nice restaurant that you can think of as half Starbucks and half
restaurant. Regular Java House coffee
shops are as prevalent in Kenya as Starbucks, but this is the nicest of them in
all of Nairobi. Everyone loved the food,
we ate in an open air section of the café and the weather was perfect. I bought 500 kilograms (about a pound) of
Nairobi coffee beans for approximately $12 and had them ground and bagged. My mornings will be getting off to a better
start for a while!
We returned to the lodge, everyone checked out their new
rooms, some showered, others took a little nap.
While waiting for dinner, I met two very interesting guys from a church in California. One was their Music Director Reggie (are you listening, Rob?) and the other was a dentist. The dentist had been doing dental missions to Kenya since 1990, and in that time had been put in the position of having to assist in several births, perform operations and do all kinds of things that only God could enable someone to do. Reggie confessed that he was roped into injecting novacaine and on occasion, doing an extraction or two himself. We laughed about what most people would call a comfort zone and admitted it's much more fun to live life without one. They encouraged me greatly, seeing such strong, joyful men of faith pressing ahead in the race. We met for dinner at 6:30pm and had a very good buffet with lots of
veggies, chicken and potatoes. I led one
of my favorite devotions based on the writings of Oswald Chambers, we had a
brief discussion of it and then Pastor Kevin laid out the plan for opening the
clinic on Monday. We all called it an
early evening, knowing we would need our strength for tomorrow. Another very full day had come to an end. Thank you, Jesus!
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