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“…they
are not just waiting—they are hungry and waiting.”
Greetings, dear
brothers and sisters, in the name of Jesus, our Jesus. He
is the one, and the
only one who WILLINGLY gave up everything he had, because of his
UNWILLINGNESS for one thing. He was not willing that any
should
perish! His position, rights, comforts, and very life were
subservient to and were forfeited because of His desire that all
would come to repentance. It is true that not every person
alive
then or now has been eager to accept Christ’s offer to repent and be
saved. We must know, though, that when Jesus gave his life, he gave
it so that ALL would have the opportunity to repent and believe in
Him, thus grasping hold of eternal life! It is true that God’s
foreknowledge comes into play here, and we respect the limits of our
fallen humanity, but that in no way limits the fact that Christ died
for all. It doesn’t take away from the fact that when Jesus hung on
the cross He looked down through the ages with a heart that
encompassed all of humanity both present and future, and that heart
was unwilling that any should perish. Oh, how He loved us! May we
love Him more, and as we come closer to His heart may we pick up His
heartbeat and make it our own—NOT WILLING, NOT WILLING, NOT WILLING
that any should perish! May we join Him in His passion by abandoning
everything that would hinder us and by pouring our lives out in the
pursuit of what He died to achieve; an open path to God for all of
mankind. Oh, God, give me a holy
stubbornness and a total unwillingness to see humanity rushing on
toward hell when You gave Your life and by that gift totally
purchased their redemption! I must do something, for my heart and
conscience compel me. Only show me what to do and I will obey!
“Brethren, my heart’s desire and
prayer to God for the Konkombas is, that they might be saved.” Romans
10:1 (personalized)
Have I shocked or alarmed you
with the strong words written above? My intention is not to shock
but to share, not to inflame but to inform. My friends, you cannot
walk the trails that I walk. You cannot see the things that I see.
Therefore, somehow I must communicate enough of what I experience so
that you will be able to share more fully in the burden I carry,
because in many ways we are here on your behalf. We feel keenly the
fact that we are not here alone. Many of you are laboring with us in
heart and in prayer. It is with a burden to keep you all engaged in
soul-labor with us that we write to share our heart with you. We
want to keep you connected to what we view as our shared ministry
and out of that desire we share our visions, dreams and
difficulties. The victories we exult in are ours together, so we
wish for you to join in our praise. The resistance we encounter is
against our shared offensive, and this makes us desire your support
as we make our stand. We do not take your prayerful undergirding of
this work for granted. We thank you for taking the time and energy
to care about us, and most importantly to care about the spiritual
needs of the Konkomba people.
As I just mentioned,
sometimes we share stories of success and other times accounts
of difficulties
we are facing. In this article I would like to take you into the
burden that I have felt for our people in the last couple
of weeks.
Our burden is not our ministry, but it is the passion that fuels
our outreach. Although the burden is always present, from
time to time
God allows us a glimpse of the needs around us in such a way that
it once again arrests our focus and drives us to action.
The view of
the needs around us in the last few weeks have pulled our hearts
deeper into God’s heart for our tribe. Our burden has grown
until the above verse just rang in my heart this morning.
Truly, brothers
and sisters, this is our one desire that our people would be saved!
We beg you to open your heart to share that desire as you
read a bit
about the needs with which we have been faced in recent days.
“And there were certain
Greeks among them that came up to worship at the feast: The same
came therefore to Philip...and desired him saying, ‘Sir, we would
see Jesus’.” John 12:20-21
God has given us the privilege
to stand for the Konkombas of this area, where Philip stood for the
Greeks almost 2000 years ago. This is the place of being where
people who are wanting to see Jesus come to inquire. We count it a
real opportunity to be ministering to a group of villages that are
not only open to hearing the gospel but are ACTIVE in looking for
someone to come and teach them! As Christians, we are called not
only to share with those that are seeking, but, also to carry the
news of the gospel to every person alive. Certainly we would all
recognize that there is an extra urgency and motivation that
accompanies sharing the gospel with those who are, as the Greeks
were, asking to see Jesus. It is in this place that we find
ourselves, as God is working to draw the Konkombas to Himself, and
as their age-old darkness is pierced by the light of Jesus. It is an
exciting, but challenging work!
During this last month, we have
come into contact with no less than six villages who have come to
meet us with the specific purpose of asking us to come and give them
the word of God. They have met us under many different circumstances
and through many channels of contact. They are spread out over a
large area, but they are united in their shared desire for a church
in their village. Some have come to meet me in Bunbon as the market
draws people from maybe forty-five villages around it every six
days. Others have been introduced through a family member, who
somehow came into contact with one of our groups in another village.
Now they come as a representative of their village to beg me to
come. One was even discovered by the latest youth team from America,
who happened in on a particular village as they walked the trail to
invite people to a Bible class in the evening.
They come bearing gifts, a
chicken and a dozen yams is not an uncommon one. They recognize that
before they ask me to do something for them cultural tradition
demands that they must give me a gift. They sit on the logs in my
compound, usually three of them at a time, explaining to me where
their village is located, how many people live there, and why they
want a church. I sit and explain to them that the only thing I have
to offer them is the Word of God. I try to convey to them the fact
that if they obey the words that I teach them they will become a
church. Their words are stuck in my memory, hear them:
“We come to you from the
village of Chabaatung. Please accept this fowl and these few yams
from our people. If the harvest had been good we would have brought
more. Please, we have seen that some of the villages around us are
leaving the darkness of our forefathers and are following the path
of God. The people of our village also want to have their eyes
opened to see God’s way and to know the way that we should live. We,
the Konkombas, have been like small children who know nothing, but
now we are starting to see what is the right path to follow to
remove ourselves from the problems that we and our grandfathers have
been facing. We have built our church (usually a cleared area with
some log benches under a tree) so that anytime that someone comes to
teach us the words of God we will be ready. We are trying to follow
the church road but we do not know what is good for us and what God
doesn’t like because nobody ever comes to tell us the right thing.
You must come soon as we are waiting, and while we wait for you we
always gather at our ‘church’ on Sundays as we have seen some other
villages do. But when we gather we do not know what we should do,
so
we only sing some songs and go home again. Please try to come to
us soon, as we are like a blind man until we hear the words of God.”
Dear ones, these
are actual words pled with me. I have heard them not once
but several times
over the last weeks. The long names at the heading of this article
are not ones I dreamed up. They are actual places, villages
with
maybe two hundred people who are hungry for God’s word. I put the
names there not to amuse you with their hard-to-pronounce sounds,
but rather to help you to visualize in your minds the fact that they
represent real people! We must face the truth that there are many
villages where Konkomba people gather together hungry for God’s
Word. So hungry, in fact, that they will send out a delegation
looking for someone who will teach them the Bible.
What a wonderful
thing it is to be here ministering among a receptive people!
We know that we have a
rare opportunity. We pray that God will help us to use it to its
fullest to build God’s kingdom. Just the knowledge that there are so
many villages who are waiting to hear a clear presentation of the
gospel for the first time should be enough to increase the burden on
all of our hearts. But the thing that has really multiplied my own
burden is the fact that I cannot take on all of these villages, so
there they sit waiting for teaching. The fifteen villages where we
are already working take up all of our time and energy and we
honestly do not know what to say to these many villages that are
knocking at our door. Some of them we promise a one time visit to
survey the situation. That only makes it worse as I sit in their
village compounds, see the ‘church’ they built, and sense the hunger
that they have to actually leave their idol worship and follow
Jesus.
What should we do with our
physical limitations? We are faced with being a Philip but not being
able to answer the many queries we get of people seeking to see
Jesus. What can we do to somehow answer all of these cries without
endangering the work that we have already undertaken in so many
other villages? What would you do in our shoes? Can you understand
why I say we are burdened? I must say that I feel almost frustrated
today with my limited vocabulary as I try to communicate the need
and our burden to you. It is not that I think that all of these
people are 100% sincere or that I expect all of them to burn their
idols immediately. We are aware that every soul is won through war.
We have seen some of that conflict here, but it seems the chance of
a lifetime to share with hungry hearts the good news of Jesus. It
seems the ultimate shame to leave them sitting there hungry!
“And
it shall come to pass, that in the place where it was
said unto them, Ye are not my people;
there shall they be called the children of the living God.” Romans
9:26 & Hosea 1:10
Dear fellow
burden bearers, I am both excited and very burdened with
what I see as I live and work
here among our dear Konkomba people. God has opened up a window of
opportunity for us here, as the Konkomba villages come into
contact
with the light of the Gospel for the first time. The Gospel is
always powerful, but I do not believe that anything can rival its
first impact. It is this persuasion that makes us desire
to move
forward carefully, to maximize the initial influence to its highest
potential. At the same time, the majority of the villages
around us
are without the teaching of God’s word and are crying for it! This
fact makes us desire to rush quickly through this open door.
I am burdened because I do not
want this hunger that the Konkombas now feel to pass without a large
portion of the tribe coming into contact with the Gospel. My heart
is heavy because I do not know what to say to the many voices
calling for Bible teaching, some of which are so far away as to make
it difficult to go there regularly. I keenly feel the fact that in
another ten years, and maybe even only five years from now, the
situation will be much changed here as civilization and development
move into these super rural areas. This fact compels me to do
everything possible to ensure that these dear simple people put
their child-like faith in Christ before materialism, western ideas,
and the television come in to distract and confuse them. Lastly, I
am burdened with the thought that Christ-hungry villages are sitting
and waiting. It is true that the Konkomba villages have waited for
hundreds of years without the Gospel. That fact alone should
motivate us to reach them, but the thought of Konkombas sitting, who
have seen enough of the light to be hungry for it, is too much for
my heart.
I am also excited
for several reasons; The hunger that we are seeing among
our people,
demonstrated by their actively searching for someone to teach them,
opens up incredible opportunities for the gospel to change
the
course of history for an entire tribe. This is a wonderful and rare
chance for the Gospel to sweep rapidly through a large area
of a
tribe, with many coming to Christ and changing the moral climate
of a people forever. I am also thrilled with the thoughts
that flow out
of the promise above when I apply it to our tribe. Though for
centuries the Konkombas have undoubtedly not been God’s people, God,
in his redemptive plan, is working right now to bring this tribe to
the place that they can, individually and collectively, be called
the children of the living God! And you and I get to observe this
marvelous reaching out of God’s grace to a whole group of people. We
not only are allowed to observe, we are called to labor here in work
and in prayer, right now, to see that this wonderful plan of God is
brought to completion! These thoughts awaken in my heart feelings of
awe and wonder at God’s goodness. This is coupled with a deep desire
to know the power of God in such a real way in my own life that I
will be able to labor unflinchingly to bring this people group out
of the clutches of Satan and into the glorious liberty of the Sons
of God!!
Dear friends,
for the sake of Christ’s name among the Gentiles, and for
the sake of the souls of the many hungry Konkombas, pray
that God will help you to pick up
the burden of praying this vision into reality. We certainly know
that God wills it. Remember, He is the one who willingly
gave all
because He was unwilling that any should perish! Pick up the
excitement of dozens of villages filled with people who are
beginning to hunger after God and His word. Let your heart meditate
on the marvelous possibilities that are opened up by such
hunger,
and praise God for putting it in the hearts of the Konkomba tribe.
I beg you to also pick up the burden that lies in the fact
that we
cannot fill all of the calls for teaching that come our way. Allow
God to press upon your heart the reality of these hundreds
of souls
lost in darkness, now groping for the light. Think about the
spiritual warfare that absolutely must be raging for the hearts of
this entire tribe! When this burden settles on your heart,
PRAY! Oh,
how we need your support in this way! While you pray, ask God what
else you can do to push forward His redemptive plan for this
tribe
of dearly loved and dearly bought Konkombas. Maybe God will send
you here to join in this work, which I described above as
both exciting
and challenging. Maybe the call from Chabaatung or Damankudo or ???
is meant to be answered by you!?
Thankful for praying
friends and praying for more,
Daniel Kenaston and family
Remember, they
are not just waiting—they are hungry and waiting!!
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