Tuesday, December 31, 2019

End of Year Missionary Reflections


Today, is the last day of 2019.   We’re both hopeful and vulnerable as we look at 2020.   We’re sure our last blog and email of 2019 isn’t the only one you have today requesting a year end gift.   We do sense that we are exactly where we need to be.  We do sense that we are in a location where God is moving.  We request that you put some thought into what’s happening in America, and the best use of resources.

From our perspective there are neglected places in the margins of society that show the movements of God.   America is a great nation, but amid a great spiritual struggle.   In this struggle it can be easy to choose a partisan path.   The issues of ministry we frequently face of immigration, poverty, and race are frequently seen through a partisan lens.   Yet, we believe these issues of ministry are best addressed through the witness of the Church.   There are thoughtful voices of faith.   However, many of those voices cluster in urban areas.   We chose in 2019 to move to Bismarck, North Dakota as missionaries to be near a surge of African migration, take a part-time teaching pastor role with Revive Christian Church, and hopefully settle into life that is good for our disabled son and us as grandparents.  

December saw these variables play out.   If you weren’t aware with recent policy changes to refugee settlement local states and counties now must consent to receive refugees.   It’s all been a relatively easy process.  In North Dakota our governor, and the counties where Fargo and Grand Forks are located quickly consented.   However, in Bismarck it quickly became international news.  (If you haven’t seen there are articles on Burleigh County refugee settlement in the B.B.C., New York Times, Washington Post, and local North Dakota newspapers.)  Social media escalated concerns.   The first Burleigh County Commissioners meeting on December 2 had hundreds attend.   The meeting had to be rescheduled for a larger venue on Monday, December 9.    At first the Burleigh County commissioners were receiving hundreds of phone calls and emails with a 9 to 1 ratio opposing refugee settlement.   In the week before December 9 a multiple of Bismarck pastors and Christian leaders raised awareness.   By December 9 the ratio had shifted to 7 in favor of refugee settlement to 3 opposed in communication to the commissioners.  When it came time to vote the commissioners consented to refugee settlement by a 3 to 2 vote.  Refugees will continue to settle in Burleigh County, North Dakota.

We didn’t speak at the public meeting on December 2 or 9.   There were hundreds in line who spoke.  We thought we might hurt the argument as we are North Dakota newcomers.  However, Dave did edit one refugee’s speech, we hosted a small group discussion about these matters with Revive, and Dave wrote each county commissioner.   In a way, this was a very personal matter.  We take it as the movement of God that most refugees in Burleigh County are from Congo and speak Kinyarwanda (Banyamulenge ethnic group.)  They have deep old Christian traditions.  They worship in Kinyarwanda and Kiswahili.   We feel very at home with them.  They only number a few hundred in the Bismarck / Mandan metropolitan area.  We’re unaware of any of them ever having problems with law enforcement.  They work hard.  Their young people are in school.   Those laboring help in tough jobs such as cleaning, home health care, and nursing.   Their young men are frequently in the local sports page for their success in soccer and track.    We believe they are an answer to prayer for more workers in the mission field of America.

Now coming back to the needed voice of the Church.  During Christmas season Dave preached through the traditional Christmas texts at Revive Christian such as Isaiah 9, Matthew 1-2, Luke 1-2, and John 1.   This past Sunday, December 29 we were in Matthew 2 where the wise men visit Jesus’ family, King Herod orders genocide of male toddlers in the Bethlehem region, and Jesus’ family flees to Egypt before settling into Nazareth.   

When we hit the point after we understand the history of the text and ask for application to our faith community in North Dakota we look back to several events.   Germans from Russia came to North Dakota and settled on the prairie generations ago to flee religious and ethnic persecution.   Armenians also came to North Dakota to settle on the prairie fleeing genocide of the Ottoman Turkey empire.   For most in North Dakota these types of applications are part of esteemed heritage, but too distant to feel personal.   Thus, we invited Banyamulenge refugees to tell us their stories to apply the text.   We had two delightful young women, Joy and Francine.  

Some parts of their stories were heartbreaking.  Can you imagine entering junior high with no English skill?  Can you imagine having lived as a refugee your whole childhood, and thus having no memories of your parents’ home?  Can you imagine starting out in a new country in high school? 
  
Some parts of their stories were funny and endearing.  Can you imagine landing in North Dakota in January?   Can you imagine the first time you ever touched snow?

Yet, the biggest parts of their stories were inspirational.   Young people who couldn’t speak English within 4 years spoke in such a way you couldn’t tell immigration was part of their story.    They had completed school.  Everyone in the home was working.   Their church was growing.   Their family structure was the glue that kept them all together.   We at Revive got to meet those whose character was like the generations of German and Armenian refugees who settled in North Dakota generations ago.   It strengthened our believe in God, American ideals, and local churches.   In those ideals we believe is a future of hope.

Today can you donate to keep us in North Dakota as missionaries by either sending a check to 

East Africa Diaspora Community
P.O. BOX 480
Wheaton, IL 60187


Asante sana.  Webale nyo.  Murakoze cyane.  Thank you very much,

Dave and Jana

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