Welcome to our Blog! What are the goals of "Africonnection"? To further the Kingdom. To help North American friends make a connection with the lives and experiences of their brothers and sisters in Africa. And to give North American friends an opportunity to partner with Africa Nazarene University as it supports the Kingdom through the Church of the Nazarene in Africa.

Mark and Nancy

Saturday, April 18, 2009

ANESA REPORT

Well, praise the Lord! The ANESA conference was great and we'll give you some quick highlights of it before we go to bed this Saturday evening.

On Friday morning, Regional Education Coordinator Dr. Fili Chambo ( blue shirt in front of screen) led us in singing "Come Let Us Adore Him" and "He Is Lord."

In his addreess, Regional Director Dr. Eugenio Duarte called for a "culture of
spiritual accountability" and "extraordinary prayer" on the Africa Region. He called for ordinary people doing extraordinary work because they make themselves available to the Lord.

Howie Shute (at lunch in red sweater) gave some thoughts about developments in the Horn of Africa:
  • We need representatives of each of the people groups in Africa to be trained as theologians capable of contextualizing theology for each group.
  • Great story about the Jesus Film being shown in a particular Ethiopian village with a large Muslim population. Across several weeks after the film, many Muslims were saved, the Imam's children became Christians; the Imam's wife became a Christian. A few days after this, the Imam came to the Nazarene pastor and dangled the key to the mosque in front of him. "Take it," he said. "The mosque is yours." The Nazazrene pastor was astonished but accepted the key. Right now there are three mosques in the Horn of Africa being used as Churches of the Nazarene.
  • On the darker side, Christians in general face tremendous danger and persecution in the Horn of Africa. 15 of our Nazarene leaders have died because of their faith in the last 8 years, but of these 15, 7 have been killed in 2008 alone. We need to be in passionate prayer for these brave pastors who are literally giving their lives for the spread of the gospel.
There was a very lively discussion of the relationship between multiple, contextualized versions of the Nazarene Course of Study used for training of Nazarene pastors in Africa and the idea of a centralized, unified course of study to be used by all areas. Dr. Fili Chambo mentioned the cost of development of multiple versions, and a desire to pursue accreditation with the Accrediting Council for Theological Education in Africa (ACTEA) as reasons for moving toward unification. More senior Field Strategy Coordinators remember the old days when the Region sent what they often saw as irrelevant, unified materials for them to use. At the end of the discussion--which extended across the tea time--there was an agreement to talk about a "consolidated" course of study (meaning fewer models but not a single model).

Last night, we interviewed Ermias Choliye, the Field Strategy Coordinator for the Horn of Africa (standing and gesturing during the theology conference), for the NMI book we're working on--what a privilege to hear his story of faithfulness to the
Lord. We'll do a blog entry on him at a later date and he will be one of the interviews in the book, but just a kind of funny highlight of his perseverance and faithfulness: He had been an officer in the Ministry of Education in Ethiopia, and a life-long Christian who made the decision to become a Nazarene after meeting Al and Kitty Jones. He quit his job and came to ANU to begin ministerial training. He was housed with a very young student who played loud music and was doing his first studying in many years. He wrote
his wife a letter saying he was
discouraged and coming home, but before she received it, three things happened: He heard a sermon by Dr. Jim Diehl about how he overcame discouragement and frustration as a pastor, his wife sent him an encouraging letter and a picture of herself and his children smiling broadly, and--the Lord "piling it on"--he visited an elementary school as part of a prayer campaign at ANU and the welcome song the students sang was the Christian song "No Turning Back." He laughed and
said at that point he knew he had to stay and see it through! And now the Lord is using him to lead the "Book of Acts" movement in the Horn of Africa. Praise the Lord!

This afternoon, ANU presented some of its plans for distance learning and did two sessions on entreprenurship for Nazarene pastors and congregations. There were presentations by our Dry
Land Natural Resource department, by our lecturer in entreprenurship, by our director of distance learning and by Rod Reed of the Religion Department, talking about how we might help some of our diploma colleges with short courses in accounting, land management, as well as theological subjects.

We just got back from the first evening of a "mini-theology conference" attached to the two main conferences. Two great papers offered:
  • Rev. Joseph Llilema, a Zambian working at NTC-CA in Malawi (standing at podium in gray suit), presented a summary of his excellent MAR thesis research regarding attitudes toward polygamy in the Central Africa District (Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi. His research showed that Nazarene attitudes toward the treatment of polygamists in the church were all over the board and called for the region to establish a clear policy toward polygamy. He cited the Manual statement regarding divorce (saying it is outside of God's plan for marriage but that people can and should be redeemed after divorce) as possible language regarding polygamy and called for the full acceptance of redeemed polygamists as members of the church to be offered the sacrements. As you might imagine, lively discussion followed.
  • Rev. Gift Mtukwa, a faculty member at ANU (gesturing at microphone in blue mock-turtleneck and suit), delivered a portion of a paper he and Dr. Rod Reed, Religion Department chair, had delivered at Wesley Theological Society meeting at Anderson University earlier this year. His paper examined the idea being discussed in some academic circles in Africa of the idea of "Christ as Ancestor." He concluded that this was not a good alternative to Western Christology because by definition ancestors are tightly connected to family or clan, meaning the idea of Christ as ancestor would encourage rather than calm African ethnic tensions.
It's getting late and we'd probably better close for now, but we'll give you at least one post from the Leadership Conference that begins on Sunday morning. Thanks for your prayers. We can feel their impact!

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