Category: Africa

  • LIVING AS A CHRISTIAN IN ZAMBIA REFLECTS THE CHOICES WE MAKE

    LIVING AS A CHRISTIAN IN ZAMBIA REFLECTS THE CHOICES WE MAKE

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    Choices. They are crucial. Yet what influences, what informs our choices. When we become a Christian, do we choose to be a disciple of Christ? What do our choices show? Do we attempt following Jesus while still grasping things from our past that the world has used to shape our identity?

    The influences for our choices is the battle for the mind: the battle of our choices. This is the battle for being a disciple of Jesus.

    So many people in Zambia struggle with choices as they become a Christian. They face the pressures and the luring of those things and ideas that are seen as essential if they want to have a modern image and identity.

    Just think of the imagery that we have bombarding us every day!!

    Look at the billboards blocking out the sky along the streets of Lusaka. Billboards so huge you cannot miss them even if you wanted to. Billboards advertising images of beautiful people and pictures of products to make you look like them; images of how to get fair skin; images of vehicles for the prestigious; photographs of the right clothing; food; and so much more. 

    There is so much imagery that we face every day. 

    The world wants you to copy the behaviors and customs it creates. It wants you to conform to at least one of the avenues of life it has for people. It does not want you to leave its authority. And, it does all it can to keep a hold on you.

    All of this is nothing new. 70 yrs ago, T.S. Eliot wrote:

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    The problem of leading a Christian life in a non-Christian society is now very present to us….And as for the Christian who is not conscious of his dilemma—and he is in the majority—he is becoming more and more de-Christianized by all sorts of unconscious pressure: paganism holds all the most valuable advertising space.

    – T.S. Eliot, The Idea of a Christian Society. In Christianity and Culture. 

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    What can we do to affect the impact of the many influences Zambia faces?
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    Unfortunately, for many, their identity as a follower of Christ is limited. Christianity doesn’t seem adequate to give people a Christian identity that is sufficient to be acceptable for every area of life. This is not true!

    We must proclaim the full gospel of Christ! The gospel that is about God so loving the world, his creation, that he sent Jesus to earth to restore humanity to its relationship with God so that all of creation will be saved and blessed. All. All.

    No culture remains static, the same over generations. All cultures change. But what guides or influences that change is important. And we must be proactive in times of change. We cannot afford to be passive receivers of all changes. We must think about our lives and think about our values. We must be active in the battle that takes place for our minds.

    We are witnessing a reaction against the flow of foreign thought into Africa. Some call for a restoration of traditional African values and ways of life. However, it is difficult to go backward for anything. Life moves forward.

    The gift of the gospel message is that we can have a new life in a relationship with God, our creator. This message can give us the stability every person needs to be able to withstand the winds of ideas and philosophies; to withstand that siren call to be like everyone else. 

    Remember, this is not a new problem. Nearly 3000 years ago, the Israelites confronted Samuel, 

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    “Look,” they told him, “you are now old, and your sons are not like you. Give us a king to judge us like all the other nations have.” 1 Samuel 8:5

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    God’s chosen people. Yet, they wanted to be like other nations. In other words, they wanted to be special, but not too special. The Church wants to be special. But it doesn’t want the world to call it uncivilized, not modern, caught in its primitive past. So, it compromises a little here and a little there. 

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    To help people fight the influence of the world, Christians need to know that their identity in Christ is sufficient, and even more so than the identities the world may have to offer.

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    The “Battle for the Mind” is an old battle that still wages.
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    Many Christians in Zambia today don’t understand the dangers of the battle that is taking place for their minds. Life–just living–demands so much effort. Little time is left to pay any attention to the development of our personal lives and especially the more profound things such as our identity as Christians and being a disciple of Christ.

    The struggle for so many today is for how to live…not what to think.

    However, we must understand that what we do and how we live is based on what and how we think. And, the worldview we have lies as the center for all of it. The cultures of Zambia are caught up in a very real storm of ideas and philosophies that have come to it in many ways.

    They are being buffeted by the winds of different secular systems of belief, supported by the lure of finances, education, jobs, and a better life. Secular missionaries from many NGOs are working to spread a gospel of tolerance, personal rights, and freedoms. The problem is much of this gospel is contrary to the ethical beliefs Africa has held for centuries. They teach that if Africa would just accept their gospel, it would become advanced and taken into the world systems. 

    The Scriptures tell us that when we become disciples of Jesus: 

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    Then we will no longer be immature like children. We won’t be tossed and blown about by every wind of new teaching. We will not be influenced when people try to trick us with lies so clever they sound like the truth. Eph 4:14

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    Christian Africans, Zambians, must become proactive in the development of the biblical worldview in this land. If the Church is going to be more than just a hobby, a pastime, a casual part of life, then it must develop a biblical worldview, in this context. The Church, which is the community of people who are believers, must become disciples of Christ. Disciples who are not just religious, but are engaging their faith in every part of life. 

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    Though there is a large and active Church, often the focus is misplaced.
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    I believe that in their excitement to preach and teach the Word of God; that in their desire to promote a time of spiritual encounter in its worship services, much of the Church in Zambia has let the world system slowly, methodically and successfully isolate Christianity to a narrow portion of life dealing with morality and spirituality. There, in its isolation, Christianity has been gelded, neutered, prevented from being able to engage in the conversations of the world and from participating in guiding the directions of cultural change. The Church has, in many ways, been made a prisoner of the cultures in which it exists.

    If we are not active about what we believe, we remain prisoners of our cultures. Unable to move forward with the full freedom we have in Christ, free from the power of sin that affects all humans. Our cultural beliefs remain unchallenged and influential as we try to be Christian.

    Maturing as disciples of Jesus, believers must overcome secular or unsaved worldviews, or they work to hold onto our lives as Christians and prevent us from seeing the kingdom of God come as a reality in our world.

    Culture. Worldview. How we live and react to the reality, we encounter, all are rooted in and shaped by our worldview and the culture we receive from birth.

    Unfortunately, the institutional Church has widely taught and preached a Christian faith that the prevailing worldviews and cultures of the world have limited to a small part of life. Therefore, the Christian faith has become imprisoned in a small cell of one’s whole life; people around the world struggle as prisoners of their cultures while making visits to the cell-room of faith. 

    Our faith must change our cultures. Jesus came to set people free. Free from the powers and principalities that rule this world. Free from the power of sin and death. Free from the darkness that clouds the minds of people, preventing them from seeing the light of the world, Jesus Christ!

    Go, be the light, the light set on the hill. Reflect his glory in everything you do and say. 

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    Many discipleship programs exist in the Church, yet, people still struggle to overcome their old worldviews and cultures.
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    Sometimes, I think the Church, in general, has been and is often very simplistic in its approach to discipleship and life in the Kingdom of God. There is a tendency to emphasize the knowledge of the faith over being able to live the gospel.

    I do not believe the Church overall, is teaching anything wrong and leading people astray. I think the Church wants to see people saved. I believe it wants people living righteously and go to their reward in heaven when they die.

    Nevertheless, the Church does seem to have given up teaching that God is in charge of it all, not just our religious life. It has let the world set the agenda for what we know and believe. 

    The world likes to tell us that if God had created all, the universe is just functioning now on its own. If we as people are going to get ahead, we must do so through our efforts to understand reality and deal with it. Our faith is good for helping us to live as good people, but it doesn’t help to deal with real things like this coronavirus we are facing today. It doesn’t deal with the production of food; with mining and the industrial complexes, we need to survive in the modern world. 

    Our worldviews and cultures reflect the reality that we are social people—we live with others and must exist together. Humanity has created these worldviews and cultures to be successful at creating working societies. 

    Culture is what we make of the world.

    Worldview is the deeply held belief system that informs all our interactions with the world around us. It is what our cultures are built upon, and it is why having a biblical worldview is so essential for a Christian.

    The biblical worldview accepts that God made man. He made him in his image. God gave man a brain, and it is unique in nature.

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    The human brain is unique: Our remarkable cognitive capacity has allowed us to invent the wheel, build the pyramids and land on the moon. In fact, scientists sometimes refer to the human brain as the “crowning achievement of evolution.”

    But what, exactly, makes our brains so special? Some leading arguments have been that our brains have more neurons and expend more energy than would be expected for our size, and that our cerebral cortex, which is responsible for higher cognition, is disproportionately large—accounting for over 80 percent of our total brain mass.

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/what-makes-our-brains-special/

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    The image of God overcomes the naturalistic worldviews.
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    I am not making a simplistic response, but we must understand, when people want to exclude God from their understanding of reality, they will look for any possible evidence and even create it! Our trouble is that without a biblical worldview, we as Christians can be open to their arguments. We have the truth, and we must know it.

    If we observe nature, we at the variety of life we see humbles us. God thought about all of that.Since God made us in his image and our brains represent that image, what are our minds capable of? If people of this world create and do what they do with their brains, what could be done by people who are born again and in a relationship with the One who designed that brain?

    Why do so many Christians live without using their brains? Without accepting their identity of being in Christ and being the image of God?

    Again, Romans 12:1-2,

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    And so dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all he has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice—the kind he will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship him. Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect. Rom 12:1-2

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    The people of faith do not only have the Word of God but the One who inspired it. 

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    But for us, there is one God, the Father, by whom all things were created, and for whom we live. And there is one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things were created, and through whom we live. However, not all believers know this. 1 Cor 8:6-7a

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    For there is one body and one Spirit, just as you have been called to one glorious hope for the future. There is one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who is over all, in all, and living through all. Eph 4:4-6

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    In the nation of Zambia, with people claiming to hold to the same belief system to the extent of being 85.5% of the population, what can that nation accomplish?!! 

    What more can it accomplish when they are Spirit-filled children of God?

    How we can be free from the power of culture, how we can win the battle for our minds, and become disciples of Christ. After this long path to get there, let me say the answer is: we think. We use the mind God has given each of us.

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    All Scripture references are from The New Living Translation.

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  • Christian response to the coronavirus pandemic

    Christian response to the coronavirus pandemic

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    How should Christians respond to this crisis of the Coronavirus Pandemic?

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    (This is the script for the radio program, Battle for the Mind: The need for developing a biblical worldview, that was broadcasted Sunday, March 22, 2020, on Radio Christian Voice, the largest Christian radio station in Zambia.)

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    Kunda: Coronavirus! Coronavirus! The world seems to be in major upheaval over the Coronavirus. How does having a biblical worldview affect how Christians deal with a major health crisis such as this?
    David: I don’t think many of us have seen anything like this in our lifetimes.
    How is the world responding to this quickly spreading virus? What do we see and hear daily in the media as to what people are doing?
    Fear. Fear is evident around the world. Fear that is based on what? It’s the kind of fear that is based on the fear of darkness, of sounds not associated with sources we know; of strange smelling foods; of people who look and act very different than ourselves; of anything that is not familiar.
    Fear. Where did this virus come from? How is it spreading? Why is there no vaccine? Now that it is in Zambia, what will happen? Will it kill me? Will it hurt me for life? What will happen to me when I get sick with it? Who will help me?
    Our focus in this program on the need for developing a biblical worldview is more relevant to this issue than you might expect. How a person perceives the realities around him or her selves, is based completely on what a person has made the source of their total allegiance for living, their worldview.
    Remember, folks, thinking and behavior are based on worldviews. What we are witnessing today reflects the worldviews held by good men and women who are now being confronted by an unknown new calamity. Worldviews help us to understand, explain and place into known categories new things that come into our lives.
    And situations like this can tell us a great deal about the worldviews people have.
    How a Christian responds today, tells the people around them if Christianity is any different than other philosophies or religions that we find. Sadly, many Christians show evidence they are guided by worldviews developed in the world that is separated from God and determined by sin. Many Christians are showing fear and even a little panic.
    We believe that a biblical worldview is a comprehensive explanation of reality that is rooted in the Word of God, the Bible.
    God does have words that help us to deal with the events of this world.
    Our faith as Christians is not just focused on personal devotion and reverence to our religious belief in God.
    Our faith is comprehensive because it is focused on the One who is the Word:

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    In the beginning the Word already existed. The word was with God, and the Word was God. He existed in the beginning with God. God created everything through him, and nothing was created except through him. The Word gave life to everything that was created, and his life brought light to everyone. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness can never extinguish it. John 1:1-5

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    Jesus upholds all creation:

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    The Son radiates God’s own glory and expresses the very character of God, and he sustains everything by the mighty power of his command. When he had cleansed us from our sins, he sat down in the place of honor at the right hand of the majestic God in heaven.
    And:
    He existed before anything else, and he holds all creation together. Christ is also the head of the church which is his body. Col. 1:17-18

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    To all of you who are listening this morning, GOD IS STILL ON THE THRONE!! GOD IS STILL GOD!!
    Let me ask you, is anything outside of the understanding of God? Of Jesus? Anything? Diseases?
    Nothing, I repeat, nothing is outside of his creation of which he holds ALL together.
    A biblical worldview knows that nothing passes by God. He doesn’t miss anything. He understands it all. And He upholds it all together. God is God and he is a good God.

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    Why does God allow suffering and calamities?

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    Kunda: The question a lot of people have is why God allows these bad things that can harm us? People in general and Christians specifically.
    David: And there are other related questions:
    If God loves his creation so much, why doesn’t he just intervene and prevent so many of the great crises that humanity has faced and will face?
    If healing is a spiritual gift given to the Church, why doesn’t God heal everyone?
    And a biblical worldview looks to the Bible for answers to these and the other related questions we have. From the Bible, we understand that God created all and had a perfect plan for all. What he made he said was good. It was never part of God’s intention that the problems we see existing in the world today would be there. Even in the final book, Revelations, we read

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    Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the old heaven and the old earth had disappeared….He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone for ever. Rev. 21:1,4.

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    So,what we are experiencing now in the world was not his plan. God did not design sickness and disease and plan for them to trouble his creation. He did not plan for calamities to strike our lives. However, it is quite obvious to anyone alive that we face bad things in life.
    The Bible tells us clearly that the source of these problems is Sin. Adam was able to make choices and he chose poorly, to disobey God and bring a break between the Creator and the Creation. God then cursed Adam and his progeny and that curse fell upon the physical creation, too.

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    And to the man he said, “Since you listen to your wife and ate from the tree whose fruit I commanded you not to eat, the ground is cursed because of you. All your life you will struggle to scratch a living from it. It will grow thorns and thistles for you, thought you will eat of its grains.” Gen. 3:17-18

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    Folks, God created good and Man spoiled it through disobedience. Today creation suffers from the resulting curse.

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    Against its will, all creation was subjected to God’s curse. Rom 8:20
    For we know that all creation has been groaning as in the pains of childbirth right up to the present time. Rom 8:22

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    However, somewhere along in our existence, we have developed the idea that we have a right not to have suffering in our lives. We don’t deserve to suffer. Some of the teachings that are found in Churches today in Zambia emphasize that as God’s people, we are not to experience suffering, that we are above that in Christ as the children of God. We are told we have a right to prosper and not suffer, to be healed and not be sick.
    Where could this emphasis on our rights come from?
    The Fall, when humanity chose to place itself on the throne, or in our worldview terminology, at the core of our existence. When our self became the focus of our ultimate allegiance.

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    The Kingdom of God has come, yet not in its fullness.

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    Kunda: Are you saying that suffering is part of life? It is just something that we can expect to experience?
    David: It was not part of creation. Suffering is a result of the Fall and sin. Jesus came to reverse the curse of the Fall and initiate the kingdom of God to be again on earth. For the time being, yes, the curse remains.
    Jesus came proclaiming the kingdom of God has come. It has come, it has begun, but not in its fullness. When it does, when Jesus returns to restore all of creation to the kingdom, suffering will end, but not until then.
    At this time, we have the gift from the Father, the Holy Spirit, as an earnest payment, a down payment of the perfect bodies we will have in heaven.

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    While we live in these earthly bodies, we groan and sigh, but it’s not that we want to die and get rid of these bodies that clothe us. Rather, we want to put on our new bodies so that these dying bodies will be swallowed up by life. God himself has prepared us for this, and as a guarantee he has given us his Holy Spirit. So we are always confident, even though we know that as long as we live in these bodies we are not at home with the Lord. For we live by believing and not be seeing. 2 Cor 5:4-8

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    God expects that we understand that for now, in these bodies, things are not perfect. He has given us the Holy Spirit to make things better, but they are not yet perfect. The Holy Spirit’s presence is a foretaste, a guarantee of the perfection of life with God in heaven will be like. Therefore, with this knowledge, we should not live in fear of the troubles on earth. Though we may experience some, diseases such as coronavirus are not the end of our lives.

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    Christian reponses to earlier plagues have changed history.

     

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    Kunda: Once we understand that as Christians our response to something like the coronavirus is not to be fear, what should our response be?
    David: The church has had to face severe plagues from early in its history. During the third century, a great plague, the Antonine plague, struck the Roman Empire and lands beyond its boundaries. Death was everywhere. It was one of the greatest recorded pandemics until then. At the peak of the outbreak, about 5,000 people were dying every day in the city of Rome, alone!!! Over 2/3s of the city died.
    What about the Christians?
    There is a journal in the United States, it is a very secular journal, and it has published on 13 March, an article that talks about the historical response of the Church/Christians to pandemics. I want to read a section from that article.

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    The Christian response to plagues begins with some of Jesus’s most famous teachings: “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”; “Love your neighbor as yourself”; “Greater love has no man than this, that he should lay down his life for his friends.” Put plainly, the Christian ethic in a time of plague considers that our own life must always be regarded as less important than that of our neighbor.
    During plague periods in the Roman Empire, Christians made a name for themselves. Historians have suggested that the terrible Antonine Plague of the 2nd century, which might have killed off a quarter of the Roman Empire, led to the spread of Christianity, as Christians cared for the sick and offered a spiritual model whereby plagues were not the work of angry and capricious deities but the product of a broken Creation in revolt against a loving God.
    But the more famous epidemic is the Plague of Cyprian, named for a bishop who gave a colorful account of this disease in his sermons. Probably a disease related to Ebola, the Plague of Cyprian helped set off the Crisis of the Third Century in the Roman world. But it did something else, too: It triggered the explosive growth of Christianity. Cyprian’s sermons told Christians not to grieve for plague victims (who live in heaven), but to redouble efforts to care for the living. His fellow bishop Dionysius described how Christians, “Heedless of danger … took charge of the sick, attending to their every need.”
    Nor was it just Christians who noted this reaction of Christians to the plague. A century later, the actively pagan Emperor Julian would complain bitterly of how “the Galileans” would care for even non-Christian sick people, while the church historian Pontianus recounts how Christians ensured that “good was done to all men, not merely to the household of faith.” The sociologist and religious demographer Rodney Stark claims that death rates in cities with Christian communities may have been just half that of other cities.
    (https://foreignpolicy.com/2020/03/13/christianity-epidemics-2000-years-should-i-still-go-to-church-coronavirus/)

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    Emperor Julian was embarrassed of how the Christians completely out-shown his fellow non-Christian Helenists. Stark went on to write,

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    “for all that [Julian] urged pagan priests to match these Christian practices, there was little or no response because there were no doctrinal bases or traditional practices for them to build upon.”
    (https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/what-early-church-teach-coronavirus/)

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    The biblicala worldview makes a difference in dealing with life.

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    Kunda: So, plagues and mass outbreaks of disease are not a new thing in history. And it looks like Christians have helped a great deal in dealing with them.
    David: Yes, because it has the doctrinal bases and traditional practices from which to build a response.
    The biblical worldview provides the foundation for our Christian response to all troubles and even this coronavirus that is knocking on the doors of our nation.
    Jesus taught us:

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    You have heard the law that says, ‘Love your neighbour’ and hate your enemy. But I say, love your enemies! Pray for those who persecute you! In that way you will be acting as true children of your Father in heaven. For he gives his sunlight to both the evil and the good, and he sends rain on the just and the unjust alike. If you love only those who love you, what reward is there for that? Even corrupt tax collectors do that much. I you are kind only to your friends, how are you different from anyone else? Even pagans do that. But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect. Mt 5:43-48
    And:
    Do to others whatever you would like them to do to you. This is the essence of all that is taught in the law and the prophets. Mt. 7:12
    And:
    This is my commandment: love each other in the same way I have loved you. There is no greater love than to lay down one’s life for one’s friends. Jn 15:12-13

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    The worldview foundations of the people of the world is a focus on self leading to actions of self-preservation over all else. You can see the pictures and hear the reports of hoarding taking place in many countries. Take care of me is the first thing.
    The Christian response must be different, reflecting the God we believe in, the new life we have in Christ Jesus, and the presence of the Holy Spirit in us.
    We should have no fear that overcomes our right thinking and our faith. The peace of Christ should rule in our hearts.
    Based upon our faith, we should act.

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    Kunda: What should we do?
    David: We should obey the guidelines put forth to us by our government and health officials.
    Then we should look to see the opportunities we have to serve those in need around us.

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    Suppose you see a brother or sister who has no food or clothing, and you say, “Good-bye and have a good day; stay warm and eat well”—but then you don’t give that person any food or clothing. What good does that do?
    So you see, faith by itself isn’t enough. Unless it produces good deeds, it is dead and useless.
    Now someone may argue, “Some people have faith; others have good deeds.” But I say, “How can you show me your faith if you don’t have good deeds? I will show you my faith by my good deeds.” James 2:15-18

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    Even if we do not have much in things to share, we can share our help.

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    And I have been a constant example of how you can help those in need by working hard. You should remember the words of the Lord Jesus: ‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ Acts 20:35

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    At this point, the coronavirus has not hit our nation the ways it has hit so many others. We are relatively calm here. But for how long, we are not really sure. This is a virus, and virus know of no boundaries. They go until they stop.
    Our response as Christians needs to be prepared even now as we look ahead.
    How is the state of our faith?
    Are we practicing good sanitation in our homes? Teaching our children?
    Is the Church giving information to its communities on how to be prepared? The steps we can take as individuals, families, and communities? Are we learning and telling others about the precautions we can take to avoid spreading this or any other virus that comes our way?
    Churches must be aggressive in teaching good sanitation for the home and community.
    Churches need to promote loving each other, but be aggressive about social distancing, keeping a healthy distance from one another when the virus is present.
    Check on those you know have weaknesses or may be in poor health. Make note of the elderly around you who may not have family nearby. They are there. Check on them.
    Does this put you at risk? Perhaps. But when you practice the primary personal sanitation routines, you are doing what you can to avoid the major routes of infection.

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    Kunda: Again, time is reaching an end. Any closing words?
    David: We’ll be watching the developments in the week to come and if we need to address this issue more, we will. Until next week,

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    Guard your heart above all else, for it determines the course of your life. Pro. 4:3

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    All Scripture references are from The New Living Translation.

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  • Battle for the Mind

    Battle for the Mind

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    In January, I began the second year of hosting a 20-minute program on Radio Christian Voice called, “Battle for the Mind: The need for developing a biblical worldview.” This is a joint work between The Worldview Institute of Zambia and Emmaus Road Ministries. The focus of the program is to educate the Christian community in Zambia about the need to develop a biblical worldview in the process of maturing as a disciple of Christ. The worldview a person lives by, that was received from their culture before they became a Christian, is at odds with the new life as a child of God. Romans 12:2 says, “Don’t copy the behavior and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect,” (NLT). Though it is not a unique problem to Zambia, perhaps the single most stumbling block for most believers here is the baggage of their old worldview that they bring into their new Christian life. It is impossible to try to live as a Christian with the core system of understanding that was developed in the world enslaved to sin.

    Through this program, we are reaching the nation of Zambia with the message that our way of understanding and interpreting the world we encounter–our worldview–as a Christian must be aligned with the truth contained in the Bible. God is God, the creator of all. If we believe that, nothing exists outside of his being and is understandable to us as we know his truths. Christianity is a total philosophy of life, not a partial one to be relegated to just a moral religious segment of life. The New Wine must have new wineskins. For Zambia, the ability to think and behave according to a biblical worldview is essential. We are so grateful for this opportunity to reach the nation every week.

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  • Thank You

    Thank You

    [et_pb_section admin_label=”section”][et_pb_row admin_label=”row”][et_pb_column type=”1_3″][et_pb_image admin_label=”Image” src=”http://www.emmausrdministries.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/Lusaka-south-David-teaching-Thu-pm.jpg” show_in_lightbox=”off” url_new_window=”off” use_overlay=”off” animation=”left” sticky=”off” align=”left” force_fullwidth=”off” always_center_on_mobile=”on” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid”] [/et_pb_image][/et_pb_column][et_pb_column type=”2_3″][et_pb_text admin_label=”Text” background_layout=”light” text_orientation=”left” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid”]

    Dear Reverend Becker,

     

    Greetings to you in the Lord’s precious name.

     

    As you take time to meet family and friends in the United States of America, I wish to encourage you for the great contribution that you have made to the church in Zambia since your coming to this country several years ago.

    As a result of the many trainings[sic] that were organized by the Evangelical Fellowship of Zambia (a Christian evangelical umbrella body), it was a great blessing to have your invaluable participation and input into the lives of our hundreds of our local pastors in urban as well as rural Zambia.

    Thank you for spending so much of your time to share on various topics on the mission of the church to the pastors. Many of the pastors have not had formal training from a Bible School or Theological Seminary and your time with a team of facilitators all across our country imparted essential biblical knowledge, leadership and administrative skills to our people. This has greatly impacted on our churches with corresponding quality of ministry and improved leadership and character development.

    You have a strong understanding of the Zambia’s scenario and spiritual landscape that has enabled you to contextualise a lot of your exposure and professional ministerial qualifications into the local scenario of our country. As a result, it is such a blessing that many of our local pastors can always call on you to for guidance knowing that you provide a great contribution into their lives and the work of ministry. Your stay and ministry has been such a great blessing to the spiritual leadership of our churches because they are facing regular changes in their communities because of a fragile socio-economic environment with a rising inflation, huge unemployment, high poverty levels, and increasing number of false prophets. Developing church leaders in such a situation could have been a tremendous task. But thank God for adding a dimension that has helped to re-align the thinking of most of our pastors that you have interacted with to make change the mind-set and make the Bible teaching a relevant part of people’s lives thereby modelling Christ in the market place in being salt of the earth and light of the world.

    I am particularly grateful also that you have also been able to challenge the local pastors against dependency and instead to prepare them to look inwardly and become self –reliant. This has greatly helped the churches and their pastors to work out mechanisms that make their ministries self-sustaining. As we have moved all across the country, it is increasingly becoming common to see local churches gathering in decent structures as believers worship the Lord with great joy and awesome celebrations.

    As a leader of the Evangelical movement in our country, I am aware that we still have a lot of work to do because as the work grows, the challenge for quality leadership development is ever increasing. Therefore I wish to encourage you that while we are thankful for so much that has been achieved in the church today, there is so much to be done as we look into the future of the church in Zambia. I am trusting that you will always be available to contribute to the ever growing work among the evangelicals and continue to participate in various ways in the equipping of the body of Christ and transformation of our nation.

    Thank you so much for being such a great blessing in my personal life as well as in the lives of many Zambian pastors, church leaders and laity. The contribution that you make in the Bible School such as Rhema Bible Training Centre–Zambia and informal trainings[sic] in workshops and seminars throughout our country and personal interactions with pastors is a great service in the body of Christ. Your continued availability for equipping church leaders and pastors will be a great blessing to the growth of the church in Zambia.

    May God richly blessing you in all that you do for the Lord’s glorious Kingdom.

    Much love to you.

     

     

    Pukuta N. Mwanza (Rev.)
    Executive Director
    Evangelical Fellowship of Zambia
    Lusaka, Zambia

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  • Getting around

    Getting around

    [et_pb_section admin_label=”section”][et_pb_row admin_label=”row”][et_pb_column type=”2_3″][et_pb_text admin_label=”Text” background_layout=”light” text_orientation=”left” use_border_color=”on” border_color=”#dd3333″ border_style=”solid” border_width=”8px”] It’s getting on to nearly 20 years old! But there are few vehicles that can do what it has done and hopefully, will continue to do! However, who am I to be an objective commentator? I am a little smitten as a Land Rover owner, not really of sound mind anymore, given to regular bouts of McGyver-ism intertwined with Mitty-isms.  Many of my “friends” entertain themselves with jokes that they think are at my expense. I know better. Pure envy. That is the real root of their jokes. For they all know that with a generous amount of love and care, my Landie can go anywhere and survive just about anything. I think they are just abusive with their vehicles. They bring them home, beaten, dirty, park them and then get in and go again, not checking all of the bolts and screws, the belts and seals, doing a thorough pre-drive check list (not unlike what I always did before taking off in a plane as a pilot!). They don’t even care enough to carry those special spare parts that could be needed when deep in the bush: oil, water, belts, bolts, tubing, duct tape, bailing wire and such. My old girl sometimes likes to have special treats when far from civilization. Don’t we all? Anyway, bought new when we moved to Zambia in 1997, much to the chagrin of my sons, I am still driving the Landie. Does she need to be replaced? Well, in the words of my Land Rover mechanic friend down in Livingstone, “it is time that [I] consider retiring her from daily driving.” The daily use in city is wearing and tearing on the mechanics, but with a little attention to a couple of items, it could still be reliable (relatively speaking) for longer distance trips. It has taken us over a lot of African roads and track and places where there were no roads. Comfortably? That is a relative question, too. But I have always made it home. (Though a couple of times at the end of a tow-bar!) [/et_pb_text][et_pb_divider admin_label=”Divider” color=”#ffffff” show_divider=”off” divider_style=”solid” divider_position=”top” hide_on_mobile=”on” /][et_pb_image admin_label=”Image” src=”http://www.emmausrdministries.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/David-repairing-brake-line.jpg” show_in_lightbox=”off” url_new_window=”off” use_overlay=”off” animation=”left” sticky=”off” align=”left” force_fullwidth=”off” always_center_on_mobile=”on” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid” /][/et_pb_column][et_pb_column type=”1_3″][et_pb_image admin_label=”Image” src=”http://www.emmausrdministries.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Land-Rover-sand-track.jpg” show_in_lightbox=”off” url_new_window=”off” use_overlay=”off” animation=”left” sticky=”off” align=”left” force_fullwidth=”off” always_center_on_mobile=”on” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid”] [/et_pb_image][et_pb_image admin_label=”Image” src=”http://www.emmausrdministries.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/Land-Rover-sand-track-2.jpg” show_in_lightbox=”off” url_new_window=”off” use_overlay=”off” animation=”left” sticky=”off” align=”left” force_fullwidth=”off” always_center_on_mobile=”on” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid”] [/et_pb_image][et_pb_image admin_label=”Image” src=”http://www.emmausrdministries.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/a-regular-position.jpg” show_in_lightbox=”off” url_new_window=”off” use_overlay=”off” animation=”left” sticky=”off” align=”left” force_fullwidth=”off” always_center_on_mobile=”on” use_border_color=”off” border_color=”#ffffff” border_style=”solid” /][/et_pb_column][/et_pb_row][/et_pb_section]