Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Water for Living from Our Living God


It is winter in Xai-Xai with temps ranging from mid 50s to the upper 70s.  We have experienced an uncharacteristically large volume of rain this winter which caused our water collection tanks at the church to fill up.  Our people are starting to understand Celebration's concept of "Serve The City" and suggested that we open the tanks to allow people from the community collect water.  Women will otherwise have to walk about 1.5mi up and down hills on sandy roads with the water balanced on their heads.  We are praying that God will open up a well on our property so that we can give water to the community with regularity.

Monday, July 18, 2011

5 Tips for Buying CarePoint Food

We purchase thousands of pounds of food every month to feed our 500+ kids at the Care Point.  Here's Diane's top five things to know when buying food for the Care Points:

5.  The Indian shop owners will always negotiate if you show them the money.  They even sweat just a little bit more when you turn around and start walking away.

4.  Good transport is a must, yes broken down pick-up trucks with bald tires that will carry about 1200 lb of food and a goat will work on a good day.

3.  If you try to buy at noon you will be left outside in the hot sun until the shop opens again at 2.  Everything closes down from 12-2pm here.

2.  She's making a list, checking it twice . . . 

1.  Have a strong back because these dudes weigh over 100lb a bag.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Worship Practice

Tonight I got to spend a lot of time learning a new song in Shangaan, Wa Va Gahna (Jesus Is Ever Shining) with the worship team.  Our staff decided today to start locking the outside gate of the church doors and forgot to give me a key.  We ended up at Joey's place in a small room with great acoustics.  Locked out of my own church, wow, I now know how Jesus feels about some places . . .

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Combatting Cold with Clothing and Blankets

We enjoyed our time in America and were happy to be greeted by cool temperatures in Xai-Xai.  Our first day back to the Care Point it was in the low 60's, windy, and raining.  Many of our kids were in shorts and short-sleeve shirts because they didn't have anything else.  Our church responded by clothing 250 kids and distributing 78 blankets to those in greatest need.

Thanks to all who contribute regularly to make the ministry here more effective.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Xai Xai Mercy Center

This is the Mission of Mercy Newsletter I recently sent for them to forward to sponsors of our kids here.  I thought maybe you would be interested too ...

NEWSLETTER
MZ 002  Xai-Xai, Mozambique
"Pastora" and her kids
Children from all over the community join us for a variety of activities every day at the Mercy Center in Xai-Xai.  Bible Club, exercise programs, life skills training, and nutritious meals five days a week are the basic components of the program.  However, the children receive much more as the staff give of themselves every day to make these orphaned, abandoned, and vulnerable kids feel like they belong.
Singing "Father Abraham"
Diane Stauber, who serves as the oversight director of this Mercy Center, is an American missionary and pastor’s wife of the host church in Xai-Xai.  She has taken personal responsibility for ensuring quality spiritual development for the children.  She meets with them every Wednesday for Bible Club where the children get to hear and act out bible stories in a new learning environment that they seldom get to experience.  Many of the children say Bible Club is one of their favorite activities because they get to sing, dance, learn stories from the bible, act out stories, and do arts and crafts.  Learning in this way is different than how they are instructed in public school where they would normally sit in a crowded classroom and simply repeat back what the teacher is trying to teach.  Children learn much more effectively when they can actively participate in any teaching activity so we do our best to get them involved when possible.
Goliath Goes Down!
Recently the children learned about David and Goliath, which is an important story for them as they have many big challenges ahead of them in life.  After singing songs a group of children from the Mercy Center were selected to dramatize the story.  As Diane read to the children, each of the characters began acting out their part.   Goliath stood on a flimsy green chair and enjoyed being the big powerful warrior.  He swung his sword, a long stick from outside, with great enthusiasm as he commanded David with his threats.  Then, as David, actually a girl in this case, swung his stone and hurled it at the giant, Goliath jumped off the chair, rolled off the stage, and acted out the part of a man who was slowly dying.  All 200+ children laughed and cheered wildly and wanted their turn to act out the parts as well.  So the children came up as we retold the story another ten times.  That’s one story they will never forget.
A major challenge facing the Mercy Center is getting running water to the facility.  Currently the Mercy Center depends on having water delivered by truck, poured into a large holding container, and retrieved with a bucket and rope.  We have explored many options including drilling our own well on site, but are still far from solving the problem.  Lack of running water has kept us from having better restroom facilities which has also delayed the start of the pre-school program.  Please pray with us that this problem will be quickly resolved.
Despite many challenges they face, the children you sponsor are thriving in all areas of life.  Thank you for your continued support.
Pastor Mel Stauber
Igreja Celebração, Host Church Pastor
Co-Director Mercy Center MZ002 Xai-Xai, Mozambique

Monday, April 25, 2011

Building the House of Micas

A highlight of the heart of Celebration Church is to serve those around us, to do random acts of kindness that will impact people for eternity.  To bring practicality to the message on serving we rebuilt a local house of one of our church kids.  

Micas, the child who lives there, is not the most beautiful, cute, or princess like little girl.  Nor is she the child that initially makes you want to grab her in your arms and take her home with you.  But her beauty shows in her faithfulness to the church, her personality, her genuine smile, and genuine appreciation of God and the church.  I suppose it’s because I so deeply love this little girl that I became a little teary eyed walking into her home.  I could plainly see the community outside through the walls of her house and cringed at the thought of what it has been like these past several months with all the rain we have received pouring through their walls and roof.  When I told her mom we were going to rebuild the house she wept with crocodile tears of appreciation.
We've experienced some of the first cold nights leading into the fall this past week and I'm thankful that I'm a part of a church that has cared for "the least of these"l

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Xai Xai

Arve, Mel, Rachel, Diane
 Vi er i Xai Xai og besoeker Sean's slektninger som er misjonaerer her. Koselige folk. De planter menighet, driver ledertrening og matutdeling for foreldreloese barn. De planlegger aa starte foerskole for dem.

De bor rett ved havet, og i dag spiste vi lunsj paa en restaurant ved havet.
Rachel 10

Matthew

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Training Africa's Leaders

This past Tuesday night I walked into an atmosphere of dancing, laughter, and singing African style.  Pastors and church leaders from the deep bush that are part of Celebration Mozambique had arrived and were excited about our first leaders' conference.

Getting Here
Traveling from the remote villages of Maqueze, Panda, Helene, and Choke, most of the church leaders traveled 4-8 hours in the backs of trucks or in crowded vans through heavy rains to be here.  No one complained, but came off their ride with a smile on their face and a song in their heart.  Twenty churchleaders representing seven different churchplants in the country sides of Mozambique all came together to celebrate.  Twenty leaders representing the beginning of what God is doing through Celebration Church's campus in Africa.

Borrowing heavily from Pastor Joe's message on the Queen of Sheba's visit to Solomon's temple, I shared a message of the importance of the local church.  We talked about the many things that make an excellent experience for those who visit that don't know God, then broke into groups and started making plans of how things will be different.  Again, lots of laughter and singing.

Accommodations?
I'm humbled that all of our leaders sleep in small reed huts, usually with nothing between them and the bare ground but a reed mat.  We provided mats and air mattresses.  After service they transformed the church into a hotel for the next three days.

When I arrived Wednesday morning I chuckled at all the laundry that was hainging on the bushes and trees surrounding the church.  They had been up since 5:30am washing clothes and preparing for the day.  It was a bit of a humorous scene until I realized that they had to wash their clothes because between what was spread out over the bushes and what they were wearing, that was all the clothing they owned.  These people remind me of the woman who gave one mite that caused Jesus to notice her.  They may not have much, but they give everything they have to serve God and I'm certain that they have God's attention.

Supernatural Connections
A bit overwhelmed at the thought of preparing nine trainings to take place over four days was a bit daunting.  We are continually amazed to experience that when we take a step of faith, God meets us every time.  God supernaturally connected us to one of Mozambique's leading speakers on leadership in the church who graciously came and worked with our people.  Additionally, the director of Youth for Christ shared about touching the next generation, and two others stepped in to share on prayer and the pastor's calling.  What started as a unilateral download turned out to be a well rounded conference.

Activities
So we taught on Servolution, served the neighborhood by rebuilding a broken down home for one of our kids, had a movie night that completely filled the church forcing people to watch from outside the windows and doors, and saw God heal a man who has not been able to talk for nearly a year.  I suppose this was a pretty good start.

As we said our good-byes Saturday morning, the people all shared how grateful they were that Celebration Church was called to be here and that they can be a part of what God is doing through our church.  More laughter, more singing . . .

If you are a part of Celebration Church, remember that this is part of your family.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

“Would You Be Willing”


In the Beginning
As this is my first blog I am understandably a little long winded.  Many of you have asked me to share our story of how we got to Xai-Xai, Mozambique, Africa, from Austin, TX, USA.  So in a few words, here it is.  I’ll be brief in future blogs.
Our Journey to Xai-Xai
Having been in Africa for two months, we left the safety of our friends and the city of Maputo on a Sunday morning, traveling for the first time on our own in a developing foreign country to the city of Xai-Xai where  we didn’t know one person, didn’t know the language, and didn’t have a house where we would live or even a place where we would stay that night.  We were on our way to start a church where we had no leaders, no connections, no music, no bibles, and no way of getting the word out that we were there.  All we had with us were our children and six suitcases that contained most of everything we owned and a word we felt was from God.  The sense of adventure became very real.  Driving on the tattered road through fields of sugar cane, broken down cities, tall ant hills, tropical foliage of coconut, palm, cashew, mango, and marula trees, passing cars and trucks worn from being in a war torn land, and passing groups of people walking, playing, biking, standing and sitting along the narrow roadside, my knuckles were white from the grip I had on the steering wheel that day.  We had sold everything . . . . everything . . . .  in America to come to a land that God would show us, putting all that would be our future into His hands.
Would You Be Willing?
Ah, Xai-Xai.  God had moved on my heart right here only six months earlier when He asked if I would be willing to come and do this work.  
“Would I be WILLING?  Hmm, I don’ think so God.”
The intensity that gripped my heart that night in December of 2009 was similar to the night terrors that had haunted me as a child that left me wide awake, tight chested, breathing fast and heavy, and profusely sweating.  That night took me to the very core of my faith in God as I wondered, “Would I really be willing to leave all of my family, friends, things we have accumulated, church, and country?  Would I be willing to ask my wife to leave her profession of 20 years, all her friends, her family, her dreams, and the safety of Austin, TX to start a church on the other side of the world?  And what about our kids?  Would I be willing to rip them out of the nest of friends they had just become comfortable knowing and from the school that we had invested so much into knowing, helping, and where we had been seeing so much favor?  What of their grandparents who have no other grandkids to grow old with?”  
I heard the truth of my heart tell God, “No way” and suddenly realized that I was ashamed.  I had sung the songs in the safety of my church for years that now pounded my mind, “I Will Follow You”, “Lead Me”, “Take, Take, Take It All”  as my heart grew sick in wondering if I had lived a life that was a complete fake.  I had for all my life said I would go anywhere and do anything for God.  I had prayed and asked God to use me in any way that would benefit His Kingdom.  I had declared that my life was completely surrendered to Him for over 30 years.  And when it came down to it, I realized there was a big question mark over my head.  Interestingly enough, I didn’t sense that God was asking us to actually go to Africa.  He was simply asking if I would be willing, and in that willingness, I couldn’t say yes.  
Jacob was said to have wresteled with and angel.  I think I now know what that night was like for him.  I beat my pillow, screamed into my bed, cried tears until my head ached, tossed and turned over and over and over.  I wanted to know what it was like to walk in faith but had never mustered the courage to put myself in a place where faith was put to a test regularly.  When I finally got to the point where I could honestly say, “Yes God, I would be willing” the scene changed.  My prayer before that night was, “I want to do something big for your Kingdom.”  From that night my prayer changed to something like, “God, you asked if I would be willing and You and I both now know that I am.  So here am I God, send me.”
Prayer and Covering
So we took it to prayer.  Celebration Church had just entered into a season of 21 days of prayer and fasting and Pastors Joe and Lori Champion agreed to use this as a time to seek God’s wisdom on sending us to be the first international church plant campus of our growing church.
We love our pastors and desire to live a life filled with loyalty and commitment to the local church.  We entered into this season understanding that if God were to send us to Africa that it was not a work of our own, but an extension of the great things that were going on in Austin.  We have since seen missionaries come and go from this place and have seen that those who enter the mission field without a covering either don’t make it, or become offensive to the communities they serve.
Pastors Joe and Lori indeed felt also that God was sending us to Africa and we began our preparations to move in three months.
When You Know, You Just Know
We have come through many trials over the last eight months in Mozambique and I am thankful for that dark night of the soul where I wrestled with God for the very existence of my faith.  In the most challenging of times I go back to that night and find myself comforted, knowing that our future is secure because it is in His hands. 
In the short time we have been here we have seen God do so many miraculous things!  We saw an empty pot of rice miraculously be filled again with enough food to feed over 100 kids.  We have seen sick children, just moments away from death, be completely restored to health.  We have seen God surround us with leaders and give us favor with the government.  We have seen our children grow in their own faith, responsibility, and scholastic ability.  We have seen Celebration Church, Xai-Xai campus grow from a small gathering of six people on a hot Sunday afternoon to become a vibrant church in the community.
Sure there have been peaks and valleys just like there are in any life in any country.  The one thing we have NEVER done is question God. We have never wondered if we are supposed to be here or not.  When you know, you just know.  And in that knowing you can endure just about anything.
What about you?  Maybe you have sung the many songs I have sung, and perhaps you have prayed the prayers I have prayed asking God to do with you what He will.  When it comes to that moment and you sense the question, “Would you be willing to go?”, no matter where that “go” means, where does your heart take you?