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Sunday
Dec202009

Introducing Josiah Michael Trump

~ Josiah Michael Trump ~We are pleased to be able to introduce Josiah Michael Trump! Josiah was born on Saturday at noon exactly after about 20 hours of labor and 3 and a half hours of pushing. That's right three and a half hours of pushing. Krista was very politely requesting an epidural after the 2nd hour of pushing but no epidural or entonox (nitrous oxide - laughing gas - and oxygen, commonly used in the UK during delivery) or any other pain medication was available. That's one of those things we knew wouldn't be an option when we decided to deliver Josiah here in Kampala. 

~ A Relieved Krista a Few Hours After Delivery ~ Josiah is a strong, healthy baby boy, weighing in at 7 lbs 0.1oz and measuring 19.7 inches long. The pediatrician put him on oxygen for a few hours because he was in a bit of distress after the prolonged pushing but he didn't like the oxygen tube around his head at all and instead opted to exercise his lungs in other ways. We endured a night at the hospital and gladly checked out on Sunday around 2pm. We could have stayed longer - hospitals are for-profit here and in general you can stay as long as you can pay. You must pay in cash so they don't have to worry about what your insurance will cover. We decided, though, after one night that we would rather enjoy learning about parenting at home, so we checked out and paid our bill.

Josiah is a great little guy. We feel completely lost. At one point I came back into the room and saw him there and my first thought was "Huh - there's a baby there."  Then I realized that baby is entrusted to US to care for! "That's MY baby there!" Welcome to life outside the womb, little man! -Shauen

Tuesday
Dec082009

Making Dinner...While the Power is Out

What it really looked like (no flash)What it should look like (flash)

Monday
Nov302009

November Field Notes Published

Field Notes for the month of November has been published. This month, Field Notes included the following articles:

  • TEE - Preaching
  • Our First Thanksgiving in Uganda
  • Preparing for Baby Trump
  • Facts in Focus - Luganda

Our prayer requests this month include:

  • For the continued health of both Krista and Baby Trump
  • For Baby Trump’s delivery in Kampala in December
  • For comfort as we struggle with homesickness in the Christmas season

And we praise the Lord:

  • For the health of both Krista and Baby Trump thus far
  • For Pastor Jerome’s installation at Kampala Lutheran Congregation
  • For the congregations and individuals who have brought us to tears with their generosity as we prepare for Baby Trump

If you haven't seen it yet, download Field Notes for November 2009 (PDF file, 620k) from thetrumps.org now!

Friday
Nov272009

Our First Thanksgiving in Africa

We had a wonderful first Thanksgiving here in Uganda. While it was more of an international affair (there were Irish, South Africans, Italians, Canadians, Sudanese and Ugandans there besides Americans) it was definitely an American Thanksgiving. I brought green beans, homemade applesauce and pecan pie (had brought the pecans over with me from the States). There was also turkey, mashed potatoes, stuffing, gravy, cranberry sauce, bread, carrot souffle (a yummy substitute for sweet potato casserole), salad, lima beans, onions in cream, apple crisp, and of course, pumpkin pie. We had a lovely time in fellowship with others and the food was amazing. As is traditional for Thanksgiving, we both overate and came away completely stuffed. The only thing that didn't feel like Thanksgiving was the warm weather and the mosquitoes! Well, that and the hum of the generator that we had to speak over due to the power going out. Regardless, we were blessed to share the holiday with friends and have a little taste of home, somthing that I had foolishly been worrying about!  -Krista

Friday
Nov272009

An American Auction...Of a Chicken...After Church

Last Sunday we saw something that we had never seen before. During the service, Pastor Jerome Wamala was installed as the pastor of Kampala Lutheran Church. Afterwards, there was a special offering to raise money for land the church is hoping to purchase in the future. We would also be enjoying a meal together afterwards. However, between the offering and the meal a chicken was brought to the front of the church. It had been donated by a man who wanted to contribute to the special offering and had no money, but did have this chicken. It was announced that the chicken would be auctioned off "American" style, with the money going to the offering. I have to admit, it took Shauen and I the longest time to figure out this American auction. Instead of someone bidding, $1, then someone else $2 and so forth with the highest bidder taking the chicken, someone would bid an amount of money, afterwards someone else would bid an amount of money, sometimes a higher or lower amount than the first bid. This went on and on, with people placing the amount of money they bid in the offering basket. We finally figured out that it wasn't the amount you bid that would get you the chicken, but that whoever the last bidder was, even for 500 shillings ($0.50), would get the chicken. I must say, it was an ingenius was of doing things. If only one person bought the chicken, it probably would have gone for around $10-$20. This way, everyone in the congregation was throwing in amounts ranging from $0.50-$10. As long as no one bid after you, you could get a chicken for as low at $0.50! In the end, the total amount collected was over $100 and the last bidder gave the chicken to Jacent Wamala, the wife of Pastor Wamala, our newly installed pastor. Lots of fun was had by all, especially the Americans trying to figure out the rules of this "American" auction!  -Krista

Wednesday
Nov182009

Christmas Too Early

Every year, I encounter my biggest pet peeve: stores that put up Christmas decorations and start playing Christmas music WAY too early. It absolutely drives me crazy. I don't need Christmas music playing in September! Also, there is a complete skipping of Thanksgiving! I'm all for Christmas decorations and music starting the day after Thanksgiving, and I must admit much to my husband's horror, I love the hustle and bustle of Black Friday. But Christmas starting September/October/November? No thank you! The other week I walk into one of the two big South African stores we have here and what do I see? I see over-the-top, bordering on gaudy, Christmas decorations everywhere! It's the beginning of November, Thanksgiving is still weeks away (although to be fair, Thanksgiving isn't celebrated here so they don't know that rule) and not only are these two stores decorated for Christmas, they are even playing Christmas music! I absolutely loved it!! I can't explain how happy it made me to see this. Now, as I first mentioned, Christmas too early is one of my biggest pet peeves, but here I was happy and excited to see it! In my defense, I am pretty sure that even as Christmas draws near, only maybe a few other stores will start to decorate for Christmas, nothing even compared to how over the top it is in the States. It was just nice to see something that reminds you that the holidays are coming! I wasn't feeling homesick exactly, but it did make me feel a bit more excited about the approaching holidays. I was also excited to see that they have for sale artificial Christmas trees. Now granted, these are the most obvious, fake Christmas trees I have ever seen, but sometimes it just nice to see that you can get even a bad fake tree which is better than nothing! It's the little things that count sometimes.  -Krista

Wednesday
Nov182009

Dyeing our Eggs

Neither Shauen nor I can make omelets. We try, it just always ends up as scrambled eggs with veggies and cheese mixed in (still delicious). We tried once again the other day, and once again the same results. As we sat down to our breakfast, Shauen asked if I noticed something special. I realized that the eggs were yellow! The majority of eggs here have white yolks, you can find and pay extra for organic, yellow-yolk eggs (actually advertised as such) but we typically don't. Apparently while getting the eggs ready for our pseudo-omelet/scrambled eggs, the whiteness of the egg mixture started to drive Shauen a little crazy and he snuck in some yellow food dye so that we could have yellow eggs for breakfast! In the States some people really try avoiding foods with unnatural ingredients such as food dye; here, we add them in ourselves!  -Krista

Tuesday
Nov102009

Pulled Over

Yesterday after I left the Women's Bible Study I attend, I was pulled over by a traffic cop. After coming out of the neighborhood, I needed to turn right, but there was median so I had to go left and shortly afterwards there was a break in the median with an actual turn lane (so extremely rare). I got in the turn lane and made my u-turn. About 50 feet down the road was the policeman who waved me over. The traffic police here just stand on the side of the road, they don't drive police cars and have no radios. I could have tried to ignore him and just kept on driving, but that's a pretty hard thing to do when your American culture has ingrained in you to respect and obey the police. We greeted each other and then I asked if I was not allowed to turn where I did, people make u-turns like that on a road with a median all the time, but the tricky thing is only certain breaks in the median are to be used for u-turns, there are of course no signs to indicate which ones you can use or not use. He told me that where I turned was only for cars turning onto the side street there, not for u-turns. Now, as I mentioned there was an actual turn lane, something very rare, and although I was on a major street, the side street this rare turn lane was for was not impressive. It was barely paved and certainly didn't look like a major thoroughfare. Maybe someone important lives down the road? He asked me to read reason #21 in his ticket book, careless and inappropriate use of a vehicle, fine 40,000sh ($20). I was a bit perturbed at this, it was not a careless u-turn, there were no cars coming. If anything it was just an illegal u-turn. I apologized to him, told him that I didn't live in this area of town and wasn't familiar with it, that there was no sign so I didn't know that I couldn't turn, etc. He showed me his ticket book and pointed out the fines that other people were paying, also 40,000sh. Was this his way of asking for a bribe? If so, it was way too subtle for me. I was tired and maybe a bit nonchalant about the whole thing. I didn't try and bribe him nor did I try to talk my way out of the ticket. While I didn't want to pay a ticket, I figured overall 40,000 wasn't too bad. (later Shauen told me that it would have entailed them impounding my car at that time and taking it to the downtown police station, I would go to the bank, pay the ticket, and then come back and get the car...if I knew all this I don't think I would have been so nonchalant!) In our conversation it came up that my husband was a pastor here (vicar/pastor - it's pretty much the same thing here), I was American and this was my first baby. Who knows what it was that resulted him in letting me go. Maybe he saw I wasn't going to bribe him, maybe because my husband was a pastor, maybe because I'm American, in other words President Obama, or maybe because of my pregnant belly. I like to think it was the pregnant belly that did it!  -Krista

Tuesday
Nov102009

Sigh...He Got Another Haircut

Well, Shauen did it again. He went out and got another not-approved-by-the-wife haircut. The guy doesn't learn! He decided Sunday after church that he couldn't wait another second to get a haircut. I had just settled down to take a nap (haven't been sleeping well) or I would have gone with him. He told me he had seen a place nearby and was just going to walk and check it out. Now there are some Westernish style places around, so I wasn't immediately suspicious. I asked him to promise to pay at least 10,000sh ($5), preferably 15,000-20,000sh ($7.50-$10). In retrospect, this should have aroused my suspicions as I now realize he carefully did not promise to do so. He instead had some carefully worded reply that placated my tired pregnant brain and tricked me into thinking all would be okay. I now have a husband whose entire head of hair has been buzzed off with a #2 clippers. Do you know how short that is?!!! I don't think it's even required to be that short in the military! He could almost be bald it's that short! He was happy because he only paid 3,000sh ($1.50). At least every thing was even this time, that's one positive thing about it. In his defense, he was going to have the guy use the longer clippers on the top of his hair, but instead of starting on the back with the short clippers, he started right on top! He also prevented the guy from shaving off his widow's peak this time as well so that was also really great! He's also excited about the possibility of forming a relationship with his barber. I have to admire him for that, I mean, we're missionaries, that's kinda what we are here to do! However, I selfishly want him to form that relationship with someone who has cut a white person's hair before! I miss my old husband and am still getting used to this stranger I wake up in bed with. He tells me it will grow. I only hope it's long enough by the time baby gets here, I don't want to remember this haircut every time I look at our firstborn's baby pictures! Not to mention the fact that yesterday we went on a date, dinner and a movie (there is one movie theater here). After the movie, as I come waddling out of the bathroom my pregnant belly leading the way, there's a woman, who looked somewhat questionable, hitting on him! Her pick-up line?! I like your hair! Now that's just insult to injury.  -Krista

Tuesday
Nov032009

Feeling a little under the weather?

Around here if you're feeling a little under the weather it's perfectly acceptable to say, "I'm a little coughy." Now, if you're not used to hearing that, you think you heard, "I'm a little coffee," in which case one might reply "What in the world are you talking about?" and your mind quickly runs through the possibilities of how you could possibly have misunderstood the sentence. You want some coffee? You need a little pick-me-up? You're a little what? Or you might be one of those smarty-pants who comes up with a quick response to everything so you say in reply, "I'm a little teapot!"  Trust me on this - as strange of a look as you may have given someone when they make the perfectly reasonable statement "I'm a little coughy," it's nothing compared to how they're going to look at you when you say "I'm a little teapot" in a culture that doesn't have that particular nursery rhyme. Anyway, don't worry about us - we're in good health and hopefully neither of us will be too coughy anytime soon.  -Shauen

Tuesday
Nov032009

Lawnmower!

~a neighbor mowing the lawn with a gas-powered lawnmower~Once in a while some sound drifts through the window and it suddenly occurs to me that I haven't heard that sound here in Uganda. Today while sitting at my living room table with fellow missionary Rev. Jacob Gillard and Ugandan Pastor Jerome Wamala, I realized I was hearing the sound of a lawnmower from the compound next door. They do sell gas lawnmowers here - I've seen them in the store. But they're very expensive. Most people hire someone to come once every week or two and cut their grass with a gas weed-wacker or their gardener mows the lawn with an old-fashioned push reel mower. I'm pretty sure I haven't heard a good ol' gas-powered lawn mower since I arrived. Believe it or not, it's actually a kind of comforting "normal" sound. Honestly, I never expected the sound of a lawnmower to make me feel at home. I guess you can't expect the unexpected. -Shauen

Saturday
Oct312009

October Field Notes Published

Field Notes for the month of October have been published. This month, Field Notes included the following articles:

  • TEE Service Event in Lukonda
  • Ugandan Clergy Roster increases 150%
  • Matongo Seminary & a Visit to Amudatf
  • Photos in Focus - Missionaries on Retreat

Our prayer requests this month include:

  • For the continued health of both Krista and Baby Trump
  • For calls for all three of the new Ugandan pastors
  • For us to be able to celebrate Thanksgiving in some semblance of American tradition

And we praise the Lord:

  • For the health of both Krista and Baby Trump thus far
  • For Samuel, Jerome, and Aaron—Uganda’s 3 new Lutheran pastors
  • For the hard work of our TEE students and the lessons they learned over their service weekend in Lukonda
  • For a successful and rejuvenating retreat

If you haven't seen it yet, download Field Notes for October 2009 (PDF file, 818k) now!

Saturday
Oct312009

A Rainy Sunday

~ Kampala Lutheran Church, on a not so rainy day! ~ Last Sunday, right about the start of the sermon it started to rain. We worship in a large, permanent tent that has been erected over a cement floor. Often the sides are unhooked to let the breeze in so it is not as hot and stuffy inside. So as the rain started, several men jumped up to hook up the sides. Being pregnant, I feel that it is ten to twenty degrees warmer than apparently anyone else, so I was disappointed that the cool breeze from the rain was now shut out. However, not too far into Pastor Wamala's sermon, the rain really started coming down and the wind began to blow the sides of the tent in. It got so bad the sermon had to be stopped and everyone moved to the center of the church. Pastor Wamala handled the interruption quite well and was able to go on, but I have to admit, even with him practically shouting into the microphone it was hard to hear over the roar of the rain. Plus I was a bit distracted angling my chair just right to avoid the many little drips from the ceiling! The power did go out shortly after his sermon (surprised it managed to stay on so long) and then it was extremely hard to hear. We ended the service by singing "How Great Thou Art" accapella to the sound of the rain and it was so incredibly beautiful!  -Krista

Saturday
Oct242009

Amudat and environs in Nakipiripirit

~ Region of Alapat south of Amudat ~

The Pokot people of Amudat live in the Nakapiripirit district in the west of Uganda in the shadow of Mount Kadam. The Amudat area is a tough place to live. The land is harsh and unforgiving. Water is scarce. Vegetation is thin. Trees are stunted. The soil is sandy. The topography is flat. On those rare occasions when it rains, the land floods as the normally-dry creek beds flash-flood carrying the copious runoff to who-knows-where. The Pokot people are pastoralists - mostly raising cattle, goats, or camels. The boys who tend the flocks carry a bow with well-made arrows as protection against lions, hyenas, and raiders who are well-organized and armed, frequently rustling cattle and driving them hundreds of miles to the south. Besides their bow, these young herdsmen carry only two other items - all their earthly possessions. The first is the sheet they wear wrapped around them which is also their blanket at night. The second is a carefully whittled seat the diameter of a soda can at the bottom but with a wide top to sit upon. Cattle are driven across the thick low-lying bush towards the regular watering holes or to one of the infrequent wells where the boy will pump water for them. The Pokot are similar in many ways to the Massai and some wear the same bead necklaces and ornaments as the Massai. The older Pokot men often have chin plugs or ear plugs. It's probably the closest I've been to what most people think of when they think of Africa.

~ Pokot man breaks from whittling for tea ~ Communities in Amudat are distant from each other and our journey into that area involved a considerable amount of driving to reach these far-flung trading centers. There are no paved roads in the entire district, and many of the roads between villages follow whatever natural pathway may be in place - from cattle paths only slightly wider than the truck to dry creek-beds. Vehicles are seldom seen, and most people walk to get where they need to go. With water scarce and cattle plentiful, African Tea is the drink of choice - generally consisting of boiled milk, tea leaves, and ginger (no water). It's a good way to get liquid and nourishment, and ensures the milk is safe. Everywhere you go, every time you stop, you should plan on drinking tea - it will be offered to you, hot, and frequently in a tin cup (that gets pretty hot itself).  It's very pleasant in the morning but not so refreshing in the heat of the day.

Fellow missionary Rev. Jacob Gillard and I were returning from a one-night stay at Matongo Lutheran Theological College in Kenya and turned north after crossing the border back into Uganda. We picked up Reverend Charles Bameka in Mbale where we stayed the night. The next day we were delayed somewhat by a concern about the CV (constant-velocity) joints on the front of the Land Cruiser which appeared to be leaking a considerable amount of oil from their seals. Unfortunately, the mechanic in Mbale didn't have the seals but topped up the joints with oil and assured us they would last until we returned to Mbale. Not satisfied, but having no other options, we picked up some foodstuffs to carry to Amudat: fresh vegetables, sugar, rice, and other staples.  We then traveled north around Mount Elgon and through some of the most beautiful country I have ever seen - mountains rising from the plains, areas lush with bananas, rice, and gardens, and vistas that make you gasp. The villages and trading centers got smaller and smaller as we traveled, well past the last electricity pole and even beyond where the taxis and public buses go. Finally, after three hours of mostly murram roads, coming down a gentle incline, we spotted the small town of Amudat.

~ A herd of camels crosses the road ~ The people of the Lutheran Church in Amudat greeted us with singing and dancing and Reverend Moses Lokong made introductions and welcomed us warmly. The congregations of Amudat (around 10 churches) used to be ministered to by the Lutheran Church in Kenya in part through Reverend Moses. The Lutheran Church in Kenya entered into discussions with the Lutheran Church Mission in Uganda (LCMU) to ease some of their difficulties in managing churches from a neighboring country and last year handed over these congregations to the LCMU. Reverend Moses is Pokot and is a true blessing to these congregations, contributing in large part to the success of these churches in this remote area. After some tea and a lunch we began our visitations, traveling first to the most remote congregation, about an hour's drive to Alapat. ~ Lutheran worship space in Alapat ~ The Lutherans of Alapat worship under a very large tree and we were again blessed to be greeted with singing and dancing as the congregation sang their way from the trading center to their place of worship. Introductions, speeches, and a small devotion were shared and the people of Alapat placed branches onto the truck as a sign of blessings for the journey - even covering the windshield! I'm sure we were very blessed by the branches, but as soon as we were out of sight of the congregation I did stop and remove them from the windshield. Blessed or not, I think it's prudent to be able to see as you drive.

About an hour from Alapat we arrived at Alacas Lutheran Church, again being greeted with joy, and enjoying a cup of tea. The congregation at Alacas worships in a mud-walled building with a tin roof. They are well off the dirt road and we had to be guided there maneuvering around the bushes and frequently scraping between small trees. After our time at Alacas, it wasn't too much further to Nabokotom Lutheran Church. We arrived at Nabokotom after dark and we used my big Maglite to illuminate the brick and tin-roofed church building as we made introductions and sang together. Finally, it was back to Amudat for the night, arriving at the unstaffed hotel in the dark city (remember, no electricity).  After Ambrose, our local guide, asked around a bit, we headed back into the city center to find the manager of the hotel to let us in and let us a room. The rooms were good sized, with a nice clean bed and mosquito netting. At some point in the past a solar panel and batteries had been installed at this hotel, but it wasn't functioning any more, so the hotel provided complimentary candles. Water was dipped from a rain barrel for washing and we were pointed in the direction of the pit latrine out back. No running water, no electricity, but a clean bed and a good mosquito net - well worth the $4 per room. I slept well.

~ Amazing. That's all. Just Amazing. ~Sunday morning we got a little diesel in Amudat. Oh, don't be confused.  There's no gas station. You buy gas from someone on the side of the road who has a jerry-can full. It comes at a premium but they don't gouge you. It was about $5 per gallon instead of the usual $4. I sacrificed a hankie to filter the fuel as they poured from the jerrycan into my gas tank - well worth whatever a hankie costs. After tea at Pastor Moses' place, we set off for the hour drive to Ding Dinga Lutheran Church (it's as fun to say as it looks like it should be). We dropped off Pastor Charles there for Sunday services and Jake and I continued on with Pastor Moses to Cheralachakoghin Lutheran Church for services.  I suspected I would be preaching since it seems to often happen that way, so I tried to pay close attention to the lessons for the day as they were read. I caught that the first lesson was two verses from a Psalm. But no one translated for us when the other lesson was read. So, I started with the Psalm as a base, and since it was Reformation Sunday, I delivered a sermon based on the story of Martin Luther as he struggled towards the clear proclamation of the Gospel. As I've mentioned before, it's always difficult preaching to a congregation you don't know, but I was fairly certain that the people of this area had been converted from African Traditional Religion, so I emphasized the dissatisfaction Martin Luther felt with the church at the time - how the rituals and ceremonies, the mass in a different language than the people, the apparent magic of the church - didn't provide Luther with the assurance that he had been made right with God. I was both pleased and slightly dismayed to find that it was a story these people hadn't heard before. But I think that it was a story they appreciated, and one that they could identify with in some ways. After the sermon, a whole bunch of people left the building. I'm not an alarmist or anything, but I was a bit curious - there was a whole bunch of stuff left to do - prayers, baptisms, confirmations, the Lord's Supper, and the offering (which, when collected, would receive Ugandan Shillings, Kenyan Shillings, eggs, and beans). It turns out the "whole bunch" of people was 30 in number and that they were stepping outside to make sure their names were on the list to be baptized! ~ Pastor Moses and Jake baptize ~ Jake was happy to work with Pastor Moses in baptizing 30 adults! When he asked why there were no children or infants being baptized, he was told that 30 was enough for one Sunday and they wanted the adults baptized so they could be sponsors for the children next time! Wow. I asked why Pastor Moses didn't baptize the last time he was at the congregation. Well, he did! A few months previously he had been there and had baptized at that time too! This congregation is just in an area where the clear Gospel proclamation hadn't been heard before and God was calling people to Himself with complete abandon - praise the Lord!

After service, I left Jake at Cheralachakoghin and returned to Ding Dinga to pick up Pastor Charles - who had also delivered a good Reformation Sunday sermon and had administered dozens of baptisms.  On the way there, I began to get a bit panicky as I heard some new squeaking from the truck. I could imagine in my mind the CV joints overheating and seizing out here in the middle of nowhere - no cell phone reception, no roads, no tow truck for miles and miles. I prayed over those CV joints like you would not believe the whole way to Ding Dinga.  When I picked Charles up at Ding Dinga we had tea and some chapati (flat bread). I was starting to struggle a bit - would my truck break down stranding us all out here? I didn't want to drink any more tea and the hot church with the tin roof began to seem unbearably hot - especially with the flies arrived, drawn to the smell of the yummy chapati. There were a lot of flies. Like, a lot. Upon returning to the truck, I discovered that a child had come across a black ball-point pen and had doodled from front to back on one whole side of the truck, including on the hood.

At this point I was pretty close to a melt-down. I'd driven about 1000 km over the past three days on bad roads requiring intense concentration, I'd preached a sermon I wasn't as prepared for as I hoped, the truck was about to give out, the flies, the heat, the hot tea in the middle of the hottest part of the day, and now ball-point pen all over the truck. But I have to say thank you to you. What got me back to Cheralachakoghin was the knowledge that people were praying for me in the United States - it was about the time that church would be starting in the States and I know that we are included in both private morning prayers and in the prayers of the church. I relied on those prayers at that moment. I knew there was no way anyone could know how deeply I was struggling at that particular time - without cell phone service even Krista didn't know - but it didn't matter. I knew I had been sent to this place and that those who sent me loved me, encouraged me, and prayed for me. And when I lifted my own simple prayer up as we drove away from Ding Dinga I could feel the weight slowly being lifted off my shoulders.  The strange sounds I had heard from the truck earlier in the day were gone - the rear tailgate hadn't been closed all the way. I heard echoes of my own sermon as Pastor Charles told me what he had preached about. The air conditioning in the truck cooled me off and by the time I got to Cheralachakoghin I was feeling much better. We were treated to a good lunch and - you guessed it - tea. Thank you, Lord, for hearing the prayers of Your people.

We departed Cheralachakoghin to go the back way around Mount Kadam and return to Mbale. We drove on the worst road I have ever been on in Uganda. Most roads are okay once you get over about 30 mph - the excellent suspension system on the truck just coasts over the bumps once you get up enough speed. But this road was bad. The "washboard" was about a foot deep and you could only drive about 10 mph - no way you could speed over it - especially when you're trying to be tender to your front CV joints. It was a long way around the mountain but finally we got onto the bigger roads and made it safely to Mbale. Even though it was dark we did a bit of hotel-shopping when we arrived in town  because of the mediocre night we'd spent in Mbale previously and we ended up at the nicest hotel I've stayed at in Uganda! We split the $40 room three ways (three beds in the room) and I enjoyed a good dinner, a hot shower, and a pretty solid night's sleep. The next morning we stopped by the mechanic again and he topped off the oil in the CV joints and gave us the go-ahead to return to Kampala. One more stop along the way to Kampala to make arrangements for a short-term mission team coming over Christmas and then we were home. Altogether I'd put 1,367 kilometers onto the truck since I left Kampala and I have to admit it was worth every meter.  -Shauen ~ Passing by the south side of Mount Kadam ~

Wednesday
Oct212009

One More Thing From Scratch

Last night for dinner I wanted to make a casserole and my particular recipe, not surprisingly, called for a can of condensed cream of celery soup. Well, we don't exactly have Campbells here so I turned to the internet for some possible substitutes. Do you know you can make your own condensed cream soup?! Not only can you make it from scratch, it's super easy! Just some oil, flour and milk and there you have it! Since I didn't have any celery (something we rarely find here) I made it a condensed cream of mushroom soup and sauteed some mushrooms and added them. It turned out great, was easy to make and then add to my casserole, which also turned out great! If I was living in the States, I'd have made a quick grocery run. The things you learn living overseas!  -Krista

Sunday
Oct182009

Visit to Lugombe's Preaching Station

~ Jake baptizes a child in Lugombe ~ Many of our TEE students travel hours and hours to get to Kampala for class every two weeks. But some of them live and serve fairly close. Today, the day after a labor-intensive and exhausting service event with our TEE class, fellow missionary Rev. Jacob Gillard and I drove an hour outside of Kampala to Lugombe, where Edward Tamale, one of our TEE students, serves at a small preaching station.

We arrived and immediately visited Edward's place. On the way, we passed by the school where the church meets and Edward jumped out to pound on the drum for a little bit, calling the Christians to church.  At his home, we were treated to tea, sweet bread with margarine (a real treat), and some pleasant conversation. Then we returned to the church for service. Jake would do a baptism and I would preach.  Before the sermon was the baptism. The father of the young girl being baptized asked if I would "be a father" to the child as well - stand as a sponsor. I am more than willing to pray for this child but to be a true sponsor isn't easy when you don't live near your god-children (just ask my god-child in the States). But since there were other sponsors also standing for the girl being baptized, I was willing to stand as well. This little girl was maybe 6 years old, so she stood in the front of the congregation with her father for baptism.  As the bowl of water was brought up towards the child, she thought it was being brought for her to drink so she tried to grab the bowl and tip it to her mouth. It was wonderfully cute and rather funny. 'Cause she did it a second time too before Edward told her that he would hold it and she wouldn't drink it. She was successfully baptized and the congregation responded with the joy and celebration we often see at baptisms here in Uganda.

~ children and adults are attentive as Shauen preaches ~ I'm slowly becoming more comfortable doing things like preaching when I'm up-country. Preaching at these upcountry congregations frustrates me somewhat because a good portion of my normal sermon preparation can't be done - I don't know enough about the congregation to be able to speak to their circumstances or challenges. I can't plan on any long-term rhetorical devices like sermon series because I get only one chance to say it all in one sermon. I have no idea what the pastor has been preaching on before my visit or what he will preach on afterwards. I don't know how mature the Christians are in their faith or what they might be struggling with in their faith lives. Ultimately, though, my own difficulty in preparing a sermon shouldn't have equal weight against a group of God's people who are eager to hear. So I continue to work towards being comfortable preaching when I visit congregations across Uganda. 

In Lugombe I was privileged to be able to preach on Mark 10:23-31, "How hard it is for the rich to enter the Kingdom of God... it is easier for a camel to pass through the eye of a needle..." It's a great passage with a clear Gospel message, "With God all things are possible."  I even enjoyed pointing towards the child trying to drink the baptismal water as an example of how we misunderstand the ways of God.

~ a boy smiles at me ~ After church we passed by the home of a man desiring prayers as he recovers from a very bad motorcycle accident. And then returned to Tamale's house for a wonderful meal with lots and lots of great food. The small choir for this preaching station joyfully sang several songs as we finished our meal and we stepped back outside to visit a while longer with the children and adults of the congregation and Edward's family. Finally, we returned to Kampala, joyful at the opportunity to serve and a little more enlightened by what we saw in Lugombe. Praise the Lord for His work in that small trading center.  -Shauen

Sunday
Oct182009

Today's Sermon Illustration: Child Sacrifice

"Whoever loves money never has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his income. This too is meaningless."  Ecclesiastes 5:10 NIV

Today's sermon was based on our Old Testament reading, Ecclesiastes 5:10-20. Pastor Wamala started off his sermon with the story of a man who is apparently well-known in Uganda and who many years ago sacrificed his child so that he could be wealthy. He is indeed a very wealthy man now, but every time he goes to sleep, takes a break or tries to enjoy the benefits of his wealth, the spirit of his child is there haunting him of what he did, telling him to work harder and earn more money. He is never able to rest and is consumed with increasing his wealth. Wow! What an illustration. Not something you would hear in the States, but appropriate for this culture and a powerful illustration at least to me. Although it's a practice not sanctioned by many, sacrifice does happen here. Human sacrifice is more powerful than animal, and child sacrifice is more powerful than an adult. The closer in relation to you, the more powerful the sacrifice. Parents will pierce the ears of girls and more and more boys are circumcised, all in an attempt to make them not perfect, a blemished human being. Therefore, if they are kidnapped, they might be spared. Sadly, this is a practice done by the wealthy to protect a new business venture and to ensure their success. I don't know how white children rate, but this will be a fear of ours once our son is born and a constant prayer request. Referring back to the illustration, this man sacrificed his child for his wealth, but learned too late that it was a curse and not a blessing. True wealth only comes from God, not from any material possessions. "Naked a man comes from his mother's womb, and as he comes, so he departs. He takes nothing from his labor that he can carry in his hand." Ecclesiastes 5:15  -Krista

Monday
Oct122009

Cakes and Ordination

Ceremonial Cutting of the Cake by the New PastorsThe Cakes Shortly Before Being Served

We arrived home fromPastor Jerome Wamala Passing Out Cake Every Last Bit Counts! Kenya on Wednesday afternoon. On Thursday Shauen and I made a trip to the grocery store, while there, Shauen received a call regarding Sunday's ordination service. During that call, I overheard him saying such things as "I think she would be able to do that" "How many cakes do you think you need?" and "Oh no, don't worry about it, it'll be our gift!" I immediately turned the cart around and stocked up on butter, flour, eggs and powdered sugar. They were expecting about 200 people for the ordination and thought 3 cakes would work. Ugandan cake portions are small so that would work, but I decided to bulk up the portion size a bit by making 6 sheets cakes and then layering them, resulting in 3 cakes. I enjoy baking, but I am discovering that I really enjoy playing around with decorating. I don't really know what I'm doing, but I have fun making things up. The cake was white with a chocolate buttercream layer, vanilla buttercream frosting and then chocoate decorations. I experimented with my chocolate buttercream and was really happy with my end result, very light but still chocolatey. It took me a good portion of Friday and Saturday to make the cakes, but although it was work, it was fun work. From experience I know that when serving cake, the cake is cut into small pieces and then the pieces are piled on the plate, the plate is passed around and everyone picks out a piece. What I didn't expect to see on Sunday was the cake cut into pieces, and then my layers cut apart! Oh well, by doing this it meant that instead of everyone getting one piece of cake with 2 layers, everyone one was able to have 2 pieces of cake. There was even some cake leftover to send home with the 3 newly ordained pastors. The tray was also scraped to get the last bit of frosting and crumbs and that was either eaten or wrapped up to take home. So, while the layers may not have been truly appreciated, the taste certainly was!  -Krista

Sunday
Oct112009

3 men ordained in the LCMU

~ Aaron Bamuwamye, Samuel Ogwang, & Jerome Wamala ~ Today the Lutheran Church Mission in Uganda (LCMU) celebrated the ordinations of three men, more than doubling their clergy roster!  The ceremony was attended by dignitaries from Kenya, Sudan, and Ghana. Presiding over the ordination service was the guest of honor, the bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Ghana, Right Reverend Doctor Paul Kofi Fynn. The LCMU was originally planted by missionaries from Ghana, so it was fitting that the bishop of that church body come to celebrate with the LCMU. Ordained today as pastors in the LCMU are: Reverend Jerome Wamala, Reverend Aaron Bamuwemye, and Reverend Samuel Ogwang.

These three pastors were trained at Lutheran Theological Seminary of South Africa. During Seminary training their families remained behind in Uganda. The Seminary in South Africa holds class from February to November, with "summer" break over Christmas. Ugandan students at the Seminary cannot afford to travel home for any of the short breaks during the year so they go 10 months at a time without seeing their families. These three men returned to Uganda to serve their "time of probation" about the time I arrived in January 2009. Now that they have successfully completed their probation/vicarage/internship, they celebrate with their families and the whole church here at their ordination.

The ordination service was a festive affair, with red (the color of ordination) being the predominant color. Led by a processional choir, the three candidates entered the service wearing their white albs - those full-length coverings worn by most Lutheran pastors in traditional services. Men who are not yet ordained generally do not wear the stole - the colorful strip of cloth that drapes around the neck.  The ordination vows are administered, and laying on of hands is accompanied by Scriptural exhortations from the clergy in attendance. Stoles are then placed upon the men during the service as a mark of their formal entry into the Office of Public Ministry and additional gifts are given to the men - a new Bible and a cross to wear as they execute their office. Since I'm not yet ordained I excused myself from much of the service but I did read one of the Scriptures for the day in a regular ol' shirt and tie ~ Laying on of hands during the Ordination Service ~ (no need to confuse the issue by wearing a clerical this particular day).

After the service itself, our three new pastors were the guests of honor at the reception. There was great food, speeches from all sorts of dignitaries, and Krista's cakes. Personal gifts were given to the men and congratulations were shared all around. Jerome, Samuel, and Aaron join Rev. Charles Bameka and Rev. Moses Lokong to bring the clergy roster for Uganda to 5 Seminary-trained ordained men. Five men to serve the more than 80 congregations and preaching stations across the country. Praise the Lord for His bounty in this place and pray that He will be even more bountiful in the years to come!  -Shauen

Thursday
Oct082009

Feeling Like Fall

Apple Cinnamon CandleLiving in perpetual summer, you don't always remember that the seasons are changing back home. This was emphasized for me as my Mom sent me pictures of the trees changing colors and then informing me during our last Skype conversation that it was actually snowing in Seward! We are in the midst of our rainy season right now. There are two rainy seasons here, one has occasional showers and the other has the heavy rains. We are experiencing the latter. Usually this means the day starts out with sunshine but clouds roll in during the afternoon, although some days the sun shines all day. Today, we woke up and it was cloudy and rainy and it happened to stay that way the whole day. Shauen, being the Seattle boy that he is, was ecstatic! We happened to find an apple-cinnamon candle during our shopping trip, so that evening, with the wind and drizzle outside, we lit our candle and declared it fall for at least today!  -Krista