The main issue I encountered while in Kenya, besides reaching the unreached, was that of a distorted gospel. Most people were not able to study the Bible for themselves, whether that was an issue of language, reading ability, or knowledge of how to study something inductively. Therefore, many of these people were easily lead astray by false teachers or those in search of making a quick shilling (dollar). If we could train leaders in the community to combat this plague of false teaching, that were already more fluent in the language and culture than I could ever hope to become, we could reach people and places that I could never reach in quite the same way. In this way it seemed to me that discipleship was a more effective path than evangelism, that as in 1 Corinthians 3:6, “I planted, and Apollos watered, but God caused the growth.” I was only a part of God’s work, and once these methods were taught and absorbed, for it to be truly sustainable, I would someday be working myself out of a job, for success without a successor is no success at all.
This
is our vision in Kimana, Kenya. To
establish a pastoral training and community development center that will be
focused on meeting the needs of the whole person while teaching them to study
the Word in a culturally contextualized way. So that,
in this way, they, as James says, “may be perfect and complete, lacking in
nothing.” We hope to be able to
establish a place where local community members may come for any need they may
have and that it will sustain itself within that community, long after we are
gone. By doing this, we are not creating
a dependency that will cause this mission to fall when we leave. We have faith that God will accomplish this work through local pastors and leaders. They will pick up
the torch and continue to let God do the growing.
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