Tanuekue's
brother Jorge has been to our Bible school twice, and at school he heard that
ministers of the Gospel should go out healing the sick, raising the dead and
casting out demons, so he went home and did just that.
Dear friends,
I just received Rolland & Heidi Baker's latest e-mail newsletter. It
includes their partnership with Fresh Fire Ministries during our time
in Malawi.
May you be greatly encouraged and inspired! I want to and will see the same
things in Mali - what about your country? Do you want to be a part?
In HIS service,
Claudia
FROM GLORY
TO GLORY/Increasing revival in the bush
Rolland and Heidi Baker
Iris Ministries, Inc.
Maputo, Mozambique
22 June 2003
[41 photo links at end of message]
A FEEDING CONFERENCE IN MALAWI
Tuesday, 3 June -- Silver streaks of smoke lie painted over the marshy
plain before us. They stream north against us from dozens of fires, held low
by strong winds. We descend through hazy, gray skies in the sunset, straining
to see our dirt airstrip ahead. The headwind slows us down, and we will
barely make it to our unlit field before Malawi's official last light.
We sink still lower, and in the dim light we can see canoes floating on the
small ponds and streams of the lower Shire River basin, which drains clear,
pristine Lake Malawi. Here, though, the water is shallow, muddy -- and full
of crocodiles. There is greenery even with drought all around, and desperate,
hungry villagers search for water lily bulbs and anything else edible, in
spite of the danger. Crocodiles use their noses to flip canoes, and then many
times have dragged victims away in their jaws.
It's our third flight of the day. We started this morning from Maputo,
Mozambique, our Cessna 206 loaded to full gross weight with sound equipment
for our largest bush conference yet. Five hundred miles further north we
clear customs and immigration in Beira and head for Blantyre, Malawi, and now
we are almost to Bangula, where we will feed and minister to more than ten
thousand people who have streamed in from village churches all over southern
Malawi.
We are ten thousand miles from southern California, where my wife Heidi and I
were married twenty-three years ago. Two weeks after our wedding we were off
to foreign countries, searching for the poor and lost, and we have never
looked back. Now we are in Africa, immersed in a movement toward God so
intense that we can hardly take time to report on it. The numbers increase,
the challenges mount, and many tell us to scale back. But this revival is not
too big; it is only beginning, and we are just now learning how to minister
to the poor...
Beside me I have Surpresa Sithole, our African co-director of Iris
Ministries. He was born in a little town in a remote province of Mozambique. Both
his parents were powerful, well-known witch doctors. He knew nothing about
Jesus when one day the Holy Spirit spoke to him in a loud voice, so powerful
that his bed shook. "Get out of your house or you will die!" He got
out, and in a week his parents were dead. Surpresa survived in the bush for
weeks more, and in time found a Christian pastor who told him about Jesus. God
turned him into a flaming evangelist, supernaturally gave him many languages,
and steered him to us in 1998. By now Surpresa has received thousands of
vivid visions from God that have encouraged and sustained our work together.
Now we are facing the poor again. The runway is in clear view, but covered
with people. A team has already cleared it of weeds, stones, goats and cows. We
float down and skim over the crowds, letting them know we are here. From the
plane we can see their rags and bare feet, and their wildly excited
expressions. We circle around for a final approach, and this time everyone is
out of the way. We land on the dirt, very rough this time from footpaths and
all the weeding that was done, with just enough twilight not to need landing
lights. People stream toward us, laughing and dancing. Jesus, after all you
have done in our lives, do we have enough from you for this multitude? They
are so expectant, so hungry...
There is history behind this gathering. For more than a year Malawi has
suffered severe food shortage from both floods and drought. Many of our own
people in our remote Iris Africa/Partners in Harvest churches were down to
eating bugs, worms, grass, leaves and roots. Surpresa and I kept preaching
everywhere we went, in the dark and rain, under trees and dripping thatch
roofs, without electricity and lights, to all who would listen. "Nothing
can separate us from the love of God! Not floods and famine, disease and
death, nor anything in all creation!" And we cried for His help and
presence. Our churches kept growing, in spite of tears and hardship.
We invested in more bush conferences, each very expensive because the people
are penniless and most are unable to journey to our meetings unless we
provide transport. Georgian Banov came to Bangula with offerings for one
thousand chickens, which we boiled in open pots over firewood. That was such
an unusual display of the love of God to the people that two hundred churches
were added to Iris Africa in Malawi as a result. Then Todd Bentley and Fresh
Fire Ministries responded fervently to the Holy Spirit. For months they
planned large meetings, food distribution and outreaches in the poorest areas
of Malawi's capital city of Lilongwe. Tomorrow I fly back to Beira to pick up
Heidi and Guy Chevreau and take them to Lilongwe for the start of that
campaign. Our pastors and churches in central Malawi will be deeply involved.
But Fresh Fire went further and contributed huge support for food
distribution in Bangula, our working headquarters in southern Malawi. Bangula
is a tiny town on a rough road between Malawi and Mozambique, once supported
by cotton plantations, now long gone. It's a destitute place, and fiercely
hot most of the year. But it has a runway, unused for years until we cleared
it off ourselves, and now we own property right alongside the runway where we
can hold large outdoor meetings and build housing. For us it has become a
focal point for ministry to isolated rural villagers in this whole region,
communities that rarely benefit from humanitarian aid efforts at larger
centers.
Our meetings here don't start for a few days, but the people and food are
ready. All has been organized by a leadership commission from thirty
denominations, an amazing, encouraging display of unity. We have a welcome
committee that registers every person and family. We bought forty large
cooking pots and put together a cooking team of eighty men from many churches.
Another team of twenty pastors serve the people as they are grouped by zone
into five lines. We truck in all the firewood. More teams built shelters of
tree branches, bamboo and plastic, and a simple stage. We announce over the
radio that all are welcome. Our ten hired trucks come and go, bringing in
load after load of singing, clapping people until eight thousand have been
trucked "African-style." Two or three thousand more come by foot
and bicycle. It is such a spectacle, to many the greatest thing that ever
happened in Bangula.
There is such order in the camp that our hired security guards marvel. We
watch as ten thousand hungry Malawians wait patiently for their corn mush,
beans, cabbage and lentils. Angels must be guarding too. Town authorities
were afraid there would be riots, but the Holy Spirit keeps supernatural
control as yet another team maintains an intercessory prayer vigil.
I fly Heidi and Guy to Lilongwe, then bring Guy back to Bangula the next day
to start our meetings with Surpresa. Pastor Rego from Mozambique has already
been preaching. We all teach what God has given each of us. The people
respond with one huge cry. They have spiritual hunger. They have faith. They
will receive. It seems all we have to do to see an outpouring of the Holy
Spirit is say, "Let's pray!" As we have seen so many times in the
African bush, the Holy Spirit falls on the entire crowd, even in the hot sun
and blowing dust. People are intensely hit; they shout, cry and shake with
perspiration pouring down their faces. They weep, they hug, they fall to the
ground and worship with fiery intensity. They pray in tongues. Sometimes they
laugh ecstatically with unrestrained joy. Some are in visions. A number are
healed. All want Jesus. All want to be saved. All want to give their lives to
Him as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to Him.
One night a spirit of worship rises spontaneously. Hundreds move toward our
rough, wooden platform and kneel in the dirt, softly weeping and worshiping
into the night, no one wanting to leave. Our worship team is on their faces. We
have been speaking of the excellencies of Christ, the One who amazingly is
our all-powerful King and Judge, and yet also our Savior and humble friend,
if we will have Him. I am in tears again to see our God so loved...
I fly Heidi and Michael Ellis in from Lilongwe, and we continue. At night the
emphasis is healing as we remain in His Presence, and at least seven receive
their sight. We cannot take time for all the healing testimonies. We lead
children off in groups for special teaching. We speak specially to pastors. We
do everything we can to deliver the whole counsel of God in the short time we
have together.
Malawi's hunger crisis has subsided. The rains are returning, crops are
growing again, and wide-scale disaster has been averted. Help has come from
many quarters. God is merciful, and answers the prayers of a nation turning
to Him. We still have our part to play in southern Malawi, where extreme
poverty and isolation leave great need. On the last day of our conference we
distribute food to six thousand families as they return home on our trucks. Each
family receives a 10 kg. sack of corn and a 5 kg. sack of beans, practical
evidence of God's love that will stir greater faith in the future.
I fly Heidi, Guy and Michael to Pemba in Mozambique and return for Surpresa
and the sound equipment in a few days. Surpresa has a chance to meet with our
Malawi leadership commission and consolidate all that has been taught for six
days. Our Bible school is starting up in Bangula. Long-term missionaries are
on their way. All involved with this conference are encouraged beyond
measure. May all who helped and contributed enjoy rich blessing in Jesus as a
result!
REVIVAL IN TWO MOSLEM PROVINCES
Sunday, 22 June 2003 -- Just over one year ago we began to preach
publicly in Pemba, a city on the coast a thousand miles north of Maputo in
the almost entirely Moslem province of Cabo Delgado. We started with one
mud-and-stick church of fifteen adults, and held night meetings beside it on
a hill near a marketplace among the huts of the town. Persecution was strong
and few listened. But the Holy Spirit fell on our little band of believers,
and our Pastor JosZ, and since then doors have opened wide for ministry to
Moslems all over the province.
Demons were cast out by the hundreds in front of onlooking crowds, who
suddenly realized they were dealing with the true and living God. Moslems
began to bring their desperate cases of sickness to our church for prayer,
and Jesus the Healer did what only He can do. One example was a 12-year-old
girl who was completely insane and out of control. She couldn't even look
anyone in the eye. Her Moslem parents were desperate. Our little Pemba church
fasted and prayed for five days for the girl, and she was totally healed and
restored to her right mind. She and her family had been syncretistic Moslems,
keeping idols around the house, taking special medicines dedicated to evil
spirits, and washing themselves with oils used in Islamic traditions. They
destroyed all these things and have come to Jesus, along with many other
Moslems who saw what happened.
A desperate man with severe epilepsy came to our church asking for prayer. He
couldn't remember going a single week without a terrible epileptic fit. He
has been completely delivered, and now he serves joyfully as a volunteer at
church, bringing many others to Jesus.
Through healings like this and our evangelistic meetings, thousands of
Moslems have come to Jesus in and around Pemba, an area described by
missiologists as "unreachable." Now we have thirty-six churches in
Cabo Delgado, and just today we baptized four hundred ex-Moslems in the ocean
in Pemba with the help of visiting teams. Last night in a conference meeting
a four-year-old boy with paralyzed legs walked for the first time. Today her
mother brought him back to show us how much more strongly he was walking, now
without having to hold on to anyone. This morning before breakfast Heidi led
two Moslems to Jesus. One was named Ishmael. And after church she married
twelve couples, all ex-Moslems who have recently been saved.
Our Bible school in Pemba is at full capacity. We are adding property and
building simple classrooms and dorms. Teachers and staff are arriving. Our
pastors and students are eagerly going out and preaching everywhere, so
excited to serve Him! Pemba is becoming a major base for us, a launching pad
for ministry among Moslems even further north.
In Nampula Province, just to the south of Cabo Delgado and also heavily
Moslem, our provincial leader, Pastor Tanuekue, is extremely excited and
encouraged too. Three have been raised from the dead since the beginning of
this year. His wife is especially anointed -- God has used her to raise up at
least four children that I know of after they died of malaria. Most recently
this year she prayed for a dead 2-year-old girl who came back to life after
three hours of prayer. Tanuekue and his wife don't go around announcing that
they will raise the dead, but they quietly go into homes and just begin
praying. Then the Holy Spirit may confirm to both of them together that they
should continue praying for someone who has died until they get up.
Tanuekue's brother Jorge has been to our Bible school twice, and at school he
heard that ministers of the Gospel should go out healing the sick, raising
the dead and casting out demons, so he went home and did just that. Recently
God used Jorge to raise a man who had been dead for eight hours after just
thirty minutes of prayer. Tanuekue just told us about another man in Nampula
who had been mute for ten years. After prayer he not only speaks, but now is
preparing to be a pastor in our Pemba Bible school.
When these miracles take place, it usually happens that all the Moslem
friends of the people involved come to Jesus immediately. In this way the
Gospel has spread until fifty-three churches have sprung up in Nampula since
our first Iris gathering in one small mud church there two years ago.
Jealous leaders of certain nominal churches in Nampula have caused trouble
for Tanuekue and his pastors, and have even had them thrown in jail for
proselytizing. But the charges did not stick. "We don't take people from
other churches. They come to us because of the miracles!" Tanuekue tells
the authorities. Moslem persecution remains strong, and Tanuekue has asked us
all to pray for him and the believers of Nampula Province.
WE STARTED WITH CHILDREN
We are pouring staff, teams, money and resources into ministry activities all
over southern Africa, but we still remember that we started with orphaned and
abandoned street children from the streets of Maputo. Jesus started us at the
bottom instead of the top, and the only thing we know to do now is to go
lower still. We cannot lose if we stop and give away what we have to the
least of these. The Sermon on the Mount is true. We can trust God if we seek
first His Kingdom and His righteousness. And still we do not say no to any
true orphan we find. Our main centers in the south, center and north of
Mozambique all take in children, and they are a model for our churches
everywhere.
Sunday, 1 June, was Children's Day in Mozambique, and once again we
celebrated in Jesus with all our hearts. The helpless and unwanted are no
longer alone and fatherless, but they are set in the family of God and
invited to sit down at the Marriage Feast with the King of Kings. At Zimpeto,
our largest children's center, our property was cleaned up and beautifully
decorated for the occasion. Many were so excited the night before that they
could hardly sleep. We sang and danced our hearts out in church, soaking up
more of God's love. We fed visitors from the street and dump. We distributed
gifts lovingly provided in shoe boxes by Samaritan's Purse. We displayed for
visitors the handicrafts that the children had made. And in the evening we
feasted on chicken, spaghetti, chips and Coca-Cola, a wonderfully special
treat. Finally we put on a program of dances and drama that our children had
been practicing for months.
We have marked another year of learning how to love our neighbor as
ourselves, even as we are loved by our God and Savior. May He be increasingly
thrilled with us as His Spirit purges everything from our hearts except what
He wants. And may you be overjoyed as you participate with us in the Gospel
in every way possible. To us it is magnificently miraculous how our friends
around the world have supported, helped and encouraged us with such fervor,
even when we have hardly been able to communicate with you in the intensity
of our work. On we go in Jesus, from glory to glory, forgetting what lies
behind and straining toward what lies ahead as together we continue to seek
and serve Him!
In His great love, Rolland
Photo links (click or copy and paste into browser
address field when online):
The following group of photos are all from our Bangula conference. They show
the area, the people, their responses to the Lord in the meetings, the
feeding process, local children, anything I thought would help you feel like
you were there!
1. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0405.jpg
A Bangula family and hut
2. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0565.jpg
Our first arrival
3. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0576.jpg
Excited by the plane
4. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0575.jpg
Heidi's arrival
5. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0566.jpg
Transport by truck
6. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0509.jpg
Two little local boys
7. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0396.jpg
Boys by our stage
8. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0431.jpg
Opening prayer
9. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0445.jpg
In His Presence
10. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0415.jpg
In His Presence
11. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0426.jpg
In His Presence
12. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0432.jpg
In His Presence
13. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0454.jpg
In His Presence
14. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/altar.jpg
The people's response to Him
15. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0622.jpg
A mother's cry to God
16. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0592.jpg
A people movement
17. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0457.jpg
Excited children back from their own church
18. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0506.jpg
Cooking ground maize
19. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0516.jpg
Feeding the multitude
20. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0521.jpg
Feeding the multitude
21. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0525.jpg
Feeding the multitude
22. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0531.jpg
Feeding the multitude
23. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0555.jpg
Feeding the multitude
24. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0556.jpg
Feeding the multitude
25. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0560.jpg
Feeding the multitude
Heidi is here with Pastor JosZ from Pemba and Pastor Tanuekue from Nampula,
who have been telling their testimonies described in this newsletter
26. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0331.jpg
These photos are all from Children's Day at our Zimpeto center in Maputo,
Mozambique
27. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0263.jpg
Girls in Sunday morning church
28. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0260.jpg
Heidi with her kids on the floor in church
29. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0275.jpg
A mother from the community at the altar
30. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0266.jpg
The children help pray for our visitors at the altar
31. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0285.jpg
Heidi leading children to Jesus
32. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0311.jpg
Testifying to our children
33. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0322.jpg
Bringing in the poor by truck
34. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0326.jpg
Another truckload on our sandy property
35. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0333.jpg
Passing out presents
36. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0347.jpg
Our housemothers
37. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0348.jpg
A dorm room
38. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0366.jpg Cooking for our children
39. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0367.jpg
Our Children's Day dinner
40. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0384.jpg
Our Children's Day dinner
41. http://www.irismin.org/Media/photos/G3/IMG_0388.jpg
Our Children's Day dinner
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Ask of Me, and I will make the nations your inheritance. (Ps 2:8)
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Phone Number in Vienna June 14-July
9
(+43) (0) 676 / 517 4008
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mag. Claudia R. Wintoch
10808 Fremont Avenue
Kansas City, MO 64134
USA
(+1) 816-966-9294
claudia@healing2thenations.net
www.healing2thenations.net
www.glorywebservices.com
Talk to me online - I'm
"healing2thenations":
yahoo/msn messenger
Your support - whether by prayer or giving - is
greatly appreciated.
In Europe:
Bank name: BA/CA
Bank number: 12000
Account number: 509.101.468.00
Online (it will say Glory
Webservices):
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