Lon and Val Garber - Distributed in Namibia

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2007 April News

                                                                                                            

MINISTRY NEWS

Travel with me down to the coast.  I make this trip every other weekend, but this time I’d like to take all of you with me.  Our journey starts with a brisk 7-minute walk to the Shell (petrol) station on Friday morning.  The bus in supposed to arrive at 7:00 a.m. but it rarely does.  Today, it arrives at 8:15.  Thanks to the bus driver, we can relax and read for the 3½ hour trip (300 km; 190 miles) down to Swakopmund.  Along the way, we will descend 4400 feet (1350 meters) in altitude and we will cross the oldest desert in the world, the Namib.  We start in the rocky bushveld with acacia trees and scrub bushes dotting the landscape.  The vegetation keeps getter more sparse as we travel west until it disappears completely in the desert.  We pass rocky mountains on both sides of the road and two mines (gold and uranium).  We stop at Usakos for 15 minutes to stretch our legs and buy a cool drink and we wave at our friends Brenda Johnston and Nan Parker as we pass near Arandis (they live in the middle of the desert and I think they ride camels around town).  About 30 km before Swakopmund the hot desert blast furnace is replaced by the cool breezes coming off the Atlantic Ocean.  Just before arriving at our destination we see majestic red sand dunes (some over 500 feet tall) to the south and then roll into town between a colonnade of palm trees.  It is about this time that being a missionary becomes fun as you can see from the photos to the left and below.

Someone from the church meets us and takes us to the small car the church provides while we are in town.  I have dinner with friends on Friday evening and on Saturday morning drive back to Arandis for a Hope’s Promise Orphan Ministry board meeting.  In the afternoon, I meet with the church elders and in the evening relax in the flat the church provides and make last minute improvements to my sermon.  This past Sunday, I preached from James 4-5 on Three Signs of Spiritual Retardation.  After church, we get back on the bus and begin our journey home to Okahandja.  We arrive home at 17:00 (5:00 p.m.) feeling tired but useful.  I’ve been following this routine every other weekend since early 2003.  In the meantime, I have helped the church form an effective elder board and we are now searching for a full-time pastor.  I look forward to the day when I can travel down to the coast and enjoy (or be convicted by) someone else’s sermon.

Earlier in April, we traveled with Nan Parker to Livingstone, Zambia to participate in the annual Missionary Ventures African Regional Conference.  We spent the weekend with missionaries from Zambia, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Gabon. And Uganda.  We were joined by Steve Bean, Dr. Larry Capps and Judi Hinson from MVI headquarters in Orlando.  We benefited from good teaching, useful information for missionaries, majestic views of Victoria Falls, good food and wonderful fellowship with other missionaries.  For Val and me, getting to know other missionaries in our region was the highlight of the weekend.  Building a network of peers who understand our work, our joys and our frustrations is such an encouragement for us.  The last evening there, we had a braai (BBQ).  It seems some of the meat was a little past its prime and several people got a little food poisoning as a result.  Thankfully Val and I avoided that little adventure.  The trip was long (3750 km, 2250 miles roundtrip) but well worth it.  We returned home fortified with the encouragement of meeting new friends and ministry partners who are co-laboring with us in Africa.

Last year, a group of concerned citizens from Orlando, put together a container of computers, construction equipment, etc. and shipped it to Namibia.    At our request, they purchased rather than rented the shipping container because Val had plans for turning the container into a gift shop.  The container has been “resting” at the Red Plot for 9 months and now is the time to put it to good use.  Our close friend, Avileno Jose (Portuguese Namibian) is retrofitting it for its new use and we have made a petition to the municipality to grant us permission to install it at a strategic location in town next to the wood carvers’ market, right beside the main north-south highway through Namibia.  We are waiting to hear an official response from the town council.  Avileno is graciously donating all of his skill and labor to the project.  God is good and so is Avileno.  We are so grateful for his contribution.  The work is coming along nicely and we hope to have it completed soon.  We will include a photo of the fully renovated container in next month’s Chronicles.

We are still waiting on a positive response for work permits for Markus and Jojo Liebold who wish to join our ministry team as soon as the permits are granted.  Markus and Jojo are busy packing in Germany and are anxious to arrive in Namibia.  We heard recently that there is a huge stack of pending applications since the approval board only began meeting a few weeks ago since recessing in December.   That was discouraging news for us since our busy ministry season is crouching at the door and we desperately need more assistance with all the work that goes with it.  Once again, God is using the work permit process to build our character and our faith.  But victory comes to those who persevere, whether patiently or impatiently.  We stand ready to claim the victory, hopefully in the not too distant future.

IN THE NAMIBIAN NEWS

Ever imagine what a mini-taxi looks like after it accidentally hits an elephant?  It looks terrible and people get killed.  Last Friday night a long-distance taxi driver failed to see the elephant in the road and paid for it with his life and 5 others.  Those in the front seat were killed instantly and the terrified elephant trampled three others to death who were trapped inside the vehicle.  Then the injured and now extremely dangerous elephant walked away into the night.  I’ve often chronicled how dangerous night driving is in Africa and this is just one more vivid illustration.  We traveled this same road both ways on our Zambian trip, but we did it during the daytime for obvious reasons.  All along that stretch of road are signs which scream “Elephants !” including the exclamation point.

Our bank in Okahandja was robbed the other day by three armed bad guys.  They distracted the outdoor security guard (our friend Andres) by asking for assistance at the ATM and then entered the bank and stole N$279,000.  They have since caught the men but N$200,000 is still missing.  Neither the security cameras nor the security entrance were working that day.  I wonder how the bank robbers knew that.  Thankfully, no one was hurt.  I’m glad Andres was distracted since he is an unarmed security guard.  The only thing he could have possibly stopped was a bullet.  Praise God that didn’t happen.

The BBC recently filmed a TV series in Namibia called “Fat Men Can’t Hunt” where 8 obese Brits were sent to live in the San community, far far away from the nearest grocery.  The four men and four women collectively lost 76kg (167 pounds) because they were forced to hunt for their food just like the San do.  Hunting, trapping and digging for roots can help you work up a healthy appetite that doesn’t get satisfied.  The Bushmen are very small people for a good reason.  The show was so successful, BBC is planning on repeating the show with obese British teens in the Australian outback.

PERSONAL NOTES

Autumn has arrived to our part of the world.  The rainy season is over and the temperatures have fallen to a wonderfully pleasant level (mid 70’s Fahrenheit, low 20’s Centigrade) during the days and low teens (55°F) for our brisk morning 8K walk.  It is a glorious time to be outside enjoying God’s creation.  The evenings are cool and provide wonderful sleeping conditions.  We probably won’t see anymore rain until December.

In his spare time, Lon has recently become a cricket fan; the sport, not the little guy named Jiminy.  It’s not the same as baseball (Lon’s first sporting love), but it is more enjoyable once you learn the rules.  So with great interest, he watched Australia win the World Cup of Cricket this past weekend, now that he understands runs and wickets, bowling and overs and all sorts of other crazy cricket terminology

Since December, Lon has been teaching ballroom dancing once a week to a group of friends here in Okahandja.  We are tired of not having anyone to dance with so we decided to train our own.  We started with the Waltz and have moved on to the Swing.  The class includes a young-married couple, a family where both parent and children are learning to dance, two other couples and some singles.  Soon they will have progressed to the point where we can all go dancing together.  In Africa you sometimes have to create your own entertainment opportunities.

DISTRIBUTED CHURCH
This past Easter weekend, Khomas Community Church along with 4 other Khomasdal churches went on a weekend short-term mission to the San people in the Kalahari Desert near Tsumkwe (see if you can say that 3 times quickly).  Place the tip of your tongue against the back of your upper teeth and try to say an “S” sound.  Fifty-five city folk distributed 2500 Operation Christmas Child boxes to Bushman children in remote areas accessible only with 4-wheel drive vehicles.  Patrick Britz, a KCC pastor, recounted the story of one young girl (age 10-14) who opened her box to the wonder of a portable CD player.  She was so excited, even though she had no CD’s or batteries . . .  or so she thought.  She had never owned anything electronic before.  More digging uncovered 2 children’s music CD’s and a large supply of batteries.  The look of wonder on her face when she first heard the music was worth all the effort of organizing the trip. 

Mary Beth Fackler, a Northland staff member, and 3 others arrive this Sunday to spend the week distributing more boxes in remote farming communities in the Hardap Region south of Windhoek.  It is so rewarding to see these international church partnerships strengthened month after month and year after year.  Thanks so much to those of you who participate in these events.

ON THE HOMEFRONT
It’s AVS time again (American Visitor Season).  May, June, July and August are our busiest months for hosting guests from the States.  Mary Beth Fackler and three others (sorry, we don’t know their names yet) will be opening our season this Sunday.  It is so encouraging to us to see old friends from back home and watch them fall in love with our Namibia.  Later in May, Joy Baker arrives.  She and her husband Jim were missionaries with Christ’s Hope International until a few months ago and close friends of our here in Okahandja.  Joy will be staying with us while she attends a wedding and visits with other close friends.  Then Madeline Snively arrives in June followed by Richard Hanna a week later.  Madeline will be helping Val for a few weeks with art-craft projects while her father Steve and brother Taylor tour the country together.  Last year, Steve did the same bush trip with Madeline and had to fix a broken fan belt with the shoes laces of his sneakers; African ingenuity at its best.  Richard will be entertaining his good friend Lon as they renew their “best friend” relationship face to face.  We also look forward to feasting on some of Richard’s culinary artwork.  Let the AVS begin  . . .

We have several people back home to thank this month.  First we would like to thank Geoff Longstaff, although we’ve never met him, for purchasing the container for our gift shop.  We are making good use of it.  And then there are all the people who are helping us with our dance classes.  Unfortunately, we have done almost no dancing for the last 4 years and our memories are slipping.  We have already taught our class all of dance steps we remember..  So here come Bobby and Judi Chapman to our rescue.  They are sending us a “Dance Instructor’s Survival Kit.”  It will arrive on Sunday with Mary Beth Fackler.  Thanks Mary Beth for being one of our beloved intercontinental “pack mules.”  And thank you so much, Bobby and Judi, for taking the time to help us so willingly.  You now have an international dance ministry with a Namibian local chapter.

SLICE OF AFRICAN LIFE
Before our trip to Zambia, I thought that the most dangerous animal in Africa (for humans) was the hippopotamus. The hippo kills more people than all other game animals combined.  They are fiercely aggressive towards anyone who accidentally gets between them and their water source or comes close to their young ones.  But I now stand corrected.  The hippo doesn’t even come close to ferocity and deadly threat of the  . . . mosquito.  Yesirree, the tiny anopheles mosquito with his deadly malarial spit kills millions of people each year.  The hippo can’t even claim thousands.  We were hoping not to become two more of its victims, having ventured into malaria country while having forgotten to take the preventative pills.  Val got several bites the first night and then had to wait 10 days to find out if those mosquitoes were friend or foe.  Fortunately they turned out to be the friendly variety. 

This month’s Namibian geography lesson ventures into the realm of SOIL and WATER.  It can be summed up really quickly.  SOIL: good for growing rocks, bad for growing vegetables.  WATER: we don’t have any.  Okay, maybe that’s a slight oversimplification.  Most Namibian soil is not suitable for growing crops.  It is either too sandy or too rocky or too salty or sometimes all three.  And what arable soil there is falls victim to the “no water” clause.  Therefore most food products have to be imported from South Africa.  The good soil is basically restricted to the northern border area and what is considered good soil in Namibia is considered bad soil in most other places.  Subsistence farming is possible in the north but commercial farming is, for the most part, not a viable proposition.  Thankfully the soil around the Okahandja area is some of the best in the country for growing crops.  Our good friends Johnny and Dina Pedreira have a lovely vegetable plot right next to Vyf Rand camp.  WATER: The interior of the country has no surface water whatsoever.  The rivers are dry.  There are only 2 lake systems in the country and one of them has been dry since 1985.  The only rivers with year-round water are on the northern and southern borders.  Interestingly, many of the dry river beds have underground streams flowing underneath.  There is an adequate aquifer but it is very deep in most places, under lots of layers of rock.  Boreholes (wells) have to be dug over 100 meters deep in many locations.  For our drinking water, we capture the little rainwater we receive in a series of 13 dams and reservoirs scattered around the country.  We are fortunate to have 2 of those reservoirs close to Okahandja.

FINANCIAL SUMMARY
Here is our financial summary of Lon and Val’s Personal Support for 2007:

$   7,148        2007 YTD Giving through March,
   10,968        2007 YTD Need 
-----------
$  3,820         2007 Ministry Account Balance
========

May 11, 2007 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

VAL'S ART MINISTRY

I have been thinking more and more about art ministry in Africa and how it could work. I would so like to teach skills that could help women earn an income. Exactly how to get started is yet to be discovered. This has been a dream of mine for years, so perhaps Africa is the place God has been waiting to get me to begin? I will call the ministry WORK OF OUR HANDS from Psalm 90: "May the favor of the Lord our God rest upon us; establish the work of our hands for us-yes establish the work of our hands." Please pray for wisdom, direction, and for God to prepare the people to be involved with this.

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

STAY IN CONTACT

You will be receiving regular email newsletters from us once we arrive in Namibia. We will send a single copy to our "Email Distribution Center" and our Email Distribution Director (Vicki Mattingly) will send them to all of you from our stateside email address (lonnval@cs.com). If you wish to write us (and we certainly hope you will), DO NOT reply to lonnval@cs.com. Instead write to our Namibia email addresses which will remain as they are now:

valsadoll@hotmail.com
lon.garber@northlandcc.net

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

FAREWELL RECEPTION

Our Farewell Reception was everything we hoped it would be and more. It was wonderful seeing so many "old" friends in the same room at the same time. Our only regret is that we could not spend more time with each of you. We feel loved and cared for by all of you. Thanks for a wonderful evening. Everywhere we looked, we saw friends and fond memories.

You have all impacted our lives over the years and we greatly appreciate your friendship. As we embark on this grand new adventure, we will take all of you with us. We feel your prayers and your support.

A special thanks to Deb Meyer and her thoughtful gift: a safari hat with built-in solar-powered fan. How appropriate is that?

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

NAMIBIA CONTAINER

Namibia20container20001thumb Our household belongings are packed,inventoried, labeled and ready to go. Many trips deliver them to the church and the Namibia Collection Center.
At the Namibia Collection Center,they are combined with the clothes, books, toys and sports equipment donated by generous Northlanders. A last-minute surge of donations fills the load. Namibia20container20002thumb_1
Namibia20container20003thumb_1 This tractor-trailer truck then transported the entire load to Harvest Time, International in Sanford. This ministry sends shipping containers of humanitarian aid to needy countries around the world.
At Harvest Time, they are off-loaded into the warehouse, stacked onto wooden pallets and shrink-wrapped. They will be stored there until the shipping container arrives from Jacksonville. Namibia20container20006thumb

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

VISA TROUBLES

NOTHING IS EASY

On Tuesday, November 5 we received the news that our visa applications were denied. It seems that the Ministry of Home Affairs is not currently issuing visas to foreign pastors. It seems that a Nigerian pastor forged application documents this past summer and the Namibian authorities caught him. This has tarnished the reputation of all foreign pastors and they are routinely denying visas. Six other pastors had their visas denied on the same day as ours.

So what now?
Stephan Nell (our Namibian sponsor) is appealing the decision. We are confident that God wants us in Namibia and will therefore make a way for us. We are proceeding with our plans to ship belongings to Namibia and follow them in early December. If the appeal is unsuccessful, we may have to enter ministry activities we can engage in during this period and will necessitate our leaving the country for an undetermined length of time before long-term visas can be issued. If so, we would go to South Africa and work with Bruce and David Wilkinson in their new ministry venture God's Answer.

Stay Tuned
We will keep you posted as this adventure develops. In the meantime, please pray that God will make a way for our long-term stay in the country.

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

OUR CHURCH HOME

On 30 December, we visited the church that has become our Namibian church home on weekends when we aren’t ministering somewhere. His People Christian Church located in the southern side of Windhoek has lively, contemporary worship, a grace-filled atmosphere, and challenging teaching. The pastor is Andrew Gossman, a white South African. After several weeks of “this church speaks too much Afrikaans for us language-challenged Americans, this church’s worship is too tame, this church is too segregated”, etc., we finally found a church that is just right.

What we like most about the church is that it is thoroughly integrated, with equal mixes of whites, blacks and coloreds. What’s more, they are in the midst of moving to a larger facility, which was previously a Boy Scout center. We had a workday this past Saturday to clean-up the grounds. It reminded us of the olden days when Northland first took over Skate City, except I didn’t see any rats at the Boy Scout center.

We have also joined a home group that meets in our neighborhood. The leaders are Bonnie and Dawn Pereko. Bonnie is a music professor at the University of Namibia (UNAM) and an excellent worship leader. He also just released his first worship CD with songs he wrote in several languages (Oshivambo, OshiHerrero, Sotho, Afrikaans, Nama/Damara, and English). It’s a great CD

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

FYF RAND SQUATTER'S CAMP

My relationship with Pastor Thomas Mbundu began simply enough in April, 2002. I was asked to give him a ride to Five Rand. Five Rand is the squatter’s camp near Okahandja, Namibia where he lives and ministers. Unemployed workers from Ovamboland and refugees from war-torn Angola migrate south in search of work and safety. However, work is hard to find for the unskilled and unschooled who only speak Oshivambo. So they gather in these “informal settlements.” Pastor Thomas pastors a church at Five Rand.

Several months later I received a letter from him asking for clothes for his congregation. Upon returning to Namibia in December, I visited Pastor Thomas to tell him that the clothes would soon arrive. In the process, I invited him to tell me how God was blessing his church. Thomas blessed me with the following report.

He founded the church in September, 2001 in response to the obvious spiritual needs of the camp dwellers. 40 people attended his first service in which a crippled man received healing. 80 people attended the next week. They now have from 140 to 200 attendees meeting in a modest sanctuary that holds about 70 people comfortably. Pastor Thomas attributes the increase to concerted, faithful prayer. An educated man who speaks 7 languages, Thomas and his family have chosen to remain in the camp and minister to the needs of their fellow camp dwellers.

Eventually, people in his congregation return to their homes or migrate elsewhere. When they do, Pastor Thomas and his leaders go with them to help them plant a church in their new location. As a result, in the past 16 months Pastor Thomas has planted a church in Noordoewer on the southern border of Namibia, another in a migrant labor camp on a grape farm in the south, one at Gobabis in the east, one in Windhoek, one in Ongulumbashe, two more in an Angolan refugee camp near Otjiwarango with over 500 attendees, and 4 more in Rundu on the northern border. That’s 11 new churches in about a year. The Five Rand church has an apostolic ministry that is spreading churches all over Namibia and beyond.

Now that the war has ended in Angola, many of the church members in Otjiwarango refugee camp will be returning to their homes near Lubango, Angola. In March, Pastor Thomas and several of his leaders will be traveling with them to Angola to plant a church in Lubango.

Pastor Thomas wishes to send greetings and thanks to the many Northland attendees who donated clothes for his congregation at Five Rand. He will use them to bless his congregation and then give the remainder to the elderly, orphans and handicapped people in the camp. Thank you for partnering with the Five Rand church as they continue to minister to the needs of people throughout Namibia and Angola. Your care and concern is helping Thomas and his church leaders to shine the light of Christ’s love in very dark and needy places. He summed up God’s blessings on his church by stating, “In the beginning, we spread through the camp in search of people to help us build our church. Now the people seek us out.”

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

MOVING DAYS

We found a 3-bedroom townhouse in Hochlandpark before Christmas, but it did not become available until 16 January. Since we had to vacate our borrowed flat on 9 January, we spent the intervening week in Swakopmund, a beach resort town on the Atlantic coast. While there we visited with two pastors with whom we will be working. Welly du Toit is the pastor of Walvis Bay North Dutch Reformed Church and Manus Olivier is the pastor of the Swakopmund Dutch Reformed Church. He also preaches at Swakop River Community Church.

Finally, our much-awaited moving day arrived. Most of the boxes had already been stored in our landlord’s garage before leaving for Swakopmund, so moving day consisted mainly of unpacking the bins we had sent over with the outreach teams this summer. It did not take too long to find a place for everything and afterwards the house still looked empty. Nevertheless for the first time in two months, we had a place to call home.

For the next two weeks, we still slept on a borrowed twin mattress (very cozy) and ate on the patio furniture left by our landlords, Jan and Mika Erasmus.

The container arrived in port on Jan. 13 but was not delivered until Jan. 27. Late that Monday afternoon, we got a call that the container was on its way to Hodygos (YFC’s headquarters). We literally dropped everything and rushed to Hodygos only to find that the truck had gotten lost. It arrived right before the rain and darkness. It was an unloading zoo. Boxes were literally flying off the container, while we tried frantically to save our breakables and computers from certain destruction and separate them from the contents destined for the other places.

Then, while the sofas and cardboard boxes were arrayed on the dirt like an eviction proceeding, it began to rain. Wind, sand and rain mixed together make mud. We are learning to hold on lightly to our belongings. Darkness set in before the container was emptied. We then loaded our stuff onto a separate truck by the faint light of far off poles. With a couple of trips, we got it all under cover. This warehouse-type building was under construction with no way to secure it. So we had to sleep there to guard everything. At least we slept on our own mattress for the first time in over two months. Well, sleep is a bit of an exaggeration. We got to lay down and swat mosquitoes all night.

In the morning, most items had dried due to the dry climate. We packed an open-bed truck (that’s Dave Fortin on the truck) and our Isuzu bakkie (pickup) and headed for Windhoek (thanks be to God, everything fit). By noon we re-united our home and our belongings for the first time since leaving Orlando.

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

MINISTRY OPPORTUNITIES

We have been here for just two months and the ministry opportunities are beginning to fall like summer rain (Namibian summer that is). I have many preaching opportunities. I will be preaching on the fourth Sunday of each month at Khomas Community Church, On March 1, I will preach at Swakop River Community Church and on March 16 at the Oshakati Dutch Reformed Church.

I am conducting elder training at River of Life Community Church in Khomasdal every Monday evening. They have 15 elders and 9 potential elders attending the training (see separate article, Elder Training Opportunities). I will be conducting a Lay Minister Seminar on March 13-14 in Oshakati.

I am also working with Dieter and Joan Morsbach, missionaries to the Fyf Rand (Five Rand) Squatter’s Camp in Okahandja, in a consulting role. I am assisting them as they put together a 90-day, 1-year and 10-year ministry plan for holistic ministry to the 7,500 residents of the camp.

Since mentoring is in my blood, I am currently mentoring a pastor, a ministry leader and an emerging young adult leader named George Steinbach, who is also serving as my ministry assistant.

I continue to meet pastors and ministry leaders throughout Namibia by attending pastors conferences and gatherings, through personal appointments and introductions. Stephan Nell, pastor of Khomas Community Church, introduces me to a new pastor each week.

So rest assured, God is opening many doors for us and ensuring that our time here is not be wasted. Please continue to intercede for us concerning our pending, but unapproved, work permits.

November 01, 2006 in News | Permalink | Comments (0)

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