As the alarm clock goes off and my wife tells me it’s time to get out of bed, I wonder, how can it be 6:00 in the morning already. It’s time to go get all the boys up and get them ready for school. In about two hours, I’ll walk down the hill in the cool fresh African morning air and go teach my computer classes… Then I open my eyes and reality hits me, I’m not in Africa. I’m not with the boys. It’s 7:00 a.m. and it’s time to get up and take my kids to public school here in the U.S. It only seems like yesterday that we were supposed to be on an airplane heading “home”, but we are here at home in the U.S. It’s days like this that I really miss Africa and long to be there with all my heart. I know that right now God has us where He wants us and that in order to return to Africa we have to be diligent with the tasks at hand. Many of you may not know that my wife and I are expecting our third child in October and we were advised to stay in the States until our precious baby is born. We know that our God is faithful and just and that He knows our hearts desire is to be in Africa. As I have been really missing Africa recently, I reread the scripture Jeremiah 29:11 in the Message Bible and really like what it says: “I’ll show up and take care of you as I promised and bring you back home. I know what I’m doing. I have it all planned out—plans to take care of you, not abandon you, plans to give you the future you hope for.” We know that in everything we are right where we need to be at this time and moment and God will bring us back home. I would like to say a personal thank you to every who has prayed for us and continues to support us on a monthly basis. It is our goal to return to Africa as soon as possible after the baby is born, and we need all the support that we can get, both in prayer and financially.
Prayers
When Reality Sets In…
Categories: Dreams, General, Life, Prayers, Updates
On The Road
We are now on the road heading West. Our first planned stop will be in Colorado where we will be staying with Brooks’ dad and visiting friends and family. We are planning on meeting with people and talking in as many churches and small groups as possible. After about 3-4 weeks we will be leaving Colorado to go to Utah for the next few months to do the same thing, except we will be staying with Brooks’ mom. Please pray for safety as we travel and that everything will go smoothly. We are believing God for divine appointments and opportunities to speak. As we travel we will be updating the blog more regularly and posting information on our Facebook Page and Twitter accounts, so make sure to follow us. If you happen to be in either Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, or any place in between, please let us know if we can get together. We would love to see as many people as possible, but our schedule will likely fill up fast. Thank you for praying and continually supporting us as we seek to raise support so that we can return to Africa and to RVA as soon as possible.
God Bless!
One Month Ago…
Categories: Family, General, Journal, Prayers, Updates
Wow, it has been exactly one month since I posted anything on this website!
One month ago, we had just arrived back in the U.S. How time flies when you are having fun. At lot has happened since arriving. We have attended a re-entry seminar. Gone through reverse culture shock. Enjoyed spending time with friends and family, and reconnecting with friends. I have also had the opportunity to share with many people about what God is doing in Africa and how we were involved. We have been blessed by so many people and are continually being told by people that they want to support us, which has greatly increased our faith.
We know that God has us here in the U.S. for this time, but as school at RVA is starting again, our hearts are once again turned to Africa and all the staff that are serving there. As we continue to talk with people and raise support so that we can return we are continually praying for those that are there in Africa. Please be praying with us that God would continue to work in the hearts of those that are supporting us or will be supporting us. Pray for the doors to open for us to speak with them at the appropriate time. Also pray for the staff that are currently at RVA that God would be their strength and they would rely on Him.
Finishing Strong – Quick Note!
As I sit here, I realize that we are on our last two week in Kenya and I have not posted anything on this website in over a month. Sorry! This month has been filled with lots of ups and downs. There has been a lot of sickness going around campus, therefore we have not had a full dorm much this month. It has been a very busy time as we are preparing to return stateside. There are lots of emotions that come with this and you have to give everyone time to process. We need to remember that we must finish strong and say our good-bye’s well in order to leave this place that we have come to know as home. Hopefully, we will be able to return here as soon as possible. It is our hearts desire to minister to these student and we believe that God is calling us into continued service in Africa and at RVA. Please pray with us that all the transistions and changes happening over the next month will go smoothly and that everyone will adjust quickly. Thank you so much for all your prayers and may God bless you in everything you do. We will be sure to write more in the coming days!
Lessons from the IDP Camps – Pt. 1
Two weeks. The length of time I’ve taken to process my experience at the IDP (Internally Displaced People) Camps. Rusty was able to go last term with the outreach group and I have wanted to go – along with the kids – ever since. To look down from campus over the valley and see the white tents dotting the view marking the different camps that are now there. Finally, we were able to get our opportunity to go there, minister, play and take food supplies with this terms’ outreach Saturday. About 300 students and staff went to dozens of different places in the surrounding communities – we were a part of one group going to the IDP camps.
Hearing the stories, seeing the photographs, viewing the tents from a far, and knowing what life was probably like for the people there was NOTHING compared to going down and seeing first hand what the camps were all about! I was hoping by now I could fully comprehend what I saw and what is happening there, but instead, I have come to the realization that it is truly beyond my complete comprehension! The atrocities that placed these people in the camps happened before I arrived in Kenya and I am certain that CNN, FOX, and BBC didn’t cover the whole truth of the post election violence in Dec. 07-Jan 08. Knowing that living in this camps were a far better a choice, in their opinions, than returning to their previous towns and houses – assuming that their home wasn’t looted, burned down and/or destroyed in the violence – spoke volumes more than words could ever tell.
We filled a bus with students, soccer and volley balls, hola hoops, rice, water, and corn maize. Heading down the hills, I tried to talk through with Kayla what we were going to be doing and seeing when we arrived. We drove about 30 minutes, then parked the bus as close as it could get to the camps. We had to walk in the rest of the way. We split into two groups: Titchies in one and the jr/sr high in the other. We were too many people to go to one camp. It was a 20 minute or so walk to get where we were going.
As we walked, the first thing I noticed was the tents. White, to help keep off some of the hot Africa sun, no bigger than a 3-4 man tent. The tent we had in the States is bigger than these. I think back to all the times we went camping – knowing that it was challenging because it lacked so many “necessities” to life that we’d been used to or how many times we “camped” with hot showers and toilets near by! It was always fun though because we knew it was temporary and that we could pack up and go home whenever we wanted. These people didn’t have that option. There was no packing up. This was home. Everything they owned was still held within their four walls of white fabric. My heart broke.
I was walking behind the group with Kayla and Micah. Up the road we see a water cart stuck. The donkey had decided it didn’t want to go up the hill and had backed its way into a ditch. ‘Our kids’ (most of the Titchies we were with) & Rusty were helping push the cart out. One was wondering why we had to help when the donkey was being so stubborn. It dawned on me that it was just a small token of time, but how much more could we really help the community than by helping their only water get there! Saying so to the kids really gave them the extra motivation to help and squelched the criticism of one! No matter what we did for a little while the donkey wanted no part of it. One of the girls watched Micah, Kayla, and the other stuff we set down to help and I jumped in help. We pushed and prodded. The cart boys tried to persuade the donkey in the right direction. It took all the strength, determination and patience that we had to finally get that beast to go up the tiny hill. The phrase “stubborn as a mule” now makes more sense!
The boys who were working with the donkey were grateful. As I looked at them I couldn’t help thinking of my two older nephews and dorm boys – they were all about the same age. Knowing that they were doing their job and how hard their work was. They don’t have the opportunity to play with their friends during the day, have sport games to play in, and do the things that we normally think kids this age should do. No, they had a job to do – not for “pocket money” and weekend cash, they were doing their part to help their families survive. Everyone here has their part in the family – they were just out doing theirs.
I cannot help but wonder if we as humans are not so un-similar to that donkey. We determine in our minds that we don’t want to do something, or we know better than our guide where we want to go. We fight and push against where we know we are directed to go. We’re stubborn and selfish creatures fighting against what we should just be doing willingly. I can only imagine what God sees when He looks down and sees us in a ditch instead of on the path that we were guided to take. We’d be okay if we’d just follow His guidance, but instead we’re stuck in a ditch because we thought we knew what was better for us and where we wanted to go. How is being in a ditch better than just going down the path we’re led to go?! I don’t know, but I know how many times I’ve put myself in a ditch. My prayer is that I will continue to be open to follow God’s leading instead of being as ‘stubborn as a donkey’!
As we continued to walk, I was amazed at how big the camp was! It was rows of tents. They had found a way to work in community with each other. We came to a fork in the road and I started to head to the camp I’d been watching. It was then that I found that the camp I had been watching and looking at was not the one we were going to. Even the dire circumstances that seemed to be surrounding the camp I’d been studying didn’t prepare me for what I saw in the camp we were headed to…

The Munson Family