Friday, November 6, 2009

First YY to be with God

Dear Friends and Family:

This is just a quick note to let you know that one of my fathers, Lawrence Yangisi went to be with the Lord yesterday. Lawrence was the first man in the entire tribe to be baptized (he nearly got speared to death for it)  and was a very outspoken witness for the gospel. A few months back he contracted TB and managed to make his way out to the aid station in the town of Wewak for medical treatment. His wife (Gloria) was there with him as he grew thinner and weaker and he could see the end in sight.

The most amazing thing through all of it was that Lawrence's testimony never faltered. He repeatedly sent back messages to the tribe and his children (5) that he was not afraid to die, and they were not to accuse anyone (the typical Yembi way) of working magic or anything.

The last time we heard from Lawrence he sent a messenger to the radio out in Wewak and passed on this message "If Got closes his hands on me then that is how it is, it is His will alone. You will see this dirty (my body) of mine when it comes in there to be put in the ground, but don't be sad, you will see me again in heaven. I am ready and have no fear, I really have no fear". Lawrence is the first Yembi that the entire tribe has heard of that was not afraid to die, he was ready to meet his maker.

As the news raced around the village yesterday that Lawrence had died the usual chorus of voices from the opposition in here started up and the accusations and threats started to fly. But some of the believers sat down together and went around the group asking each other what they thought Lawrence was doing. Some said he was talking with Adam, some said he was probably talking to Noah, others said he was probably talking to the apostle Paul and telling him how he had just finished studying his letter to the Romans, it was awesome to hear.    

Please pray for Gloria and her kids, the pressure on them will be heavy these next few weeks. And pray for the believers as they prepare to bury Lawrence. This is the first believer to die in Yembiyembi (the first person from this language group to be with God) and they intend on conducting an entirely new type of "service", pray that they would have wisdom and be a great testimony in the process.

Thanks guys,

Brooks


Sunday, October 11, 2009

Titus, trip to Iteri, and co-workers back

Dear Friends and Family: 

I blinked and all the sudden we are a week and half into October. Things have been non-stop here (probably where you are at as well) but we have continued to see the church grow, the crossers (believers) mature, the translation move ahead, so we are encouraged.

Three weeks ago our co-workers (the Sutton family) made it back into Yembiyembi and it has been great to have them. The Yembiyembi's welcomed them with the usual volley of mud, coconut milk, flowers and running the gauntlet of sweaty smiling faces wanting to get a piece of you, even our pilot did not escape, it was fabulous. They have settled back into the rhythm of life here and their 2 clans (we were all divided up at the beginning into clans) are especially glad to have them back.

Nina and Beau are doing well, working like crazy on 3rd grade, but doing well. Beau is elated to have his best friend Logan (Sutton's boy) back and catching him up on all the delicacies (various YY foods) he has been missing. Nina is plugging along at content checking 1&2 Timothy and Titus, keeping ahead of Beau in school and keeping us alive (malaria meds, parasite meds, tropical ulcer meds, etc…), without her we would be hurting.

Last week myself and my father (Robert and uncle (Zaccheus) were able to fly to the village that I grew up in (Iteri) and encourage the church there for 3 days. The Iteri's are economically much worse off than the Yembi's but spiritually much further along, so it was a neat exchange. We were able to be there for the Sunday gathering and 3 late night meetings with all the believers.  Our guys (my father and uncle) were struck with how bad things are for the Iteri's here on this earth, but how good they will be for them in eternity, it was a great lesson for them to see "the least of these" in person.

Robert said this as we were boarding the plane to leave Iteri: "I don't know if I will see any of your faces on this ground, but I call out to you (refer to you) as brothers now because of the talk of Jesus, so I know that I will see your faces when we meet at His ground (heaven) someday. We won't worry about shorts (clothes), food, we won't worry for anything, we always be full".

Because of the radical difference in culture and language between Iteri and Yembiyembi (remember that Papua New Guinea has the highest number of distinct language and culture groups of any country in the world) there were 100's of questions each day from eating styles, dress, language, understanding of the Bible, exposure to the outside world, etc… They Yembiyembi's were blown away by the clear memories some of the Iteri's have of cannibalism and pre-European days. The Yembis too were able to catch the Iteris up on national politics, errant doctrines that were making their way through the town, and the best kind of newspaper to smoke these days. Funny stuff to watch and be a part of.

Guys, I usually have waaaay too much to say but I will cut this one off and save a few recent highlights for November. However I can never say enough how thankful we are for the part each one of plays in keeping us out here, keeping us encouraged, and praying this work through the ups and downs that it has faced. We are grateful for you.

 

Thanks so much,

Brooks for Nina and Beau Buser

P.S. Charger nation, looks like it is going to be a typical year. If they happen to start looking like the Chargers of 06-07 then somebody tape the games if they can, if they lose, save your postage.


Friday, September 4, 2009

Fwd: Nina's Grandmother's death

Dear Friends and Family:

Well it has been a rough week. Early on Sunday morning when we were gearing up for teaching the weeks lesson we received and e-mail letting us know that Nina's grandmother (who Nina spent a lot of time with growing up with and is named after ) had died.

We got on the radio with our base and our pilot/support team did a great job of getting us out of the bush the next day. We debated sending Nina and Beau back but being at least 19 hours of flying away and with a long list of issues that pop up with moving across so many countries so fast it didn't seem to be the right choice.

We have been out at our base for 4 days now and have caught up on all the details and issues with the funeral and memorial and have been able to talk with family through this tough one. Pray for Nina as we get ready to head back in the bush and not being able to be home for this.

 

Thanks for your prayers,

Brooks

 


No more rats, grub worms for breakfast, and the end of Ephesians

Dear Friends and Family:

Well another month has gone by in Yembiyembi and things are going well. There have been all sorts of things happening around here and we have seen some incredible growth in the believers so it has felt like a very productive month overall.

Last Friday myself and two brother-in-laws (Job and Pita) and my father-in-law (Edward) returned from having the books of Romans and Ephesians checked by a translation consultant (another missionary who is trained to check the accuracy and clarity of our translations). We were given the green light to print the books so that is a huge hurdle out of the way. Galatians is just about there and we are pressing hard into 1&2 Timothy now. The neat part about having these books done is the volume of information that it opens up to the Yembi's. We recently started a Bible memorization program with them and it has caught on strong. As you walk along at night you will hear house to house the weeks verse being gone over and over. Remember that most of the believers have only learned to read and write (in Bises) within the last year and a half, and dealing with the written word is a real treat for them. My father Robert was talking about this 2 Sunday's ago and he said "Now that this talk (the Bible) is starting to be turned (translated) into our language it is like drinking clean water instead of dirty, I can taste the sweet in it because it is my language, I can see the root of it so clear (the true meaning)".

Ladies and Men's meetings continue to go well, along with the believers teaching a new class on Adam to Christ, and along with the Literacy class and now a new children's Sunday School program. It is too much work for one couple, but Nina and I are not doing most of the work, it is in the believers hands now and they are leading and teaching nearly every aspect of all these programs.

Nina's favorite time of the week continues to be the ladies meeting that happens each Friday afternoon watching them grow and apply the lessons they are learning so well. Parenting, Husband/wife relationships, End times, how to deal with people that are angry, all these topics are being touched on in these ladies meetings and most are doing their best to implement what they learn.

One of the combined meetings (on Saturday nights occasionally the women will be invited to join the men at their meeting) the group was talking about the impact the teaching was having on their family lives and the stories that their children were growing up with now as opposed to before. Nina's father Edward stood up and said this "My children are growing up in this talk so well, but I have a worry. If I die how will I know that my children will continue to get this talk fed to them, who will do it? Tonight I want some to stand up and talk promise that they will teach my kids if Got decides to close his fingers on my time (call him home)". So the rest of the night the believers went around making agreements to each other on who would teach who's kids if their lives were suddenly ended.

Unfortunately we have had a spat of deaths in the village lately and there are others who are very sick and nearing the end of their days. While I was out for the translation check one of my sets of parents (Lawrence and Gloria (both believers) lost their 4 day old baby boy. This was a big blow to them and very hard for Nina as her and Gloria are very close. But the reaction to the death of this child was unlike any that we have ever seen in the village. As they buried the boy Lawrence got up and said this "God Papa you hold all of us in your fingers, and you decided that the time of this boy of mine was only 4 days. Death will take us all someday Papa, it is the promise all the way back to the time of Adam, that is just the way it sits (is). But Papa you know me, you call me child, so I will not let the liver of my stomach turn black (be bitter) over this. You marked my boys days and you have marked mine, but you have put me in the heart of your stomach (love me) and I know there is thinking on this (a reason), you always have thinking for your children (a reason why things happen to believers)". The incredible thing was that a father never speaks at a child's funeral and if he does it is with rage and suspicion over who or what caused the death, so it was shocking to all there to hear what he said. Keep praying for Lawrence and Gloria though, these are tough days for them.

Nina and Beau are into 3rd grade so that has them both stretching more and more. Recently we were able to fly in 2 more big cats and two kittens so to Nina's relief we have been rat free ever since. It is less fun for Beau (not being able to check the glue traps for "catches" every morning) but having Mama happy is far more beneficial for the family entire family. Beau has developed a taste for uwokak (a pod with red and yellow seeds that is made into soup) mixed with grub worms. About every other morning before school he goes over to his Papa (my brother who lives 50 feet away from us) Roger's house and is treated to the lovely breakfast. Nina about vomited when she found out what was going on, but it cut down on our cereal and milk bill so there was an upside.

Unlike most letters there is a hoard of other stuff going on (the believers taking active steps to look after each other in very new ways, teaching being asked for in 3 villages (1 within our language, 2 outside) because the believers are teaching while they are there, Sunday School Bible quizzes put on by the believers with over 80 kids showing up, etc…) but I run the risk of getting long winded so we will wrap this one up. Next letter.

Thanks guys for standing with us and for all you do on our behalf, I know I have said it before but please do know that we could not be out here without everyone of you. Thanks for your support of us and all that is happening in Yembiyembi.

 

Your friends,

Brooks Nina and Beau

 

P.S. Chargers anyone for the Superbowl this year??? Sounds like it's the year…..

Monday, June 1, 2009

Baptisms and growing tension

Dear Friends and Family:

Just a quick note to let you know that we had 19 people baptized in the Gokfak river last Sunday. It was a strong group of people (3 future chiefs of the village and 1 present one and his wife, and our son Beau J) that are dedicated to showing the "colors" of Jesus' side. There were some incredible testimonies and some of the participants had prepared a series of questions that they asked and answered with people on the banks as a means of teaching the outsiders that were there. All in all it was an incredible day.

But as is typical in Yembiyembi "fire chases sweet" (bad follows good), and we came crashing back to earth yesterday. 1 of the village chiefs that is STRONGLY against all the changes that have been happening called us down for a "meeting" to discuss why so many were crossing over (becoming believers). It turned out that it was a pre-planned trap to try and get the believers and myself to react and start an all out fight….or worse. To their credit the believers held their cool and got out before any major fights erupted, but the tension in the village is high. Remember that the believers (like every good Yembiyembi) have been raised to fight at the drop of a hat, and to have 26 men hold their cool while some younger men were taunting them and begging them to fight is….very unnatural.

Pray for these next days as they will be loaded with tension and the possibility of a major village explosion is high.

Thanks for praying guys,

Brooks

P.S. If you have your pictures, or access to the website http://www.flickr.com/photos/yembiyembi you can see the people who got Baptized. (Clara, Sita, Grenis, Salvius, Paul, Peter, Jerome, Edward, Sabina, Kelly, Brian, Kris, Matthew, Zaccheus, Regina, Marianna, Fransisca, Beau Buser, and Kathy R.)

Quotes from the baptism:

Kelly Taman- "I wash now to mark before your eyes whose side I stand on, but God sees my deep inside, he knows I am His kid and no one can loosen his fingers from me".

Sita (My mother and Nina's good friend)- "I have had night dreams of this day coming to meet me, I am so happy, I am marking whose side I am on"

Zacchues- "I am standing on Acts 19 (the first part of the chapter where Paul baptizes some men a 2nd time). In mans eyes I have washed once before but I was a baby and I knew nothing of this talk. Now I wash for the first time in Gods eyes and he knows that my thinking on the bridge-man is clear"

Edward- "Keep your ears open good to what I am going to say. I am not joining New Tribes Mission, I am not going under some name. I am standing on the talk of Jesus alone and for that reason I wash to mark my outside because of my inside thinking"

Beau- "I am getting baptized because I understand that Jesus died on the cross for my sins"

Friday, May 8, 2009

Baptism, Rats, and Garamambu

Dear Friends and Family:

Well It is May and that means that we are starting to dip into a bit of a dry season out here in Yembiyembi. That means that we have to conserve a bit more water (Beau and I washing at the river, laundry not as often, etc..) but our airstrip will be out of the water for any unexpected flights so that is nice. It also means that we will have a great sand bar down at the river for our 2nd set of baptisms coming up on the 24th.

 

The believers are very excited and it looks like anywhere from 15-30 people might get baptized. About 20 have given their testimonies and have been "approved" by the believers for baptism, and there are quite a few more that are debating it. Remember that the first group we baptized almost resulted in myself and one of our believers getting speared in the water, so the tension is thick when these things happen. Baptism here is not simply a confession of faith and following through on that. Anyone involved is making a very public break from their old way of life and committing themselves to stand on this new talk ALONE, it's almost Biblical J.

Last week our co-worker Tim came back to the village to help out for 5 weeks, (which is a huge blessing) so that caused a lot of excitement among the Yembi's and brought out the mud, flowers, face paint etc… to "welcome" him back. He is going to be teaching next week as we push into Romans 7 and 8. The believers continue to grow and mature and we seem to be getting new faces every Sunday. As we have been going through Romans being "saved by works" or by "following the 10 commandments" has taken a pounding and that is reverberating around the village. Last week as I was walking home one night I stopped and stood by my brother's (Roger) house listening as he read to his wife and 2 boys and explaining our "Adam part" (old nature), "and "if the law could save us why did Jesus come?" Then further on one of my in-laws (Stanley) was explaining to his mother that "Abraham crossed to God's side (was saved) by belief, and not by cutting skin or by the Law of Moses, they came later, so how could they help him cross, and how can they help us cross now?"

 

Nina and Beau are doing well. Beau continues to do battle with his mother through 2nd grade but his chickens (an egg a day now), his dog, his kitten, and rubberband wars with his Yembi buddies are seeing him through. Two weeks ago he flew on his own to the Mariama tribe to see his friends (8 other missionary kids) and get a break from Mom and Dad, so that was a huge hit.

Nina is carrying a heavy load as usual and has been doing great on the content checking (making sure the meaning of what Paul was saying comes through in the translation) of the book of Romans. We are hoping to wrap Romans up in the next couple of weeks and start the checking on the book of Ephesians, so pray we can keep our energy level up for all of that.  God has smiled on Nina and our cat (Snow) has started to catch rats resulting in 3 rat-free weeks now….it has dropped all our blood pressure quite a bit (Nina because of the rats, Beau and I because of Nina).

 

Guys that should do it. In 2 weeks I head out on a survey of a new tribe (the Garamambu language group) that has been asking for missionaries for 5 years now, so pray for that. These things have a way of breaking your heart as you see people ready, waiting, and wanting missionaries so bad, but having no families to go in there. Pray that the Lord would send us a few new families to put in there, so that the Garamambu people could "cross over" someday.

 

Once again I tip my hat to all of you and say a big "Thank You" for the prayers, packages, encouragement and support you are to us over here, the Yembi's would not have the gospel, would not be growing if it wasn't for you. Someday you will get to see the result of all the efforts, but till then you will have to suffice with just these bad e-mails.

 

Appreciate you all,

Brooks for Nina and Beau

 

P.S.

This is from my uncle Zaccheus a very down to earth, humble man that has just learned how to read well and loves talking about the "Bridge-man". Our Council (the government representative for the village) was trying to intimidate him to stop coming to the teaching and he responded to him like this, "Brother-in-law, you are a big head (knowledgeable) man, I am not. You know more about government, money, town living, you win/pass me in knowledge on these things. But I know this book (the Bible), and I know that I have the found true talk in it, and I win/pass you in knowledge of this book. I am one of little knowledge, but I do know what is true, and you will not loosen my fingers from it."

 

P.S.S. the pictures of the Yembiyembi's continue to be at http://www.flickr.com/photos/yembiyembi/ and the blog of all our communications from out here is at http://bringingthesecrettalk.blogspot.com/

 

(((Pictures next time, our radio connection has been poor)))


Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Sunday meetings and Witchdoctors

Dear Friends and Family:

Well we are back in Yembiyembi and settling back into our translation and teaching routine. The time out of the tribe proved to be a great time for the believers as they taught themselves for 3 weeks and did a great job at it as well.

When we got back we heard that they met together on the first Saturday night but for the second and third teaching times they decided to move the teaching time to Sunday morning. This is a big step for these guys as it shows they have no fear of the backlash from the "other side" and what they could have done to them. Thankfully nothing came of it, and now 3 lessons into Romans the Sunday morning time has proven to be a huge blessing.

Nina is doing well and is continuing to pound 2nd grade into Beau's head, keeping us all fed, medicated, and clothed, leading the womens group (that has doubled in the last month), and discipling 6 ladies. Lately she has been doing battle with a couple rats in the house that chewed up 3 of her Tupperware which brought the wrath of God (through Nina) down on our house.  

Beau is working his way through school, mud ball fights, shooting birds with slingshots, teaching his dog how to roll over, catching little bats, and how to trap fish in the river. He does well in here when there are activities and kids to keep him occupied, but is very excited for the day when Scarlett and Logan (our co-workers kids) get back.

I am in the middle of translating and teaching the book of Romans. We are presently 6 chapters ahead in the translation (teaching off of translated material) and hoping to get the book done in the next month and a half. There are always a ton of things going on in Yembiyembi, airstrip work, house maintenance, lesson writing, translation, but the biggest by far is the interaction with the dozens of people we see every day. As the believers are growing the discipleship that is taking place is far and away the most important job we have. As they grow and stretch they are applying more and more of what they learn to every aspect of their lives.

While we were gone a witchdoctor from another village came to Yembiyembi and offered to cleanse the house of anyone in the tribe for a small fee. With this house cleansing no one who lives in that house will get sick or die, but he threatened that anyone who doesn't ask for his "help" will be sick and die soon. My uncle Zaccheus stood up in the believers meeting while we were out and said this, "Everyone is free to follow their own thinking, but the footprints of this liar will not be around my house. Only God controls sickness and death. How can a man nothing (mere man) tell me he controls these things?  This is a clear lie, we are not going down that path". 

One of my best friends, my brother-in-law Job, was a little more…pointed when he stood up in the men's house (the meeting house of all YY men) and said this, "This is the fat layer (biggest) of all trick plans (cons). This man says he can keep us from sickness and death, do it and see if it works, but my hands will be clean from this liar. Before I would have doubted and been thrown around like dry grass (easily persuaded), but my thinking is clear now, God alone holds us in his hands. But those of you who don't have clear thinking, who don't know the root of our talk, feel the fear in your bones and do it, but I have no fear of this man's words". 

Guys that is about it for now. We are still going through ups and downs, challenges and trials of living in Yembiyembi. God is doing a great thing in this village and the enemy is not going to just give up and go home, so please keep praying. Last Sunday we had 10 new faces in the group and there were 3 from sister villages that are here "tasting" what this talk is about. The believers are teaching in their houses every night and there is talk of the older believers teaching a new class from Adam to Christ that will be for the children and new believers who want the review.

But at the same time there is talk of the two unbelieving village chiefs (there are 5 of them) going out to town and taking myself and the other 3 believing chiefs to court just to get us to stop the teaching. There continues to be the antagonism and out right threats made against some of the believers, but they are not intimidated. Keep praying.

Thanks for your gifts, your letters, your prayers and your support, we wouldn't be here without you behind us.

Brooks for Nina and Beau 

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Death in Yembiyembi

Dear Friends and Family:

This will be a quick note to catch you up on two events that have happened in Yembiyembi that were very big. Unfortunately both of them were deaths in the tribe.

 

On Tuesday one of my translation helpers came for a final brush up on Romans chapter 7 and some hard talks. Kevin (Gamul) has been a great help to me in the past 2 years with translation but at the time of the teaching he understood but did not agree that he was a sinner and God would judge him someday. Every other week Kevin and I have met and gone over some parts of the Bible translation and then we would have a "strong" talk on where we disagree. The next day (Wednesday) Kevin caught a strong strain of Malaria and by Thursday he was fading fast. On Friday morning he was unconscious and we medivaced him (flew him out on the plane to the town hospital) but only lasted an hour in the hospital and he was gone. Kevin had taken a strong stand against the believers and told many of the first ones that were baptized that God would kill them within a couple months so the turn of events is BIG in the tribe and for the believers and unbelievers.

 

The second death came on Saturday.  Osia was a sickly guy in the tribe and had been battling a combination of Asthma and a heart condition since the time we arrived in Yembiyembi. He had not been coming to the teaching but mostly because his father had threatened to stop feeding him if he did. A week earlier when Osia was fading one of Nina's fathers (Edward) had gone up to the house where he was at and requested permission to give Osia the "talk of life", but the unbelievers in the house would not allow him to come in so he turned back. Then on Saturday as Osia was slipping in and out of consciousness he said these last words "Papa where am I going, where am I going. I think you have fed me bad sago (you have taught me lies), where am I going, where am I going!!!!". 2 minutes later Osia was dead.

 

Donald (Osia's father) has been strongly against the teaching,  but these last words rocked him and he asked for some of the believers to come to his house and talk with him 2 days later.

 

A final note is that Kevin was a strong leader of the opposition and his death has churned up a lot of outsiders (from 5 other villages) to come "investigate" what killed him.  This meant that the changes that have been happening in Yembiyembi are going to come under the judgment of some of these outside leaders and there will be lots of blame handed out for his death.  As Nina and I were boarding the plane to come out of Yembiyembi (for our annual regional conference) one of my fathers Robert came up and said he had just had a discussion with the other believing leaders and said this "White son, this is not a bad thing (outside leaders coming to our village). This will give us an even bigger chance to give them this talk. They will want to know what has happened in our village and why we have changed and this will be a great opening for us. Leave this in our hands, we are ready, we have our spears ready (the bible verses they want to share) this is a chance and we will not miss".

 

Nina and I are out at our headquarters now and we are encouraged. These are the ups and downs, the opportunities and heart breaks of tribal church planting, but through it all we have to make the most of these chances. Thanks for praying for the Yembiyembi believers, this could be a huge moment for the tribe, people group and the entire area.

 

Appreciate you all,

Brooks

 

P.S. the pictures are of Kevin and Osia. Kevin is on the left in his picture and Osia is also on the left.


Monday, February 16, 2009

New teaching house and the start of Romans

Dear Friends and Family:

It is Sunday today and apart from a surprise flight in from our pilot (the tribe upriver from us had a medivac and we were in the flight path so we got some supplies) things are pretty quite around Yembiyembi. Beau is going through a bout of Malaria with a fever of 103 right now, so be praying for him, and Nina and I are both spent from a long week of work, but overall we are all doing well.

 

The big news is the completion of the teaching house and starting into the book of Romans. We had communion last night in the teaching house (always a drama with the strong opposition we have) and taught on the first 7 verses of the book of Romans and introduced some of the bigger issues we will be talking about in the upcoming weeks. The believers are especially fired up to learn about topics like, Paul showing clearly that the Law doesn't take us to God's side, belief in the bridge-man and how He alone can save, what a believer has to look forward to on this ground and the ground (heaven) to come.

 

Last night at the men's meeting I walked in from gathering firewood with one of my brothers and heard "when we skin change like the snake it will be so nice". I was curious as to what they were talking about when one of my brother-in-laws (Bakago, or Brian) told me they were talking about receiving new bodies when they get to heaven some day. He said "Brother-in-law, we are talking about how it will be at Jesus's ground, when we die our meat/bones (body) from this ground we will shed like a snake, and we will get new ones, ones that don't feel burn, don't feel stings, don't split when knives are put to them, we will be new, we will be joined back to God like that branch brought back in, just like we were supposed to be". 

 

Some of them started getting excited and one of the young boys said, "When I get to heaven I will eat the best food there is, rice, tinned fish and cow fat pieces, and….I will have the cold water chunks (ice) all day long, but only if I have good teeth then." Most of the guys nearly fell off the benches laughing.

 

Things are going well as far as the teaching goes, we still have the constant tension with the people who never crossed to God's side (or unbelievers) and it makes for some interesting village dynamics these days. Most of the believers were solid going into the book of Acts, but after watching the Apostle Paul and what he put up with and was willing to sacrifice for the gospel they are doubly so now.

The unbelievers made another push about 2 weeks ago to stop the teaching, baptisms, and any new people from joining and demanded that myself and the leaders of the "crossers" come down and answer some questions. We went through the usual gamut of threats and what not, and at the end my father Lucas stood up and said this, "We all know that we are two villages now, some of us have heard, understood, and believed to be true the talk of the bridge-man and some of us haven't. Some of you think that when my white son leaves we will not be able to follow the trail and will fall back to the old ways. But I tell you with my own mouth right now, I will never go back, none from my family will ever go back. Why? Because we have tasted the sweet of true talk, and our eyes are opened to the difference between mans talk and God's. I will follow the path of Paul and no matter what happens to me on this ground, I will never go back. No spear, no stone (verbal insult), no talk from the head of man will change me, that is how I stand!"  

 

If I could impress on you one thing from this e-mail it is this, keep praying for your people. We are still in a war out here and your prayers really are the difference maker in the outcome.

Thanks guys for your letters, e-mails, packages and support of us over here, we are ever grateful for the team we have behind us.

 

Thanks so much,

Brooks for Nina and Beau

 

P.S. the pictures of the Yembiyembi's continue to be at http://www.flickr.com/photos/yembiyembi/ and there is a blog of all our update e-mails, a recent video of the teaching at http://bringingthesecrettalk.blogspot.com/

 

P.S.S. when we get to our base we will try and send some recent pictures of the new teaching house.

 

 

 

 

 

 


Thursday, January 1, 2009

Christmas, outreaches, and a new building

Dear Friends and Family:

 

Well it is a Monday here and we are doing the usual routine. Nina is in the middle of educating Beau (2nd Grade is testing both of their character), doing the laundry from our time at the river yesterday and getting ready for her ladies meeting on Wed. I am in the office with Romans translation work, lesson writing and going over a new teaching schedule with some of the "crossers".

 

Things have settled down really nicely in the village and there are some neat breakthroughs with some of unbelievers in the village. The believers have done a good job showing kindness (a very un-Yembiyembi quality) and a little grace when dealing with some of these guys. Right now our believers are living and breathing in the book of Acts  and watching Paul in action is infectious. How Paul was willing to sacrifice body, ego (a huge one in our tribe) and the comforts of this ground (another big one) to get the message to those who had never heard is a message that is resonating among them. 

 

5 nights ago I was about to go to bed when I heard some guys sitting around talking outside and went out to investigate. 5 of our believers were outside making a fire and were all excited about something. My brother-in-law Job invited me over and explained that 2 of the believers had been to our sister village (Changriman) to buy Kerosene for their lamps and had been asked by the village chief about the "God talk". The 2 believers went to the Chiefs house that night and the whole village sat inside or outside on the ground and listened till 3:00 in the morning as they started in Genesis 1:1 and talked through till the fall of Man. One of 2 believers said this later, "They were like baby birds just eating everything we were giving them, it was amazing to watch God squeeze their livers like that (desire something greatly)". The two believers had to leave early in the next morning (a 6 hour hike) but promised that next time they came they would bring their notes (the lessons they have gone through) and "fill up everyone's thinking good".

 

These next few weeks are going to be busy for us as we hang out with some visitors (Thanks so much Rob and Becky for coming, we can't wait to see you), tear down our old meeting house and re-locate it to a new site, have a translation check for the first few chapters of Romans, and finish teaching the last few lessons of the book of Acts.  We are really excited about finishing teaching in Acts and starting into Romans.  So many of the Yembis are asking questions about the "Christian life" and are wanting/asking us to start teaching them about faithfulness, living with the Holy Spirit and what to do with that law (10 commandments) now that they know they don't help them get to God.  We are also starting to gear up for an outreach to one of our sister villages and in the next month or so will be doing another baptism.  Like we said, we will be busy, but it is so encouraging to be seeing first hand how the believers are growing daily by their time in the Word and from the persecution they are facing.  Keep praying for them, especially for Jenny (Paul's wife), Helen, Ipona, Kerobim and Otto.  These are the one's who have been causing the most friction in the village lately.  We know though that God answers prayers, and we are hopeful that their hearts will be softened and their eyes opened to the truth of God's Word.

 

Thank you so much for your prayers.  Nina and I have been so encouraged these last few weeks by all of the e-mails and notes we have received from you. 

 

Appreciate you all,

Brooks for Nina and Beau

 

P.S. the pictures are of the baptism, clearing the site for the new teaching house, one of my fathers reading the Christmas story on Christmas night, and Beau with his friends.