Monday, April 19, 2010
some pics and then to ZIM!
Saturday, April 17, 2010
life is good in south africa :)
I have much to tell! It has been an exciting past couple of weeks full of fun breakthroughs! I had some really good days in Masi last week. On Thursday, we went to visit this guy who we have been meeting with weekly. I will share a quick testimony about him! A few weeks ago, we were meeting with him in his shack reading the word and sharing with one another. During our time with him I kept having pain shooting from my hip to my calf in my right leg. I never have this pain so I took note that it might be from the Lord. (Sometimes the Lord will give people pain for a minute that someone else has so they can know to pray for that pain in the other person. This is called a word of knowledge.) At the end of our time, we asked him if he needed prayer for anything. He began sharing that he has leg pain and began pointing to his right leg in the exact place I had been having “pain.” I began freaking out and telling him that I had been having pain there and that the Lord wanted to heal him! We explained about the word of knowledge and he was getting so excited! We prayed for him and declared healing. He told us it hurts him at work when he stands for a while and that he couldn’t tell if it was healed yet. WELL, when we went back the next week he told us that he had been healed and that he no longer had leg pain!!! Praise the Lord! Well as we were on the way to his house last week his neighbor stops us and pulls us into her shack and shuts the door. She began speaking to us in a hushed, serious tone and was barely looking at us. She begins telling us that she has a secret that no one knows. She begins pouring her heart out...that she is HIV positive and that she stopped treatment because some people found out and were making fun of her. She shared that her life is a mess, she can't get a job and she can't stop drinking. She told us that she has seen Vovo, who is a girl from Masi who began following Jesus and is now in CPx, and others in "our church" from Masi and that she sees the way their lives have changed and that she wants that! She told us that she has never followed Jesus, but that she wants to start!!! So we shared the God story with her and I had a word for her from psalm 18. She told us that she wants us to come back and read the bible with her and help her follow Jesus. This whole time she was so serious and as we were leaving she was hugging us and smiling! She was so giddy and was introducing us to all her friends and family who were outside! It is so good to follow Jesus! His grace really does melt all our guilt and shame, and his love and power really do heal and transform lives! Ndaba ismnandi! (good news!) Later as we were walking down the street, we ran into a man we had randomly prayed for the week before. We had prayed that he would get a job. He called us over and told us that in the next few days after we prayed he got a job! There are so many testimonies of God’s provision and healing in Masi…he is bringing his Kingdom to earth because he loves his children! Praise the Lord!
So I have been living in south Africa for 2 ½ months now. I really love living in another country and culture…it is always an adventure! But there are definitely so many fun cultural/communication breakdowns every day. So often we will have to stop and try figure out what in the world the other person is trying to say! One really fun cultural difference we have come across recently is that in Xhosa culture it is a good thing for a woman to gain weight. So one of our African sisters told my roommate (with excitement and good intentions) that she was looking big! She came back to our room mortified that she had just been called fat! We had to do some major debriefing to help her figure out that it was meant to be a nice thing! Ha! I have found it is always an adventure living cross culturally and I am loving it! For your enjoyment, here is a list of some commonly used phrases here that I am learning to use!
queue: a line you stand in
how's it?: what's going on?/how are you doing?
is it?: really?
sort it out: take care of it/figure it out
just now: in a little while
now: in a minute
now now: right this second
pitch: come/show up
top it off: refill
long: tall (so you would say: that boy is long for his age).
crockery: dishes
chips: fries
crisps: potato chips
biscuit: cookie
scone: biscuit
crumpit: pancake
a sweet: any type of candy or desert
takkies: sneakers
hooting: honking (as in a car)
robot: traffic light
windy house: a shack
kreche: preschool
fun facts from last week:
1. I ate sheep intestines for the first time! Ladies cook them on the side of the road in Masi and sell them...so my friend Vovo bought some to share with us the other day. OH MY! Lets just say it was verrrry interesting...and very chewy!
2. I saw my first dolphin last weekend! On my day of last week, my roommate, Rachel, and I took a taxi to fish hoek beach. We saw something swimming around in the distance...at first we thought it might be a shark but then i saw it jump up out of the water...it was a dolphin! I love dolphins and I have never seen one in the wild, so i was sooo happy :) dream fulfilled!
i leave for zimbabwe in 5 days! i am so excited! i will write more soon about our upcoming trip.
MUCH LOVE!
whit
healing the land!
God is so good and so faithful! He invites us to come and sit with him in the heavenly places (Ephesians 2:6). That is the place of victory, rest and joy, no matter what our circumstances are! Praise God that he invites us to sit with him! So seek the Lord today and ask him to raise you up to see the way he sees you and your circumstance from heaven’s perspective! Amen! I am praying that you and your family are doing well and filled with much joy and many blessings!
MUCH LOVE FROM AFRICA,
whit
Monday, April 5, 2010
my comings and goings...
We met a group of about 8 girls who are all around the age of 15 or 16. We have been meeting with them every Thursday. They are all friends and most of them stay on the same street in Masi. They are so fun and bring so much joy to my heart! It is so fun watching their interactions, seeing how each week they are opening up more and more. But there is a reality that strikes my heart every time I hang out with them. They are victims of a continuous cycle that plagues the people of Masi. At the age of 15 one of the girls in the group already has a child and another is pregnant. One of the biggest strongholds of the community is the lack of fathers. The vast majority of the young women I meet already have one or more children, and yet it is extremely rare for the fathers to be in the picture. The majority of people have not been raised by fathers who speak worth and identity into their lives. The women do not know how much they are worth. So many women in Masi live with verbal and physical abuse, as well as, rape. In a nearby township, statistics say that at least half of the women have been raped. My heart cries out for these young women, that they would know how valuable they are. I long for them to know the greatness they were made for. For them to have men in their lives who will protect, provide and love them well. For their children to grow up with a father, and in a safe and healthy family.
“You hear O Lord the desire of the afflicted, you encourage them and listen to their cry, defending the fatherless and the oppressed.” Psalm 10:17-18 My heart really does cry out for the fatherless and the women who are so oppressed by this cycle. My heart is so stirred to see restoration of families in Africa. It is so needed and so near to the Father’s heart! He loves families!
Lately I have been running into a lot old friends that I have met the last three times in cape town! The other day I was getting an ice cream cone at McDonalds near our house. As I got to the front of the line, I noticed that the girl at the cashier looked so familiar. She looked up and saw me and her face lit up. I realized that I had met her one of my previous times in Masi! It was so exciting to get to reconnect with her! She told me that after we had prayed for her to get a job, she got a job at McDonalds! (Unemployment is unbelievably high in South Africa, so most people we meet ask us to pray for a job.) She also told me that she started a tech program and is taking classes! Praise God! He has a hope and a future for his children. Since then I have run into her in Masi… I love that I have been able to invest in this community and that the connections I have made here in the past are so lasting!


Here is a pic of my roommates in our backyard! (From left: Me! Amanda, Nicole (from florida) and Rachel).
So a fun tidbit for you in closing… I am officially AFRICAN! I received a Xhosa name last week! My new name is Bubele, which means kindness or friendliness. (Name meanings are really important in Xhosa culure, which I love!) We met a dear woman named Irene, a fun, joyful mama who is so hungry for the Kingdom. She is everything you would imagine an African Mama to be! On our last visit, we were just talking and having tea with her and she ended up giving us Xhosa names! It has been really funny introducing myself with an African name to people in Masi and seeing their confused faces! Ha!
I treasure your prayers so much! Here are some things you can be praying for!
-Teaching phase: The Lord would use my remaining three weeks in Masi to see long lasting fruit in the people I have met and am pouring into! Also pray that all the things I have learned/am learning will be imprinted on in my life.
-Outreach Phase: I would continue to receive the Lord’s heart and dreams over Zimbabwe, as well as, pray for unity for our team!
-Future plans: Direction for my next step after completing CPx.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
david watson teaching!
-The thing I love about his teachings is that not only did he present a method but he conveyed so beautifully the heart behind church planting.
-He emphasized that no one wants our religion, but the thing I have to offer is my connection, communion and relationship with the living God. It is about living wholeheartedly for the Kingdom in a way that transcends the intimate places of my life and spills out into every area, and into my relationships with those who don’t know the goodness of Jesus.
-One of the things I loved was the way he described “ministry.” He defined it as the church answering the prayers and cries of the lost and those in need. It is about loving and caring for people. Meeting people where they are. This is the call of every follower of Jesus. To constantly be answering people’s prayers, looking for ways to love people tangibly.
-His method is focused on planting churches that are self replicable. It is about taking the focus off of the church planter and onto the raising up indigenous leaders, through empowering them to be the leader of groups even from the beginning.
My eyes have truly been opened to so much and I really feel forever changed by all that I have learned this past week. If you want to hear more, email me! I would love to share more in depth with you!
MUCH LOVE!
whit
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
life in cape town and onward to zimbabwe!
There is a group of us who spend our nights on the weekends praying and worshipping in the prayer shack in our backyard. It has been so sweet to really press into God’s presence and to experience more and more of the Living God! One night as we were praying I was looking at some pictures that are hanging on the wall of the prayer shack of kids in Masi who are apart of the Vulnerable Children program. All of a sudden my heart was flooded with emotion and I began crying. That night the Lord really poured out his heart over me for the children of Africa, specifically in Masi. I mourned the injustice of the things these kids face everyday. So many children are growing up without fathers and/or mothers. Disease, neglect, abuse, addiction, fear, abandonment and hopelessness plague the families of Masi. Children face everyday things I could never imagine the children I know from home facing even on one occasion. I mourned that night, but God also began stirring my heart. He gave me Ezekial 37 where God calls Ezekial to prophecy life over the pile of bones, and as he does the dry bones come to life, and come together in a “vast army.” I felt God calling me to prophesy over these children, prophesying life, hope, destiny over them. Calling out to each child by name because as each was born God saw them and dreamed extravagant dreams over them. He still longs for those dreams to come to pass, he longs for each child to live out their glorious destiny. Although they are over looked in this world and are oppressed by the injustices of society, the Father sees them and the great Rescuer comes to break their chains. So I feel that he is asking me to stand in the gap and to cry out for each child to come and step into their destinies…calling them to be the generation that seeks the face of God. (Psalm 24:6). Some of the things that I feel God has been stirring up in me since being here at CPx is a desire to see children raised up to know God, to love him and to hear his voice. And a longing to see families restored…Father’s returning to their children, mother’s healed and set free, and children being loved, treasured and raised up! This is so near to God’s heart!
Since that night in the prayer room a week ago, I have been praying over the children of Masi, specifically the children in the V.C. program. I have a list of all the households and each of the children’s names. I have been taking each household and praying for the children by name. As I have been praying the Lord has given me words and dreams that he has over each child, and I have been speaking those words over the kids. Here is a fun story about one of the children I prayed over:
Every Friday we have a kids club where we gather the Vulnerable Children program. i was praying over one of the households that i have never met...i prayed over a little 10 year old girl named Lucy. I felt the Lord speaking several things over her. That afternoon in masi we were going around to the households gathering the children for the kids club. one of the households i went to gather from was Lucy's! she was pretty quiet and was not opening up to me at first. but as we were walking she reached up and touched my clip (my friend brooke made me some hair clips that i could wear and then give away to little girls in masi) ...so i pulled the clip out of my hair and put it in hers. she was so excited! i told her that i wanted to give this to her but she had to promise to remember a few things everytime she wore it. i told her when she wears it she must tell herself 1.) I am beautiful! 2.) God loves me! 3.) and whitney loves me too! her face lit up...and her walls started to come down. i then told her that earlier that day i had been praying over some kids from the vulnerable children progam and she was one of them. i then told her that God had told me that he created her to be a light in this world. that where there was bad things and darkness, God had made her to bring light and love to those places. she got so excited and said "my name means light!" i got to share with her some more about God's heart for her. it really felt that she understood that God had spoken these things! it felt so significant. it was seriously one of the sweetest moments i have had in masi so far. Praise God! He loves his children!

In other news! As most of you know, the last 6 weeks of CPx are spent on short term outreach trip where we can apply all the things we are learning in the teaching phase. I just found out last week that I will be going to…

I leave on April 23 for Victoria Falls, which is located in Northern Zimbabwe, right on the border between Zimbabwe and Zambia. From what I hear, Victoria Falls is beautiful and is like Niagra Falls but ten times bigger! We will be living in a community of about 150,000 people, called Chinotimba. As most of you know, the county of Zimbabwe was once known as the “breadbasket of Africa.” The country was prosperous and stable; however, due to the leadership of president Mugabe, the economy of Zim has been destroyed. The people of Zim were left to fend for themselves in a country where billions of Zim dollars could not even buy food for a family due to the extreme inflation. I have prayed for Zim many times for the issues the country is facing and it is a joy to be able to actually go and meet the people and serve them! The team I am going with consists of our team leader Munya, who is from Zim, two couples from Florida, David and Shannon and Ray and Stacy, and a black South African named Wonder. We will be living in the community we will be serving in which is very exciting to me!

And I hear that elephants live right outside where we are staying!

THANK YOU to each and everyone of you for being with me on this adventure and loving, supporting and encouraging me! i thank God for all of you!
MUCH LOVE FROM AFRICA!
whit
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
the Divine Orchestrator!
Genesis 1:1 &10
God created the heavens and the earth out of nothing. He formed the earth and everything in it. When I really look at nature it never ceases to amaze me how everything fits together so perfectly. I have been studying Genesis 1 with several groups of women in Masi this past week (pretty sweet when women who don’t really know Jesus are teaching you knew things about God. Yes!). I have been struck really deeply with some truths drawn from this story. God is an orchestrator. Every detail of creation screams this truth. I have been for the 100th time learning to trust God in a new way since I have been here. On Friday during our time in Masi, the Lord moved in such a powerful way that I truly feel changed by it. There wasn’t any crazy healing, no one got raised from the dead, and the multitudes didn’t give their lives to Jesus. However, I was left in awe of the greatness of God and feeling so secure in the Father’s faithfulness. Here is the story.
My group that I do outreach in Masi with (Julianna and our friend, Vuyani) began our day by going to find Nokuthula, a girl we met the week before. She is hungry to know more about Jesus, so we set up a time to meet with her and her friends to pray and read the Word together. On the way we were going to drop by one of the Vulnerable Children houses. As we are heading down the main street we passed a group of girls. I made eye contact with one of them for a bit and I felt the Lord telling me that I was suppose to talk with her because she was hungry to know Him. But for some reason I didn’t do it. So as we are looking for this house, we got a bit lost and were walking in circles. We passed that same group of girls again about 10 minutes later. As we passed by the group, the girl I knew I was suppose to talk to was passing directly in front of me and for some reason neither of us got out of each other’s way. We ended up standing face to face. Her name is Siwapiwe. She asked me what we were doing in Masi. After telling her about our heart for Masi, she said that she wanted to walk around with us sometime. I told her that we could come by her house later that day. We then headed to meet Nokuthula. When we got there she led us to her friend’s house that wanted to meet us. But her friend was not there. We went to the library to try and find a place to hang out. The library was in mass chaos with hundreds of kids…and somehow we ended up on a tour of the library. We went up the stairs to the computer section and as I walked up the stairs a beautiful little girl greeted me. We finally found a quiet spot and had a really sweet time with our friend. After hanging out with her we went to find the house of the girl we met earlier, Siwapiwe. As we walked up to her home, we realized that it was the exact shack we had come to with Nokuthula! The girl I felt the Lord calling me to speak with and the friend of Nokuthula was the same girl! We knocked, but Siwapiwe was not home. As we were waiting for her, I saw a woman across the street coming in and out of her shack. Her shack was my absolute favorite color (turquoise, of course) and she seemed really lovely. I really wanted to go talk to her, so I went over while we were waiting for Siwapiwe. She was SO friendly and invited us to sit with her and gave us some coke. She told us that she has two kids who were at the library for an afterschool program. I thought to myself, “I bet her daughter is the little girl who greeted me at the computer area.” Sure enough, a minute later her kids came home and it was the same little girl! A few minutes later, Siwapiwe got home. We called her over and come to find out, she is really close with the woman we were sitting with. Earlier that day the Lord had given me a word for someone we would meet later that day about the parable in Matthew 13:44 of the treasure hidden in a field. I feel the Lord spoke so clearly who his treasures were that day. Every person we came in contact with were connected. The crazy thing is that these people were not all from the same area. We had been all over the community. Masi is big but God is bigger. Our steps were ordered so perfectly. The Lord sees and has plans for these women.
God is a divine orchestrator. He orders our steps. He won’t let us miss the good things he has for us. There is such assurance when we walk with the Father. This encounter that I had in Masi sealed something in my heart… I can trust the Father. He is so big and he knows exactly what we need. We can throw ourselves on his promises. We can put every hope in him and we will never be disappointed. He brings all things together for our good. I am so thankful that I have such good news to share with a hurting, weary and oppressed people! My heart is welling up with joy and praise for God our Creator. My heart’s desire is more and more to walk in adoration and worship as I keep my eyes fixed on Jesus, the lover of my soul. Thank you again to all who have made it possible to be here…I am so thankful for this time in my life and what the Lord is doing in me! MUCH LOVE! whit