The Importance of Prayer in Mission: Kampala

“Any success, any resources we have here are all because of the faithful from around the world praying for us. We can’t ever take that for granted,”

City outreach and stratified evangelism began this morning with our team being invited to speak to the police officers in the Old Kampala Police Headquarters. The mission team arrived as the officers were completing their morning march.

Pastor Stephen, who traveled from Kenya to join the mission, spoke to the officers about how Jesus is the High Commander. “When you are given an order, you obey it,” he said. “You do what is commanded and ask questions later. If we can only be loyal to Christ like that! What is God telling you to do today?” he asked. “Surrender your heart to the High Commander today and let Him control your life.

Pastor Daniel closed the powerful outreach in prayer and made a call for salvation. As a result, 31 police officers gave their lives to Christ including the police commander, Mr. Ameru P.  After the meeting, the mission volunteers were given clearance to go preach inside the police headquarters. While inside, 35 suspects/inmates made confessions of faith! Praise God! In total 110 people were reached with the Gospel and of those, 66 received Christ as their Savior.

Following the outreach, officer Charles B. approached the team to thank them. He is the self-proclaimed Chaplin of the Old Kampala Police and was thrilled that such an impact had been made for Christ among his comrades. “You have done a great work here today,” he said. “We see so many terrible things but I know that if the people of this district knew Christ, they wouldn’t do the things they do. Your work will help stop crime so please keep going and tell everyone the Word of God!”

Pastor Daniel credited the successful outreach to the power of prayer. “There are strategies involved with any evangelistic outreach,” he said, “but the most important strategy is prayer. We’ve been praying for this mission for a long time because we believe that prayer prepares the hearts of the lost to receive the Gospel. Doors open into prisons, schools, hospitals and police stations like this one because of prayer.”

“Our prayer underpins the cooperation we are seeing between churches. It is not such an easy thing to get churches to work together! We can’t take this blessing for granted. It is the power of God,” he continued.

“People aren’t being saved during this mission because of fancy preaching. We’ve recruited members of churches some of whom have never led someone to Christ. Others have been trained in evangelism for a few moments, yet they are turning hearts to Him! It’s all because God has prepared the hearts of the hearers through our prayers.”

“Any success, any resources we have here are all because of the faithful from around the world praying for us. We can’t ever take that for granted,” he concluded.

Please continue to pray for our team as outreaches take place all over the city for the rest of the week.

Kampala: A Local Church

“AE has played a pivotal role in uniting churches in Kampala. No one church can reach this big region alone and AE has given us the unique opportunity to do it together,” he said. “In fact, this is the first time that all of the churches are coming together in the Rubaga district.”

When AE Uganda began preparing for this mission over a year ago, they found that there were deep divisions in the local churches and some refused to work together at all. Before we could do effective outreach to the city, we first had to help heal the divisions within the churches.

Rev. Raphael Kjjubi is a core partner with AE in Kampala. He leads King Jesus Church in the Rubaga division. He spoke to us enthusiastically about the mission.

“AE has played a pivotal role in uniting churches in Kampala. No one church can reach this big region alone and AE has given us the unique opportunity to do it together,” he said. “In fact, this is the first time that all of the churches are coming together in the Rubaga district.”

Rev. Kjjubi shared that local churches have felt discouraged by the spread of Islam in their community. Newly established and well-funded Islamic educations centers target marginalized communities and provide free education which revolves around Islamic studies. “This is why it’s so fundamentally important to evangelize urban areas. The churches need to awaken to the Great Commission and learn to be intentional about sharing the Gospel,” he said.

Raphael opened his church for pre-mission training and over 40 churches were trained in evangelism. He told us, “AE’s model works so well because it provides free training and support to churches before the mission. My church and many others have been empowered by this training and it’s provided long-lasting benefits for all of us. We’ve been provided with a strong theological base, local leaders have been encouraged and people have been challenged to reach out to their communities. God Bless AE! Thank you for coming to our community!” he said.

Salvation in the slums of Kampala

“Even though our supporters may be on the other side of the world, they are with us in spirit right now, sharing your pain and hoping to make a difference for you in the name of Jesus”

Hundreds of mission volunteers arrived at the Buskenyi Slum in western Kampala to clean the streets as an act of love and service to the community. The streets and gutters were piled high with rubbish and filth, but our team faithfully cleaned and witnessed to the community about Christ’s love.

The locals were so taken aback by what they witnessed, they could think of nothing else to do than to join them. It wasn’t long before our volunteers were working hand in hand with locals to clean up the dirtiest parts of their community.

It was here that Ben Campbell, CEO of AE Australia met Dickson. A man in his early twenties, frustrated and unemployed with a degree in social sciences. Ben noticed Dickson having an animated conversation with a young mother named Ruth who had joined the cleaning effort. Dickson was angry. “Why haven’t you cleaned the whole slum?” Dickson asked, his tongue loose from alcohol. “Do you know that if I came here and tried to clean on my own, people would beat me up?!” His anger hid a begrudging admiration for the mission team who had done something that he desperately longed to do; make a difference in his community.

Dickson invited Ben and Paul CEO of AE Uganda back to his home. He and Ruth are neighbours and do their best to look out for each other. As they walked down eroded and rocky pathways through the slum, they passed many small village shops and homes with people cooking and cleaning clothes in buckets. Young children stared and followed the group, giggling, their clothes torn and their smiles shining through dusty faces.  Young men, drunk early in the day, called out, momentarily distracted by the visitors walking into their midst.

“You see how we live?” Dickson said, at pains to point out the shortfalls of their home. “I hate this place. I feel like I die inside when I wake up to this dump every morning.”

Soon they arrived at Ruth’s home. A 2×3 metre room at the end of a narrow alley. She shares one single mattress with her three children aged 10, 8 and 4. All her belongings were jammed behind a curtain and on her wall were posters praising God. “I love God,” she said in broken English. Her children gathered, eager to meet and welcome the new guests.

“You see how she lives?” Dickson said, still frustrated. “I do what I can to earn money to help her feed her children. But I desperately want this place to be better. If I die and have made a difference here, I will be fulfilled.” he said.

As Ben and Paul continued to speak with him, they discovered that Dickson attends a church but feels that his faith is empty. Seeing his pain, Paul encouraged him to open his heart to Christ. “God has given you an ability to see the needs of your community. Look for the bigger picture of how God can change your life and use you to affect your community.”

“I believe that the church is the only thing that can make a difference in our community,” Dickson said. “The government can’t help us, but the church surely can. Thank you for coming today, you’ve given me hope.”

Ben also took a moment to pray for Ruth and her children. He encouraged her on behalf of AE’s partners across the globe. “Even though our supporters may be on the other side of the world, they are with us in spirit right now, sharing your pain and hoping to make a difference for you in the name of Jesus,” he said.

Please pray for Dickson and Ruth that God would open the way for new opportunities and courageous hearts as they face difficult circumstances. Pray that the local church would gather around them for support. Pray that Dickson’s frustration would be turned into vision and action for his community.

Real Joy

“God is good – all the time.”

For nearly 50 years, Uganda and its joyous Christians have been etched on Dr Robert Claxton’s heart. As a former AE Australia Board Director and Doctor, he has made periodic visits to the beautiful East African nation at various stages in its tumultuous history.

He’s been uniquely exposed to the changing demographics, political climate and growth of both Uganda and its Christians, who suffered prodigiously at the hands of Idi Amin in the 1970s. Originally working as a doctor in Uganda 45 years ago, Dr Claxton revisited 20 years ago, and make the journey to Africa again this year to join the proclamation period of the 2017 Kampala Mission.

In September 2017, Dr Claxton visited the International Christian Medical and Dental Association at Mengo Hospital, and the Department of Surgery at Mulago Hosptial. At Mengo, an exciting project overseen by Indian missionaries Anil and Shalini, is training South Sudanese students in medicine and surgery. They are also discipling these students through daily devotions, prayer and singing. It is an exciting time to be a Christian in Uganda!

He also reflected on serving at Kinawataka Medical Camp, in the vast slum of Kinawataka, where 700 of the most vulnerable people were given free medical care to improve their health, and by extension, whole communities. They were also spoken to about the complete healing that can be found in Jesus Christ.

“We looked after slum dwellers, the poorest of the poor, who live in extremely crowded ad unsanitary conditions. We screened for Hepatitis B, C and HIV and offered advice to patients. An eye clinic was also organised to restore vision and hope to poor Kampalans.”   

Joy is present in the churches of Kampala in a tangible form – genuine, generous love and care for new Christians, worship through song and prayer, and a real sense of community. It’s quite inspiring and an obvious manifestation of God’s love for his church.

AE Australia is so thankful for supporters like Dr Claxton, for helping to sow seeds to strengthen the Church in Uganda.

Robert’s prayers for Uganda:

  • Praise God for the Church in Uganda
  • Pray for its leaders and that it will remain faithful to the Gospel.
  • Praise God for the many lives transformed during the Kampala Mission
  • Pray that those who came to Christ will be enabled to grow in their faith and have the support they need to live for Jesus in the modern world.
  • Praise God for people like Minister of Health, Dr Jane Ruth Aceng, and pray for them as they seek to be salt and light in public life.
  • Praise God for political stability.
  • Pray this this may continue to the glory of God and the blessing of the people.

A mother and her unborn baby, saved – Kampala Mission, Uganda

Pregnant at 21 years old, Abbo *, decided she was going to abort her baby.

“I have no one to help me with the baby and no money,” she said. “The baby’s father is not financially stable, and he said he was couldn’t care for the child.”

Abbo was a Christian, and knew she had messed up, but she couldn’t see a way out.

“When I finished high school, I couldn’t do any further education,” she said. “I found myself with no money and no food, so I got into a romantic relationship with a man who got me pregnant.”

Desperate and frightened, Abbo thought the only option was to abort the baby.

Until she met a local evangelist during the Kampala mission this week. Reverend Susan, an assistant chaplain in one of Kampala’s hospitals, arranged for Abbo to visit the clinic and gain access to free pre- and post-natal care.

“I am so overwhelmed by the love I have received from fellow brethren in Christ and for Reverend Susan for her kind offer!” Abbo said.

“The AE evangelists talked to me about the love of Christ, how he forgives all sins and how He still loves me no matter what.”

Because of this reassurance of Christ’s love, and the help from her fellow Christians, Abbo has decided not to go ahead with the abortion.

Abbo and her baby have both been saved.

 

*name changed to protect individual’s privacy

Life on the streets – Kampala Mission, Uganda

Richard stumbles along the road in a long, tattered shirt, wearing shoes that don’t fit. At first glance, he looks like madman – dirty, unkept, muttering.

“I cannot remember the last time I had a shower,” he says. “Every time I shower, when I try sleep afterwards, I have dreams of snakes crawling over my body.”

Tortured by nightmares, avoided by other people who think he is mad, Richard feels like demons are chasing him.

But Richard is not mad. He is broken.

Richard’s wife left him and his children want nothing to do with him. He has no hope on his own.

“I feel like my life has no meaning,” he says. “I have no job, no family, I just loiter on the streets to see if I can find food.”

Having been tormented for so long and feeling pushed to the edge, Richard decides he is better off dead. He plans to go to Lake Victoria, and throw himself in the water to drown.

But then, a man approaches him and smiles. Richard blinks, tries to think if he knows the man. The man asks his name, reaches out his hand, and touches his arm. Richard is shocked into stillness.

Richard gets saved

He hears the man’s voice telling him about God, telling him that Jesus forgives all sins, no matter how great they are.

Richard finds himself crying and tells the man he wants Jesus to save him.

That day, Richard becomes a child of God, thanks to the work of an African Enterprise evangelist who reached out to a dirty, broken man on the streets of Kampala.

“I cannot express enough how grateful I am to you for praying for me,” Richard says. “Now all I want is to be reunited with my family. No more rejection! No more torment!”

Richard is broken no more.