[contentblock id=49 img=gcb.png]
For the past year or so, the Samburu Training in Ministry Outreach (TIMO) team have been working among the Samburu people and have grown to deeply care for them. Here are some of their stories of people they have met.
Jacob writesโฆ Pray for Apaiya (Father) Lesingeran
He visits our home daily to have a cup of tea with us and then we either read the Samburu childrenโs Bible or listen to a recorded Bible story and discuss it. He seems interested in Godโs word, but it is hard to tell since he is a quiet and soft-spoken man. Pray that God would open his eyes to the grace found in Christ. Pray that he would come to faith and be an example to his household drawing the rest of his family to Christ as well.
Apaiya (Father) Lesingeran
Miriam writesโฆ Pray for Lina
Sitting in my friend Linaโs house after showing the Jesus Film at her compound, I found her full of good questions. As we talked she asked me, โMiriam, what does it mean to murder?โ I cast about for recently learned words in Samburu as I explained that God commands us not to kill, that he hates war, and in fact says if we hate another in our hearts it is the same as murder. This brought a thoughtful pause. Pray for Lina and others like her who desire to know God, that they will come to know the God of love who is actively seeking after their hearts and lives.
C* writesโฆ Pray for Sabina
Sabina returned the day after weโd studied the Beatitudes to ask if Iโd help her remember them. So I grabbed my Samburu version of the Gospel of Matthew and we headed for the river bed. Like a sponge she soaked in each word and in 30 minutes sheโd successfully memorised half (vs 1-7 of 12.) Worrying sheโd lose her zeal for memorising I asked if she wanted to stop for the day. To which she responded, โI will stop memorising only when I remember all of what Jesus said!โ Praise God for hunger and eagerness to know him. Pray that she would grow into a woman rooted in Godโs word, captivated by his voice, and yearning to follow after him.
Mama Lenkoyo
Joy writesโฆ Pray for Mama Lenkoyo
โIโve come to church.โ This comment from Mama Lenkoyo preceded our first Sunday worship service in Lchakwai. Her determination to โhave churchโ, to worship God in song, prayer, and listening to his word, pushed us all into starting a worship service in Samburu long before we felt ready for it. Mama Lenkoyo, recently widowed, is just a few years older than I and we have become friends. She believes in Jesus and knows that he died for her sins. Pray that she will grow in her understanding of what it means to be a follower of Jesus, even when that means doing things differently than her culture prescribes.
Ltodoka and Kulalo
F* writesโฆ Pray for Ltodoka and Kulalo
At his request, I started studying Matthewโs Gospel with Ltodoka, a young school boy, and not long after, his friend, Kulalo, joined us. One week, we were looking at a passage where Jesus heals many sick people. โIf we are sick then we must pray to Jesus,โ Ltodoka said. โAnd if we arenโt healed straight away, what should we do?โ I asked. โWe must keep praying to Jesus because only he can heal,โ came the reply. I am amazed by these boysโ simple yet profound faith โ they have a lot to teach me. Please pray for them and me as we study together, that Jesus would make himself known to us.
* C & F’s names in this article have had to be removed for security purposes. Following the conclusion of this two year TIMO team, both C & F have gone to work in creative access locations with AIM, continuing to be passionate about sharing the gospel with those yet to hear.