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Africa
Tour Stirs General Assembly Moderator
‘Jesus
being reborn again and again’ amid pain and joy, Andrews
finds
by
Sharon K. Youngs
LOUISVILLE
- Christmas came early this year for the moderator.
In
November, the Rev. Susan R. Andrews, moderator of the 215th
General Assembly (2003) of the Presbyterian Church (USA),
received gifts too numerous to count during
a
three-week visit to Africa.
Andrews
was fulfilling one of the many roles she has as moderator
- serving as
an
ambassador to the PC(USA)’s global partners and witnessing
to the ministries undertaken by Presbyterians and partner
Christians for the sake of the gospel. She returned from
the trip tired but energized.
Accompanying
the moderator on the trip were her husband, the Rev. Sim
Gardner; elder Charles Easley, the vice-moderator; and Doug
Welch and Jon Chapman, PC(USA) area coordinators for Africa.
Numerous PC(USA) mission personnel served as hosts.
Andrews
visited Ethiopia, South Africa and Cameroon. Everywhere
she went, she saw
an
evangelical joy sweeping across the continent, a spirit
she said can “help us in the United States reconnect across
theological perspectives.”
Joy
was the theme of the tour: the joy of smiling children;
of women beginning to step forward into more visible roles
and sharing the good news through their lives and dreams;
and of men, women and children making rich, rhythmic music.
At the end of one worship service in Johannesburg,
Andrews’ singing and swaying so impressed the pastor that
he said he wondered whether she was part Zulu!
The
moderator was deeply moved by the faithful, committed work
of the PC(USA) mission personnel she met, by the strong,
dedicated leadership of African Christians, and the power
of their partnership. “The witness to Jesus Christ
is broad-based and multifaceted," she said. “I
experienced Biblically-grounded evangelism that is enthusiastically
offering the whole gospel to the whole person, and public-policy
advocacy ministries that make concrete the good news of
salvation.”
Although
telling about all the ministries and missions work being
done in Africa by the PC(USA) and its church partners “would
require volumes,” Andrews said, she’s going to try.
“I plan to continue to share each and every story,” she
said. “Presbyterians in the United States need to
know how very far their mission dollars go.”
One
of the things that impressed the moderator was the work
of Gwen and John Haspel, who run a medical clinic and school
that are among the best in western Ethiopia, despite being
an 18-hour drive away from the nearest source of supplies.
The Haspels’ evangelical witness to the previously
unreached Suri people has resulted in dozens of baptisms
in the past five years.
The
moderator also was impressed by the work of Breezy Luster
and her two African colleagues, whose translation of the
Bible into the Anurek language is almost finished -two decades
after it was begun.
Farther
south, the public policy work being done by Doug Tilten
is helping to make South Africa truly “post-apartheid.”
Andrews
brought greetings from the PC(USA) to those who attended
the eighth assembly of the All Africa Conference of Churches
in Yaounde, Cameroon. In her remarks to the assembly,
the moderator said: “I confess to you that, over the years,
we Christians from the West and the North have made mistakes,
sometimes imposing our faith in ways that have been oppressive
to the African people. But at the heart of our mission
partnerships has been our desire to share the liberating
gospel of Jesus Christ through evangelism, education, health
care, and political and social empowerment.”
“Brothers
and sisters,” she told the delegates, “you here in Africa
are the ‘new thing’ that God is doing in the church.
We in the PC(USA) recommit ourselves to be partners with
you, praying with you, serving with you, sharing our resources
with you. Most of all, we commit ourselves to step
back and learn from you how to be the joyful, vibrant, growing
church of Jesus Christ in the 21st century.”
The
moderator and vice moderator were not entirely shielded
from the problems that plague the continent of breathtaking
beauty and faith-filled people.
Ramifications
of the HIV/AIDS epidemic greeted the team at every turn.
While the PC(USA)’s partners are committed to educating
the population about the disease through clinics, schools,
and congregations, tensions persist about how best to prevent
AIDS. Tackling the issue of sexual infidelity, for
example, is complicated in a culture where vestiges of polygamy
linger.
The
African church faces a serious challenge: The number of
Christians there is increasing at an explosive rate, and
the numbers of pastors and lay leaders is not keeping pace.
But Andrews said she was deeply impressed with the
African leaders she met - such as Setri Nyomi, a Princeton-trained
Ghanaian now serving as general secretary of the World Alliance
of Reformed Churches.
“Setri
is preaching Africa into wholeness, with his honesty and
passion and joy,” she said. “He is calling them back
to the memory of the moral community that formed their African
tribal identity, but he is also calling them forward to
a future of physical, emotional, spiritual, and intellectual
maturity, as the interdependent body of Christ in Africa.”
Andrews
summed up her feelings this way:
“The
hospitality was generous, the energy was contagious, hope
was palpable, and the joy was life-changing. Jesus
Christ is being reborn again and again in the heart of Africa,
and we all will be different because of it.”
~
~ ~ ~ ~
For
more information, contact Sharon K. Youngs, Communications
Coordinator, Office of the General Assembly, 100 Witherspoon
Street, Louisville, KY 40202-1396; phone (888) 728-7228,
ext. 5750; email syoungs@ctr.pcusa.org.
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