Happy New Year from Mozambique!
Many of our friends have moved out to their farms, the rainy
season is off to a healthy start, and we are so grateful. Ripe mangoes
are everywhere, mosquito breeding season is in full swing, trees are lush and
green, and the roads are full of potholes! With the strong winds and almost
daily rain, though, we’ve had some problems with our power lines – I’m writing
this newsletter to the rattling and humming of our family’s generator (we are
thankful to have a back-up power supply when the electricity goes out so often
and so unexpectedly!).
As seems to happen every year, October through December were
over-full, and it felt like a sprint for Rachel and I to make it to the
holidays. So many projects and programs are concentrated during the dry
season while the roads are still passable and before our Mozambican friends
begin tilling, planting, and hoeing in their farms.
In October, I spent a week in Nampula participating in the
translation check of the book of Acts in Makua-Metto. The full
translation of the New Testament into Makua-Metto is still incomplete, and our
teammate Chad Westerholm works regularly with the translation team.
Spending a week observing and assisting with the consultation was an
eye-opening and stretching experience for me; I really enjoyed working with
translation team. To read more of my reflections on this experience check
out the blog post "Acts and Allies".
You could say that long term transformation of individuals
and communities into new creations really is the ultimate goal (here and
everywhere!) – and this makes mentoring leaders so crucial. A few months ago,
one deacon serving in the area of communication and collaboration for his
church cluster was removed from that role for stealing church funds for his
personal use. So, on a recent Sunday those five churches from that area
worshiped together in Nikanda and chose a new deacon to serve in that
role. We first met Pedro, the man they all agreed on together, years ago
when he became a Christian as a teenager; please pray for him and other
leaders, that they will not cultivate selfish power but instead to grow into
servant leaders.
The sustainable agriculture program has been going well.
After the training seminar in September Jessica put together a report
using the participant data to help us decide what future directions to take;
eventually we decided to buy high quality seed for distribution to the
different village associations this year – we’re hoping that will not only
increase their production but also improve seed quality in their areas.
These associations are spread out over five different districts and are our
primary avenue for teaching and encouraging conservation agriculture principles
in local farms. Jessica also has been organizing short videos in
Makua-Metto about sustainable farming practices for us to share on SD cards.
The long-term teaching potential of these videos is exciting; having
short training videos available for people to watch on their phones and share
with their neighbors can help spread the information about increasing crop
production to reduce the yearly hunger season and increase the church’s
capacity to share.
In December, I was able to reconnect with two young men that
we’ve been discipling over the years; they both have had scholarship sponsors
to begin university study in nearby cities, so it’s difficult to see them
except when they are on school holidays. It was a blessing to get to work
with one of them who took the initiative to put on a youth conference in
Montepuez for students on school holidays. That same week I got to study
through Ephesians with the other young man, and also spend time exploring the
ways God is working in the Makua-Metto culture. Helping students to
further their education is an important investment for the future of the church
in Mozambique. We still need to find scholarship sponsors for these two
young men and another young woman (between $1000 and $2000 for each of them –
that amount covers all their school fees and room and board for the year –
pretty good deal!). If you are interested in helping with any of
these scholarships, let us know and we can send you more information.
The bulk of our team’s time and energy these last three
months, however, has been invested in the Theology School (“Instituto
Teológico de Cabo Delgado” in Portuguese). Jeremy Smith has been working
hard on the construction of a classroom building and cafeteria/kitchen;
construction is almost complete and should be ready for inauguration right
before classes start in April. It is amazing and encouraging to look back
over the development of this school since its beginning a few years ago when
our team recognized that it was time to begin offering more formal training for
church leaders. In year 1 (2016) of the Bible school, we had 51
different students. Including the data from year 2 (2017) our total number of
students is 121! These students come from 8 different church backgrounds,
5 districts from Cabo Delgado as well as students from Nampula and Zambezia
Provinces.
Over the past two years our team has taught 22 classes
(offering 10 out of the 14 required courses). I recently taught the
New Testament Survey class in September, a class on “Giants: Challenges Facing
the Church in Cabo Delgado” in October, and a Preaching class in December, and
Rachel taught a week-long, intensive Church History course; she had 15 students
and they loved her class.
Over the past three months Rachel finished up studying
through the Sermon on the Mount with women in the Ancuabe district as well as a
few other studies in other villages and in town. She also juggled an
online theology class from HST, participating in young women’s initiation
ceremonies, teaching some science and some Portuguese in our team school, as
well as taking our team kids through a survey of the Old Testament culminating
in Advent.
We mentioned difficulties with our team’s residency
documents in the last newsletter; thank you for praying
about this with us! This issue has been prolonged over more than two years now,
and has been further complicated by some religious violence in a city about
five hours away, and then additionally delayed by leadership changes at the
provincial level. Please continue to pray with us as we are still working
towards the resolution of this issue.
The big news for our family, though, is that after much
prayer and seeking input from American and Mozambican colleagues, we have
decided to leave Mozambique in December of 2018 and return to the United States.
It is strange to begin wrapping up this chapter of life for our family – we
love our work here, and our girls have grown up knowing Mozambique as home.
We’ve begun to experience a swirl of emotions as we try to intentionally plan
our final year in Mozambique; hope for the future and also grief in the
upcoming goodbyes. That decision to leave is popping up in more and more
conversations with Mozambican church leaders as plans are being made for this
year and beyond.
Please keep this process in your prayers, both our leaving
Mozambique and our moving to the States. We want to “leave well,” not
underestimating the impact of stepping away from Mozambique after 15
years. We also want to move forward in trust; we don’t yet know where we
will be going or what we will be doing next, and we are waiting on God.
Thanks so much for supporting us and this ministry!
Please join us in prayer:
- For healthy farms and healthy people during the rainy season
- For church growth and maturity
- For resolution of our document issues
- For wisdom about wrapping up our work in Mozambique and peace about what God has for our family in the future
Grace and Peace,
Alan and Rachel Howell
Praying for you all as you go through the difficult transition. XO Julie
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