Thursday, August 23, 2007

Garissa Update from Ken Ochieng

As indicated in the previous update, our Jesus film staff went with University of Nairobi students to reach out to the people in Garsen with the gospel. Below is the pictorial account of the mission




The mission team headed to Garsen
Missioners crossing the river to reach the other villages. One of the “boats” carrying missioners overturned in the middle of the river—it took a miracle for the people to be rescued.




Talk of poverty?—it is real in Garsen

People gathered to watch Jesus film at night


Excited children after the show

Zakayo—Our Jesus film staff helping people follow the show



LAGBADANA MISSION

Mwenda—Our Jesus Film show leader helped organize a mission in lagbadana(5 miles from Garissa) for “Bridgers”—Students in transition between high school & University. This muslim lady is so generous—she cooked a meal for the team


Multitudes watching the show


The team constructing a school in lagbadana—Practically demonstrating the love of Christ. The class almost ready—just waiting for mud wall

The House of the headman—How does it compare with yours?

Ken

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Thailand Update

I'll be making a trip to Fang, Thailand and Myanmar in September. Among other things, I'll be participating in the dedication of the church building that we started in March 2006. The trip will also allow me to connect with old friends and learn what they are up to. I plan to meet hill tribe missionaries and others so I can keep our trips fresh, interesting, and challenging. We'll be sending a Pullman / Montana team sometime in the winter/spring of 2008.

Our initial meeting for Thailand 2008 will be the last Sunday of August (26th), and we'll get things going later in September after I get back from Thailand.

If Asia isn't your thing, we'll be heading to East Kenya in summer 2008 for a very challenging trip.


Bruce

Kenya Update - Ken Ochieng - Garissa, Kenya

Psalm 63:1-3 says “O God, you are my God, earnestly I seek you; my soul thirst for you, my body longs for you, in a dry and weary land where there is no water. I have seen you in the sanctuary and beheld your power and your glory. Because your love is better than life, my lips will glorify you” NIV. These words capture the longings of my heart. My prayer is that he will be the priority of our (including you) lives and that every other thing will be secondary.

I have been reading a book on “Boundaries” by Dr.Henry Cloud & Dr.John Townsend and have drawn great lessons on how to be saying No to those things that look urgent but are not quite the priority of my life. I have always taught people that God must always come first, Family second & Ministry third but I find myself not abiding in the same things I teach as most of my time is spend in ministry—sounds hypocritical but then it is an area of growth—I covet your prayer in this.

We have been having busy time here: Eunice has been active in meeting the prayer groups that meets in our office every week and also helping the office with HR issues. Last Sunday she was speaking in Anglican Church of Kenya here in Garissa. Last Sunday I spoke at Glory restoration sanctuary. Two of us speaking in different venues presented a good problem of who was to go with the kids—I had to go with both Tim & Ann coz it was possible for me to preach and manage them at the same time. This Sunday, I will be speaking at the Redeemed gospel Church—Pray for God to use me as his Voice.

Our Jesus film (JF) staffs have continued to work faithfully in this unfriendly environment. This week, Zakayo (JF staff) is together with Students from the University of Nairobi who are studying Medicine, Pharmacy &Dental surgery. They will be treating people during the day and showing the film during the night. Because of high illiteracy levels, Jesus film and the lives of believers might be the only “bible” this people would be able to “read” the whole of their lives. Pray for safety of the team and for God to reveal himself to the people who would be watching the film.

Kenya government is currently recruiting trained teachers and we are likely to loose some of the Teachers. We don’t pay our teachers as much as the government does and it takes those with a calling to remain with us. We have experienced high turnover of teachers as they move to the “greener pastures”. We can hardly pay a half of what others are giving.

Pray that God will bring people with a burden to serve and not people interested in money. Pray that we will get enough resources in order to give competitive remuneration to our staffs (we are about 50).

We intend to have 40 days of prayer & fasting this coming September. We ask you to consider full or partial fast. We even welcome those who will skip breakfast for those 40 days. We will not rest until we see the kingdom of God established in the hearts of Somalis, munyoywaya, Malakote, Wata, Orma, Wardei. The Knowledge of the glory of the Lord must cover this land as waters cover the sea. We hope to give you the prayer points for every single of those fort days soon. Please, shoot back if you want to be a part of this.

Lots of Blessings

Your commitment to the work of the Lord will pay off even in this life and remember Revelation 22:3 "And there shall be no more curse; but the throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it; and his servants shall serve him."

KEN,EUNICE,TIM and ANNA.

Friday, July 27, 2007

Update from Fang, Thailand

Greeting to you in Jesus Name.I could not belived that it a long time since we comunicate. I am very sorry for this latr reply.We have been praying for you all the time .I am very excited to that young people are very intersted in more missions work look forward to work with them.The Orphans are doing alright and we now have 30 of them,and all are in school. and they have been praying for a new track (truck) to bring to school and back,as of now they all sqeese in to our little blue track,have attach their bios.We are now entering the final stage of our new church building I have attach some picture of the building.We are praying that it would be finished by September and Dedicate the Church building September the 15 2007.so that we would be able to us it immediately.do you think any one from Pullmen church could come for the dedications.?We still need more funds for floor tiling,chair and cutrians.Please help pray for us.We are very excited that it will be finished on time and are trusting God for the finances. Thank you again and we appriciate you all very much.Blessings Thailand for Jesus.Timothy, Fong Fung















Tuesday, July 24, 2007

July Update (2nd) - Ken Ochieng - Garissa, Kenya

PRAYER POINTS

---The knowledge of the glory of the lord to cover the land as the water covers the sea


---God to reveal himself to the locals through visions, dreams, miracles


---Believers to be bold in sharing their faith both in life style and by word of mouth


---God’s Protection upon the local believers


---More laborers to come over


---Unity among believers


---Our School to maintain academic excellence


---Peaceful campaigns in this region during this year of election


---God to enable us to be strategic in our approach. That we would reach out to “Samaritan woman” whose conversion would cause great revival in the horn of Africa (Garissa, Somalia, Djibouti)


Eunice & Our school children carrying Somali children who have been abandoned by mothers at birth—this habit is on the rise



Our School children showing love to the innocent children







Eunice bottle feeding the baby abandoned by a Somali woman




It is time for raising the national flag in our school parade



A student in our School: Pray that they will worship the true God.


For the fulfillment of the great commission,


Ken & Eunice

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Update from Ken Ochieng in Garissa, Kenya - July 2007

We thank God for you and pray that you enjoy intimacy with him.
Life has been busy with lots of activities geared towards connecting with the locals.

Our visit to children’s home run by “mama Hani” was so successful. This old Muslim lady (72 years) has been working so hard to take care of the children majority of whom were dropped by their mothers. In the Somali culture, it is so bad to have a child out of wedlock and so there are a lot of Somali ladies (those who don’t want abortion) who have to carry the child till birth and then drop them in the garbage. People who find these children know where to take them—“mama Hani”. The long clothes that cover the head to the sole makes it easy for these girls to carry the pregnancy without people noticing. Some parents throw their children if they have disabilities. We took our boarding children so we could all spent time with this underprivileged children—many of our students learnt to appreciate who they are because they realized that others are worse.
Our own children, Tim & Ann learnt the importance of giving—we told them the story behind those children’s predicament and they were so touched about it---they gave clothes to be donated to those children. As a family, we are praying to God to help us know the workable strategies that will enable us reach out in love to those children. We hope to send you pictures of the same.

On 5th July we distributed mosquito nets and cooking utensils to a number of Somali ladies that lost things during the flood---the impact of the flood is felt to date

Please, do pray for a Somali brother “A” below that I won to the Lord and am trying to follow him up. He seems to be under intense pressure to give up Christianity. Thank you for standing in the gap.

For the fulfillment of the great commission,
Ken & Eunice

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Ken's trip to U.S. and return to Garissa (including attack by...)

(below this post there are some great photos - check them out!)

Everything about the trip was a miracle—right from the process of getting the visa to booking the flight.

On 12th April, I left for Seattle where Scott was to meet me. I arrived in Seattle at 16.35—it was a warm reception from Scott, his wife Hillary, daughter Emma and sons Grady & Gavin. We managed to spent a few days in Seattle at the house of Scott’s brother—Jason. The good thing was that all of Scott’s family was there. I felt like I was co-opted into the family.

You talk of Seattle and all that comes into my mind is rain—no wonder the all place is dotted with star bucks. I already noticed the difference between where I came from and America. Here, roads are really nice (Americans should be faithful in paying their taxes) and buildings are really planned. I also realized that Americans drive on the ‘wrong’ side of the road—this scared me to death because I thought we were going to collide with the oncoming vehicles. Many times I would enter the side of the driver (when I was supposed to be a passenger).

After few days of recuperation in Seattle, we started our journey to Pullman. I was able to see nice sceneries on the way but what excited me most were the sites of snow covered land—I had never experienced this before. Scott was gracious enough to allow me step out of the car to touch and taste the snow—great experience. Landscape kept varying from mountainous to flat land.
On the way to Pullman, I started experiencing something new—‘Drive through”. If we needed a meal or coffee, all we needed was “drive through”—Life is really made easy.

We finally made it to Pullman—one of the most beautiful sites of the world (it was actually ranked top 10 best world sites for photography—I was told but I don’t know who ranked them—I believe it anyway).

The programme that Scott came up with could not have been better. Mine was to meet with people and share my story—I enjoy doing it.
Below is how my itinerary looked like:

Stayed with Scott’s family for most part except below. Among the foodstuffs that I ate for the first time included: Tacos, Lasagna, Salmon fish. Off course there
were all these strange juices (apparently they were nice) like Crane berry, blue berry etc. People (read Dan) like diet coke—I have never seen them in Kenya.
20th April 07—was with Pastor Dan (he is so funny). We went to see a movie (Amazing grace).

I spent in the house of Jamie & Sherry Hawes.
21st Apr—Visited Kamiak national reserve with Jamie, Sherry, Cole, Addison, Clay. Very exciting to do this kind of exercise. It is here that I realize that Americans love there dogs. Scott has one too called “Lu”

22nd Apr---Spoke at Pullman foursquare church. The topic: “the way up is down”. In the evening, I spoke on the book ‘prayer that works”.

23rd Apr—Stayed with Caleb and Stella (together with their children—Brian, Lauren, Andrew). It is here that I ate ugali & Kuku (this reminded me about home).

24th Apr—Stayed with Jeff & Angie Feuerstein (together with Annie, Tom, and Rosie). I felt like I was President Bush being in this beautiful house.

25th Apr—Stayed at Jeff’s place. Dan, Scott & I drove to the top of Steptoe—the guys who designed the road must have been genius. We had great lunch in Colfax.
I joined Jeff in conducting the gospel survey at WSU. I think the guy we talked to was philosophy major—very interesting talk indeed.

26th Apr---Stayed at Jeff & Angie’s house

27th Apr---Arrived at Springfield national park for Men’s encounter week. Joe talked on “Lost Son returns home”

28th Apr—second day of encounter. Went out together with Jamie and Ryan to Snake River—I think it was five hours walking. Experienced two rattle snakes on the way. Great experience for me although I was really exhausted.
Jan Busboon talked about “the transcedency of God”
Chad Jeffrey talked about “Forgiveness”
Jeff Feuerstein talked about “deliverance’.
We later lit the fire and burnt what was written against us.
Great teachings.

29th Apr—Scott taught on “The Holy spirit”
Dan closed the meeting. We drove back to meet the rest of the congregation at Pullman foursquare church. Ryan and Bruce cycled (it doesn’t sound real especially for Ryan who walked five hours the previous day).
30th Apr—Visited Oliveto’s (Stephen, Tiffany, Zach & Connor). I had Vietnamese dinner!

1st May—Attended Jan Busboon’s cell

2nd May—went with Scott to Eastern Washington state university. I briefly shared what we are doing in Garissa. Scott shared the message—he is a great speaker. Many students showed interest to come over to Kenya.

3rd may—stayed at the house of the Salvadalena (Russ & Janie, Shianne, Nick).
Attended my first bowling game (courtesy of Russ). Won the second match (out of five of us—can’t share about the first game).

4th May—Stayed in the house of Joe and Sue Watson—beautiful place to view other sites in Pullman

5th May—Joe and Sue took me to watch their grand son Jessy play baseball—my first time. Great game although Jessy’s team lost.

6th May—Attended Church—Reinhardt Bonke’s series.
Stayed with Bruce & Laurie Heimbigner. Got to meet two of their sons and their daughter in law. Had good talk around the great meal.

7th May—Traveled together with Bruce & Laurie to different parts of Eastern Washington. Got to join Bruce’s brother plough his huge trucks of land. Visited Grand Coulee, salt lake among other places. Had dinner in Spokane.

8th may---Visited different places at Washington state university. Saw Labs for Victor, Bruce, and Masaro before linking up with Jan

9th May—Spent most of the time at the church

10th May---Visited Jan & Janice Busboom—cut trees, fed sheep. Ate dinner

11th May—Visited Steve 7 Serena Bravard. Tried moving the boat. Did shooting---using different guns (The noise was really scary). Great dinner.

12th May—on Steve & Serena’s four wheeler meandering through the steep hill—great excitement for me. Fed horses.
In the evening, I joined Victor, Lupita & Jeff—we went to Jeff’s deck. We passed through India reservations. Great experience as Victor 7 I tried a game neither of us was familiar with. Sad that Victor Beat me.

13th May—Attended Sunday service—Reinhardt Bonke’s series.
Did preparation for the following day

14th—18thMay---Las Vegas, NV

18th—24thMay--Virginia

24th—30thMay--San Jose, CA

31st May—Preparation for the following day

1st June—Drove to Okanogan/Omak

2nd June—Attended Okanogan centennial celebration

3rd June—Spoke at Omak’s foursquare church

4th June—traveled back to Pullman. Great Dinner at the house of Pastor Dan, Patty, Bowen

5th June---shopping & saying bye to those who came to bid me farewell
GREAT, GREAT, GREAT EXPERIENCE. THANK YOU ALL WHO MADE MY STAY A SUCCESS.
THANK YOU SCOTT FOR ALLOWING GOD TO USE YOU TO
BLESS ME.

6TH –9TH---NJ
9—12TH---PN
13TH---WARM RECEPTION FROM EUNICE, TIM ANN.

I MET THE OBJECTIVES OF LAUNCHING THE BOOK & RAISING FINANCIAL SUPPORT---TO GOD BE THE GLORY!!!

I am now back to Garissa where there seems to be plenty of work
Already. My wife Eunice worked so hard in my absence. She did organize a
Prayer seminar that was well attended by members of different churches in Garissa--it was very successful.
In my absence, some Muslim thugs invaded our school at night where
They slashed our watchman leaving him for the dead--God spared his
life and is recovering--this is now a police case. The intention of the attack is still not clear. The thugs managed to break into our school offices and made away with lap top computer amongst other things. Please pray for safety of the school children who are borders and also ourselves

Friday, June 08, 2007

Ken on Tour

Ken in Cougar Country - Sorry couldn't find a live one.
American Bison / Buffalo
Visiting a Wheat Farm in Eastern Washington - No cougars here either


Dry Falls Washington

Grand Coulee Dam


Fun in Spokane


My wife even gave him a haircut

More later, Bruce

Friday, April 20, 2007

Ken (from Garissa, Kenya) is in the United States for the first time!!!

Ken is in Pullman, WA, USA until June 6th raising awareness of the work he does, building relationships, raising prayer & financial support, releasing his first book (click here to buy a copy online), and seeing snow for the first time! Below are from the Cascade Mountains in the state of Washington where he saw (and tasted) snow for the first time. We will be updating the blog with news from his trip, so check back often! Also, yesterday was his 35th birthday!!!! Happy Birthday, Ken!!


Sunday, March 18, 2007

Ethiopia vs. Somalia Soccer Match in Dadaab, Kenya at refugee camps

When you talk of Somalis and Ethiopians the next thing that comes in mind are enemies that cant see eye to eye. This is worsened by the recent war that was in Mogadishu (capital of Somali) in which the Ethiopian troops helped to remove Islamic courts that had ruled Somali for a number of months. Around that time, we had a lot of influx of Somali refugees to daddaab refugee camp.

I have trained quite a number of Ethiopians on how to do evangelism and discipleship. We needed something that would bridge the gap between these refugees who are neighbors and yet enemies. Having talked with a refugee from Ethiopia who is taking care of the church in the camp, we decided that a match between these groups was going to be the bridge to use to share the love of God to them.

We hade two categories of matches: under 15 years and Adults.

Saturday 10th match: Ethiopians under 15 beat Somalis two goals to nil. We had about 1,200 Refugees watch the match.

Sunday 11th: It was a match of the adults between Somalis and Ethiopians. At the end of the 90 minutes they had equal goal aggregates two versus two on each side. They went on penalty and both scored three more goals. It became dark and a deal was made for the match to continue the following day. About 1,500 Refugees watched the game.

Monday 12th: They decided to have full match again. Somalis emerged the winners having beat Ethiopians two goals to nil—it was real celebration time for the mammoth of Somali supporters who had cheered their team all through. About 1,600 refugees watched the match.

As I think about it, I realize that adopting relevant strategies in reaching out to the hurting world is going to go along way in bringing people to the Master —sharing HIS Love in multifaceted ways is something we need to boldly do.

Giving smiles and joy to faces of some of those people who have seen death so close is something I would not trade with anything.

Here are a few photos so you can have a taste of what happened:

Look at that—Somali players (in red) with Ethiopian Players (light blue)







Ethiopians holding the two cups that were being “fought” for & Ken holding the cups before giving the leaders

N/B: most Ethiopians who played are from Gambela region—they are called Anywak—they are river-Lake nilotes. We also have other Cushitic Ethiopians in the camp (I have trained quite a number of them) only that it was tricky involving them also. Thanks for being apart of this !




Friday, March 16, 2007

Myanmar update

Hi Bruce,

Thanks for the in-depth and encouraging update on what is happening with you guys and the church. My apologies for not responding sooner. I was in the States for ten days of meetings and my inbox is very full (still 75 messages to go!).

Let me say that your continued partnership in Thailand and Myanmar are making a difference and bearing fruit. I am in regular contact with P (talked to him last night) and the ministry there is mushrooming in every direction (its now up to 58 church and doors opening all over). Our big challenge now is to help them get some buildings up! The evangelism is going great but the government and economic situation are very tough and they need our help. I will be there in two weeks for a graduation of the students who have now finished their course work since the Bible School was closed. P is using the church to continue the training and we are looking at finding a way to reopen the Bible School as a vocational training center.

Another need is additional room for the orphans. As they get older, it is essential to separate the boys and girls and they are looking for a way to build a dormitory that will allow for this. The church property is pretty maxed out but P manages to find a way!

You may have heard about increased persecution from the government. Six churches have been closed in Mandalay and officials have been cutting the crosses off of church buildings in the Golden Triangle. So far, none of our ministries have been impacted but the situation is tense.

One thing I have discovered is that places where we have missionaries get a lot more attention and help than the places that do not. That is one reason I pound the drum for Burma a lot. Our involvement with some very solid and proven ministries will greatly multiply the fruit and I have a strong sense that it is God's time for breakthrough in this nation. I have been north to Chin State where the revival started in the 70's and south to Moulmein where Adoniram Judson began a ministry that has left a lasting legacy. In Yangon, Mandalay and the Golden Triangle, a young generation of leaders is rising.

Please convey my thanks and those of the Pastor Philip Ahone, P and the leaders in Myanmar for what you and the Pullman Foursquare Church has done.

Philip and Mie Mie Ahone are in the Seattle area now. Their daughter Charis will be graduation from Seattle Pacific U. in May. I would encourage you to contact them. Philip is the founder and leader of Foursquare Myanmar and I would love for you to be able to spend some time with him. They have a daughter in Portland, Glory.

Thanks again Bruce. I will be happy to work with you and the 20 something's who what to come to SE Asia! Sounds like a great trip. I would love to spend some time with you and this group. Let me know dates, etc and I will help you set this up.

God bless you,

George Butron

Monday, February 19, 2007

Cornelius in Burma

BREAKTHROUGH IN BURMA

The news out of Myanmar (Burma) is often negative but God has a way of getting redemptive work done even when things are looking bad. After hearing about increased opposition to Christianity in some parts of the country, I paid a visit this once prosperous SE Asia nation which is still known as, "The Beautiful Land." After visiting several ministries that are growing under difficult conditions (the economy is weak, the spiritual atmosphere is heavy and the Buddhist religion and world view is pervasive), a unique opportunity came to meet with a highly placed government official.

While not a believer, this man is like Cornelius from the book of Acts chapter 10. He is a man of peace who fears God and genuinely wants to help people. He has a greburden and spoke with compassion of needs in his nation regarding health care, orphan care and other areas where development and transformation are needed. The health care system faces huge shortages of medicine and supplies with increasing spread of diseases. Regarding orphans, he stated that when poor children and orphans are taken to the Buddhist temple to be raised by the monks it dooms them to a life of poverty and begging with no education or future advancement.

After hearing about Foursquare orphan care, medical teams and development projects in Cambodia and other places, he was genuinely interested to see these things happen in his nation. He said they need the help, offered his assistance and said that many of these projects could be run through local churches--a most unusual opportunity.

After all the negative news--there are powerful players who are actively opposing Christianity-- this was certainly a positive and unexpected conversation! God has a way of arranging divine appointments and opening doors. He is also putting a burden for this nation on the hearts of many people who are banding together for a breakthrough in Burma!

Help is needed and if you are interested in being a part of this project, please contact me at:
fmisea at singnet.com.sg

Thanks!

George Butron
Foursquare Missions International SE Asia

Sunday, February 04, 2007

News from Myanmar

I've found several news articles on this, but it difficult to know the accuracy.
http://english.gospelherald.com/article/asia/959/section/more/1.htm
http://www.cbn.com/CBNnews/95502.aspx
http://www.christianitytoday.com/tc/2005/003/1.42.html
http://www.mnnonline.org/article/9490


Dear Friends,

The News from Myanmar recently has been a mixture of both good and bad. On the good side, churches are growing like never before and three is every indication that God is doing something unusual and wonderful in this impoverished nation. The bad news is that there are indications of a severe campaign against Christians that has already resulted in the destruction of several church buildings and caused believers to flee for their lives. According to an official document that was recently published in London, there is a “Program to destroy the Christian religion in Burma,” (Charles Colson, Breakpoint Commentary 1/31/2007).

I travel to Myanmar on Monday Feb 5th and return on Saturday the 11th. Some strong prayer support, intercession and warfare would be much appreciated.

Thanks for caring!

George Butron
Singapore

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Garissa/Dadaab Ministry Update from Ken Ochieng

Hi Scott
Greetings from a hot and meatless Garissa. Meatless because we have had an animal disease outbreak called Rift valley fever. Mosquitoes transmit the same disease to Human beings. The government slapped a ban on eating meat in this place (the locals love to eat meat). We have learnt to be vegetarians—I think I am enjoying it.

The year is getting busy and you can join me in praying that more laborers will come here and join us in reaching the Muslims with the gospel.

The exciting news to report is that God enabled our school to top 83 other schools in our district in the 2006 national exams whose results came a month ago. This being our fifth consecutive time to top the district has made many parents flock our school to bring their children (majority are Muslims). We decided to increase the number of streams (classes). The school now has >400 students. Continue praying that they will see the light of the Lord.

The year started in a very tough way—what of with the conflict in Somali and the Rift Valley fever. Garissa not being very far from Kenya-Somali border is seen by many people as not a very safe place to live in. many people expected us to leave the place when things were tough in Somali. We thank God that now things are much better.

Somali is one country in the world that has very few missionaries reaching them. Because of lacking a government for the past one and a half year, the place is so unsafe to missionaries that many decide to keep off the place yet the God I serve whose ways are not our ways has opened a great door here in garissa and daddab for me to mobilize believers to reach out to them. Somali people are more open to the gospel when here in Kenya as opposed to when they are in Mogadishu. I am planning to organize a football match between Somali and Ethiopia soon in daddab refugee camp. As you are aware, people are so idle in the camp such that they prefer to play football every time the temperatures go down. We have over 150,000 refugees in the camp and many are coming in. I have tried to equip believers especially from Ethiopia and Sudan with skills on how to reach out to there Somali colleagues (they freely mingle in the camp). Pray that the football match I am organizing will be successful and that the believers will use that to connect with Somalis and plant the word of God.

Through out this week, I have been teaching the word of God to our workers—two of them are Muslim. The study is such that even the non believers can attend. These studies are laying foundations that are going to help these two Muslim colleagues know the Lord—in fact one of them came to me asking me to spend more time with him explaining to him some things that are not clear—please, pray that the Lord may bring them to the knowledge of truth.

People that were affected by floods are still in camps although many of there places are dry. We continue to help them with medications and clean water. The government has come to appreciate our work the more through our intervention in this situation. It is true that everything works for good to those that love the lord and are called according to his purpose.
I plan to run training on evangelism and discipleship starting this match here in garissa. We believe many will be equipped. One of the things I will train on is how to do Muslim evangelism.
Keep praying that God will fulfill his purpose in this place through our lives.

We thank God that you are helping us lay foundation of the word of God here where deception has reigned for long. I am looking forward to seeing you in US this April so we can strategize further on how to accelerate the process of reaching out to our friends here.

Blessings

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Urgent prayer items from Ken in Garissa, Kenya

Other than the impact of the flood that is still with us, there are two urgent prayer items:
1) The fight in Somali is causing a lot of influx of refugees here (we are not very far from the border). Pray that Christians will share the love of God with them. Pray for a lasting solution in the conflict in somali
2) The outbreak of "Rift valley fever" is causing many deaths here. The disease is transmitted by mosquitoes from Animals to people. Victims die after 48 hours--signs are fever, bleeding etc. Pray for God's intervention.
Thanks for standing in the gap
Regards to Hillary, the children and the church

Friday, December 22, 2006

Highlights of 2006 from Ken in Garissa, Kenya

Ken, Eunice, Tim, and Anna
















Life Frontier School
















Ken training teachers














Flooding














Anna
















Tim




















OUR PRAYER FOR YOU IN 2007 IS THAT:
You will walk with God --- you will not loose strength
You will continually talk to God –you will not loose breath
You will wait on God—you will loose no time
You will Trust in God—you loose no faith
WISHING YOU LIFE GUIDED BY ETERNAL PERSPECTIVE IN 2007

N/B---We are having ‘Pamoja Africa” conference at Kabarak University where University + other tertiary students from all over Africa are gathering (We expect over 3, 000). Ken will speak on two topics: Building prayer movements and reaching least reached people groups. PLEASE PRAY THAT GOD WILL RAISE A NEW BREED OF LEADERS FOR AFRICA AFTER THIS CONFERENCE

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

More pictures & update from Ken in Garissa

So far five people are dead because of the flood—thank God because many more lives would have been lost.

There are thousands of people marooned in an island---I have learnt that ten elephants and a number of Lions are also in the island and as the flooding continues, the animals are getting closer to the people and this is a great threat.

Not far from our place, crocodiles and hippopotamus are freely moving around enjoying the blessings of rain.

We have all moved from our house—I initially remained but finally decided to move out after our house was surrounded by water.

It is really hard for our children Tim and Anna who don’t understand what is happening—being away from there familiar house is also complicating the issue.

We have to move to a better house which means more money which we don’t have. We purpose not to complain or ask questions why this is happening. If anything, we are now helping out people who are in more serious situation than ours(At least we have a place to lay our heads).
We thank God for giving us opportunity to go through this kind of things—they cannot compare with the eternal weight of glory awaiting us and all those that are living for him. Greater love has no one than this, that one should die for his friends--Amen


Tana River Overflowing














Flooded House















Eunice outside their house

People fleeing the flooding

Flooded Ministry

Sunday, November 19, 2006

URGENT: Tana River Causes Mass Flooding in Garissa, Kenya (Update from Ken Ochieng)


So here we are in a serous situation. I have heard of tsunami, Katrina etc but never thought it would be that close to us. We have serious disaster of flood caused by the overflowing river bank of tana river. I evacuated my wife and children on Thursday and remained in the house hoping that things will become better—it has not. Below is our house











Things are bocoming worse—about 25,000 people are affected. Much as we are victims, we are trying to see how we can show the love of God in this. Below is a muslim friend helping to shift our furnitures











People are in great crisis here and buildings including churches are submerged. I was suppose to preach in a church today but could not because the church is under water and besides, I had to be rescued.




Please Pray






Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Update from Kennedy Ochieng in Garissa, Kenya

Greetings in the matchless name of our Lord. Below are photos of our standard eight students who are did their national exams last week---please, pray that they will glorify God with good results














We had music festival for our school—it was amazing seeing muslim children dancing Christian songs. Pray that they will embrace the truth \ Lots of love from us