Sixteen hours of flight time -- that was the length of our flight from Atlanta to Johannesburg with a one-hour stop over in Dakar, Senegal, for fuel and a crew change.
As we flew across the Atlantic I was treated to hearing a number of languages – a reminder of the rich mixture of cultures that would await me in Africa. Often I have wondered how I could preach meaningfully in such diverse cultures from my own. What I have found is that the stories in the Old and New Testaments communicate widely and, in fact, are sometimes better understood in cultures that are more similar to that of scripture than our own.
We are in Johannesburg just for the evening Early tomorrow we fly to Kinshasa where we will be met by Baptist leaders and missionaries. The Democratic Republic of the Congo has more than 200 African ethnic groups. About 70 percent of the population is Christian (50 percent Catholic and 20 percent Protestant).
The per capita income is $700/year for a population of around 65 million people living in a country one-quarter the size of the United States. The capitol city, Kinshasa, has a population of more than 6.5 million people. For 2006 the inflation rate was estimated at 18.2 percent.
The life expectancy is just under 52 years. The infant mortality rate is 86.6/1000. Roughly, 66 percent of the population is literate.
The country has been wracked by political unrest in recent years, both from inside and outside of the country. Things are relatively peaceful now, though one never knows when other forms of terror, such as the recent outbreak of Ebola virus, will erupt, shaking this society.
The full breadth of ABC mission: evangelism, medical, educational, and agricultural is present here. Dr Fountain (retired) was recognized by the United Nations for his pioneering work with village-based health care. Even now his work is a critical link in the health delivery system here. When the recent outbreak of Ebola surfaced, our medical missionary Dr. Bill Clemmer was on the frontline, helping diagnose it and initiate public health practices to contain the outbreak.
This will be a rich visit. I look forward to the statistics becoming faces and friends.
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
4 comments:
Welcome to Congo, Dr.Medley and team.
We hope you wil be blessed and be a blessing to all you meet, especially at Kikongo which was our last post in our years in Congo (1956-1990).
We know you will be impressed by the Pastors' School as well as the medical service.
As you enjoy the relative stability and peace in West Congo, don't forget to enquire about the ongoing tragedy of violence, rape and murder in the Eastern Congo. We should be concerned!
Dr Norman and Jean Abell
My prayers are with all of you as you travel! To my knowledge, the official annual income in the Congo is less than $100, which means that some people make more, others less! Wendy Bernhard, missionary in residence, Judson University, Elgin IL
Dr. Medley,
Thank you for going on our behalf as a representative of our family of churches. May God bless you, give you wisdom and strength, as you share Christ's love with our missionaries and sister churches in Africa.
In the bonds of Christ's love,
Gregg A. Sneller
Roy and team,
How wonderful to see all asppects of ABC represemted on this trip and to have each of you share it all with us.
May God bless you richly and bring you safely home;
Inj Christ,
Esther
Post a Comment