It's Not Just a Handout

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It’s not a benevolence program. It’s a life changing opportunity. What am I writing about? Manna Ministry. Here is a story that Vincent sent me about Justine Nangobi and her family that illustrates what Manna Ministry is and what it does. I love it.

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Justine Nangobi is a 37 year old mother of 4 children.  She came here from the village to stay with her sister in the slum, Banda. She is married and has stayed here for 17 years. She thanks God for the provision of Manna Ministry because when we found her and her family life was very difficult. Her husband’s names are John Kyatesa. He is 47 years old, an engineer and has been out of work for the last 4 years. He, too, is very grateful for the provision of Manna Ministry that has given to his wife.

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Since being in Manna, Justine and John been able to save and to start small businesses that are doing well and giving them hope. They have been able to buy a sewing machine to work with to make money. They also buy and sell shoes, gum boots, clothing and plastic items in a small store. They can earn around 20,000 shillings. They save 5,000 and invest the rest into their business. Before Manna they had no hope, but today they have hope. Justine and John are so grateful for the help Manna Ministry has given them and they ask you to continue to pray for their family and business as they continue to work together.

John and Justine have given their lives to Christ. They have been baptized, are studying the Bible Way books and are involved in a house church. They are growing as Disciples of Jesus Christ.

Vincent

I want to take this opportunity to thank all of you who have partnered with us at IMFC in this ministry to the people living in the slums of Kampala, Uganda and the Sudanese refugees living Arua, Uganda for the past 14 years! When this began in August 2004 under a tent in Soweto slum, we didn’t know if Manna Ministry would still exist today. We didn’t know if IMFC would still be working in Uganda. We didn’t even know if IMFC would still be in existence. But here we are in November 2019 and this work, Manna Ministry, has more than tripled in the number of people it works with and now includes Maama Kits and reusable sanitary pad workshops. Plus, it has become a tremendous DiscipleMaking tool for the Lord. Thank you for your prayers and support. You may never know how the Lord has used your support to care for the “Least of these”. Thank you.

One last thing. I want to ask you to pray for something very specific with me. Next week the leadership team from Nairobi, Kenya is traveling to Kampala to learn from Vincent and the Manna Ministry team what is involved in working Manna Ministry. They need to know how it works. How they enroll people. How they train people to save and start small businesses. How they buy the food, bag it and dispense it to the people without creating riots among the poor living in the slums. How they engage the local leaders and community in the ministry. They will be learning the nuts and bolts of Manna Ministry. Why? Because some of the very poor people in the slums of Nairobi have been asking for help and we are praying how we may be able to impact the lives of some of the people living in hopeless situations in the largest slums in the world in Nairobi, Kenya. The Lord is transforming many lives in these slums through the sharing of the Gospel, House Churches and Bible Way books. But, can IMFC do more? Can we help some with their desperate physical state of affairs as we do in Kampala? I don’t know. It was never our plan. But Nairobi was never in our plan either. So, I ask you to pray with me as we begin to pray and investigate the opportunities. We don’t want to say no without seriously investigating the opportunities and praying about it. So, I as you to pray with me and the IMFC Board and people of Nairobi. Pray for wisdom as we move forward in the work the Lord has laid at our feet. Thanks.


Jimmy

Could This Happen to Us Next Year?

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Greetings Muzee Jimmy,

Following the death of the area MP of Kibera a few months ago, the Kibera people are heading to the ballot on 7th November in a hotly contested election.

From the run up to this election, we have seen a lot of tension as one party claims that if they loose there will be no peace. So members of the IMFC family meeting in house churches from every corner of the slum who are in the thousands here in Kibera, are calling upon the brethren to pray together with them. Pray that the Lord will give peace to the people of Kibera, pray that the voting shall go on peacefully and pray that after the result is known it will also be received and accepted by whoever will loose the election. Today, we see people hurling insults and threats on public platforms that say if they lose there will be no peace in Kibera.

Kibera slum is the largest slum setting in the world and it is one of the places in Nairobi where the Lord has transformed many lives through the simple story we share from the book of John 3:1-21. We have so many house churches meeting in almost all corners of Kibera equalling to tens of thousands of people. This means that our brothers and sisters in these areas of Kibera are at a great risk of loss if any chaos breaks out. And today, they are fearing for their families, their homes, their businesses, their lives.

So the reason for writing this to you muzee Jimmy is because our Kibera family is calling upon the IMFC family to remember them in prayer as they wait for the election on the 7th November. Pray that the opposition party of former PM Raila Odinga, which is absolutely fuming now with their candidate being the brother to the former MP, will be calm and peaceful as they have officially said if they lose there will be no peace. The other candidate from the leading party is an international footballer, Mariga, who has a real chance to win under the guidance of the Deputy President. So ours is to pray that God will intervene because leadership comes from Him. Pray that our brethren will go through this exercise peacefully both before, during and after November 7. Thank you and kind regards.

Xavier

 I promised Xavier that I would ask my friends here in the US and in Uganda to pray for the people living in Kibera slum, especially for the believers meeting in the house churches and who are sharing the message of Christ boldly. I have been there many times and know many people. They're good people. They simply want an opportunity to live their lives in peace with a job to provide for their families. I am praying for them and I ask you to join me. I remember seeing the photos of fires burning in the slums after the last election and the riots that followed. I pray there is no repeat. Pray with me that the police could intervene and stop the hooligans who are being paid to cause this unrest without adding to the misery of the people by brutally beating innocent people themselves. November 7, is one week away. It’s next Thursday. Please begin adding this to your daily prayer list today. And we may need to pray that we do not face violence like this or the threat of it in the USA after political elections.

Thanks. 

Jimmy

Humbled and Challenged. . .

I am humbled and challenged by this. . .

I am humbled and challenged by this. . .

When he finished writing the book "Who Is Jesus?", he spread it out, knelt and dedicated it to the Lord, asking Him to use it to bring people to salvation.  He thought if two thousand or three thousand people were saved it would be great. From 1964 until 1988 the Bible Way materials had spread to 22 countries in Africa plus many other countries in the world.  It is only a "God thing" the way it continues to be used. - Mary Small, wife of Tom Small author of Who Is Jesus?

Mary Small emailed me last week after reading my email update on how one hundred Who Is Jesus? books have been sent to India. What she wrote has stayed in my heart. She said her husband Tom laid the manuscript for the book, Who Is Jesus?, on the floor and prayed over it dedicating it to the Lord. What did he ask for? Tom asked the Lord to bring two or three thousand people to faith in Christ through his book. Well, the Lord has done that and then multiplied it two or three hundred times!

While I was thinking about Tom Small and how God is still using his book, Who Is Jesus?, 55 years after Tom writing it, I received an email from Vincent in Kampala. He said he was sending me a good story of how God has changed the life of one our young leaders. It was the story of Isaac, a medical student in the main hospital in Iganga, Uganda, who has been changed after reading Tom's Small’s book, Who Is Jesus?

 Isaac told me that he was very confused with the messages he heard from the different churches so he decided to stay home and not be anything. He wasn't born again. He wasn’t a Christian. He wasn’t a Moslem. He was just there, existing. One day, Tom, a friend of Isaac’s who had come to be born again, came where he was and shared with him John 3:1-8, the story of Jesus and Nicodemus and how to be born again. Isaac heard the message but did not want to be born again and pray that day, so Tom gave him the Bible Way book, Who Is Jesus? Tom challenged Issac to read it. Isaac did and God spoke to his heart. He understood the truth of the Gospel and who Jesus really was. He had never learned this in any church. Isaac said that he decided to be born again. He prayed on a Wednesday to be born again and God changed him. He now knows he is born again and is sharing this message of Jesus and Nicodemus with his friends. He is glad he is no longer in confusion but knows the truth. 

Isaac is a young man with passion. He has a teachable heart. He was asking many good questions during his training in Kampala just wanting to learn. He asked us to pray for him as he continues to share the message. Isaac is very, very smart and he knows what to do. After the training, he told us how he has the message and now knows how to train his friends so that the whole Eastern part of Uganda will hear this message. I am seeing Isaac as great tool for Iganga and other parts of Uganda. He is a changed man. - Vincent, IMFC Team Leader, Kampala, Uganda. 

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Tom Small never got to meet Isaac (He is the man in middle of the photo. This was taken at his baptism in Kampala last week.) or any of the hundreds of thousands who have been transformed by the Lord through the reading of his book, but they are real, theirs stories are inspiring and they are the fruits of Tom’s labor for Christ. I can only pray that the Lord will bless my efforts for him as he has Tom Small's. May I be as faithful in my task as Tom was in his. This story has helped me. It has challenged me.

Thanks Mary for taking the time to email me. Thanks for sharing this personal story with me. Thanks for being a part of the story that has brought us a beautiful book, Who Is Jesus?, that God is still using to change people’s lives. Thank you.

I pray this story will encourage you as it did me. I pray that it will challenge you to be faithful and not tire in your work for Christ. I pray that it will allow you to see how the Lord can use your works to bring a great harvest of fruit for his kingdom during your life and far beyond it. Do your best. Don't stop. Don’t give up. Finish your task. Then spread your arms and pray over your efforts giving them to the Lord. 

Thanks for reading this. Thanks for praying for us. Have a great week. May God richly bless you and your family.

Jimmy
IMFC
jimmy.imfc@gmail.com
www.imfcworld.com

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2019 Bible Way Campaign

On Giving Tuesday (December 3) We are asking for your participation so that we can print 50,000 more books in order to get ready for next year. To print and distribute each Bible Way Book it only costs .50 cents. Please prayerfully join in, so that thousands more “Isaacs” can be made into disciples of Jesus.




This Wasn't Planned

IMFC is now sending Bible Way Discipleship Books to India

IMFC is now sending Bible Way Discipleship Books to India

While living in Namuwongo, Geoffrey met a man named Jotham sharing the message from John 3:1-21. Geoffrey received the message in his heart, prayed for Jesus to change him, and the Lord did. He read the Bible Way books, was part of a house church and worked with Jotham learning how to make disciples that make other disciples. Geoffrey learned how to share the story of Jesus and Nicodemus from John 3:1-21. He learned how to share the gospel using the five fingers on his hand. He learned how to lead a house church and an inductive Bible Study using the S.O.T. method:


S - What does this Bible passage Say?
O - What is there to Obey in this passage?
T - What truth is there to Tell someone else from this passage?


What Geoffrey learned in Namuwongo from Jotham, he carried to India when he went for post schooling. 

Sometime after moving to New Delhi, Geoffrey begin to call Jotham to tell him about the many people he had shared with, how many had come to faith in Christ and to ask for Bible Way books to help the people grow. Jotham told us about Geoffrey, what he was doing in India and his requests for books, but we didn't really know what was happening, and it is a long way to India. Besides, reports come in from many places and the request for Bible Way books are very, very many. So we prayed for Geoffrey and the new believers in India, entrusting them to their Lord and continued doing what we have the means to do. 

A few weeks back, a man came to Kampala from India on a business trip that Geoffrey had met in India and led to Christ. His name is Ganesh. Geoffrey had given Ganesh Jotham's contact. Ganesh contacted Jotham and asked for Bible Way books. When Jotham met Ganesh, he discovered that Geoffrey had taught Ganesh how to share the gospel reading John 3:1-21 using the S.O.T. method, how to share the gospel message using the five fingers and how to lead an S.O.T. Bible Study. After meeting Ganesh and hearing his story, the leaders in Kampala gave Ganesh 100 “Who Is Jesus” books to carry back to the new believers in New Delhi. Today, Bible Way books are in India as well as Uganda, Kenya, DR Congo, Tanzania and South Sudan being used by the Lord to grow His new followers! You gotta love the Lord. This was His plan not ours. 

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This story of Jotham, Geoffrey and Ganesh is an amazing story of how the Lord Jesus can use the simple gospel message spoken by simple people to cross oceans and significantly change others. Here is a great lesson: When we are faithful do our job where we are using methods that are reproducible, the Lord will do great things. That's true here in the USA as well as in Africa and for you and me as well as for the Africans. Let’s be faithful.

Have a great day. Thanks for your partnership. God bless.

2018 A Partial Year End Report

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IMFC doesn’t like to give numbers when we write or speak publicly. More often than not, you’ll read or hear more stories about changed lives than actual numbers found on a spreadsheet. Jimmy rarely ever uses them, and I only occasionally mention them. You see, it is more important that names are recorded in the Lamb’s book of life than in a computer file stored in the offices in Kampala, Nairobi, or Hiram, Georgia. Even though numbers are important we haven’t spent a whole lot of time or effort counting heads. Our thinking is simple really: It is more important to continue developing men and women into disciple makers than counting the ones we have.  Also, we don’t estimate numbers, simply because the temptation would be too easy to over-estimate.  But with that said, the world where we live revolves around reports, and rightly so, because important decisions involving lives and resources have to be made, and those decisions need to be based on hard reliable data from the real world.

Yesterday, we received one of our annual year end field reports from Tom Asea. The numbers you see below are derived strictly from things we can reliably count. The number you see from the baptisms - we know their names. The house churches that are reported, well we know where they are and who leads them.  As well those who are enrolled in discipleship, we know who completes the courses, and we especially know who is discipling more people. Our discipleship system is well suited for that purpose.

Uganda reported 116,417 individuals enrolled into discipleship in the year that ends today - 2018.  Of that number 93,198 of them completed discipleship courses. This is a completion rate of 80.06%. 8,871 people were baptized. IMFC is involved in 10,054 house churches. (These numbers are from Uganda alone. You see, the infrastructure in Kenya is still young and growing, and their current reporting capabilities only extend to how many books were printed and distributed. There is no infrastructure in the Congo or other east Central African nations at all, yet we know the IMFC influence is there, because we hear the stories and quite often see the pictures.)

From Tom’s year end report several things can be learned. 

  1. Baptism numbers are lowest from Kampala, where we have the largest staff. This is not a moral/doctrinal/ethical/motivational problem; it is simply an unclean - unsafe water issue, which has solutions. 

  2. The Discipleship Curriculum needs to be translated into the following languages in order for the Gospel to run even faster - Runyankole/Rukiga for Western Uganda, Rukonjo for South-Western Uganda and the Kasese district as well along the Congo border. Eastern and Northern Uganda need the books translated into Japadhoia and Luo, as does Kenya in the Tororo region. Tribes in the Congo need the books translated into Lingala and ultimately Portuguese. 

3)   All of this happened because Jesus loves His children and wants them in His presence. 

Finally, Tom’s report says that there were 93,385 people who made positive decisions for Jesus Christ in 2018 because of the field work of those who associate themselves as IMFC. Of that number, we have no idea how many were real, because an internal soul decision can’t truly be counted by anyone other than the individual who made it, so this will be the only time that you see it or hear it. This number though is important because of what lies behind it, which is 7,077 people in Uganda actively sharing the Gospel message along with the story of Nicodemus and then leading those who made positive decisions through a 4 stage discipleship process, and planting churches of whom we know personally. 

Here are some very important numbers that I can’t give you. We have no idea how many man hours nor how many people are praying daily for the movement of God we see throughout East Central Africa.  We just don’t know.  Also, we haven’t counted the number of Americans who gave their time working, sweating, and sometime bleeding in the dirt or mud. We could count this number easily, but actually it only occurred to me a few minutes ago to do so, or even that we should. There is another important number with names that I could give, but I won’t. There are a lot of precious people who believe in the movement of God in Africa, and they want to see it spread, so they provide funding for 110,000 books printed and distributed in Uganda, along with an equal number of books for the new believers in Kenya. They provide money to keep the Manna program running, and to buy septic tanks or cots for those who find themselves in prison. They give funds for orphans who find themselves alone and outside the official UN refugee system. They buy thousands of MAMA kits so pregnant women and their babies can be born safely.  Some have provided funds for boda bodas (motorcycles) and even office space. None of the numbers we provide above would happen at all without them.

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As one of the thousands of people across the world who call themselves IMFC, I say thank you to all those who provide, pray and work. Thank you, because you will never know the full extent of what you do here on earth. An interesting thought is that even though we don’t dwell on “field numbers”, they are incredibly important, because Jesus loves His children and wants them in His presence. Thank you for being IMFC.  

Blessings,

Steve DuVall, IMFC

Would You Want to be a Part of this Church

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From Vincent. Leader of IMFC teams and work in Kampala, Uganda. Just thought you might like to know as you continue to pray for the work in Eastern and Central Africa.

Justus and I were able to move around Katanga slum to see how life is for the people who were in Manna Ministry after the food from Manna Ministry has left. We found people still happy. Those who had started some businesses during Manna are still moving on with their business today. We found the house churches still moving on. 

We visited one of the house churches that was started after the food and Manna Ministry had left. It was awesome. People were praising God, worshiping God and sharing the word. I was with Justus and it gave us and the people in the community a picture of what a true church is. They come together and meet in their homes and small walkways to praise God and study His word together. They pray together. They help each other. And, they continue to share the message of Christ with the people around. It was so amazing to see the desire they have to learn the word of God. 

Manna Ministry is gone with the food, but the people are still moving on.

Praise the Lord! I love it. This is what I pray for and I know you join me in praying for this. Thank you for your continued prayers. God is faithful!

Have a great week.

Jimmy

PERHAPS (Part 1)

An army was concealed from their enemy that had them outnumbered by a whole lot. Yet, they weren’t really hidden; their enemy knew exactly where they were. They had them completely surrounded and were just waiting them out entertaining themselves by tormenting them. This invader was not only bigger; they were stronger. They had better weapons and were better trained. They even held the high ground. The army that protected a nation will face a sure quick death, by immeasurable horrible violence the moment they leave their hiding place. If they stay where they tremble then starvation will be their fate. Either way, at their death not only will an empire disappear from earth, but the wives, children, mothers, sisters they leave behind will be enslaved at best, but raped and then slaughtered when they fall as they run most likely. Humanity can be incredibly cruel, and there was no hope. There was nothing they could do. 

A few months ago, Jimmy and I were sitting in the home-office of one of the heroes of the faith - Dr. Jerry Rankin, the president emeritus of the International Mission Board of the Southern Baptist Convention. Of the hundreds of questions that we asked Dr. Rankin, this one stood out. I asked, “When do you know you have done all that you can for Christ? When do you know you’re done?” He replied as only Dr. Rankin can answer, “When you have done all you can do, you’re done.”   

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Jonathan said to his armor bearer, "Come on, let's cross over to the [enemy]. Perhaps the LORD will help us. Nothing can keep the LORD from saving, whether by many or by few.”  (1 Samuel 14:6)

International Missionaries for Christ is legally an organization. It is a registered 501c3 in the US, and a registered Non Governmental Organization operating throughout East Central Africa, but honestly it is much more than that. IMFC numbers thousands of rescued people of different races, cultures, and socio-economic backgrounds working together to make a difference among the poor, the distressed, the displaced, the lonely, the lost peoples on the dark continent. All these people who claim to be associated with the IMFC are united in two things only - Jesus rescued them where they were, and gave them the vision that they can do something to rescue more people from the horrible place they find themselves. This ragtag group of thousands very much resemble the unnamed men from Cyprus and Cyrene, that are found in Acts 11:20. Acts 11:21 “And the hand of the Lord [is] with them, and a great number believe[d] and turn[ed] to the Lord.” 

His armor-bearer responded, "Do what is in your heart. You choose. I'm right here with you whatever you decide.” (1 Samuel 14:7) 

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Standing on the side of the Indian Ocean just south of Mombasa, Kenya, after watching what God was doing in Satan’s strongholds throughout Uganda and Kenya, Jimmy and I were in deep contemplation, and we weren’t saying much. Finally the silence was broken first, by Jimmy.  He said, “We are going to need $250,000.”  I said, “No, I think we are going to need $2,000,000. This ocean will not stop these guys from running with the Gospel. They are going to take Jesus over there, and they are going to run  as fast as they can.”  Jimmy then said, “Then let’s go to work.”  If you want to read what we have been doing, read the article Perhaps - The Plan (Part 2) directly below.

“All right,” Jonathan replied, “we’ll cross over to the men and let them see us.” (1 Samuel 14:8)

 

PERHAPS - The Plan (Part Two)

Jimmy and I have been preparing, because. . .

Perhaps the LORD will help us. (1 Sam 14:6)

  • Provide as many discipleship books that the brothers in Kenya need.

  • Help IMFC-Kenya begin field ministries in the slums of Nairobi, maybe Kisumu and later Mombasa, such as: the wildly successful Manna program that you find IMFC-Uganda working in Kampala and among the refugees in Arua. Perhaps the LORD will save the lives of women and babies by providing the means for the brothers to purchase and distribute MAMA Kits.

  • Begin “Official” and recognized work with the brothers who are running already with the Gospel in the Congo. There are thousands of them!

  • Begin preparations for Tanzania. 

  • Begin fosta Discipleship Making Movement in the United States.  

Nothing can keep the LORD from saving, whether by many or by few. (1 Sam 14:6)

PERHAPS:

  • What if there was an IMFC African Disciple-Maker who left their home and moved to Colon, Panama with their family? Perhaps God calls Africans to the nations as well. 

  • What if the IMFC began working in metro Atlanta, where there are 54 different heart languages and 100 nationalities gathered? 

  • What if the US church began producing Disciple-makers outside their church walls? 

All right . . . we'll cross over to the men and let them see us. (1 Sam 14:8)

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  • Thousands across Uganda, Kenya, the Congo, throughout East Central Africa are running with the Gospel making disciples who produce more disciples.

  • A church in Alabama has begun training reproducing disciple-makers and releasing them from their traditional ministries to seek out and make disciples who make disciples.  

  • A pastor recently left his job as a pastor in Alabama and found a job that will provide for his family, and he is beginning stage four discipleship process right  here in North Georgia right now. 

You choose. Will you be with us?

It Ain’t from Satan

Someone told me just the other day, “For a minister, you’re not scary.” I answered, “Good, I prefer funny and good looking.” They didn’t laugh. . . and the discussion turned more serious, so I listened, and then I shared Jesus.  

While traveling and speaking, over and over again, I hear this message: “I know I am supposed to do more, but I don’t think I can.” Or this: “I want to do more, but I’m scared.”  My all time favorite is: “How do you know if you are called to do. . .?”  

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Here is the truth - the answer I always give - the answer straight from Scripture: Yes, you are supposed to do more. Yes, you are called. If you have ever read the Bible, been in a Sunday School class, listened to a sermon, or sung a song about Jesus, then you have heard Jesus calling you to do something, and you will never be satisfied doing nothing or less than you do now. I can promise you with all assuredness, “That still small voice in your heart that is leading you to help, to serve, to go, to do more is not from Satan.”

So why are you sitting there? It’s time to make a difference in the world. 

Blessings,

Steve

I AM A BORN AGAIN CHRISTIAN

Recently Geofrey Masika asked a young man by the name of Eric to share his story. Jeff sent it to me, and I just had to share it with you. May you be blessed as you read.

Steve

My name is Eric Maleza, and I am a born-again Christian. I know that I am going to heaven when I die, and right now my life is better, because I am obeying what Jesus teaches.

I came to know Jesus through Xavier Mpanga. A while ago he was walking in the streets of my slum where he met me at a chill spot with my buddies. A number of my friends fled thinking he was an undercover policeman but I stayed back. He was the coolest evangelist I'd ever seen. Unlike the others he didn't condemn us but rather he offered us a story that changed his life, which would also help us see the back of our hopeless lives. I listened and got saved but my life didn't change immediately. I started avoiding Xavier because I'd felt ashamed since my actions were not owning up to my faith in Christ. I'd still sell weed and at times rob women of their purses on the streets at night. I stayed away for awhile without meeting Xavier until I forgot about him.

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Then one evening I walked out to deal as usual. It happened that there was a raid against dealers on our block that day. One cop caught me by the trousers, pushed me on the wall and frisked me. He found my stash of weed, and I got arrested. That really blows. I was living with my sister at the moment, and when she heard I was arrested she was happy - my own sister was happy! She said if by any chance I made it out of jail she didn't want to see my face ever again, so I slept at the station awaiting my fate when the next morning I was bailed out. How did this happen? When I came out I realized it was Xavier. I was surprised at his love towards me - a total stranger. Why would anyone care about me - a drug dealer? This motivated me to learn more about Jesus and to begin sharing the same message with others. Right now, I'm teaching others what I learned and now believe. Some of those guys are doing what I’m doing and telling others. Who would have ever thought this street dealer would do something for the glory of God? Jesus changes everything, man.

Erica Maleza

A SIMPLE MAN

Hamis Juma’s family

Hamis Juma’s family

It is indeed wonderful to see my brother Hamis Juma leading and bringing many to the knowledge of Christ JESUS after being well discipled himself. This takes the hand of GOD because Hamis was disowned by his family for following JESUS. This is extremely difficult to take for many of us, but by God's grace Hamis is now leading so many to the LORD. In the pictures, he has led these youths to knowing Jesus and doing Bible Way Correspondence School.

Please pray for Juma as He keeps sharing the story that changed his life even amid so many pressures and hate from the Muslim community led by his own family members that cannot stand him sharing JESUS CHRIST. May all the glory and honor be to our LORD GOD who reigns forever more.

Xavier Mpanga, Nairobi, Kenya

Xavier Mpanga leads the IMFC work in Nairobi, Kenya. Nairobi is home to some of the largest slums in the world. Millions of people call these slums home. Hamis Juma is one of these people. Disowned by family, pressured and hated by the Muslim community, Hamis keeps sharing the message of Jesus Christ that changed him! Hamis Juma is a modern day follower of Jesus like the ones of Acts 11:19-24. He is poor. He is not famous. He is not ordained. He has no church building, no religious programing, no stage, no budget. He has little education. But, he has the two most important things: The message of God’s grace in Jesus Christ that changed him and the hand of God on his life. 

 At IMFC we pray for and focus upon raising up an army of people like Hamis that will be able to go and make disciples of Jesus among every tribe and language. Pray for him and pray for the hundreds of disciples just like him across Uganda, Kenya, South Sudan and DR Congo who are moving around sharing the gospel of Christ. Pray that the Lord encourage them, meet their needs and keep them from harm as they run with the message of Christ and make Disciple Makers. 

Thanks for your prayers and support, and if you would like to come alongside these men and women to help work in their communities and bring encouragement to them and their families, there are many opportunities  in 2019. I world love to see you there. Have a great day.

Jimmy

www.visitimfc.com 

jimmy@imfc.us

Sofia

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SOFIA

a story as related by Nzasenga Vincent

Vincent sent me the story of Sofia. It lifted my heart. In a world of bad news, good news is welcome. Here is her story. I think it will lift your heart as it did mine. See, God isn’t dead. Satan isn’t winning. Good things are happening.

Nanyanzi Sofia is a former Manna recipient from Katanga. She was in the program from February through July 2018. She is a single mother, 30 years old and has 4 children. She was married to a Muslim man who was a taxi driver, but he left her alone with the children. When we found her she had nothing and was hopeless. A neighbor pointed her to us as one who needed help. She didn’t believe we would really help her until she saw us coming with the bags of food. Sofia heard the Gospel that was shared with her and was born again. She was the only one who gave her life to Jesus Christ on that day. I remember her telling me that this is my day. I thought she was joking about being a Muslim and confessing Christ in public while others were watching her, but she was serious. She told me she was tired of all the lies she received from religions. She was baptized 3 months after being saved and now has a house church that meets at her place on Monday’s. Sofia loves to share the message that changed her with others, and she has led many to Jesus Christ. Her life has changed and she is happy and grateful for the food and the message of Jesus Christ. 

Through the Manna program Sofia listened to our teaching on saving money and starting a small business.  She saved 72,000 shillings, and she started a small business selling African pancakes and other eatables. She sells in Makerere University, Mulago Hospital and the local YMCA. Her business is growing and today she has 366,000 shillings which she is using as capital. You see Sofia has a dream. She has bought a piece of land that she wants to build upon. She is working hard and is challenging other women to work hard as well and teaches them to be proactive and to not just sit around waiting for their husbands to act when your children go hungry and there are needs.  She has encouraged not just me but also all the IMFC staff. I want to thank everyone who gives to these people in the Manna Ministry. You are making a difference.

Vincent

Jimmy

I Have Changed

Simple Truths, Big Impact

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I have changed. I am not the man I was 14 years ago when I went to work with International Missionaries for Christ. Regardless what people may say, old men can learn new things that change them. I am a testimony to that. Here are five simple truths that have changed my thinking, my outlook on life and my behavior.

I have learned that the kingdom of God is bigger, much bigger, than me and my church. I am important. My church is important. The community I live in is important and God cares for it very, very much, but I am only one and the community I live in is only one small area in a great big world that God cares for and Jesus died for. If things are going poorly for me or my church in my community, it doesn’t mean the Kingdom of God is failing. His Kingdom is NOT centered on or around me. His Kingdom is growing. His workers are scattered throughout communities everywhere in this great big world and they are sharing His message and extending His Kingdom. I am just one among many in His great Kingdom, but I am one and I am so grateful and humbled to be a small part of what He is doing. 

I have learned that followers of Jesus Christ in poor, underdeveloped nations are not inferior in any way to me. They have a walk with Christ that is rich and their experiences with the Lord are oftentimes deeper than mine. I am humbled to have prayed, walked and shared the Gospel with men and women of other colors, languages, and ethnicities who live in small mud homes with no electricity or running water. They have few clothes, little money and no health care, but they love the Lord and follow Him completely with great love and faith. I know I am not worthy to be a part of the Lord’s work among them but I am a blessed to be a part.

I have learned that the Lord can use me in the work of His Kingdom far beyond what I ever thought possible. To think that I am a part of a movement of God reaching into Uganda, Kenya, DR Congo and Southern Sudan involving hundreds of thousands of people coming to Christ and sharing His message with others, is crazy. But it is happening. I’m not that smart. I’m not that talented. I’m not that gifted with money. And, I am NOT so spiritual that Lord had to include me; but the Lord has included me and used me to influence more people than I could have ever imagined. God’s grace is truly amazing and I am what I am and do what I do by His grace.

I have learned that true worship is not solely how loud I sing in a room with other believers on Sunday mornings but how I give myself into the Lord’s hands to help the people He loves and died for who are trapped physically and spiritually in poverty, disease, sickness and sin. Loving the people Jesus loves and giving myself to help them IS actively loving the Lord and worshipping Him. This has become my greatest act of worship. This is the song of worship I sing and I am humbled that the Lord has allowed me to worship Him by walking with the “least of these”, praying with them and helping them.

I have learned that I am rich, and I have learned how to be grateful for all God blessings. I’m not rich like Bill Gates or Warren Buffet, but I am wealthy. I have never lived in a mud hut six months behind on rent waiting to be thrown out on the streets. I have never gone to bed without a meal that I could have eaten sometime during the day. I have never gone to bed night after night to the stinging bites of bed bugs with no way of eliminating the problem. I have never shared six toilets with more than 100,000 people. I have never been placed in the hot equatorial sun to lay in hopes that it will heal my sickness because I don’t have the money to go to the doctor or buy medicine. I have never seen my children suffering from lack of food and tattered clothing with no way to help. Why? Because I am rich and I live in a nation of plenty. I now know just how rich I am and I am grateful.

These are lessons learned. Lord, thank you for getting me out of comfort zone in my living room to travel to different places (especially Africa) to learn these simple truths that I should have known. Thank you.

Jimmy

Mama Kits and Trainings

Recently I was asked in an email about two very important and highly successful ministries of the IMFC.  Below is the entire email, and my answers are in italicized bold.  

First of all thank you so much for taking the time to answer my questions. I appreciate this opportunity. As I said earlier, I have been asked to talk to the ladies at our church about the mama kits and the reusable sanitary pads.  

Mama Kit Questions:

1.)  How much do the kits cost (U.S. and Shillings)?

$7 US or currently 26,152 Ugandan shillings per kit.

2.)  What do the kits contain?

Each mama kit contains plastic sheeting, razor blades, cotton wool, gauze pad, soap, surgical gloves, exam gloves, cord ties, and a child health card.  Each kit also includes an instruction sheet in both English and Luganda.  All of the supplies are sealed so that they remain sterile until needed. Birthing a baby is way beyond my limited abilities to understand, but I have been assured by those I trust that seem to know what they are doing that everything one needs for a healthy normal birth is included in the kit. 

3.)  If possible, where could I order one to show the ladies?

I’m not sure if you can get one in the US, Jimmy may have one - I don’t, but here is an email address you might use to find one info@mercyformamas.com. 

4.)  How is it determined who will receive the kits?

Our guys who are working in the slums see a pregnant lady as they walk and share and inquires if she needs one.  All of the ladies need them - very few of them are prepared to give birth.  

5.)  When will the women receive the kits?

The sterile packages do have an expiration date, I don’t know why.  And we have learned from experience that providing them too early is not really a good idea, so we aim at giving them to the ladies beginning in the later part of month 7.  As you can imagine when we are distributing them 9 month ladies receive their’s first, then 8, finally we end with month 7.   Earlier months are given our phone number in order to call when they are ready.  No lady is turned down for one though.  That would be morally reprehensible.  Quite often the guys will have to take down names and return with one or two later, because always more ladies show up to the distribution point than they counted when they were doing their preparation and planning.

6.)  How much is the boda [motorcycle taxi] ride to the hospital (U.S. and Shillings)?

This is not standard at all.  It all depends upon where they are in relation to the clinic, doctor’s office or hospital.  I’ve heard it ranges from 3,000 to 10,000 shillings and occasionally even more.  ($1 - $5US). We do not provide hospital boda-ride fares, because rarely would the money be used for hospital boda-rides, but we do teach them how to save for the inevitable when we distribute the kits and encourage them strongly to do so.

7.)  Approximately, how many women will use the kits at the hospital, and how many will use the kit at home in the slums?

Wow, this is something we have never even considered tracking.  It would be interesting to know though.  

8.)  How many kits are given out in a month, and what are the costs involved with that? 

We budget for 100, but often the demand exceeds that to around 150.  The last few months we’ve seen the need jump to 200, and God has continued to provide over and above the budgeted amount. Our desire is to always do more, and now we see the need to introduce them to Kenya, because poor displaced pregnant women are not limited to just the Ugandan slums.   The need is there as well.  So to answer the cost part of the question, we currently budget $700 monthly for the kits.  In actuality the kits often cost the IMFC around $1,050, and for the last few months it has cost about $1400 US.  

9.)  Approximately, how many lives are saved because of these kits (mothers and infants)?

This is something else that we have never even considered tracking, and I’m not sure we could do it with any accuracy at all. Though we do hear almost daily how much this $7 investment means to someone.  We are always being introduced to “our” babies as we walk the streets. This mama kit program is one of the first tactics we use when entering an area for the first time. This is a simple ministry that paves the way for the Gospel to be shared openly and easily. It ‘softens’ up the targeted area. It is also going to be our third ministry introduced into Kenya as the resources become available. The first is discipleship of course, and it is going strong.  The second ministry to be introduced is all about your next set of questions. Kenya is learning right now how to do the following training and making plans to incorporate it into what we already do in the slums in Nairobi.

Reusable Sanitary Pad Questions:

1.)  How much does it cost to do a workshop?

I love this ministry because it is the cheapest thing we do with the greatest physical impact.  The potential here is for making life better for 1/2 the total population.  Yes, I know that you now think I’m a heartless, shallow and callous man, but it is part of my job to consider these sorts of things.  Each workshop - we call them ‘trainings’ - cost approximately $33 US or 120,000 Ugandan shillings.  

2.)  How often are the workshops done?

Currently we do 2 - 3 per month, as the guys on the ground request them. Very soon we hope to be doing the “trainings” in Kenya as resources come available. The Kenyan team is learning this as this email is being answered. We have begun limiting the size of our trainings to 20 attenders, and requesting and encouraging those that attend to train five more. This limit is much easier for us to be prepared and to handle the trainings effectively.  

3.)  What materials are used to make the pads?

The materials can all be found locally and are very affordable and include absorbent fabric, comfortable fabric, buttons, and string. The tools used are: paper patterns, scissors, and needles.  Easy peasy and very effective!

4.) Approximately, what percentage of girls will quit school for lack of sanitary pads?

I am not sure we would know how to track this statistic, but there are many, many.

5.)  What items will women use if they don't have access to the reusable pads?

Rags, tee-shirts, nothing - many will simply hide behind closed doors.  

6.)  After the workshop, what supplies do the women get to keep?

They get to keep their craft of course; they go home with a pattern and the needles. We collect the scissors, but each time 3 - 5 disappear.  Children generally use the leftover fabric scraps for toys, headbands, etc.  

7.) How accessible/affordable are the materials that are used to make the pads?

Very! This is why we teach how to make them instead of relying upon mission teams, individuals, or churches to provide them.  Though, we are considering collecting them from groups for women who are in prisons and do not have access to materials or tools in order to make them. We are only considering this at this time because before distribution can begin there are challenges to overcome, such as: collection, storage and distribution. Every solution always comes at a greater cost and has to be carefully considered or it may affect negatively other ministries.  An unintended blessing from this ministry that was never considered before it began is that often women who have participated begin making them and selling them as a steady source of personal income. It’s a win-win.

8.)  Approximately, how much does it take each month to put on workshops?

Currently in Uganda we have budgeted $75 monthly, and as of today there is no funding available in Kenya. (We are looking forward to making this huge impact for little cost!) I think that covers all the questions I had.  I hope I haven't asked too many questions.  I'm just super excited that God has given me the privilege to do something like this with our ladies.  On a personal note, I have another question.  

How did you know God was calling you to some kind of service to Him?  

I love this question! I get asked this frequently - actually almost every time I stand and speak in a crowd someone gets me to the side out of earshot of everyone in order to ask it.  I completely understand their need for secrecy, because until you announce your call there is no one holding you accountable and it might be easier to let the call slide, and you will have not lost “face.”  You see, I went through this very thing myself.  My answer to your question is always the same, and it is a question itself: I ask, “How can someone who reads their Bible, listens to Christian music, attends Sunday School, listens to sermons, and prays regularly NOT KNOW THEY ARE CALLED TO SERVE?” You see sometimes God shouts to get our attention but not very often.  Usually it is a still small voice that stirs deep inside our souls calling us to go, give and serve more.  We as humans are pretty good at ignoring His voice, or even thinking it’s something else entirely.  Often we are glued to inaction because we are uncertain or unsure of His “call”.  I think most often it’s not necessarily a disobedient kind of thing that causes inaction, but rather a complete misunderstanding of the definition of the word - “called”.  I think people have thought a call is a scary, mystical kind of something that is accompanied by a choir of angels or maybe Gabriel blowing his trumpet.  A call though is really nothing more than a incessant tug upon your heart and soul guiding you somewhere to do something.  This I can assure you, if you have a sense of a call inside you it is most definitely not of of the evil one.  Satan would prefer you to sit quietly and diligently in your pew doing nothing or at least a very minimum to impact the world for Christ and for the good of others just like so many others who have ignored that still small voice.  I have met you, and we have walked together, and I know this for a fact - you will never feel complete sitting on the sidelines.  You were meant to be in the game.  You my dear friend are a soldier.   People often believe they have to see, hear and participate in signs and wonders to know exactly if beginning this mission or serving in that place or church is the will of God. In my experience the will of God is whatever door is open at that time. Just walk through it with boldness.  Go where He leads. 

I can't explain it, but ever since I have gotten back from Africa I have had this restless feeling.  I would love to be able to explain it, but I can't.  You just did!  Hopefully, you understand, and yes I most certainly do.  I'm not sure what God might be calling me to do, but I really believe after months of prayer and searching that He is calling.  Africa will forever be in my heart, and I am looking forward to returning with Mt. Zion in January 2019.  

Very soon, in fact this week I’m rolling out a new partnership plan for the vision of the IMFC.  I believe it’s time that individuals, groups and churches become full partners in the Acts 11 vision of making disciples who produce disciples - worldwide.   

Thank you SO much for your time!  It means a lot to me.  I look forward to hearing from you. No, thank you! I look forward to seeing, hearing and reading what God does through you.

Thanks, 

LeAnne Jenkins  

Thank you LeAnne for asking those questions.

Blessings,

Steve DuVall

www.visitimfc.com

Coastal Report - Kenya

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Coastal Report

by: Geofrey Masika

Sharing God's word continues in Mombasa as well. Thanks Brother Samson Manoah for being an example of Jesus Christ's disciple who is touching the poor and displaced people of Africa for Jesus Christ. 

Indeed, we are very proud of you and your teams involved in this noble cause of extending salvation to thousands of people at the Coastal region of Kenya and hundreds of House Churches planted there as a place of learning, sharing and worship God. 

May the Lord continue using and bless you more abundantly for his glory. We believe that through this mission our poor and displaced people of Kenya and other parts of the world will be saved both spiritually and physically for Jesus Christ through International Missionaries For Christ.

Geofrey Masika

Isaac Will Answer

His name was Peter, or at least he didn’t object when I called him that.  He came up to me while I was standing watch in the street the other day.  He had a BibleWay book in his hand.  He was carrying the one entitled Who Is Jesus, which is what we give out to each new believer. He asked me if he could tell me his story, since he had just listened to one of ours.  I said, “I would love to hear it.”  

He began by telling me that he had not lived a good life nor had it been an easy one.  He had lived rough, but his mother who had passed years ago would pray for him daily while she still breathed.  He told me how his wife had died three years ago, and how his daughter has a serious handicap.  He told me how he so needed a job to care for her. I smiled when he told me that he had decided earlier this year that this would be the year he would give his life to Christ.  He then told me that just that morning he had found a job, and next week he begins this new life as security at a place I did not recognize. 

It was at this point that I thought he was going to ask me for a loan just to get by, but I was wrong.  You see he continued his story by telling me that as he was walking home he saw one of our team with that little book with the word Jesus on it, and he just knew that today was the day he needed to become a believer, so he stopped to hear one of them share. He prayed to believe, and he received that same little book. He then saw me, and wanted to tell me his story, so I listened. At the end of this story, he did ask me one thing. He turned to the page with Isaac’s name and cell phone number written on it.  Then he pointed to that name and asked, “If I call this number will Isaac answer?” I said, “Yes, Isaac will answer.

Steve DuVall

www.imfcworld.com

It Ain't So. . .

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Steve DuVall
IMFC
www.visitimfc.com

He didn’t believe me. I mean he didn’t think I was lying, but rather he thought, “Steve must be mistaken.” You see what I had described to him was a movement of God - of Biblical proportions. “Yes,’ he thought, ‘Steve sees something, but it can’t be what he’s talking about.” Today, Chris Meaders, the mission’s pastor of Mt. Airy Baptist Church now believes, because he and his team from Mt. Airy participated in this movement. They saw it, they felt it, (honestly, no one quite understands it, but that’s ok), and now people will not believe them either when they try to articulate it. So don’t believe us, just come and see it. Come feel it and participate in this movement of God before it passes you by. Contact me or Jimmy for more information. Our 2019 schedule is already filling up with people who return year after year after year.  You see they believe it also, because they have participated in it as well.  

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Back in Kampala

Good morning from Uganda.  Yes, we're back at what feels like home here in Kampala.  Both Jimmy Barry and I are getting ready to see our families.  It's been a long time.  Jimmy has been here for three months; I have been here two and 1/2.  We have traveled with two amazing men of God from Uganda, Kasimbura Benon and Kintu Deo.  Along the way we met and journeyed with other giants for Jesus - Masika Geofrey Bisagati, Xavier Mpanga and Sam Owino.  We met and think some sort of partnership might be in the future with Doug and Jennifer Lawson, who live and serve in Kitale, but they work throughout Central Africa.  We saw many others who have been so influential, and I cannot mention them all here, but I will continue sharing many of their stories.  

We have traveled throughout much of Kenya. We have sweated in Mombasa, closed our eyes in fear of the traffic in Nairobi, froze nearly completely in Eldoret, left a jacket in Kisumu - which was sadly really needed in Eldoret, but everywhere we have traveled we have met a lot of passionate people whose lives were changed by the Gospel. We met drunks, thieves, murderers, taxi drivers, school teachers, mothers, people dying of AIDS, shop keepers, and many more who Jesus found and offered a gift which they accepted, and it changed their lives. Then they ran with this message to others also, so they too can share in His blessings. In Uganda we call these people serious. They are serious men and women who heard a serious message and now they treat their lives as a serious example of what Jesus does when He changes everything. They seriously run fast with the Gospel.

We finally have our NGO status, so we can legally move with the word and baptize. Now Timothy in Kakemega won’t have to spend time in prison for doing what Jesus commanded him to do. As we traveled and observed the work we saw areas that needed a little tweeking. We made a few changes here and there. We opened an office in Mombasa. We bought a computer, priced motorcycles, and prayed a lot. We did some things to hopefully to help the message move even faster. We were very pleased at what we saw.

We were also surprised. In fact, Kenya showed us that the organization needs to make some deep changes. You see, a movement of Jesus in Uganda, jumped a border into Kenya, and in less than 18 months the Jesus influence that traveled through the guys and gals of the IMFC has doubled the entire ministry. In Kenya, it stands now at the border in Mombasa almost ready to cross the Indian Ocean, and its down toward Tanzania, it’s perched on the edge looking longingly into Ethiopia, and it’s moving into Somalia. I met the man running with the Gospel there, and he begins his marathon next week. You see we entered Kenya thinking we were building an organizational plan and structure for Kenya. We already knew the IMFC influence was in the Congo, South Sudan and Johanesburg, South Africa. Well Kenya showed us that we better make plans for the world. By the way I speak Spanish, I wonder how God might use that?

We need your prayers.

Steve

We hope to see you soon. . .

We hope to see you soon. . .

A Club Called Hell

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A Club Called Hell

Justus posted this to facebook today and it made me smile. You see, I love to read the stories about people who pray to receive Jesus as their Lord and the result is a changed life that last. Charles is that kind of man. He was a boxer in Uganda. He won over 50 bouts and didn’t lose. All but two fights ended in knockouts. He was the national champion. He was a very tough guy and a bouncer for the club called Hell. I will never forget the day Deo, Robyn, Micheal (Robyn and Michael were two volunteers from Immanuel Baptist crazy enough to enter the bar with me) and I entered the bar and shared the gospel. We didn’t enter because we sought them out or stumbled onto them. No. Their drunken leader, I think his name was Peter, sought us out. Later I ask him why he kept bothering us until we came to speak to them. I will never forget his answer. He told me that he heard a voice in his head telling him to get us to speak to them. That day Peter, Charles and others prayed to receive Christ as their Lord. Over a year after that experience, Charles showed me a small Gideon bible that Micheal gave him. He still had it. I am so grateful that Charles is continuing in the faith.

Here is what Justus wrote about Charles today, three years after that experience.

This morning as I woke up, God put it on my heart to share this wonderful story. The guy seated on a boda boda besides me is called Charles. If you can still recall the story of HELL that papa Jimmy Barry wrote sometime in 2015, this is the guy who was in charge of security in the HELL and this was the name of their bar. Hell was full of thieves, drug addicts, drunkards and sex workers. This man was so influential in that bar. One day back in early 2015, muzee Jimmy Barry came across him and shared with him the story of Jesus and Nicodemus. This guy is one of the guys who prayed that day. I discipled him. I baptized him. He has led many to Jesus. He has baptized many. I am glad to let the world know that he is now a changed man. Not a thief, not a drunkard, not using drugs anymore like he used to be. On the right is his Dad who welcomed me with a big hug and mentioned one word THANK YOU. I told him not me but Jesus changed your son’s life.

Charles is now working, riding his boda that his family bought for him as a gift to earn a living. This encourages me the more to go out even today and share a simple story that changed my life. Thanks for whoever prays for us the IMFC. May the lord fulfill the desires of your hearts.

Here is a comment from one of the volunteers, Robyn, who was with us that day.

Robyn Wilson: Wenani Justus, I was at HELL that day. I will never forget it. The devil and God were both in that room and everyone there could feel and see it that knew God. Oh The Power of Our Lord and Savior reigned! Love your heart! I hope that God will bring me back one day to serve Him in this place once more!

Paul wrote that the Gospel of Christ is the power of God unto salvation, but I think we sometimes forget that or disbelieve it based on what we see around us. Charles’ story renews my faith. If I share the simple message, people will be changed. And that is true here in America as well as Africa.

Have a great day. Have a great weekent and don’t be ashamed of the Gospel or Christ. He is Lord.

Jimmy
www.visitimfc.com
jimmy@imfc.us

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Justus and Charles

One Man Who Made a Difference

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This is the story of one such man, Valeria. 

Valeria is the young man on the left; Justus is on the right. Valeria is 27 years old, not married and living with his father. He lives surrounded by family in the mountains and hills of Ibanda just north of Queen Elizabeth Game Park in the Southwest part of Uganda. They grow matoke, coffee, avocado, sugar cane and other things. His life story today is much different from what it was just a few years back. Why? God's has changed his life.

Valeria moved to Kampala a few years back to find a job. He became a security guard and was making little money. He failed to show up for work one night and a car was stolen from the place that he was to be guarding. He was arrested, charged with negligence and sent to Kasangati Prison for three years. He was hopeless.

A volunteer team from the US visited the prison with me and the IMFC team to share the gospel while Valeria was there. Valeria heard the Gospel message, prayed to receive Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior and God changed him. While in prison he completed the Bible Way books and helped Francis, the IMFC team member that works the prisons around Kampala. After leaving prison, Valeria joined the team in Kampala and learned how to do the work of producing followers of Jesus Christ who know how to produce other followers of Jesus.

Valeria returned to his home in Ibanda in September 2017. He has shared the gospel in the villages around his home and in Ibanda town. Over 1,000 books had been distributed to people who have heard the message and prayed to receive Christ. 38 people have been baptised. He travels hours by foot to do the work. 66 people  that he calls his leaders came to meet me in January. Each of these have many people they are meeting with in house churches and doing the Bible Way books. These are people that he has trained to produce followers of Jesus. They came from as for away as 25 kilometers to meet me.

I asked Valeria why he did this work. Why would he walk so many hours never receiving anything to do it? He said the message he heard in prison changed his life and he wanted his family and neighbors to hear the same message so it could change their lives. They are hearing it, and they are being changed.

Valeria is one of my heroes like those unnamed people of Acts 11:19-24 who fled Jerusalem after the stoning of Stephen. He is the reason I travel. He motivates me. I keep asking myself the question, "How many more people could be like Valeria? People simply needing someone to come share the Gospel with them and train them." So I go. I don't have to meet people like Valeria. I just need to train producers who will meet them. They will do the rest with the presence of the Lord Jesus Christ with them.

Pray for Valeria and the people he is training. This is the first work we have in Southwest Uganda. From here the message could reach Tanzania, Rwanda, DR Congo and beyond. Thanks.

Jimmy
IMFC
Jimmy@imfc.us