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© Louise Perkins |
It’s a huge privilege and joy to share life with the students and staff at SOW (Servants of the Word) Bible School here in the Gambia. This year it looks like I’ll focus my energies on just two students in Year 2. Sadly, the class has whittled down from 11 a year ago (not the norm, I hasten to add).
- Some had valiantly had a go but concluded (sensibly) that they need to improve their basic literacy before being able to benefit significantly from such a course;
- One we’ve sent off to Nigeria to a full-time Bible school there for a year;
- A couple are in teacher training and have (frustratingly) been placed at the other end of the country;
- Some are simply too stretched financially not to spend the hours they would spend in class earning.
Will you pray with me for these two young men? First, I thought you might appreciate me introducing you…
Alieu (names changed) is tall, well-built and cheeky. He came to the Gambia from Sierra Leone and got sucked into the bumster way of life here. Bumsters are notorious hustlers who get by through (usually) petty crime, often fleecing tourists and whoever else they can. Alieu's life was typical of that community - unrestrained stealing, drugs, alcohol and sex. He’d tell you that - despite his bravado - it was miserable. He became very sick, and when no doctors could help, one doctor said his only hope was to try a marabout (traditional healer / witch-doctor). As is very common, Alieu ended up selling all he had to pay for the ‘assistance’ of various marabouts, but all the sacrifices and charms achieved nothing.
One bumster friend of Alieu’s came from a Christian family and, whilst he didn't care about Christianity himself, he sensed that “their God has power”. Alieu thought it was worth a shot. So he resolved to go to a church service. His girlfriend kept trying to dissuade him, employing various tactics to distract him or discourage him from going. Sometimes he’d be on his way to the church, but he’d bump into some mates en route and choose the easy option of sitting down with them and joining in their boozing.
Eventually he made it. Having grown up in a Muslim environment, the initial experience of church was shocking. In his mind, religious meetings meant taking off your shoes, approaching with an attitude of quietness and respect, men and women being separated… By contrast, at the church, everyone was singing, dancing and drumming! It was like a party! But instead of being offended (as many would be), Alieu loved parties and so loved this!
Alieu felt a totally unfamiliar peace and joy when in the presence of these Christians, which was deeply attractive. In time, God restored Alieu to health, and he found himself continuing and desiring to go to church with an increasing hunger to know more about Jesus from the Bible. He got baptised when he received Jesus as his Saviour and only hope for life and eternity, and his life began to be transformed by the love, grace and peace of God through Jesus.
Two years ago, someone from Alieu’s church took him along to a workshop about Bible storytelling - an important and effective technique particularly aimed at people with low literacy (though Alieu is actually well educated and very bright). Whilst there, Alieu heard about SOW and decided to enrol. He’s now in Year 2, he got an excellent score in last year's external Moore College Introduction to the Bible exam, and recently did a practice exposition on a part of Philippians in class, which was one of the clearest sermons I’ve heard in the Gambia!
**
Tijan is from remote rural Guinea - "the forest” region - extremely different from coastal Gambia with its tourist industry and mixture of African & foreign nationalities. He’s short, earnest, but with a high laugh and a big smile, and speaks with an extremely strong Guinean-French accent (Guinea being francophone). Whilst studying at university in Labé, Guinea, Tijan met a pastor who sensed that Tijan had both the willingness and embryonic gifts for Christian ministry of some kind. This pastor was from the same tribe as Tijan, and had connections with some Christians in the Gambia…
Two years ago, this pastor duly sent Tijan here to be taken in by a community of believers from his tribe (which spans national borders), many of whom have suffered greatly for their faith. It’s one of the least reached people groups in the world (0.05% Christian) The purpose of his coming? To be trained at SOW - somewhere where he would read and study the Bible, and be taught how to interpret it accurately and how to teach it clearly.
Tijan struggled through his first year, unable to find a decent job, but this term we rejoiced when he landed a job as a school-teacher, teaching French. It requires phenomenal hard work and is met with a meagre salary. After full days of teaching, he comes to SOW for Monday and Tuesday evening classes, and then again on Saturdays. Such times would be key opportunities to offer private tuition (where teachers’ money is really made here). Instead, Tijan decides to come faithfully to SOW.
He works incredibly hard, and is making slow but good progress with his English. Beautifully, his classmate Alieu is very patient with Tijan’s much slower rate of English reading and comprehension. There are often lovely moments in class where Alieu takes it upon himself to correct or clarify something for his brother. One battle we’re fighting together is to break Tijan’s habit of dropping the consonants at the end of words, which is common in French. So, for example, “On dit un mot” (“one says a word”) is pronounced in French, “O[n] di[t] u[n] mo[t]”. This leads Tijan to do the same in English - he’ll passionately declare, “The WOR of GO!” (= “The WORD of GOD!”) I’ve just about got used to it! But communicating clearly in English is a massively useful skill, not only here; so as much as I enjoy dusting off my school-level French, we’ve agreed that we’ll only speak English in the classroom. (Unless I can remember a French word or two to translate when necessary.)
Most impressively, Tijan has a phenomenal zeal to use his God-given gifts to serve Jesus by making him known through the sharing of his word, the Bible. He longs to do that back in rural Guinea, after this season of training and discipleship here.
**
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Doing the two-times multiplication table is surprisingly exciting. And actually quite staggering. Get this… If I, by God’s grace, can make a lasting impression on these two, through the regular opening up of God’s word this year, and then they could each do the same in two more, each year, for (say) 21 years… Guess how many people would have been discipled after those 21 years? More than 2 MILLION!!! 2,097,152. (Do the sums yourself if you don’t believe me!) That’s more than the current population of the Gambia!
It gets crazy when you add on just a few more years… 25 years? 33,554,432. 30 years? 1,073,741,824.
Could the reason we often don’t see that kind of growth be the shallowness of our work in people?
So please pray for a DEEP work in these precious FEW (two!) for the sake of the MANY! And that in the future, God would do a deep work in many others through them, and on and on and on… For God’s glory!
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