Showing posts with label Mending the Soul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mending the Soul. Show all posts

Friday, September 19, 2008

You should go to this! some of my photographs have been repainted by James and will be on display!



 www.jamesvanfossan.com

 



 

Rive Gauche Art Galleries

is proud to present an exhibit of paintings and fundraiser* by

 

James Van Fossan

 "FACES OF AFRICA"

 

Thursday, September 25, 2008, 7:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.


*a portion of all proceeds will go to "Mending the Soul Ministries",

a non-profit organization working closely with the people of Africa.

 

*James Van Fossan will raffle off a beautiful painting at the end of the night.

All monies collected for the raffle will go directly to

Mending the Soul Ministries.

 

7173 East Main Street, Scottsdale, AZ 85281

480.947.6372

rivegauchegalleries.com

 


Saturday, August 23, 2008

CEPIMA: Caring for the forgotten & despised

CEPIMA, where the most broken and mentally unsound people come in Beni to meet Jesus and be healed. Never have I been humbled enough to meet so much brokeness face to face. Walking in was a party, walking out was a different outlook on life... the people greeted us as if we were rockstars, mostly because this team, not me, had been there last year, and had spent quality time praying with these people, and even gave enough money to help move their ministry along for quite some time, even buying them two motorcycles that they could use to help people out of the city. Even now, over a month after this experience, it's hard to simply say what I experienced. I would have a hard to explaining what it's like to pray for a boy who was so emotionally abused he just stared at a wall. I would have a hard time telling you about Jean Claude, a former Mayi Mayi rebel, who was so traumatized from what he'd seen and done that he was like a small child holding onto his daddy. I would have a hard time telling you about Naama (II). I would have a hard time conveying to you the joy of the people who worked there because of the miracles they've seen. They really don't have a "model" there other than some Mending the Soul materials and a bible. They don't even have a trained psychologist. Just a pastor, some nurses, a few old drugs, and a passion and trust for the Lord that overcomes all other shortfalls. No state funding, no board of directors, no models and protocol, just a willingness to be Christ and share him with these devastated people. Christ heals them, they plan on it, and he eventually does... that's how God works.. he performs miracles...

I've never cried so much in my life. It was too much for me to handle... this is the wages of sin... the wages of war... the wages of tribalism, of hate, of ignorance, of greed, of colonialism. And these people were paying that price. I praise God for his abounding mercies, and that He is healing each and every one of these people as they learn of him and trust him, in their hearts, even as their minds are lost.... Our goodbyes...



a former government soldier, dressed up in his gear



talking with Jean Claude, the former rebel soldier, he was a dear brother



Naama, and two boys we prayed with



The Pastor of CEPIMA




Jeff, Christine, and Celestia



Jean Claude (he wanted my sunglasses)



Our Welcome!





Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Congo Photo series 4









Here are some photos from when I spoke to the soldiers on Integrity as a soldier and prevention of violence towards women. This group of officers and chaplains was a mix-match of Congolese soldiers, some of which were former rebels. It was daunting to stare in the faces of men who knew much more about war than I did. Deep within the "rape capital of the world", in a stick tent, I was given the opportunity to speak with the Governor of Kivu's assistant, Valare, about sexual violence towards women. It was incredible. I felt the prayers of the multitudes that day, and each word I uttered to these men I count as a gift from God. Never have I felt so exactly where I should be. There was no need to accuse the men so I just showed them using truth and scripture that it's our job to defend women and children, not rape them, not hurt them. With power comes responsibility....The men took it well and responded with words of affirmation that they will take this issue and discuss it with their men. After Valare, the assistant/counsel to the Governor, gave a sermon, somewhat about what I had spoken about, we were dismissed. An older man, a chaplain of some kind came up to me and said very slowly and deliberately, in broken English, "I. love. youu". It was beautiful and powerful. Thank you for your prayers....

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Post 2: Congo & Hope




Friends:

Never have I been on the cutting edge of ministry as I am now. God is moving mightily. The Democratic Republic of Congo is simply different than anything else I’ve ever experienced. As the bush plane we took to the Congo descended into Beni over the lush rainforest of Ituri, I had to take a gasp at the immense beauty, never imagining the destruction and utter hopelessness that seemed to be all that I’d ever heard concerning this country to be true. But the people are lovely… and exploited and lied to and in bondage like I’ve never experienced before. Mending the Soul is here in Beni (now that Goma has fell back into violence) with the Congo Initiative to minister to the broken people of Congo. The rubber meets the road here. This is where the modern west and traditional Africa collide. This is where the bible meets myth. This is where colonization’s legacy is played out in ways that I could only dream of prior to experiencing it myself. The culture here is as far from mine, yet somehow so alike, as I can imagine. Africa has always posed a conundrum with me, and Congo has only further complicated that paradigm.

I don’t want to give too many details now until I’ve processed the complex situations that I’ve experienced since being involved with this, but the youth track of our complex has been one of the most eye-opening experiences of my life. Healthy-sexuality has everything to do with everything in Africa. It is one of the most key aspects of every major issue in this amazing continent. One might not gather that when thinking of poverty, war, famine, and other issues commonly attributed to “the dark continent”, but the patriarchy, war, rape, family dysfunction, poverty, AIDS, corruption, and many other issues are intrinsically linked with sexuality. I’ve seen its destruction in America. Here it has defined life and death. There is hope with the youth though…. I have hope for them, we all do, and we know God is faithful to complete what He has started, for God is able to do ALL things, no matter the difficulty we perceive. Moment by moment we are all reminded just how much God has to be at the center of all of this. He is the ONLY hope for the Congo, no amount of “free love” and NGO aid will fix the issues of the DRC, and the greatest leaders of the Congo echo these sentiments. Only Christ can heal this land. Period. I won’t attempt to explain all the dynamics at this time, but I will tell you this: after copious amounts of facing the reality of abuse-acceptance, victim-blaming, traumatizing-rape stories, clergy-denial, and a profound misunderstanding of sexuality, there is hope. The people here have a respect for scripture that is allowing for repentance on a large scale and normal people going to great lengths to care for the abused and to change their country back for Christ.

I want to share with you a story. A story that could change your life. I’ve only just begun to understand what it means in my life. Read. Absorb. Be changed.

Last year when the MTS team was here in Beni with the Congo Initiative they traveled to the nearby city of Butembo and went to the local mental hospital. There they faced the reality and aftermath of war: raped women who were so traumatized they could no longer function. Rape is always evil, but the rape in Congo is of a caliber that it is hard to express the profound destruction that is given to women who experience this rape. Steve and Celestia Tracy, the founders of Mending the Soul Ministries (MTS), were there to minister to the people there, and met a woman who was so traumatized she no longer could do anything for herself. PTSD doesn’t even describe the reality this woman lived in, her eyes were hollow and blank. She had been brutally raped by the rebels while she lived in her village, and had gotten pregnant from that tragedy, and in turn resented the child, and to top it off her village had rejected her, leaving her socially ostracized. Hell was her life on earth. And it is in this dire existence lies the most amazing story of redemption ever told, a story that could change the world… Celestia took a photo of this woman, Nama, was here name. The photo captures Nama’s empty eyes, her empty soul. That photo came back to the United States, became a painting that was eventually put into an MTS healing workbook. It haunted the Tracy’s thoughts and prayers for a year. The debilitating trauma of rape in the eyes of those who have experienced it will do that to someone. They never forgot her. God answers prayers. This year as we were here in Beni, at the conference, the ladies who worked at that mental hospital were here reporting on their work with rape survivors. After they spoke, Celestia and Steve went and talked to the ladies and brought along that book with the photo of the woman in it. They asked the ladies “Do you know this woman?” and the ladies said, “Yes, we know this woman!” and Steve and Celestia said “We have been praying for her for a year now, how is she?!” and then the best story told in decades was unfolded from women whose eyes wept with the ramifications of epic.
“Her name is Nama, which means ‘Grace’ in Swahili”, they said. “She was one of the most traumatized women we’ve had, but God did a work through us to her. Over the past year she has healed from her abuse completely. She can function as a normal person, loves her child, has moved back to her village and again can work in the fields. She has experienced amazing healing and her love for Christ is real. God has done an incredible work in her! But there is more. The man who raped her, and left her with child, has left his evil life in the bush and has given his life to Christ. He repented from his sinful and destructive life and has sought to turn completely around. He is actually from the same village as Nama is from and now has fallen in love with Nama and they are to be married! He is submitting himself to the leadership and discipleship of the church for two years to ensure that he has thoroughly changed from his past and that he is the man he must be to marry this woman he nearly destroyed. He doesn’t do this because he feels he musts, or because of some cultural reason, but because he has turned away and experienced Christ!”

This story of redemption has the power to destroy our fragile framework about what is possible, and build up in that void the truth; God can do all things, and he can redeem fully all things.

John 10:10 “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.

Please pray earnestly for healing in this land. Thank You, Dan

Ps. I miss the comments at www.glocaldan.blogspot.com ! Hook a brutha up!