I'd Be Dead
“If
it wasn’t for our Global Mission pioneer, I’d be dead by now,” says
Kgosana Xase, a recently baptized member of the Bere Adventist church
plant in Botswana. His young face looks so sweet as he sings hymns, it’s
hard to imagine him brawling in a bar with men on the verge of stabbing
each other. But this is the new Kgosana. The one who gave his heart to
Jesus because a pioneer named Ishmael came to live and work in his
village.
Sitting next to Kgosana in the sanctuary is his newly
baptized friend Basimilwe. “My life changed dramatically when I became
an Adventist,” he says, flashing a radiant smile. “I used to practice
ancestor worship, and I was a serious robber. Wherever there was
mischief going on, you could find me right in the middle of it!”
Basimilwe was arrested frequently, but his life began to
change the day Ishmael knocked on his door to tell him about Jesus. “I
gave myself to God and stopped drinking and stealing,” he says. “I’m a
free man in Christ, and for the first time in my life I’m happy with who
I am.”
As Chief Gorosho listens to the new
members speak, a look of satisfaction crosses his weathered face. Since
the former pioneer left several years ago, he’s watched sadly as most of
the congregation slipped away. “These new members give me hope,” he
says, patting Ishmael’s shoulder. “In just one year, our pioneer has
brought many members back and added eight new ones!”
Chief Gorosho joined the Adventist church
in 2000 when members of the Ghanzi* church held evangelistic meetings
in Bere. He remembers worshiping under a tree while the Bere church was
being built. “It’s very hard to worship on the ground during rainy
season,” he says with a laugh. “We missed the inspiration of worshiping
together during those months. But with our own church, we can worship
together all the time now.”
Chief Gorosho and his wife weren’t Christians when they
attended the evangelistic meetings. “We were so hostile to each other,”
he says. “But when we met Jesus, He made us kind. Now our marriage
testifies to His power.” Chief Gorosho longs for everyone in his village
to experience the transforming power of Jesus.
Ishmael Rabatho is a seasoned pioneer who has worked many
places where there was previously no Adventist presence. But he says
serving the Basarwaor Bushmen people in Bere is the toughest challenge
he’s ever faced. “Poverty, disease, and despair are rampant here, but
one of my greatest obstacles is the language barrier.” The Basarwa’s
language is very difficult to learn, and Ishmael has no translator or
literature available in the villagers’ dialect. ? “I can only communicate with them because a few of them speak a little of my language,” he says.
Transportation is another challenge for Ishmael in this
remote settlement. “His only mode of transport is a bicycle,” says
Pastor Ramasankate, the Ghanzi district pastor who oversees his work.
“And there’s no riding a bike in the Kalahari sand!”
To buy food, Ishmael must catch a ride to Ghanzi, a
distance of 150 kilometers one way. To catch that ride, he must walk 14
kilometers on a road where lions are sometimes spotted. But the lack of a
vehicle isn’t just an inconvenience to Ishmael. He longs to take the
gospel to those living outside the settlement—a desire held in check by
long distances and dangerous animals.
But perhaps the greatest challenge Ishmael faces is
reaching the Basarwa people spiritually. It has taken a year of gently
trying to earn their trust, of attending their funerals, praying with
the troubled, visiting the sick, and playing with their children.
“It’s very hard to share Jesus with my people,” says Chief
Gorosho. “But since Pastor Ishmael came, I’ve noticed a gradual
softening of their hearts. He’s reaching out to those who have never
known God, and he’s doing a great work in them. I’ve seen a remarkable
change in my community.”
Pastor Ramasankate is also thankful for Ishmael’s
ministry. “If it weren’t for Ishmael,” he says, “there would be no
Adventist work in Bere.” Pastor Ramasankate’s district covers some
119,000 square kilometers, and he can visit each church in it only once a
year. “I have only three pioneers but we need many more for such a
large territory.”
Despite the many challenges of working in Bere, Ishmael is
optimistic. He loves being a Global Mission pioneer and believes that
God called him to this unique ministry. But he requests the prayers of
his church family.
“Please pray that God will enable me to share the gospel
without any hindrance,” he asks, “so that the Basarwa can see a true
picture of Jesus and understand God’s Word. And please pray that God’s
Spirit will be poured upon these people so they’ll be receptive to His
love and ready for His soon return.”
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