When Jesus spoke those words to Peter, after the resurrection, what was he talking about? Shepherding the young church by feeding them the Word. Surely! Here, we count it a privilege to feed these pastors the Word every day, and find that we are also called on to physically feed the hungry. Week seven at the Bible school has finished up well but there are great challenges back in the homes of the villages our students come from. The backdrop to training pastors at the school where they get three meals a day is one of hunger. | |
Earlier this week reports came to the school from various sources about a food crisis in many of the villages scattered throughout the southern part of Malawi where our pastors are from. Through letters and messengers we heard the same report: “We are completely out of food and starving. Please help us.” Having run out of food, these large families (which often include a wife, children, several senior citizens, and orphans) were beginning to starve. With no food in their homes they had resorted to eating lily-bulbs, roots and grass. | |
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November is the beginning of another hard period for the people in rural Malawi. There is hope that the rains will soon come to water the freshly planted fields but last year’s harvest of maize is running low and therefore prices are going up. When maize is plentiful a 50 kg bag of maize sells for about 340 Malawi kwacha. Two weeks ago I purchased a truck load for 600 kwacha per bag. This week the maize cost 850 kwacha a bag and it is expected to rise to 1,500 kwacha ($20, almost one months wages) per bag before relief comes with the new harvest in March and April. Soaring prices make it impossible for the rural poor to purchase maize during this time and so they patiently wait and fill their stomach’s with whatever they can find from nature around them. Even in the larger village of Bangula we have seen an increase in the number of hungry people who come for food handouts at the Iris Ministries office this month. The government recently has helped by handing out free maize seeds for families to plant, but that will not relieve those who are hungry now. |
Food being delivered to the starving families of Bible School Pastors Some of our Pastors’ family members, in Chazuka village. Children and the lilly pads they’ve peeled to eat. Children, who had been preparing to eat the lilly bulbs, rejoyce at the arrival of maize and beans! |
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