HOPE Congo had its annual spiritual retreat June 27-29 at
Vuela, a Catholic retreat Center just outside of Brazzaville. It was a great
place to get away from the city noise and see tress, flowers, and grass. All 37
of us piled into a bus and the HOPE truck and arrived at Vuela Friday morning.
The office was split into 3 teams: the green, red, and yellow teams. Each
morning we had a time of praise and worship led by one of the teams and 3
office staff spoke throughout the weekend. This weekend was a great time for
Nate and I to spend quality time with the staff.
The theme for the weekend was “Rooted in Christ, Growing in
Faith.” Manny began the weekend by speaking about the importance of digging our
roots deep into Christ by reading the word, praying, studying, meditating, and
memorizing the Word. He read a verse Psalms explaining how we must remain
rooted in Christ for sustainment like the tree remains rooted by the river for
water.
Loveline, the loan supervisor, spoke next about even as we
root ourselves in Christ this doesn’t mean the storms of life will not come.
Loveline lost her husband a few years ago. As well as dealing with this loss,
she was also pressured by her family to do certain customary acts followed in
her culture. She explained how she felt God would not be pleased if she did
these things instead of trusting and leaning on him. She was ostracized from
her family because she did not do these traditional acts. She explained how her
faith in Christ grew as He sustained her though this dark time her life.
Clement, the HOPE accountant, spoke the last day on Joshua 1:7-9 encouraging
everyone to be in the Word daily. He encouraged everyone to be confident in our
faith, and to trust God as he works in our lives.
We also enjoyed fun games with some intense competition
between the teams. Each team made a chant to yell throughout the weekend, and
wore the same color t-shirts each day.
I have been personally blessed by this weekend. The time of
fellowship and great insights from colleagues made me so grateful to be in
Brazzaville and a part of the HOPE Congo team. I have been living in
Brazzaville for almost 9 months now and am feeling like I have some true
friends in Christ. The HOPE Congo staff are such an encouragement to Nate and
I. They always greet us each morning with a contagious joy. Their passion for
the mission of HOPE and God’s call on their lives is inspiring. The most
meaningful time for me was the last day’s worship time. The staff were asked to
give a testimony about how God had touched their lives through this weekend or
through HOPE. I was tearing up through each testimony that was given.
Here are summaries of a few of the testimonies:
Alix’s father died when she was young, and her mother died a
few years later. Her extended family raised her. As an adult she began to
really feel the loneliness of not having her parents. She felt everyone had a
place to call home, except her. She started working with HOPE Congo in April 2011.
The HOPE staff have become like family. She now feels like she has a place where
she belongs.
Espoir’s parents died when he was very young. He was raised
by his aunt, but was often treated like an orphan. His childhood was a
difficult one. He was given old clothes, did not have a blanket to sleep with,
and was not able to eat at every meal. He was able to obtain an internship at a
local business. One day Espoir was praying at this office. His boss decided
Espoir couldn’t pray at work because it wasn’t productive. Espoir was very
upset and felt this was not a place he wanted to work long term. He began looking
for another place to work. Espoir
started working with HOPE Congo in February 2012. He is thrilled to have a
place where he can both do meaningful work and worship God.
Martine’s mother is Russian and her father is Congolese. Her
parents divorced when she was young. Her mother moved back to Russia, but
Martine stayed with her father in Congo. She has not seen her mother in almost
10 years. Martine is new to the HOPE family starting in May 2012. Before she
began with HOPE she felt lost and had no direction in her life. A close friend
who was also a loan officer at HOPE told her to apply for an open position with
HOPE. Martine applied and was hired! Her first day at HOPE she woke up very
sick, but was worried that if she didn’t come the first day it would give a bad
impression. She decided to come to the office, but felt very ill and
discouraged. She joined the morning devotions, and prayed that God would heal
her because she needed to be 100% on her first day. After the prayer time she
felt much better and knew it was God telling her this is where she is supposed
to be. She already feels close to the HOPE staff and calls them her family.
Darcelia’s parents divorced when she was young. After the
divorce she lived with her father. Even though her mother still lives in
Brazzaville Darcelia has not see her in years. Her mother refuses to see her.
Darcelia explained, “It was very difficult growing up without a mother’s love.”
She said, “She wishes she was an orphan instead of having a mother who doesn’t
want to see her.” When she started working with HOPE in February 2012 she found
love, acceptance, and a family at HOPE. When Darcelia was finished with her
testimony, Loveline, the loan officer supervisor, stood up, embraced her, and
said she would be her mother. Loveline expressed her love for Darcelia, as
Darcelia cried in her arms. It was a beautiful expression of God’s redemptive
love.
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Meeting at the office, ready to leave! |
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Some members of the GREEN team |
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Loading the bus |
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The girls of the RED team |
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The GREEN team |
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The RED team |
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Us and the Sparlings |
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Sitting around about to play a game |
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The YELLOW team. That is Alix in the front. She is a nut! |
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The Finance Team. Nate spends a lot of time with these guys. |
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The trees and flowers around the center were a nice change from the city. |
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