I preached at Pastor Filbert’s church this morning. The place was packed with what looked like
500 people in church. The service
started at 9:00 am. You know how most
American church-goers pull in to church at the last minute? I was sitting in Pastor Filbert’s house right
next to the church and heard singing at about 8:30 am. The place was already getting crowded. When we walked in at 9 am, we had to set up
the video projector I brought because Pastor Laurent wanted me to show the
video of Mayor Eggers greeting the people of Madagascar (good job, Mr.
Mayor). They already full house sat and
watched in relative quiet.
The church service was 2 hours and 15 minutes long. And the crowd was sitting on plain wooden
benches. Children were there and were
mostly quiet. When they started crying
no one gave the disgusted look I’m afraid I’ve seen in too many American
churches. The children were in
worship. And so were the husbands and
wives. And so were the youth. About 40 percent of the church was 18 and
under. They were there because they
wanted to be there.
The worship service consisted of two baptisms, commissioning
two leaders in the church (which involved those leaders singing a song,
reciting Scripture, and answering a series of commitment questions), two
anthems, 15 minutes of announcements, about four songs, an offering song, three
Scripture readings, and a sermon. I
preached the sermon and Pastor Laurent translated. I stopped after every thought to allow Pastor
Laurent to translate. As in the past
with doing this in Honduras, I think the translator preached a better sermon
than I preached judging by the crowd reaction.
Two things stood out.
First, the singing. I thought it
yesterday at the 25th celebration of Pastor Laurent’s ministry and
again this morning in worship. We could
learn a lot from the Malagasy Christians.
They sing! Loud. With vigor.
Even the vice president of the church, a dignitary who works with the
American ambassador in the capital city, was singing away with mouth wide
open. The church choir sang a piece I
will just have to play for you.
Beautiful and inspiring. I played
it for Pastor Laurent later and he translated it for me. It was a discipleship message: “follow me.”
The second thing that stood out was the attentiveness and
involvement of the congregation. I sat
up front and could see the congregation during the whole service. There was not
one part of the service I saw people’s eye’s glaze over and them check out
mentally. Their passion for the Lord was
evident. Their faith shaped their lives,
inspired their hearts, and was evident in their worship.
After lunch, we headed out for our afternoon activity. It was a commissioning service for new
pastors. Pastor Laurent is the vice
president of the denomination, which means he is involved in significant events
like this commissioning of 83 pastors and 50 church school teachers. The event was held in an amphitheater that
held 4,000 people. It was filled to
capacity. Kelly King and I sat next to
Pastor Laurent and his wife, Diamondra, on the second row of the platform. That is Pastor Laurent and me in the photo
above before the commissioning. We sat
next to all of the dignitaries of the national church. As far as we could tell, we were also the
only two white people in the crowd. It
was far from uncomfortable. While we
were the minority race, it felt we were among family. Race was a non-category. These were my sisters and brothers in
Christ. It was a beautiful moment.
The commissioning lasted three hours. Again, more sitting. The names were read, speeches given, hands
shook, and the deed was done. The church
here desperately needs the graduates.
Many churches are without pastors.
These new pastors are required to service a remote church for five years
before seeking a transfer. They have to
thrive in the poorest of environments as a proving ground for ministry
here. If they can’t make it there, they
are not allowed to make it elsewhere. It
still amazes Pastor Laurent that we have three pastors in one church when there
each pastor has three churches to serve.
During the commissioning, I loved one moment in
particular. What is implicit here in the
American church was explicit there. The
new pastors took a vow, had a verbal agreement to not tell a living soul what
gets said in confidence. What a great
moment for the 4,000 people to hear. It
reminds me to say to you that there are things that have been told to me that I
will take to my grave. If you ever need
to talk, unload sin, confess…
After the commissioning, we had an unplanned visit. One of the church members who was heavily
involved in evangelism work died suddenly two days ago. He was 49 years old. One of the professors we sat with during the
commissioning told us about the death.
The man who died was a family member of that professor. We got to see how the Malagasy deal with
death.
In America, when a person dies, a funeral director is called
in, the body is removed, an embalming or cremation takes places, and funeral
plans are made. Here in Madagascar, the
practices at death are similar to how they were long ago in America. First, a solution is applied to the body to
slow decay. No embalming takes place. The body is washed, dressed, and placed on a
table in a room in the home. In the
south, we used to call it “sitting up with the dead.” Here, the family sets up chairs in the room
and sits with the dead while visitors come by to pay their respects. Kelly, Pastor Laurent, Diamondra, and I were
shown into the darkened room. Pastor
Laurent expressed condolences to the dozen family members gathered. I prayed a pastoral prayer for the
family. A family member exchanged
thoughts with us, which we were told later were words of gratitude. Diamondra gave an envelope to the wife who
had a stack of envelopes in her hand.
Each had money in it to help cover the expenses. Death is not abstract and distant. They are involved in all stages of death. Somehow I think that gritty reality helps the
grieving.
When we left the house, we walked outside and found a crowd
of people waiting to go in to visit the family.
They would soon do what we just did.
One of the people in the crowd was the former prime minister of the
country. We had a brief conversation
with him and he was interested to know how Kelly and I like Madagascar. We assured him it was an honor to be
here. Just like that, we met top
political leader of the country.
That night, we found out that Pastor Filbert, in whose home
we were staying, fled into exile during the government coup in 2009. Pastor Laurent told us, “Don’t let this quiet
man fool you, he is a strong man of principle.
He has been a rock during this national crisis.” For three months, his family went into hiding
until international amnesty groups put enough pressure on the government to
stop arresting and persecuting outspoken leaders. The Christians stood on the side of those
who were being abused and oppressed.
Pastor Filbert and others spoke out and still do. The people here continue to amaze me in their
resilience and optimism in spite of their conditions. This is their homeland and they love their
home. It is a shared experience
everywhere I have travelled, but it is good to see it here.
Sleep. Welcome
sleep. Again, thinking of you.
1 comment:
Oh,Wow! That was just inspiring. Thank you.
Carol
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