Tuesday, October 19, 2010

change of plans...

Thank you to those of you who have faithfully followed this blog. We are definitely so thankful for your support and prayers. This post is to let you know that Dakar Post will no longer be a primary avenue for our team for communicating what is going on in Senegal. We will probably update from time to time with some pictures or little stories, but below you will find links to some better ways to keep track of what's going on at l'Université Cheikh Anta Diop!

to receive monthly email updates from Dayton, email him at dayton.harris@uscm.org.

to check out Ashley's personal blog, click the link here.

to check out Ted's personal blog, click the link here.

to check out Michelle's personal blog, click the link here.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

We will always be together. (Of Diégane and Jesus.)

November 2009—

(Dayton and Diégane.)

I checked my sweaty watch as I waited outside the B.U., or the university library. My contact was late. (Little did I know then how regular a phenomenon that would be.) Pulling my drawstring backpack off my shoulder, I glanced around. Not much to see—preoccupied students passing in and out of the library; others sitting, taking a moment’s pause on the edges of the concrete flower beds. One student was sitting a few feet away from me, hands on his knees. He was sporting a pair of sunglasses—I noticed they had earbuds attached to them.

Talk to him.

It wasn’t an audible voice, but it was clear.

Oh God, I thought, I just want to meet my contact. Who knows if I’ll even be able to understand this guy—let alone he understand my thickly-accented French! Nothing will come out of this, and it’ll just be awkward.”

Talk to him.

I realized (no surprise) the Holy Spirit was not going to be reasoned out of this one—I could either obey or disobey. Glancing sideways, I took a deep breath.

Hello! (I pointed at his glasses.) “That, it is interesting!

He smiled. “Yes, it’s an mp3 player.”

“Oh, okay, excellent! Sorry—my name’s Dayton. You?”

Diégane.”

Well, it took me about the next 5 minutes to figure out how to say and spell that one. Diégane. Pronounced Jih—GAHN. We chatted for a couple minutes more, and then we exchanged phone numbers as he left for class. I continued on with my day. Late that night, I got a text message from Diégane wishing me a good night.

“Okay Lord,” I thought. “I guess that’s what you wanted.”

Thankfully, He had a bigger picture in mind.

January 2010

Okay, time to ask him.

Diégane was sitting next to me in my apartment’s living room. We’d just finished watching a short film called, “La Busqueda”, a modern-retelling of Jesus’ parable of the prodigal son. I’d been hanging out with him pretty regularly since our initial meeting at the library, but this was the first time for us to talk about spiritual things. So far it was good, but we were still mostly speaking in generalities. I plucked up my courage.

“Do you know God, Diégane?”

His answer shocked me with its simplicity and honesty.

“No, I do not know God.”

Well, if there was any doubt in my mind as to the need for ambassadors for Christ, it was gone after that. Proceeding from his answer, I explained to Diégane how, on our own, none of us knows God, how the wrong things that each of us has done divide us from God who is perfect and cannot tolerate wrong things. We talked about how no amount of effort on our part could change that—like trying to purify water by spooning the tea out of it, our own efforts can never remove ALL the wrong things from our lives. Then I shared with Diégane how Jesus Christ is the only answer for us, our only way to know God. I explained how He gives us his perfect life if we make a choice to trust solely in His perfect living, sacrificial death, and victorious resurrection to rescue us from our wrong-filled life.

Needless to say, that was a lot for a man who did not know God to take in. Diégane listened carefully to everything I said but didn’t say a whole lot in response. I could tell his mind was churning through it all. Later after he left, he sent me a text message saying our discussion of the film “was very interesting; truly I was happy”, and in true Senegalese fashion, he added, “We will always be together.

February 2010

“I’ll make a deal with you, Diégane.”

I could hardly believe myself. This was about to be very audacious. Our team had just been discussing earlier that day about putting yourself in situations where either God will move or you will look very stupid. This was going to be one of them.

Diégane was asking me to give him back a bracelet he had loaned to me. Many Africans have ideas that different blessed trinkets or small objects can protect them from evil spirits or misfortune, and Diégane believed his bracelet would protect him from some nightmares he’d been having—nightmares about dying. Thinking this could be a God-given opportunity, I somewhat impulsively set up a challenge for him.

“I’ll keep your bracelet for three days, and I will pray to Jesus to take away your nightmares. At the end of three days, you can tell me what happened, and if you want your bracelet back, you can have it.”

Though probably more from wanting to be agreeable than from willingness to give up his bracelet, Diégane consented to the plan. That night, my team and I prayed. After the first day, Diégane sent me a message saying he’d had no nightmares. (Coincidentally, he asked for prayers for him to have good grades, good health, and lots of money.) When I tried to give him back his bracelet a few days later, he told me I could hold on to it! (What a good deal!)

— April 2010 —

God, I’m not well-prepared. Please help me find a place in the Bible that would be good for Diégane and me to study together, a place where Diégane can hear the gospel clearly in a way he can understand.

That was my silent prayer as I mounted the steps to my apartment, Diégane following close behind. The last time we’d met, I had asked Diégane if he’d be interested in studying the Bible together, and his answer had been an emphatic yes—he’d never done that before. Now we were together again, but in the bustle of daily life and meetings with other students I had not planned or prepared to guide him through any passage or study.

As I opened the front door, I wondered to myself, “I want Diégane to read about someone who was transformed by Jesus—who in the Bible was changed from meeting Jesus?” The answer was almost instantaneous.

The Samaritan women at the well.

It was so good an answer I couldn’t help but smile. Yes, she had definitely been changed by her encounter with Jesus—she’d left her heavy waterpot at the well and had run all the way back to her village to tell all the people who had looked down on her about him. The Holy Spirit was helping me remember these things about Jesus so that He could be glorified. (Thank you, Lord!)

Sitting side-by-side on my foam mattress bed, Diégane and I read the Samaritans woman’s story in John 4. In his studious fashion, Diégane would read and then ponder for a few minutes before posing his carefully thought out questions. He was struck by the way the woman’s view of Jesus changed through the narrative—how first, he was just a Jewish man to her; then, a prophet; and then, the Messiah. I knew he was figuring out just what he thought about this Jesus, and his next question confirmed my suspicions:

“Can we study the Bible again this next Tuesday?”

— May 2010

Little Goldfish-like crackers flew up into the air and back down into waiting jaws. Ben, Diégane, and I were munching on the crackers and catching up again in our living room. (A can of Jif extra-crunchy—thank you Mom!—sat within easy reach as well.) Diégane had had a particularly tiring week of school, but had come over to discuss the four-spiritual laws booklet Ben had given him a few days ago. By now, spiritual conversation was practically an expectation with Diégane.

“So, what do you think of the green booklet Ben gave you, Diégane?”

“Well, I did not finish it yet—I only read the first few pages.”

So between bites, we started reading and discussing the booklet from where Diégane had left off. Knowing Diégane’s reflective and analytic nature, Ben and I waited while he formulated his thoughts and questions on each page of the booklet.

Seeing the spiritual canyon because of our sin between us and God and the futility of each person’s attempts to reach God on his own power, Diégane demanded, “What then can we do to attain to God? What can we do to make ourselves acceptable to God?” So we read about how it’s not any of our work, not any of our efforts, but rather to make a choice to trust in Jesus, in his sacrifice for us. We read together the booklet’s sample prayer of putting trust in Jesus, and Diégane indicated that he had already prayed such a prayer. To confirm that we were understanding each other, I asked, “so do you believe Jesus is the replacement for your sins?”

And right then and there, Diégane made a profession of faith— simple and informal, but striking and beautiful.

“Of course I do!”

The rest of the conversation my insides were going wild with joy. We prayed together, thanking God for Diégane’s new trust in Jesus and asking for grace to grow in understanding of this new relationship.

I am amazed as I think back on how God worked through this story:

“Nothing will come out of this, and it’ll just be awkward.”

“No, I don’t know God.”

“We will always be together.”

Praise Jesus that, because of what He’s done this past six months, now the first two of those statements are total lies and the last statement couldn’t be more true.

Monday, March 15, 2010

initial report on big outreach

Thank you for praying for the showing of the film the other night! After some initial coordination issues, the movie started about 8pm, right as it was getting dark. It was awesome to see the students move curiously to their dorm room windows or else walk up and sit down on the ground to watch. After the film ended, we collected 115 response cards! A large majority of the students who filled out cards wanted to talk more or find out more about the life and mission of Jesus! We are praising God for this opportunity, and ask that you pray for us and for the students and the other staff of Campus pour Christ as we work together to follow-up with all these interested students.

Monday, March 8, 2010

big outreach coming up!

The staff and students of Campus pour Christ have been working over the last few weeks to prepare for a large-scale outreach at the university on this coming Wednesday, March 10th. The plan is to show a film called L'Espoir (the Hope), which gives an 80-minute documentary-style synopsis of the entire Bible. The truth about Jesus is clearly presented along with an opportunity to respond. Please pray for this outreach, that it would be well-advertised, that students would be drawn to come, that the logistical details would not be a barrier. Pray that students would clearly understand the gospel. Thank you!

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Success

Lately I’ve been thinking a lot about success. Am I a successful Missionary? Am I a successful Christian? Do I feel like I succeeded today on Campus? How can I be more Successful?

All of these questions are constantly circling my head and I would be really surprised if questions like this weren’t on your mind too. We want to be successful. I don’t think there is really anything wrong with that. After all, who wants to be a failure?

A problem with wanting to be successful is that things tend to not go as expected. Students won’t show up to meetings, the power goes out at the most inopportune times, there may be bad weather, or things just get out of hand. There is nothing more frustrating then having a great plan and seeing it all “go to waste” because of circumstances beyond our control.

There is a problem with this. Failure Kills Vision. That’s probably pretty obvious, but nevertheless it’s true. We don’t see the results we expected and we give up on our vision. We assume that we must have misunderstood God’s calling on our lives, or that we must have done something wrong.

I think the problem lies in how we define success. I have started thinking about this idea a lot and have come to a conclusion. We define it wrong.

We assume that Success is seeing our vision come to fruition, the way we envisioned it, in the time frame we thought it would take. Believing this only sets us up for failure.

I think, instead, we should redefine success as Remaining faithful to the process God has laid out for you. Rather than judging my success on the things that I can see, we should define success based on trusting that God is at work and that by trusting and following him, He will bring his plans to completion.

I believe fully that God called me to do ministry here in Senegal. I think God has shown me this through a lot of different signs along the way, including the support He brought in.

My vision for coming to Senegal was to share the Gospel with a Nation of people who don’t know Christ, to see a student led movement begin at our University, and to see National student leaders rise up and take over the ministry. In short, I want to see Dakar, Senegal become a place where people know Christ and worship God.

If I were to look at the last 5 months and judge our success based on my goal, I’d say we are pretty big failures. The ministry here isn’t close to being what we envision.

BUT! God called us here anyways. He calls us to preach the gospel, and to share the love of Christ with students, in spite of what we think is happening here. By taking a chance on God and trusting him for the results we are already a success. Faithfullness = Success.

Noah was a success the day he started building the Arc, Moses was a success when he finally approached Pharaoh and told him for the first time to let the Israelites go, David was a success when he decided he couldn’t allow Goliath to demean the Name of God, and you are a success when you step away from inactivity and pursue the vision God has placed on your heart.

Unfortunately we often don’t make the distinction between success and the rewards of our success. We think we are failures if we don’t see rewards of our success.

This just reminds me of the fact that there are a lot of things going on in the world behind the scenes that we don’t know about. God is constantly working to bring the world to salvation.

That pumps me up! Our job is to trust God and leave the results up to him! How relieving is that!?

Romans 8:28 says, “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose”

God calls us according to our purpose. He has you where you are for a reason. And He wants you to trust him with the vision He has given you.

Rather than focusing on what is around you, focus on what is before you.

Expect God’s intervention, hold fast to what you know about His character, and give it your best. Everything else is up to God: your success is defined by your faithfulness.

Sunday, December 13, 2009

Pamoja

Coming up in a couple weeks, our team will be helping with a Campus pour Christ conference in the Ivory Coast called "Pamoja". Pamoja means "together" in Swahili; it is a conference designed to equip students from all over Africa to launch spiritual movements on their university campuses.

Please take some time to pray for this conference; it really is a huge opportunity to accelerate the spread of the gospel in Africa. Pray for the travel and financial needs of the students coming, and pray for their hearts to be spiritually prepared. Finally, pray that Christ would be clearly and evidently exalted in Pamoja-- that's the central thing.

Thank you so much!

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Thanksgiving outreach

Hi everyone,
We are hosting students for dinner and watching "The Passion" movie on Wednesday night. It is part of Thanksgiving celebration and an attempt to explain to students why Christians are thankful. Please pray for Mbagnick, Antoine, Sophie, Hadji and Hadji. These are some of our closest friends in country. I love staying that we are friends because the Lord is really building in us love for the students to whom we minister. Our team grows increasingly affectionate for our students the longer we remain in-country. Our team wants this group of students to understand the Jesus loves them not because of their goodness, but in spite of their sin. He died to receive worship from and give new life to our students. If I might ask, please ask that the Holy Spirit would open hearts to start a relationship with Him for the first time on Wednesday evening.

Finally, my grandfather's funeral is Wednesday in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Some of you knew my grandfather. My family and I appreciate the continued outpouring of prayer and sympathy. Thank you so much for your support. For my family, the children and grandchildren, especially my younger cousins Skyler, Garrett, Randell, and Angelina. I've been praying that the Lord would minister to the hurting in my family in a special way.