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Lighting the Path- Swazi Journal

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Travel Journal

 Sawubona from Swaziland

Here's a glimpse of the four VanderWal boys, amid today's stories from the "front lines." These three normal 5-year-olds and a little brother participate in all the bush medical clinics, even if it's just playing soccer with the Swazi boys. You'll enjoy their insights.

Jacob, whose health is much improved, said, "Mom, I just can't wait until all of Swaziland loves God." He's a boy of few words, who makes friends easily with young Swazis.

Luke is the theologian, who analyzes The Passion anew after watching it 50 times. He considers the extent of Satan's power and the supremacy of Jesus. He talks about heaven as often as he talks about matters on earth. One day when he was helping me in the pharmacy, I offhandedly said, "You ask a lot of questions, Luke."

"I'm a talker," he replied. "What do you expect?" and stomped off to offer his services elsewhere.

On a 2.5 hour drive home one evening after 237 people accepted Christ, Luke asked his parents: "If we weren't missionaries, would those people have asked Jesus into their hearts?"

Zebadiah runs up after the names of new believers have been written down: "How many people got saved today?" He does not stop asking until someone answers. Before each clinic Zeb asks: "Are you ready to sweat?"

Every morning we gather in a circle to pray before departure. Two-year old Zion faithfully declares: "To the work, Luke Commission on assignment," running all the words together. Zion has been nicknamed Mdonjla by our translators. It means "always helping, strong man." He helps load the trailers, speaks SiSwati in the pharmacy, gives out cards in the eyeglass line, and assists Harry and Echo as they console and treat the sick.

Grace is continually blessed as she fits eyeglasses. Three elderly lady friends put on their new glasses and told her, "We are beautiful."

What do people say when they can suddenly see after years of poor sight? "I can see the children playing..." "I can thread a needle again..." "I can see my goats clearly now..." "I can read my new Bible..."

Climaxing a difficult day when people in the eyeglass line had been usually impatient, an old man who had been pushed out of line finally got his turn. "When I tested his eyes," Grace notes, "I realized he probably had seen very little for 20 years. But we found just the eyeglasses he needed. When I put them on, his face lit up and tears fell down his cheeks." (Thank you to all who donate glasses! God finds just the right match, time and time again.)

Thank you, too, to all who have prayed for SiSwati Bibles. A shipment of 400 Bibles and 1,000 New Testaments came two days early, an unheard of event in Africa where everything is late.

The Bibles arrived just in time for two big clinics where hundreds were saved but lacked God's Word. Zulu is almost like the SiSwati language and is read in southern Swaziland. Consequently, we have ordered 1,800 Zulu Bibles, expected next week. (Thank you, Jesus). Please press on in prayer, though; we need more SiSwati Bibles and have been told none are available until July.

Please pray for our 13 translators, also. Echo thought they'd appreciate a vacation day, only their 2nd day off in a month. However, most wanted to work. Echo asked Emmanuel, "Why don't you want to take off tomorrow?" He answered, "I'll miss lunch."

A quick footnote: A hospital administrator called Echo, asking her to pick up the leg which had been amputated from our patient mentioned in an earlier update. Echo quickly contacted his relatives so they could bury it. "I'll do almost anything for the Swazis but transport maggot-infested body parts." Cultural differences know no bounds.

Love in Jesus,
Jan for Harry and Echo, Kalvin, Grace, Luke, Jake, Zeb, and Zion

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Past Entries 

TLC – Stuck on 3rd Base, but Heading for Home

TLC Stories of Deliverance Start and End at the Cross

The Luke Commission Hits the Road – Once Again

Swazi Team Awaits Expectantly & Joyfully

2010 Vehicle Fund Update

So What about Swaziland? - Jake, Luke, Zeb, Zion

Faces Shine Forth in Idaho Gala Crowd

TLC Ohio Auction Inspires Young & Old to Get Involved

Students Serving in Swaziland Speak Out

TLC Spitting-Snake Week, Plus Three.

Wheels are Turning at Luke Commission Clinics

Alumni Spotlight: Echo VanderWal '00

Jesus' Sacrificial Love Seen in Mothers' Lives Here

On the Road Again with The Luke Commission

Swazi Leaders Review The Luke Commission

TLC Team Members Light the Path from Here to Swaziland

Laborers Here Produce for Swazis There

The VanderWal Boys Tell All!

TLC Makes-Do in Swaziland, While God Crafts the Outcome

AIDS Portion of TLC Bush Clinics Grows with Assistance from Afar

Seeing Beyond Statistics to the Heart of the Matter

Visiting the Sick in Swaziland - It's Like Anywhere Else and It's Not Like Anywhere Else

The Luke Commission Adds Surgeries and Chickens to Their Menagerie

Travel Journal: You are There - Experience a Luke Commission Clinic Firsthand - Manzini, Swaziland

Travel Journal: Too Much Work to Leave... Harry and Echo from Swaziland

Travel Journal: Amid Medical Clinics, Kids Receive Operation Christmas Child Boxes

Travel Journal: The AIDS Battle Brings Out the Best and the Worst

Travel Journal: Faith Like a Grain of Mustard Seed Grows

Travel Journal: The Luke Commission... It's a Puzzle with So Many Pieces

Travel Journal: Miracles Abound Amid the Clutches of AID

Travel Journal: Swaziland as Viewed through Children's Eyes

Travel Journal: The Gift of Sight Given Outwardly and Inwardly

Travel Journal: Running Swazi Pharmacies out of Medicine Turns to Blessing in Disguise

Travel Journal: One by One, the Young Come with Full-Blown AIDS

Travel Journal: A Boy, A Bus, A Spider... And Hope In The Midst

Travel Journal: When that white bald-headed doctor sings...

Travel Journal: From security lapses to sugared engines welcome VanderWals to Swaziland

Travel Journal: Humbled and Thrilled, the VanderWals Return to Africa

Ministry Update - Dear Luke Commission Friends

Ministry Update - Dear Ones in the U.S. and Canada

Travel Journal - Dear Luke Commission supporters

Travel Journal - Dear Ones across the continents

Travel Journal - Here's another update from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Greetings from The Luke Commission

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back Home

Travel Journal - Sawubona from Swaziland

Travel Journal - We look forward to these updates

Travel Journal - Dear Ones who love the Swazis

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland!

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 2)

TLC NEWSFLASH!!! (Issue 1)

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland

Travel Journal - Dear Ones

Travel Journal - Dear Ones back home

Travel Journal - Greetings from Swaziland on a Wednesday morning in early spring

 

"I want to thank The Luke Commission for giving me a second chance in life. When you found me in the bush I was like the man who had leprosy in Mark 1:40-42 and you healed me." 

Lwazi Lishaba

13 year old who was about to lose his leg because of a postsurgical infection.

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