The 3 hr trip to Lampang was great. There were a lot more temples and a lot fewer Christians there. The city had a darker atmosphere.




Follow our ACTS team as we journey with God into the heartland of Uganda, Kenya & Thailand.
Wow. What a week. On Monday the 10th, our ACTS team hopped on a bus for a 12-hour journey North, Turkana. On the bus Cory Wasson preached to 50+ Kenyans out of the story of Mary of Bethany. After he preached, I followed up with a ministry time, where I prayed for 10-15 people who raised their hands saying that they want to give all of their time, money, energy and relationships to Jesus. I have no idea who I prayed for that was already a born again Christian or who was not. I wish I would have been more intentional to figure out what kind of people were responding; but nevertheless, it's really awesome that people responded to Jesus. 10-15 people said that they wanted love Jesus with all of their heart, soul, mind and strength. Amen! After I preached, Cory played guitar as Eunice Njeri led the bus into worship.
At 11pm, we arrived in Kakuma - a simple Turkana town surrounded by the desert mountains. We slept that night, and every night, outside in the cool air and vigorous wind, underneath the most spectacular moon and stars I have ever seen. I got to see my first and second shooting star ever! I don't know how I have gone through 22 years of life without seeing one, but finally I have seen one. It was sweet:) In the morning, we were usually awakened to the sound of SHOUTING goats who roamed freely among us in our little compound:)
We arrived in Kakuma not knowing at all how we were expected to minister. But we agreed that regardless of how we ministered, God's primary assignment for us there was intercession to withstand the increasing influence of immorality and idolatry (Islam) through intercession.
Our basic ministry schedule looked like two services every day - one morning and one evening service. The service would begin with worship, followed by a sermon on prayer, and we'd finish with a time of intercession or prophetic worship.
In our Thursday morning service, Tyler Andrews preached and led us into a time of prayer for God to establish a culture of prayer in the town. During this time of prayer the Lord released upon us a spirit of conviction through a word of wisdom given to Cory Wasson. We responded to the Lord with a time of open repentance and confession of sin from the church pulpit. This was the turning point for our trip. Previously we really were sensing a "blockage" in the effectiveness of our teaching and praying, and even in our team's internal relationships. But after this open confession and repentance of sin we saw a breakthrough in the response of the congregation we were ministering to, God began to answer the prayers that we offered up even before we left for Kenya, and the team felt a new brotherly love for each other. This was so cool. God changed our team and He changed those who we ministered to because we confessed our sins to one another.
On Friday afternoon the team spent some time sharing dreams that God had given us for the whole team. God is clearly speaking to us through dreams right now. Each dream explained and confirmed the other. There are far too many details to share about the dreams and what God is speaking to us in this update. But I just wanted to testify to God's good leadership, that He is clearly making known the direction that we should go, and the things that we need to intercede for. Thank you Jesus for speaking to our team so obviously!
After sharing our dreams, we spent an hour in intercession for the immorality and idolatry in Kakuma. We prayed that God would release purity in the Church, and that He would take every Muslim out of the domain of darkness and transfer him into the Kingdom of Jesus Christ, and turn every mosque that stands at the gates of the city into a church. We felt a breakthrough in intercession during that time.
So on Friday evening instead of preaching the AWESOME sermon that I had prepared, I sensed God wanting me to preach from James 5:16 and lead the congregation again in a time of open confession of sin (there were more people in the evening services who weren't there for the Thursday morning confession). The message connected in the congregation, the Holy Spirit was present, releasing grace for confession, and after a word of exhortation from Cory (who carried the grace to lead people into repentance), the whole congregation responded by coming to the altar to repent for and openly confess their sin.
On Saturday, upon our request, Pastor Wilson (one of the main pastors in Turkana, and our host), took us on a climb to the top of one of the largest mountains in the area, for have a time of intercession, blessing and prophecy for the town of Kakuma and nation of Kenya. I felt God's presence on top of the mountain, and knew that He would answer out prayers. And I believe that our repentance on Thursday is the reason why the prayers on the mountain will be answered. James 5:16 says "Therefore, confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be healed. The effective [or fervent] prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much." Because we had confessed, because we had come into right standing before God, our prayers surely will accomplish much.
On Sunday, before I preached the second service, Tyler Andrews' "man purse" where he keeps his wallet containing his ID, credit card, copy of passport and visa, and both personal and team money was stolen by a little boy. Pastor Wilson and a couple others prayed that it would return before we left to go back home to Kitale in the afternoon. The "man purse" was found only a short while later. But this is the cool part - while second service worship was still going, a man who lives a few kilometers away stumbles upon Tyler's wallet, sees that there is a white guy's ID card in it, and decides to call Pastor Wilson to see if perhaps he has any foreign guests in town who may of lost their wallet. The wallet was returned with everything in it except for the cash. Praise God! He answers prayer!
Okay, so back to the church service. I got to preach the AWESOME sermon that I told you about. I preached on responding to the imminent day of Christ's return through intercession. The passages I preached from were Luke 2 (Anna), Matthew 24, and Luke 21. I really enjoyed preaching this sermon hahaha:) About 20 in a congregation of 100 or so came to the altar to receive prayer for grace as they commit themselves to live lifestyles of intercession and fasting like Anna the daughter of Phanuel in Luke 2. God answered a prayer of mine from Thursday morning in this sermon. On Thursday morning, as we were praying for God to set watchmen on the wall of intercession in Kakuma, I felt like God told me to pray for this specific family that we had the opportunity to meet earlier in the week. I felt like He told me to pray for the children of this family, that they would be intercessors like Anna; that they would give the best of their vitality to intercession and fasting, night and day, for the rest of their lives. One of the teenage girls of this family that I was praying for, came to the altar for prayer after my sermon; later with tears in her eyes she told one of the ladies' on our team, Carly Cerak, that she wanted to be like Anna. What a God we serve who answers prayer! He told me what to pray on Thursday; I actually prayed; and then on Sunday He answered that prayer. I love how God works!
Oh ya I almost forgot. That before I preached, God told me that there was somebody in the room who wasn't born again, but I wasn't sure if He was telling me to give a salvation call or not. No matter, after ministry time, Pastor Wilson gave an invitation for anybody who wanted to be born again to come forward. One of the town drunkards who had disrupted one of our team meetings came forward to give His life to Jesus. He knelt down, and prayed; then Pastor Wilson prayed for Him to receive the Holy Spirit. As he was going back to His seat, he was wiping tears off of his face. This man was not just praying a prayer, he was not drunk, but he genuinely repented and gave his life to Christ. Hahahaha! Yes!
There are even more testimonies from this week than I am not sharing. I hope that none of my team members read this update, because they'd certainly yell at me for leaving stuff out. All this is to say that God is working through us. We have been sent by God to Kenya on purpose.
I have arrived in Kenya! I landed in Nairobi (the nation’s capitol) with my ACTS team at 1:00am on Tuesday the 4th (5pm on Monday 3rd, U.S. Central Time I believe), and at approximately 3am our team lodged in a Pentecostal Christian guest house.
I woke up on my own accord at 6:15am, but forced myself to lie in bed until 7am. I ate a normal American breakfast (bummer), and spent about an hour and a half on the balcony reading my Bible, praying, and journaling. Afterward, our team gathered together for a little worship and prayer together before we departed ways for the day to run some errands.
One of those errands was to buy three acoustic guitars to bring to the house of prayer in Kitale. Having grown up in a guitar-saturated community, I was shocked at how difficult it was to find any selection of acoustic guitars in the emerging city of Nairobi. We walked around with our taxi-driver/tour guide for a few hours before we accidentally stumbled upon a music shop that sold some decent guitars for a cheap price.
I am thrilled about bringing these guitars to Kitale, because one of our team’s strategies in accomplishing the objective of establishing a culture of worship-based prayer in the local Church is to have every one of our team members personally disciple a native Kenyan in prayer. We are each going to make a friend, and bring them into everything that we do in the prayer room. So, the three guitar players on our team are going to teach guitar lessons and give a guitar to three young men or women who are committed to be pillars of intercession in the house of prayer in Kitale for an extended period of time. This is such a cool idea! Hook a young adult with the worthiness of Jesus, give them the vision of leading worship and prayer in their city to welcome Him back, teach them the lifestyle, tools and instrument necessary to do it, and then get out of the way! I believe that by the grace of the Spirit this is possible. Pray that God would give us three passionate worship leaders to carry the censer of intercession in Kitale.
Anyhow, I could continue on with my observations of the culture, feel, architecture and people of Nairobi, but I am already running the risk of writing too much! I promise my updates won’t always be this long.
I’ll end with this:
- I sense the Spirit challenging me to be radical and risky.
- God is going to do something magnificent while we're here.
- I think the food thus far has been pretty good.
- I embark upon a 7-hour drive to Kitale tomorrow morning.
Love,
Michael
2011 October 3 (Monday morning)
Yesterday, we sent out our first ACTS teams on outreach. As I write, they are on planes traveling to Thailand, Uganda, and Kenya to work with local believers to plant prayer furnaces and preach the Gospel to the unreached for the next three months and possibly beyond that. Some of these missionaries are your friends, sons, daughters, brothers, and sisters. I have gotten to know them well over the last three months that they have been with us here in Kansas City and they are some of the best and the brightest young people I have ever met. Their passion for Jesus and compassion for the lost is beautiful to me. Their love for one another is one for the history books! They have given themselves to three months of intense schedules of prayer and worship, rigorous Bible and theological studies, and practical training to prepare them as intercessory missionaries to go to the hardest and darkest places to plant prayer furnaces and reach the unreached. Of course, they had fun along the way too!
To me personally, this is a dream come true.
For the past several years, the Lord has spoken to me about finishing the task of the Great Commission in this generation through worship and intercession. Of course, we desperately need conventional foreign missions and local evangelism to continue on as it always had to finish that task, but I believe that the Holy Spirit is raising up a new kind of missionary - an intercessory missionary - who will go to the hardest and darkest places and exalt Jesus through worship (Ps 22:3) as they partner in prayer with the Great Intercessor for a harvest of souls in the nations. To me, these students are the first fruits of that new kind of intercessory missionary movement.
Over the next few months, these students will share their stories on this blog. I encourage you to pray for them daily and regularly and share this blog site with others in their family or with their friends and their church.