Sunday, August 30, 2009

God knows


I heard a story about a man who was out on his boat when he encountered a terrible storm. His boat capsized and he ended up on a deserted island all by himself. Weeks went by and he was so miserable, so distraught. He didn’t think he would ever be found. He prayed every day, but it seemed like the heavens were silent. He tried to make the most of it. He even built a little thatched roof hut for shelter and became quite good at fishing and gathering food.



Time passed and there were no signs of his situation changing. In fact, one day just when he thought it couldn’t possibly get any worse, he was out trying to find food and came back to find the little hut he had built was on fire. He just sat there, stunned, watching the only thing he had left going up in flames. It was like pouring salt on his wounds. He fell to his knees and said, “God, I give up. I asked You to help me, but one bad thing after another keeps happening.”



Well, about an hour later, the Coast Guard showed up to rescue him. The man couldn’t believe it! He was thrilled. He said, “How in the world did you find me?” They said, “We saw the smoke coming from that huge fire you built.”



Friend, sometimes what looks like a disappointment to us is really God positioning us to go to a new level. Maybe you feel like this man, hit by the storms of life alone on an island with your hut on fire. But instead of getting negative and bitter, recognize that God still has a good plan for your life. He’s working behind the scenes. He’s taking those disappointments and discouragements, and He’s using them to launch you into freedom. Even when you don’t understand what’s happening in your circumstances, understand that God is using them for your good. He has a plan to bless and prosper you and bring you out better and stronger than ever before!

Saturday, August 15, 2009

KENYAN DREAM

All work no play may have made Jack a dull boy
But all work no God has left Jack with a lost soul
But he's moving on full steam
He's chasing the American dream
And he's gonna give his family finer things

“Not this time son I've no time to waste
Maybe tomorrow we'll have time to play”
And then he slips into his new BMW
And drives farther and farther and farther away

Cause he works all day and tries to sleep at night
He says things will get better;
Better in time

[Chorus]
So he works and he builds with his own two hands
And he pours all he has in a castle made with sand
But the wind and the rain are comin' crashing in
Time will tell just how long his kingdom stands
His kingdom stands

Well his American Dream is beginning to seem
More and more like a nightmare
With every passing day
"Daddy, can you come to my game?"
"Oh Baby, please don't work late."
Another wasted weekend
And they are slipping away

'Cause he works all day and lies awake at night
He tells them things are getting better
Just take a little more time

[Chorus]
So he works and he builds with his own two hands
And he pours all he has in a castle made with sand
But the wind and the rain are comin' crashing in
Time will tell just how long his kingdom stands
His kingdom stands

He used to say, "Whoever dies with the most toys wins"
But if he loses his soul, what has he gained in the end
I'll take a shack on the rock
Over a castle in the sand

Now he works all day and cries alone at night
It's not getting any better
Looks like he's running out of time

[Chorus]
'Cause he worked and he built with his own two hands
And he poured all he had in a castle made with sand
But the wind and the rain are coming crashing in
Time will tell just how long his kingdom stands
His kingdom stands

All they really wanted was you
All they really wanted was you
All they really wanted was you

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Faith

‘Now faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see. This is what the ancients were commended for. By faith we understand that the universe was made…by faith Abel offered a better sacrifice… by faith Noah built the ark… By faith people passed through the sea… by faith the walls of Jericho fell… ’ Hebrews 11
The examples of men (and women) who had absolute faith in their daily life is a challenge to me and to all of us. Remember the verse, that faith can move mountains, faith as small as a mustard seed? Then I wonder why I’ve got challenges which (I feel) seem too big for my faith. Or is it that I got no faith? I’m worried about my next moves, coins, cats, exams: and exams really give me a hard time. I spend nights on books just for a c.a.t and still never in history have I ever felt confident enough to walk into the exam room. I always worry that I may not be sent money on time. Where is my faith?
Its ironic that I can trust somebody for 1000$ and still fail to trust the same person for 10$. If I claim to trust God for my future in eternity, then why can’t I trust Him for my fees, meals, cats, exams, relationships, security… all of them? I want to learn to trust Him more in all areas of my life. I need to trust God even in the simplest of all tasks. I imagine God is spending ‘sleepless nights’ just waiting to hear me speak. It’s the same way am anxious waiting for that important phone call. Looking back, I have never seen God let me down (sure enough). Why should I imagine that he is going to do so tomorrow? I just don’t believe in Jesus because somebody told me about Him, but because I have seen him. I look at the moments when I felt that God was underperforming and I realize that He was just teaching me to trust in him more and more.

Grace

Grace is many times defined as unmerited favour, but in fact, it is even de-merited. We not only don’t deserve it, but we actually have what it requires to miss it. That is why whenever you open your mouth, close your eyes or even hold your neighbours hand to say “may the grace of the lord…” , just think twice. Think about what it means, what it implies and what it cost. Of course it cost us nothing, but it cost God a lot. I think Paul came up with this prayer (or its statement or declaration). It was his common way of signing his letters to various churches. Look at 1st and 2nd Cor, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1st and 2nd Thessalonians, Timothy, Titus and Philemon. All of these books end with Paul’s wish for grace to his readers.
Why then do we need all this grace? If Paul found it important to wish his readers grace, I have no doubt that it is vital in our daily walk with God. We are survived by the grace of God, and even when we don’t see it, it is there. Just like the air we breathe, rarely do we stop feel how sweet the air is, but we are always breathing and without it we are doomed. Maybe I have been a recipient of this extravagant grace and that’s why I have learnt to take it for granted, just because its ever sufficient to me. Why am I alive, how comes I can see, I have nit suffered a cardiac arrest, I have money for food, fee, everything. How comes my joy does not come from beer and all forms of immorality as many do. Why is it that I am not wanted by any law enforcers. Why is it that I am not one of the classmates who dropped out of college, I have parents who care and love me, I can find time to sit and teach kids the word of God. This is unbelievable. Absolutely. Paul really knew what it meant to have Gods grace. It is beyond what I can think or see. Next time I open my mouth to say it, I will open my mind first. And in today’s society where we are always looking for laws to break, where everything is as evil as it has never been, where we think that God does not exist just because he does not punish us for the evil that we do, never in history have we ever been in such a dire need for grace.
And may the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you, amen.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

49 on my to do list b4 i hit 49

1. Climb Mt Everest
2. Go for a mission in Iraq, if they shoot me, sawa, if they get saved, the better
3. Spend a week in Mogadishu, Somalia
4. ride a chopper without a pilot (its called a drone)
5. Contest a political seat and loose
6. Become a hussler, Engineer, an idler then a businessman
7. Get a kid
8. Ride a bike from Cairo to Cape town, with a few friends
9. Buy the latest model of a suv and give it to my father who cannot drive, neither does he travel
10. Visit The Vatican and discuss important diplomatic matters with the pope (if they don’t deny me a chance)
11. Start a kiosk in New Delhi, sell foodstuffs and repair electronics
12. Learn Chinese
13. Smoke weed with the bishop of the diocese of Nairobi (Anglican)
14. Camp for 3 months in Masai Mara, no packed food
15. Drop a false bomb in parliament when all are present
16. Fast for 40 days and nights
17. Kill Omar-El-bashir
18. Buy a train(a small steam locomotive)
19. *****
20. Buy a cow
21. Work for eabl. I’ll never drink
22. Go to a bible school, get a pass
23. Produce an album
24. Learn how to swim (among the last one)
25. Travel to Migingo and leave a mark there.
26. If time, space and money allows, buy a chopper
27. Build a high voltage lab in my house
28. Live in Geneva, Switzerland
29. Repay my helb loan to the last cent
30. Visit Jerusalem, gaza strip, Lebanon, see Mt Ararat, the Jordan river, west gate
31. (very personal)
32. (very, very personal)
33. Apply for a job as the chief government executioner
34. leak a national exam to all candidates just two days to the exam
35. grab land in Mau and sell it to foreigners, preferably Somalis
36. try car racing, possibly the rhino charge
37. I’m too shy to say this one
38. Convert china onto a democracy
39. Go to school (this one already achieved)
40. See the vision 2030 fail to be impelemented
41. Send a post card to DL moody
42. Sign up in a local gym
43. Lead a monk to Christ
44. Learn to beg
45. Take my family for a trip around Africa
46. Keep a giraffe pet
47. Buy 16 kWatt 7.1 music system with all the specifications in the market, yet the neighbours shall never hear of it. Never
48. See Kenya become self sufficient in power production
49. Resign from a job
DISCLAIMER
-Not in any order
-I Should Not Be Quoted
-terms and conditions apply
-thou shall not judge
-I guess I slept early, been dreaming a lot

Friday, July 3, 2009

of fools, forgetfulness and miracle


I always marvel at the foolish nature of Israelites, who would forget all about God, generation after a generation. The many events and experiences they went through would soon fade from their minds, and they would turn to idle worship. A look at the book of Judges 2:10
“After that whole generation had been gathered to their fathers, another generation grew up, who knew neither the LORD nor what he had done for Israel.”

What is it that would make a whole generation not to know God? Is it possible that we can completely forget what happened in the last 100 years, the inventions, the world wars, name all those events. I guess it would require a great deal of effort to forget these things, and to forget them all of us. But this is what happened of Israelites. The whole generation forgot about God, and that’s all; they forgot. Not even the great victories that God had fought for them remained. Amazing! The results:
“Then the Israelites did evil in the eyes of the LORD and served the Baals.”
With no revelation of God and in their ignorance, they would stop serving God.
What brings me in this line of thinking is my own realization of how we tend to forget what god has done. Lately I have had some nasty experiences with a dentist, involving a minor dental surgery and a tooth implant. I didn’t understand all that took place but it seemed so simple to the doctor unbelievable to me. A few foolow ups followed and yesterday when I went for the final check-up, the doctor said that my recovery was a full miracle. My performance was beyond expectations and she had never seen such a perfect recovery in her lifetime. Actually she was jumping in excitement.
This morning I sat down reflecting on these events and it dawned to me that if I am still looking for a miracle, I should open my eyes wide. This is an event which I would easily forget. But aren’t such small experiences worth remembering in future, whenever I feel down or far from God. What if the Israelites made deliberate efforts to write down what God had done? Maybe it would have save them from all the bad experiences and cycle of experiences that goes on in the book of Judges. And maybe too for me…

FRIENDSHIP



A friend is one of the nicest things you can have, and one of the best things you can be. ~Douglas Pagels


Friendship isn't a big thing - it's a million little things. ~Author Unknown


A single rose can be my garden... a single friend, my world. ~Leo Buscaglia


Only your real friends will tell you when your face is dirty. ~Sicilian Proverb


The antidote for fifty enemies is one friend. ~Aristotle


In everyone's life, at some time, our inner fire goes out. It is then burst into flame by an encounter with another human being. We should all be thankful for those people who rekindle the inner spirit. ~Albert Schweitzer


A loyal friend laughs at your jokes when they're not so good, and sympathizes with your problems when they're not so bad. ~Arnold H. Glasgow


The friend is the man who knows all about you, and still likes you. ~Elbert Hubbard, The Notebook, 1927


A good friend is cheaper than therapy. ~Author Unknown


If a friend is in trouble, don't annoy him by asking if there is anything you can do. Think up something appropriate and do it. ~Edgar Watson Howe


The most I can do for my friend is simply be his friend. ~Henry David Thoreau


A true friend never gets in your way unless you happen to be going down. ~Arnold Glasow


But if the while I think on thee, dear friend,
All losses are restored and sorrows end.
~William Shakespeare


The most beautiful discovery true friends make is that they can grow separately without growing apart. ~Elisabeth Foley


It is easier to forgive an enemy than to forgive a friend. ~William Blake


A friend is the only person you will let into the house when you are Turning Out Drawers. ~Pam Brown


One's friends are that part of the human race with which one can be human. ~George Santayana


A friend knows the song in my heart and sings it to me when my memory fails. ~Donna Roberts


If I had to sum up Friendship in one word, it would be Comfort. ~Adabella Radici


If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advances through life, he will soon find himself alone. A man should keep his friendships in constant repair. ~Samuel Johnson


True friendship comes when silence between two people is comfortable. ~Dave Tyson Gentry


You can always tell a real friend: when you've made a fool of yourself he doesn't feel you've done a permanent job. ~Laurence J. Peter


Friends are those rare people who ask how you are and then wait for the answer. ~Author Unknown


A friend is the one who comes in when the whole world has gone out. ~Grace Pulpit


One doesn't know, till one is a bit at odds with the world, how much one's friends who believe in one rather generously, mean to one. ~D.H. Lawrence


Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art.... It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things that give value to survival. ~C.S. Lewis


Constant use will not wear ragged the fabric of friendship. ~Dorothy Parker

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

NOBLE COURSE

This year, the JKUAT CU has redefined the concept of mission, from being a time to evangelize to a whole bunch of activities including multi-million projects to improve the livelihood of people. This comes in the wake of preparation for a mission to Ngomeni (not sure which district), where massive water projects are to be undertaken to better the livelihoods of the people in this area. This will include equipping a borehole with water pump, preparing a water catchment area, providing a free medical camp and even sponsoring some students to further their studies.
I am greatly blessed by this big venture which is surely faith inspired. It reminds me of how great God is, and how much power if has bestowed on us, and better, how much if expects from us as stewards of his creation. I have a soft spot for missions, and its time i dreamt big like the people behind this initiative. This is a sure sign that the armies of the Lord are picking and dusting up their swords, recommissioned for the great commission.
Anybody can be part of this project by praying for this mission or supporting it financially. For any queries, please contact 254722436160

Friday, June 19, 2009

Sorry...sorry

For the faithful readers, i have taken too long a break. Sorry

Friday, April 3, 2009

Great DAVID

David was a man of excellence. The Bible tells us that David played his harp “skillfully.” He didn’t just play it, he played it with excellence. When he slung the stone that defeated Goliath, it wasn’t an accident. It wasn’t just a lucky break. David had practiced the slingshot year after year out in the shepherd’s fields. He was extremely talented with that slingshot. Some experts say he could hit a small bull’s eye more than 100 feet away!
In the same way, if we want to see God’s hand of promotion, we need to live excellently. In this day and age, if you’re not growing, then you’re at a disadvantage. If you’re at the same skill level this year as you were five years ago, then you are falling behind. It’s time to step it up a notch. Whatever you are doing, do it with all your might! Don’t get complacent. Keep growing; keep learning; keep improving. As you do your best to live excellently, God will bless the fruit of your labor. He’ll pour out His “super” on your natural and cause you to rise up higher into the life of victory He has in store for you!

Saturday, March 21, 2009

insecurities

I don’t remember how many times in my life has somebody looked down on me, or found me to be hopeless, useless or helpless. Worse still, I can’t tell what people think of me, especially the ones we meet or get to know each other just briefly. The reason why I’m thinking of this is because I’ve realized that for some time now, I really don’t care about what people say or think of me. I no longer try to present an ideal image of me, but I just live my life abundantly. This has got me to trouble several times, through my word of mouth. Many times I have made comments which leave people heartbroken, angered or just bitter. It’s hard for me to understand this of course. In any case, why should someone spend sleepless nights just because someone said that he is slow, lazy or careless, unless it is true? No doubt that each one of us goes through some insecurities at one or more points in life, and we usually handle this depending on our past experiences or situations. But I feel that at times, many people go through unnecessary suffering just because they want to portray a certain image of themselves to other people. Well, such things like first impression or anything similar are good; but why create an image which you can’t sustain? It has never been within my interest to make people regard me too highly (humility is a fruit of the Holy Spirit). On the other hand, I also don’t put any effort to ensure that people don’t take me to be proud or arrogant out of what I say, as long as it is true, necessary and important to be said at that moment. (I still love psalms 12:3).
Coming back to my main point; what is it that makes people to “hang” at some point in life just because something was said of them which is untrue or not very true? One of the reasons must be that we take what we are told to be true or something which will come to be true. If this is the case, I see some sense in speaking words of encouragement, hope or just any optimistic or prosperity message to people. Reason: they will take it to be true and, good for them! Somebody might live to be a great person (at least in his sight) just because you said so. I’m the first person who should think about this very seriously…. Inasmuch as my word matters most only to me, I have a divine responsibility to ensure that the people I interact with day by day are positively impacted. I just need to be the good neighbour, so does each one of us. By our words, we can help people go through their insecurities and overcome many fears that are mere illusions, isn’t it?

Saturday, February 28, 2009

An I for an eye

You have heard that it was said, “Eye for an eye, and tooth for a
tooth
.

This statement keeps ringing in my mind, especially now that I live in a society where the concept of mercy is very alien. It seems crude that God had given this kind of law to the Israelites, and still claim to be God of mercy. Never mind that this same God who chased Adam and Eve out of the garden of Eden is the one who shed His blood on the cross to redeem mankind. But why on earth would God give such a cruel law, which is often looked down upon as crude, primitive retaliation? On the contrary, people in the Moses’ day must have regarded it as revolutionary, just as we regard turning the other cheek today. In fact, it is so far reaching that even the modern nation of Israel does not attempt to keep it. For any guilt of their Arab neghbours or citizens, they prefer a head or two for an eye!
Now, looking at the town where I am staying, a walk through the town you find at least somebody fighting, quarrelling or cursing. You find two old men argue about nothing and then all of as sudden a fight ensues. I’m not surprised any more; after reading some documents on Islam religion, one of the things they criticize about Christianity is salvation. It just doesn’t add up for somebody to obtain forgiveness at no cost. And so, in doing to others as they would like to be done to them, they mete out justice at the slightest provocation. How I wish that they would know about this steadfast, unconditional love of Christ that I enjoy.

Friday, February 20, 2009

Mandera

I have been in this Somali populated town for almost two months, but lessons keep coming every single minute. Honestly, this is not my comfort zone, but i wonder what is it that God is pushing me to do or preparing me for. I have made no effort to learn Somali language, not at all. I am working with this mision org called Diguna (http://www.diguna.de) and just to say it all, I need more prayers right now than ever.
Now its late in the night and I can hear occasional gunshots in Somalia, a few metres away. Isnt there much to thank God for? Meanwhile, this song helps me relax:
I will bless the Lord forever
I will trust Him at all times
He has delivered me from all fear
He has set my feet upon a rock
I will not be moved
And I'll say of the Lord
You are my shield,
my strengthMy portion,
delivererMy shelter,
strong tower
My very present help in time of need
Whom have I in heaven but You
There's none I desire beside
YouYou have made me glad
And I'll say of the Lord
You are my shield,
my strength
My portion,
deliverer
My shelter,
strong tower
My very present help in time of need

Saturday, January 10, 2009

Amazing Embu

The Embu inhabit Embu District in Kenya. To the south of Embu are to be found their cousins, the Mbeere people, in Mbeere District. Previously, the Embu and Mbeere were in one district, Embu District, and just referred to as the Embu people. To the east, Embu neighbors are the Kikuyu in Kirinyaga and Nyeri districts. The Meru people in Meru South District border Embu to the east.

Embu mythology claims that the Embu people originated from Mbui Njeru in the interior of Embu, close to Runyenjes town. The mythology claims that God (Ngai) created Mwenendega and gave him a beautiful wife by the famous Mbui Njeru waterfall — hence her name "Ciurunji". The couple was blessed with wealth, and their descendants populated the rest of Embu.

Judging by historical accounts, the Embu are believed to have migrated from the Congo Basin together with their close relatives, the Kikuyu and Meru People. The migration was perhaps due to conflicts there, such as slavery. It is believed that they migrated as far as the Kenyan Coast, since the Meru elders refer to Mpwa (Pwani or Coast) as their origin. The conflicts there, perhaps slave trade by Arabs, forced them to retreat northeast to the interior of Kenya, and they settled by the slopes of Mt. Kenya. They were to refer to this location as the place of the Lord, the owner of the snow("Nyaga") or ("Njeru" meaning white) — hence the name "Mwenenyaga" or "Mwenenjeru".


History of the Embu
The Embu are cash crop and subsistent farmers who also rear cows, goats and sheep. A man's riches were formerly judged by how many wives and children he had. For example, Senior Chief Muruatetu, probably one of the most famous of the Aembu people, not only had sixteen wives and many children, but he was also a respected administration officer for the colonial government and independent Kenya. An entire village bears his name, and a school is named after him.

The Embu were fierce warriors who, although rarely raiding other tribes, always stood firm in defence of their territory and people. Many occasions are on record where the Embu had to fiercely repulse Kamba and even the dreaded Maasai invasions. They also rose against the British in the Mau Mau fight for Kenya's independence. The fact that the tribe was and continues to be considerably small explains their relatively small impact on the history of Kenya.

A captivating photo of Embu warriors hangs at the Izaak Walton Inn in Embu, named after Izaak Walton, an English gentleman who was enraptured by the fresh trout available in the fresh rivers flowing through Embu. The Ruvingaci and Kavingaci Rivers border Embu town to the west and the east respectively and are a key source of domestic water to many Embu families.


Economic activities
Embu lies on the windward slopes of Mt. Kenya. It remarkably occupies the most prime fertile lands of the Kenya highlands. Two seasons are enjoyed each year, and the weather is favorable for diverse agricultural activities. The main food crops grown are maize, beans, yams, cassava, millet, sorghum, bananas, and arrowroot, among others. This, alongside the domestic livestock of cows, goats, sheep and chicken, keeps the people well fed throughout the year. Rarely do the calamities of drought or famine affect the people.

With the advent of colonialism, many cash crops were introduced. For long these have offered a lucrative alternative source of livelihood for the people. The most widespread cash crops to date are coffee, tea and macadamia nuts. These are mainly grown for sale with little being processed for domestic consumption.

However, the society has over the years experienced fast population growth. This has resulted in widespread land fragmentation whereby a man has to subdivide his land among his sons. Taken to the third generation, this has resulted in land ownership being fragmented to small strips of land not conducive to economic activity.

Nevertheless, the Embu are an industrious lot in the wide array of economic activities. They have successfully taken up modern lifestyles, as shown by excellence both in academia and the overall national growth. Numerous schools and colleges train hundreds of youth each year to become well equipped not just for agricultural work but also for formal employment and entrepreneurship.


Tourist attractions
The district plays host to the renowned Mt. Kenya to the north. This remains an everlasting tourism attraction with hordes of foreigners and local people flocking to its slopes to savor the allure of its beauty and majesty. Numerous expeditions set out each year to scale the slopes to the mountain top. It is an enthralling experience, especially watching the sun rise in the horizons in the early morning from the highest Batian mountain peak. However, this climb is no mean achievement, and it calls for great stamina and resilience. Legend has it that one man Munyao did scale the mountain to the peak and hoisted the national flag during the independence day on 12thDecember 1963.

Other attractions in the region are the huge Karue hill towering high along the Embu-Meru highway. It's a magnificent view, made of a huge crested rock, at the top of which has grown two unique eucalyptus trees. Lovers are known to savor the early intimacies of their love by basking in the twilight light of the evening at the hilltop. From such a bird's eye view, one has a widespread view of far reaches of the entire of Embu. Nearby to this hill are two magnificent waterfalls in close proximity which color the sky white as their waters fall down, then marry to form one big Ena river that then meanders downstream to encircle the Karue hill. To climax the scenery is the renowned Kirimiri hill in close proximity. Though not open for tourism, it is home to a diverse array of wildlife.

Much more abounds to keep the most eager tourist and visitor enthralled, not least the Embu people themselves who carry about their daily life with a deep sense of filial attachment to each other. They are a hospitable people, always welcoming to visitors and eager to help. This has endeared them to their neighbors and to strangers from far. Embu girls are known to make remarkable wives and mothers, while the men treat their wives with such respect and never ending love that hardly ever is family breakdown a subject of deliberation. For long, Kikuyu, Meru and Kamba men have come to get brides from Embu, while the Embu men enjoy high regard from marriageable girls in the same tribes. With the advent of Kenya nationalism, this high regard has permeated to the entire nation, and now the Embu form one respected unit of the Kenyan social fabric.

Monday, January 5, 2009

2009

I'm an optimist, sure, but i'll stay up late to make sure 08
is gone. Not that it was the worst of all, but because i feel like. The year i was reminded that i'm not just a Kenyan but a....what tribe?