Bonjour from Mango, Togo

 Bonjour from Mango, Togo  news, Togo, Uncategorized, Update  Comments Off on Bonjour from Mango, Togo
Mar 132019
 

It has taken us much longer than anticipated to get this update written. A lot has happened in the last two and a half months! We arrived in Mango just two days before Christmas and settled temporarily into the home of furloughing missionary friends. After a few weeks of adjusting (a process we’re not sure we’ll ever be done with!) to the culture, weather, dialect, having guards and house help, shopping and other aspects of everyday life, we slowly began integrating into our outside-of-home ministry roles. Exactly two months after arriving, we were able to move into a home of our own. We are thankful for how God had already gone ahead of us and provided exactly the details we had been praying and hoping for in a house.

Jonathan has enjoyed finding a routine in his IT role at the hospital, while at the same time balancing that with working on overseeing and completing various projects on our new abode. There have been and continue to be at times frustrations and setbacks with timing, details, and lack of French technical vocabulary, but lots of progress has been made and Jonathan has done a great job meeting the various challenges that arise. On top of all this, he has also been busy coordinating details for getting our truck to Mango. We hope we will soon be heading down to Lomé to pick it up as it has been a longer-than-expected process. Thankfully, in the meantime we have been borrowing a vehicle from some friends, and Jonathan was also able to purchase a moto, which provides him with a much smoother ride over bumpy dirt roads.

Bethany started orienting to the maternity ward (here that includes Labor & Delivery, Postpartum, and NICU) at the hospital around the end of January and works there two to three days a week when house and other life necessities don’t interfere. It is a big change from the Medical-Surgical Progressive Care Unit in Roanoke, but she is enjoying learning how to care for and minister to the moms and babies here. When she’s not at the hospital, she keeps busy trying to turn the new house into a suitable nest, getting used to shopping at market and elsewhere around town, getting to know the lady who is currently our house help, and more. Having someone else in your kitchen/home is an adjustment, but it didn’t take long to realize what a huge blessing it is to have someone help with cleaning and cooking — with as quickly as the Harmattan dust collects, and with the lack of most typical western ‘convenience’ foods/items.

Our Youngling is growing steadily and getting stronger and more active. At the last ultrasound everything looked great and right on track. He or she seems to be developing quite the personality, giving the doctor quite a difficult time getting all her measurements. And if Bethany is standing against the sink doing dishes too long, lots of kicking seems to let her know somebody wants more personal space 😊 The Youngest Edwards has even started helping with ministry. About ten nurses needed to practice finding and counting a fetal heartbeat for an in-service a couple weeks ago, and she/he was glad to volunteer.

A woman at market making fresh beignets (basically the Togolese version of doughnuts, typically eaten with a spicy piment sauce)

Overall life here is going well. We find that sometimes God needs to remind us that any abilities we might think we have – whether spiritual, linguistic, technical, relational – are in no way why we are here. Sometimes we make the silliest language mistakes and tell friends with a new baby that God has blessed us instead of them and then don’t realize until a few minutes later why they laughed. Sometimes we forget to give money or accept items with only our right hands (Bethany 😉 ) or to ask all the customary greeting questions (How are you? And your family? And how is the morning/day/work, etc. going?) . So we just try to laugh at ourselves and do the best we can, praying that God uses us in spite of ourselves and that we don’t get in the way so much that we offend others or hinder the work He wants to do through us.

Our missionary team has welcomed us graciously and showed us where to find things and how to get places around the community, hosted us for meals, loaned us items until we could get our own, helped us transition into the hospital, answered lots of random questions, and so much more. We are grateful to have such a patient and kind built-in family and support system here.

We also continue to be thankful for those of you reading, for your steadfast prayers, encouragement, and financial support. Being in Togo has made us realize and appreciate afresh the generous provision God has provided through our partners.

In a previous update around October we mentioned that we would be under-supported significantly by the end of the year. We truly wish that this weren’t the case. We don’t like having to focus on money and would rather keep our focus on ministering here rather than on the means to stay here. Unfortunately, despite our physical distance from the US, its economics and laws still affect us in profound ways. (plus the fact that we’re adding a third member to our family). Currently we’re 9%, $505 per month below where we’d like to be. So here it is by the numbers: In 2018 & 2019 the IRS changed rules governing the taxable income and insurance rates went up 20%. That’s about $258 per month, and there are added fees and costs associated with making and keeping a third person a legal resident within the country. Unfortunately as happens when you have a fixed amount and some of the money is shifted elsewhere in the budget it must come from somewhere else. We’ve already shifted $350 per month (the maximum available) from ministry funds to cover these but there is still a deficit of over $155 each month that reduces our salary. While we would not say that we are suffering because of this, we do know that it limits our ability to minister effectively. Thus far God has been gracious to provide gifts that have offset the difference. Would you pray with us that He would continue to help us to fill this gap so that our focus can remain on ministry?

Our view one Sunday morning at Bel Amour, the local baptist church we attend occasionally

Praise God with us
… that we are here starting ministry in Togo! It has felt like a long road at times, but He has been faithful to bring us to where He has called us.
… for the provision of a house here that we both like and think will be a good fit for our family for as long as God has us here.
… for good staffing currently at the hospital. Bethany is thankful she has not felt pressured to rush into full-time working before she is ready.
… that Jonathan has had a smooth transition as he has gotten back into working with the IT at the hospital.
… for an uneventful pregnancy thus far; our little one seems to be growing well.
… that we’ve stayed healthy so far in spite of changes in environment and diet.

Pray with us
… that we would be a light to our Togolese and Burkinabé neighbors.
… for continued growth in our cultural and lingual understanding.
… as we form relationships with new guards, house help, co-workers, and others in the community.
… that God would give us a clear idea of how we should focus and prioritize our ministries.
… for the situation in Burkina Faso, and that the Muslims in northern Togo, Benin, and Ghana would continue to reject extremist ideology and not permit it to be taught, that the restrictions this causes would not hinder ministries, and that Christians in affected areas would continue to stand firm in their faith.
… that we’d be able to get our truck soon.

On our way from the airport to Mango, we stopped at a popular landmark

Thank you for taking the time to read and pray.
Serving Him Together,
Jonathan & Bethany and Youngling

 Posted by on March 13, 2019

Lasts & Firsts

 Lasts & Firsts  Togo, Update  Comments Off on Lasts & Firsts
Oct 242017
 

Click here for the printable version.

A lot has happened in the last month, and even more changes are coming over the upcoming two months, as they will (hopefully) culminate in us leaving for language school.

Westwood Baptist, Bethany’s sending church, hosted a spaghetti dinner and silent auction at the beginning of the month to help raise our outfit and passage fund. We were very blessed by all the hard work and generosity displayed by the church during that time.

A few days later we headed to the French Consulate in D.C. for our visa appointment! Thankfully everything went smoothly and we even had time to stop at a few museums before heading back home. Continue reading »

 Posted by on October 24, 2017

Pomp and Ceremony

 Pomp and Ceremony  Togo, Update  Comments Off on Pomp and Ceremony
Mar 062015
 

The grand opening ceremony of the Hospital of Hope, Mango, Togo! A beacon of light in a dark land.

“I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me. “

“Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” [1]

 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations…” [2]

This is only the beginning of the adventure…

 Posted by on March 6, 2015

Three Weeks

 Three Weeks  Togo, Update  Comments Off on Three Weeks
Feb 092015
 

A lot has happened since my last update.  That’s just the way life is here.  There’s always plenty to do and when you’re a IT Manager preparing a hospital for opening there’s not much time to sit on your hands.   Here’s just a quick glimpse of what we, as an IT team, have been doing to prepare for opening day each with a specific prayer request. Continue reading »

 Posted by on February 9, 2015

The Grinch That Stole More Than Christmas

 The Grinch That Stole More Than Christmas  Togo  Comments Off on The Grinch That Stole More Than Christmas
Dec 082014
 

You're a bad banana with a greasy black peel, Mr. Grinch!A kind doctor was coming to Togo one day and thought to himself that it would be nice to bring Christmas gifts for all of the on-field missionaries. So he let them know that he would have room in his luggage for A LOT of stuff.  And stuff they sent. Grandparents sent gifts to grandchildren, parents sent gifts to children, school supplies and a laptop were sent for the Christian schools, and supplies for the hospital laboratory.

When he arrived his luggage could not be found – not an uncommon problem here. For a week he waited. Then finally the airline was able to send the luggage to him. Continue reading »

 Posted by on December 8, 2014

Ebola and the Plague of Fear

 Ebola and the Plague of Fear  Field Info, news, Togo, Update  Comments Off on Ebola and the Plague of Fear
Aug 122014
 

EBOLA, Togo’s grand mobilization for prevention. The headlines could not be more clear. The full page color add taken out by the Ministry of Health told citizens to report to a medical facility if any of a list of symptoms developed. The instructions were clear and simple.

The Western media churns out reports of more cases and televises opinionated “experts” arguing over what the best response should be.  Even while the bicker millions of people ponder the implications of a disease that has no cure and means almost certain death to anyone without access to the best Western medical treatments. Continue reading »

 Posted by on August 12, 2014

Rebuilding the Technology Walls: Arrival

 Rebuilding the Technology Walls: Arrival  news, Togo  Comments Off on Rebuilding the Technology Walls: Arrival
Jul 052014
 

It’s amazing the perspective you can get in just a short time. Before I left I had spent months preparing, asking questions and researching about Togo I read about it’s culture. I studied it’s language. I trained to refine my understanding of the Bible. I inquired about the technical setup and tried to gain a scope on the mission that I was being sent to do. And despite all those long months of preparation I have gained more insight in two weeks. That is not to say that somehow those were wasted months; quite the contrary. What I learned then has been invaluable. But the complete disruption of everything you know, the upheaval of all that is familiar, when you begin thinking to yourself, “what have I gotten myself into,” you put trust in God that He is in control.

After arriving at HBB and getting to know all of the staff I set out to start my mission.  But where should I start?  Continue reading »

 Posted by on July 5, 2014