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May 2022 Prayer Letter

KUWAA MISSION PRAYER LETTER May 2022 Dear prayer and financial supporters of the Kuwaa Mission in Liberia, West Africa. It has been some time since we contacted you about the work in Liberia of your Kuwaa Mission. I wrote “Your” because you are a vital part of the Mission through your prayers and financial support.  This letter will bring you up to date with a report from the Lutheran Church of Liberia, Bishop Daniel Seyenkulo, and on the Mission activities during the calendar year 2021. In 2021 the Mission:
  • Provided 20 bundles of corrugated zinc and zinc nails to help Lutheran and public schools in 5 villages of the Kuwaa Chiefdom
  • Paid the transportation and school fees for 2 young men in training as evangelists
  • Provided Bibles for several village Lutheran churches and individuals
  • Conducted vacation Bible school, sanitation, and hygiene classes
  • Provided a solar lighting system that allows adults to learn how to read and write after they have spent the day working on their farms
  • Helped provide a stipend for night-school teachers
  • Paid the 2021 pension for Rev. Paye our Kuwaa Mission local contact.
Bishop Seyenkulo, as of this month, has completed 10 years of service as Bishop and is “sitting down” or as we say retiring.  He has consented to serve as our Kuwaa Mission Field Director. We praise God that that this Kuwaa man, whom Diane and I have known since his high school days, has accomplished so much in his Lutheran Church ministry. We also praise God that Bishop Emeritus Seyenkulo will continue with the Kuwaa Mission of which he was a founding member. Belated Easter blessings, Ed and Diane Stelling Former Lutheran Bible Translators missionaries to the Kuwaa People 1972-1979 and current board members of the Kuwaa Mission
Your contributions to the Kuwaa Mission are tax-deductible.  We are a 501c3 non-profit organization.  Our tax ID number is 27-5458111 Donations can be given in two ways:  A Check to the mission address or PayPal on our Website: 

Donate

Kuwaa Mission, PO Box 90513, Anchorage, AK 99509

www.kuwaamission.org                          Facebook: Kuwaa-Mission

Please subscribe to our mailing list if you want to receive our monthly update letter.  

Shop like you normally do on Amazon but make a small contribution to the Kuwaa Mission with every purchase.  Please consider adding the Kuwaa Mission. 

November 2021 Prayer Letter

Dear friends of the Kuwaa Mission,

Grace and peace to you all in name of our Savior, Jesus Christ.

It is the season of Thanksgiving in much of the world.  Families gather, often around a festive meal, and reflect on the many things they are thankful for.  The Bible tells us in 1 Thessalonians 5:18 (NKJV) 18 “in everything, give thanks; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.”

I don’t know about you, but I find this verse easy to read but a bit difficult to follow at times. Paul doesn’t just tell the Thessalonian church to “be thankful when all is well,” but in “everything, give thanks”!  That word “everything” seems to carry the idea of… well, everything!

Another verse that brings home this powerful truth is found in Romans 8:28 (NKJV) 28 And we know that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who are the called according to His purpose.  However, just because it is the season for giving thanks, it doesn’t mean that being thankful always comes naturally.

I have little doubt that you have gone through times of significant testing, especially during these past months when the whole world slowed to a to stop under the weight of pandemic.  It can certainly be hard to find a lot to be thankful for.  But God is faithful to be with us through the storms of life as well as calm seas.  This is the promise we cling to and for which we are the most grateful.

The pandemic has slowed us down a bit, but the good work of the Kuwaa Mission is continuing.  Bible classes are being taught, missionaries are being trained to bring the Good News to the Kuwaa people, and supplies are being provided for the maintenance and repair of wells, schools and churches in the villages.  For all of these blessings we are thankful to our faithful donors and to God who enables our work to continue through the empowerment of the Holy Spirit.

Would you like to help us continue this good work? 

Your generosity is so very appreciated and you can be assured that every dollar donated goes directly to benefit the Kuwaa people as our organization is completely led by volunteers.  We know the past months have been very challenging for all of us, but let’s thank God for all things! The key is to keep a thankful spirit, not only one day a year, but “at all times”!

On behalf of the Kuwaa Mission Board of Directors, I would like to wish you and yours a wonderful Thanksgiving and blessed Advent season!  

Blessings in Christ, Carol George, Chair


Your contributions to the Kuwaa Mission are tax-deductible.  We are a 501c3 non-profit organization.  Our tax ID number is 27-5458111 Donations can be given in two ways:  A Check to the mission address or PayPal on our Website: 

Donate

Kuwaa Mission, PO Box 90513, Anchorage, AK 99509

www.kuwaamission.org                          Facebook: Kuwaa-Mission

Please subscribe to our mailing list if you want to receive our monthly update letter.  

Shop like you normally do on Amazon but make a small contribution to the Kuwaa Mission with every purchase.  Please consider adding the Kuwaa Mission. 

October 2021

In Memorian Richard (Dick) Thompson 

April 27, 1939 – July 8, 2021

Richard (Dick) Bernard Thompson passed away peacefully on July 8th, 2021.  His wife of 59 years Doris Thompson was by his side as he was called to be with our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.  


My father Dick Thompson (Sumbo) was a Missionary to the Kuwaa people for 10 years in Liberia, but his heart was planted there from the moment his feet hit the ground. He and my mom Doris arrived in Liberia in 1970 and began their decade long mission, alongside the Stellings, working passionately to bring the love of Jesus to the Kuwaa people.  Their work focused on developing a written version of the Kuwaa language, teaching people to read and write their own language, and working on a New Testament translation.  During our time in Liberia we lived with the Kuwaa people in Konjade(our adopted village) much of the time.  We lived with the people and they treated us like family.    The teaching and translation work was interrupted in 1980 with the military coup in Liberia.  My parents had previously decided to return to the US for our ongoing education and chose to stay in the US after our return in 1980.  My dad’s heart remained with the Kuwaa people and this led to the co-founding of the Kuwaa Mission in 2008 with his long time friend Rev. Dr. D. Jensen Seyenkulo.  

My father was born April 27, 1939, to Harold and Tatiana Thompson in San Francisco, California. On June 3, 1962, he married my mother Doris Lee Wisman. My parents were blessed with four children me (Todd), Rachel, Bradley, and Samantha.   He received his bachelor’s degree in theology from Concordia Theological Seminary in Springfield, Illinois in 1964.  He did his vicarage between 1962 and 1963 at Our Redeemer in Silverton, Ohio before taking a call to Eureka Montana.  In 1976/77 he completed his masters in Linguistics from San Jose State University in San Jose, California in support of his ongoing language and translation work in Liberia.  After returning to the US and serving ministries in California and Alaska he received a Master of Sacred Theology from Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne Indiana in 2001.  He continued his education  and a received a Doctor of Ministry from Louisiana Baptist University in Shreveport, Louisiana in 2004.

My father was a loyal servant for 41 years as a pastor and teacher in Montana, Alaska, California, Louisiana, Mississippi, Liberia and Nigeria.  His passion was mission work and he approached everything from a perspective of serving others while offering the message of salvation.

For me and my siblings, he was much more than his service; he was our rock and a constant example of a purpose driven life.  He was serious in his work but never took himself too seriously.  He was patient, kind, loving, funny, and sarcastic. He loved us unconditionally and prioritized us in all things.  Most important to me was that he was Human.  He was not perfect and never pretended to be.

He loved all people and truly loved experiencing different cultures. He was especially fond of the unique foods that each culture creates, and he recognized the value of food as a bridge to friendship.  Liberian food remains a staple in my own home and is always the meal we want to share when we gather as a family. 

My father was also a talented sportsman who among other things chose service to God over multiple offers to play professional baseball.  He loved fishing and hunting, but was happiest in a quiet place with a fishing pole and a hook in the water.  Fish or no fish, it didn’t matter.  I picture him in heaven in the middle of a fully stocked lake in a comfortable seat enjoying a good day fishing, free of pain.

I helped my parents move to Lincoln California in 2017 to be closer to me and so I could be there to support them.  I was blessed to be able to see my parents regularly for the first time since my first year in college.  My sister Rachel and I were with them both in the weeks before his passing and I was blessed to be at his side with my mother when he was called home.

My parents commitment to each other, their strength, and their faith have always been inspiring to all of us. Please pray for my mom to find peace and a new normal. I am looking forward to having her closer to me and to sharing many more years together. 

Your support for the Kuwaa mission and the Kuwaa people meant the world to my father.  He was forever grateful that he was able, through the efforts of the many Kuwaa mission volunteers, to help his second family, the Kuwaa people.  He wanted deeply to return to Liberia but his health prevented him from making the journey.  The pictures and stories from the Kuwaa mission work were his connection to the people he loved very deeply.  A personal thanks from the Thompson family for all of your support for the Kuwaa Mission over the last 13 years.  My God bless you and your families. With respect and admiration,  Todd Thompson  


A short note from Ed and Diane Stelling

The first time Diane and I met Rev. Richard Thompson was oddly enough through a cassette tape that he sent us from Liberia while we were in training for missionary ministry with Lutheran Bible Translators (LBT). It consisted of a welcome from Dick and his Kuwaa coworkers after we had been assigned to the Kuwaa Bible Translation/Literacy Project. He also included greetings from our Kuwaa coworkers who taught us some basic Kuwaa conversation phrases acquainting us with the language and some basic customs that we could study prior to our arrival in Liberia some 6 months later. Several months later we met Dick along with our Liberian coworkers, Francis and Forkpa, at the LBT office in Orange, CA. They had come to the States for a series of informative presentations in California, Illinois and Missouri regarding the ministry of LBT and raising funds for the Kuwaa Project. They also gave us our Kuwaa names of Fongbana and Janga and participated in our commissioning service at our home congregation, Christ Lutheran in Costa Mesa, CA. This was a unique commissioning in that the people we were sent to as missionaries had representatives to welcome us and participate in our commissioning. Diane and I along with our children worked with  Dick and Doris and their children from 1973-1979. Later in 2010, we joined the Thompsons and Rev. Seyenkulo in forming the Kuwaa  Mission, providing over 15 fresh water wells, a medical clinic and numerous health and ministry programs for the benefit of the Lutheran Church of Liberia and the Kuwaa communities. We praise God for this wonderful ministry relationship we have enjoyed over the years with the Thompsons and miss Dick with his love for God and the Kuwaa people.

Well done, good and faithful servant of our Lord!


Your contributions to the Kuwaa Mission are tax-deductible.  We are a 501c3 non-profit organization.  Our tax ID number is 27-5458111 Donations can be given in two ways:  A Check to the mission address or PayPal on our Website: 

Donate

Kuwaa Mission, PO Box 90513, Anchorage, AK 99509

www.kuwaamission.org                          Facebook: Kuwaa-Mission

Please subscribe to our mailing list if you want to receive our monthly update letter.  

Shop like you normally do on Amazon but make a small contribution to the Kuwaa Mission with every purchase.  Please consider adding the Kuwaa Mission. 

March 2021 Prayer Letter

The Kuwaa Mission teaches classes as well as installing wells, repairing bridges, providing tuition for evangelists, and medical & school supplies. Here are some of our classes: Pump technician training- installing pump head Training men to maintain the wells providing safe drinking water for wells the KM provided with your support. Days for Girls Kits. Young women taught how to use them for their monthly cycle. Children holding up David and Goliath photos to color. Training teachers to teach Bible School to children. These teachers are proud of their training certificates. In Belle Baloma. Completion of a hygiene class:  Cindy Ellis teacher
Your contributions to the Kuwaa Mission are tax-deductible.  We are a 501c3 non-profit organization.  Our tax ID number is 27-5458111 Donations can be given in two ways:  A Check to the mission address or PayPal on our Website: 

Donate

Kuwaa Mission, PO Box 90513, Anchorage, AK 99509

www.kuwaamission.org                          Facebook: Kuwaa-Mission

Please subscribe to our mailing list if you want to receive our monthly update letter.  

Shop like you normally do on Amazon but make a small contribution to the Kuwaa Mission with every purchase.  Please consider adding the Kuwaa Mission.   

February 2021 Prayer Letter

THIS IS A WONDERFUL TIME OF THE YEAR!

       Here we are in February. Potentially, we have come through the worst part of winter. But it is also a time of the year where the weather can be unpredictable. We thank God for remaining our God and keeping us as his people and caring for us in all weather. 

We are also thankful for our relatives, friends, and our brothers and sisters in Christ who have traveled with us along life’s journey. We American Christians often forget to thank the people who have remained our brothers and sisters through good and difficult times. And so it is with God: We often forget to thank God and often treat God as a stranger, rather than as the one who definitely has been with us every step of the way. Our God who never neglects nor forsakes us. The one who always is there to help and befriend us. The one who always loves us.

All Christians are witnesses; some Christians are not only witnesses in normal life but in their calling as missionaries.  Part of our witness as missionaries is to show respect for different cultures and traditions.  A Christian who is called to become a missionary must learn that every culture is different and different cultures have different ways of greeting people.  Those greetings are often more formal than our American greetings; and they might differ between the first and subsequent meetings.

In the Kuwaa culture, there is a formal way of greeting that is typical whenever you meet someone, known or unknown. When two people meet, they must greet each other and then inquire as to one another’s health or situation. The person first addressed answers to the positive or the negative followed by their own inquiry.  The first party responds in kind.  Somewhere along the line of exchanges, they thank God for the other person and God’s help for that person. This formal greeting is repeated regardless of how often or how familiar two people are. 

Sometimes we Americans get tired of such rigid formality. We sometimes forget that it is important to the people we are living or interacting with. Through your greeting, regardless of how many times you do it, you are signaling whether you are their friend, and when they reciprocate you know if they are your friend. As a Kuwaa missionary, learning the proper greeting exchange is one of the first and most important things we had to do. 

There are at least two other things a person must do to show a stranger that they accept them as a friend. When a traveler comes to a town, whether or not they are known to that town, they must inform the villagers if they wish to stay the night, why they are visiting and if they come with a white (friendly) heart. The traveler then presents himself by offering the town people a gift, usually a small amount of money or something else and says, “This is my white heart gift to show you that I come as a friend.” The town’s people will then welcome the traveler with their own white heart gift, usually rice, meat, palm oil and some spices so they won’t go hungry during their stay. They also show him/her to a room where they may stay for as long as needed.  The visitor may then share their reason for visiting, or they might wait until the following morning.  The town will then break word (give their answer) regarding the visitors stay.  This process is called the exchanging of white hearts. White heart exchanging shows their happiness and thankfulness for their encounter with each other. If the town’s people feel any deception or unfriendliness, they will not exchange their white heart and they won’t accept the visitor.

If they accept each other’s white heart gifts, a deeper relationship (a deeper friendship) can then be formed. As a relationship grows, someone might offer a red chicken to their special friend.  This gesture shows everyone that they share a special bond and deep friendship. Here in America we might call them blood brothers or sisters.

Jesus has given a red chicken to each of us, and we have given our white heart and red chicken to him.  We have given our white heart gift to the Kuwaa people through the things we do for them through this mission.  We give thanks for them (our white heart), and we give to and live for them (our red hearts).

Your red chicken partner in Christ,

Dick Thompson


Your contributions to the Kuwaa Mission are tax-deductible.  We are a 501c3 non-profit organization.  Our tax ID number is 27-5458111 Donations can be given in two ways:  A Check to the mission address or PayPal on our Website: 

Donate

Kuwaa Mission, PO Box 90513, Anchorage, AK 99509

www.kuwaamission.org                          Facebook: Kuwaa-Mission

Please subscribe to our mailing list if you want to receive our monthly update letter.  

Shop like you normally do on Amazon but make a small contribution to the Kuwaa Mission with every purchase.  Please consider adding the Kuwaa Mission.