Family Time

Blogged under 2005 Cameroon by John on Friday 29 July 2005 at 12:42 pm
John with the Dallmanns
Dallmann family (minus Jonathan) & I

One of the best parts of my trip was experiencing life with a missionary family. I was so blessed to be able to stay with and learn from the Dallmanns!

I especially appreciated their “family time,” a time of singing a couple praise songs, reading & discussing Scripture, and prayer. This time really inspired and encouraged me throughout the trip. Even when it was only John, Jonathan, Luke, Josiah, and I in Banyo, we still had family time almost every evening. As I look ahead to being a father, “family time” is definitely one thing that I desire to pattern after the Dallmanns’ example. Praise God for keeping their family close through the challenges of living in Africa!

It amazes me how close missionary families are not only to each other, but also to other missionary families. Throughout this trip, I saw the body of Christ united in many ways–people from each Christian denomination in the country are working together to reach the peoples of Cameroon. Missionary work can be very challenging and depressing, but I’m in awe of how God provides encouragement and fellowship through a network of missionaries. After seeing that and having the opportunity to be a small part of that in Cameroon, I have no doubt that God has called me to be a part of the work to share Jesus with unreached peoples of the world. I’ve been encouraged that it’s not a task I’m called to do alone, and I trust that God will continue to give direction, wisdom, and strength through the years ahead.

I encourage you to keep on seeking and trusting Him, and be willing to surrender your complete life to Him as a sacrifice of praise. As you become satisfied in knowing Him and being used by Him, He will be faithful to fill you with an indescribable joy (Romans 15:13).

More Pictures

Blogged under 2005 Cameroon by John on Friday 29 July 2005 at 12:36 pm

I’ve been able to add several more photos to the Cameroon album, which is now accessible at CamPics.JohnAgee.com. There are still more than 500 files (pictures & videos) that I’m working on captioning and uploading, so check back for more each day.

Cameroon Pictures

Blogged under Prayer Updates by John on Tuesday 26 July 2005 at 9:07 am

Greetings in our Savior’s name!

Thank you again for your prayers throughout the duration of my trip! May God alone be praised for the good that He has accomplished in lives because of it.

I would like to let you know that I will be sharing many more stories on my blog at http://www.4jcg.org, so be sure to check it out over the coming days. I’ve already posted my account of my detained python skin in the Atlanta airport. Honesty is not always easy, but God will
take care of those who are truthful.

I also encourage you to visit http://pictures.johnagee.com/index.php?cat=7 to view the hundreds of pictures that I am in the process of posting there. You can even rate the pictures, leave comments, and send e-cards if you register on the site. Remember to check back often, too. I’ll be adding many more pictures as I get them captioned.

May God bless you with a taste of Cameroon through these stories and pictures!

For Christ’s glory,

John

Cameroon Python Skin Story

Blogged under 2005 Cameroon by John on Tuesday 26 July 2005 at 8:56 am

After speaking with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife office at the Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport this morning, I was told that I could not bring my 9-foot long python skin into the country since I did not have an “export form” from Cameroon. The skin, which a Fulani man in a Yaounde market sold to me for the equivalent of less than $4 U.S., was taken by a customs officer as I entered the U.S. on Friday.

My Air France flight arrived in Atlanta about 30 minutes late due to late departure from Charles de Gaulle Paris (neither of my flights departed CDG on time). I spent another 30 minutes waiting for my baggage so that I could take it through U.S. customs, where I was sent to a special inspection line since I had checked the animal/wildlife product box on the customs form. I waited more than an hour (until the time my flight to Denver was scheduled to leave) for the customs official to decide that he needed to detain the skin and fill out the necessary paperwork. Then I had to drop my baggage to be transported to the plane and pass through airport security.

By the time I made it to the airport train, my flight was scheduled to be taking off, and I had no idea which concourse or gate to go to. I decided to head for Concourse A since many domestic Delta flights depart from that concourse. I then arrived in Concourse A, looked at a departure monitor and noted the gate number and that my flight was still boarding, and sprinted down the concourse. Since my section was not boarding yet, I called my mom to let her know I made it to Atlanta. Thankfully, I was able to board my originally-scheduled flight. (Sometimes delayed flights are good, and that was what I had been praying for on the way out of customs!)

Both my suitcase and the box I took for the Dallmanns arrived in Denver, although the box was placed on the next Delta flight. My parents and I only had to wait about an hour for that next flight to arrive, though, which gave me some time to talk with my dad before his flight left for a business trip to California.

In retrospect, I wonder if it would have been better to lie and state that I did not have any animal products. It probably would have been much easier to get through customs (unless I was randomly selected for a baggage search), and I would not have needed to wait that extra hour in customs. But it would not have been the upright thing to do. I would have a 9-foot long python skin, but is that worth lying?

Proverbs 12:19 says, “Truthful lips will be established forever, But a lying tongue is only for a moment.” I would encourage you to remember this story and keep truthfulness a priority in your life, even when you know it will involve sacrifice. Honesty ultimately is more profitable than anything this world can offer.

Through Him then, let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that give thanks to His name.

And do not neglect doing good and sharing, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.

Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they keep watch over your souls as those who will give an account. Let them do this with joy and not with grief, for this would be unprofitable for you.

Pray for us, for we are sure that we have a good conscience, desiring to conduct ourselves honorably in all things.

- Hebrews 13:15-18

Thanks for your prayers! To God be the glory for keeping me truthful!

Pictures Are On the Way…

Blogged under 2005 Cameroon by John on Saturday 23 July 2005 at 9:39 pm

Just a quick note to inform you that I will be posting my Cameroon pictures at http://pictures.johnagee.com/index.php?cat=7.

Safely Home

Blogged under Prayer Updates by John on Saturday 23 July 2005 at 2:08 pm

My heart is steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast;
I will sing, yes, I will sing praises!
Awake, my glory!
Awake, harp and lyre!
I will awaken the dawn.
I will give thanks to You, O Lord, among the peoples;
I will sing praises to You among the nations.
For Your lovingkindness is great to the heavens
And Your truth to the clouds.
Be exalted above the heavens, O God;
Let Your glory be above all the earth.
- Psalm 57:7-11 (NASB)

As I woke up this morning in my bed around 5:15 MDT (GMT -6), I was glad to be home and for another day, but I do miss the people in Cameroon that I met throughout the 25 days I was there. I’m so thankful for the Dallmann family who accepted me as a part of their family throughout my stay. And, I’m grateful for your faithful prayers, especially for the times of travel and our crazy raft trip.

Since my last message, I was able to climb a large rock in Yaounde with Jonathan and Luke Dallmann and some of their friends, visit the Yaounde zoo, go shopping, and finish the design for the Jesus film projection screen.

Travel through Paris and getting stopped in U.S. customs for having a python skin was quite an experience (that I hope to share with you soon), as well. Thankfully, the flight from Atlanta to Denver was delayed after waiting for customs to decide that they needed to keep the python skin, so I had time to get to the gate before the plane left. And, one of my bags even made the flight! I didn’t have to wait long in Denver for the other one to arrive on the next flight, so I ended up with all of my luggage and the things that the Dallmanns sent back with me.

Praise God for safety in travel and for this amazing opportunity to learn more about life as a missionary! I believe more than ever before that God has called me to serve long-term as a missionary, and I’m excited to see how and where He leads me in the years ahead.

I’ll be posting pictures and sharing more stories in the days ahead, but I must close for now.

Rejoicing because nothing is impossible with God,

John

Praise God for His Grace and Protection

Blogged under Prayer Updates by John on Monday 18 July 2005 at 4:13 am

Greetings from Cameroon once again!

Since it’s been quite a while since my last update, this message is rather long, but well worth reading. Thank you so much for your continued prayers! Internet access is not that widely available here (especially outside of Yaounde), and I probably will not be able to check my personal e-mail accounts until I return home since we must travel several blocks to the SIL compound for limited-time access. So, feel free to respond to this address before Tuesday, July 19th if you would like to send a message to me while I’m still in Cameroon.

Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve had some very memorable experiences around the country. About two weeks ago, the four eldest Dallmann guys (John, Jonathan, Luke, and Josiah) and I traveled 8 hours by motor (SUV) to the town of Banyo, where the Dallmanns spent most of their time here. John has completed the majority of his well and water projects in this part of the country, too.

The conference for the well technicians took place Thursday night through Saturday morning in Allat, a town southwest of Banyo. I didn’t understand much of the training sessions that I sat in on, but I praise God for the opportunity to see the men learn and understand more about the mechanical well pumps and their need for Christ in their lives. We showed the Jesus film in Fulfulde the first night, and there were several Bible/gospel presentations during tea breaks. I also was able to chop (eat) some “country chop,� known as fufu and jama-jama (basically a ball of corn starch with spinach-type greens and sometimes beef meat). This is the country’s favorite meal, and it was served for every meal at the conference except Friday night when they had rice and beans, the other popular meal here. Continue to pray for the men who attended the conference: that the Holy Spirit would remind them of what they saw and heard about Christ, as well as that they would take responsibility and have the desire to take care of the wells and pumps they have been given.

On Sunday evening, July 3, we celebrated the “1st & 4th [of July] on the 3rd� with several other missionary families from the area. Our Canadian/USA festivities included a softball game, duck supper, and homemade hydrogen balloons at which we tried to shoot flaming arrows and make small explosions.

Early Monday morning, the Dallmann guys, Bob and Brian Lokker (father and son who are a part of the family now living in the Dallmanns’ old house in Banyo), and I embarked on an exciting raft trip down the Mayo Banyo and Mbamti Rivers. Bob built our raft, consisting of a 2×4 frame, big metal jet fuel drums (for flotation), a bamboo deck, bamboo seats, and luggage storage areas, and an ill-fated bamboo frame for a roof tarp. Some highlights of the trip include: snapping the frame for a tarp roof on low-hanging guava trees, Luke falling off the raft several times, Brian and Luke dropping their poles in the water, losing my Nalgene water bottle in the unexpected rapids of the Mayo Banyo River, John’s leg almost getting crushed between the raft and a rock, beaching the raft just before a small (4’-6’) waterfall, carrying our cargo and walking around the waterfall while we let our raft go through as Bob, John, and Jonathan held the rope, going through some big rapids with only John and I on board as the others walked around, banging against lots of rocks in the Mayo Banyo rapids, almost losing Bob and Brian after they jumped out to help guide us through some rocks, showing the Jesus film on Monday night to about 15 people with a small television powered by a car battery, eating canned ravioli, sleeping in the furrows of an old field (inside tents), seeing lots of monitor lizards jump off trees and splash into the water, getting stuck and pushing the raft out of sandbars in the middle of the Mayo Banyo River, getting hit in the head with the long poles as others poled, poling the raft back and forth across the Mayo Banyo River at every bend to stay in faster and deeper water (the outside of corners), pushing the raft away from trees and other hazards, eating Mambo bars (Cameroon chocolate) and canned hot dogs on bread while poling, getting stuck in an eddy and a tree right next to a black cobra (that was stuck in the eddy), making it to the confluence of the Mayo Banyo and Mbamti Rivers faster than anticipated, not being able to stop the raft in the Mbamti River due to the fast and deep water, finally stopping on a sandbar (after several failed attempts) and clearing an area for camp, being watched for hours by locals from the opposite bank of the wide river, eating chicken soup (from packets) and “chicken lipsâ€? (Bob’s term for chicken spam), watching “Ghosts in the Darknessâ€? in the middle of the bush at night (since everyone was on the opposite side of the river), sleeping at the edge of the tent on a root and getting wet from the early-morning rain, trying to dry our wet clothing on suspended poles between two cargo barrels, eating more “chicken lipsâ€? with scrambled eggs, unsuccessfully trying to keep a fire burning with green wood, waking up to find that the river had risen 3 feet and that the sand bar we landed on no longer existed (the raft was tied to a tree so we didn’t lose it), discovering that our poles worked for rowing in deep water, loading and unloading our cargo (often up and down slippery banks), greeting people we saw along the river, throwing sugar and a gospel tape and tract to a couple on the river bank, stopping the raft at a tree on the corner immediately before the bridge (to plan our final landing and get people to the shore to catch and tie the rope), no heavy rain until we had landed at Mbamti Catarco, the crowd we attracted at both Mayo Banyo Catarco and Mbamti Catarco, and Bob’s daughter Jesse’s homemade brownies on the truck ride back to Banyo.

After our raft trip, John took me around to see several of the wells he has put in for the Wawa villages northwest of Banyo. There is only one known Christian among this Muslim people group. Please pray for this man and his family to be strong in the Lord and have the courage to reach out to and share Christ with others. Praise God that we were able to take a water sample for testing from one of the villages, take a Wawa cattle herder who was stabbed in the foot by one of his steers to the Banyo CBC (Cameroon Baptist Convention) clinic, and help a Wawa mother get her sick baby to the CBC clinic.

On Saturday, July 9 (the rainiest day of the year to date in Banyo), several of us climbed up the Banyo mountain to see the spring water catchment, sand filter, and storage tank for the Banyo water system which John has helped develop. This system is made up of several kilometers of delivery pipe and more than 30 taps around the town. Several of us climbed to the very top of the mountain to see the old German machine gun nest and forts, and we were drenched in a major deluge as we scrambled back down.

It’s been a tremendous blessing to spend the past three weeks in Cameroon! The country is beautiful (especially outside of the rainforest in the Yaounde area), and I especially enjoyed the people and topography around Banyo. Even the rainy season up there doesn’t seem too bad…It’s definitely not as humid as it is here in Yaounde most of the time. Worship at the Banyo church on the CBC compound where we stayed was great, and I’ve learned so much more than I expected about missionary life, Cameroon, the African way of life, rafting, small engine repair, and animals.

Since our return to Yaounde, I’ve had the opportunity to go running, help with games for a camp-type program at an orphanage (which will continue for the next two weeks on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays), repair the Dallmanns’ lawn mower, play with the Dallmann kids, play the guitar, and read.

Over my remaining days here, I hope to complete the design and construction of a new projection screen frame (for the Jesus film showings), shop for a few more souvenirs, go to the zoo, and prepare for my return to American culture.

Thank you again for your prayers! It’s so hard to believe that my time here is nearing the end.

I’ve included a picture from the raft trip. I’ll be posting more on my web site upon my return home.

For Christ’s glory and in His name,

John

Raft Trip

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