Welcome to the third update on the current progress of my missions trip with Mercy Ships.
I would like to start this news letter with a thank you to all the people who have helped to make this possible and those of you who have offered to support me during this mission.
It’s the start of September which means I have not very long left in Newcastle. I am due to leave on the morning of 12th September at approximately 6:25am from Newcastle international airport. This flight will take me to Brussels where I have to transfer to another plane to head out to Sierra Leone. The total travel time will be about 11 hours in planes. Once I get to Lungi airport I have a 2 hour drive across to Freetown and then followed by a quick trip on a water Taxi.
The AimOver the next couple of weeks I have a couple aims I would like to complete.
The first and most important one that needs to be done is to sort the anti-malaria drugs out and to start to take them. Like all medication this will have some small side affects which could be interesting, but this is not a reason enough to stop taking it.
I need to check that I have all that I need as it will not be easy to get stuff sent to me once I’m in Africa. The information from Mercy Ships advised it can take up to 2 months for a single letter to arrive on board the Africa Mercy.
I need to check that I have all that I need as it will not be easy to get stuff sent to me once I’m in Africa. The information from Mercy Ships advised it can take up to 2 months for a single letter to arrive on board the Africa Mercy.
The reason for doing this missions trip is that I feel God has called me to serve another community for a season. I need to make sure that I’m keeping God in the centre of all I’m doing, where this be in pray, reading and communicating all that I do.
Worries and FearsThe other weekend I was talking with a friend who is doing something in Africa with medical stuff, we both looked at the countries we will be at and the only thought we could think off we don’t pick the safest of places to go.
As you know I will be travelling to Sierra Leone which has just celebrated 10 Years of peace, but this is a peace that is still fragile. My friend will be the other side of Africa which you can see in the news for how safe it is.
The point of this does not make any reasonable sense in the normal light of things, but we as Christians are each called to serve God in different ways.
I know how much each of the medical teams has to deal with as they literally have people lives in their hands when they are performing the medical stuff, I know I’m only doing the IT stuff but even this has a real impact on the medical mission.
Like all modem first world hospitals the Africa Mercy is just the same but it floats and serves the people of West Africa. The systems on board are very reliant on connection to a network and some parts even require a connection to the internet for diagnosis of patient data.
Under any normal day I would be concerned with the systems and the interaction between them and people, with this trip I am more concerned about making a very large mistake and just getting there.
This does not mean I don’t worry about having the financial support to complete this trip but it’s just not as important as doing what I’m told by God.
It does make you understand that when God tells you to do something that he does know what he is doing and that there will be the provision for the work. Even if it is the only thing I have learnt so far from this experience and that it is that I need to place my total trust in God.
Spending time with God has been great so far but with all that’s to come I’m excited to be used by God and be shown deeper things of him.
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