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Mission Connections
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Read Letters from Kari Nicewander and Joel DeJong

2015
January - A Sad Goodbye

2014

Christmas - The Light Will Overcome
October
- Let Justice Roll Down
August
- Annual Ministry Update
June
- Extravagant Generosity
Spring
- A New Job!
Late Winter

Winter

Older Letters
Christmas 2013

September 2013

May 2013

April 2013

February 2013

December 2012

October 2012

The 2015 Presbyterian Mission Yearbook for Prayer & Study, p. 154

Rev. Kari Nicewander and Joel DeJong

Mission co-workers in Zambia 2012 - 2015
Blog: Loving Lusaka

Kari and Joel Ended their Mission service with PCUSA in 2015 - Thank you for your support of their work

 

Meet Kari and Joel in a video

About Kari Nicewander and Joel DeJong’s ministry
Rev. Kari Nicewander is serving as the Discipleship and Church Growth Specialist for The Church of Central Africa Presbyterian (CCAP), Synod of Zambia. CCAP Zambia believes in a holistic approach to evangelism and discipleship, emphasizing God’s care for our spiritual and physical health. Kari assists in developing curriculum that reflects this theology; she also conducts workshops on graceful evangelism, Christian education, and holistic health; additionally she assists in community-based evangelism, sharing the good news of God’s love for all people. Kari also helps with Community Health Evangelism (CHE), assisting in oversight and development of sites and leading occasional trainings. This initiative is a form of outreach that combines community health and development with evangelism and discipleship.

Joel DeJong is serving as the Media Specialist for The Church of Central Africa Presbyterian (CCAP), Synod of Zambia. In this role Joel works with the CCAP Zambia Synod Leadership to design and produce materials that effectively share stories of the important ministries of CCAP. Joel equips the denomination with attractive, quality educational and presentation materials while offering training to Synod personnel in various media. Joel works with web, print, and video materials, using skills in graphic design, technology, and video production to contribute to the work of CCAP Zambia.  

Kari talks about life in Zambia.

Despair in South Sudan
Presbyterians continue to walk with the Murle people...

C0untry context
Zambia has a population of 12.9 million people, which includes some 70 ethnic groups. An estimated 50 to 75 percent of the population identify themselves as Christian. Most other Zambians are either Muslim or Hindu. Presbyterianism was introduced into Zambia by Scottish missionaries in the 1860s. The churches in Zambia, like those in other parts of Africa, struggle with leadership needs because of fast growth. Zambia has a per capita gross domestic product of $1,500, which ranks it 200th among the 227 countries of the world. In addition to poverty, Zambia struggles with the burdens created by the rapid spread of infectious diseases, including HIV/AIDS. Zambia has one of the world’s most widespread rates of HIV/AIDS infection. More than one in every seven adults in the country is living with HIV/AIDS, and life expectancy at birth has fallen to just 39 years.

About Kari Nicewander and Joel DeJong
A major component of Kari’s philosophy of life and ministry is summed up in her name. “My parents named me Kari Joy, and the idea that I am called to ‘carry joy’ has always been a part of my identity,” she says. “I believe that I am a joy-filled person and passionate about the good news of God’s love. This helps me in outreach, evangelism and church growth because I believe that enthusiasm is contagious and we have good reason, as Christians, to be filled with joy.”

Kari and her husband, Joel, sense a call to go to a country where the joy of life is often cut short for many by AIDS. As they begin work in Community Health Evangelism, no doubt they will walk into many communities that will identify combating HIV/AIDS as their top priority. It’s also an issue that is a passion for Kari and Joel.

Their adopted son, Johnny, who is now 4, was born in Ethiopia to a mother who was HIV-positive. “When he was only 1 year old, she had to place him for adoption because she was too ill to care for him any longer,” Kari says. Kari and Joel’s experience with Johnny has heightened the couple’s awareness of the devastating effects of HIV and has led them to a deep love and concern for Africa.

“While Zambia is far different from Ethiopia in many ways, they do share some characteristics in common, and the opportunity to work with Zambians to address health issues, including HIV/AIDS, is very near to my heart,” Kari says.

Kari’s involvement in international mission began at age 15 when she went on her first trip to the Dominican Republic, where she worked in a batey, a village of Haitian sugarcane cutters. Over the next 15 years she went to the same village in the Dominican Republic every other year, developing close relationships with the people. During her ordination service, 10 years after her first trip to the Dominican Republic, she was presented a stole sent to her from friends in the Dominican Republic.

After she entered the ministry Kari began leading mission trips to the Dominican Republic. In more recent years she was accompanied by Joel, a graphic designer who also has good skills as a woodworker. “I led the work projects, helping people build school desks, church pews and computer tables for the schools,” Joel says. “I like being able to use my building skills to build relationships with people.”

For Joel those trips to the Dominican Republic and the relationships he built there have been life-changing. “Doing this work made me want to do mission service, and I have felt called to mission service for a very long time.”

Kari traces her call to mission to that first mission trip to the Dominican Republic as a teenager. “I saw vividly the way God can work through partnership, mutual ministry, and faithful relationships to transform lives,” she says.

Since her ordination by the United Church of Christ in 2003, Kari has been pastor of two congregations, Edgewood United Church in East Lansing, Mich., and Manchester United Church of Christ in Manchester, Mich. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan and the Harvard University Divinity School.

Joel earned a bachelor’s degree from the Art Institute of Boston and worked as a graphic designer for the Ann Arbor Observer. He plans to use his skills in technology and design to help Kari in her ministry and will also offer his assistance to local church leaders. One of his primary responsibilities, he says, will be helping Johnny and the couple’s oldest son, 6-year-old Frankie, adjust to life in a new country.

Birthdays
Joel ­ November 7
Kari ­ November 6
Frankie ­ November 10

Johnny ­ June 24

 

 

 

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