You Can Learn From Anyone
(A tree can not make a Forest)
2023 Camp Heritage
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Camp Heritage 2023 was a great success to the Glory of God. Over 60 youths attended this year's Camp. We pray that we will see the impact of what was learnt a the Camp in their various endeavours.
BRIEF HISTORY OF KABUSA LCC SINCE INCEPTION It is evident, however, that the Hebrew people were a commemorative race; in other words, they were given to creating and presenting memorials of important events. Even in the patriarchal times we find monuments set up in order to commemorate eventsof Jacob (Gen 28:18) "set up a pillar" to perpetuate the memory of the divine promise; and that these monuments had a religious importance and sanction appears from the statement that "he poured oil upon the top of the pillar" (Gen 31:45; Josh 4:9; 1 Sam 7:12; Judg 9:6). Long-lived trees, such as Oaks and Terebinths were made use of as remembrance (Gen 35:4; Josh 24:26). Commemorative names, also, were given to persons, places, and things; and from the earliest periods it was usual to substitute a new and descriptive name for an old one, which may in its origin have been descriptive too (Ex 2; 10; Gen 2:1; 23; 4:1). Genealogical tables appear, moreover, to have had a very ear
ECWA Church History SIM/ECWA HISTORY SIM is an international, interdenominational Christian mission organization. It was established in 1893 by its three founders, Walter Gowans and Rowland Bingham of Canada and Thomas Kent of the United States. The Founding of SIM in Africa The vision for SIM (and ECWA) was first born in the heart of a woman – Margaret (Craig) Gowans. Margaret Craig was born in 1836 in Hamilton, Lanarkshire, Scotland, and married a brewer in Kilmarnock named John Gowans (1836-1906) in 1861. She was the first person in SIM/ECWA history to have a vision to take the gospel to the Soudan, which then led to what we know today as ECWA. They had nine children and emigrated to Toronto, Canada, in 1879.. Mrs. Gowans fervently believed that world-wide missions was an important part of the church’s calling. It was due, in part, to her influence that two of their children became missionaries. Annie , their oldest, went to China in 1892. Walter , their fifth
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