[Warning: this post talks about animal droppings! Sorry if it offends!]
During the entrepreneurship training in Burundi last week, our DML leader from Cameroon divided the young adults into groups based on their residence and asked them to address the question, "What challenges is this community facing and how can we solve the problem?" The underlying root of the question is the understanding that every social problem is a business opportunity.
One group said that their avocados all come ripe at the same time, and they don't have a market. They decided to begin processing avocado oil for hair and body lotion and grinding the seeds for animal feed.
Another group said there was a lack of charcoal in their community for cooking. They recognized a need for alternatives to charcoal for cooking, including recycling waste.
Another group said that everyone in their community harvests their maize at the same time, and they all sell at the lowest price because they don't have the means to store it well. They learned that they could use the "Zimbabwe model" of boiling their maize and then drying it, and no pests would bother it. They also discovered that the leaves of the neem tree, which is known as the King of Trees, can be dried and sprinkled among the bags of stored maize, as weevils (the common pest) hate neem.
And so on. It was really great to hear their thoughts, and they had time throughout the week to discuss and plan together how they could organize themselves to address this.
For me, as I couldn't listen to the individual group discussions in Kirundi, my mind immediately went to my community and the problem that I am facing: goose poop. Geese are everywhere. And apparently, they poop every 12 minutes. So, thirty geese in my yard, pooping every 12 minutes, means 360 poops per day. You can't hardly walk without stepping on it. I've tried everything to chase them away. They keep coming back. We aren't allowed to kill them (not that I could), but we are allowed to break their eggs to slow the population (but I can't do that either).So, what to do? As the groups were pondering their challenge, I sat and pondered this. We know that everything God created is good...so what is the good in this? I was still stuck and didn't have an idea.
The next day, the agricultural speakers from Uganda trained the young adults on "chicken poop soup." They shared that the white substance in chicken droppings is nitrogen, which is very good for growing crops. They showed them how to make chicken poop soup.And suddenly the lightbulb went off for me. Having avoided stepping on goose poop for years now, I am pretty familiar with how it looks...and there is a lot of white in fresh droppings...which means nitrogen! I knew it was good for the grass, but what if I could harvest it, make goose poop soup, and help my own gardens grow...plus maybe some of my neighbors' gardens as well!
As I shared from Philippians 4:9 on the last day of the conference, I shared my goose poop soup plan and told them that the next time they see me, they can call me the "Goose Poop Soup Lady." Philippians 4:9 tells us to put into action what we have learned. It says:“What you have learned and received and heard and seen in me, practice these things. And the God of peace will be with you.”
During the week, we learned, received, heard, and saw how to do farming in a way that is restorative to creation and good for the farmer as well. We learned to be innovative and problem solvers in our communities with our time, treasure, and talent. And now it's time to put it into practice. The verse encourages us to have the confidence to tell others to do what they see in us as followers of Christ, knowing that it will lead others closer to Christ as well. It's scary to say, "Follow me as I follow Christ" because I know how often I fail! But when we live out what we have learned, we should be able to increase in that confidence. And most of how we teach and preach is by our actions, not our words. So, how we work, how we treat God's beautiful creation, how we seek the flourishing of others over self, this is how we practice what we have learned.
From teaching about God directly to finding a use for goose poop, and everything in between, our call to do our work as worship is holistic! May God help us view our challenges as opportunities to bring God-inspired solutions!
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