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Letter 12 - August 12, 1902

Letter 12 - August 12, 1902

Mpumudde, Bugisu (Masaba land)

To Rev. Canon Alston, CMS London

My dear Canon,

The Gospel does not arrive uncontested.

Yesterday, while visiting Mpumudde, I was confronted by a local diviner named Mungoma. He had heard that we now discourage the use of charms and ancestral offerings in the school compound. He raised his carved staff and declared:

“You bring light that blinds our gods. The children forget the voices of the caves.”

His words reminded me instantly of Paul’s rebuke to Elymas (Bar-Jesus) in Acts 13:10:

“You son of the devil… will you not stop making crooked the straight paths of the Lord?”

Canon, we are not battling flesh. This is a spiritual contest - not for lands or crowns, but for hearts and truth.

And still, the Light shines.

That same afternoon, a woman named Namono brought a small charm bag - wrapped in banana fiber and dyed red with goat’s blood - and laid it at the foot of the altar in our small chapel. She whispered,

“I’m tired of fearing everything. Jesus is enough.”

Later that night, I heard her humming a verse from Psalm 27:

“The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?”

I’ve also heard word from Sironko that a group of young believers now meets every Friday under a tree near the ridge to sing, read, and pray. And in Mutufu, a widowed grandmother has begun teaching neighborhood children how to recite the Beatitudes - line by line, as her memory allows.

Even in Bugema, the chapel is said to be overflowing on Sundays, with boys sitting on stones and window sills just to hear the Gospel. And the schoolteacher in Buwalasi wrote me this week: “We no longer measure revival by numbers - but by how many fathers now pray with their sons.”

Yes, there are changes coming to this land. New maps are being drawn. Flags are flying where shrines once stood. But the most enduring change is not colonial. It is eternal.

We are not planting a kingdom of men - we are planting the Kingdom of God.

Pray for strength, Canon. The fire is spreading.

Yours under the cross,
Rev. William A. Crabtree

  • Letter 12 - August 12, 1902
  • The Crabtree letters.

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