THE KEROSENE FAILED NOT
By Rendy Sebilo
Lapangon Mission
School
November 1999
Since all the members of the village Lapangon has been
baptized, they meet, young and old, in our front yard to worship each morning
and evening. They are hungry for the
truth in their new found faith. They
want to listen and fill their still empty hearts with the Word.
Although we meet early each evening before sunset, the
hearers are so interested for the study deeper into the God’s word that it gets
dark before we end the study. Therefore,
my partner and I purchased a kerosene lamp so we can have enough light for the
worship service. When the kerosene lamp
was first lighted, the people were very surprised to see a very bright light
making their little nook in the forest so bright. Their little lamps made of sardine tins
produced such a flickering little light that this was amazing to them.
Each night, they anxiously await the time to light the
kerosene lamp and this magnificent light can illuminate the village and they can
listen to the Bible stories from the picture rolls. They loved that kerosene lamp also because
the surrounding villages from quite a distance can see the light shining from
Lapangon. They compare that magnificent
light with the light of salvation through Jesus Christ brought by the student
missionaries from Mountain View College, The School of the Light.
The night came when we ran out of kerosene. We need the light for worship. We asked about if any one had some
kerosene. Many raised their hands and
with any second thoughts, they scampered to their homes and returned with small
amounts of kerosene in their little tin lamps.
We poured it all into our kerosene lamp and it was only about half full. We decided to shorten the worship this night
because there was not enough kerosene to go as long as we had been in the
nights before.
We had a very interesting and lively worship that evening
and forgot all about the shortness of the kerosene supply. We went far past the 30 minutes which we
thought our short supply would take us.
When we finally stopped, we put out the lamp and checked the tank. It was empty.
That meant that we would have NO kerosene for the next night’s
worship. It is a long ways down to the
nearest trader to buy kerosene and we could not spend the valuable time just to
obtain that commodity.
As the time approached for worship, my partner decided to
drain what little that might be left in the lamp into the sardine tin so that
we could have some little light for the evening. To his surprise, the tank was full! He asked me if I had stored some kerosene
away for an emergency but I had not. He
commented that this was a miracle.
That night, we lighted the lamp again and began
worship. My partner emphasized that our
God is a God of miracles. God provided
the kerosene for our worship. He told
the story of the widow and the two boys who borrowed the vessels to fill with
oil and the oil failed not until all were filled. We told the people that this was because of
the faith of the widow. We compared that
to the kerosene in our lamp. The
following evening, we inspected the lamp again, and again it was full! This went on for three nights before we had
the opportunity to purchase more kerosene.
God really did bless our lamp. He filled it to the brim each evening when we
needed it. He performed the same miracle
for us that he did for the faithful widow.
“My dear SULADS,” the chief, Datu Malinas, interrupted
during our worship. “We have seen the
miracle shown by the God in heaven before our very own eyes. We need to be faithful to Him every day!” he
emphasized.
“We will be faithful!” the villagers chorused.