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Posted June 3, 2014 by
Tags: The Liberal Arts Spiritual Life My Wheaton Campus

From Rwanda To Wheaton

For the first time in my life, I had to face winter.  And not just any winter, but a record Chicago winter.  Prior to coming to Wheaton, I had never seen or touched snow before.  The high elevation in my home country of Rwanda always provided cool weather throughout the whole year, with 82F average high and 58F average low. So my Kinyarwanda language did not even have the vocabulary word for snow.  The cold winter was one of many new and exciting things I was able to experience during my first year at Wheaton College Graduate School.   

I just completed my first year in the M.A. in Systematic Theology program.  I had many challenges at the beginning of my program, such as adjusting to the rigorous pace of graduate studies and speaking and writing in English, my fourth language.  But Wheaton College offered me the best studying environment that I could ever imagine.  I lived with four roommates who were also international students, and each of us was from a different continent; what a great blessing!  Though we all came from different cultures, we had a common culture of being Christian brothers.

I also had to leave my wife Hope and our three children: Moses (11), Esther (8), and Sandra (4) in Rwanda when I started my Theology program. Though I was apart from my family, Wheaton College became my family away from family. The Christian interaction between students, professors, and staff provided an excellent learning environment. Professors at Wheaton are so amazing! I always wondered how these professors are so knowledgeable, yet so very humble. They are not only academic professors, but also spiritual mentors.

Back at home, I am a church planting pastor and a theology teacher, where I serve as the General Secretary of Evangelical Baptist Churches of Rwanda; an association of indigenous churches that a team of 12 pastors and I founded in 2007. Since then, we have planted 33 more churches to bring our total number of churches to 45.  This summer, I look forward to being home in Rwanda with my family and to return to my ministry. The first year is already gone and it seems that the time was so quick.  I look forward to finishing my second year with great courage.