Image of Bobbie Tinnion in Zimbabwe

A triple celebration for Elim in Zimbabwe

Under the cloudless Zimbabwean skies at the Elim Mission Station in Katerere, Roy Johnston and Bobbie Tinnion took part in a weekend of celebrations


Official opening of the hospital theatre

For more than a decade these moments had been in the making and now the dreams had come to a pivotal point.

The community in Katerere, in partnership with the Elim Pentecostal Church of Zimbabwe and the movement in Ireland and other parts of the UK, have together raised financial support and materials to build a state-of-the-art hospital theatre to serve the local community around the mission station at Katerere.

WhatsApp Image 2024-10-16 at 1The project, first birthed as ‘The Centenary Project’ in 2016 by Pastor Ray Cotter, has faced many challenges and complications, but through prayerful and practical persistence it has finally come to completion. The local community has invested in the project, providing building materials and labour. The Elim Pentecostal Church in Zimbabwe provided the drawing plans, the local knowledge and expertise to source the materials for construction and equipment for the theatre, ensuring they satisfied building regulations and department of health requirements.

The Elim movement in Ireland and the UK helped to provide much-needed financial support for the project to come to fruition.

On Saturday 14 September, we saw the culmination of these years of hard work and dedication as the hospital officially opened amidst great rejoicing! It has now been recognised by the local medical authorities to be a facility that can serve the wider community with surgeries and medical care in a modern, superbly equipped facility.

A new ambulance

WhatsApp Image 2024-10-16 at 1The celebrations continued later that afternoon as Bobbie and I joined the invited guests, including staff of the hospital and theatre, representatives from the regional medical department, stakeholders, representatives from NGOs, leaders from the community and students from the primary school and Emmanuel secondary school.

At this celebration, we had the honour of dedicating a brand-new ambulance to support the work of the hospital. This had been provided through donations from the Chibisa family and the generosity of the Elim churches in Ireland.

A new building

The next day, Bobbie and I travelled to Kanyim, approximately 45 minutes from the mission station, for the opening of a new church.

There was a tremendous sense of joy and celebration as Dr Pious Munembe led the congregation in worship while the new building was opened and dedicated to the glory of God in memory of Rev Edwin Cotter.

The funds were raised by Edwin’s brother Rev Ray Cotter through sponsored events primarily in Northern Ireland.

It was wonderful to be with the Elim family in Zimbabwe, to see their appreciation of the goodness of God and the help they have received from Ireland and the UK. They respectfully send their heartfelt love and greetings to the wider Elim family.

We give God the glory for each faithful footstep of giving, praying, planning, labouring and building, and rejoice in all that God is doing in Zimbabwe. We praise God for the part that Elim Missions Ireland and in the UK have played in this journey so far, and for the future godly connections of vision, purpose and fruitfulness as we endeavour to continue to support the projects.


This article first appeared in Direction Magazine. For further details, please click here.

 
Standing up for the everyday
Faithfulness is not about the size of the battlefield, but the willingness to stand when others step back, writes Liam Husband
Our vision to see Christian artwork in every home
Sharmila and Matt Bain attend Elim’s Wave House church in Newquay, and told Chris Rolfe how Gospel Entrepreneurs coaching has given their art business a boost
Faith in the Everyday
We often think of Esther, Deborah and Ruth as inspiring women in the Bible, says Silvano Griffith Francis. But there are also remarkable women closer to home. At BE church, three women share how they live out their faith in everyday life.
Reform or deform? The Church, AI and the call to discernment
Mark Pugh speaks with James Poulter about why ministers and church leaders cannot afford to ignore artificial intelligence, and how the Church can respond with wisdom, courage and character.
My past experience gives me a unique part to play
Sid Thurlow was once a heroin addict, drug dealer and all-round rotten egg. He is now pastoring the recovery community alongside daily duties at his church in Southend while completing his MiT. Chris Rolfe reports.
 

Sign up to our email list to keep informed of news and updates about Elim.

 Keep Informed