Monday, June 11, 2012

Memorial Service, Central Baptist Church, Brantford, Ontario


Dr. Bob Foster
Dr. Bob Foster
Tributes are pouring in this week for a great humanitarian with strong Brantford connections, who made a major impact in Zambia and Angola.
Dr. Bob Livingston Foster, who died on Sunday in Angola at 87, was a larger-than-life medical missionary who left a legacy of four hospitals in rural Africa, countless churches and dozens of missionaries who were inspired by him to give their lives to the poor.
Dr. Foster married Belva Mark 63 years ago. Her family continues to have strong ties in Brantford and it was the Marks who introduced Dr. Foster at Central Baptist Church then on Brant Avenue, which became one of his supporting congregations.
"He influenced everybody he met," said Brantford's Keith Donald, a former missionary himself.
"He was a man with a lot of energy, vision, confidence and faith and came from an impressive family."
Dr. Foster's father was also a missionary and translated the entire Bible into a Zambian language. Four of Dr. Foster's children are currently working in Angola and another is a Bible translator in Mozambique.
His son Stephen, who was born in Brantford, was honoured in 2010 by the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, for medical humanitarian work in Africa.
"I think my father will be remembered as a man who believed God," wrote Stephen Foster on Wednesday. "Not as 'believed in God,' as the devil does too, but rather in the matter of fact way he simply took God at face value ... that God would keep His promises, protect in times of danger, whether from leopards and mambas to the bullets of guerilla warriors."
A man of remarkable directness, Dr. Foster was known for telling people to consider medical mission work and they often responded.
When the doctor wrote a book about his work, The Sword and the Scalpel: A Surgeon's Story of Faith and Courage in Africa, Franklin Graham, son of the famed evangelist Billy Graham, wrote that "Bob is the No. 1 missionary statesman in the evangelical world today and the man God has used in a mighty way to open up new frontiers for the Gospel in some of the roughest areas of Africa."
Graham wrote again on Wednesday to Dr. Foster's widow, saying her husband had influenced his beloved Angola in "monumental ways. But he also had an impact on my life by demonstrating a selfless spirit of a true servant."
The Fosters and their sibilantly named children --Steve, Sharon, Sheila, Stacey, Stuart, Stirling and Shelley -spent several of their furloughs in Brantford, where Belva Foster's mother taught at Brantford Collegiate Institute.
In Africa, Canada or the U.S., where he finally retired, Dr. Foster was known for his big booming laugh and authoritative manner.
Although he often didn't see his parents for years at a time - he was left in a home for missionary children while they were in Africa -he was heavily influenced by them: his middle name was Livingstone in hopes that he would follow in the footsteps of the famous Dr. David Livingstone, the medical missionary explorer -and he did.
Dr. Foster tells tales from his interesting life in both his book and in a professionally shot video presentation where he talks about his education and working in dangerous rural Africa.
During one examination Dr. Foster was surprised when a woman refused to stay for treatment and, instead, warned about 100 other patients not to go to see him. It turned out there was an eight-foot long black mamba snake in the rafters over the exam table. Dr. Foster had to tackle the snake himself as no one else would face it.
In some areas, the African people called him Kahaya, which means "the big white chief."
Dr. Foster's funeral, which is expected to be massive, will take place Thursday in Lubango, Angola.
It will be streamed for Internet viewing.
Dr. Foster leaves his wife Belva, whom he married in Brantford at Central Baptist Church, his seven children and 17 grandchildren.
Memorial gifts in his memory have been requested to Advancing the Gospel in Angola, 25 Maple St., Addison, NY, USA 14801 or The Angolan Fund, CMDS Canada, 246B Main Street, Steinbach, Man., R5G 1Y8, Canada.
Tributes to Dr. Foster can be viewed at http://drbobfoster.blogspot.com and the video of Dr. Foster talking about his own life can be seen at http://bit.ly/drbobfoster.

Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Greatly missed

Dear Stuart and Sindia, 

Thank you for the pictures.  Uncle Bob to us, is a treasured memory. 

He is one of those people you just do not think of as dying!  He was one of the people that made me feel more secure in the world, just knowing he was there. I know for the family he is a greatly missed rock.

Love and prayer, 

Steve Fields

A few memories I have of Bob

Dear Belva and family,

Pam Young from Brantford, as well as Doreen Ross, let me know of Bob’s death. He will be sadly missed by all of you. However, it is a great consolation that he is free from pain and rejoicing in the presence of his Saviour & Lord. Our loss is heaven’s gain.


Bob was a classmate of mine in Medical School in Toronto. We graduated in 1947.


Bob was a real inspiration to me. I was not a Christian when I started university and he greatly influenced my life. He has been a mentor for me down through these many years.

I fondly remember your parents

Hello Steve and entire family,

I'm Roy Howarth's daughter.  We met many years ago when the Foster family was living in the States (New Jersey, perhaps?).  I live in Oakville, Ontario and my brother, John, is in Mount Albert.

Dad has never embraced the computer world, so I am emailing the attached letter for him.

I fondly remember your parents.  I saw your Dad more often than your mom, and in thinking of him, remember his booming laugh.

Hopefully Dad's letter will be read by your Mom and siblings too, 

Janice Ghent


Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Praying for you all

Dear Stuart & Sindia,

We were privileged to serve Dr Bob and Belva with Mercy Air, flying them to Zambia.  They visited where they had lived, and the hospitals he built and worked at,  and lots of people came to see them and hear them teach and share.

We had read Dr Bob's book before we flew them so we relived their adventure with them.  What an amazing couple with an incredible Lord leading and guiding them throughout all the days of their lives!

We are praying for you and your family during this time of rejoicing for your Dad life and the great memories you have to cherish, until on day you see Jesus face to face and your dad too!

Hugs,

Barbara and Ron Wayner

Mercy Air

A special heritage

Dear Sheila and all of the "Family Robert Foster," 
It seems difficult to think of our world without your very special Dad, Dr. Bob, sharing it with us.
For  each of you, I imagine the hole that is left in your heart is still raw and weeping  around the edges and
you may often or occasionally, be ambushed by tears, at the most unexpected times and places.

Friday, January 20, 2012

A handwritten note from your dad

I was so surprised last year to receive a handwritten note from your dad.  Such a busy, competent man took time to greet me and thank me for a word of appreciation!

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

The legacy of a missionary doctor

Throughout the centuries of past medical ministry, missionary doctors have sacrificed much to serve the needy with vital medical care.   One great example of this commitment and service is Dr. Robert Livingstone Foster.  Dr. Foster was a pioneering missionary doctor in western Zambia and Angola and in conjunction with his son, Dr. Steve Foster, they worked to establish the CEML Hospital in Lubango. 


www.angolarising.blogspot.com

A wonderful family

I remember both Dr Bob and Belva coming home on furlough to Central Baptist Church in Brantford, Ontario. I remember him preaching on various occassions at Central and Belva sharing with the different ladies groups at Central. They made you feel like you were there during their time in Africa. Dr Bob has left a legacy behind and a wonderful family that I have had the oportunity to meet. May God be with the family at this time. 
Mary Armstrong, Central Baptist Church, 
Brantford, Ontario, Canada

SIM Canada remembers Dr. Bob

 
Dr. Robert Livingstone Foster (USA) passed into the presence of His Lord on January 8 2012 in Angola.  Although Dr. Bob was a member of SIM USA he was a much loved missionary within the Canadian SIM Family.  Dr. Steve & Peggy Foster serve with SIM Canada in Angola. 

In the forward to the book that documents Dr. Bob Foster’s career - Sword and Scalpel: A Surgeon’s Story of Faith and Courage in Africa - Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan’s Purse and World Medical Mission and son of famed evangelist Billy Graham, writes: "I believe Bob is the number one missionary statesman in the evangelical world today and the man God has used in a mighty way to open up new frontiers for the Gospel in some of the roughest areas of Africa.”

Tribute from Advancing the Gospel in Angola (AGA)


Dr. Robert Foster

Dr. Robert Foster
In the forward to the book that documents Dr. Bob Foster’s career,  Sword and Scalpel: A Surgeon’s Story of Faith and Courage in Africa , Franklin Graham, president of Samaritan’s Purse and World Medical Mission and son of famed evangelist Billy Graham, writes: “I believe Bob is the number one missionary statesman in the evangelical world today and the man God has used in a mighty way to open up new frontiers for the Gospel in some of the roughest areas of Africa.”
In all, the Greensboro, N.C.-based Dr. Foster devoted his career – some 60 years of medicine and ministry – to the people of Zambia and war-torn Angola, founding four hospitals in remote areas and serving as a surgeon and medical director.
Dr. Foster has been described as a modern Christian hero, serving in primitive conditions and helping those in need despite suffering some of the worst conditions possible, including a civil war that saw thousands flee Angola for their lives. In 1988, World Vision International named Dr. Foster as its Missionary Statesman of the Year.
A graduate of the University of Toronto’s College of Medicine, Dr. Foster completed his medical residency at Vanderbilt University in Nashville in 1949 and immediately went to Zambia where he founded and served for 12 years as medical director of Mukinge Hospital. While in Mukinge, he also founded the school of nursing.
In 1962, he founded and served as medical director at Luampa Hospital in Zambia, leaving in 1967 to serve as interim director of Africa Evangelical Fellowship.
In 1970, Dr, Foster became medical director of Cavango and Kalukembe Hospitals in Angola. He remained in that role in 1981 when he became international director of Africa Evangelical Fellowship and medical coordinator for mission medical work in Zambia, Angola, South Africa and Zimbabwe. Since 1990, he has performed short term medical work at Jamba, Lubango and Rio da Huila clinics in Angola.
From 1990 to 2008, Dr. Foster served as the United States representative to AEF-SIM.
In 2005, Dr Foster created a non-profit organization called Advancing the Gospel in Angola (AGA). AGA is dedicated to promoting the Gospel of Jesus Christ by facilitating the exchange of information, and providing for the delivery of goods, services and finances to various ministries throughout Angola.
In the summer of 2010, Dr Robert Foster and his wife Belva returned to their beloved Africa to live out their days with their family members serving in Angola. Concludes Franklin Graham in Sword and Scalpel: “Bob Foster has inspired and challenged me, not only in the ministry with which I’m involved, but also in my personal spiritual journey. When I get to the end of life’s road, I pray that God will have used me even a fraction of the way He has used Bob Foster.”
www.hopeforangola.com 
website of AGA Advancing the Gospel in Angola

The exciting story

Sword and Scalpel

Sword & Scalpel is the exciting story of how God has used Dr. Robert L. Foster to spread the Gospel and bring healing across southern Africa. Through the dangers of civil war and the difficulties of missionary life, he served four decades as a surgeon in Zambia and Angola, founding four mission hospitals. 

"When you read Sword & Scalpel, I believe you will see why Dr. Bob Foster is not only a great surgeon, but a great preacher as well. God has used this missionary statesman in a mighty way to open up new frontiers for the Gospel in some of the roughest areas of Africa." --Franklin Graham

Dr. Bob tells his story

Robert Livingstone Foster, 1924-2012
Our prayers go out to the family of Dr. Bob Foster. His wife of 63 years, Belva, their 7 children, 17 grandchildren, and 5 great-grandchildren, sister Rhoda Lane, 4 hospitals in rural Africa, countless churches, and the many missionaries called into service by God through his counsel. He will be deeply missed and heaven all the better. Watch this wonderful biographical video by Samaritan's Purse. God is good.
www.youtube.com
Dr. Bob Foster shares his experiences on the mission field

In Memoriam

God's faithfulness proven over and over

Sword & Scalpel

By Lorry Lutz, the biography of Robert L. Foster, M.D.
"This book is for anyone who has ever considered missionary work, and for those who are missionaries. . . ."
Sword & Scalpel is the true story of Dr. Robert and Belva Foster--their lives, their work and their determination to serve God in Africa, even during the war-torn years of emerging independence. You will be hard-pressed to put this book down and will want to re-read it many times. It is exciting reading - God's faithfulness proven over and over.

facethechallenge.org

from Samaritan's Purse: In memory of Dr. Bob

Medical missionary pioneer Dr. Robert Foster passed away on January 8 in Angola, Africa, at the age of 87. 

Samaritan’s Purse and its medical ministry, World Medical Mission, worked with Dr. Foster for decades to help send Christian physicians to mission hospitals in Africa on short-term assignments, and to provide those hospitals with medical equipment and supplies. 

Dr. Foster was born to missionaries in Zambia, grew up in Canada, completed his residency in the United States, served as a medical missionary in Zambia and Angola, and was a mission leader in England and the United States. He was involved in numerous medical and evangelism outreaches in Africa. He established Cavango Mission Hospital in Angola, and Mukinge and Luampa hospitals in Zambia. He also helped launch church planting and medical projects in Madagascar. 

When he was 83 years old, Dr. Foster camped for six weeks in the Angolan bush to help build a medical clinic. 

"I was just looking for a place to use the gifts God had given me," Dr. Foster said as he looked back over 60 of ministry. "I wish more young people would do that."

Dr. Foster’s greatest motivation was to serve the Lord by sharing the Gospel. The hospitals he created were also centers for evangelism. 

"I believe that medical missions is the most valuable tool of evangelism," he said. "People are needy when they come to the hospital, and the opportunities for reaching them for Christ are tremendous."

Quero ser missionário

Pelotas, 18 de janeiro de 2012,

Para Stephen, Sharon, Sheila, Stacey, Stuart, Stirling e Shelley,
Olá, irmãos Foster,

Precisava compartilhar algumas coisas com vocês. Meu nome é Juliano Coimbra, nasci e vivo em Pelotas, sul do Brasil e tenho 21 anos.

Um irmão querido da minha igreja voltou do CBM (Congresso Brasileiro de Missões) que ocorreu outubro passado trazendo um livro, "Espada & Bisturi". Ele leu na praia, entre o Natal e o ano novo, e me indicou. Pedi, meio sem esperar muito do conteúdo - nunca havia ouvido falar em Robert Foster.

Comecei a leitura e a cada página, meu coração se encantava com a história de coragem, fé e perseverança. Em uma semana, havia terminado as 340 páginas. Tanto me interessou, que hoje fui em busca de informações sobre Bob Foster na internet, até que encontrei a nota do obituário. Certamente, como o próprio Dr. Bob mencionara no livro, ele soube como terminar a sua corrida, permanecendo fiel ao nosso Senhor. Sou grato a Deus por me mostrar servos que não acreditam que uma vida de entrega e renúncia por Jesus seja algo utópico, inalcançável. 

Hoje, com 21 anos, estudo Arquitetura e Urbanismo na universidade. Amo o curso e a profissão que escolhi, mas como o pai de vocês, eu não quero me limitar ao padrão de nossos tempos - conforto, estabilidade, segurança financeira, enquanto tantos continuam na escuridão, sem conhecer ao Senhor, vivendo em condições desumanas. Eu sei que quero ser missionário e levar o Evangelho à outras culturas, e se esta certeza hoje está mais viva do que nunca, muito eu posso agradecer ao exemplo e ao testemunho do pai de vocês.

Fiquem na graça e na Paz de Jesus,
Um abraço do Brasil,

Juliano M. Coimbra

May God give us grace to serve Him faithfully in our generation

Dear Stuart and Sindia,



Thank you for your email telling us of your Dad’s going home, Stuart. Praise God for faithful servants like him and your Mother. May she know God’s comfort in a special way with the loss of her life companion. And may God give us grace to serve him faithfully in our generation and encourage others to do the same.



God bless you richly. I have many precious memories from our times together in Mozambique. And so we continue in the good fight of faith in this New Year 2012 knowing that our times are in his hands!



Love,



Henry and Stella

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Mixed feelings of sadness and joy

Dear Stuart and Sindia,

Thank you so much for sending us the news of the homecall of Stuart's father, Dr. Bob.

We do send our sincere sympathy to you and all the family at this time of mixed feelings, both of sadness and joy. It is great to know of faithful warriers of the Lord being now in their Heavenly Home away from all the difficulties and pain of this world, but it is sad for the family to be without their loved one, and for the many friends he gained along the way who felt it a privilege to have known Dr. Bob.

We do hope that the funeral was uplifting for all those present, especially Belva, if she was well enough to be there. We will continue to think of you all and pray for you and the work which you as a great family are doing.

Our love to you all,

Michael and Pat Brazier

P.S.  We have sent the news to Goring Free Church and the friends there

A vossa carta tocou me muito

Querido Pastor
Dr Stuart
 
Antes porem quero pedir as minha desculpas por ter lhe espondido tardio o E-mail, foi por que eu estava de ferias durante os meu 30 dias so hoje e que entrei no escritorio, porque nao tenho computador em casa e nem internet, aproveito quando estou de servico.
 
A vossa carta tocou me muito no meu coracao na perca deste grande homem no qual Deus usou lhe sobremaneira excelente na obra ministerial, que pena perder este grande homem na arena espiritual, mas eu sei que o senhor tem um proposito mais que nos no seu reino celestial, por isso ele lhe chamou para um lugar maravilhoso de paz, amor incomparavel, misericordia, caloroso, cheio de protecão e acima de tudo um lugar cheio de esperanca vindouro em Cristo Jesus.(João 3:36)
Pastor eu digo que neste mundo ha muitas aflicoes mas tenha bom animo porque o nosso rei e salvador ja venceu tudo aquilo que o Satanas colocou como barreira da vida neste mundo, por isso todos aqueles que creem no senhor sao e serao mais que vencedores.
 
Pastor os vossos choros sempre devem chorar reparando na santa cruz, pois e la onde somos limpos as nossas lagrimas, visto o senhor enxuga as lagrimas no interior dos nossos coracoes e ele nos da o melhor consolo nas vidas.
 
Que Deus vos console eternamente e que de ao falecido um eterno descanso em Cristo Jesus.
 
Pastor
Teixeira

Monday, January 16, 2012

What a special man

Dear Stuart and Sindia,

We were so saddened to read about the passing of Stuart's father. What a special man and what an incredible legacy he has left in you and all those whose lives he touched. Although we didn't know him personally, we feel blessed to know Dr. Bob through you. Hearing about your mother is heartbreaking, but it is good to know that she seems to be more at peace.

We are glad that Luke is feeling better. This cold weather is brutal even for New Englanders, so it must be a real challenge for him. We have no doubt he can handle it, especially in NYC, which is teeming with activities and ways to escape the winter blast.

You all remain in our prayers and we hope to see you on the 22nd.

In His love and with our deepest sympathy,

Ann and Dan