Thursday, July 26, 2012

Why Did God Send Me?


Let the morning bring me word of your unfailing love, for I have put my trust in you. Show me the way I should go, for to you I entrust my life. Psalm 143:8

God’s heart is bigger than anything I can imagine with my human brain. 

Earlier this month, I went on my first mission trip. Yes, it was a short term mission trip – only one week to the El Florido section of Tijuana, Mexico. It was about planting seeds and changing the hearts of a group of high school students. Yet, what I saw in them, and experienced myself, will change my heart forever.

DAY 1 – The Drive
It was a long, hot drive down to Mexico from northern California and the comfort of our homes. At 7:00am, we met at our church, Cornerstone Fellowship, in Brentwood, about an hour from Oakland on the eastern side of Mt Diablo. The students were nervous, excited, and full of expectations as they turned in their forms and passports, readying themselves for whatever God had in store for them. We willingly grouped into cars with people we didn’t know and became adept, if shyly at first, at maneuvering the unknown territory of getting to know each other in an enclosed environment. As seven vans, 28 students and 16 leaders pulled out in caravan formation at 8:30, the occupants became gracious and encouraging of one another, curious to explore one another’s stories. 

In the lead van, John, Rebecca, Sam, BJ, Brandon and I alternately talked, watched the road, played games and asked each other questions about their ages, our interests, the schools they would enter in the fall, and how we came to know Jesus. John was a confident and competent driver and leader; I was a not-so-confident and inept copilot. John was patient and forgiving while I hung in there and did my best, praying that John would stay patient and forgiving.

As we made a clean crossing over the border into Mexico, three of our vans were pulled over. We were on walkie-talkies and had planned ahead of time to pull off at the first gas station to purchase insurance. We managed to do that, and hook up with all the other drivers. Now the hard part – the loop into Tijuana. We all had maps and written direction, but it was still confusing and, yes, we managed to get separated, with three vans going one directions and four going another. Since we thought we were lost, we stopped on a deserted street to discuss the situation with the other two drivers. We came across a car with a family inside. Blessedly, John spoke fluent Spanish and approached the driver, showing him our map. The driver volunteered to lead us right to the door of our destination. Praise God!

Driving on ahead to the dormitories of Caravan Ministries, we bounced along rock and dirt roads until we saw a bright blue, two-story building nearing the top of a hill. When we stepped outside of our van nearly 10 hours from the time we left Brentwood, I heard children playing soccer in the roadway, dogs barking and power lines buzzing – the only power lines in the area coming from two, tall towers. We had arrived.

Dragging our luggage inside and up the narrow staircase, the cacophony of conversations hit us like a bucket of cold water. The couches, chairs, benches and tables were filled with other students and leaders who had arrived before us, echoing the building excitement and abating nerves, the anticipation of tonight’s orientation and tomorrow’s first build. Slowly, our own group ascended the stairs in fatigue and butterflies, seeking shelter and a place for pillows sleeping bags. Soon it would be time for quiet and reflection.

With the ebb and flow of the evening coming to an end, bodies begin to rest in the Word. Soon they will rest in bed, then in sleep. Lord, protect and love on us. Bless each of us with your wisdom, your peace, and open hands to serve.

 DAY 2 – The Build 
Rising at 6am, we readied ourselves for our first build day. Silent devotions, breakfast, worship, then loading the truck with 2x4s, plywood, hammers, nails, tape measures, roofing supplies and other tools of a carpenter’s trade.

Out the highway, then up a long and dusty hill, two vans and a truck, 15 students and six adults – our build crew – traveled out to build a structure for a woman named Carmen and her 3-1/2 year old son, Daniel. Carmen’s husband had left her, and she had no job, no current means of support.

A 16x16 cement foundation has already been poured. This is the foundation upon which Carmen’s home will be built today; it is a 14x14 structure made from plywood and 2x4s and a rock tarpaper roof. It will have one hinged door and one window with hinged closures. It will keep out wind and rain and animals. It will not keep out heat or cold or dirt or dust. She and Daniel will still have to use the neighborhood toilet at the end of the street. But it is a start, and she knows the Holy Spirit will be guarding her home, and her heart and her mind. She knows the Lord is with her and her son, and she is grateful for the Foundation upon which her home is built.

While we built and painted, she and her neighbor cooked lunch for our team, which cost them a week’s wages. When it was done, we all squeezed into her home and prayed. We did. She did. We asked the Lord to watch out for her and Daniel and protect them. She asked God to watch out for us and protect us. We all know God answered our prayers that day.

DAY 3 – The Message
By the time I arrived home yesterday, I recognized that I couldn’t build again. The temperature had been over 100° with no shade anywhere. Although I was chugging water all day, I spent half the day sitting in the van with the doors to create some sort of shade. Dizziness and nausea wouldn’t leave even though I prayed to be able to keep up with the energy of the students. At 61, I still think I can keep up with 16-year-olds. By the end of the day, I felt disappointment at my own lack of performance, at not being able to contribute.
Upon returning to the dorms, I spoke with the Caravan Ministry director, Eddie Passmore, who assured me there were other ways I could contribute besides building. He scheduled me to work at the dorms today, and to go out with an interview team tomorrow. 

As I opened my devotional book this morning, I read the following passage: “Relax in my peaceful presence. Do not bring performance pressures into our sacred space of communion.” Thank you, Lord, for your voice of comfort. Thank you for giving me permission to let go of my own expectations. Thank you for calling me to your side. How can I serve you today, my God?

Today, I cleaned the staff kitchen, and washed down and swept the dorm dining room and women’s bathroom. My special assignment was to break down two 100-lb bags of rice into 4-cup plastic bags to be given away at the end of the week. Each week, the Ministry staff goes into poorest neighborhoods of Tijuana and gives away bags of rice to the homeless or to mothers in desperate need of food for their children. It was a pleasure to serve those who serve so many. The staff, with the student visitors from three churches built nine homes today.

When everyone arrived “home,” we had dinner and worship time. Several students from our group in Brentwood led worship every evening – an incredibly talented, God-centered group of young people who filled a hot, humid room with the cool breeze of God’s love, forgiveness and mercy. Our van driver, John, - a strong, solid man - was moved to tears on more than one occasion, as was I, listening to the purity of the words and music offered up to Jesus. 

DAY 4   - The Process
This day I drove out with two staff members from the Ministry – Michael, an intern who drove the van, and Patty, a woman who is what we might call a social worker. She reviews, interviews and conducts site visits for the people who submit applications for homes (those 14x14 structures the teams were building). We left from the upstairs office, taking three applicants with us to their “lots,” which are the properties they have purchased from the government, to ensure they have the space to build.   

One of the women appeared to be in her early 30s. She had a boy about 12 years of age and a girl about 11 years old. When we arrived, the boy ran out to greet his mother immediately. The girl stayed inside the old RV, in which they were living on the property. As soon as Patty began to interview the mother, she began to cry, it seemed simply from the emotion of the process. She pulled herself together, and sent her son into the RV for juice for Patty, Michael and myself. 

As Patty spoke with her, the woman seemed to be telling Patty that she had two younger children who were living with her parents. The idea was for all of them to live together, along with her husband, who was working at the time of the interview.
Michael explained that the process from this point usually took about one to two weeks. Eddie informed me later that Patty, Imelda and Maggi (Eddie’s wife) reviewed all the information and made a decision, usually an approval, after which building would begin.
I remain hopeful, and prayed during the week that the woman and her family would receive a home.

DAY 5 – The Unwashed     
Fifteen students and leaders from Brentwood drove to Spectrum Ministries, run by Eddie and Maggi’s son, Aaron. Spectrum has ongoing programs with hundreds of poor families and thousands of children located in eight of the poorest neighborhoods in and around the city of Tijuana to help feed and provide medical help for these families. They work with the city’s street children and the Tijuana juvenile facility and hold summertime Vacation Bible School. 

This particular day, our team split into two, men’s and women’s, to give baths, wash feet and check for lice. The boys were in one hall, the girls in another. For three hours, a small group of three of our young men and one of our female students and I sat and washed feet. As one of our male students put it after our return, “It was humbling; it was a privilege to be able to serve as Jesus did.”

For some of these children, it was the first bath, or partial bath they had experienced in a week; for some, the first one in a month. The dirt was caked on. Our focus was on their eyes, their faces, their toes, the balls and heels and ankles of their feet. Gently washing, tenderly massaging, softly drying. Sometimes, a child didn’t want to leave. So the washing continued; the arms, the hands, the faces. Then a hug, or a stroke on the cheek, and onto the next station where a shampoo was given, or a check for lice.  

One young girl, Linda, told me she was eleven. She had large, doe eyes. Her mouth didn’t speak a lot, but her eyes spoke volumes. And her feet. Her feet had bruises and calluses and scabbed-over sores. They were caked with dirt. The Holy Spirit in me spent a lot of time on those feet. Washing and rubbing and washing again. Massaging and washing and stretching and washing. She wasn’t moving, only staring. I pushed up her pantlegs and washed her legs. I noticed her hands were sticky from a popsickle she had eaten earlier. I picked up a clean cloth and washed her hands and arms. She still didn’t move. I gently and slowly – ever so slowly, washed her face and neck. I took her hands in mine and stood her up, indicating it was time to go. There was a growing line behind her. She looked at me vacantly. I hugged her, and she moved along. It was only then I noticed the bracelet with the red bead. Lice. She moved over the lice shampoo area. When she was done there, I was asked to come to the lice-check area to comb her hair. As soon as I completed the feet of the girl in front of me, I returned to Linda.

She now sat on a bench, hair wet from shampoo solution. A plastic, rectangular, container sat next to her on the bench, like an unwelcome meal she knew she must consume. I stood behind her and tilted her head gently back. The container reeked of a Lysol solution, and I picked up the small comb with the tiny teeth. As gently as possible, I began to part her long, black hair. There they were. The small, brown creatures, crawling, jumping, alive and ready to bite at the slightest provocation. 

Dragging the comb through the first part, I quickly dipped it into the solution, watching the wretched insects dive off and die in the green, transparent liquid. Time after time, I repeated the motion. Ten, twenty, a hundred. Each time, Linda sat silently, each time, I dragged the comb with my right hand, lifted her chin with my left to keep the solution out of her eyes. As she sat and I combed, tears silently escaped those large, wide-open eyes, cascading down her cheeks into her hands. I knew they were there, knew they threatened to call out my own, but I held them in check, refusing to give in, needing to be the calm in her storm of momentary despair. Combing, dragging, combing dragging, for 40 minutes. Finally, the truth dawned on me – I would be sending her back to a lice-infested home, and this would happen all over again with someone different next month. 

I put down the comb and placed both my hands into the solution, then put my hands onto her scalp and massaged. Just massaged her scalp. Tried to rid her of the itching, the pulling, the scraping; just provide a little relief if only for the time it took her to walk home again. I called over another leader and student who were both geniuses as styling hair (I wasn’t) and asked if they would give her a pretty design with pretty barrettes. Mercifully, they did. I went back to washing feet as I watched them perform artistry.
When they were finished, I walked over, took her face in my hands, and told her in Spanish that she was beautiful. It was the first smile I saw on her all day. And it broke my heart.

DAY 6 – The Orphanage
Our entire group was privileged to visit an orphanage today. Hang out with the kids at an almost 1:1 ratio – play with them, color with them, play bubbles, swing them, play soccer and football (our football), sing with them, make them laugh and give them attention. Seeing our students be vulnerable enough to allow these children to enter their hearts was a beautiful thing. These kids were IN CHARGE and it was a total win. It was particularly inspiring to see the male students become vulnerable, to open themselves to an emotional experience. Watching them color side-by-side with a little girl, or swing a little boy for an hour was something they could only have done by being willing to follow God’s leading. 

Many of the students returned with stories about “their kids” and talked about a moment at the orphanage that changed their hearts. I believe it was their willingness to love and give that allowed them to receive God’s love in those moments.

Whether it was a kid who rode on someone’s shoulders all day, a child with Down’s Syndrome who called football plays, or a baby who fell asleep in someone’s arms, everyone gave and received this day.

DAY 7 – The Return and Beyond
Coming home, thoughts were about wanting to stay, what will we do when get back and new friendships. During our debrief session, we were left with the question to ponder, “Why did God send you here?” Students are blogging on the website, asking each other, “What do we do now?” and “How can we continue to support each other?" and "Who can help us stay steady in our walk with the Lord?” Excellent questions.

For me, “my kid” was Linda. I will never forget her. I know that I will rise each morning and ask God, “How do you want me to serve you today, Lord?” And in His gracious response to my performance pressure, He has validated the mission I knew he had for me. So I will continue to be thankful, to praise Him through all circumstances, and follow Him, because He is the One in whom my trust lies.

Tuesday, July 3, 2012

His Gifts

"Let all who take refuge in you rejoice. Let them sing with joy forever. Protect them, and let those who love your name triumph in you." Psalm 5:11
 
Taking time to fast and pray today, the first thing that entered my head was to praise Him.

You are the Lord who sings praises to us, Lord on High, through the birds and the sun and the stars and the evening breezes. You share your everlasting love with us every day, Lord, yet we-in our busyness, our self-absorption, our pride, our petty hurts and annoyances-turn away from You.

My heart grieves for those who do not stop to savor the simple splendors of a child's belly laugh in response to the excited licks of a puppy, or a tear escaping the eye of a man's loving look at his wife of 50 years as he takes her hand in his, or a piece of music, literature or Scripture written by one who knows our heart deep down to its core and touches us, weaving words that forever tie us to the moment we hear it or read it.

You, Lord, create these moments for us, binding us to You in love, in courage and in faith. You reveal yourself to us in all You do, Father God. You encourage us, teach us, favor us, and above all, sacrificed Your Son for us. What kind of love and mercy is that? 

The kind that brings me to my knees. The kind that makes me weep without ceasing. The kind that creates in me a thirst for You in a parched and deserted land. The kind that causes me to stand courageously and lift my arms to heaven and proclaim, "I love You with all my heart!"

You told us that we are Your masterpiece, Lord, yet we have done nothing to deserve this magnificent title and honor. You are the potter and we are the clay; if You see us as such it is only due to the strength and power You bestow on us, the beauty You see in us through Your eyes, Lord.

I pray today to live up to what and who You have created me to be, Lord. I know that You are not yet finished with me, and I pray that, in the finishing, You create in me a desire to make Your will my own, to make Your path mine, and to make my love for You greater than any love I have ever known. I pray, Father God, to know You more deeply with every passing day, to walk in the fruit of the Holy Spirit and to be a living sacrifice and beacon of the Light of my Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Monday, July 2, 2012

My Mission


By ourselves we are not qualified in any way to claim that we can do anything. Rather, God makes us qualified. 2 Corinthians 3:5 GW

The Holy Spirit has given me a gift. Before I was born anew in Christ, I used that gift aimlessly, and for whoever would pay. I didn’t care about what I wrote, as long as I got paid to do it.  

As I develop maturity in my faith (and it’s a long, slow, uphill process) and an understanding of my dependence on the Lord, I joyfully submit to His yolk, realizing that the capabilities I have are only those that He grants me for His good purposes.  

For the last two years, I’ve been writing k-6th grade, homeschool, Bible curriculum. The Bible studies focus on foundational pieces of scripture in a way that helps Christian families come alongside their children to form a closer relationship with God and to walk in the teachings of Jesus Christ. 

This Bible curriculum is slow. It is developmentally appropriate for each age group. Each grade’s study takes a small portion of God’s Word and identifies how it is a reoccurring theme of the Bible. Students will see the threads that connect it all together, from Kindergarten to sixth grade, from the Old Testament to the New, from Adam to David to Jesus, and how God worked in each of them. The name of the curriculum – Branches – comes from Scripture, too: I am the vine; you are the branches. If you remain in me and I in you, you will bear much fruit; apart from me you can do nothing (John 15:5 NIV).

Each small portion of scripture is given to children as a precious gift to unwrap, enjoy, and marvel over for nine months. Students are given the opportunity to revisit the scripture again and again as they would a cherished photo album or scrapbook. They will build upon it piece by piece like a tasty puzzle until every morsel is in place to reveal His beautiful canvas.  

The writing is Spirit-led, which many marketing experts don’t understand. I can feel my heart expand as I sit and listen to the Holy Spirit lead me from one scriptural idea to the next. Some days I write for an hour or two; other days I write for five or six. I am amazed at the depth of understanding I have received from the Lord. He has graciously given me eyes to see and ears to hear. He has mercifully opened my heart to His word the way I have never been open before. He has shown Himself to me in new and glorious ways, and in doing this, He has prospered me and made me a wealthy woman.

This curriculum has become my mission, my way to spread the Good News of Jesus Christ throughout this country. By the end of August, I will be looking for about 200 moms from across the country to pilot-test and give honest input to this curriculum so that in the spring of 2013, if it is God’s timing, I will be prepared to go to a publisher and spread the word in a big way.