“Because it’s uncomfortable and difficult and I don’t want
to,” I said. That’s how I was feeling, so right or wrong I said it.
He just looked at me, knowingly, patiently.
It looked easier in the missionary biographies and blog
posts, this serving Jesus thing. More adrenaline filled and more close the
pages and fall asleep comfortably in your own bed at night after a nice
relaxing meal with your family and maybe a good TV show or two.
But playing it out in real life has meant dying to myself
and repenting of my selfish heart and opening up our home and being poured out
every. single. day.
And now it meant opening up our home to this young couple
because we felt—knew—that is what God was saying to do.
It was easy when they were just this young couple who had a
baby in the middle of nowhere with nothing and I could just start a program and
get some blankets and bottles donated.
It was a little harder when we had to stop our lives three
times a day to bring him healthy, vitamin packed meals so that his body could
stand a chance against this illness blackening his lungs.
It was more challenging still when the baby was hospitalized
and multiple trips to the nearest city and the clinic didn’t seem to bring
answers.
And try as I may to think of all the reasons why this isn’t
a good idea, the truth is that it is a good idea and, in fact, it’s exactly
what this discipleship thing is supposed to look like.
Sure, we can work to relieve their physical ailments and
send them back to their tribes with healthy lungs and healed bodies. But isn’t that
just treating the symptoms, not the illness?
So, we have taken them in under our own roof. For [at least]
two months we will live in front of them, live with them, teach them, learn
from them.
Become friends with them.
Because you expect a lot of things when you move your family
to the Amazon jungle.
Bugs. Heat. Rain.
Somehow, though, you never anticipate the lonely. Our house
is full of people all the time. All the time it’s full.
But there is still the loneliness of a new culture. No one
who speaks your heart language. No one who understands your culture.
So some time ago I asked God for a friend.
And as I look into the eyes of this sixteen year old girl
and mother of one, I realize what she must be going through. So far from her
own culture, her own people, her own language with a baby to raise.
Just like me.
So we share. She tells her stories and I tell mine. Two
different worlds coming together in our second languages. She’s ten years my
junior and from a world more primitive than I have ever seen but there is this
friendship that is being built.
I teach her to read, she teaches me to cook. I hold her baby
and she holds mine.
And somewhere in there we both try to find common ground in
this loneliness that comes from a foreign land.
That’s when it hits me that we are all foreigners in this
land, but we are brothers and sisters in Christ. Then loneliness starts to fade
and hope shines through.
And it’s two steps forward and one step back every day as I
lay aside my preconceived ideas and let go of the cynicism that creeps into my
heart and I lay down my pride and I allow myself to be the student and not just
the teacher and I speak the truth in love, but also hear the truth with
humility.
Then I realize that sometimes the answers to our prayers are
found right smack dab in the middle of the uncomfortable and difficult.
And this serving Jesus thing starts to look just like it’s
supposed to.
Love hearing about everything you guys are doing. How challenging it must be but the Lord is with you and your family every step of the way.Thanks for everything you are doing there.
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