Sitting there in the corner of that little 500 square foot
house, I looked around the room at the little faces of the kids that had
gathered together that Saturday afternoon, almost thirty of them. It was hot
and cramped and little two-year-old Francisco was not happy that his mom had brought him there.
Taiwani sat next to Mariclene and my mind went back to when
they ran the streets together. They were like the dynamic duo, stealing fruit
from the trees in our back yard and throwing mud at the house when we said it
was time to go home. Now Mariclene has been part of our family for a year and a
half this month, and oh how she has transformed. But Taiwani still wakes up to
the same troubled house she lived in when we first met her two years ago. The
stories I know are horrific.
I see the others. This one being raised by her elderly grandmother
because her mom didn’t want her and her dad got remarried and his new wife
didn’t want her either. This one who will likely not make it to thirteen before
she has a baby of her own because all of her four sisters before her have
walked that same road. This one who is so selfish and overbearing because her
parents give her every last thing that she wants because it’s easier than
teaching a child. After all, no one ever taught them.
Then there is little Chico who stands outside the doors all
wide-eyed. He refuses to come in because he prefers to “run the streets”. He’s
five.
There is Rafaela who has the sweetest little timid voice and
I swear she hasn’t grown an inch these last two years. Her dad is a drunk, but
her mama, who can’t read a single word and asks Rosa to count her money because
she doesn’t know the difference, works hard to provide for her and her brother
and sister, always smiling as she walks several miles to work and back.
And so many others sitting there laughing and coloring and
listening and learning. I know pieces of their stories and this room feels so
much smaller.
I feel so much smaller.
It’s always made me a little uneasy when I have people tell
me that the ministry we do is “amazing” or “incredible” or “awesome”.
To me it feels heavy and not enough. I feel inadequate and
overwhelmed by the needs. I look around and I think, “We could never do enough
to change-really, really change--this town.”
I know how weak I am. I know my own faults. How many days I
just want to go away, back to the comforts and familiarities of my homeland.
Imperfect, unable.
I know Rosa’s family struggles. I see the personal battles
she faces and I watch as the “church” criticizes her every move as she seeks to
be faithful to the calling He put in her heart twenty years ago. Imperfect,
unable.
I know the financial needs. The funds are limited and I feel
like we aren’t doing enough but a dollar only stretches so far so we have
vitamins to supplement the physical lacking and prayer to increase awareness.
Imperfect, unable.
I know the stories of these littles as they file in and out
on Saturdays. I know many of the houses they go back to and I wonder, “Does
this really even matter?” Imperfect, unable.
And then I hear it. When I step away from myself and all
this imperfect, it’s there. That still, small voice again that faithfully
reminds me:
“I AM enough.
I AM sufficient.
I AM here.
I AM at work.
I AM the Creator of all things.
I AM the Sustainer of all things.
I AM amazing.
This IS amazing. Because of Me.”
{Or, in the words of Francis Chan, “God says, ‘This is MY
party and I invited YOU!’”}
And so I applaud this ministry and say at the top of my
voice that YES! this ministry we are a part of IS amazing. YES! the work we do
here IS amazing.
Because we are so very weak, but He is so very strong.
Because we can’t see past this difficulty or that obstacle,
but He holds the future.
Because we are so far from perfect in our endeavors, but He
sees the intentions of the heart.
Because... Grace.
“Indeed, we
have all received grace after grace
from
His fullness...”
John 1.16
John 1.16