It was about three years ago last month that God brought one
of the most incredible women I’ve ever met right to our front door.
It was dark out and we were settling down into our wooden
home at the end of a crumbling road in a crumbling society. We opened the door
with hesitation and anticipation. We didn’t know anyone in this small town and,
as the new foreign family in town, we were targets for scammers. Our guards
were cautiously up. She introduced herself as Rosa (pronounced “Hoh-za”) and
her daughter as Vandrena.
I tried in my broken Portuguese to understand and be
understood as she told us her story and we shared a bit of ours. And so a
friendship was born.
The timing of this meeting wasn’t by chance at all. We had
only recently died to some pretty big dreams and were doggy-paddling our way to
whatever it was God had for us next.
We didn’t know the Kingdom was already on this street. His
Body was alive here. And He would allow us to be a part, to find our place.
We began pouring ourselves out. Our doors stayed open. Our
table stayed full. Our hearts stayed broken. Rosa showed us the ropes of
working among the poor. We learned from her unconditional love and she learned
from our unwillingness to give in to pressures from the naysayers.
I’ll never forget when we were sitting in our kitchen floor
chatting one day about life and she was talking about her middle son coming
back home. He had been away for about a year and she was telling him about us.
“He asked what you
guys were like. I told him you guys were simple people, just like us...”
She went on to say other things that I don’t remember now and
had no idea that she had just spoken words of hope and life into my heart.
Because that’s exactly what we wanted her to see. That we are her peers, her
equals. The white man didn’t come here to save, but rather to serve.
We walked an almost two year journey together with Rosa on
that street and watched and loved and served and taught and gave and cried and
laughed and lived. A house was constructed that would bring more children to
the feet of Jesus. More bellies were fed and neighbors loved. Drunks were picked up out of the streets and Pharisees sneered. We invited in the rejected
and those hooligan BMX kids. We built water systems and funded small business
endeavors. I learned to scale fish (earning the nickname “mermaid”) and how to
cut a whole chicken. I encouraged and listened, gave and received.
And so many seeds were planted during those trial-filled
years. And by God’s glory we get to watch some of the flowers already blooming
and even some fruit starting to grow.
Rosa is now the Director of Grace House Amazon which is home
to four children: Cairara, Mariclea, Frankie, and Michele. We have been able to
expand her influence exponentially by empowering her and speaking words of
truth into her life. She continues to pursue what God called her to twenty
years ago and what she was already doing, and God has used us to facilitate that in new ways. The feeding
program is well underway, feeding 10-15 street kids Monday-Friday. Many kids
are being tutored in math and reading in the afternoons.
Rosa’s oldest son, Boboco, whom Richard taught small business skills
and discipled, is investing in the lives of young boys through soccer ministry
every week. Her middle son, Pepeco, whom Richard discipled for a year and a half and is
one of his closest friends, is pastoring the kids at Grace House as well as his
own family as they face trials and struggles on a daily basis.
Our former neighbor on that street, Aurilene, is now the Assistant
Director of Grace House and serves these kids selflessly every week. She has come
so far from the shy, introvert that we first met as she now boldly stands up
for what is good and right in a society of critics. She and her husband took in
her niece and began raising her as their own. Then they took in his nephew. They know that there is joy in sacrifice. They've seen it with their own eyes.
There is something so beautiful when we recognize that this
thing isn’t ours at all. We are a small part of a big Body. We each have a role
to play and it’s an important one. But it’s no more important than any other
part. When we humbly submit to one another in love. When we are quick to hear,
slow to speak, and slow to anger. When we esteem the other as better than ourselves.
When we trust God’s timing. When we accept that God not only created different
cultures, He is glorified in those cultures. When we realize His ways are not
our ways.
When we truly DIE to ourselves.
That’s when we get a little glimpse of what Christ meant
when He prayed, “May Your Kingdom come. May Your will be done on earth as it is
in Heaven.” All of His followers, walking in unity just as He commands, for His
glory and the edification of His Body. And the world watches and wonders at it
all. And we invite them in, too.
And man, is the journey breathtakingly beautiful.
“I assure you: Unless a grain of wheat falls into the ground and dies, it remains by itself. But if it dies, it produces a large crop. The one who loves his life will lose it, and the one who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. If anyone serves Me, he must follow Me. Where I am, there My servant also will be. If anyone serves Me, the Father will honor him.” –John 12.24-26
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