This post is way overdue. I have been meaning to add to this blog since I found out about the next big step the Lord is taking me on in my journey of learning His heart for the orphan. In just 17 days I will be embarking on my first trip to Asia to work with a team from World Orphans at Living Hope International Orphanage in Fuzhou, China. For those of you like myself who are not familiar with the geography of China, Fuzhou is in the most southeast part of the country right across from Taiwan.
We will host an ESL/sports/music/art camp for the teenagers at the orphanage and little ones from the village who have school off for the Chinese new year (they get like a month off to celebrate!) This year the Chinese new year falls on February 9th which coincidentally is my 22nd birthday... I will be in China, on their new year, on my birthday!! Only God could write something like that into being. But even cooler was the process of joining this team and what a stretching of faith and gracious blessing it has been. The Lord has moved in such awesome ways to bring this about that I feel the need to share the story that it may encourage your hearts also (Colossians 4:7-8) as God challenges you to be available for His work.
I first learned about the trip this summer while I was in Colorado. I was looking at the upcoming trips on the Journey117 Website (branch of World Orphans that does short term trips) which I am in the habit of checking periodically. I was scrolling through like normal when the post about doing a camp in China grabbed my attention in a unique way that the other postings had not. I prayed about it, however I was pretty unsure because the dates of the trip were right in the middle of the spring semester which according to the "plan" is my last semester of my college career.
I put off a decision, and to be honest, I doubted my place on that trip. Was it was the adventurer in me trying to find my next big journey or was it genuinely the Lord pressing it upon my heart to go?
The summer came to an end, and I returned to A&M for fall classes and a new internship at a local magazine here in Bryan/College Station which meant that my mind was in a million places. I had almost forgotten about the China trip at that point when early one Monday morning as I was driving, I all of the sudden remembered the trip and felt led to pray about it again. That's weird. Surely I missed the deadline, but out of nowhere (aka the Holy Spirit) I had a renewed urge to pursue being a part of this team I knew minimal information about.
When I got home, I scrambled for my laptop and searched for the posting to see the deadline to apply. It had already passed but I felt such a strong sense of God pushing me forward anyways that I emailed them and explained how I felt to see if there was any possibility that they still needed to fill space on the trip.
I got a call THAT afternoon. Turns out they still needed one or two more people for the trip, particularly with experience doing camps and with teaching ESL (English as a second language). Thankfully God has given me a ton of camp experience between attending my whole life, coaching baseball camp in Germany and being a counselor at Sky Ranch. I also have some experiences with teaching English to international students at A&M as a conversation partner and Bible study leader for them. The only thing holding me back was the fact that I would miss two solid weeks of class. The Lord told me to trust Him and move forward with the process step by step.
So I did and was encouraged exponentially in my faith. I had not heard from my professors for two weeks after contacting them about the trip. At this point, I was signed up, committed to the team and ready to go with deposit down because the professors I had asked originally were on board but by the time registration rolled around in November, I was unable to get those classes so I had contacted all new professors. This was a scary place to be in. I was fully committed to China, no turning back, and I still did not know if my professors would cooperate with me. The Lord was seriously testing my trust in Him!
Sunday came around and my pastor, Eric Evje, had given me permission to share what God was doing in my life in regards to sending me to China in front of our church family at Living Hope Bryan. I shared about what we would be doing, God's heart for the orphan and prayer requests for favor with professors, financial provision and for our team as we prepared. Before I left the stage Eric asked the women to come forward to lay hands on me as he led the rest of the congregation in praying over my journey. I felt the Lord's peace wash over me and His spirit remind me that He was working out a plan and would make a way.
I was humbled as people approached me after the service offering more prayers and encouragement. I cried as one of the women that I look up to immensely from our church, Judy Moss, held me and prayed for my heart to be prepared and for God to move. Two precious ladies that I had never even met approached me with hugs and money straight from their pockets. I am so moved by these lovers of Jesus that were so willing to join with me on this mission.
Later that afternoon, I received an email from one of the professors I had anxiously been waiting to hear from saying that she would be willing to excuse my absences. The next day I received similar replies from the remaining professors. Talk about direct answer to prayer! So exciting to see God answering the prayers of my friends, family and World Orphans staff to move the necessary obstacles. God's heart for His good news to be spread and for the orphan is so big that He does the humanly impossible to accomplish His work.
This is but one large example among many other smaller but equally as special ways that God has provided for this trip. Thank you from the bottom of my heart to all of you who have given, prayed and encouraged me throughout this time. I am blessed to be surrounded by so many generous and caring hearts. My prayer is that the Lord in turn will bless you for these things, which I know He is faithful to do.
I cannot wait to see all that God has in store. I will do my best to blog again as the days get closer.
Showing posts with label orphans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orphans. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Friday, August 26, 2011
The Hub of the Cycle
When was the last time you were without food or water and had no available resources to get the nourishment you needed? This desperation for basic needs is a foreign mindset for most reading this, but all too familiar for the 2.8 billion people across the globe who are living on less than $2 a day. Six hundred million people within that population are children who live on next to nothing at less than $1 a day. This statistic rings especially true for the orphan. Extreme poverty leads to many of the problems that stand in the way of an orphan breaking out of the cycle they are caught in. Helpless children in a sate of hunger and despair fall into lives of even deeper darkness. Some live in poverty because they are orphans, while others become orphans because of the affects of it. For example, the need for money brings families to the point that they sell their children into slavery in order to have food on the table. Abandoned children are persuaded with false promises of being cared for into lives of soldiering or prostitution. The lack of resources for clean water, healthy nutrition, and good hygiene that results from poverty leads to disabling or fatal diseases that rob the orphan of a productive life. In fact, it is estimated that every two minutes a child dies from AIDS and extreme poverty. This means that more than 9 million children under the age of 5 are dying each year. Two-thirds of these young deaths are considered preventable but are allowed to happen because of poverty. The facts keep revealing the magnitude of the devastating effects that poverty has on the abandoned and orphaned and may leave you wondering what life is really like for one of these children.
UNICEF provides stories that they have collected about the livelihood of children of impoverished backgrounds. Each of them are unique in their experiences but a common struggle of lacking what is needed for survival dictates their everyday lives in ways that we cannot even comprehend. For example, Ali is a 16-year-old boy who relies on a strenuous job of working in fields for extended hours to help feed himself and his siblings. He is only one of 40,000 youth working day in and day out to get by in Jordan. Unable to attend school, the future looks bleak for kids like Ali who cannot find better jobs without a decent education. Another story is of a Venezuelan girl, Yuleini, who was given to her grandmother to raise while her sixteen year old mother searched for work. She never was registered as a baby, so when her grandmother passed away and Yuleini was left again with her mother who lied to the schools that she did not have any documents because she did not have any parents. Now at only 13, Yuleini cares for her four younger siblings and does all the cooking and washing as her mother works from dawn until dusk. Poverty’s hold on this family effected multiple generations as the burdens of each one passed down to the next. The cycle continues.
Why are so many children in such great need? Has the Father turned his back on them in their state of destitution? To the worldly view it would seem so, but when looked at from a Biblical perspective it is clear that it is not the Father that has turned His back but His people. The Lord shows his concern for the poor in Psalm 12:5 (NIV), “The Lord replies, “I have seen violence done to the helpless, and I have heard the groans of the poor. Now I will rise up to rescue them, as they have longed for me to do.” God clearly loves and watches out for the poor.
However, in our selfish nature we have blinded ourselves by ignorance or disobedience, while the Father is crying out for those who follow Him to open their eyes to see the needs of those who cannot help themselves. So devoted is the heart of God to the poor that those who turn away from people in poverty may not truly have His love within them. As 1 John 3:17 (NIV) says, “If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person?” Loving the poor enough to meet their needs is a response to God’s love in the hearts of individuals. He gives wealth so that it will be shared from hearts of gratitude for all He has done. In fact He holds us responsible to give, “From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.” (Luke 12:48b NIV) This does not mean merely handing out the excesses to check a giving quota off the “to-do” list and wipe our hands free of responsibility. Instead, true giving is characterized by the kind of sacrifice depicted by the Good Samaritan who gave his best to care for someone that the world would consider his enemy or by Boaz who choose to provide for Ruth as much as she and Naomi needed- true sacrifices from those whom God has given much to provide for the least of these. Probably one of the most beautiful stories of sacrificial giving is of the widow who gave the only two coins she had to live on for the Lord to use. Jesus was so pleased with her giving that he said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything—all she had to live on.” (Mark 12:43-44 NIV) This is reiterated in Proverbs 19:17 (ESV) as He promises blessing to those caring for the poor, “Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the LORD, and he will repay him for his deed.”
There is hope. Biblical examples are an immense encouragement, but it also is motivating to see progress things being addressed among some of the world’s most prominent leaders. The United Nations reported to MSNBC, “Global poverty can be cut in half by 2015 and eliminated by 2025 if the world’s richest countries including the United States, Japan and Germany more than double aid to the poorest countries.” An end could be accomplished, and thankfully advocates of the poor and the fatherless are not waiting for the government to take action.
Many organizations and individuals have caught on to what is happening, understood what the scriptures say about it, and mobilized to fight poverty and help orphans affected by it. Compassion International and World Vision both have sponsor-a-child programs that provide food, education, and other basic needs to children all over the world. With a touch of a button, one person can change a child’s life forever and ultimately have an impact on them for eternity. Compassion also is breaking the cycle of poverty through a leadership development program to help young people be able to afford the education they need to lead their generation and the one to come in a fight for a better future for themselves and their respective communities. Kiva (www.kiva.org) provides microloans for entrepreneurs in underdeveloped countries that are starting small businesses to provide for themselves and boost their local economy. Though not all of these programs are directly related to the orphan, their causes do help orphans as they improve the environments that these children are surrounded by. These orphans are treasures worth investing our money, time and prayers in. You too, can have a part in the eternal impact that results from His work being done to meet people’s needs.
UNICEF provides stories that they have collected about the livelihood of children of impoverished backgrounds. Each of them are unique in their experiences but a common struggle of lacking what is needed for survival dictates their everyday lives in ways that we cannot even comprehend. For example, Ali is a 16-year-old boy who relies on a strenuous job of working in fields for extended hours to help feed himself and his siblings. He is only one of 40,000 youth working day in and day out to get by in Jordan. Unable to attend school, the future looks bleak for kids like Ali who cannot find better jobs without a decent education. Another story is of a Venezuelan girl, Yuleini, who was given to her grandmother to raise while her sixteen year old mother searched for work. She never was registered as a baby, so when her grandmother passed away and Yuleini was left again with her mother who lied to the schools that she did not have any documents because she did not have any parents. Now at only 13, Yuleini cares for her four younger siblings and does all the cooking and washing as her mother works from dawn until dusk. Poverty’s hold on this family effected multiple generations as the burdens of each one passed down to the next. The cycle continues.
Why are so many children in such great need? Has the Father turned his back on them in their state of destitution? To the worldly view it would seem so, but when looked at from a Biblical perspective it is clear that it is not the Father that has turned His back but His people. The Lord shows his concern for the poor in Psalm 12:5 (NIV), “The Lord replies, “I have seen violence done to the helpless, and I have heard the groans of the poor. Now I will rise up to rescue them, as they have longed for me to do.” God clearly loves and watches out for the poor.
However, in our selfish nature we have blinded ourselves by ignorance or disobedience, while the Father is crying out for those who follow Him to open their eyes to see the needs of those who cannot help themselves. So devoted is the heart of God to the poor that those who turn away from people in poverty may not truly have His love within them. As 1 John 3:17 (NIV) says, “If anyone has material possessions and sees a brother or sister in need but has no pity on them, how can the love of God be in that person?” Loving the poor enough to meet their needs is a response to God’s love in the hearts of individuals. He gives wealth so that it will be shared from hearts of gratitude for all He has done. In fact He holds us responsible to give, “From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.” (Luke 12:48b NIV) This does not mean merely handing out the excesses to check a giving quota off the “to-do” list and wipe our hands free of responsibility. Instead, true giving is characterized by the kind of sacrifice depicted by the Good Samaritan who gave his best to care for someone that the world would consider his enemy or by Boaz who choose to provide for Ruth as much as she and Naomi needed- true sacrifices from those whom God has given much to provide for the least of these. Probably one of the most beautiful stories of sacrificial giving is of the widow who gave the only two coins she had to live on for the Lord to use. Jesus was so pleased with her giving that he said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything—all she had to live on.” (Mark 12:43-44 NIV) This is reiterated in Proverbs 19:17 (ESV) as He promises blessing to those caring for the poor, “Whoever is generous to the poor lends to the LORD, and he will repay him for his deed.”
There is hope. Biblical examples are an immense encouragement, but it also is motivating to see progress things being addressed among some of the world’s most prominent leaders. The United Nations reported to MSNBC, “Global poverty can be cut in half by 2015 and eliminated by 2025 if the world’s richest countries including the United States, Japan and Germany more than double aid to the poorest countries.” An end could be accomplished, and thankfully advocates of the poor and the fatherless are not waiting for the government to take action.
Many organizations and individuals have caught on to what is happening, understood what the scriptures say about it, and mobilized to fight poverty and help orphans affected by it. Compassion International and World Vision both have sponsor-a-child programs that provide food, education, and other basic needs to children all over the world. With a touch of a button, one person can change a child’s life forever and ultimately have an impact on them for eternity. Compassion also is breaking the cycle of poverty through a leadership development program to help young people be able to afford the education they need to lead their generation and the one to come in a fight for a better future for themselves and their respective communities. Kiva (www.kiva.org) provides microloans for entrepreneurs in underdeveloped countries that are starting small businesses to provide for themselves and boost their local economy. Though not all of these programs are directly related to the orphan, their causes do help orphans as they improve the environments that these children are surrounded by. These orphans are treasures worth investing our money, time and prayers in. You too, can have a part in the eternal impact that results from His work being done to meet people’s needs.
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