Saturday, July 28, 2012

Hosanna...


I’m sitting in my room at my laptop beginning a sermon DVD and outside my window there are a bunch of little girls singing praise songs in Creole. What is more beautiful than hearing children sing praise songs I know in English in their own language? Melts my heart.
Excited for my last Sunday at Hosanna tomorrow morning, a church I’ve come to love and call my own here in Haiti (we’ve been unable to attend the last couple Sundays because we’ve had groups here). It’s crazy how you can feel the presence of Holy Spirit as you sing along in another language not really knowing what you’re saying. It’s been a powerful, growing, eye-opening experience to “do church” with our Hosanna family over the past few months. Thankful for the day Matt and I (along with Natalie on her first Sunday here) decided to visit. I’m eager to fellowship with my church family in the States and take this fresh excitement for the church with me : )

So there was nothing deep or exciting about this post but I, very randomly, had to share what I’m hearing outside my window and the other stuff just came along with it out of nowhere…































Saturday, July 14, 2012

Because I Love You...


(7.13.12)
There’s a young, single midwife running a clinic here in Jacmel who is currently taking care of a little baby girl who has aids (we actually have her brother here at HAF). Sarah brought Louise to our 4th of July party (she was 1.5 weeks at the time) and I was able to spend quite a bit of time holding this precious tiny baby. As Natalie, Matt and I stood staring at her I asked, “how do you hurt this?,” to which Matt automatically responded, “you don’t!” I explained that I didn’t actually mean Louise but all the babies who are abused and abandoned everyday, the babies we have here who were dumped down 35 foot outhouse toilets minutes after being delivered. Holding and staring at that precious tiny baby, falling instantly in love, I just couldn’t comprehend…
Two days later we met another little girl, Jillian, who is now at another orphanage here in Jacmel. Jillian is 2 years old and weighs 10 pounds. I have never seen such a sight, in person, in my life. I was happy for Jillian and the care she is now receiving, happy that she will make it, that she will one day walk and play and feel the ocean on her skin. But at the same time my heart broke, not understanding how her parents, the people who are suppose to love and protect her, could allow her to be in such a state.

This was all amplified as we had some discussions with our group that week about our kids, being a parent, etc. We (Matt, Cam and I) are not her to be these kids’ parents but the reality is we are a parental figure in their lives. We help take care of them, we discipline them, hold them when they cry, take them on outings, spend one-on-one time with them, etc. Anyway, I hadn’t really thought about it until we started having the discussion but I suddenly understood the love of a parent (if even just a little bit) like I never had before, being that I’ve never been a parent J
These kids have become “my children.” They test my patience and frustrate me at times, sometimes I just want to walk away and not deal with them, some days I just want to stay in my room and not come out. But then that frustrating child does something and I’m reminded how much I love, not only that child, but all of these kids. It was talking with our group that I understood that thing our parents always said, “no matter what you do I’ll always love you.” No matter what any of these kids do, not matter how much they test my patience, no matter how frustrating they are, no matter how many “episodes” I have to restrain them through, there is nothing that will make me stop loving these kids.
I also now understand the whole “I discipline you because I love you.” I always dis-liked (because hate is a strong word :) ) when my parents told me that after a spanking, but now I understand. I discipline the kids here because want the best for them, because I want them to be honest, respectful children and someday adults.

I read this compilation of scripture passages this morning…

I am my beloved’s, and his desire is for me.
I know whom I have believed, and I am convinced that he is able to guard until that Day what has been entrusted to me. – For I am sure that neither death nor life, nor angels nor rulers, nor things present nor things to come, nor powers, nor height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. – “I Kept them in your name, which you have given me. I have guarded them, and not one of them has been lost.”
For the Lord takes pleasure in his people. – “Delighting in the children of man.” – The great love with which he loved us. – “Greater love has no one than this, that someone lays down his life for his friends.”
You were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body. – If we live, we live to the Lord, and if we die, we die to the Lord. So then, whether we live or whether we die, we are the Lords.
Song 7:10. 2 Tim. 1:12. Rom. 8:38, 39. John 17:12. Ps. 149:4. Prov. 8:31. Eph. 2:4. John 15:13. 1 Cor. 6:20. Rom. 14:8

I’ve always loved Romans 8:38,39 but reading it in light of everything I shared above I had a new understanding of God’s love for me and how nothing I do can stop Him from loving me. I can do nothing that will separate me from His love. I see how becoming a parent gives a whole new understanding of God’s sacrifice and love.

So I feel like this is jumbled and may not make a whole lot of sense but they are the thoughts that have been going through my head and I needed to write them down. There are so many more thoughts but I don’t want to add to this disjointed mess :)

One Month...



(7.11.12)
Well here I am at the “one month left” mark. It’s definitely bittersweet (a lot more bitter than sweet), and while I know I shouldn’t borrow tomorrows worries today I couldn’t help it this afternoon. I was out scrubbing the girl’s galri with the girls so it will be ready for the group to paint next week and as 15 little girls start putting on their swimsuits, playing, singing, laughing, slipping and sliding as we work I can’t help but ask, “how do you say good-bye?”
How do you say good-bye to 68 children whose lives you’ve been involved in for four months, who all have a place in your heart, who all long for stability and love, whose voices you now know before seeing the face they belong to… 

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

If It's Not One Thing It's Another...


(7.7.12)
Yesterday was a hard day and today hasn’t started off any easier.
Everyone (American staff) is off camps for the day so I’ll probably stay in my room with my thoughts most of the day.
I broke out the guitar this morning after seeing the group off and this song connected…

“Will Your grace run out if I let You down
‘Cause all I know is how to run

‘Cause I am a sinner
If it’s not one thing it’s another
Caught up in words tangled in lies
But You are a Savior and You take brokenness aside
And make it beautiful beautiful

Will You call me child when I tell you lies
‘Cause all I know is how to cry”

On top of everything else I’m definitely feeling like I’ve let God down in so many ways. I’m imperfect, selfish, self-centered, lacking in love, compassion and knowledge of Him. “If it’s not one thing it is another.”
I’m broken but I’m trying to believe and have hope that out of all of this God will make something beautiful even though I don't see it right now.
It’s hard not having any contact with the outside world and not feeling like you can talk to the people here who you thought you could talk to… which also makes me feel terrible for having any sort of pity for myself.
My thoughts and emotions are everywhere and I’m not really sure what I think or feel right now.
Does anyone from back home want to come for a visit? J

“My grace if sufficient for you, for power is made perfect in weakness.” 2 Corinthians 12:9a

If You Don't Laugh You'll Cry...

I'm alive! We've been without internet for nearly two weeks so I've posted the dates I actually wrote these next couple posts.




(7.6.12)
And right now I just want to break down and cry.
As I near having only one month left here, as I build relationships with  nannies and other workers, as I bond with the kids more and more each day, even as I think of trivial/selfish things like not having the mountain to look at everyday, not having the ocean as the backdrop of my life I almost have a sort of panic attack.
How do I leave this? How do I live in the States? How do I get out of bed and go about my day without the voices of 68 children as my soundtrack? What do I do if I’m not caring for these children? What did I do before that was of such importance as this?
I trust God and am willing to do whatever He leads me to next but with that is the fear that maybe He won’t call me back to Haiti… Or maybe it will be years…

Add that to daily life here and an “issue” we’re having now with some employees (an “issue” on which some of us aren’t agreeing), and there doesn’t seem to be anything to laugh about right now leaving crying as the only/best option.