Wednesday, 24 July 2013

The Lost Get Found

The Summer hustle and bustle is coming to a close! We just parted ways with our last volunteer team until November and Uhuru Academy will be concluding its second successful term of the year August 8th. Not to mention I have officially been in Kenya for 6 WHOLE MONTHS. Wow. I really do not know how that happened or understand how time can fly by so quickly. Literally, June and July were a blur!
To highlight the major events we did have the City Project team from The Summit Church in Durham come visit for two weeks and they certainly left an impression! They plowed some farm land we are going to use to grow more lettuce, did some manual beautification of the school as well as continued the ever prevalent struggle of paving the driveway to the school, held a worship service with the students and a church service, organized/participated in many field days and craft activities with the students, and had the most positive attitudes. J We really enjoyed their energy and enthusiasm and how they really bought into the vision of Uhuru Child and sought to love on not only the people of JIkaze and our students, but also the people living in Tigoni (where we live). In their spare time after a long day of physical labor, some of the students would venture out of the team compound to meet people in Tigoni who they could sit and listen to stories from and even share the word of God with. It was so encouraging just seeing the love of Christ exude from these college students and seeing their hearts for anyone and everyone to know Jesus. No one is exempt from the love of Christ through the gospel and I think I was reminded of that through them being here.  Here are a few pictures from them assisting the students in interpreting God’s Word in Bible Study one Saturday morning!




Also, I attempted my first visa run a week and a half ago and it was one of the most terrifying experiences of my life! Basically, I had only planned on staying in Ethiopia for a few hours and because of that, the visa office at the Ethiopian airport would not let me leave the airport. Apparently, there is a rule that you must be staying in the country for at least 24 hrs before you can exit the airport and get an Ethiopian visa. Long story short, I waited in two lines for an hr each, trying to figure out if someone could help me get a visa and get out of there….to no avail. I kept bouncing between two employees at two different desks, one of which was rude to me every time I tried to ask him a question. Then, the two employees started arguing with each other about the rules in Amharic (Ethiopian national language) while I stood there hoping the woman helping me would be able to get through to this guy. In the end, he remained a jerk. And the icing on the cake was that my plane ended up getting more and more delayed each hour as they gave us an update for 8 hours. I was supposed to arrive in Nairobi that same day at 12:45 pm but did not arrive until 8:45 pm. Needless to say, I will not be flying Ethiopian airlines anymore! It was a headache yes, but just terrifying being stuck in a foreign country, in an airport I had not previously flown to, with a language I did not understand (I wish every African country spoke Swahili), and I was by myself!

Recently, I have been doing a word study in the Bible with the word “lost.” Like, what does it mean when the Bible describes people as lost? How does God address these people and why does he “find” them? What makes them get lost in the first place? And I feel like this experience has given me a very real experience of what its like to be “lost.” I was left to fend for myself even though I didn’t know where I was supposed to go half the time or if I was ever going to find someone nice enough to help me. Then, I realized once I was safe at home in Kenya (yes, my home now), that that is what happens spiritually to us when we stray from God. We are desperately searching for truth or resolution in places that we aren’t even sure they exist. We are so far away from anything safe or comfortable that we don’t think we will ever return to our home, in God’s arms. BUT, we are never far enough that He cannot seek and save us. The parable of the lost sheep, which I am pretty sure everyone is familiar with, says that He will gladly leave the 99 on a mountain, to seek and save the dumb sheep that has left His side (my paraphrasing J ). What a promise! Why we ever go astray from the perfect love and security of God I don’t exactly know, but what I do know is that we are sinful. We want to follow our own way, no matter what the result is and when we finally realize we are lost and have no helper and are at a loss for what to do or where to go, we can ALWAYS ALWAYS ALWAYS call on the Lord for rescue. That’s one of His identities! We have a loving Rescuer who will literally drop everything to come save His flock. What a Father. So, no I am not happy or excited about what happened last Monday, but I am thankful that God used that moment to give me a visual representation of what happens when we leave His side where we are safe. Not to say I left His side in going to Ethiopia because I had to do it, but being lost there and scared and alone made me realize this is what we do to ourselves when we choose to go our own ways and is always the result. Our desires and the worldly things we chase always over-promise and under-deliver.

“For the Lord God is a sun and shield; the Lord bestows favor and honor. No good thing does He withhold from those who walk uprightly.” –Psalm 84:11


P.S.  Tim and Jody’s cat, Toroak, that I helped to deliver her babies is doing very well and the kittens seem healthy and active. They are going to be 4 weeks old soon which also just seems impossible to me! But, here are a few pictures of the cuties!



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