The Eyes I Will Never Forget

 My heart broke as once again I gently held her back so we could close the door to the cement block building that housed the homeless shelter for women and children.  It was the end of the day, and time for my mission team to leave the group of children and head back to our hotel.  As I sat on the cushioned seat on the charter bus, I wondered who would love these kids after our 10 days were over.  I would probably never see her again, but I would never forget her large brown eyes as she pleaded with me each day to take her with me.  She was tiny, even for her five years, and skinny from a probably sporadic diet.  Her brown hair was stringy and thin.  She was the prime example of a child who had not been cared for.  I winced as I remembered the day before when she raised her shirt to show us the telltale red circles on her back.  The cigarette burns were in various stages of healing.  Who would help this tiny child once we were gone?  Was I even helping her now?

We had traveled 16 hours on our bus from Texas to Orlando not to the familiar theme parks that come to one’s mind when thinking about the vacation capital of Florida, but to a poor neighborhood not far away where children lived in poverty and abuse, only minutes from the sound of laughter, watching fireworks and riding amazing rides and dream come true meetings with Disney princesses.  Our team consisted of adults and high school students who were humbled by the up-close look at these terrible conditions.  We were split into groups to work at various sites in the neighborhood.  My group provided play and bible stories to a group of children ages 5 to 12 in a bleak homeless shelter where battered women and their children found refuge.  Our job was just to love on these children and plant seeds of truth about Jesus. 

The little girl had latched onto me, and in truth me to her.  I wanted nothing more than to bring her home with me, but that was not why I was there.  Every day, I played with her and held her.  She never complained, even when she showed us her scarred back.  The only time she got upset and asked for something was when we would leave.  I will never forget those eyes as we closed the door each day.  This was my first mission trip, and I was unprepared for the emotional attachment that could develop so quickly. 

The last day came too quickly.  We played our games, presented the day’s Bible story, and then sat in front of the old TV to watch the video Bible story.  As I sat, legs crossed, on the floor, she plopped down in my lap as she had done each day.  This final story was about Jesus’ resurrection. 

“Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came to the tomb early, while it was still dark, and saw that the stone had been taken away from the tomb, so she ran and went to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one whom Jesus loved, and said to them, ‘They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid him.’ So Peter went out with the other disciple, and they were going toward the tomb.  Both of them were running together, but the other disciple outran Peter and reached the tomb first.  And stooping to look in, he saw the linen cloths lying there, but he did not go in.  Then Simon Peter came, following him, and went into the tomb.  He saw the linen cloths lying there, and the face cloth, which had been on Jesus’ head, not lying with the linen cloths but folded up in a place by itself.  The other disciple, who had reached the tomb first, also went in and he saw and believed for as yet they did not understand the Scripture, that he must rise from the dead. Then the disciples went back to their homes.”   John 20:1-10

As we watched the story of hope, she turned to me and said quietly, “There he is,” pointing her tiny finger into the air.  Everyone else was watching the video, so no one heard her faint voice except for me.  I looked confused and asked her who was there.  She looked at me as if I should know and said, “Jesus.” I said, “Yes, he is all around us.” She took her tiny hands, one on my forehead and one on my chin, and turned my face to just the right angle and said, “No, he’s right there.  Do you see him?”

I wept that night, remembering her insistence that she saw Jesus.  The way she turned my face to a certain point.  I will never know for sure what she saw, but I do believe that the Holy Spirit was working on her tiny, abused heart.  I’m no theologian, but I like to think that maybe in such dire situations, God provides more apparent signs. I don’t know, but in my heart, it will always be a miracle, not just for her sake, but for mine as well.  The whole week, I had been tormented that the fate of these children was out of my control.  I questioned God as to why he would let innocent children experience such pain and circumstances.  He answered me that day — I was not in control, but He was.  

Even all these years later, I think about her and wonder what her life has been like.  I hope I was a blessing to her as much as she was to me.  I pray that the tiny seeds planted by God through a group from Texas grew in her heart and that, at some point, she came to know Christ as her savior. My dream is that I will meet her again one day in heaven as we both worship our Savior face to face!

Our Daily Bread

IMG_0574Do you ever have a day that is just really awesome?  I hope you do!  Yesterday was one of those such days.  Rick, my husband, was off, the weather was perfect with just a slight hint of Fall, and we happened upon a Farmer’s Market.  We had gone to eat at one of our favorite restaurants in Biltmore Park Town Square, one of those up and coming apartment homes/shops and restaurant centers.  I had forgotten that the shopping center had a Farmer’s Market.  It has limited hours and is only open on Wednesdays so I had not been able to catch it at the right time.  The City Market South was small and had a decent crowd so we could visit with some of the vendors about their goods.

There is just something about being around fresh produce, just picked the day before, and fresh bread that just makes me feel alive, maybe I’m just weird that way.  Among the produce offered by the farmers was tomatoes, kale, peppers, zucchini, gorgeous radishes and deep orange carrots.  The rainbow of color was so appealing – colors from the earth – that it made my day seem even more perfect.

There was one vendor, Fletcher Village Bakery, that had home baked cookies and an amazing assortment of bread.  The loafs of fresh bread were gorgeous, again very earthy, various varieties, textures and sizes. These fresh veggies and scrumptious crusty bread made me think about how amazing God’s creation really is.  My thought process went on to think of “our daily bread” – a provision that we often take for granted.  So many times, our prayers are filled with worries about the future, and even more worries of things that may not even happen, plus requests for things that we may not really need.  I’m not saying not to pray about these things.  My point is what if we had the mind set of “our daily bread”, living in the moment and enjoying what we have been given for that day, that moment?  We take this for granted and are seldom reminded that there are other people, other believers, who do not have the option to run to the grocery store or a Farmer’s Market when their supply of bread runs low.  God provides for each of us in separate ways and it’s a mystery why some have more and others have less.

The different loaves of bread, nice and crusty and imperfectly shaped, also made me think about how it is made.  IMG_0571 - CopyMaybe you’re a bread maker, I am not, but this display of the most basic of foods made me reflect on the time and effort that goes into making each loaf.  The loving hands that combine the ingredients, knead the dough, patiently wait for it to rise, shape the dough into loaves, and finally cook the bread for just the right amount of time.  I can almost smell the comforting aroma of the bread as it bakes.

If you think about it this is how God prepares us to receive, and to give, the daily bread.  He lovingly gathers the events, circumstances, gifts, and relationships and combines them in just the right way, kneading us with our experiences, preparing us and shaping us into who He wants us to be and who He wants us to “feed”.

“Give us this day our daily bread,” Matthew 6:11

Yes, yesterday was one of the good days but of course not every day is like that.  We experience good days, bad days, worse days, and even devastating days.  I believe that God knits all these things together to form us into who He has created us to be, preparing us for service for His kingdom.  However, we must have an open and willing heart and listening ears to hear Him guide us to action.

Why do some have plenty and others have none?  Why are there people who are starving and a mother whose only wish is that she could feed her children?  I don’t know.  What if we were meant to play a part in their lives, in their provisions of “daily bread”?  What if God has picked us to supply the needs of others and we have missed that call?  I’m not trying to preach (nor am I qualified) but maybe we need to think about what we are called to do instead of trying to find fault with God.  His call to action for you may be to pray, then pray.  It may be to give, then give. It may mean to go, then go.

“Then he said to his disciples, “The harvest is plentiful, but the laborers are few;” Matthew 9:37

  I know there are many in our country, as well as our global neighbors, who desperately need “daily bread” in one form or another.  Whether it’s in Houston, Florida, Haiti, or all the others affected by storms, let us all listen to what God has created us to be and to do.

Many times, I have the excuse that I don’t hear or I don’t know what God is guiding me to do but usually that is during the times when I am not seeking God with my whole heart in everything I do.  Many times, it’s also when I am not spending time in God’s word every day and then responding to Him in prayer.

I’m not trying to step on any toes here.  I just type and God seems to give me the words.  Maybe the only person who needed to hear these things was myself but maybe I am not alone.