Wednesday, May 25, 2022

I am the sinful woman...

 

My faith journey involves a lot of patience, mercy, grace and love...not just for others but for myself. I continue to ponder on the idea that faith and the manifestations of it can be offensive especially when living cross culturally but as I reflect and walk through my days, I am finding that this may be a fear man has spoken over humanity, over me. Why? Because when I remember the times I encountered Jesus, the time growing up when His truth and love manifested, I realize that offense was not included in those moments.

 

I have read the story in Luke 7 of the “sinful woman” many times but as I read it this week, I see something very familiar in it. Not the sin…but the risk, the love and the culturally “unacceptable”. I see Jesus, I see myself, I see Jesus serving through the outpouring of a “sinful woman”. And you know what? It can appear offensive.

 

“As she stood behind him at his feet weeping, she began to wet his feet with her tears. Then she wiped them with her hair, kissed them and poured perfume on them.”

 

Then Jesus is basically scolded by his host, a Pharisee…Jesus responds.

 

“Do you see this woman? I came into your house. You did not give me any water for my feet, but she wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair. You did not give me a kiss, but this woman, from the time I entered, has not stopped kissing my feet. You did not put oil on my head, but she has poured perfume on my feet. Therefore, I tell you, her many sins have been forgiven—as her great love has shown. But whoever has been forgiven little loves little.”

 

Wow! This was not her home. This was not her guest. She was not invited. She was not the host.

 

I want to be more like her…

 




 

 

Sunday, April 10, 2022

Does faith offend?

It has been a long time since I have bothered to type out my thoughts and feelings in a blog. Most days I feel my words fall on deaf ears, closed minds, and hardened hearts...then I realize that the small health community I serve in does not reflect the greater community. 

Or does it? 

But then other days I feel that my voice is just another addition to the noise around us adding to the chaos of the world. However, during my reflection this past week, I really believe that my silence comes from the reality that even in my quiet, daily care of the suffering and dying, there was a deep fear that my faith would offend. It was not a strong fear, but I discovered it way deep in the part of my heart that has been hurt, bandaged and hurt again. 

Who would it offend? 

Well...not the Brothers and Sisters of other faiths I care for but actually the Brothers and Sisters of my same "faith". So, I would like to thoughtfully, prayerfully take the risk and sling some stories and ideas out on paper (in this case a computer screen) for us to all process together, maybe learn from, and I pray it is not just more noise in the greater chaos of the world or another brick in the walls we have placed around ourselves in the process of self-protection. So, the stories I want to journey through will look at the core question and allow everyone reading to share as they journey with me.

Does faith offend?



Sunday, June 7, 2020

We would not listen...

Over the years as my faith and relationship with Jesus has grown, I have noticed a change in myself. My worldview has grown, the color of the world has changed, and I would like to say I care and love deeper…I see beyond myself some days more than others. I also think a lot of the change has come because when I lost both my parents to cancer within two years of each other, it took me on a journey I had dreamed of but never imagined how it would really look and how painful it would be to live out in obedience. I have mentioned before some of my journey before we moved to Mozambique and one of the biggest lessons I learned was about forgiveness. I had to reflect on a painful childhood, sexual abuse and forgive the one that sinned against me and that bled out shame upon me. The part I have not mentioned publicly is that the one in prison is not actually the one that abused me…he is the stepfather of the one that abused me. My physical offender was never brought to physical justice in court for what he did to me, and possibly to others. The man in prison did abuse children, especially young boys, but in other cases he manipulated, threatened and preyed upon others to carry out his evil intentions, including his own stepson. Of course, I also had to forgive the young man that chose to place his hands on me and violate me; however, God was also showing me the depths of sin and how it is generational. The abuse done against me was not my fault; however, the circumstances surrounding my life put me in a situation where I was vulnerable to abuse. My parents divorced, there was adultery, lack of extended family support and my single mother had to go into the workforce; therefore, she had to leave me with a babysitter. I have worked through much over the years and am thankful to say I was very close with both of my parents before they died. I cared for them both as they took their last breath, I forgave them for what they could control and what they could not control, I asked for forgiveness for my acting out of grief and sometimes rebellion, I forgave them for being silent when I came forward with my abuse, and I chose to love them deeper still.

Over the years, I have read scripture, prayed and sought the Lord using this lesson of forgiveness as I live out what he has called me to do in the war torn country of Mozambique.

There was a few key words God spoke to me 5 years ago when we moved to Central Moz in Manica…He said, “self preservation”, “blood on their hands”, and “the blood from the land is crying out”.

Over the past 5 years, I have come to discover he was not just speaking to me about others, but about myself. It is a lot to unpack and discuss. Some of it had to do specifically with the generations of sin witnessed and carried out by locals and missionaries in this land of Mozambique. A lot of it was connected to covenants made over the land, civil war, colonialism, and child sacrifice. 

So, what does this mean for today’s situation? What does it have to do with Moz, with America? What does any of this have to do with race protest, riots, anarchy, leftist extremist, rightist extremist, sexual abuse against children during initiation ceremonies, political idolatry, corruption, etc, etc, etc?

What do we do as citizens of the Kingdom of God when the forces of darkness have claimed the land and are tormenting all that walk upon it? Today, I want to leave you with two scriptures. One of them I was rereading with my family as we are studying the life of Joseph…it literally took my breath away for a moment. I have recalled myself saying many different things over my teenage years and into my mid adult years about racism, war, and strongholds in the lands. My views and perspectives influenced by the loudest voices around me, usually men. I have prayed and weeped…I mean, look at me…I am not in denial. I am a white women in the middle of Africa trying to be a voice for the voiceless and I do not even speak the language well. I am not black let alone African. BUT, this is what God has placed in my heart since I was 4 years old. To come to Africa, to be a nurse, to be a voice for the voiceless as I knew what it was like to have no voice and when I spoke to not be listened to. And guess what? That does not end…people of all kinds do not care what I have to say, their minds are made up. So…why in the heck am I even blogging? 

Because, I love. I love Him. I love them. I love my neighbor. I love you. The victory is His, Love wins!

I want to reflect further on these verses but first I just want to give space for them to be, be what they are…the Living Word of God. Alive and active even now. Speaking to our very being, our souls, our spirits, our flesh. 

Listen…He is speaking.

They said to one another, “Surely we are being punished because of our brother. We saw how distressed he was when he pleaded with us for his life, but we would not listen; that’s why this distress has come on us.” 
Reuben replied, “Didn’t I tell you not to sin against the boy? But you wouldn’t listen! Now we must give an accounting for his blood.” They did not realize that Joseph could understand them, since he was using an interpreter.
He turned away from them and began to weep, but then came back and spoke to them again. He had Simeon taken from them and bound before their eyes.

-Genesis 42:21-24

Now Cain said to his brother Abel, “Lets go out to the field.” While they were in the field, Cain attacked his brother Abel and killed him.
Then the Lord said to Cain, “Where is your brother Abel?”
“I don’t know,” he replied. “Am I my brother’s keeper?”
The Lord said, “What have you done? Listen! Your brother’s blood cries out to me from the ground. Now you are under a curse and driven from the ground, which opened its mouth to receive your brother’s blood from your hand. When you work the ground, it will no longer yield it crops for you. You will be a restless wanderer on the earth.”

-Genesis 4:8-12

Artist: Zak Muller


Wednesday, May 27, 2020

The Lord Sees...

Just when you think the week looks a bit brighter amongst the grief and escalating uncertainty, the baton literally comes down on someones life…an African man in the African market not wearing a mask, an African American man in America robbed of his breath by a bent knee.

This morning...my dear friend in Africa is scared to go to the market alone to buy much needed resources for her family. My dear friend in America is afraid to walk the streets alone during the day. Are we really seeing into the depths of this injustice? Is anyone really seeing? Have we cast it all aside for the sake of politics? Will we ever acknowledge the strongholds in our lands from the bloodshed?

"For no one is cast off by the Lord forever. Though He brings grief, He will show compassion, so great is his unfailing love. For He does not willingly bring affliction or grief to anyone. To crush underfoot all prisoners in the land, to deny people their rights before the Most High, to reprove them of justice—would not the Lord see such things?" 
Lamentations 3:31-36

"My eyes will flow unceasingly, without relief, until the Lord looks down from heaven and sees. What I see brings grief to my soul because of all the women of my city.” 
Lamentations 3:49-51

I had to catch my own breath again this morning and was very aware of the breath in my lungs, the tears in my eyes, the fire in my heart...very thankful for life. I paused to meditate on what is true, fight the urge to demand justice from the Father as it is really not fair to demand from Him when humanity is making these choices. 

So…today I know again the Lord sees. My dear friends are not alone. I lean into His heartbeat, listen for His voice. His voice is the voice for the voiceless. What next, Lord?


Artist: Marvin Halleraker





Friday, May 22, 2020

Lies in fragile times...

These days, there are many voices you can choose to listen to, and there are many voices you may not realize you are listening to. I was sharing with a good friend in the States this past week and the question came up…

“What lies are we believing?” 

We may think that question has everything to do with a pandemic virus, government conspiracies, and the idea that you may be losing a freedom you never truly had. I challenge us to meditate on His Word and look deeper. As citizens of Heaven, people of the Kingdom…

What rights do we really have? What benefits are really irrevocable? Where does our security really come from? What does justice really look like? 



Reflect on the words in Psalm 103…

Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise His holy name. Praise the Lord, my soul, and forget not all His benefits- who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s. The Lord works righteousness and justice for all the oppressed. He made known His ways to Moses, His deeds to the people of Israel: The Lord is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love. He will not always accuse, nor will He harbor His anger forever; He does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities. For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is His love for those who fear Him; as far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us. As a father has compassion on His children, so the Lord has compassion on those who fear Him; for He knows how we are formed, He remembers that we are dust. The life of mortals is like grass, they flourish like a flower of the field; the wind blows over it and it is gone, and its place remembers it no more. But from everlasting to everlasting the Lord’s love is with those who fear Him, and His righteousness with their children’s children-with those who keep His covenant and remember to obey His precepts. The Lord has established His throne in heaven, and His kingdom rules over all. Praise the Lord, you His angels, you mighty ones who do his bidding, who obey His word. Praise the Lord, all His heavenly hosts, you His servants who do His will. Praise the Lord, all His works everywhere in His dominion. Praise the Lord, my soul.

Monday, April 8, 2019

I will not burn...

To the nations and peoples of every language...

The words of Nebuchadnezzar in the Book of Daniel as he prepares to share a dream but ironically after the chapter that explains how he became furious and commanded three men of God be thrown into a blazing furnace heated seven times hotter than usual because they would not worship the gods or worship the image of gold he set up. In fact, the three men declared they did not need to defend themselves in this matter...

"If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to deliver us from Your Majesty's hand. But even if he does not, we want you to know, Your Majesty, that we will not serve your God's or worship the image of gold you have set up." The three men were firmly tied and fell into the blazing furnace, after the flames of the fire killed the soldiers. And then...

"Look! I see four men walking around in the fire, unbound and unharmed, and the fourth looks like a son of the gods", says the king. The governors and royal advisers crowded around them as they came out of the fire. What is truly amazing is how the king commanded them out as acknowledged the truth. He commands them for a second time but this time in recognition of the one true God.

"Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego, servants of the Most High God, come out!"


What does this story say to me about God?

My exhaustion many days comes from the enemy's pressure, many times through man's idea to bow down and give in to the things not of the Most High God. I can feel bound and threatened. I see it daily in the political news in many countries. The pressure to bow down to the ways of a political party. The pictures showing those in power gathering around the top official as he dedicates the next great image or policy and then requests loudly that we all must fall down and worship it...and if we do not, we will burn! But God, the Most High God. What does He say the truth is?

What He is saying to me is that I have a choice...is it easy, no. But I have a choice. I can be intimidated by a corrupt system, witchcraft, my fellow American Believers or a desperately lost thief and become bound by fear or...I can choose to turn from the lies, speak light into the darkness, and not bow down to the ways of an unjust system and world. I can choose to trust that the Most High God's ways are higher and instead of demanding justice, bring it all to Him. All justice and righteousness flows from His throne. I can choose to gather around the throne as royalty, the daughter of the King, as He gives declarations...and the pure beauty is He will not demand I fall down and worship Him or His ways. I can choose to...because I love, I abide. I can choose to be thrown into the blazing furnace of the things of this world and walk around in the fire, unbound and unharmed because I love, I abide. I can walk in freedom as He is with me in it all, and I will not burn!

It takes personal choices to change the world, the corrupt systems and not the laws of the kings. It takes the ways of the Most High King. Who will we gather around? Who will we bow to? Who will we dedicate our lives to? For no other god can save in the way we see Him save in the blazing furnace...they trusted in Him and defied the king's command and were willing to give up their lives rather than serve or worship another.

His promise to the nations and people of every language...He will be with us always to the very end of the age. Will you love? Will you abide?


Saturday, July 28, 2018

Forgive them...



In the middle of the night, our neighbors showed up to our door with their 7 month old grandson. He was sick with fever, upset stomach, diarrhea...they did not want to go to the hospital as it was night and it was a Sunday so I gave them medicine for the fever to get through the night and they agreed to go to the hospital in the morning, as I was already scheduled to go there, I would drive them. The next morning the baby's mom showed up with him and we drove together. The doctor assessed the child on our arrival and agreed he needed to be admitted for hydration and intravenous malaria treatment. He received attentive, prompt care...he was sent home after he stabilized and responded well to treatment. He was given oral medicine and follow up instructions were given to his mom and grandmother. The family joked, laughed and felt relief as we drove home from the hospital. Even the child's father joined in on the playful celebration...many times it is difficult to locate young fathers, so this was a blessing.

During times of struggle here, things are not always as they seem so with that comes the need for great discernment, grace and in some cases mercy. We live amongst a culture of deep fear, but I am learning that Western culture is the same it just manifests differently. In our village, when people are sick, fear drives them to exhaust all options available to them while deciding if the illness is spiritual from a curse, an indwelling spirit, tormenting spirit in their home or if it is a true physical illness. It is difficult for many to have the courage and knowledge to access an actual medical doctor to help assess this so many seek other traditional methods or assistance from their elders. But in reflecting, how is the Western world any different? We go to the doctor to discuss our abnormal test results, then the surgeon, get a second opinion and then a third opinion...we go to the Naturopath...we start chemotherapy and change our diet, when it fails we try another type of chemotherapy, we go to church for prayer, to healing rooms for intercession, we use essential oils and apply to energy points on our bodies...and then the day sometimes comes where we have exhausted our resources and death is lingering within our next breath. Are we really any different then our Mozambican neighbors?

The risk you take when journeying with some during illness can be huge...it means opening yourself up to frustration, disappointment, judgement, pride, trust issues, spiritual realms and death. What added to our neighbors situation is the reality of the child's grandfather...a man with his own issues. Years of physical, spiritual struggles and mental instability. He actually met his wife during an appointment at a traditional healer's house where she was also seeking assistance for her physical ailments. A very different scenario then our Western match making sites such as church, the bar and the Internet! He is known to still talk to himself, to those unseen around him as he works in the field...he is a man gripped by many demons mentally and spiritually. We have sat with him and his wife several times discussing day to day life, hearing his stories and watching them struggle to make beneficial decisions.

So...the story, stories that followed the celebration of a young child's recovery drastically took a turn over a weekend. Last we heard from the grandfather was the child was still improving. We attended our prayer day in Malawi Saturday and returned filled and ready to rest for the weekend. Sunday was relaxing, uneventful and quiet. Monday morning we decided to visit another neighbor while the boys started their language lessons...our neighbor was not home but as we returned we walked by the house of the neighbor we had just helped and we noticed another friend visiting so we asked to come in to visit them all and we were received.

We took our seats as we were welcomed onto the mat and responded to each person as they greeted us...there was something heavy in the environment although all were calmly sitting, chatting and even smiling as our mutual friend had to leave. As she left, I asked the grandmother how the 7 month old was. She immediately looked frightened, and I was sensing something was wrong as the child's father was visiting and not at work in town. The grandmother got up, went into her home and brought out the child...she placed his shriveled, limp body into my arms. Ian sat next to me as I unwrapped the blanket from his body...the little child I saw just a few days ago was almost unrecognizable. Mouth dry with sores, chest retracting with very short, shallow breaths and eyes rolling back half open. We could sense instantly what had gone on and with a quick physical assessment it was confirmed. This precious boy had been taken to a traditional healer and medicine was given...and he was now only breaths away from death. He had a new, large string type necklace around his frail neck which is often coated with herbal medicine and chanted/prayed over by the traditional healer. I looked at Ian and he knew by my eyes what was going on...he calmly asked the father, the decision maker in the moment as he was the only male there and the grandfather was out in the field, if he would like the child taken to the hospital. Everything in me wanted this child to live and that is what we began praying, but everything in me knew he would take his last breaths this day. I knew it was important to manifest hope in any small way possible and not just watch him die. His father desperately wanted assistance for his son...we would find out later the next day that he was not around when the grandfather insisted his daughter take herself and the child to the traditional healer during the night.

I made a phone call to my doctor friend as we rushed to our vehicle, I let him know we were bringing in a dying child that he had just discharged days before. After several attempts to start our car, it finally turned over. The child's grandmother carried the child into the emergency area and his parents were right behind us on a motorcycle. I recognize the nurse on duty as he whispered to me that the doctor had notified him to be expecting a dying child...he was kind, patient and after four attempts placed an IV in the child's neck, administered an antibiotic and started a fluid drip. Another nurse came in to assess with him, they both talked for a bit and looked at me dumbfounded as the child was so well a few days before, but they also confirmed from their experience with strong certainty that this was a consequence of medicines and actions given by a traditional healer. During this time, the child's crying father was yelled at and escorted out of the room as the rule is only one person at a time with the patient. I calmy but firmly said to the assistant that he knows how rare it was to see a father here in this situation and his child was dying. The assistant, usually a kind and playful man to this American missionary nurse, looked at me in surprise...the look of, you know rules are rules here no matter what...not even death can get in the way of these rules. I knew it was a privilege that I was given permission to stay in the room with his child and wife as the child's father cried at the curb of the hospital, but it was not my right. Ian had returned to the emergency entrance and quickly came along side this wrecked father. He spoke kindly to him, hugged him...he walked him slowly back into the room where his child was beginning to slowly gasp for breath. Ian directed him to speak into his son's ear as he could still hear him, he knew his father's voice. The father bent over his son and whispered in his ear, his sobbing increased as he left the room.  I stood at the doorway as the father stood outside and cried uncontrollably. Ian noticed the child taking his last breaths. I walked over and placed my hand on the child and my eyes met with the nurse attending the patient across from me...the emergency room is about half the size of a normal hospital room for one person in the States and it is crammed with three gurney type beds, a couple small tables for supplies and a sink. This was a good nurse...despite our different training, different countries of origin...he could read my eyes. He stepped over, assessed the child, did a few chest compressions and confirmed his death. His mother broke into tears and left the room to be replaced by his grandmother. I asked the nurse if there was anyway to have some privacy for a few minutes so he pulled over the portable "curtain" to block the bed from others' view, to give some sense of sacred space. I walked out to take a few deep breaths, to let my own tears out...just then my doctor friend walked in to meet up with us. In passing, I told him the child had just died. Ian and I went and spoke to the shocked parents as they grasped at what had just happened. As Ian comforted the father the best he knew how in the moment, we were asked if we could help by driving the baby's body back home with his grandmother and his parents would walk a bit together and take a motorbike. We agreed...no death certificate at this time, no investigation, no call to the social worker and no report to authorities.

Then the moment that will be etched in me forever...when humanity in all its brokenness united to create some kind of wholeness as a bit of light broke through each of us. I re-entered the room where the doctor looked at me heavy with desperation for answers and empathy, he placed his hand on my shoulder and said he was sorry several times. I assured him he had given the best care last week and there was nothing else he could have done. The nurse had attentively taken out the IV and remained in a quiet, humble posture. He lives this experience day in and day out and has every reason to be quick tempered and sharp with his judgementaI words, but he chose grace on this day. I approached the grandmother and she said in tears she was ready to go. A family member of the patient a few steps across from us joined us as the grandmother was afraid to touch the child's body, so he gently helped me swaddle the child and with kindness shared in the grandmother's grief...a complete stranger but he wanted to make sure this foreigner knew how to swaddle a dead baby to prepare to transport. I humbly let him join me in this simple act although I have swaddled many loved ones in death, even my own parents. He had done this many times as well before...

We drove the lifeless child home with his grandmother. When we arrived back to our village, our neighbor met us at the car along with the uncle of the child. He carried the body back to the house and our neighbor joined the grandmother as the outward grieving process began while she walked her home...loud cries, wailing of broken hearts and deep years of suffering suppressed came out in just minutes. I walked quietly behind them with silent tears. We were met immediately at their home by a group of women called to fetch water to start the burial process...we extended the use of our borehole to them which they gratefully used. I was also met by the grandfather...he softly greeted me and then went back to repairing his bicycle as the child's mom and grandmother cried in their home.

During the night hours, the assigned men dug the grave and by the guidance of a flashlight, the child's body was carried to the cemetery while then men quietly and beautifully sang together. The path through our front yard was used for ease...it was a sacred moment. The women stayed back at the house and grieved, mourned as is their custom.

The next day I had a visit at the cilindu. I looked out to see the child's grandfather waiting to talk with me. I took a few minutes, prayed, listened and walked out to meet him. The next few minutes were filled with different stories, some blame-shifting, a lot of shame, confusion, sadness, frustration...our eyes finally met as he looked up and there was a pause...I heard in my spirit, "Forgive them, for they know not what they do." Wow, I had never really stopped to think that was a "now" word that Jesus spoke over humanity as He took on our sin and shame but it was and is! I looked my broken neighbor in the eyes, "Baba, I am so sorry life is so difficult here in Mozambique, I am sorry your grandson had to suffer and die, I am sorry you think you are alone...we should pray." With obvious physical relief, he agreed. I prayed in the name of Jesus for him, for the family, for the brokenness of all involved, for justice of it all. He then thanked me for all our help and the friendship we have extended to him, to his family before he headed home.

I attended the sadaka forty days later to remember and celebrate the spirit of this child being released...I was honored to sit amongst the community, to be served the best food that had taken hours to prepare, and to talk with those I now call friends. The child's grandmother thanked me and walked me out as the day was ending. Sadly, the grandfather's father had died just a few days before so we helped him get farther North to attend the funeral along with his own mother so she could visit her children as the had been separated by divorce.

So much loss, so much grief, so much humanity but so much grace, so much mercy, so much love...this is what being a good neighbor truly means. Love wins even when we do not see it, feel it, acknowledge it...we will not be forsaken and Love will have the victory!

"Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing."