Take a moment, and just be present...in His presence

Author: Sherri (Page 5 of 9)

Bridging the Gap (revisited)

(Two years ago this month, I went on my first mission trip. Our Sisterhood team spent a week in Craigavon, assisting Celebration Church Northern Ireland.  I recorded our adventure as the official blogger for the team and the trip was indeed life-changing.  Recently I’ve been reflecting on my time there, and wanted to share some of our experience here, now that this space has been created).

bridge wide

June 19, 2014

Jesus is often referred to as our bridge to God.  In him, we can see hope.  He brings us the message that we can have a better life.

Today, we saw another bridge.  But its message is the same.

The area we are visiting is rather rural.  The countryside is abounding with luscious rolling  fields set against picturesque hills.  Winding two lane roads take you past the farmland and into the quaint Irish town.  The houses are cobblestone, the patios meticulous, and the people are friendly.

But like any other town, there is a dark side.  There is an area where  some would be reluctant to walk alone after dark.  The housing units are in a state of disrepair,  the crime rate is high and the morale is low.

It seems that the area was intended to be a flourishing community a few decades ago, and the infrastructure was in place for that vision to become reality.  There was the hope of  life, and a bright future was just ahead.

But then, life happened.

Some political issues…some deals fell through…and without much fanfare, the dream died, and along with it, hope for that bright future.  It was written off as a “failed” community.  And so the people thought of themselves that way, too.  It wasn’t  long before the darkness took over.

Fast forward to the present time, and today  it is still a depressed area housing third  generation  drug dealers and crime families.  The adults feel stuck and the kids do not even dare to dream of a future; they feel they have been forgotten .

Their despair is so obvious, you don’t even have to look for it.  But you can read about it.

It is a place known as The Bridge.  There is a walkway between housing units  and at one point, the road for car travel is overhead, creating a bridge.  Because youth tend to like to hang out, and because it is more often than not raining here, kids will gather under the bridge.  They hang out.  They drink.  They smoke.

And one night, one of those kids wrote his feelings on the concrete walls of the bridge.  His anger had bubbled below the surface too long, and it finally came out through a can of spray paint.  He defaced the wall that night.  And soon after, another someone followed, and then another, until the  majority of the surface was covered in hate-spewing graffiti.

But it started with one.  It always starts with one.

And so, the kids hung out night after night, sitting in a smoky haze, and surrounded by words of  worthlessness and condemnation.  Forgotten.

But God has not forgotten them.  When Celebration Church Northern Ireland was looking to do some community outreach,  He sent them here.  They knew that the kids hung out at this bridge, and they saw that it was littered with trash and debris.  So they cleaned it up.  Nothing earth shattering, they just picked up the trash.  Thirty-two bags of it.

It was dirty.  It was messy.  And it was noticed.  They talked to some kids while there and invited them to church.  They talked to more the next week.  And the next.  And eventually, one came.

It always starts with one.

After several months, a few of the kids were coming to youth services.  It was about that time that someone noticed a new message written on the wall.  For the first time however, the message was not hateful,or condemning.  It was uplifting.  Someone had written  encouragement on the wall. Amidst all the ugliness and vile messages, there was one that was positive.

Bridge3

It always starts with one.

Today, there are still kids hanging out under the bridge in a smoky haze.  But now, instead of being surrounded with words of  worthlessness and defeat, there are hundreds and hundreds  of messages telling them that were made for more.  That they are loved with an unconditional love.  That the past does not dictate the future.  That someone cares.  And that they are not forgotten.

A few years back we had a message series entitled “Grace Graffiti” at Celebration.  And that’s exactly what this was.  There was grace and mercy all over the walls of that bridge.  God is talking to those kids, and it is as clear as the writing on the wall; he loves them.

Bridge

There were many tears shed by our team, as we walked under that overpass and saw the faded words of  hurt and pain covered by the graffiti of God’s grace.  It was so very powerful.

You should know that the young man who was  leading us on this tour, was one of the  ones that used to hang out in this very spot.  He showed us the apartment his dad still lives in, and said that his grandfather had lived here too,  and had been involved in the same illegal activities.  He told us that his future was on a straight path to the same lifestyle.  Until someone invited him to church. Just one person.

It always starts with one.

As he looked over in the direction of his dad’s house, he said, “This stops with me.”

This young man’s life has changed because someone reached out.  God wants to  get right in the middle of our mess, and take out the trash.  He wants to clean us up and write a new message on the slate of our heart.

Now when you  look at the walls  of concrete, you see hope.

Jesus is still The Bridge.

Invite someone to your church, to your small group, to your life.

It only takes one. Maybe for someone, you are that one.

 

An Amaze-ing Arrival! (revisited)

(Two years ago this month, I went on my first mission trip. Our Sisterhood team spent a week in Craigavon, assisting Celebration Church Northern Ireland.  I recorded our adventure as the official blogger for the team and the trip was indeed life-changing.  Recently I’ve been reflecting on my time there, and wanted to share some of our experience here, now that this space has been created).

amaze-ing-grace

June 18, 2014

After four countries and 28 hours of travel, we have arrived!  The water is blue, the country is green, and we are tired,  But good tired.  Well, really more like exhausted. But a good exhausted.  We have traveled by plane, by bus, and by van.  We have spent hours sitting and waiting.  Yesterday (at least I think it was yesterday) we spent an 8 hr layover in the airport in Toronto, Canada.  The weather was such that we could not wander into the city, so we found ways to keep calm inside as the storm raged just outside.

We ate, we walked, we talked, and we bonded.  We played cards and read books.  We wrote in our journals and made phone calls home.  We gathered in a circle and did a devotional.  Eight hours stuck in an airport is not ideal; but we learned to be content.  Much of the time we spend on our walk with God is spent waiting, so we must learn to be content in the waiting period, for the waiting time is your prep time-–time that God prepares you for your next step.

There are twelve of us on the trip.  We all know each other, but each of us has a different level of connection with  the various women on the team.  There are some strong, deep bonds among us, as well as several surface friendships.  Our waiting time allowed us the opportunity to get to know each other better.  We bonded as a group, and as individuals.  We are stronger as a team, and we will need that strength as we walk through the next several days of this mission trip.

(We arrived in Dublin about 11:30 and drove 2 hours north, where we dropped our luggage at the team house and immediately boarded the van again, chauffeured by Ps. John who showed us around the beautiful countryside).

Pastor John also delighted us with a trip to the Peace Maze.  It is a massive maze of pathways and shrubbery and at its heart sits a peace bell.   The idea is to walk the maze and find your way to the bell of peace.  A group of 10 entered the maze first,  followed shortly by  Nilda and me, who had stopped to take some pictures.

As anyone who has walked one of these things knows, some paths we took ended in a wall of shrubbery, and others just circled us back to where we had already been.  We could hear other voices, but we could not see them.  After close to half an hour, Nilda and I managed to find the center, and could see where the bell had stood.  As we had circled to the center, the path we were on had risen in elevation, so that when we arrived at our destination, we stood high above the others.

There was a bridge overlooking the site and as we approached it, we could see the maze in its entirety. It was huge!  Much larger than either of us had thought while walking it.  It was simply amazing,  what we could see from this higher perspective.  Not only could we see the whole maze, we could see each and every twist and turn.  We could see which path led to success, and which was a dead end.   And…we could see our sisters, trying to make their way  through.  No longer were they a pack of 10, for at some point they had broken into pieces of the original group.  They were now walking two or three together, and a couple had gone off completely on their own.  They were scattered and lost, walking in circles of frustration and exhaustion.  But Nilda and I, perched at our elevated level, called out to those struggling to find their way.

From where I stood, I was able to see where I had taken a wrong turn, and say, “No, don’t go that way, it leads to a dead end.”  I could see their faces light up as they found a new path that looked so enticing.  But I knew it led to nowhere, for I could see the end.  One by one, our sisters found that bell, that peace, because Nilda and I did what sisters do–we reached out to those who were walking through the same wilderness we once had, and we showed them the way.

We are Sisterhood.

The Why Factor

 

flames

“Why me?”

Tears flowing from unblinking eyes, she looked at me for the answer.  All other eyes in the room also seemed focused in my direction as I looked back at my crying sister, reached for her hand, and with all the love in my heart, simply said, “Why not you?”

Her lament that night was concerning an issue that she had been dealing with for many years.  It was burdensome, it was embarrassing, and it often caused her schedule to be interrupted with little notice.  Much like Paul, she had begged God to take it from her.  And also like Paul, He had not.  That night she spoke to me, but she was really crying out to God, asking Him, “Why do I have to do this?”

But she was asking the wrong question.  The real question is, “Why do I get to do this?”

James tells us in his first few verses to consider it joy when we face trials. And it’s often the go-to scripture when someone else is struggling through something.  But it’s one thing to read it.  It’s one thing to say it.  It’s a whole other thing to do it.  Joy?  Joy when you are laid off from your job?  Joy when your son is living on the streets, slipping further and further into the depths of the drug world? Joy when your marriage is all but over?  Where is the joy in any of this?

You won’t find it if you look to your circumstance, for joy is not found there; it is found in the Lord.  And it is only when we put our full trust in Him that despite the tears and despite the pain, there is hope.  Hope that even when we cannot see it, cannot even fathom how it could possibly be used for good, God will use our circumstance for His glory.

In his Gospel, John tells us of a man who had been born blind.  Just before Jesus healed him, the disciples had asked why this man was suffering from his affliction—had his parents sinned? Had he sinned? Whose fault was it?

Jesus answered, “It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him—John 9:3

This man was blind so that others could see the glory of God?  I’m sure as he had sat begging at the road’s edge and being dismissed and ridiculed, that he did not think his condition was fair.  I’m sure he asked on many occasions, “Why me?”

But then Jesus healed him.  And thousands of years later, we are still talking about that man.  Not because of him, but because of what Jesus did through him.

Most often our trials are not even about us.

How can that be?  How can our suffering help someone else?  Because people are watching.  They see us sporting the Jesus T-shirts and fish bumper stickers and the cross pendants. They see us smiling and raising our hands on the mountain top.  But what do they see when the trial comes?

In the book of Daniel we hear about three men that faced a fiery trial. Literally. Because they refused to bow down to the King and worship his gods, he was furious. He ordered them to be thrown into the fire and asked them, “What god will be able to rescue you now?”  Daniel 3:19-23 describe that in the king’s fury he demanded that the heat be turned up.

 He ordered the furnace heated seven times hotter than usual and commanded some of the strongest soldiers in his army to tie up Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego and throw them into the blazing furnace…The king’s command was so urgent and the furnace so hot that the flames of the fire killed the soldiers who took up [the men], and these three men, firmly tied, fell into the blazing furnace.

We read that passage in less than a minute, but think about what was happening in real time.  These men stood there as they were being tied up.  And not just loosely wrapped, but tied carefully by skillful soldiers.  The soldiers were accustomed to men kicking and flailing before being forced into the fire, so they would have used unbreakable ropes and tied their knots meticulously.

And so the three men stood there, bound by the ropes of their circumstance, and watched as the fire got hotter.  This took time. There was no thermostat on a wall that the king could ordered turned up. No, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego stood, and watched as coal was heaped upon coal, and chunks of wood were thrown in one at a time.

They stood.  Bound.  As the fire intensified.

Did their faith waver?  Would yours?  Did their resolve begin to melt as the beads of sweat ran down their brow?  No, they stood.  And they waited.  As the furnace got hotter, and the flames grew higher.

And when it was time, they moved forward.  The fire was so hot that at the entrance to the furnace, the soldiers escorting them burst into flames.  That’s some intense heat!  There they stood on the threshold of the furnace, no longer guarded, no longer being forced into the flames.  They could have taken this opportunity to run.  Well, maybe not run, but at the very least, bunny-hopped around the side.  Yes, they would have avoided the flames.

But they still would have been bound.

In verse 17, they had stated to the king that “our God is able.”  It does not matter the intensity of the flame, our God IS able.  And knowing this, the three men willingly fell into the fire.

And you know what? In the middle of the smoke and the ash and the flame, people were watching.  When the king looked into the furnace, he was astonished, because although they had put three men in, he could see four walking around. Unbound. And unharmed.

God had not saved them FROM the fire; He saved them IN the fire.

Are you bound by your circumstances and side-stepping the furnace?  Or are you moving forward boldly into the flames, knowing that God will meet you there? If these men had avoided the fire, they would have also missed a personal encounter with God.

And as is often the case, this encounter was not only for them. When they emerged from the fire, verse 27 tells us that there was a crowd gathered, and everyone witnessed that “the fire had not harmed their bodies, nor was a hair of their heads singed; their robes were not scorched, and there was no smell of fire on them.”

Oh yes, people are watching.  When someone peeks inside your furnace, what do they see?  Are you crumpled up in a heap screaming from the heat?  Or do they see you standing amidst the flames, walking with God?  Our faith needs be non-flammable. When we walk through the flames of our trials with complete and utter trust in God, it brings Him glory.

And it has a lasting impact on other people.  The king who before had been mocking God ended up praising Him and ordering others to give Him due respect. All because he was watching when someone else faced a fiery trial.

These three men. The blind man.  People saw them walking through the flames and stumbling in the darkness. And then they saw the miracle of God’s divine intervention, and their lives were changed for eternity. What an honor and a privilege to be a part of God’s miracle.

So maybe my friend was asking the right question after all.  Except instead of standing and angrily shaking a fist while we shout it, we should be on our knees, face down on the floor and whispering.

Why me?

 

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