Category: Personal Musings


Weighing heavily on my heart

Hi all,

I have a lot to catch you all up on, especially about the Adventure Team trip around the south of Chile, but I’ll get around to that at some point. I have something weighing heavily on my spirit right now that is having me reach out to you to pray when you read this.

Today I took a day away from work to spend it focused on God and me. It was good; I read the Bible, read part of a book about the Bible, listened to and sang worship songs, and drew/painted. What surprised me was that God brought back to me incredibly clearly my time of working with prostitutes and transvestites last year. I’ve had the image in my mind all day of going and visiting a transvestite in the hospital who was sick with AIDS, and holding his hand as we prayed with him and he asked Jesus into his heart. I’ve been remembering all day long the faces of each transvestite I got to know.

Since we’ve moved our OM base I’m not in the part of Santiago much where we used to work with the transvestites. Tonight I happened to be there visiting a friend. I just got home recently, and as the bus made its way through that sector, I saw a number of different prostitutes and transvestites standing on street corners. I teared up as the bus moved on.

Please, God has laid these men (and these women) on my heart again for a reason. Please pray for them. Please pray for freedom from bondage. I had the amazing gift of being present twice when a man made the decision to accept Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior. Please pray for protection for these beloved children of God, both physical and spiritual.

 

With Everything - Hillsong United

Open our eyes, to see the things that make

Your heart cry.

To be the church that You would desire.

Your light to be seen.

Break down our pride and all the walls

we’ve built up inside.

Our earthly crowns and all our desires

We lay at Your feet.


Let hope rise and darkness tremble

In Your holy light, that every eye will see

Jesus our God

Great and mighty to be praised.

God of all days, glorious in all of Your ways.

Oh the majesty, the wonders and grace,

in the light of Your name.

With everything, with everything

We will shout for Your glory.

With everything, with everything

We will shout forth Your praise.


Our hearts they cry, be glorified

Be lifted high above all names.

For You, our King, with everything

We will shout forth Your praise.

 

Isn’t it a beaut? I went to the gym about two weeks ago and, deciding to run back to the house, took about four steps and rolled my ankle on some uneven pavement. That’s what I get for not paying attention and talking with a friend instead of looking where I was placing my feet, especially since it was dusk and getting darker. Smarty, that’s what I am.

I knew it wasn’t broken, just a bad sprain, because I was able to walk the 6 or 7 blocks home on it.  I wrapped it in an Ace bandage, iced it a lot, elevated it and took Ibuprofen, then continued on with my days, figuring it’d get better.

 

For a week I’d say it was healing, but last weekend I did waaaay too much on it, going to a goodbye party (walking too much) then heading to a birthday party where I was on my feet until about 5AM (welcome to Chile, where the party starts at 9PM, so really it starts at 10, you eat dinner at 11:30, play games after midnight, eat cake at 1:30AM and open gifts around 2:30. Did I mention that this was a birthday for a 60-year old and her older siblings and little grandchildren all stayed up for the whole party, too? Like I said, welcome to Chile).

 

When I got home after this weekend, I knew I’d done too much and couldn’t just let it heal on its own. I’m leaving tomorrow for an Adventure Trip to the south of Chile with the Intensive Training team, so I knew I needed to get the ankle checked out. I went to the doctor on Tuesday and now have this lovely walking boot that immobilizes the ankle joint. I’ll stay in it for the entire 2-week trip and when I get home I’ll go see the doctor again and get an x-ray.

 

I have a pretty strong feeling that God is trying to teach me something with this stupid ankle, and I believe it is about asking for and accepting help from others. I am really independent and enjoy helping others, but I’m not great about asking for help. I think I need to learn humility to allow others to help me and accept it graciously. There could not be a more apt time for the lesson. This Adventure Trip is called such because of all of the activities we do. We will work with two churches, doing dramas, giving testimonies, doing outreach. We will also do some touristic things like white-water rafting, climbing a volcano, going to hot springs, mountain biking and horseback riding. A rather active-sounding list, don’t you think? I am actually really okay not participating in the adventure stuff (I did it last year and I’ll do it again in the coming years), but just the idea of having to take it easy and not carrying “my share of the load” or that I might be inconveniencing others in order for them to help me, that’s where it’s difficult for me. I know if the role were reversed with someone else, I would feel really pleased to be able to help a friend, so I’m trying to think that way. When I feel my struggle with this area, that’s why I believe this ankle is a teaching moment from God. I’m going to try to be a good student and I’ll let you know in a few weeks how it goes.

 

God bless!

Chau.

I’ve been in a weird mood recently. I couldn’t put words to it, I couldn’t explain it well to others, but something just felt off around me. I felt like my surroundings, my daily life was unsettled, unbalanced. It felt like the world around me was in chaos and yet nothing was really going on. Life was continuing at the normal daily pace. My interactions with the people in my life also were normal. Nothing was really different and yet I felt so… off-kilter. I couldn’t understand it.

I wondered if I was possibly experiencing spiritual attack, which I have experienced a few times now since I’ve come to Chile. With nothing in my physical world acting as a stimulus to explain my feelings, I wondered if possibly I was being attacked. My only recourse was to go to prayer. I began searching out more opportunities to be alone and spend time in the Word, to speak with God and to be in His presence. In case it was spiritual attack, I wanted  to bathe the situation in prayer.

What I found, and what was so impactful, is that in the world swirling around me, I found balance when I was with Him. Every time I began praying or read the Bible, my world settled around me, picking up again when I stopped. It was incredibly strong the distinction between my time with Him and my time with the world. I know I’m being redundant, but the difference was remarkable.

I had the realization that perhaps what was happening was actually an answer to prayer. I’ve been praying that God would give me more of a desire to spend time in His Word, a hunger to be in His presence. It’s a prayer request, a desire that I’ve wanted to see grow for awhile. What I realized when I noted the difference between the world around me and my time with the Lord, is that I believe that this is how God has drawn me more closely to Him. With my world swirling around me with no understandable cause, my desire to be in His presence grew hugely, because there I found peace, calm, balance. My preference was to turn to Him. This deepening of my hunger came about so strongly and quickly that I believe this has been God answering my prayer.

Praise God for His faithfulness. Praise God that the best gift He can give me, the best answer to any prayer I pray, is to turn me ever more close to Him. Walking with eyes trained on Him gives this world balance. Praise God for deepening my desire to praise God!

You know, as I was writing my last post, I wondered if I was being fair and honest in what I was sharing. I’ve decided that, yes, I was. At the same time, though, alongside of my very positive feelings about what I’m experiencing here and what God is doing in and through my life, I was feeling other emotions of which I didn’t say anything. Now I don’t write everything I feel on here, obviously, but I feel like this is important to recognize as well. As a missionary in a field, I want to represent clearly and respectfully the experience I’m going through, that someone not read this blog and have a misguided notion of missions. I should write more often in order to do that well, but at least I can work towards that now.

I spoke very truthfully as I wrote the night of my birthday. It was a wonderfully blessed day; I am filled with gratitude for the life God is blessing me with here in Chile. I feel extremely positive about where I am right now, physically, mentally, spiritually. At the exact same time, though, as I wrote the last blog post I was dealing with a huge surge of sadness that had stayed with me for two days. I didn’t write about it because it was so separate from the positive feelings I have that I didn’t know how to meld the two in one blog post. The sadness hadn’t overtaken the positive feelings or the joy and yet it was so strong that I felt it like a physical weight sitting on my chest and over my shoulders, making me want to walk through the day with my head down. People in my life noticed it and prayed aloud for me, speaking of the sadness maybe I was feeling of passing another birthday here in Chile, away from my family, but I knew that wasn’t it. I didn’t know the reason for the sadness; I just knew I couldn’t shake it.

I thought perhaps it came from seeing a huge protest/parade pass by on Saturday, where I saw so many people objectifying their own selves as sexual objects for others’ gain that I finally walked away, heartsick for the low value they placed on their own worth, not as things but as people.

–But I had the sadness earlier than that, and it only deepened from that experience.–

I thought perhaps the sadness came from the youth group I went to Saturday night, where the songs we sang touched my heart until I was crying, and where a missionary back from the field spoke of Afghanistan and the Muslim population there. The images and stories broke my heart for the population there and I felt a powerful sadness. It was also an intense time of prayer for me, too, though, that the clinging sadness did not touch.

–So the origin of the sadness didn’t come from Saturday’s events.–

Sunday was a rough day and a wonderful day all melded together, as I struggled with my sadness and also experienced the joy of having a big group of friends together to celebrate birthdays. Church, where I am often refreshed for the week, took from me that day, and I felt more and more heavy. My birthday celebration was wonderful but the entire way there I wished I could not go and as soon as we were done the sadness and heaviness returned. I could have easily cried that night as I sat on the bus heading home, and yet it had nothing to do with another birthday in Chile.

Where was it coming from, and how could it feel so separate from my other feelings?

It wasn’t until our team meeting Tuesday morning that I finally put the words to it. I had been praying for days at that point against the sadness. I knew it wasn’t from me and I knew it wasn’t of God, but it wasn’t until Tuesday morning that I actually declared that I was being spiritually attacked. I was in a small group during our prayer meeting and as we shared prayer requests, when it came to me I looked at the others and said, “I’m just feeling really sad” and immediately began crying. I spent the rest of the team meeting that day crying at different points, praying against the attack and praising God for His faithfulness and the victory found in Him. I made the connection that the previous Friday evening I had had a very powerful time of prayer, praying victory against a spiritual attack on someone else and on OM Chile as a whole. During that time of praying I sat with goosebumps, very aware of the battle happening and that I was in the presence of the Holy Spirit (which is a sentence so far out there for our world that it’s almost hard to write because of how people might respond; I will not apologize, though, for speaking of the presence of the Holy Spirit nor of the battle being waged).

The experience Friday night was incredibly powerful for me and I praised and thanked God as I went to bed for allowing me to be a part of the fight. I then woke up Saturday morning with an incredible sadness, a heaviness and pressure that weighed on my shoulders and chest and would not lift. I was being spiritually attacked.

 

–Spiritual warfare is a very real and present thing. I feel like one of the reasons God brought me here to Chile was to become more aware of its presence. In my world at home, my life and my Christian walk were so comfortable that I lived blindly to the spiritual battle. I then came here and it’s been one of the most apparent aspects of my time here. Being in a place where people routinely come who have just made a huge leap of faith to trust God for the nine-month training program we do here, and to regularly enter into ministry where we are actively sharing about the love of Christ in places where the devil has footholds, children’s homes, the streets, jail, skate parks, and other places, well, Satan does not like that. He fights that. I had experiences during my time with the transvestite/prostitute ministry where, even if there was no one working on a street corner, I would suddenly become aware of an incredible darkness, more so than the evening’s darkness, and the only resource I had to battle what I was experiencing was prayer and the power found in the name of Jesus Christ. Our world has diminished the importance of invoking Jesus’ name to where it almost seems silly, but there is power in the name and the blood of Jesus Christ, and after praying and experiencing a change on that street corner, though nothing had changed physically, I state with confidence that Jesus Christ has victory over evil; that demons must obey His commands and that the devil has no authority. –

That doesn’t mean he doesn’t try, though, and that’s what’s been happening for me. It’s happening for others as well right now in OM Chile, so it’s been a little rough the last week. One of the things I love, though, about believing in my Father is that I can praise Him in the midst of difficulties and hardships. I look at the spiritual attack happening on OM Chile and I praise God for it, because I know that Satan wouldn’t be fighting this hard if there wasn’t something he was trying to prevent or something that’s already happened that he wants to break down. Something wonderful is coming for OM Chile that will further the kingdom of God. Something wonderful has already happened here because we received our new group of the Intensive Training program a month ago as well as moved into a new home base where we are now all together. I praise God for all of this in the middle of the attack Satan is waging against us.

I have a very strong prayer team praying for me and for OM Chile. We here within OM Chile are supporting each other, both in prayer and outside of it, and my family and church are lifting me and OM Chile up in prayer. I would love your prayers as well, as you read this. Our Lord is faithful and loving. Our Father is mighty and victorious. Satan has already lost this battle; he does not win in my life, he will not win in the life of OM Chile, and he does not have to win in yours. Claim victory, claim freedom in the blood of Jesus Christ. Find others to pray for you. Speak with your pastor. Pray. Pray. Keep your eyes focused on God and praise Him, rather than focusing on the problem. You can share with me as well, and I will pray for you, too.

 

I do not have a lot of knowledge about spiritual warfare. I do not have a lot of experience with spiritual warfare. I feel like I am going through a bit of a crash course at the moment, living with it around me. I wanted to share with you, though. Although I do not speak with authority on every aspect of spiritual attack, I tell you what I’ve been experiencing because I do not want to stay quiet. God has called me as a missionary to Chile and this is part of my experience. It is a part of your experience as well. Spiritual warfare exists and it is strong. Our God is stronger. Praise our Almighty Father. Amen.

Feliz Cumpleaños

(that means “Happy Birthday” in Spanish)

 I am 28 today. It is the second birthday I’ve had since arriving in Chile. Last year I celebrated my birthday by spending it with a group of Chileans in a city park for an afternoon, but it was because it was a get-together for the people involved in OM Chile’s homeless ministry. This year I celebrated my birthday by spending it in a park with a group of Chileans, but it was because that was the plan. I had a relaxed shared birthday party with two good friends and the three of us invited what ended up to be around 45-50 people to the park. We bought some bread, ham and cheese, and everyone who came brought something to snack on or something to drink (which is the custom here instead of doing gifts, and I am a fan), and it was a wonderful, relaxed time. We ate, we laughed, we played games with a ball and it was a lovely way to pass a Sunday afternoon. I couldn’t be with my family but I had loved ones all around me. I am blessed.

I feel very positive about life and how I’m living it right now, which is a great feeling to have. In evangelism training today I taught about giving testimonies. I gave mine to the group and I realized that, with having really accepted Jesus Christ into my heart as my personal savior at the age of 14, I have now been walking with Him for half of my life. It was a surreal realization to have in the midst of teaching. Half of my life. Growing up in a Christian home He always seemed to be around, but 14 years ago it really became my own personal faith. Before that I was just borrowing the faith of my parents. As a preacher’s kid I just always figured I was set when it came to the whole “heaven” thing. I mean, my dad and God are tight so obviously I must be okay. It wasn’t until one day when the doorbell rang that I began to think differently.

I answered the door to find two Jehovah’s Witnesses standing there. They greeted me and asked me if I knew if I was going to Heaven? I said, “Of course.”

“How do you know?” they asked me.

“Uhhh,” I said as my mind went blank. “Umm, well, see, my dad is the preacher down at the….” Luckily as I floundered for what to say, they realized that they knew my dad and they graciously moved on down the street. It wasn’t until I shut the door that the thought came to me:

“Oh! Jesus! Jesus Christ came and died on the cross for my sin! Jesus! That’s the answer! How did I forget that answer?!”

It was then that I realized I didn’t have my own walk with God; I was just walking behind the footsteps of my parents’ faith, and that was a big eye-opener. That summer I had the wonderful opportunity to go to a Young Life camp for a week. Young Life, an absolutely amazing ministry that is nation-wide as well as international, has camps situated around the US where (mainly) high-school students go for a week and experience the best week of their lives, and where they hear the full story of what Jesus Christ did for each one of them (Young Life also has ministries focused on middle-schoolers, teen moms, and kids and young adults with disabilities). At that camp setting, although I had heard all of the information before, it finally struck me just what it meant that Jesus had done and gone through everything He did specifically for me. I accepted Christ into my heart and told him I would follow Him.

Fast-forward half a lifetime and I’m now in Chile. Our God is a literal God :D

I didn’t expect to be in Chile. Before January of 2010 I had never even heard of Operation Mobilization, but 8.5 months later I was flying away from the US for 3 years. Our God is a powerful God and a faithful God and He couldn’t have made it clearer that this was His plan for me. I came here to Chile without fear, although things moved so quickly and I was coming for a long stretch of time, because God made it clear without question that this is what He’d spent my life preparing me for.

I am here now, celebrating my second birthday away from my family, away from my home, friends, culture, and yet I am utterly secure that I am where I am supposed to be. The day-to-day of life can sometimes be challenging, the distance away from loved ones is definitely hard, and the question of the future is still up for grabs, but as I wind down the day of my 28th birthday, I am so thankful and blessed that I sit here calm and secure in knowing that my Heavenly Father has a plan for me, a plan  to prosper me and not to harm me, a plan to give me hope and a future (Jeremiah 29:11 paraphrased).

I pray that same assuredness for you.

 He has a plan for you.

God bless you.

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