Latest Entries »

Loving Every Child

I’m going to copy and paste a story that I wrote for OM International’s news website (which is really a pretty awesome website that you should check out, updated all the time with new stories and photos of things happening around the world with OM – a great resource for information and prayer inspiration – http://news.om.org ). I wrote the story in third person and with a british-style of English, so that’s why the story is going to sound how it does, but I wanted to share this with you all as well because it was a beautiful experience that also broke my heart. Please hug a child today, whether your own or one you care for, and tell them they are beautiful, loved, and have value.

 

Loving Every Child

Chile

 

The young boy did not come over to greet the OMers when they arrived at the children’s home in Santiago, Chile, where he lives. He didn’t participate in the programme the OMers put on. Instead, he stayed in the corner of the yard all afternoon, digging in the dirt.

 

After their programme, one of the OM team members, Whitney Guthrie, went over to see what the young boy was working on so earnestly. She bent down next to him and saw a small pile of worms next to his foot, the results of his toil.

“¿Qué haces?” she asked. What are you doing?

“Venga, Tía,” he responded. Come, Aunt. He led Whitney over to an enclosure in the yard where two chickens scratched in the dirt. He sat down in the dirt and held out a worm towards one of the chickens, smiling as it stretched its neck out to snatch the worm.

Whitney watched as the little boy, one by one, fed his painstakingly-gathered worms to the chickens. At one point, he pulled one of the chickens into his lap to let her eat straight from the pile of worms in his hand. When she had gobbled them, he gently and quietly talked to her.

“Here, let me clean your beak off,” he murmured. “You’ve got mud on it.” He lifted the hem of his t-shirt and wiped at the chicken’s face, the hen remarkably calm throughout his ministrations.

As the boy put the chicken down and left the enclosure, Witney called him over and knelt down in front of him. “You know, I love watching you with animals,” she said. “You really like them, don’t you?”

“Yeah, they’re great,” he replied simply.

“I’ve seen you with the dog of the home, too, and you’re very gentle and loving,” Whitney said to him. “I want you to know that I love seeing that side of you. You have a great heart. I love you a lot. You know that, right?” she asked.

“Yeah, I know, Tia,” he answered. “I love you, too.” He grinned at Whitney, gave her a big hug and ran off.

The boy, Luis*, is 13 years old and has been in different children’s homes since he was a baby, along with his older brothers. He has experienced so much insecurity and rejection in his young life that he now has difficulty connecting with other people, preferring the company of animals over that of the other boys at the home. Please pray for this young boy’s heart, so loving and already so scarred.

*Name changed

"Rex", the ever-patient dog of the hogar

OM Chile’s New Base Project

Members of our communications team have been putting in long hours to prepare a video presentation about the huge project OM Chile has undertaken by buying a new base. Along with creating a cd of information, videos and cost breakdowns, they have created this video with the overall idea of the project and have posted it to YouTube. Please feel free to share this video. The more eyes that see it, the better. God bless!

 

 

 

Are You Really Free?

I posted awhile back on the first project we did with our front gate and gluing a painting to its bars. I was so pleased with the result and it held up remarkably well with only using flour and sugar to make a paste (it also helps that it didn’t rain once for 5 weeks).

I decided it was time to change out the painting for some new messages so we began the whole process again. It’s very time-intensive and detailed to get everything into place correctly after painting, but the final product is completely worth it. We’ve had some great conversations come out of it with people passing by who want to know more, and one of the guys from the training program here told me that the other night, he woke up around 2AM and heard noises outside. He looked out front and there was a group of people standing around our gate, looking at the paintings and then taking photos with them. I pray God touched their hearts with the messages.

We did two paintings this time with a paired message. The first painting asks the question, “Are you really free?” as a man’s hands hold the bars of a jail cell. As a person walks past the gate, if they turn around they will see the second painting, which says “Jesus sets you free”. In that painting the hands of Jesus are bending the cell bars open.

 

beginning stages

 

 

hand upclose

 

writing the message

 

"Are you really free?"

 

"Jesus sets you free"

Humbled at the Hogar

I go to a children’s home (hogar de niños in Spanish) here in Santiago two or three times a week to spend time with the around 40 high-social risk boys who live there. I’ve been going there ever since I arrived, about a year and a half ago, and those boys have my heart. It’s incredibly difficult work and one of the most fulfilling things I do. These are not your Sunday-school kids; these boys have experienced things that no one should experience- abuse, neglect, abandonment, and much more. When I get to see a light turn on in them and an “ah-ha” moment happen, it’s incredible.

About a month ago, Monday was a very difficult day at the hogar. We arrived at the hogar with a program prepared but first we just spent time with the boys. A young boy about 9, we’ll call him Charlie (an obvious gringo-name replacement to care for his privacy), at one point playfully and lightly smacked a girl from our team on her face and ran away with our soccer ball. I walked over to him and said I wanted to talk to him. I knelt down and said, “Charlie, you know you shouldn’t hit the tia, right?”

“Yes, tia,” he replied, smiling at me (“tia” means “aunt” in Spanish and is the term of respect used by the children).

“She’s a girl and it’s not right to hit girls,” I reminded him. “I’d really like to you to go apologize to the tia.”

“Okay, tia,” he said, and ran off to do so. I thought, well that went well, and it’s nice that Charlie’s in such a good mood today. He is a boy whose moods change rapidly and dramatically.

We got underway with the program and it went well, that is, until Charlie had a meltdown. He began to fight with another boy and then ran off in a full-blown rage to begin throwing things. It was the worst behavior we’d seen in awhile at the hogar. We continued our program with the background noise of his anger, and by the time we wound down so did he, so that he returned in time to participate in drawing his ideas of his future, and the future God has in store for him.

He quickly blew off the idea of the drawing, though, and when another little boy showed me his drawing of wanting to be a firefighter, he laughed at him and said, “God doesn’t have a plan for your life.”

“You don’t think so?” I asked him, “because I do. What about your life? Does He have a plan for your life?”

“Nope. He hasn’t cared so far,” Charlie replied. The other little boy ran off to play, but Charlie stayed close, obviously wanting to talk. I asked him why he felt God didn’t care, and this little boy of 9 years old just looked at me with incredibly old eyes, eyes that had seen too much in his short life. I asked him if he believed in God and he said, “Yes, I believe.” He looked at me again for a long moment, then quietly asked me, ” Tia, if God loves me, if He has a plan for me, why did He make my mom a drug-addict?”

 

My heart broke.

 

“I don’t have a good answer for you, Charlie,” I said. “God didn’t make your mom a drug-addict, but there are sad and really hard things in life. God loves your mom. He’s even more sad than you are.” I stopped and prayed for the words to say to this little boy. We ended up speaking for a long time, a surprisingly long time for a 9 year old, and about deep things related to his life and to God, about Charlie’s anger and his hurts. At the end of our conversation I said to him, “You know, Charlie, when you were so angry this afternoon, when you were throwing things and almost hitting people, I was scared. I was scared that you were going to end up hurting someone. It made me sad to see how angry you got and how you acted.”

“I know, Tia”, he said with his head down a little, “I’m sorry.”

“I say this to you, though, Charlie, because I want you to know something. Even though I was worried and sad today, I still love you. Even when you get so angry and can’t control it, when you’re throwing things and breaking things, I still love you. There are times when I don’t like your actions, but I love you.” He gave me a small smile. “Charlie, God loves you so much more than I ever can. My love for you doesn’t change when you’re happy or angry, and neither does His. He loves you so much, Charlie, and He has amazing plans for your life.”

We talked more that day about a lot of things, but at the end of our time there, as I was leaving I reflected back on what just happened and I was so humbled by what I’d experienced, what God allowed me to experience. This little boy, this angry little boy wanted so badly to talk, to be heard and to have someone share with him. I pray for his beautiful heart, hurt, scarred and angry, and also filled with love, creativity and a wonderful sense of humor. I pray that God touched his heart that day and that He will also take away Charlie’s uncontrollable anger. He is a beautiful, much-loved creation of our Heavenly Father.

Original Song – IT ’10

This is a video made about the Intensive Training group of last year and the original song they created, music, lyrics, everything. It was a very cool experience to see the song come to life. It’s nothing professional, but still wonderful. Enjoy.

 

Lyrics:

Verse 1
They say God is a Father
They say God has a heart
Then who’s the dad of these children
With tears in their eyes, deeply hurt

Chorus 1:
You’re Abba, Father, the I Am who I Am
Alpha, Omega, the Lion and the Lamb
King of all nations, the Holy 3-in-1
Divine Creator, Father, Spirit, Son

Verse 2
I was the lonely and broken
Ashamed but priceless to You
Each day You showed how You love me
And because of how, now I know

Chorus 2:
Father’s only Son, came to the Earth, went through the pain
The One who chose to take our place and carry all our pain
The loneliness is gone, the tears are dried, now I can say
The brokenness is healed, my heart is filled, He leads my way

Bridge:
I was the kid, living on the street
Not knowing where to sleep
Not knowing what to eat
I know it’s not easy
That life can be hard
But still God was there for me,
Right from the start.
Dying on the cross for me,
taking all my blame
So all I want to do from now on is bless His name

Chorus 1 / Chorus 2

Verse 3
If only you could trust Him
In spite of all the pain
He longs to be your Healer
Let Him be Yahweh

Chorus 1 / Chorus 2

Chorus 1

OM Chile’s New Home

In August, OM Chile moved from an office space, a house, and two apartments all into a new base. It’s an amazing blessing to be all together, serving alongside each other. We finally have a nice video created about OM Chile’s purchase of the new base, and I wanted to share it with you. Also, if you’d like to read more about what’s going on here in Chile, or in OM around the world, there’s a really really great OM news site where people post stories and photos of God’s impact around the world, and you can read it here. The Chile-specific stories are here.

Here are also the full website addresses if you’d like to see them all written out:

http://news.om.org/

http://news.om.org/country-news/clq

Enjoy!

 

 

 

 

 

I’m excited. The idea I’ve been holding onto for a couple of months now has come to fruition and is awesome. There’s something so satisfying about having an idea, thinking of how best to make it happen, consider what’s needed, what might go wrong, what logistically needs to happen, and then go to it! A few months ago I was looking around online for inspiration for OM Chile’s art ministry, which I was taking over this training year, and I came across the idea to do lenticulars on fences. Lenticu-whats? Basically putting a painting or photograph on the sides of a fence so that when you’re walking past you see the picture at the perfect angle.

A few weeks ago in one of the art classes I asked the Intensive Training group to brainstorm ideas for paintings we could do for the fence. They came up with wonderful ideas. The hope is that we can regularly change the painting so that it becomes a continuing ministry in the neighborhood; that people will come to know our property as the place that always does these paintings; that it would spread God’s message and give us opportunities to speak to people.

We began with a simple idea in order to test out the process and so we made a painting with “Jesus loves you” in many different languages and colors. Since we have at least seven different languages spoken by the people who work in OM Chile, it was easy to fill the painting. The IT did a wonderful job creating the painting. Since this week they’ve gone to live within Chilean families for a cultural immersion, today I and two others actually did the gluing of the strips onto the fence. For future paintings the IT will be even more involved in the entire process, but it was so exciting to see the painting coming clear with each strip we put up. We weren’t even done yet when our next-door neighbor stopped to look at it and compliment the idea, leading into a conversation about who we are, our organization, and what we do. Woohoo! I’ve been pretty pumped all day since we got it up on the fence. I’ll show you some photos as well so you can actually picture what I’ve been chattering on about. Enjoy and God bless!

 

the IT painting

Full painting before cutting it into strips

 

getting started

 

last strips

From straight on, nothing

Start to see it

 

More and more

 

 

Final Image

It’s twins!

I decided to name them Charlie and Sam. They came to an unfortunate (for them, yummy for me) end this morning. At least they lived their whole lives together, though. That has to be some comfort.

Bible readin’

I am not big on the Bible-reading style of “Oh Lord, reveal to me what You want to tell me. I’m going to open up my Bible and wherever it falls open to, I’ll know it’s from You.” Not a fan, personally. However, during a night of praying specifically against spiritual attack, I felt a push to read a psalm. I opened the Bible, it fell open to Psalm 16, and it was perfect. I looked later at the other psalms around it and they were not appropriate to the setting, but Psalm 16 was (is) incredible, so I thought I’d share.

Que Dios te bendiga.

God bless you.

 

Psalm 16

(A special psalm by David.)

The Best Choice

 1Protect me, LORD God!

   I run to you for safety,

    2and I have said,

   ”Only you are my Lord!

   Every good thing I have

   is a gift from you.”

    3Your people are wonderful,

   and they make me happy, [a] 4but worshipers of other gods

   will have much sorrow. [b]I refuse to offer sacrifices

   of blood to those gods

   or worship in their name.

    5You, LORD, are all I want!

   You are my choice,

   and you keep me safe.

    6You make my life pleasant,

   and my future is bright.

    7I praise you, LORD,

   for being my guide.

   Even in the darkest night,

   your teachings fill my mind.

    8I will always look to you,

   as you stand beside me

   and protect me from fear.

    9With all my heart,

   I will celebrate,

   and I can safely rest.

    10I am your chosen one.

   You won’t leave me in the grave

   or let my body decay.

    11You have shown me

   the path to life,

   and you make me glad

   by being near to me.

   Sitting at your right side, [c] I will always be joyful.

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.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.