20 August 2007

Sara Groves says it best -

I love Sara Groves! Here is a shout out to her in case you are not familiar. So many of her songs challenge and encourage my walk with the Lord. Check her out on I-tunes if you are unfamiliar. She has a song that hit me like a ton of bricks one night in Kenya. It is called, "All I Need," and it is on her album, The Other Side of Something. Here are the lyrics:

Newly married, new apartment
All our furniture was saved from the dump.
Yes, sir. Maybe we can afford a trash can next month.
All I need is a seat for 2 and my love for you.

New baby, new life
We will teach him to speak French.
We've got no money, so we'll make it all ourselves.
I'll make the curtains, and you make the shelves.
All I need is a power saw and a new sewing machine.
Love....and a sewing machine.

I need - this house needs a little something.
That bare mantle doesn't look so good.
Someone told me of a man who makes animals from drift wood.
All I need is your monthly bonus for a wooden walrus.

I need - the Smith's are coming over, this house needs some renovation.
Just a wall or two, just a little room, and a few decorations.
All I need is a sectional and a satellite TV, darkwood cabinets that were custom built for me.
A painting by that guy who paints with his feet. That's all I need.

The song concludes with a random list of things that people say that they "need."

We use that term so flippantly. Even tonight at dinner, I told my roommate that I needed another crescent roll. Really? Is that a genuine need of mine? Just to piggyback on my soapbox of entitlement.....have you stopped to taken inventory of what you truly need in life? Do you have genuine areas of need in your life where God has chosen not to provide? We don't have the freedom to interchange God providing our needs versus our wants. We often try to justify our "needs" to ourselves and others. It makes us feel better, I think.

There were a few times in Kenya where I felt hunger pains. Not because there wasn't plenty of food, but more mental hunger pains. You know, I "needed" some ice cream. Heck, drop the cream, I would have taken just ICE! One night as I began to journal, this Sara Groves song came on. What we truly need is really so minimal. Especially in America. It is hard for us to even think about what our genuine NEEDS are. A roof over our heads? Even that looks different to me now. Would a metal roof on top of a mud house meet my needs? It certainly works for some people. It's as if we start this life with the attitude of "all we need is love" just like the song. However before long we are in need of wooden walruses and paintings by a paralyzed man.

I was laughing with a team mate of mine as we were in a market in Nairobi on the last day of our journey. Several of us were frantically perusing the market for last minute souvenirs. I colllect trinkets from many of my mission's journeys. I found these perfect bookends carved into the shape of an elephant. I had let her listen to the Sara Groves song the night before. I laughed as I told her that all I needed were some wooden elephant book ends for my house. I only paid a few dollars for them, and they look really good on my bookshelf. There I go, justifying my needs..... :)

19 August 2007

Ayub





This cutie was just one of the children who stole my heart in Kenya. His name is Ayub (Job). I am going to sponsor his nutrition, education, and uniforms for only $20 per month. If you are interested in how you can help a child in this way, please let me know.

Entitlement

en·ti·tle – verb (used with object), -tled, -tling.
1. to give (a person or thing) a title, right, or claim to something; furnish with grounds for laying claim: His executive position entitled him to certain courtesies rarely accorded others.

Americans are plagued with the attitude of entitlement. We believe that there are certain things that we simply deserve. In fact, the culture in which we live even encourages this mentality. The more educated we are, the more money we should make. The more money we make, the more stuff we should have. If we stand in line, then we deserve to be waited on in that order. When our car breaks down, then it is often time for us to get a new one. We deserve at least one vacation every year. When we do a good deed, then we deserve some recognition for it. So many of our ill feelings stem from this attitude of entitlement.

I have been traveling overseas with Americans for 8 and 1/2 years. One common way I challenge my team members is getting them to look at their current attitudes, priorities, and perspectives. American culture had tainted all three of these for those of us who are striving to grow in a relationship with Christ. The truth is, we don't deserve anything more than what God has already done for us. The truth is, most of the time, we elevate ourselves and our preferences higher than God intends for us to. The truth is, very rarely should we be the first thing that we think of.

The attitude of entitlement is not from God. Christ died for our sins, and if God never chose to bless us in ANY other way, then has He not already done way more than we deserve? We are not entitled to anything else. How different would our day to day life be if we were truly content with what God has already done for us. If we could truly serve him without reservation - trusting that He was going to take care of the details. What would we worry about if we didn't think we deserved anything from anybody?

It's at least worth taking into consideration.

16 August 2007

Kenya Thoughts 2

We are so spoiled in America! It has become second nature to us so much so, that most of us don't even realize the conveniences that we take for granted on a daily basis. We wake up to a musical alarm, get out of our nice beds with as many blankets and pillows as we want. We turn on as many lights as we want. We usually have all of the hot water that we want. We go to the fridge and get what we want to eat. We get ready, put on nice clothes, get in our cars, and drive to a job that most of the time we have chosen. We are so used to having things the way we want them, when we want them. Any delay in that process frustrates us. If for no other reason, I think every American should experience "third world living" at least once in their life. We could definitely learn a thing or two.

Eighty percent of the world lives in substandard housing, seventy percent of the world is illiterate, and sixty percent of the world suffer from malnutrition. It is hard for Americans to keep these statistics in the front of their minds. Our team in Kenya came face to face with these realities on a daily basis.

The village where we stayed, Malava, has only had electricity for one year. None of the people that we worked with in the orphanage or the school had electricity in their homes. Our team did have electricity. Some of us had running water (only cold) in our homes, but some of us had to draw water out of a well each day. We had two propane tank burners for cooking and heating water for baths. We slept under mosquito nets each night. The toilets in our houses had to be flushed out manually by pouring pitchers of water in the toilet. We had it made compared to our new friends. Rose lives in a three room mud hut. She cooks and heats water over an open fire each day. She has no electricity, and her toilet is an outhouse 200 feet away from her house. If I had been Rose, I probably would have let the team stay in my house while I stayed in the house with electricity and running water. This idea probably never crossed Rose's mind.

The women in the village are supposed to be the primary workers in their home. The husbands are expected to earn an income and work outside the home. The ladies spend their day working diligently to survive that day. There really is not much you can do in preparation for the future. There is no refrigeration, so any cooking you do is for that day. Once you build a fire, it is only good for that day. Once you heat the water, it is only hot for that day. Once the sun goes down, there is very little work that can be done. These ladies work HARD each day, sleep well on mats in the floor, and get up again to work to survive the next day.

How different is this from our everyday mentality. We go to the grocery with intentions of the trip at least taking care of one week. Very little of the work we do is for survival. We either work to save up money for our future or we work to pay off debts from our past. We make thousands of dollars a month and it never seems like enough. These people make $30 a month and it seems like more than enough.

There is a joy and contentment that I found in Kenya that is unlike any that I have ever seen. In Nehemiah 8, he says, "The joy of the Lord is your strength." My new Kenyan friends know this verse in a way that I probably never will. We met widows who had an inexplainable joy. We met people who knew the Bible backwards and forwards. Their relationship with God is priority because they really don't have much else to make priority over that. They have very few distractions, and God makes Himself very evident to them.

Maybe these are some of the reasons that I want to go back.

15 August 2007

Kenya Thoughts 1


“Religion that God our Father accepts as pure and faultless is this: to look after orphans and widows in their distress and to keep oneself from being polluted by the world.” James 1:27

This is one of the many Bible verses that has new meaning to me because of my time in Kenya. I have been on MANY mission projects since I began working at International Sports Federation. I don’t think any place has captured my heart like the Tumaini Miles of Smiles Center.

Rose Bugusu has vision and passion that exceeds most any other person that I have ever met. She sensed God’s calling her to live out James 1:27 by taking care of orphans and widows in Western Kenya. God is DEFINITELY using her in mighty ways. Rose lives in a rustic village in the Kakamega District, called Kakoi. The average monthly income is $30 USD. Currently she has around 20 orphans that she helps take care of, seven of which actually stay in her three room, mud house with her. Many of these children are students at Tumaini School (the Swahili word for HOPE). There are 12 widows who earn their keep by cooking, cleaning, and taking care of the children. There are 135 children in the school ages 4-12. Rose truly is a beacon of hope for these orphans, widows, and students. God is using her and this ministry in AMAZING ways. I want to share with others what God is doing in Kakoi.


In 2002, a friend asked Rose if she had ever heard of the internet, and she had not. The village has only had electricity for one year, and most of the houses still have no access to electricity or running water. This friend opened her eyes to the world wide web, and God began to instill a curiosity in Rose. She began to wonder, “How can I use this tool to let people know about what God is doing in Kakoi?” She began to surf the web, looking for Christian chat rooms and ministry websites. Thankfully, God allowed her to cross paths with SportsPlus. Rose and I began corresponding in the fall of 2006 about the possibility of partnering together on a short-term mission project.

In July, I had the opportunity to travel to Kakoi with 9 other volunteers. This adventure, along with other thoughts in my head have inspired this new blog site. Take these thoughts, opinions, frustrations, etc. for what they are worth. Feel free to contact me or comment on these ponderings. Enjoy!

 

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