Thursday, December 1, 2011

As we search for HOPE this holiday, let us also HELP others find it

I am 22 years old now. I grew up in a very poor Cambodian family. My parents didn’t own land, so we worked as laborers on other people’s farms. My parents were very violent towards my siblings and me. We never felt love for them. We lived in fear and shame. I never went to school because I had to work all day. It was hard to imagine having a good future.
I still don’t believe my mother thought I had value. Money was more valuable to her than me. To them I was just a laborer. When my parents fell into debt, they sold me for $500 to a family.
The family treated me like a slave. The husband attempted to rape me many times, but I refused with all my strength. He hit me every time I refused. One day I decided to run away from the family, but I got caught. They hit me with electric wire. I stayed there, but I did not give up.
Finally, I escaped with a man I fell in love with. We got married. He introduced me to his parents and they rejected me because I was poor and homeless.
One day my husband and I were in a very serious car accident and my leg was broken. We went to the hospital for care and he left me and never came back. I felt rejected and hopeless. I wanted to kill myself because I thought that no one wanted me.
The hospital sent me to Hagar’s Women Shelter. I was so nervous when I arrived. I didn’t know anyone. I cried. My legs felt horrible. And, I did not have the will to live.
Hagar staff were persistent and encouraged me. Their words were so wonderful. Living in the shelter, gave me hope. I received care, love, counseling, food and other things I never expected to have in my life. Job training from Hagar’s Career Pathways Program in cosmetology really helped me recover. I have a skill that belongs to me and I can support myself. I have value and worth. Now I can say,
“I am priceless. I am more valuable than money.”
Even though my leg still hasn’t healed, Hagar staff keep praying for me. I have hope that God will heal me completely one day, and I just keep praying and waiting.
-Malis
"We are entering a season of light.  Trees will sparkle.  Candles will glow.  Stars glisten as a reminder of God's light of the world.  But in Cambodia, Afghanistan, and Vietnam, there are thousands of women and children in darkness.  They are abused, trafficked, and rejected by society. During this season of light, will you help more women and children move out of darkness?  Together, we can bring light to very dark places. In God's eyes, each woman and child is priceless."

This girl is my age.

We need to wake up from the reality of our own self-centered minds and discover the desparate need for hurting lives all over the world. Whether it is the woman in Cambodia struggling to survive, or the hurting neighbor nextdoor, Jesus let us love like you. Let this season of searching for light in our own hearts and homes bring us more love to share that light with others. Move us to give, pray, serve, love the broken.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Cure Cards-FOR SALE

Cure Cards-FOR SALE



       I am still selling packs of blank cards with photos from Zambia-Go Team 2010 and 2011, 5 for $15, 10 for $25, to help raise support for Cure Zambia.
       These funds will go to supporting children in need of surgery. I hope you will join me in supporting Cure and also spread the word about what Cure International is doing all over the world through sharing these cards. Let me know by leaving a comment or e-mail if you want to buy cards. I am also glad to mail them. (lrwilks@vt.edu)

Friday, October 7, 2011

When I think of you


When I think of you...


Every problem I could ever have becomes obsolete

Every doubt I have in God`s provision disappears into the air

Every worry that fills my minds becomes prayers for you and your family

Every anxious desire is met with the realization of how much our God loves us
Everything in this world takes its place before the maker of heaven and earth and I am humbled


Wednesday, August 24, 2011

I am thankful for...



o   Having food in plenty
o   An incredible family who loves me and reveals Jesus to me
o   Clean, running water
o   Hot showers
o   A refrigerator
o   Beautiful friendships
o   A bible based, missional church body
o   Wise women who pour into my life
o   Having a bible and being able to read it publicly
o   A bed
o   Air conditioning
o   A car
o   Challenging conversations
o   Faithful, steadfast, loving God

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Help a meet a huge need in Zambia!

Hey I just received this from JA who is still in Zambia at the CURE Hospital...Pastor Justin served with us last year and this year and is in a tight spot with his family and finances...keep reading if you want to know how you can help!

So if you read my latest blog entry, then you read a story at the bottom about Pastor Justin (from the outreach) and Blessings. Mutinta (his wife), Blessings, and their 5 and a half month old daughter Think Grace have been hopping family and friends homes for around 2 months now because they can't pay for the water bills, or an electric one that would amount to anything. Justin is paying the bare minimum for electric, and the water has been shut off because they have around $350 to pay for overdue bills.

I was able to have dinner with Mutinta when Harold invited me over for dinner on Friday. Several times I just had to look away cause if I looked at her too long I was going to cry. I also got to hold Think Grace and play with her. There is NO reason why they can't be at home with their dad, and it's time that we saw to that.

I have no clue where any of you are financially. So please don't feel like I'm cornering you. If you don't have many to spare, it's fine. But I do know some hard facts for us to swallow: we're rich, even if we're poor by American standards. We could easily skip a few meals. Add that to the fact that Harold said about $50-60/month should give the family good electricity and keep the water running, and my heart can't stop breaking for their situation.

So we for sure need $350, but I would love to set them up for a year. I asked Harold, and this is the best way to go about it.

Again, I know it's short notice, but God's done a lot bigger things in 1 day, so we have one week (and we have Him on our side). Ask your friends, your family, your church. Let's reunite this family.

Love ya.
And hello from Africa.-JA


        Let me know if you want to help!

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

A Taste of Africa

Kumulu
Kumulu mayo
Eko ine nkabila

Kwa lesa
Kwa lesa mayo
Eko ine nkabila

Kugulu
Kugulu bama
Eko ine nkabila


          These are the words to one of the songs we sang multiple times a day in Zambia both last year and this year. The song was written by Pastor Gongalo, the pastor of the local bush church, and put to work by all the locals who love the song! The words mean 'My desire is to be in heaven' in three different languages, three local Zambian languages. These words should be the desire of each one of our hearts. I know I want them to be mine, and I pray through Christ they will be. They definitely make me want to sing and dance!

Sunday, August 14, 2011

The Battle is On


           I have been trying to write this blog for nearly an hour and I am still not satisfied. The first time I tried to write I was angry. Complaining about consumerism, legalism, lacking compassion, our endless lust and coveting, our misunderstanding of love, and so much more. I read over my thoughts and knew my pessimism would help no one, inluding myself. So I started to write again and after reading it, I knew it sounded so fake. All the hurt, pain, and sin was masked by a layer of false perfection and artificial love. Then I stopped and realized the battle that is going on in my life and mind is happening in my writing.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Home and recovering

Micah: an incredible orphaned boy being treated at Cure for club feet

                I wanted to write a quick note to let everyone know I am home safe. Everything with the flights and baggage went smooth as ever before, no problems at all. And I arrived home tuesday evening to STL. My only goal this week is to sleep a lot and rest and try to get over malaria and its side effects before school starts up again on the 22nd. I am also spending time with my family and a few friends here in STL before heading back to Blacksburg. Sharing my pictures and writings are definitely on my to do list as well as sending out a report back letter to all of you to share what God did and what I learned. But for now I am resting and processing all that has happened in the past month and I look forward to being able to share more of that with all of you who so diligently supported and prayed for our ministry with Cure in Zambia. 
              'May you have the eyes of your heart enlightened, that you may know what is the hope to which he has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance in the saints, and what is the immeasurable greatness of his power toward us who believe, according to the working of his great might.' Ephesians 1:18-19 

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Last Update

                  
        Thank you to those who were aware and were praying for me to recover quickly. I came down with Malaria on tuesday but after starting treatment I am feeling so much better already. It is definitely a blessing that I am staying at a hospital and working with an abundance of nurses. I have plenty of people to take care of me.

                  Meanwhile the team was busy organizing the supply closet and repacking all the materials from the outreach week. They also were able to watch a few surgeries and shadows different doctors and nurses throughout the past two days. They had a great time and experienced lots of new things. Yesterday they led the staff devotional with song and sharing about their experiences while being here in Zambia and what God has taught them. We, especially me, are laying low today enjoying the weather and playing with the kids recovering in the ward and then we will have an early to bed night since we will be off to Livingstone tomorrow around 4 am. We will spend tomorrow and Saturday there and then return on Sunday. Then we will head off to America on Monday afternoon! Each day seems to go by slowly, but to think we have been here nearly three weeks, it has gone by much too fast.

               I am grateful to God for all the time here in the word and in prayer with the Lord. I am also grateful for new experiences and lessons learned through the different circumstances that have come up. More than anything I am grateful for the struggles, my own personally, and for those of the team, because they have taught me so much and made me so excited to go home and to apply those lessons to my life and my ministry in Blacksburg. I deeply desire God to change my heart towards the importance of relationships in my life and help me to see them and value them more. I also deeply desire God to make the Gospel more alive in my life and help me to share it more freely and more often, that many can experience the saving knowledge and love of Christ Jesus.

             Leaving is always bittersweet. But I am trusting God to help me through the hardships and bring to light the things of importance and beauty for me to focus on and be changed by. 

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Deeper, deeper, deeper in love


            
This prideful side of me
lifts my fists and shakes at you
This prideful side of me
is being broken down by love

Oh you love me deeper, deeper, father
Oh you love me deeper, deeper, father

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Off to Mpongwe

   For my thoughts are not your thoughts,
   neither are your ways my ways,
                               declares the LORD.
      As the heavens are higher than the earth,
   so are my ways higher than your ways
   and my thoughts than your thoughts.

                                   -Isaiah 55:8-9


            
              Please pray for the team and I this Monday through Sunday as we venture out into the bush, Mpongwe northern Zambia, for 7 days of ministry. Pray for safety in traveling and especially for strength and stamina to not only make it through the long days and little amount of sleep, but that we would be filled with strength to minister and worship with the people of the villages and to share Jesus with our entire lives while we minister to them. Pray God would be our focus and bring unity to our team, to the Zambians we will be joining, and to the locals assisting us in ministry. Pray many will find healing, physically and spiritually. To God be all the glory, the honor, and the praise. He is worthy and he is the reason for it all. We take joy in the fact that he uses us for his work, though he doesn't need us. It is for his fame and his renown. 
       
               

Thursday, July 21, 2011

The team has arrived!

         Short update to let you know that the team has arrived safe and sound in Lusaka today! They only lost one bag, which will come tomorrow, and all the supplies were untouched through customs and nothing broken, praise the Lord for that answer to prayer.

         We did a short orientation and tour of the hospital and played soccer for about an hour before eating and then watching them slowly fade, one by one. They are all exhausted and resting now to be prepared for many long, tiring days ahead. Tomorrow we will join a team of about 20 volunteers to paint the Children's ward. It is very exciting and with bring color and life to the ward in many ways. We are excited to serve alongside the staff here and serve Cure through funding the entire painting project through our fundraising!



       It will be a full day tomorrow and then some days of rest this weekend before we pack Sunday night and head out to Mpongwe on Monday to the bush outreach for 6 days. We are all so excited and anticipating many challenges and times of being stretched and learning to lean on the Lord in new ways-the team is ready and excited for what God has ahead for them!

    The lips of the righteous feed many, 
but fools die for lack of sense.
Proverbs 10:20

    Please pray that through the Spirit our words will be His and will feed the hundreds of spiritually starving people we will meet along our path to Mpongwe and as we serve there in the bush area. Pray for God to prepare the soil of their hearts so His truth will sink deep into their souls. 

Limitless


Miles and miles of outstretched savannah lie before me,
clouds of dust sweep across the horizon

The land is barren and the vegetation aching,
yet I see glimpses of life hidden within

The scent of water brings life to every being, sustaining every mile,
Near every small spring, shallow pond, or winding river abundance of life is found

I see in those waters the current of a God who loves his creation, who cares for every insignificant bird, giving to all their food in due time

A tree, few and prized, brings refuge to its land,
animals take refuge in its shade and seek escape in its branches

I see in those trees the protection of a God who loves his creation,  who
spreads wide his wings over us and leads us under his shadow

Though the land is barren, trees and waters scarce,

I see a God whose power to sustain is limitless

Though life brings drought and seasons of doubt,

I see reason to believe even then my God will sustain

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Mabukabuti (Good morning in Tonga)


Learning how to make porridge in the village
       
         I finally arrived in Lusaka, Zambia on Monday around 3 am after enduring a 3 hour power outage in Nairobi which messed up all the flights of course. Luckily with the delay I made my next connection and made it to Cure around 3:30! I slept a few hours and then had a full morning at the hospital before getting on the bus to Choma. I stayed one night in Choma and then today was spent with World Vision Zambia staff and meeting my sponsor child, Melody. There aren't words at all to describe what it was like. I will definitely post pictures once I am home. I was able to see the medical clinic and school World Vision built for their ADP area in Zambia as well as go to Melody's home and be welcomed into her family with dancing, singing, and tears, and MUCH JOY. It was incredible. We talked and played games and cooked and danced. Her mother, through tears, thanked me with the most sincere thankfulness I have ever heard in my life, for giving the the support they need to raise their 7 children and sustain their small farm. And with tears I thanked them for showing me what it means to be thankful, I told them how Melody had been a picture of that in my life, for so many years. How although I had never met them, they taught me what it meant to be thankful for each and every thing the Lord provides for us. From our most basic needs to the abundant gifts he bestows on us. Melody and her family taught me their exists beauty in this world I couldn't even fathom before beginning to sponsor her.
     The most special moment for me was when I asked her what she wants to do after secondary school and she replied, I want to be a nurse. The whole day I held in tears, but especially in that moment. I was able to share even my heart for healing with this precious sister. She will make an incredible nurse in Zambia some day, maybe even for Cure International.

    I could write forever about my time with her...but I will save more for later. I arrived back in Lusaka late this evening and am eagerly awaiting the Go Team's arrival around 1 pm tomorrow. And then 3 full weeks of long days and tiring ministry sustained by the power and strength of our God will begin! I am so excited.

 Then they said to him, “What must we do, to be doing the works of God?” Jesus answered them, “This is the work of God, that you believe in him whom he has sent.” 
John 6:28-29

Melody's grandmother dancing out of thanksgiving

Jesus calls us only to believe, that is our work, our job, our purpose. It is through our believing and trusting in him that we share our lives with others and through that, the incredible news of the Gospel of Christ Jesus. 


Melody's mother helping us cook, with two of her sisters watching
Melody's dad teaching all about his farm


Sunday, July 17, 2011

Safari Survivors

Welcome to the Serengeti
                     Jack and I returned today from our 3 day Serengeti and Ngorongoro crater safari. It was incredible, and challenging in lots of ways. It goes without saying that the scenery was absolutely breathtaking and the animals, stunning. We saw every african animal except rhino, and most of them only 5-10 ft from the car, even lions! The safari was thrilling but my favorite parts were camping in the Serengeti with rangers walking around with assault riffles, meeting Jack's friends and getting to know them a little better, talking with our guide Hassan and our cook, Jonathan, and definitely taking in all the scenery, through the clouds of dust. We saw beautiful sunrises and sunsets and the crisp horizon of the Savannah meeting the blue skies. I loved spending that time with my crazy-Africa-loving brother and comrades. It was an adventure I will never forget, for more reasons than one.
               Tonight and tomorrow morning will be our last time in Arusha and I will head to Lusaka around 3 pm and Jack will maybe stay one night and then head to Zanzibar and a few other places before he returns to the US for school. Pray for the team coming the long hall from the US tomorrow to Lusaka. They will arrive Wednesday around lunch time. Pray for safe travels for myself, all connections and luggage to be worked out, only so I will be on schedule to meet my precious sponsor child, Melody, and shower her and her family with gifts! I cannot wait to see everyone at the hospital and then to meet Melody and see her village, school, and family! It will be an eventful next few days. The Lord is going before us and he goes with us, that I cling to.

     "I set you as a seal upon my heart, as a seal upon my arm. For love is as strong as death, jealousy demanding as the grave. The flames of the Lord are fierce. Many waters cannot quench this love, nor flood drown it."
     Song of Solomon 8:6-7
Along the Safari
One of our campsites

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Karibu Tanzania

            I am just writing a quick note to let everyone know I am alive and well in Tanzania. It has been a great couple of days visiting with him and exploring Arusha. Today we will do some hiking and then from Friday to Sunday we will be on a safari! It is going to be an exciting and crazy trip, I am loving all the time with my brother, and trying to overcome my jetlag. I rode my first motorcycle and went to my first African bar. Karibu Tanzania, welcome to Tanzania. I may write again before the safari, otherwise from Lusaka!

"And the word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glor,
glory as of the only Son from the Father, full of grace and truth."
John 1:14

Monday, July 11, 2011

One Hour



           In one short hour I will board the plane to London and then be on the way to Tanzania. My heart is excited but my thoughts are definitely anxious and worried. I pray this trip will be one of great confirmation and wisdom in discerning what God has for me with my future. I hope serving these children and the weak and destitute of this world will open my eyes once again to the vital importance of trusting and relying on my God, everyday, because I am weak and destitute. I pray it will move me to greater faith and to seeing the truths of the Word magnified and exalted above all the worries, sins, struggles, and burdens I so often focus on in my life. 


This is really the core issue of it all.  Do we trust him?  
Do we trust Jesus when he tells us to give radically for the sake of the poor? 
 Do we trust him to provide for us when we begin using the resources 
he has given us to provide for others?  Do we trust him to know 
what is best for our lives, our families, and our financial futures?


The will of God is for you and me to give our lives urgently and recklessly to making the gospel and the glory of God known among all peoples, particularly those who have never even heard of Jesus.  The question, therefore, is not “Can we find God’s will?’  
The question is “Will we obey God’s will?”

-Radical by David Platt

       These are the prayers of my heart spoken by David Platt. The questions he asks pierce my heart and definitely bring anxiety to my heart. Do I trust my God in that way? Do I obey my God in all things, the most crucial and central purpose of my life: in making the gospel and glory of God known among all peoples? So often the answer to those question is no. I pray this time serving in Zambia and seeing the work of God in those places will teach me how to answer those questions with a resounding, YES! My God is worthy, my God is everything. There is no reason to not say YES!

Even a tree has more hope!
      If it is cut down, it will sprout again
      and grow new branches.
 Though its roots have grown old in the earth
      and its stump decays,
 at the scent of water it will bud
      and sprout again like a new seedling.
-Job 14:7-9

         May these verses be a picture of the lives in Zambia as hundreds of people find physical healing to death bringing diseases. May these verses be a picture of their hearts as they experience spiritual healing as they meet the God who created them, who brings them the water so they will sprout again, so they will have life again in his name and bear fruit!
       
         'Liebe Gott, We praise you for who you are and for what you've done. We are nothing without you. We are broken and sinful and needy and empty. You have given us life, you have restored our souls and redeemed our lives from the pit! We praise you God for your incredible love and gift of grace poured out over our lives. We are so undeserving. Lord I pray you go before me as I travel and protect me and my luggage carrying supplies to Zambia. I pray you will be the luggage that I carry. I pray your name will be the tag on my life that is visible to all. I pray I will speak for your glory and stand for your fame. Lord I lift up the team to you and pray that you continue to prepare their hearts and their minds as they think and plan for this trip. Lord may all the issues and worries with traveling and baggage fall into place and may they use these little experiences to learn to trust you more. God I pray you bring in the remaining funds needed for some of the team members and once again that you use your providence as a way of teaching them about who you are, Jehovah Jireh, and that you are faithful to be trusted! Gott I thank you that you have chosen and appointed us to go and share your name and glory with your people of Zambia. I pray Father that you will be the voice spoken through our mouths and the love shown through our hands and feet as we serve. Lord may this entire trip, every aspect, exist to glorify you. Take our pain, our shame, our sin, our baggage, Lord use it for your glory. Danke, thank you father, for everything.'
       
Be all my hopes, be all my dreams
You're my delights
Be my everything

And I will worship You, Lord
Only You, Lord
And I will bow down before You
Only You, Lord

And it's just You and me here now
Only You and me here now

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Your name and renown


Yes, LORD, walking in the way of your laws, we wait for you; 
your name and renown are the desire of our hearts.
Isaiah 26:8

       As always the Lord provides. He truly is  Jehovah Jireh. Sometimes he provides just the opportunity for worry to arise, that we can learn to place our full trust in him.
      My insurance is back up and running and with that the malaria meds are beginning to be taken! I spoke with World Vision headquarters today and they have finalized everything for me to visit my sponsor child, Melody, and her school and family on July 19th. What an answer to years of loving this sweet girl. I also cannot believe that although she was only 9 when I started sponsoring her, she will be 17 in September! It will be the last year I can sponsor her. What a blessing to be able to meet her, see her, hug her, and definitely cry with her. 
     Please continue to pray that all the cards and ALL supplies the team is carrying will arrive safely and nothing will be stolen as they pass through customs into South Africa and Zambia. Pray the Lord watches over them and brings everything safely to the hospital!
    I spent yesterday in West Virginia with JA, my co-leader for the team, talking and planning for all that lies ahead. Bailey, another team member from last year, also joined us and it was an exciting time to anticipate and look forward for all that God has in store for us, for the team, and for Zambian. Everything is falling together- all these separated puzzle pieces the Lord has dealt us are finally beginning to look like a finished masterpiece. God always makes beautiful things out of our chaos and worry, he makes beautiful things out of us, out of dust. He takes the broken and bruised and left to die, and he restores, redeems, fills to an overflow with life abundant in his name. Praise him for that...we can never praise him enough, thank him enough, for his gift of life to us.

      Tomorrow will be our last team conference call where we will all touch base and go over some last minute tips and then say our last group prayer before I head out on Monday afternoon for Tanzania. Pray the Lord will go before us and prepare the way for his word to be displayed and spoken through us. Pray he will continue to prepare our hearts, no matter what each one of us is dealing with, that we will let him have it all to be used for his glory. 

Pray for these precious children of the King who will hear about and see his love for the first time in their lives. Pray we will be the hands and feet of Christ to each and every one of them...

His name and renown are the desires of our heart!

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Be my everything


Take my fret, take my fear
All I have, I'm laying here
Be all my hopes, be all my dreams
Be all my delight, be my everything

I will worship you, Lord
Only you Lord
________________________________

         With the help of an incredible woman from our Blacksburg church and the hands of many she gathered together, we have finished all the cards! I cannot thank each of you for your sacrifice of time and sleep to get these cards finished and ready to send off to Zambia. With the completion of suitcases full of cards comes the stress and worry about how to best get them there. I am trying to rest in the peace of the Lord that he will take care of all the baggage and flight issues and get all the supplies, and us, safely to Lusaka. 
         The Lord provided the means and the hands to make this happen, and I have to trust he will provide the way to get them there. 
         Days are passing and I am realizing how many things are left to be planned and worked out with everything! If you are reading this please pray for peace of mind and the ability to rest in the peace of Christ and trust him in all things, really give him every burden. There is still much to be worked out in terms of my health insurance being absent and in the process of getting fixed, with that problem of getting my malaria medication, also with getting from my brother to Lusaka and the travel plans, and lastly I finally received word that I will hopefully get to meet my sponsor child in Zambia, Melody. With that I am also anxious about the planning that remains and the extra funds it will require. Melody is the reason God brought me to Zambia and I know he will provide the way, but I need to trust and walk in that way!
              Pray that in the next 3 days the insurance will come through, the malaria prescription worked out, and the travel plans and their funding will fall together. Lord help me 'worry about nothing but pray about everything, in prayer and petition, may the peace of Christ which transcends all understanding guard my heart and mind in Christ Jesus!' All that more may know your name, all that more may see your fame. 


                                                      And It’s just you and me here now
Only you and me here now
                                                               You should see the view
When it’s only You


Thursday, June 30, 2011

...11 days...

Feed my lambs...tend my sheep...feed my sheep....Follow me.

            It is hard to believe that in 11 short days I will board the plane and will send off to Africa for a month. For 7 days I will be traveling Tanzania with my brother, experiencing his world and learning more about his work for the U.N. and his life there. We will see and experience many incredible things and I cannot wait for all of that, but more than anything to spend time with my brother and really talk to him and learn more about his life and his world. I am praying God will open the eyes of his heart to the Gospel and to the Truth. I am praying Christ will soften my heart and quiet my doubts and fill me with an overflow of his grace for my brother. Lord prepare my heart…

            From the 18th to the 25th we will be serving in the hospital in Lusaka. Getting to know each other as team members and serve Cure however we can: serving the mothers and children recovering in the ward, attending surgeries and patient appointments with the doctors, participating in staff devotionals and worship services, and ministering to the staff and patients individually. From the 25th to the 31st we will be on the outreach in Mpongwe where we will serve the local tribes through our medical clinic, but most importantly through evangelism and delivering the Gospel through the Jesus film and daily ministry to the villages. Please see my “prayer warriors” page for specific prayer requests you can be lifting up while we are serving the whole trip. From the 31st to the 9th we will be serving again in the hospital and by the grace of God shining his love and mercy to all those around us as we serve as we are called and build up the hospital staff and patient at Beit Cure Zambia.

            Writing about the trip…thinking about the trip…praying for the trip and these people…ignites flames of passion in my heart. I cannot wait to see them, smell that place again, worship with them in dance and song and laughter, pray with them, watch the lame become healed and the broken be restored! But it also reminds of how weak and desperate I am for the Gospel. It reminds me that I am crippled and hopeless apart from the saving knowledge and grace of Jesus Christ and the cross. I pray heaven will be poured out over my life as I enter this trip tired, worn out, weary and with many struggles and the baggage of sin and shame…that Jesus will reign, that the light of his love will cover all my darkness and bring freedom to my captive soul. I trust he will heal, he will restore.

May these verses be the fountain of my words and the steps that I walk:

            “…Jesus welcomed them and spoke to them of the kingdom of God and cured those who had need of healing.” Luke 9:11

            “Whoever does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.” Matthew 10:38-39

Cause Jesus only did what He saw You do
And He would only say what He heard You speak
And He would only move when He felt You lead
Following Your heart following Your spirit

So How could I expect to walk without You
When every move that Jesus made was in surrender
I will not begin to live without You
For You alone are worthy and You are always good

Where You go I go
What You say I say God
And what You pray I pray
And what You pray I pray

      Father God go before us and by grace alone, lead us as we follow, for we know your voice. You call each of us by name and you lead us out of darkness and temptation. You have freed our souls, now lead us into freedom. It is for freedom you have set us free! May we walk it out with you. Take up our cross and follow you…step by step, where you go we will go. (John 10:3-4) (Galatians 5:1)

      In the next week I will be working a lot, spending precious time with my co workers and continuously yearning for them to know Christ. As well as spending time with my roommates and last but not least finishing the remaining 900 cure cards we have to make in 10 days! In Christ we can do all things...I am clinging to that truth. It will be a full 11 days, and I cannot wait to see what God will do and teach me as he keeps preparing mz heart and working through sanctification. This is the hard road...but the one that brings lasting joy, peace, and freedom. This is the road that brings glory to God Almighty, and that is all that matters. 


Wir preisen dich Herr. Du bist unser Gott. 


  § I am may or may not send another last fundraising update, but with GREAT JOY I want you all to know that I have exceeded my fundraising goal by $1405. PRAISE GOD that $1405 more than I prayed for will be going to the Cure Zambia Hospital to aid in the surgeries of children anxiously awaiting a cure. Praise God...may he richly bless you for your love and prayers and support.