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Tuesday, May 17, 2011

God is good all the time - and all the time, God is good.


These last two weeks were very eventful on the emotional side. Lots of tears - but many of them were tears of joy! Let me fill you in on four major things that grabbed my heart:

1. Every Thursday afternoon, we have intercessory prayer time with our entire class. This is something completely new to me and I cannot deny that the first couple of times, I went in quite skeptical. For two hours, we all pray for a certain people group or for a certain change we want to see in the world. But would God really "care" if we were praying or not...? On April 29th, we were praying for the passing of Hawaii's FIRST anti-sex trafficking law. So far, sex trafficked persons have apparently not been protected by the law. For a long time, people had been fighting for it and on Friday we heard that on April 29th, at the time in the afternoon that we had been in the prayer room, the law had FINALLY PASSED. I felt a shiver down my spine - of joy as well as of mystification (just learned that word :) ).

2. Please meet my friend Gille Legacy: He was born in Canada, now lives in Hawaii and is a magnificent painter. The downside: he was born with cerebral palsy and has almost no use of his arms or legs. Until the age of 17, Gille never left the house. However, when he was 8 years old, he found his sister's coloring book on the floor and discovered that he could paint - with his nose! God has blessed Gille with a marvelous talent, a beautiful wife, and a contagious laughter. I have hung out with Gille and his wife Sandi over the past couple of weeks several times at the beach - collecting sea shells, taking pictures of this wonderful couple and learning from them what love is all about. When you meet these two and see the way they love and treat each other, you get peek into the DEPTH of true love. Please check out Gille's website and support him online by purchasing his artwork: http://www.manwhopaints.com/.

3. Two weeks ago, I met Jude and Peterson, two worship leaders from Haiti. Together with YWAM, these two compelling men are devoted to rebuilding Haiti on God's love and truth. One night, I had dinner with Jude and some of my friends. Jude, who always seems to be overflowing with joy and peace, shared that he actually grew up as a slave. He was sold into slavery by his parents to his uncle and was forced to do intense manual labor every day. At some point he was able to buy himself out of his misery. Because of his past, Jude developed an immense heart for getting children out of slavery and providing them with a loving family - the family in Christ. His hope and dream is to rebuild Port au Prince on God's love and truth, and therefore turn the city away from the belief in the gods of voodoo - which has added to the distress and turmoil of the country in the past, according to Jude. Please contact Jude at check out the YWAM Haiti website and consider supporting this wonderful opportunity of rebuilding a city on HOPE. You can contact Jude and Peterson at info@ywamportauprince.com.


Betty - she is not the lady I was writing about
but one of my favorite people at Hope Services!
4. Last but not least is my community outreach experience at Hope Services. Every Tuesday, my group goes to the hang out with, minister to, and teach new skills to the (temporarily) homeless of Kona. Most of the people here are in a transition part of their lives and are looking for hope, peace, and courage to take the next steps. Two weeks ago, my group hosted a "Beauty Night." We were offering haircuts (one girl on our team actually has a license!), manicures and face masks. This night was a big hit and I could see the joy in the people's eyes that came from within. At some point a lady sat down in front of where I was offering the manicures but she did not stretch out her hands. "I am not sure you want to touch me." she said. "I have skin cancer all over my arms and hands." Wow. Immediately I replied that I would not mind at all. Skin cancer is not contagious, so why wouldn't I? But when I started very carefully massaging her scarred arms and hands, barely touching her open wounds, I knew that things are easier said than done. I always said that I wanted to provide shelter for orphans, stand up for the poor and embrace the sick - but for the most part, most of these things have only been a concept to me until now. Actually being in the middle of it took courage and strength - and was rewarded a hundred times by the smile of being valued that can only go out from a person who usually receives rejection instead of embracing. This is the power of giving somebody back their DIGNITY through simple actions. At the end of that night I KNEW that this is exactly what I came for and what I want to do in my life: to be an active missionary wherever I go and speak through my actions, not my words. 


And this is what I hope and pray for you this week: May you be like a cup that God pours His LOVE into until it overflows - so first all the "bad stuff" spills out and then, continuously, His love will spill out from your cup to others :)


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