If you read my last post, you know that about a month ago, a door had opened for me to potentially return to the AFM between Thanksgiving and Christmas.
On Monday, I unpacked my bags. The door is closed again and I'm staying put until at least January. With current travel restrictions in place (for very good reasons) it wasn't a huge surprise. Even knowing this, the news brought a mixture of happy and sad feelings.
On Monday, I unpacked my bags. The door is closed again and I'm staying put until at least January. With current travel restrictions in place (for very good reasons) it wasn't a huge surprise. Even knowing this, the news brought a mixture of happy and sad feelings.
After 6 months away, I was pretty excited at the thought of returning to my job, celebrating Christmas on board, drinking tea together on deck 7, and even sleeping in my lil bunk space with my blue comforter!
The ship has become my second home. I haven't been away from it for this long since I joined Mercy Ships, but a little more waiting is okay.
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Mercy Ships' mission statement is "Following the 2000-year-old model of Jesus, bringing hope and healing to the world’s forgotten poor." Hope a definite theme in Mercy Ships circles.
There is a staff member named Stefan who visits the ship periodically, and always gives the most encouraging talks during the community gathering. Stefan says that the enemy of our faith, the devil, loves it when we are in a tough situation and we believe “things will always be this way.” In other words, he loves hopelessness, in all its forms.
To the patients we care for, hopelessness means resigning to the idea that they will always be blind from cataracts, they will always have a cleft lip, their burn scars will always inhibit their movement, or their legs will never hold them up properly.
There is a staff member named Stefan who visits the ship periodically, and always gives the most encouraging talks during the community gathering. Stefan says that the enemy of our faith, the devil, loves it when we are in a tough situation and we believe “things will always be this way.” In other words, he loves hopelessness, in all its forms.
To the patients we care for, hopelessness means resigning to the idea that they will always be blind from cataracts, they will always have a cleft lip, their burn scars will always inhibit their movement, or their legs will never hold them up properly.
Mercy Ships invites patients in who thought their lives would always be one way, and it turns out that their life can actually be changed in ways they never imagined, through surgical care and being shown the love of Christ.
When they learn that their future can be better than their present, that’s what hope is. It's a gift from a loving father.
When they learn that their future can be better than their present, that’s what hope is. It's a gift from a loving father.
To us in the United States, hopelessness in this pandemic might look like entertaining the belief that we'll never again get to hug our friends and family, we'll never be able to plan beyond the next week, we'll never be able to have a "normal" lunch with coworkers where we enjoy meaningless banter, and we'll never again be able to just hang out without the threat of serious illness on our minds.
I feel confident that these thoughts of "forever", in general, are just not true. In Minnesota we know (and we've already seen several times this year) that no matter how much snow falls, it always melts. The end may not be clearly in sight now, but one day it will be.
Having hope doesn’t mean acting like everything is fine right now for it to be true. Hope says, “This has been really hard, and it's STILL hard. But if we hold on, things will get better.” The Bible shows us this path from suffering to hope in one single sentence.
Having hope doesn’t mean acting like everything is fine right now for it to be true. Hope says, “This has been really hard, and it's STILL hard. But if we hold on, things will get better.” The Bible shows us this path from suffering to hope in one single sentence.
Not only so, but we also glory in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope.
Romans 5:3-4
You can tell a tree by it's fruit. Hope is the fruit of those who walk through suffering with their eyes on God. And hope will not let us down, because it comes from God. Despite the challenges this year has brought, I've also seen a lot of reasons to be hopeful. Have you? Make sure to share those things when you talk to others. It’s a gift that just gets bigger the more we share it, and it has the power to change a whole lot.
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Happy Thanksgiving, from our home to yours! |
Thank you so much for following my blog updates! If you missed my recent webinar, the recording is available on YouTube!
I shared about Mercy Ships in general and how it operates, as well as how things went in the last field service, and what's on the horizon.
I also recently updated my fundraising page.
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Neighborhood walks are still a priority. On this particular evening, I loved how the cloud make it look like we actually had mountains in Minnesota! |