I was glad for the night quickly falling so that no one
could see the tears sliding down my face as I envisioned myself trying to let
go of them on Friday.
I finally slipped into the night and made my way to my favorite coconut tree at the edge of our property. As soon as I collapsed against its familiar slant the sobs racked my body.
I stayed there like that for a long time- leaning up against the coconut tree, taking in the stars and sky, listening to the falling mangos, shivering from the sea wind, crying and talking to God.
“Kisa w’ap fe isit la, Courtney?” My oldest, Richard, pops out of nowhere and makes me jump. “What are you doing here?”
I finally slipped into the night and made my way to my favorite coconut tree at the edge of our property. As soon as I collapsed against its familiar slant the sobs racked my body.
I stayed there like that for a long time- leaning up against the coconut tree, taking in the stars and sky, listening to the falling mangos, shivering from the sea wind, crying and talking to God.
“Kisa w’ap fe isit la, Courtney?” My oldest, Richard, pops out of nowhere and makes me jump. “What are you doing here?”
| Richard |
I told him I was talking to God,
and then we started talking about God. “I always talk to God. I ask Him to help
me to write better in school because it’s hard for me,” He says and makes me
smile. And then we talked about other things. Like the first orphanage he lived
in, and how his parents finally were able to afford to take care of him and
came for him. How he only lived with them three months because his father then
died. How he has been here ever since. He told me he watched a little girl die
in the hospital. He said he watched them put her in a coffin and burn it. He
told me he was afraid.
I hear running footsteps. “Are you finished talking with God?” Richard asks me.
I smile at him through the dark and get up to leave with him. “Pa janm,” I say.
Never.
That was a few nights before I
left to come back to the states. A few nights before everything changed yet
again for me. A few nights before I would say the impossible goodbyes I had
dreaded for weeks. And somehow that day still came despite how much I had
begged for it not to, and I left.
To say I miss my nineteen kids wouldn't be enough. I ache for them. My arms ache not to be empty, and my
tongue longs to have a foreign language roll off so thoughtlessly. I worry
about them. I find myself worrying about what seems as less important, like if
someone holds them or tucks them in when they get sick, or if they are just
getting pushed aside when they cry. I wonder about people getting them to smile
when they are sad, when the sadness reaches farther than the taken toy or scraped
knee.
I could go on and on about missing them and about all that I miss about my life in Haiti, but there aren't enough words.
I think back on the last
month, how it was so rich of God’s goodness and yet such a struggle with
discouragement. I remember so many mornings waking up to Monique’s hands
already raised high into the air, already praising Jesus before she even gets
out of bed. I remember a night sitting under the Haitian sky with Yvenante and
listening to her pray, and as she whispered “amen”, a star streaked across the
sky. I think about worshipping God with the Haitian people a few weeks ago, on
the day the earthquake hit four years earlier, in a church that had been
completely flattened and now stands amidst the rubble. God’s marks are all over,
impossible not to see. They are like fingerprints all over a window, except the
marks make you see more clearly, not
less. But I also remember all of the discouragement. I remember going weeks and
weeks without ever leaving the orphanage. I remember my plans falling through
to take my kids to the beach the night before we would go, after a month of
planning. I can remember so many days where I thought that discouragement would
simply take over, where every hope I had of bringing change would prove void.
But something I hadn’t expected happened. Somehow, all of the discouragement
and disappointment just ended up bringing more passion into my heart, more love
for the oppressed. A greater thirst to see the afflicted empowered.
These are the forgotten. The one the world knows exists but refuses to do anything about. And one part of me feels so sad and desperate that I just long to curl up and weep at the feet of Jesus. But the other part of me is angry, is mad. I want to storm the temple and fling the tables on their sides like the One I serve. I want to rip the veil from the eyes of Christians like Jesus did when He died. Jesus didn’t just show me these things only to transform my heart. I don’t just want to listen to their voices with my ears, I want to listen with my life. I want to take action. I want to cross lines and tear things apart. I want apathy and complacency burned. I want to be a controversy like the One who looked into the eyes of the Pharisees and rebuked them.
There’s a quote that says something like, “If you want to do the work of a prophet, you
need not a scepter but a hoe.” I
love that. I just didn’t realize that it would begin resonating with me so soon
into my young life.
“So, what’s next?”
Somehow those words manage to come up in every conversation, no matter how long
or how little I will be talking with someone. I never know how to answer that
question, because really, I’m just waiting on God. There are so many
opportunities, so many paths that can be taken, but instead of being
overwhelmed by it, I feel like God has already taken off that burden. Just be still. Just be still and wait. Be
still and know who I am, He
seems to whisper. And for once, I feel like I am so eager to listen. One of my
favorite quotes was said by Martin Luther. “I
know not the way God leads me, but well do I know my Guide.” I have learned
these words, and I am tasting their joy right now in my life.
| 99 new pairs of underwear hanging on the line. |
| My girls! |
| First time going to church since they came to the orphanage. |
| And then learning to prepare it |
God is such a champ. and so are you. I love you so much <3
ReplyDeleteOh my word! This...these pictures...you....are so BEAUTIFUL!! Thank you for sharing! God has gifted you in many ways! For His glory! I love seeing it!
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