Thursday, July 25, 2013

A Thief in the Night

We joined a short term expedition into Dwa Dwa, where Brandon teaches bible studies every Tuesday, a couple of weeks ago. The trip was going well and we were making headway with the Senior Headman and his council as well as pounding the pavement (or...dirt) with outreach evangelism. One night, while the team was leading a night service with the village, Brandon, Jake, Derek and I were sitting around the fire back at our campsite discussing the day and preparing for the next. We were only 30 feet from the farthest tent, but in the pitch blackness, we could only see the few feet around our fire.

Derek was the closing speaker in the meeting, so when it was about time, he got up from the fire and started walking toward the service. He switched on his headlamp when he reached the furthest tent just in time to see a man reaching inside of it! "THIEF!" he yelled, and ran after him into the tall grass. We saw his light disappear into the night and stared at each other for a moment. We had been talking about the catfish Derek had caught earlier that day and put under the truck, joking that the dogs were going to come steal them. So, we yelled after him, "Man or Dog?" half kidding. When there was no answer, Jake and Brandon took off. They found Derek in a ravine about 40 yards away and 6 feet down. He was running too fast to see the drop and fell while chasing the thief. He was okay, but had scraped his leg pretty badly. As they headed back to camp, they picked up a few scattered bags the man had dropped as he was making his escape. There was no way to know how many he had gotten away with, so we pulled the expedition leader out of the service. Beau checked the tents and most of everyone's belongings looked in tact, but he couldn't find his backpack with his Nikon camera or all of their expedition money. They searched the path hoping to find more scattered items and bags, meanwhile, Jake pulled Senior Dwa Dwa out of the meeting along with Mariel, the co-leader of the expedition. When Mariel heard what had happened, she closed her eyes for a minute and shared with us that before the meeting, she was the last person at the camp. She noticed that there were bags and shoes laying around and tents unzipped, and she felt prompted to pick everything up - including Beau's bag - and put everything inside the tents and zip them closed. We praised God that He had prompted her to tidy the camp and that she was obedient in the 'small' task of picking up after the team.

Senior Dwa Dwa asked us if we saw the man get away, and when we couldn't verify, he and our guys went looking for the thief. When they came to the ravine, they noticed that it was actually a stream with fairly deep water. (That Derek wasn't seriously injured was a miracle.) There was a large backpack floating on top of the water. Jake reached in to grab it, but it was stuck on something. From the camp I heard Derek ask, "Is that a head? Senior, can you see, is that a man?" Senior Dwa Dwa reached in, pulled the man by his hair and lifted him out of the water. The thief had also fallen into the ravine, and was either playing dead, or hiding hoping to escape later. They brought him back to camp and sat him almost in the coals of the fire, doped up and soaking wet. Senior Dwa Dwa questioned him for a moment finding that the man was sent from town to follow the 'big trucks' in, to steal from the 'Makua' (whites) and sell items in the villages on the way back. Senior was distraught and ashamed that this was happening in his village, and assured us that it was not one of his people. He took the thief with the help of some of his council members, and we heard them questioning him for the next few hours. We could only imagine what fate awaited this man, out in the bush, where the civil laws don't always apply. For we were guests of the Chief, and this act of theft wasn't just a crime against us, but also an insult to the Chief and the headman in charge of this village.

We were quiet for the next while, torn between relief that the thief was caught and that no items were permanently stolen, and the thought of our witness to this village as Christian Missionaries. Wasn't the last person to speak to Jesus a thief? Weren't we all thieves and liars, harlots and addicts, before Christ came and erased our shame? Our flesh cried for Justice but our spirits simply cried. Is this man beyond our compassion? Is this man beyond the Grace of God? NO. He is lost, he is deceived, and he is broken - as we all were - and He is in need of Jesus, perhaps more than anyone else we had met in Dwa Dwa so far.

The leaders went and found where the Senior and his men were holding him. Sure they would walk up on a gruesome scene and find a man beaten half to death, they prepared themselves and prayed for strength. But what they found was quite different. The thief was bound, but was sitting close to a fire for warmth, no bruises or blood, and the Senior and his men were guarding close by. They told Jake that they would banish the thief from their village and deport him to the next, where most assuredly the village of Milundu would do the same until he was deported back to Livingstone. Our leaders sat and shared with the man, witnessed by the headman and his guards, the redemptive hope and righteousness that we find in Christ. He wasn't 'the thief' any longer. He was Alfred, and he is now working through his brokenness to find Christ.

When the team left a few days later, they were greeted by Alfred in Livingstone, he apologized to them, seemed to be sober, and had a smile on his face. I am eternally grateful that we have a Father in Heaven who doesn't call us what He could - for we have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God - but rather calls us by Name, His Beloved, as we are justified freely by His grace through the redemption that is in Christ.

We look forward to seeing Alfred more in the future, and continue to pray that he finds his restoration and peace in Jesus.


Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Why?

Why do people die? Why do bad things happen? Why?


  A little less than a month ago I thought of posting this blog when a young man shot and killed over 20 children, but I fought it off and said no because it was such a touchy subject. I had written it off as a never-mind and then my grandfather got some news. We recently found out that he has a very large mass on his L2 vertebra. We haven't found out yet whether it is benign or malignant, but should know something by next Monday. As my family waits on this news I contemplate these tough questions once again.

I've recently watched a friend from church, who I highly respect, go through a tough situation with her mother. (More info here) She lost her mother to cancer while we were in Africa. The picture you see is of her son reflecting on his grandmother. As I sit and think about the tough questions in life I remember a conversation told to me about this same little boy, John Thomas Fry.
"Mommy", he said, "why do people disobey God?" "I don't know", she responded, "it's like when you disobey me". "Yeah, but I would never disobey God!", he said. His mother told him how disobeying her was in fact disobeying God according to the Bible. With wide, terrified eyes, John Thomas asked, "does that mean I can't go to heaven?". She explained to him about salvation and what it means to be saved. She explained how Jesus died for our sins. Some days later John Thomas was being a little boy and somehow disobeyed his mother. When Candace called this to his attention the terror came over his face again. "Did Jesus leave me? Do I have to be saved again?"

Praise the one and only God of our salvation, No! We do not! Through God, my grandmother brought Jesus into my grandfather's life many years ago. He has trained his children in the way of the Lord and my life is a testament to the way he has lived.  My grandfather gets good news either way next week because as Christians we know that this life is not the end. He either lives which is Christ or he dies, eventually, which is gain. I can rejoice with Him either way. It might be a sad moment and that's okay, but in the grand scheme of things it will be a time of rejoicing.

Why do bad things happen? They happen because in the beginning mankind messed up. From that moment our Father was moving toward our redemption. Why doesn't God stop bad things from happening? A better question is why don't people recognize it when He does?!? Who are we to say that he doesn't? He stopped a lot of things from happening in His holy Word. He healed. He brought the dead to life. He refused the entire extinction of mankind itself. How about He gave us a way to be brought back from eternal death? That doesn't sound like a God who just "lets bad things happen". It sounds like a loving father that cares about us and our problems and our hurting.


To finish I want to just post some truths about our Heavenly Father:

1. Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, my soul, and forget not all his benefits— who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s. (Psalm 103:1-5 NIV)
2. I eagerly expect and hope that I will in no way be ashamed, but will have sufficient courage so that now as always Christ will be exalted in my body, whether by life or by death. For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain. If I am to go on living in the body, this will mean fruitful labor for me. Yet what shall I choose? I do not know! (Philippians 1:20-22 NIV)
3. The Lord is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge. He is my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. I call to the Lord , who is worthy of praise, and I am saved from my enemies. The cords of death entangled me; the torrents of destruction overwhelmed me. The cords of the grave coiled around me; the snares of death confronted me. In my distress I called to the Lord ; I cried to my God for help. From his temple he heard my voice; my cry came before him, into his ears. (Psalms 18:2-6 NIV84)
4. Therefore, my brothers, be all the more eager to make your calling and election sure. For if you do these things, you will never fall, and you will receive a rich welcome into the eternal kingdom of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 1:10, 11 NIV84)

...and the list goes on and on. Thank you, Lord, for your goodness, for your sovereignty, for your hope and for your Son.

Larry and Palma Simmons on their 50th wedding anniversary
 Please join us in praying for our 'Pepa' and the Simmons family. We know God is in control, so we pray for peace, for comfort, and for strength in the days ahead.

-Brandon