Sunday, August 14

Home Is Where Your People Are

Hey, people.  I'm looking for the words to say how much I appreciate you, how much I really do carry you all in my heart.  I don't realize just how much I miss you until I'm with you again and I suddenly love you so much it hurts!  Thanks for all the love, and the quality time, and encouragement, and for listening, and for sharing your lives with me for a week.  I am blessed to have many "homes" and this… you… will always, always be one of them! 

Thanks for laughing and moving on when my guategringa spanglish got in the way of normal, socially acceptable English.  Thanks for filling me in on the little things that I miss when I'm away for 13 months at a time.  Thanks for making an extra phone call and setting aside an extra chunk of time in your busy day to re-connect with a friend who can't be there for you the rest of the year.  Thanks for asking the good questions and being okay with whichever version of the answer I had the emotional energy to give that day. 

Thanks for caring about who I am, how I am, as a person, outside of what I do.  Thanks for being who you are, as a person, as someone who loves Jesus and lives the life he's called you to.  Thanks for being good daddies and mommies and sisters and brothers… and for letting me see that work the way it was meant to.  That means a lot.  I know some days it's boring and exhausting all at once, but it's the most beautiful mess in the world!  Keep going, brave beauties!  I admire you. 

Most of all, thank you for letting me see Jesus alive inside of you.  Thank you for sharing your heart, your struggles, your joys, your dreams.  Thank you for your friendship.  I cherish every minute spent with you and look forward to next time! 
Hasta pronto… ♥ nae

// // // // // 

Los llevo siempre en mi corazón.  Creo que no me doy cuenta lo tanto que los extraño hasta que los miro otra vez y de repente los quiero tanto que casi me duele.  Gracias por todo el cariño, y el tiempo, y el ánimo, y por escucharme, y por compartir conmigo esta semana.  Soy bendecida tener tantos lugares donde me siento "en casa" y aquí, con ustedes, siempre será uno de ellos. 

Gracias por burlarnos juntos de mi espanglish chapíngringo y entenderme de todos modos.  Gracias por explicarme todas las cosas pequeñas que me pasan de largo cuando estoy afuera por 13 meses a la vez.  Gracias por apartar un tiempo especial en medio de todo lo ocupadísimo que son sus vidas diarias para compartir con una amiga que no puede estar presente con ustedes durante el resto del año.  Gracias por siempre darme la bienvenida e interesarse en mi vida en Oasis y por nunca dejar de orar por mi. 

Gracias por preocuparse por como estoy y quien soy como persona, aparte de lo que hago en mi trabajo.  Gracias por ser quienes son, como mis hermanos en Cristo, y por vivir con amor y entrega la llamada que él les ha dado.  Gracias por ser buenos papás y mamás, hermanos, hermanas y abuelitos… y por dejarme ver eso funcionar bien.  Me restaura.  Sé que entre veces es aburrido y agotador y una locura de ocupado criar a una familia, pero quiero que sepan que lo miro como el lío mas lindo en todo el mundo.  ¡Sigan adelante, hermosos valientes!  Los admiro mucho. 

Sobre todo, gracias por dejarme ver al Jesucristo vivo adentro de ustedes.  Gracias por compartir sus corazones, sus luchas, sus gozos, sus recuerdos, y sus sueños.  Gracias por su amistad.  Cada momento con ustedes es un tesoro y ¡espero con ganas verlos otra vez! 
See you soon… ♥ nené

Friday, April 29

Get Over Yourself

I used to shy away from sharing things I'd written.  Writing a basic newsletter became the bane of my existence as I complained of having nothing exceptionally worth sharing, so why bother?  Without realizing that this need to be-exceptional-or-bust was a rather self-absorbed attitude, I would attribute this reluctance to humility; I didn't give much importance to little ol' me throwing out more words into the sea of thoughts and typeface already swarming the globe via the world wide web.  This is still a valid point, but it bears mentioning that to think that my part in the story was all there was to the story, or to want to perfect my role before I was willing to share any of that much larger story, is the exact opposite of humility!

There's also a certain risk of embarrassment in making public something that comes from so deep inside your heart.  Do you really want to share what is happening inside before you even understand it yourself and can make sense of it for someone on the outside?  It's a little hazardous to share what you're really thinking!  You invite input, encouragement, new fingerprints on your thoughts, criticism, reactions, and even the possibility of silence, of nothing in return.  That's terrifying.  HIDE!!!  


But somewhere along the line, I started to get over myself.  Maybe it had something to do with living so far outside my old comfort zone for a while, who knows?  If so, praise Jesus for bringing something good out of this clumsiness!  Three years in to living in this beautiful country, I still make a fool of myself at least once a day, and often so many times a day that I lose count and go to bed early to cut my losses.  (That's when I'm wise enough to cut my losses… there's always the days I go for bank, but we really don't need to go into that kind of detail.)  I regularly commit cultural missteps, invent my own grammar, scramble linguistically unidentifiable syllables into combinations previously unheard by mankind, and sometimes provoke stares just by walking by people in the 180 cm tower of not-brownness that I call home.  (The weather, however, is absolutely lovely up here.  Thanks for asking!)  In short, who I am regularly causes laughter and confusion for those around me.


Just the other day, I failed to realize that "On your 'marcas', Get set, Go!" is in fact a feminine phrase, and thus earned myself an imaginary boyfriend named Marcos.  (Because what other explanation could there be for such lunacy?  I must certainly be in love.  With a Marcos.)

Bound to happen once or twice during lunchtime at the Oasis, and especially certain if I'm in the middle of an important conversation with some "ritzy" visitor, two grubby little hands will pounce from behind with startling accuracy, covering my eyes at lightening speed and clamping out every last sliver of light from view (save the fireworks that the human brain interprets from what can only be understood as pain traveling down the optic nerve).  This "blindfold of steel" will only be released after the identity of both grubby little hands has been properly guessed.  Having a 1 in 57 chance does give some hope of return to one's previous conversation, but there's really no telling how far it will have moved along without you.  I dare you, try to keep your composure and look professional with a mouthful of tortilla and no ability to maintain eye contact!

As for body image, I am so accustomed to having my stomach patted by little hands to check for potential babies that I often don't even notice which children are poking and commenting on my belly… until a visiting service team member gives me one of those looks that quickly snap ya back to reality.  My height, weight, eye color, skin color, and arm hair are all regular topics of curious discussion and I've grown to accept that. 

In 3rd grade, my identity mattered so much to me that I unofficially changed the spelling of my name, forever complicating my adult life, just so people would pronounce "Renae" correctly.  Since coming to the Oasis, however, I answer equally to "Kermit the Frog," "Froggy," "Renecia" (which means either "Cute Little Renae" or "Very Dumb One" depending solely on inflection), "Renesmee," "Coconut," a loud wolf howl (which obviously must be returned in kind), and even "Mr. Rene" for strangers who really can't understand why a woman would have a man's name.  (Clearly, I must be a man.)  The employees at the grocery store just recently stopped asking me if that was my husband's bank card (and giving me strange looks when I handed them my own ID) after my local bank made a typo and printed me a card with only my middle and last names.  Score!!  Thanks, Banky Mc Bankface!  You've worked wonders.

Lest it sound like I'm complaining, please allow me to assure you that I find each of these situations hilarious!  The list goes on and on and I chuckle my way through it every time.  The truth is, when the girls think it strange enough to correct me when I make a Spanish mistake, that's actually a huge compliment.  I may never understand the girls' stomach-poking ritual or the automatic assumption that the only thing my stomach could possibly be good for is carrying babies, but at the very least, those girls aren't afraid to be their strange selves around me, and that's the oddest honor I could ever receive.  Each nick-name they come up with has its own joke, its own level of trust and friendship, and I love all of them… except probably Mr. Renae... but even there, watching the Oasis "grandfather" have to explain to visitors that he is not Mr. Rene and that Mr. Rene is, in fact, a woman has got to be one of my favorite scenarios.  I digress. 


We work hard at the Oasis.  We battle evil daily with every weapon in our arsenal.  But we also jump on the trampoline, play airplane with the babies, hog-pile-on-so-and-so, try on fancy dresses from the donation suitcases, wrestle, tickle-fight, sing loudly off-key, and imitate each others' languages and quirky habits.


Sometimes, I really do leave work and go to coffee with friends from "the outside" and we talk about everything from faith, to politics, to boy drama, to jobs, to family, to growing up Guatemalan, to dreams, to struggles, to fears, to the latest Avengers movie, and we split. a. gut. laughing at some of the gringafied things that come out of my mouth, but you know what's more important?  We grow to understand each other.  These friends bear with me and peer into my world and choose to love the whole package for what it is, and I learn how to use their words and ask about their context that is still foreign to me sometimes, and I fully appreciate their contagious laughter.


At some point in the midst of all that crazy, I start to get over myself.  God changes me on the inside, and I realize that this part of his story is just that: one part of His story!  Every time I feel really, super uncomfortable (this is often, folks!), it gets a little more familiar and a little less terrifying.  It never gets comfortable, but I do become more at home in the awkwardness.  The more I get lost, the better I get at finding a way out.  The more I fail, the better I get at failing graciously… or at least hilariously… sigh.  A girl can dream, right?


I don't have to have it all figured out; I just have to be faithful with what I have been given.  When I learn to leave my identity where it belongs: planted firmly in God's hands as his chosen, redeemed, beloved daughter, I can dance freely into the world, come what may!  You can call me Kermit the Coconut for all I care; it won't change one bit how God sees me, and he speaks truth to my heart when I need it the most.


Others are going to look at me and see Different, or Foreign, Gringa, Missionary, MustOnlySpeakEnglish, Serious, Goofball, Important, Ridiculous, and a whole host of other things based on very little actual knowing.  They might read something I write and see Adventurous, or Hermit, Melancholy, Intense, Brave, Deep, NeedsToLightenUp, Confused, WayTooHopeful, and who knows what else.  They might put me in their boxes and leave me there and I won't like it one bit.  They might think things that are untrue, or see the still-ugly places and think poorly of me for it.  Ok.

Whatever they see, I hope they see Jesus.  I hope they see him at work.  I hope God's image reflects back at them as clearly as it does on the sparkling menagerie of broken mirrors that run around the Oasis every day.

The size of the shards, how they were broken, the order they were strung back together matters hardly at all when we're reflecting the love of the Master Artist, clean and bright.  No shame.  No vergüenza.  Each little creation needs to catch that light and fling it back all over the place.  When we don't; whether we're still grungy or not strung together yet, or not hanging out in the sunshine for fear of exposure... the world misses out on part of Him. 

I really don't want to miss out on the beauty that is for fear of the beauty that is not yet

So, here's to admitting our imperfectness so God can get to work.  Here's to God's strength showing up best in our weak areas.  Here's to letting the most creative and loving person in the universe shape us however he likes, whenever he likes.  Here's to throwing sin and shame under the bus, to embrace the freedom of living for God!  Here's to the Church worrying less about hiding our unfinished places and more about welcoming God's Spirit into those places so he can show off his crazy, redemptive goodness!

Friend, you are welcome here.  If you need a safe place to be who you are right now, cracks and all, come on over and sit with Jesus for a while.  Leave your scaffolding at the door and soak up his truth.  Let him tell you what he sees when he looks at you.  Be brave enough to reflect that light to someone else who needs to know his love.  Don't worry about the flaws they might see along the way; they're either too busy hiding their own, or they've recognized for themselves that God is at work in those flaws.  Either way, you're good!  Sure, it can be risky to open up to people--sometimes people hurt each other!  But do not cower in fear.  Embrace wisdom, but have the courage to be genuine, honest, available.  Start here, in the presence of the God Who Sees, who knows you already, who loves you already, and who has a track record of perfect faithfulness, and let him tell you who you are! 


Then listen as he whispers what you one day will be; I guarantee you won't regret it.


Thursday, April 21

Tracing Pain

It's rather unlikely that a group of people visiting a foreign country would make it a point to stop at the national cemetery, but that's exactly where I found myself today.  Almost like a prototype of the country I currently call home, we walked among massive, opulent monuments to human power, separated by small fences and a world of difference from the other crowded "rental properties for the dead" that lie just behind them and just out of the way.  Referred to as "galleries" in Spanish, and a permanent fixture in Guatemalan cemeteries, these rental plots are essentially walls of stacked cement graves built at least half a dozen high and as long as the cemetery itself.  Space in the wall can be occupied until the rent is up, at which time the body is moved to a mass grave to make room for another.

They're bright and colorful, like so many places here, and are beautiful in a way.  But every time I see galleries, I think back to the day our Oasis family watched a tiny white coffin slowly disappear behind one of those walls of brick and mortar.  The scrape of the trowel rings in my ears and the dull ache of losing little Ashley tugs at the corners of my heart.  Her mama was still unstable in the hospital that day, and a whole group of strangers who would have become her friends had she ever met them mourned her loss together.

Today, we walked into the section of the cemetery reserved for babies, and suddenly, I stood in an endless, endless corridor of Ashleys.


I fought the overwhelming urge to walk down the middle of the entire thing weeping.  All my heart wanted to do was go back to that sad, confusing day, and unwrap the hurt, and let the tears come now that wouldn't come then, to wash it clean and offer it to God as holy.  But there were other people with me who didn't know about her, and didn't really know me, and to be perfectly honest I didn't really have the guts to be that vulnerable, so I turned my back to it and told my heart to wait.

I'm sorry I did.  I'm sorry I "kept it together" and pretended to be ok.  It was certainly less messy, but it was neither honest nor honorable; some things deserve grieving.

There is a child-mother who could not give her daughter life.
She is my little friend, and I have looked into her eyes.  She is real.  Her hurt is real.
All she wants is to hold her baby, but her arms are empty.
Her heart grew and her body laboured to make room for someone who never came.
"Abba!!  This is tragic.  It feels so broken here!  This hurts just to watch, much less to live.  This is never what you intended!  It never should have happened this way!  I know this hurts your heart …and, Abba?  It's too much for me.  I can't carry this by myself.  I need you so desperately.  I don't have the hope or healing; how can this possibly be restored?"

David spend a great portion of his time lamenting.  God has blessed us with pages upon pages of expressed sorrow in his word, and it is all holy.  Set apart as special.  Known by God, and close to his heart.  God is no stranger to lamenting.  Nor are there shortcuts for grief.  One of the places God is most present is in pain and sorrow.  Another place is in beauty and joy.  Sometimes, I think those places might be neighbors.  I think I need to realize that those neighbors are closely acquainted with each other and allow myself to visit God with them both.

Tonight, I returned to some of the sweetest words Jesus has ever spoken to my heart: "Blessed are those who mourn, for they shall be comforted."  Beloved, when innocence dies, when your heart suffers loss, take the time to lament.  Do not cheat yourself.  Do not cheapen My grace.

When my heart has hurt the worst, God's comfort has been the sweetest.  I have known the holy beauty of grief only as deeply as I have entered into pain with my eyes turned towards Jesus and my soul folded completely into his embrace.

Have courage, trust God, and come grieve with me.  You are welcome here.  God is waiting for us.  This is holy ground.  Blessed are those who mourn, there is comfort.

For permission to weep and loads of Godly encouragement, please visit Davey Blackburn's whole blog!  

Thursday, December 17

When God is too small

I'm free-falling over the darkest space I know.  Betrayal opens wide and threatens to swallow me whole as my deepest fears dance before me and threaten to become reality.  Sharp, jagged questions rip at my body but do nothing to orient me to reality, nor to hint at which way is up.  Balance gone, moorings failed.  Fear rips through my body and escapes my lungs in a desperate cry for help. 

I know there is hope.  Somewhere.  But grasp and flail as I might, I can't find it.  Terror rushes past my face as I force my eyes open because I know that truth exists and I desperately want to catch sight of it.  


Hope is believing that God will come to the rescue in the face of a still desperate tragedy.  Hope is knowing that the biggest story will have a beautiful ending full of poetic justice, satisfied wonder, and deep, bubbly joy. 

Trust is believing the only One who has ever passed through Death and come through victorious when he looks you in the eyes and says, "This death holds no power over you!"  Trust is knowing that God wraps himself around the ends of eternity and understands, even orchestrates, every last thing that seems hopeless and unfathomable for your good and for his glory


Somewhere in this truth, I start to find my bearings again.  I remember that the best weapon against despair is to praise.  But in this darkness, praise is my fiercest battle.  The doubts are louder than my faith.  The lies seem more real than the truth.  The fears are stronger than my trust, and I have a choice to make.  I chose to fight.  I don't always; there are times I just give up because that is so much easier, but this time, I fight.  I praise the just, faithful, loving greatness of God because I know it's there, not because I can see it. 

The pain crashes down one last time on my soul, but comfort trickles in behind it, wrapping around my heart.  Stars pierce the darkness and I can see again.  The bigness of God spreads out before me like an endlessly clear northern night, and I'm in awe at how vast it all is and how small everything else seems in comparison. 

My soul still hurts, but I can breathe again.  My heart is raw, vulnerable, alive.  This is what growth feels like.  Trust begins to take root again, sinking deeper into the cracks formed by doubt and drawing life out of the brokenness.  This is for my good and for God's glory


This is always for our good and God's glory. 

Tuesday, June 30

Jeremiah 18:1-6

Eternal One: 
Go down to the potter’s shop in the city, and wait for My word. 

So I went down to the potter’s shop and found him making something on his wheel.  And as I watched, the clay vessel in his hands became flawed and unusable. So the potter started again with the same clay.  He crushed and squeezed and shaped it into another vessel that was to his liking.  In that moment, I heard again God’s word for His rebellious people.
Eternal One: 
O people of Israel, can I not do the same to you as this potter has done? You are like clay in My hands—I will mold you as I see fit.



I need to remember this. Some times that's easier than others.

Whether it's watching a girl's face light up in a brilliant smile,
or the feeling of trust when she calls my name and runs into my arms. 

When she tells me the part of her story where God is teaching her and loving her and she's growing and learning and excited about it,
When she stands up for what is right because she loves Jesus and I actually get to see it,
When I hear of her thriving in every way back home with her family,
When my whole day is filled start to finish with the most rewarding work I could ever ask to do and overflowing with meaningful, encouraging conversations, and I'm not even tired by the end of it because it was all just that lovely…


"God, I don't deserve this! It's too good." 
"It's not about deserving it. I love you! You are like clay in my hands—Watch me do even more!"

But when I catch the cold, far-off look of a girl used to pain,
or when I learn about the painful part of a little friend's past and I can see how much it hurts her,
When I have to watch her struggle against old patterns that still hold her captive,
When I can see the battle taking place between despair and hope and I don't know which will win,
When I'm too far away from family and hard things are happening to those I've loved the longest,
When I have physical pain that won't let me take a minute off and I can't even think,
When someone I love decides to "self-destruct" and refuses help,
When the judge makes a tragic ruling that will change my friend's life forever,
When I can't hug my grandpa goodbye because it's already too late,
When I hold a sobbing, heartbroken child, 



"God, did someone do something to deserve this? It hurts." 
"It's not about deserving it. I love you. I am with you! Let me carry you."


In all of these things, I want my heart to be always in awe of God's great, powerful goodness and never-ending love, in all it's justice and holiness, and I want my prayer to be, "mold me as you see fit." 

Use me, use this, use your Church to display your glory. Amen. 


Friday, May 15

Who will fight?


"There's somebody on the other side of slavery, … They're prepared to actually fight you in this."   
- Gary Haugen, Founder and Director of IJM

Fight.  A fight takes a great deal of clarity.  Who is the enemy and what is the goal?  Yes, there are the pimps, the gangs, the traffickers, the abusive family members, the controlling and manipulative wounded people who wound other people.  There are the power plays, the desperation, the money, and the deep-seated corruption.  But if there's one thing Paul wrote that I would write across my forehead, it's that bit he sent to the Ephesian church,

"Our struggle is not against flesh and blood." 

In other words, all of the powerful darkness that we see is only a symptom, the "fallout" if you will, of an age-old battle between our creator God and the spiritual forces who rebelled against him.  Sides have been taken, territory has been won and lost, and we have yet to see the end of it fulfilled. 

But have we forgotten?  Victory has been secured! 

I have been challenged to rejoice in the opposition to what we're doing at the Oasis.  When I hear of our sweet girls facing pressure on all sides to give the enemy a stronghold in their lives, I will fall on my knees and pray with confidence that God hears the cry of his children, I will choose to shout with joy the spiritual battle cry of "Greater is He!" and I will charge boldly into the battle to which I have been called and for which I have prepared. 
When my sweet little sister stares blankly into the darkness of her past or the seeming hopelessness of her future, I will raise walls of prayer around her wounded spirit and a shield of praise in front of my own heart, and I will choose to turn loose the weapon of truth in all its double-edged power against the lies that would relentlessly plague us all if we let them, because I know that when God's people resist the enemy, he flees. 

It is is not for the people of God Almighty to do the retreating. 

Yes, we are weak.  But there is He strong.  May we be terrified to face a single day without the armor that God provides and the security of resting in Him alone.  May we tremble at the thought of one moment of self-dependence, out from under the banner of our God.  But, may God's people never again spend a single day cowering in fear of the evil lurking within themselves or assaulting the world around them!  Evil is present and fiercely active, but may it never be said that God's people allowed their enemy to fight unchallenged.  

Courage!  Confidence!  Joy!  Victory!


Peace.

May the Lord of peace himself give you peace at all times and in every way. The Lord be with all of you. 
2 Thessalonians 3:16

Thursday, May 7

Your hope a fire

This has been a Sarah-Groves-music-listening kind of week (tracks 4,6,8,9,10 on her Collections album.  Over, and over, and over).  The eyes of my heart have been opened to yet another layer of the darkness that runs deep through this little corner of the world, and my soul is fighting hard to hold on to hope. 

Sometimes, you don't even know how much you're struggling with something until someone puts it into words for you, and suddenly, you're surprised at the force of your heart shattering inside.  But then, you start to heal again, because now you understand it a little bit better than before.  *Listen Here*

These are the faces forever burned into my heart
I saw what I saw and I can't forget it.  

I heard what I heard and I can't go back.  


I know what I know ant I can't deny it.  


Something on the road,  

Cut me to the soul.  


Your pain has changed me,
 

Your dream inspires
 

Your face a memory
 

Your hope a fire
 

Your courage asks me what I'm afraid of
 

and what I know of love
...
and what I know of God. 



There's been a question out on the table between God and me for a while now, "What do you feel when you see injustice?"  I just want to know.  What does God think when his handiwork takes every last good gift and mysterious blessing and the powerful capacity that he has given us, and twists it for evil?  When we steal, and kill, and destroy, choosing to be children of darkness rather than children of light?  
When God gathers our tears, does he pour out ones of his own, or does he cry out in joyful victory over the brokenness?  Does he somehow do both? 

Child Abuse

I am not strong enough to fight this.  Sometimes, I think the scariest part of injustice is that it mirrors the unredeemed places in our own souls.  If I can't win here, on the inside, in the one and only place over which I have total responsibility, what could I ever do out there, against the great and terrible forces of highly trained and well-organized evil?  

That is the point.  I have never been strong enough to fight this.  It has always been bigger than me, stronger than me, and smarter than me.  So, God in his mercy did what I could not.  He conquered the sin inside me when he had none.  Where I have corrosion, faults, compromise, and weakness, Jesus Christ had strength, integrity, purity, and wholeness.  From that strength, he moved against the sin outside of me, too.  Where I have selfish rebellion, he had sacrificial love.  He made one strategic move against sin that only God could make; Emmanuel enveloped death with his life.  

At what point will there be no more depths to sound of this overwhelming darkness?  How fathomless is the crushing power of evil?  

I don't know.   

What I do know is that God has wrapped redemption around the ends of infinity.  He is always one step deeper and one step farther than every last ocean of darkness.  In one step, God is infinitely greater than even the most endless darkness.  In his time, all things will be made new.  We do not fight a hopeless battle.  


GloryOne day voices that lie 
will all be silenced, 
One day all that's divided 
will be whole again, 
One day death 
will retreat and wave its white flag
One day Love 
will defeat the strongest enemy, 

One day eyes that are blind 
will see You clearly, 
One day all who deny 
will finally believe, 
One day hearts made of stone 
will break in pieces, 
One day chains once unbroken 
will fall down at Your feet,

So we wait for that one day, 

Come quickly! 

We want to see Your glory. 
Song Credit: Glory, Selah with Nichole Nordeman