Posts Tagged ‘brokenness’

Three Days of Oppression

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

being in Gulu rocked my world.

everything i knew about suffering and oppression went right out the window.

seeing the huts and experiencing that lifestyle brought me out of my comfort zone but feeling the suffering and oppression on a spiritual level hurt me. i was very thankful at the end of the Gulu trip to have experienced spiritual attacks in Afghanistan and even in the past two years of being back home. it reassured me that no i was not crazy and that i was not making up what i felt.

for two days, i experienced a level of spiritual oppression and attack that i have never before felt in my life. headaches, irritability, the feeling that i just wanted to punch the next person that touched me. this kind of emotion had not risen in me since last fall when i was experiencing dark attacks on me. it was extremely disorienting yet all too familiar of a feeling. i knew what was happening but i just didn’t care.

one of the first prayer walks we did in the village i was hit hard. i didn’t speak up about it while i was in the moment but i definitely remember acting different than normal. we stopped at one hut and as i walked up to it, it was if all of my sins were being replayed for me in my head at 1 million frames/second. over and over i was seeing everything i had done wrong in life, and still doing wrong for many of them, and i could feel my mind become flooded with temptations and things far from Christ.

i was not into prayer walking anymore and since i had my camera, i capitalized and walked away from the group to take pictures. it was amazing how therapeutic it was for me to get shots of the village and of the children in it. each time i put my eye behind the lens, i felt a release from the torment in my head. as i moved farther and farther away from the group, about 20 or 30 feet, all the noise and confusion in my head stopped.

silence. back to normal.

it was a strange feeling to say the least and even looking back on it, i’m amazed at how fast everything went quiet. but in hindsight, it is evident how powerful the spiritual warfare was in the village. huts, one by one, were being fought over between satan and God. clearly (he) was trying to claim the lives of the people there and in talking with people and hearing their stories, it was scary how convincing (he) was to these people.

“i cannot accept Christ as my Savior because my means for money is brewing alcohol. my children need to get an education and their father is dead so i must work this job to get them to school. if i accept Jesus, i must give up this profession or i will be considered unclean.”

how untrue!! but the culture and satan have created this illusion and it is keeping people from the love and grace of Jesus Christ. it was so sad to sit with someone who completely understood and wanted this relationship but would not commit any further than that based off these ridiculous claims.

and this is just a small glimpse of the spiritual battle. 20 years of war has left the people and their lives in shambles. no homes, no parents, no children – it is a miracle that there is anything left really. and then there are those left behind to live in this mess that have to deal with the after-effects of this war and (he) absolutely preys on those people, convincing them to live in fear and not follow Jesus.

and in three days, i had thoughts, emotions, visions enter my head that were placed there by (him), trying to convince me of that as well. i was oppressed, turned bitter and quiet, convinced that i did not like being in Gulu.

honestly? it wasn’t my favorite part of the trip. but i am convinced that as a Christian, this is where we are called to.

the darkest places of the world. out of our comfortable lives – living in 2000 sq. ft. houses, with 2 cars and water that runs hot for hours. we are called to lower ourselves to these people. to drop to a knee and simply shed tears with them, praying for them, loving them.

after 3 days, i woke up to one of the most beautiful sunrises i had ever seen and felt such a sense of God entering my being, freeing me from this temptation and evil, and showing me the meaning behind it.

“…lead me not into temptation but deliver us from evil…”

God allowed me to withstand just enough from (him), to get a taste of what these people eat everyday so that I would be 100% convinced of this calling. i am biblically mandated to go to the ends of the earth, bringing His love to whoever needs it. bringing His truth to cast away the lies and deception. bringing hope to those in desperate need of a Savior.

this oppression was not fun but it was a growing pain in the journey of a lifetime. i am grateful to be considered worthy to suffer like that for His name so that i may be strengthened by it, so that i may return ready for what God calls me to next.

Last Day at SMK's

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

saturday.

it’s already been a week since we arrived in Uganda but for me it felt like a month. i felt so at home there and aside from a period of about 30 minutes one day, i loved every minute of it.

it was weird going into the last day with the kids there. the kids that needed our love and presence there. our joy to flow into their lives. and we needed them. something about their demeanor was contagious. their attitude was uplifting. but they desired so much out of a world that would only chew them up and spit them back out. that would continue to trample all over them unless God stepped in and did something about it.

but for me it was in these thoughts that i realized God was doing something about it. he was stirring up a hornet’s nest of fury inside each one of the students on our team, myself included, that would ignite such a desire to change this broken situation. a desire to bring such a radical love to such a dark place. a desire to follow God to the ends of the earth bring His love and His hope and His joy to those who need it most – NO MATTER WHAT.

the last day at SMK’s was not as hard as it was for the girls. they were a mess and really struggled with the idea of “why are we leaving? we are blessed with things and they are blessed with nothing” where as i was thinking and struggling with the idea of patiently waiting to come back. i knew i’d be back. i knew that this was only the beginning for me but it was a matter of patiently waiting on God’s timing and plan for me.

the week at SMK changed me so much and opened my eyes and mind to the meaning of loving the poor and oppressed. never can i go back to the way of thinking i had before.

amen.

Week @ St. Mary Kevin's Boarding School

Saturday, August 8th, 2009

we spent 6 days working and ministering at St. Mary Kevin’s Boarding School. it was without a doubt one of the most spiritually grounding places i’ve ever been to. i was there only 15 minutes on Saturday and immediately felt that “itch” from the Holy Spirit telling me this was the place for me. i felt comfortable there. i felt His presence. i felt His calling in me.

above all else, I felt Him speaking to me that I had nothing to bring to these kids but His love. and it was my choice to speak God’s love to them or not.

in the mornings, we spent the majority of our time painting the new clinic that Touch the World is developing for the school and the neighborhood. we also were the helping hands for the security wall that was being built around the clinic to protect it from theft and vandalism.

the first two days i spent atop the clinic’s roof with two other women painting it and trying not to fall through the single piece of aluminum that is considered a roof :) it was fun and i definitely had a lot of sun exposure. it was also really cool to look at it before as a dirty roof and then after two days look at it and see a red roof. leaves a sense of accomplishment in you :)

IMG_1918the last three days, though, i was the “porter” for the wall builders. three local guys were hired to build the security wall and my job was to mix the rock/dirt/cement together with water to make actual cement, continuously fill water jugs at the well, bring cement to them when it was ready and look pretty while they created their masterpiece. it was definitely a lot of hard work but i loved it. my shirts were barely fitting at the end of the week from all the lifting and upper body use.

by the end of the week working with these guys, i had learned new phrases in Uganda and was sort of able to hold a “greeting-style” conversation. plus they allowed me to lay bricks and build sections of the wall with them. that was fun because they kept asking why the white man was working with them and not watching. always was interesting to have that pop up in conversation with them.

i loved working on the roof and with the wall. it was really rewarding to see that be finish as we ended our week. only another foot or two was left on the wall but it was high enough that we could “see” the work that we helped with.

each day we would break for lunch and then make our way into the school to hangout with the kids. we would spend time reading with them. so weird to sit and weird The Berenstain Bears and Where’s Waldo? to these kids. totally changed the meaning of those books to me…

hassan/alanafter our reading sessions, it was game on with whoever grabbed us and played with us. i had a threesome of older guys that followed me around a lot. Hassan, Alan, and Suuna were all 13/14 years old and seemed to always find me wherever i was. they were also the first stories i would hear in relation to the suffering that they are going through. it was amazing to hear how honest they were with me and how real they were in what they were feeling. it broke my heart though because every conversation ended the same way.

“will you sponsor me? it’s very hard to pay for fees for my school and i need your help…”

it was gut-wretching to have to look them in the eyes and say no. but in the midst of that, the Holy Spirit would tap me on the shoulder and say step aside, my turn now. like that, we would always pray and before i knew it, the Holy Spirit was pouring His voice out and His comfort and love onto these kids and filling their bodies and lives with His peace. after praying over kids and watching their tears fall from their faces onto the ground below, i knew without a doubt in my mind that i really had nothing to give them but prayer and the love of Jesus Christ.

Suunamoney and pencils and clean beds are a nice temporary fix for them but in the end it runs out and they are left with nothing. i heard a story from Jesse, one of the missionaries, how a former team spent all this money on mosquito nets to protect the kids from bugs and the spread of malaria. unfortunately they all ripped on the metal framed beds that were in the dorms. so do we replace the nets? the frames? if we replace the frames, we have to replace the beds. the kids pee on the beds constantly so how many times do we need to replace them? at what cost?

there is SO much that needs to be done but its all materialistic projects. they are hurting and broken. these kids need nets and new beds but at the end of the day, sitting with them and loving them for who they were and praying over them did far more than i could’ve ever imagined. God is present there and working in their lives and HAS NOT and NEVER will forsake them.

He’s calling us to help and spread His love to the suffering. are you going to answer?

Dusting off the old blog

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Scraping off what appears to be weeks worth of dust on my blog, I am now realizing it’s been a month since I’ve posted. Who knows who still reads here that used to. Thought that I would at least throw out an update that deserves praise and rejoicing.

Today was DAY 95 of my fast and Friday will be DAY 100!!

I cannot believe it has been that long. I have only been physically tempted twice in that span of time, once 40 days in, the next after another 40 days. Hmm… interesting… We’ll see what day 120 brings haha.

I am so thrilled by this and plan on making 2009 my first porn and sex-addiction free year :) Can’t wait to see what God will bring from this!! (more…)

Another Attack…

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Wake up.

Beautiful weather.

Amazing colors.

Head to UConn.

Have a great time in class today.

Get ready to hang out with her.

She’s here now.

“Feelings” are out in the open now.

Prayed with her.

Conversed with her.

Time for work.

Start feeling nauseous.

(he)’s in Starbucks…

I begin to get snappy and distressed.

(he)’s telling me to pick a fight…

I ignore.

(he) reminds me to pick a fight.

“I want to get angry and fight with her.”

I believe the lie…

30 seconds later, I pick a fight.

Argument starts and accusations begin.

Begin saying a couple things and now she’s crying.

(he) smiles…

Fear and doubt enter our friendship.

Admitting our faults and concerns, (he) gets desperate and starts losing.

We talk through it, pushing (him) away from the conversation.

Light enters back into our conversation.

(he) has no right in us anymore.

Nausea overwhelms me.

Throwing up for a few minutes, (he)’s no longer in the store.

(he) has no right inside of me.

(he) is a disease not welcome around me anymore but He is my savior.

I trust Him to stand by me forever.

When We Give (him) Access

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

I awake early, feeling somewhat refreshed. Rolling over, tangled in my sheets, I notice the time was 6:42am. Awesome – more time to sleep. Daylight creeps into my room, erasing the shadows of nighttime from my walls. I fall back asleep.

9:56am… I overslept and won’t be getting to class on time or rather at all. Climbing out of bed and opening my door, I am suddenly aware of an eerily cold and quiet apartment. Something is not right. My stomach growls. Apparently, I’m hungry and that is what is wrong in my apartment.

The smell of cinnamin fills the room as cinnamin rolls finish cooking. The oven beeps, signalling that breakfast is ready. Sitting on my couch with a plate of cinnamin rolls, I debate whether or not T.V. or scripture is a better morning wake-up routine. Scripture wins.

Opening my bible, I find Proverbs 29. 

A man who remains stiff-necked after many rebukes will suddenly be destroyed—without remedy.

Whoa… its going to be one of those quiet times with slaps in the face from God. Excellent… (more…)

Looking for a Miracle?

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

After a recent conversation with a friend, I came to a powerful realization about miracles and how many there are happening in the world at this very moment. They are ongoing, never-ending, and still as breath-taking as the first miracle to ever take place.

Daily, we are surrounded by miracles that walk among us, touching our lives, interacting with us. Whether we know it or not, we will come across one every day.

Not following me? (more…)

What We Think We Are Owed

Saturday, September 20th, 2008

I’ve been hanging out with and talking alot with a friend of mine. We’ve simply been sharing life together and challenging each other. In only a few months, we’ve had a couple years worth of conversations and have been simply an out for each other in dealing with our struggles.

I am fascinated with this and have been really enjoying it because I have talked with her about struggles that are still very real and painful. I was surprised when I brought this subject up that I started getting choked up, having a hard time explaining my struggles.

My friend asked me the big question: (more…)

Of all the things our children need…

Saturday, August 30th, 2008

I pumped some gas into my car at the local gas station adjacent to the surprisingly popular V.I.P. (Very Intimate Pleasures) store yesterday. After finishing pumping, I pull out and see a car pulling out of the V.I.P. lot. Who do I see pulling out of the parking lot you might ask??

A man driving a van used for shuttling school children around….

Come on! Seriously! Knowing what I know about the destruction pornography causes, I don’t want someone entertained by it driving my child around!

Who is letting these people get these kind of jobs….

Face Planting at 20mph

Thursday, May 29th, 2008

I went water-skiing yesterday … randomly …

A friend of mine called me up after I got out of work and said there was a get together down the road from her house to go skiing and it was only $10. Well, that’s all I needed to hear before I agreed to go. Yes it has been 8 years since I’ve gone but skiing is like bike riding right? Once you figure it out, it’s easy … right?

In theory yes. But for me, it may take some time to get used to it. I “got up” three times but ended up back in the water and on my last run, I completed a glorious swan-dive style face plant. All in all, I had a great time. Beth got up a couple times and actually completed a turn which was very fun to watch!

After wards, I headed back to her house for some dinner. (more…)