Archive for the 'social issues' CategoryPage 2 of 6

Think Pink….

Knowledge is power, after all.

GO GIRL POWER!  Read more here…

And please remember to pray for those who are battling cancer.

Pray, work….learn….fight.  These are very “girlie” things to do anyway, I think!

So, THINK PINK!

LOVE WINS!

LOVE WINS!

Peace to you all!

The Sun Also Rises…

…even on a Monday…

I think this photo looks like an impressionist painting….it makes me happy!  I have a love affair with the sky….and I always have.  I used to stare at the clouds, as a child, and pretend I was up there - in their “fluffiness”……….I still have my head in the clouds, most days.

I’ve set aside today to look for my little shopping cart girl. I’ve been dreaming about her a lot lately…and this post reminded me that sometimes dreams can inspire us to work harder - that I can’t ever forget those who can’t help themselves.

I have this dream that, maybe someday, my little shopping cart girl will be able to stare at the clouds too, and dream her little girl dreams…. 

…and maybe I can help her make one or two come true.

That would really be a dream to me.

Peace.

All I want for Christmas…

…is to find my little “shopping cart girl” and make her smile. 

That’s what I’ve been thinking about today.

I guess I’ve got some work to do!

Happy Wednesday!!

Peace.

Open my eyes…

This was in my email today, from my dear friend Patti.  I needed this so much today…on a Monday - needed to be reminded of how others are working tirelessly and sacrificing so that those who suffer can feel the love of Jesus.  I wanted to share this story with you, so it can encourage you as it did me:

To Touch the King…

The grandmother, Rama, was an old acquaintance who had worked as a house-helper for some friends of ours.  Her son and daughter-in-law sat with her on the floor of our sitting room—their clothes and hollow faces declaring their poverty, the quiet despair in his eyes highlighting the harsh life of a day laborer.  Recently, I had spent the better part of two days with them and they had come by our home to pay their respects before returning to the village.  Sitting together now, I felt anger rise like bile in my mouth—anger at this family, at their poverty and ignorance and the way they simply accept their lot in life.  Anger at a world of injustice and suffering that we have so little ability to change.

A week earlier, Rama and her daughter-in-law tried to change their fate.  They arrived on our doorstep with Sonu—a five-month-old baby boy wrapped in a blanket, revealing only two large, unseeing eyes.  He was sick, and as the cheap village doctors had not helped, they had been to see our pediatrician who had told them that something was wrong with the child’s blood, and that the treatment would cost in excess of 2,000 Rs (about $44 USD), and could we help as they did not have that kind of money?  They literally had nowhere else to go and had spent the last two hours searching for our house in hopes that we might be willing to pay for the treatment.

Bundling them into a rickshaw, I abandoned my afternoon plans to sit in doctors’ waiting rooms and ensure that Sonu received the proper treatment.  Speaking with the pediatrician, I began to realize how critical the child’s situation was.  The doctor’s only official recommendation was an immediate blood transfusion.  Unofficially, his entire manner spoke of the futility of even trying.

Another rickshaw.  A small modern hospital not far away.  An elderly doctor with kind hands and a gentle spirit taking Sonu from his mother’s arms, removing the blanket and engaging the fight for this small life.  I had never seen anyone so sick and still alive.  A living, breathing World Relief poster before my eyes—emaciated with skin hanging from his body due to dehydration; each breath punctuated with small cries of pain; unresponsive when the doctor tried five times to find a vein that was open enough to allow for an IV; oxygen, antibiotics, and rehydration fluid to try and control blood-poisoning, dehydration, pneumonia & TB.

Sonu’s immediate need was blood.  He simply did not have enough to sustain himself and without more he would die.  Pricking, poking, prodding and praying, the staff was able to coax just enough blood out of him for the tests required to match type and compatibility.  Handed two small vials of his blood, I put them in my shirt pocket and set out across town to the blood bank to bring back a liter of bright red life.

Here in India, to get blood you have to give it.  And so I found myself in a chair with small blood-soaked cotton balls on the floor and a man sticking a needle in my arm.  Asking if it was a new needle, his grunt of affirmation did little to reassure me and for a split second I wondered if this was worth the risk of contracting some fatal blood-borne disease.  But who else would give their blood for some unknown child?  I didn’t have time to try and find a family member.  And even if someone could be found, could I really ask them to take the risk that I myself was hesitating to take?  After all, Someone had already shed their blood for me.  The shedding of blood still seems to be the price of life.

The rest of that day and into the night; early the next morning, afternoon and evening I found myself driving to and from the hospital—willing Sonu to live, pleading with God, giving hope to his parents, consulting the doctors, and always wondering if I was doing the right thing.  And as Sonu fought for his life, I fought with my conscience.

Thought:  “They are poor, untouchables sitting in one of the most expensive hospitals in our city.  What about current mission theory in regards to money, dependence and the poor?  Should I have taken them to a hospital that they could more easily afford?  How much money will this cost me?”

A Pang of Guilt: “This is a child’s life we are talking about!  If we would have gone somewhere else he surely would have died.  Why does being poor mean that you should not get as good of treatment as myself or my daughters?  How can I put a price on the value of a life?”

Thought: “Perhaps it would be better to just let him die.  He is in so much pain and even if he lives, his life will probably be one of incredible hardship—driving a rickshaw or hoping for work as a laborer.”

More Guilt: “Who am I to decide whether this child lives or dies?  How do I know what his life will be like?  Am I God?  Who knows that God may not use this child to start a movement for His glory amongst his own people one day?”

Thought:  “But what if he dies?  What if this is all for nothing?  Oh God please spare his life…”

A phone call at midnight.  Someone speaking rapidly in Hindi.  I try to wake up my mind, to comprehend the message: Sonu just died, please come immediately.  I hurriedly dress and drive one last time to the hospital.  It feels like I have been punched in the gut.  I can hardly breathe.  I had so wanted him to live.  Grief, anger, and relief well up from deep places within.  At least the question of whether he lived or died or what treatment would be given him was now out of my hands.

Walking into the hospital room, Sonu was in his bassinet with all the tubes still connected to him.  I put my hand upon him; closed his eyes in the sleep of death; removed the oxygen, the medical tape and the IV.  He was at last at peace.  His breathing no longer labored.  His body no longer taut with pain.  The doctors were kind.  “We did all we could.  If only you would have brought him in a few days earlier…”

Standing there with a dead child beside me, the answer to all my questions became clear.  For it was not Sonu in that small bed, but Jesus.  It was His body that was emaciated and dying that I touched each time I came to visit.  It was His eyes that did not see anything other than pain.  It was Jesus that we did this for—not Sonu or his family.  And as I searched the reality of a broken child’s body I began to see with eyes of faith the broken body of our Lord.  It did not matter how much or how little money was spent.  It did not matter even in the end whether Sonu lived or died.  What mattered was whether or not I had touched our Lord.

“Then the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation of the world.  For I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, I needed clothes and you clothed me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit me… I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.’” Matthew 25:34-36, 40

Hunger, thirst, nakedness, sickness, imprisonment, loneliness…  Food water, clothes, presence…  And the secret?  That such simple acts of service can be transformed into spiritual acts of worship—if we have eyes to see Jesus in the faces of those we serve.  The “least of these” – the poor, the oppressed, the destitute and deranged, orphans and widows – all are our King and Savior, the God of the universe in disguise.  It took a little boy for me to see.

Sonu’s family leaves our home with a strong rebuke for letting him get so sick before seeking out help.  “It is God’s will,” they reply.  “What can we do?”  What can they do?  The question echoes in my mind.  They walk away, and if I look carefully, I can see Jesus walking among them.  Ignorance and apathy from long years of suffering make me wonder if they will show up at our door with another Sonu one day.  But if they do, I am ready.  I will abandon my well-laid plans to sit in doctors’ offices, find rickshaws, and pay bills and pray with all my heart for another small life.  For the issue on that day will not be whether the child lived or died—but whether or not I reached out my hand to touch one who was suffering, and in so doing, touched the King…”.

Thank you, Patti, for reminding me of Jesus’ words - they have brought strength and comfort to me today, and have reminded me to never stop thinking of others…

…there’s always so much more to do and to give.

My prayer today is that God will continue to open my eyes and heart to the suffering of those around me - that I never become too numb to their plight…or too blind to see their need….

Thank you, Patti -

Peace.