The Unlikely Missionary

“Search me, O God, and know my heart!
Try me and know my thoughts!
And see if there be any grievous way in me,
and lead me in the way everlasting!”
(Psalm 139:23-24)

I should never have gone on the mission trip my sophomore year of college.  I did not deserve to go.  I was a terrible witness to the Christian life.  There were many who deserved to go, who would have done better – why was I selected as part of the summer mission team?  I didn’t deserve it, but I sure needed it.

I had become a master of hypocrisy; living the duplicitous lifestyle of a rebellious, foul-mouthed, directionless twerp – who, in the right surroundings, could also sing and extol the praises of the Lord with the best of the saints.  I was everything those outside the church say is wrong inside the church.  I had no sense of discipline, I “kicked at the goads,” and what’s worse, I really didn’t care.

I didn’t care about what my behavior was saying about my Lord, my family, even myself.  You might think that I only cared about myself, but while I might have been self-centered I certainly didn’t take care of my life.  I had no self-respect, and no respect for those around me.

I think I applied for the Summer Mission Program because I wanted the experience of going somewhere that people didn’t know me, to escape my problems for a summer, pad my resume with some “good works;” who knows what really motivated me.  Maybe it was my soul longing to be in a place where God would transform me.

I spent that summer in inner city San Jose, CA, working with City-Team Ministries.  City-Team had a great program that 1) brought inner city kids to a camp in the mountains for a week, 2) led Bible school programs for children at various locations throughout the city.  Working in the inner city that summer were a group of college kids from California, Canada, Iowa, and then me.  We had a great time sharing Bible stories with the kids, kids who just wanted to be loved and were eager to love us in return.

Thing is, I still wasn’t happy.  Being in a place like that for the summer, I had no place to hide.  The kids saw right though me.  The other volunteers for the summer saw through me too.  I still have the group picture we took that summer – I’m the one not smiling.

People always say that when you go on a mission trip, you think you are going to help other people, only to find out you are the one who receives the greater blessing.  That happened to me that summer.  Looking back I tell people that during that time there God was destroying the foundation that I had set my life upon – taking away the masks, the lies, the façade that I could never hope to maintain.  God was searching out the deepest parts of my life, my hidden heart, and was exposing my pride, my stubborn will, my disobedience – and purging those things with His refining fire.  God used that summer to begin a new work in me – it was painful, His hand was upon me, there was a great deal of pruning involved.  It was a hard summer, the work was emotionally exhausting, and the battle raging in my heart was spiritually exhausting.  But by the time we were done, I had learned to stop fighting, and to resign to the gracious work of God in my life.

Now I’m not suggesting that this is the right way to go into a mission trip, not by a long shot.  But I do maintain that getting involved in missions will transform you.  You will see the world differently, you will see yourself differently, you will learn to trust the Lord differently.

This the one of the benefits from following God into the mission field.  There are many more, but this is one that I know personally.  My prayer is that this mission to Haiti will bring real transformation to those who are going, and to those who are giving their support.

SDG

Practical Love

But if anyone has the world’s goods and sees his brother in need, yet closes his heart against him, how does God’s love abide in him? ” (1 John 3:17)

For those of you who don’t know how I plan my sermons, I usually take a day in the fall to plan out my preaching plan for the year.  This allows me to put the whole year in perspective, working up to the big days like Easter and Christmas, and along the way focusing on important themes or working through books of the Bible.  Still, it always amazes me how God’s Spirit works through such planning.

I selected I John for the beginning of the year thinking, “Let’s start the new year studying what it means to love one another so that we can become a more loving community.”  Working through 1 John we’ve seen how our assurance of salvation comes from the evidence of the new life that Christ has given us – that is, if we are saved we will follow his command to love one another (1 John 2:5).  Then we saw how, if we are walking with Christ, we must love our brother, so that there will be no cause for stumbling (1 John 2:10).  Last week we were reminded that as the children of God we are growing in the likeness of Christ (1 John 3:3).  This week we will see how our love for God is expressed in a very real and practical demonstration of love for our brother (1 John 3:17).

We cannot love God without that love being demonstrated in our love for those around us.  As John writes, if we have the world’s goods at our disposal and see our brother in need, yet we close our hearts to him, how can God’s love abide in us?  James 2:15 says, “If a brother or sister is poorly clothed and lacking in daily food, and one of you says to them, ‘Go in peace, be warmed and filled,’ without giving them the things needed for the body, what good is that?”  When Jesus told the parable of the final judgment, he said that he would separate the sheep from the goats.  To the sheep he would say, “I was hungry and you gave me food, I was thirsty and you gave me drink, I was a stranger and you welcomed me, I was naked and you clothed me, I was sick and you visited me, I was in prison and you came to me.”  When asked when they had done this, the Lord said, “As you did it to one of the least of these my brothers ,you did it to me” (Matthew 25:31-40).

Two weeks ago a powerful earthquake hit approximately 10 miles from the capital of Haiti, Port-au-Prince.  Millions of people have been affected by this disaster and over 150,000 are reported dead.  With many of the established sources of safety and security demolished – churches, schools, hospitals, and government buildings – survivors are searching for signs of hope and help.

The Presbyterian Church (USA) is responding through Presbyterian Disaster Assistance (PDA).  World Mission is in contact with and providing support to current mission personnel in Haiti.  PDA is rushing an initial $100,000 from One Great Hour of Sharing and designated funds to provide immediate emergency relief to the affected people.  Funds are being sent through our ecumenical and local partners working in Haiti.

What can we do to help?  The PDA recommends we stand in the “GAP”

Give – Financial support for relief efforts can be designated to DR000064.  Gifts can be made online at www.pcusa.org/pda, by phone at (800)872-3283, or checks can be mailed to Presbyterian Disaster Assistance, P.O. Box 643700, Pittsburgh, PA 15264-3700.

Act – Congregations and individuals can put together hygiene kits to be distributed through Church World Services.  Contact your local church to find out more about how you can help.

Pray – You can join with others in lifting up the people of Haiti and those seeking to provide aid in this critical time.

Beloved, let us love one another, and may our love for God be shown in how we love those who are in need.

Grace and peace,

SDG