Packing, Packing and More Packing!

On Saturday morning I felt excited–not because anything particularly eventful was going on in my life, but because I knew that my friends from the School of Discipleship January class were leaving for Asia that day! Memories of my own long-anticipated vision tour to Asia eight months ago flooded  into my mind as I knew it was the January class’s big day to hop on a plane at DFW International Airport for the first leg of the journey to Asia.

Some of my memories of the vision tour were actually intertwined with memories of the January class. The current January class arrived to Texas to start School of Discipleship just as my class (the August 2010 class) left for Asia! During the frenzy of packing that happened on Friday night, January 21, and Saturday morning, January 22, I got to meet two of my future house-mates, Christina and Jolie. I remember how happy I was that they actually wanted to meet us, even though I was a little stressed–especially Saturday morning when Jolie and her family arrived to move her into the apartments! Thankfully, they were very understanding of me as I frantically tried to stuff things into my suitcase and wore the expression of a deer in the headlights 🙂

Anyone who has been on a Gospel for Asia tour to Asia can tell you that it’s a lot of work! Aside from taking care of travel arrangements like applying for passports and visas, practicing songs to share with the Bridge of Hope children and Bible-college students, and learning about cultural do’s and don’ts, the week before the trip includes the inevitable chores of buying last-minute items, packing, packing and more packing. If you’re like me, you decide to do the vast majority of this the night before your departure, hence the deer-in-the-headlights look on Saturday morning.

When you finally make it to the Gospel for Asia office so that all the staff members and families can pray for you before you leave for the airport, you can finally breathe a sigh of relief (unless you’re me, who realized after I got there that I had forgotten my camera. By the grace of God, a very kind staff member offered to drive me back to the apartment so I could get it.) At about 8:30 last Saturday morning, the January students made it to this point. Back home , I thought of them as they gathered at the office for the prayer-bathed commencement of their Asia tour!

Having read their posts on Facebook counting the days before their trip, I knew that they were excited to see Asia, and I couldn’t help but feel a bit of that same enthusiasm–and wish I was there with them.  I know that they are not only going to have the privilege of seeing another country in all its beauty and diversity, but they are also going to draw closer to God and to each other. They will have the joy of actually getting to see what a Bridge of Hope center or a Bible college is like. Their hearts will melt as they watch the Bridge of Hope students perform songs and dances and recite Scripture memory verses. They might get to pump water from a Jesus Well. (Hopefully, they will not have to use the Jesus Well to wash their feet after accidentally stepping into a sewage-filled gulley, as I did.) And one of the best parts of the trip is getting to spend time with some of the national works on the mission field. This gave us a chance to see that they are not only godly servants who inspire our humility and awe by making huge strides in advancing Christ’s kingdom, but they are also PEOPLE. As they share their lives with us for a few days and educate us about their culture and ministry work, we realize that they have families, they laugh and make jokes, they know how to get the best prices on souvenirs, and they have unique stories of God’s faithfulness in their lives. Their examples of love and hospitality make a vision tour unforgettable. So all the preparations for the trip–like packing and attending after-work meetings and overcoming one’s fear of bugs and/or cultural blunders–are worth it.

I thank God that my classmates and I had this experience–and that the January students are currently having it! What a gift: He gave us the chance to partner with our brothers and sisters in Asia, and He has also allowed us to meet them face-to-face.

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A Wife Beaten, Abandoned and Abused, Who Will Care For Her?

At a Bridge of Hope center we visited while we (School of Discipleship Students) were in Asia for our Asia tour,  we had a special surprise waiting for us. After watching the kids perform some Bible songs for us (and doing a dance for them :P), the area leader introduced a brother and sister to us. As he spoke about how Bridge of Hope impacted their lives and shared about their mom’s hardships, I knew who these children were: They were Geeta’s children.

Geeta is a single mother. Her husband, an alcoholic, beat her—sometimes with a cricket bat (like a flat baseball bat). One day he left, and Geeta and their two children haven’t seen him since. Although Geeta found work, her earnings were meager. What’s more, she felt very anxious about their living condition. They lived in a shanty near the jungle, and she was afraid that tigers would attack them. A neighbor gave Geeta a Gospel tract, and she experienced the love of Jesus in her life. She got involved with a local Gospel For Asia-supported church, and she enrolled her children in the Bridge of Hope center. Having her children at the Bridge of Hope center was a great blessing to Geeta because they received both tutoring and meals there, and she didn’t have to worry about them being at home alone while she was working. But her troubles didn’t totally leave. Her landlord had been pressuring her for sexual favors and threatened to kick her out because she refused. Thankfully, her pastor was able to arrange some help for her.

When Geeta appeared at the Bridge of Hope center, with her hair braided tightly and her sari neatly folded, I kind of felt like we were meeting a long-lost friend and a celebrity at the same time.  It’s amazing how the Lord gives Geeta such dignity and grace in the midst of some awful circumstances. The pastors took us to the church, where we talked with Geeta and took pictures with her. Best of all, we had the chance to pray for her. Geeta is just an ordinary woman—one of many, many single women in similar circumstances—yet she had a group of 12 people from across the ocean who were excited to meet her. It’s so wonderful that in the Body of Christ, we can have compassion for and feel a bond with each other even before meeting face-to-face. I’m so glad that God has adopted us all into His family!

 

You can watch a video of Geeta’s Story

 

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