Wednesday, July 19, 2017

The Right Reasons

It’s been about two weeks since I left Africa, and I leave for Thailand in a week. I’ve been enjoying my time in the States so far. It’s been a good combination of fun, relaxation, extrovert time, and introvert time. I miss Swaziland, but I’m excited for this next season to begin.

I recently had a five-hour conversation with a man I’ve considered a mentor for the past two and a half years. He drilled me with questions about Africa and Asia in an effort to understand what I’ve been going through, and to help me process what’s been going on. He asked me what’s the hardest about leaving Swaziland. I fought tears as I described the girls, friends, church, boyfriend, and community I left behind. He smiled in his wise yet playful way, and said, “I’m glad that’s what you had, and that you left it behind. It means if you would have stayed, it may have been for the wrong reasons.”

My community in Swaziland has been so supportive about this move to Thailand, but for some reason, the way he phrased his observation was so refreshing and encouraging. I’m on the right track. Even though my reasons to stay were “good” ones – help the girls, support my friends, develop my relationship, grow the church, etc. – they weren’t the right ones. My desire is to take what I learn and experience in Thailand, and bring it back to southern Africa. My desire is to see my girls, friends, church, and boyfriend again – sooner rather than later. And that’s a very attainable goal. But is it the right one?

As I was processing this on my flight and bus ride to Wisconsin today, my mind wandered to what one of my friends and ministry partners said to a teenage girl who dearly missed her baby. The baby currently lives at a different group home (as Hosea’s Heart currently doesn’t have the facility or staff to raise infants, at least not yet), and while the mother was in deep emotional pain from not seeing her child in some time, my friend asked her, “If, for whatever reason, you never see your child again, will you still praise God and say that He is good?”

I can’t relate to a teen mom aching to see her child. But I began to ask myself the same question regarding my current situation.

If, for whatever reason, I never return to Africa, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If I never see my girls again, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If our four-year-old doesn’t remember me in two years, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If I never see or do life alongside my ministry cohorts again, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If my relationship with my boyfriend ends in turmoil, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If my Stateside family and friends all turn against me and no longer support my life overseas, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

If I am called to return to America indefinitely, will I still praise God and say that He is good?

The more I asked myself these questions and promised God, “Yes, I will praise You and say that You are good!” the more peace overcame me on that bus ride. And then, the Spirit led me down another thought process…

When I see women being openly sold and exploited in the red-light district of Bangkok, will I praise God and say that He is good?

When I meet pimps and johns selling and purchasing girls like meat, will I praise God and say that He is good?

When I meet a girl refusing to leave her life of prostitution, will I praise God and say that He is good?

When I see a child, the age of my girls in Swaziland, trafficked across borders by her own family, will I praise God and say that He is good?

Those questions are harder to answer, and that promise is harder to make. I’ve had so many arguments with God about social injustice and the abuse of girls and women I love so much. But this I know – He sees them, hears their cries, lifts them up, and sets them free.

He upholds the cause of the oppressed
and gives food to the hungry.
The Lord sets prisoners free,
the Lord gives sight to the blind,
the Lord lifts up those who are bowed down,
the Lord loves the righteous.
The Lord watches over the foreigner
and sustains the fatherless and the widow,
but the frustrates the ways of the wicked.
Psalm 146:7-9


I will praise You, and know that You are good.




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As of July 19th, I am still $10,200 short of my fundraising goal for 18 months in Thailand. Interested in helping out? Online donations can be sent via PayPal to racheldanell@gmail.com, or contact me via email about sending checks. Thank you!

1 comment:

  1. Wishing you God's best and you start this new phase of life and ministry!

    ReplyDelete