This is a picture of us from 10 years ago. It makes me smile.
There we are, 20 years old, our first adventure in Kenya together. It’s set in a village called Maji Moto,
a little outpost of civilization, rising out of the dust of Massailand around a
geothermal vent (maji moto = hot water).
You can see a lot about these two characters by this picture. They are young and browned by the
African sun. They like to stand
close together, despite the heat and the dust. They wear the beadwork handicrafts given to them by their friends,
and rest in the shade of an mbati (tin) roof in the equatorial sun. He wears around his neck a stethoscope,
just taking a lunch break from a busy clinic. It’s a symbol, of his dreams to be a healer, of the
revelation in the human body; he is just beginning to hear the voice of God
through it. And it rests atop a
thrift-store polyester button-up, uniform of the bohemian to match the afro
that blends into the shade of the building. I like this guy.
And there she is; the golden one that he’s pursued across the world. The Peachtree Road Race t-shirt reminds
her of the races she’s run and calls her to the ones before her. Sunglasses and twin braids. And you can see it in their eyes and in
their posture: the passion and the idealism. This is where it truly began for us; the opening act of this
chapter of the story of Yahweh, in which our parts are set in Africa.
Saturday, November 3, 2012
Full Circle: Starting Point
This is a picture of us from 10 years ago. It makes me smile.
There we are, 20 years old, our first adventure in Kenya together. It’s set in a village called Maji Moto,
a little outpost of civilization, rising out of the dust of Massailand around a
geothermal vent (maji moto = hot water).
You can see a lot about these two characters by this picture. They are young and browned by the
African sun. They like to stand
close together, despite the heat and the dust. They wear the beadwork handicrafts given to them by their friends,
and rest in the shade of an mbati (tin) roof in the equatorial sun. He wears around his neck a stethoscope,
just taking a lunch break from a busy clinic. It’s a symbol, of his dreams to be a healer, of the
revelation in the human body; he is just beginning to hear the voice of God
through it. And it rests atop a
thrift-store polyester button-up, uniform of the bohemian to match the afro
that blends into the shade of the building. I like this guy.
And there she is; the golden one that he’s pursued across the world. The Peachtree Road Race t-shirt reminds
her of the races she’s run and calls her to the ones before her. Sunglasses and twin braids. And you can see it in their eyes and in
their posture: the passion and the idealism. This is where it truly began for us; the opening act of this
chapter of the story of Yahweh, in which our parts are set in Africa.
Sunday, October 7, 2012
How was Haiti?
Last month I spent a week in Cap Haitien with a short-term
medical team. It was a powerful
experience, deeply refreshing and challenging. I am no expert, but here are some thoughts from that time:
The
first thing that struck me stepping off the plane was the heat. It has a force behind it from latitude,
backed up by mountains behind the city that block the wind off the sea to
create heat under pressure. I
heard it described as “walking through peanut butter that was warmed up in the
microwave.” This heat under
pressure seems to affect many things: the musical, slurred French vowels of
Creole, the tropical sense of “island time,” and the occasional bursts of
frustration and protest.
There
were the sights, smells, and the sense of desperation from absolute
poverty. The recent storms during
hurricane season had led to an overflow of the sewage system, and a subsequent
resurgence in cholera and intestinal worms. The landscape around the city is brown and barren, and there
is a sadness, hopelessness in the eyes of so many that you meet. It reminds me that poverty is so much deeper
than a lack of resources; it is a social, biological, spiritual disease/evil.
And
in life on the ragged edge of survival, everything has meaning and
purpose. Food, water, shelter,
medicine, security are not guaranteed.
I am humbled by the realization of the artificial dramas in which I play
the leading role here at home: inconveniences and inefficiency in my work as an
American physician, exercise as my right to relieve stress, artificial
war/conflict through sports and television drama to fill a vacuum of
meaning. It is a reminder that
these places on the edge are where I belong, not because I am noble, but
because I am called, and perhaps because I am so easily distracted.
I
have been taught that “It takes a whole world to know a whole Christ.” Haitian Christians opened my eyes to a
sense of spiritual reality that pervades all of life. Speaking to pastors at each stop along the way, I would ask
about the opportunities and challenges they and their churches face. Each one of them turned to me, even
standing amidst absolute poverty, disease, riots, and hopelessness, and they
would speak of the spiritual forces of good and evil. They could see clearly a deeper reality of which I have only
glanced dimly, and have shuddered.
And their prayers sprang from a well of experience, their fellowship an
honor I will hold proudly all my days.
“But thanks be to God, who always leads us as captives in Christ’s
triumphal procession and uses us to spread the aroma of the knowledge of him
everywhere.” (2 Corinthians 2:14).
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)