Friday, August 5, 2011

India-third real day

Sorry I got behind a day, not a lot of free time in our schedules. I'll make it a goal to get caught up tomorrow.


In the morning we visited another school supported by a Christian man intended for poor children. The hospitality of the Indian people is something unparalleled in the States. After our program they took us into a cool room, set up chairs and a fan and brought us snacks with drinks. The man told us the story of how he started with only 17 students and now has over 400 at his school. Getting to see the ways God has blessed the faithful in India by allowing the numbers in ministries to grow incredibly is so exciting!



 In the afternoon we were able to go to the medical camp which was the part of the trip I was most looking forward to. At first I was disappointed that I wasn't actually doing medical work but I was soo thankful I was given the job of praying with the patients. I was surprised at their willingness to be prayed for; Hindus and Muslims allowed us to pray for them and even brought children and babies to us. Although some couldn't understand us it was still an amazing experience.


We prayed not only for their physical health but their spiritual walk as well, that they would see Christ's love through our ministry and seek after it. Dr. Go, the doctor from HBI charged only 10 rupees or 25 cents for the medical work-my Indian friend Sonal explained to me that they would do it for free but the government required them to charge for the service to avoid doctors giving out faulty medicine.


Three little girls that spoke some english repeatedly came up to me to talk. They pinched my cheeks and told me I was very nice and pretty and I told them they were crazy if they didn't think the same of themselves. After we talked some more the one in the green scarf (pictured below) asked if I was a Christian. I told her I was, and she told me she was a Hindu. I wondered if something that seems minor like meeting me and knowing my faith could possibly make a difference in her life. I know it could be her only experience with Christ and I'm praying God will use it on that sweet girl.


Wednesday, August 3, 2011

India-second real day

What a difference in these two days. We practiced a lot at night and today went much smoother. We visited two schools in the morning and one in the afternoon. The first school had 900 kids but we could only fit 400 into the space where we did our program. They really loved the songs and were super responsive to our teaching. Some of the children were Hindu but the school was Christian (the principal let them in as a service to the community and a way of spreading the gospel) so it was really cool to get to reach out to them in an environment where we could speak freely.

The second school was in a remote village and we were the first visitors the school had ever had. Our friend from HBI worked on Christian radio with the owner of the church/school and got us connected. The children were sooo excited to see us and I felt like such a vessel from God.We talked to the owner of the church and his mom afterwords and he told us that his father started the church from scratch and now there are over 200 believers there. He wanted us to go to his church and pray in it before we left and it reminded me how much power our God has. In America we limit his abilities with our idea of practicality and being reasonable. We forget that He is the God that created this universe and certainly has power over His creation. Simply put, we wrongly attribute our weaknesses to an all powerful God.

The third school we visited used to be a government run school but had switched managements so there weren't as many kids there. At first they seemed kind of reserved and cold but once we sang undignified and trading my sorrows for them they got really excited. We sang them again and the second time our team went where they were standing and danced with them. The interaction was such a God thing because some of our team members are normally very reserved but they felt comfortable enough to go be with the students. After, we learned most of the students came from Hindu families and even some of the teachers were Hindu but we were able to still do our program and pray for them. God has funny timing-the first day was already going to be hard but He challenged us further. The second day He makes very rewarding and comforts us as we realize we can do nothing without Him.


Tuesday, August 2, 2011

India-first real day

God has clearly been teaching me patience. Through this, endurance too. I switch back and forth from frustration and exhaustion throughout the day. Our team has had some difficulty with organization in the program we use for the schools we visit.


Yesterday we visited a "senior citizens home" which were codewords for a place for the destitute, mentally challenged and dying. We saw a lot of hard things but we were able to pray for them. I saw a side of India I never thought existed and was able to do something about it. We went from person to person praying for comfort from the God of all comfort and the reminder that these men were still children of God despite their health or acceptance from society. Many of them were just skin and bones-I've never seen people so skinny. One of the men I prayed for had a baseball sized tumor on his forehead. At first I was taken aback-not at their conditions, rather that I had no idea what to pray for. Healing? Or just comfort through sickness? Expect a miracle or assume God's working despite death? The ones we prayed with were the healthy ones out of the group; there were many more who couldn't sit through our program. Do I take back thankfulness for my health or does this equate me with the Pharisee that thanked God that he was better than the broken tax collector next to him?


That afternoon we visited the Paul Gupta school on campus and through our performance was disorganized, we were able to make many children smile.



Hard days, but God is teaching me slowly things I could have never learned in the U.S.