Category Archives: 25 days for Peace (2015)

Rookie Mistake (DOP #14 2015)

I’ve been out of the country about a dozen times now, and most of those trips were what the North American church likes to call “mission trips”.  I’ve been to Germany, Haiti, and Nicaragua on these trips.  If you know anything about me, you know that I hate looking like I don’t know what I am doing.  So when I first started going to Nicaragua and Haiti regularly, I spent a lot of time before I left trying to learn how to be a good “short-term missionary” and not make any rookie mistakes.  Some of the simple tips I remember are: 1.  Talking louder doesn’t help them understand English any better, it just makes you look dumb.  2.  Don’t drink the water.  3.  Don’t rinse your toothbrush in the water.  4.  Don’t assume that you know the best way to do something.  5.  Don’t give handouts.

On my first trip to Nicaragua I did my best to follow all of these rules, except the last one.  I really struggled with that one.  I mean come on, this kid needs help, and giving him $5 isn’t going to ruin my day or his right?  So there I am on the bus after the obligatory hour at the market waiting on the straggling group of women to finish up their purchases and get on board.  I had “met” a young kid in the market who kept following my group around and trying to be helpful.  He did such a good job that I felt like we owed him a bit of a tour guides fee for his help.  Well, they had warned us against giving away money in the market, so my plan was to wait until the bus was just about to pull away and I would toss some cash out of the window at this boy.

I don’t know where all of the kids came from, but as soon as I had dropped some cash to the one kid, it seemed like the bus was surrounded.  They started throwing grasshopper things they had woven out of grass in through the open windows, all of them hoping to get a small piece of the pie.  While the last stragglers struggled through the chaos to get to their seats, the seated team members were all doing their best to throw the grasshopper things back out of the windows.  As I look back at the memory my brain is trying to tell me that the kids outside started rocking the bus to tip it over!  (That last part isn’t true…but it was a pretty traumatic experience…so my brain is exaggerating a bit.)  The driver managed to get through the crowd without hitting any of the kids and we sped off.  I slid down into my seat and refused to acknowledge my role in the chaos.  I’m not sure if anyone else knew that I had started the riot, but if they did know they let me off the hook.

I was pretty embarrassed, and frustrated!  All I had wanted to do was help a kid who looked like he needed help, and it had nearly turned into an international incident.

So I learned from that experience that I was going to follow that rule in the future, because it is a good rule.  For the next 3 years and 6 trips, the rule served me well, keeping me from starting any international incidents on my future trips out of the country.  The idea behind the rule is good, and it kept me out of a certain kind of trouble.  I even began to teach the rule to first-timers, so they would know better and wouldn’t have to learn from their mistakes the way I had.

Overall it was a good rule, until I started to use it as an excuse to ignore the needs around me.  I eventually became so trained in “the rule” that I stopped seeing the needs and responding to them on a case by case basis.   I’m afraid that I’ll never be able to forget the woman who asked for our help on my 4th trip to Nicaragua.  We had just finished eating at “Tip-Top” and we were already late for the next event we were supposed to be at.  I was the only guy in the van, and had taken it upon myself to make sure that all of the women were safely inside the van before I got in.  This left me in charge of closing the door.

The woman saw us getting in the van and moved towards us in a quick shuffle, which I assume was the fastest she could move.  I don’t speak any significant amount of Spanish, but it was obvious she was looking for something to help.  As I think back to the memory, even though I know she was speaking another language, I can hear her pleading for our help, just something, anything, to help her and her family.  The ladies I was with had squeezed into the van by this time, and I had found my seat and was reaching back to close the sliding door, but the woman had put herself in the way of the door.  I slowly slid the door closed an inch at a time, and eventually was able to close the door without hurting the woman.  The van started and we drove away.  We left the woman standing outside the restaurant, with even less than she had when we first met her.  We had taken the small glimmer of hope from her, and drove away with it.

I don’t know who that woman was, or what she really needed.  I don’t know who she went home to that night, or if she even had a home to go to.  The fact is that I will never know.  I gave up my chance to know her in any way when I closed the door in her face.  We didn’t talk about what I had just done in the van, but the silence was enough to know that we were all thinking about it.  We arrived at our event  and quickly got to work, slowly forgetting about the woman we had left behind.

Except I haven’t.

I had $5 in my pocket.  It would have taken 5 seconds to dig it out.  I could have done something, and I didn’t.  I’m crying as I type this, tears rolling down my face crying.  I made a choice to ignore her, to ignore her humanity, and to drive away.  It has been more than two years, and it still hurts me to think of that day.

I haven’t forgotten.
When I was in Haiti this year, we found ourselves in a little boutique that served cold soda and ice cream along with souvenirs and keepsakes.  It’s one little 45 minute stop in a week full of heat and hard work.  It has a balcony that looks over the roadway, and a little courtyard in front.   I bought a coke, and stood outside on the balcony, straining my eyes towards the horizon looking for something new and interesting.  A voice called up from the courtyard.  A little boy had found his way in and was asking for something.  I turned away and walked back inside.  I knew the rule.  Then I remembered the woman in Nicaragua that I had left, and I turned my retreat into a charge towards the counter.  I bought another coke, and returned to the balcony.  The kid had given up on  me and wasn’t looking up anymore, but after I checked to make sure the rest of the team wasn’t watching, I got his attention and threw him the coke.  He caught it with a smile and disappeared out of the courtyard door.  I smiled and congratulated myself on not causing a scene.

If you're ever in the area, stop by!

It was probably 3 minutes later that I noticed the boy had found his way to the top of the stairs, and he wasn’t alone anymore.  As I looked into the faces of the 3 boys at the top of the stairs, I knew I had done it again.  I had made a rookie mistake.  I was tempted to retreat into an inner room and pretend I hadn’t seen them, but I knew I couldn’t.  So I walked over to the doorway, crouched down and started asking them questions in the little bit of Creole I knew.  “Mwen rele Josh.  Rele?  Kilajou?”  Having exhausted my relevant Creole I asked in English if they went to school.  We chatted as best we could for a few minutes, and after they asked for help that I honestly couldn’t give them, and I said that I was sorry I couldn’t help, we chatted a bit for a few more minutes, and then it was time to go.

I will never get a chance to talk to that woman.

At least those boys knew I cared.

“Go in peace, be warm and filled” is so easy to say, but actually bringing that kind of peace is so very difficult.  The least we can do is acknowledge other people.  We can at least give them the dignity they deserve.
If you get the chance, make the rookie mistakes.

"Peace"

“Peace”

Resolve (DOP #13 2015)

I’m pretty worn out.  I haven’t been getting any criticism from my posts, but there is just a lot going on and it is hard to find time to rest.  It’s the standard holiday story of our generation, and I won’t try to impress you with how busy I am, because I know that someone else is busier than me.  Being busy isn’t really what this post is about anyways.

I have been debating for the last few hours about just skipping the post for today.  I brought up my post from last year on Day 13.  It was called “Do Monotonous Things.  Repeatedly.”  So I recommend you read that for the day.  It has been a good reminder to me that it is easy to say peace, but the actual pursuit of it will be filled with days where all I can do is set one foot in front of the other.

Goodnight all. I’m hoping to pick up speed again tomorrow.

Content (DOP #12 2015)

I recently moved out of my parents house.  I moved everything I owned to my new apartment in Fort Wayne.  It was quite a bit of work, and I was not enjoying the process very much.  It seemed like it took forever to clear out all of the stuff I had accumulated over the decades I had lived with them.  Hundreds of trips up and down the stairs to my waiting truck.

Interestingly, I didn’t find any peace in knowing I possess a lot of things.  Instead it brought about great stress.  How do I move this safely? Where do I put it in my new place?  Why do I even own this?  A lot of the stuff I owned seemed worthless to me.  It made me want to throw it all away and start over.

I think that we carry things with us too long to find peace in them.  Some memories and experiences, some relationships, some possessions are just weighing us down.

I have made a deliberate effort to change the way I consume.  Knowing that I would likely never have dinner guests, I chose to only buy one plate, one bowl, one spoon, one fork, one baking pan and one pot to use for myself.  It forces me to keep them clean, by doing it this way, I don’t have weeks worth of dishes piled in the sink.  I hate doing dishes, so by ensuring that I couldn’t put them off for very long, I don’t become overwhelmed when it is time to do them.

Another consumption change is trying to use everything in my cupboards before I go grocery shopping.  I don’t want a collection of food I’ll never use.  It is a simple change, but as I continue to simplify my possessions, I am finding peace in having just enough.  I find peace in being content.

What small practical change can you make to find room for more peace in your life?

 

Plan (DOP #11 2015)

I have noticed that all of our contributors are really wrestling with the state of the world right now.  It seems that peace has set sail from these shores and been lost at sea.  For the last several years I have enjoyed listening to the news incessantly, but in the last few months I have given up on listening religiously and have just been turning my radio off.  It is too stressful to listen to terrible events the world over and have no solution for them.

Beth, one of this year’s contributors, mentioned a lack of magic.  The feeling that so often is associated with this season.  The glimmer of hope breaking through when all seems lost seems to be missing this year.  I can’t help but agree with her.  I haven’t felt very magical yet.  I would blame this project, but I know that last year didn’t feel like this.

Peace is elusive.  Even we who are actively seeking it are struggling to find it.  I can’t remember the last time I felt what I would describe as the warm hug of the universe.  An enveloping calm with the tingling sense of a loving embrace.  In my search for peace, I find that I am worried that it hasn’t shown up!

I begin to wonder if I am grasping too hard.  If we imagine the feeling of peace as a butterfly flitting by on a fragrant spring breeze, am I a hand that has snatched it from the air, crushing it’s delicate beauty between my calloused fingers?  Perhaps one of the secrets of feeling peace is being able to accept it when it comes, but allowing it to depart at it’s own desire.

We try to keep peace captive, when the feeling of peace is a broadwinged mariposa that must not be forced to remain for fear of breaking it’s fragile wings against our cruel and unyielding skin.

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If this feeling is so fleeting, so elusive, why pursue it at all?  Would we not be better to live as if the feeling didn’t exist, so that we could ignore the ache of its absence?

I believe the answer is yes…If peace were only a feeling.

Instead we can find peace in the midst of this storm tossed world by remembering that the feeling of peace is simply a moment when you clearly see God’s plan at work.  The butterfly doesn’t cease to exist when it flys from your hand, but instead carries on with its work.  God’s plan for me, for you, for this world doesn’t cease to work when we don’t see the plan in action, or when we don’t feel the pleasant effects of tickling butterfly feet against our open palms.

The plan still exists.  The plan that ends with Jesus making all things new.  The plan where every tear is wiped from our eyes, and death will be no more.  In that day God will make his home amoung us, with far more splendor than his humble beginnings in a Manger so many years ago.

This is all part of the plan.  Even if we don’t understand it.

Jesus, the Prince of Peace, is coming to rule over his subjects.  What a glorious day awaits us who would be ruled by such a king.

A Touch of Hope (DOP #10 2015)

This past summer I had an opportunity to spend 2 weeks in Haiti filming with Gateway Chapel, and Touch of Hope.  I’ve written about the life changing adventures we had, but now I’m finally releasing some of the film from the trip.   I’ve spent nearly 12 hours on this section of film, and the last few were spent tonight wrapping it up, so I present it in lieu of my regularly scheduled writing.

Touch of Hope is actively pursuing restoration and peace for the people of Simonette Haiti.  It is a big job, and they could use a little bit of end of the year financial help.  Check out the video to learn more, and be sure to consider a donation as you are able.

The video does feature a intense medical situation, and could be considered graphic or disturbing.   If you find the medical section too intimidating, please skip to 2:01 to hear the important story.

You can also find the link here.


 

25 Days for Peace is a cooperative blogging experiment between myself and five other artists, designed to explore the facets of peace, particularly centered around this season intended to experience the peace of Christ. Visit this page to see the other contributions to this journey, and like it to join with us in exploring what peace means.