Monthly Archives: August 2011

Cambodia – First Thoughts

We have been back in San Diego for about a week it has taken me this long to begin processing all that happened on my trip to Cambodia. I am sure it is cliché to say that this trip changed me but it surely did. I am a certainly a confirmed advocate for short-term mission trips after my experience, but honestly, me being changed is just the beginning. Just like the dust kicked up into the air from what seemed like hundreds of motos and Tuk-Tuks racing through the streets of Phnom Penh, I feel like the dust in me has been shaken and still has not settled. I carried several things home with me, including some faces, experiences, ideas, and lingering questions about God’s plan for my life.

When you get home from a trip like this, you are often asked to share some of the most incredible stories. As I have tried to respond to these requests I have found it challenging. I realize that so many of the things that have made impressions on me are not necessarily stories of amazing things that God has done. Some of the deepest impressions are more of the places where the potential lies; where light is starting to break through the darkness but hasn’t fully come in yet. In addition, when I think back on the most incredible stories, I think about the people I met and how I saw God working through them.

 I saw a small but mighty coalition of committed laborers loving the poor, the sick, the abused and the orphan without the promise of daily fanfare, praise or miracles. We didn’t come home with a certain number of decisions made to follow Christ or any other typical milestones that we celebrate as Christians. Instead, I saw something more beautiful than I have probably ever seen happening in the body of Christ.

I met the unsung heroes at World Vision who are going out night after night, providing survival tips and basic medical care to children and teens living on the streets. I met the Children at Risk workers, pouring all of their lives and energies to see a small group of kids in a slum of Phnom Penh realize their value in Christ and find hope for the future. I saw young women with beaming smiles, serving us coffee at Daughters with pride and confidence, knowing their value despite their past as sex workers (most of them forced into it). I saw the quiet, meek leaders at the Happy Tree Orphanage, loving these kids with HIV and so proud of their kids as they sang songs for us. I saw a group of 22 strangers who met in Cambodia with a mission to serve – a group of people willing to do anything and everything to be the hands and feet of Christ and be a shining light in a place that has seen so much darkness.

I have so many stories to share, which I will do here in the coming weeks. I just want to pause and say thank you to so many Christians who are truly demonstrating what it means to follow Jesus into the nations, into the slums, into the brothels, and into the darkest corners of the earth to share the hope of Christ. What a privilege it is to have served with you and to be a witness to the incredible, miraculous love that you are giving so generously.

Before going on this trip, I remember how excited I was to go somewhere new and see how God was working. After arriving in Cambodia, I realized that seeing God move in incredible ways is not something that you go to Cambodia to see; it is something you go Cambodia to do. God’s plan is that WE are the vessel that carries out his miraculous work. This following Christ idea is not something we are merely called to witness. What an opportunity to be in the stories versus just telling them and some of the stories were just at the beginning. With this realization though comes a second – unless we go, get our hands dirty and commit to doing the work, the plan breaks down.

With the overwhelming needs staring me in the face from my time in Cambodia, never before have I felt so compelled to put myself fully in God’s hand and be a part of his plan to save the children of the needy, rescue to oppressed, comfort the sick and proclaim the good news of Christ as I go. Thank you to Cambodia for reminding me of the importance of one life, one child. To rescue one of the little ones that Jesus welcomed to him is worth a lifetime’s labor.

I keep wrestling with the best way to wrap this up and one verse keeps coming to mind. In the first chapter of Colossians, it talks about the mysteries of the gospel being Christ in us, the hope of glory. Never before have I witnessed how real this is, that as we go we carry the hope of Christ within us, the hope of glory.


Countdown to Cambodia

In 3 days, Chris and I along with 19 other individuals will be on our way to Phnom Penh, Cambodia. We have been looking forward to this trip for many months and as the time of our departure draws closer I find myself wondering how this is going to change me. This week I have been doing some additional reading and studying on the cultural dos and don’ts, the dress codes, weather, religions and people groups.  In addition, this evening, I watched a documentary on-line entitled Enemies of the People. It tells the story of the Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot and the Killing Fields where nearly 2 million people were slaughtered from 1975 – 1979.

When you watch something like this and hear the stories of individuals who found themselves doing the unimaginable, killing people daily because they were ordered to do so, it is hard to imagine how this country can recover. It seems that everyone in Cambodia today must have either been involved in this genocide or been impacted by it and I am not sure that one has an easier recovery than the other. With so many things left unexplained and questions gone unanswered, rebuilding seems insurmountable.

There is a point in the film where one of the men who performed these killings, which included men, women, and children, shares how his insides are constantly spinning with the images of what he has done. His eyes look like open wounds. He talks about the knowledge that families may come to avenge their relatives by killing him. In addition, he shares his fears of what will happen after he dies, based on his Buddhist beliefs. He says, “I don’t know what I am going to be reborn into. How many holes of Hell must I go through?  I feel desperate but I don’t know what to do.”  He adds, “I am desolate.”

As I watched this, my heart ached. Justice, so close to the heart of God, is a necessity. There is no excuse and no escaping the consequences of what this man had done. But, as a follower of Christ, listening to this man’s utter hopelessness, the urgency of God’s mission struck me. I longed to share with him the story of a God who loves and demands justice but also loves people so much that He sacrificed His one and only Son to pay the penalty for all this man had done.  There is a message of hope and redemption in Jesus, the good news.

I was recently talking with a dear friend about the scripture Micah 6:8, “He Has shown all you people what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God.” She has a huge heart for justice, specifically related to the problem of sex trafficking of young girls and boys. She also has a heart for the pimps and johns who run the brothels trafficking these children, which is not something you hear everyday. I think that in addition to direction on to how we are to treat the oppressed, there is an answer in this verse on how we are to treat the oppressors.

 In Micah 6:8, God gives us the following three charges: do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly.  The do justice piece has certainly been a focus for me this year. I have been learning how to actively be busy doing justice for those that are in need. Likewise, I have been convicted about walking humbly and really discovering what this should look like, continually asking God to check me in this area. But what about love mercy? Why does this charge immediately follow do justice?

The Hebrew word used in the verse, translated as mercy, is chesed. This word is typically translated as loving-kindness and it relates to a covenant relationship, such as between God and us. It can also be translated as mercy because God’s demonstration of loving-kindness to us is often in showing mercy, as we do not always hold up our commitment. Let me also share the first definition of mercy in Webster’s dictionary: compassion or forbearance shown especially to an offender or to one subject to one’s power; also : lenient or compassionate treatment.

As I have been studying this, I felt that God was showing me that loving mercy, kindness and forgiveness is so important for us to show to others as He has shown it to us in our sin. As we move forward doing justice, we are going to encounter some very different things, mainly the individuals that sit on the side of the oppressor. There is so much in the Bible on forgiveness and God’s mercy to us, but this is one of the most difficult commands for us to follow - offering mercy to those who have hurt us.

One of my favorite passages is found in 2 Corinthians 5 – the Ministry of Reconciliation. Verse 19 says, “For God was in Christ, reconciling the world to himself, no longer counting people’s sins against them. And he gave us this wonderful message of reconciliation.” (NLT) Going into this Cambodia trip, I am so motivated to do justice, to love mercy, to walk humbly, and to share the good news with those who have never heard it. What a privilege we have that God chooses to use us to deliver his message of reconciliation.

I can’t wait to share updates when we are back…stay tuned!


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