Sunday, July 14, 2013

The book and its cover


One week ago, a man that I have lived and worked with for over a year, passed away suddenly. This will be a very raw post.


I am tired of being anything less than real, so this post is going to have some of the most genuine and possibly offensive truths that I’ve ever laid out.

The truth is, I misjudged him. He was my friend, yes. But, as I have discovered, we can often be most critical of those that are closest to us.

You see, in a place where we all pour out and give so much to serve our Lord and those in this beautiful country of Mexico, if you perceive someone on your team to be giving less than the “norm” or what is expected, it can be hard to not find yourself frustrated.

When I met Joshua over a year ago, I noticed the pace at which Joshua moved was less than average. I racked it up to be that Joshua was just one of those people who took his sweet time getting where he wanted to be, and doing what he wanted to do.
It really wasn’t a big deal to me, then. Until as I began to work more with Joshua, in the kitchen or on projects, I could become frustrated with how slowly he moved. It always felt like I was doing four times the work he was, and even though I often tried to just let it go, slowly something in my heart began to sneak up on me, that would deem him as lazy.

As time went by, I noticed Joshua moving slower and slower, I would watch him walk up the hill every day at such a slow pace that it would be hard to watch.
More and more I noticed that he would leave work early or come to work late. And in my heart, more and more that critical spirit labeled him things that most people would probably have agreed with. About two weeks ago, I had one of the most critical thoughts I had ever had about Joshua, this man that I called my friend, that I had laughed with and shared many stories with. This man that I’d worked so closely with for over a year. As we worked in the kitchen and he moved so slowly to cut the lettuce for our lunch, I remember thinking, “Why don’t they just send him home? He obviously doesn’t want to be here. He is a weak link in our team. We all pour out so much, and we need people who are giving their all.”

That was one of the last times I ever saw Joshua.


After a support-raising weekend, I came home and got up early on a Tuesday morning, came to work and joined in on our daily meetings here at YWAM, Mexico.
My fellow staff members seemed very solemn, we were worshipping, when I saw our base leader crying and hugging another staff member, I turned to Nathan and said, “did something happen?” He told me what he had just discovered as well, “Joshua died of a heart failure, he had an enlarged heart. His oxygen level was only 70 percent. ”


My surprise overtook me, and then, my guilt, and then my anger… “WHY DIDN’T WE KNOW HE WAS SICK?” Oh, the signs were so obvious…

As the next few minutes unfolded, the surprise and the guilt only grew. I would come to find out, that Joshua knew the whole time, that he was sick, and probably also knew as well, that he was dying. But he never told any of us.

We lived with him, we worked with him, we laughed with him, but we actually came to find out, that we knew very little about him.

About the struggle he’s endured alone for years.


A couple days later, we would hear a story that made things make so much sense.
A good friend, Rally would speak to his brother in Nigeria, and for the first time we would hear a story that fit pieces of the puzzle together, in a way I never thought would happen.

When Joshua was 5 years old, he lost his mother. When he was 11 years old, his father also passed away. It was only his older brother and him for a long time. Joshua led his older brother to the Lord, and after that shared his dream of serving the Lord as a missionary. His target: Mexico.

Joshua began to have heart issues, and when he went to the doctor, the doctor explained the seriousness of his condition. But he wouldn’t be stopped. He took the medicine, but refused to let it keep him from the mission field.
His older brother pleaded with him to stay, but Joshua loved the Lord. When his brother was adamant about him not leaving Nigeria, Joshua snuck away, once in Mexico, he called his brother to let him know where he had gone. His brother wept and told us, “That was the moment I knew that Joshua loved God more than he loved me” And that was the moment, that I realized, Joshua loved God more than he loved his own body.

As months passed, I could see that Joshua was moving slower and slower, things that he used to do with ease, he did with what seemed to be all he could muster up in his energy. But I was blind, we were blind.

For whatever reason Joshua chose not to let his YWAM family in on his suffering must have stemmed from the same reason that he never told us of the many sufferings he sustained in his life. The man that I thought I knew was not the man he turned out to be at all.

The revelation I had during the memorial as we were read his story, and as the shock of what he had been going through health-wise began to make more sense. I realized something very precious that led me to repentance and many tears…

This is a story of the widows might.

That familiar story in the bible, that Jesus tells us of the rich men that gave quite a bit, and a lonely widow, who I can imagine slowly moving up the altar to give her few copper coins. And how my Jesus blew our minds when he showed us the truth of this story… That woman gave more than those men combined. Why? Because, she gave all that she had.

I began to think, when have I ever given all that I had to serve God even when I couldn’t breathe? Or through physical pain and tiredness that I can only imagine?

From the outside it might appear that I, and many of us, worked harder than he did. But truly, he surpassed us. And now he is in his glory with the king.


This has taught me many things, but one of the things that in my guilt and repentance I have sought to change in myself the most, is to not judge those around me, but to love.

I wish with all my heart that I could have loved him better, bore his burdens more, and most of all not judged him.

Things are not as they seem. There was once a time that I thought Joshua was the last person here that I could have learned from, and to my surprise, I have learned more from him than anyone.

This is a quote from Joshua, which he wrote on his facebook status on May 23rd.

“The strongest people are those that love beyond all faults. Cry behind closed doors. And fight battles that nobody knows about”


For whatever reason, he believed what he was doing was right. Even when he felt those around him judging him, even when we put more work on him than he probably could have handled. In his loneliness, he was not lonely. He found his identity in his father, and drew his strength from him.


Goodbye my friend, thank you for what you have taught me. May I see people for what is truth under what is perceived, may I love beyond all faults. May I perceive when people cry behind closed doors and help them to fight the battles nobody knows about. I love you.

Friday, July 5, 2013

Thirsty

I got back from leading our two month mission trip for the January DTS, and tried to settle back into the beautiful life of missions I live here in Mexico.

Weeks went by, and I went through the motions, day after day. Little did I realize my heart was dried up, little did I realize just how hungry and thirsty I was for my father in heaven.

As a missionary, this is the biggest mistake we make. We pour and pour and sometimes forget to take a sip ourselves. How many times must I learn this lesson?

I started noticing my lack of passion in the last couple weeks, but it didn't even go through my brain that maybe something was wrong. So I just kept going through the motions... I serve that cup of cold water because it is what I do, but I was losing the passion in the serving of it.

Until two nights ago, when my daddy so graciously spoke to me... "You are thirsty"

OH... sweet words to hear from my papa. To realize all I needed was him. So there I sat in his presence after a simple prayer "give me a heart of flesh again instead of this heart of stone... this heart that I have let dry up."

I don't want to just do missions because I know it's what he loves. I don't want to feed someone who is hungry because I ought to. NO. I want to do it because it would hurt me more NOT to. That my daddy's heart would pound inside of my own chest for all those that I see.
That his passion would ooze through my pores to love the way he loves.

And there is only one way to have your heart aligned in that way with the father... Spending time with his presence... Being soaked in his love for me until there I can do nothing more but pour him out again.


Daddy, help me not forget this again.