Sunday, May 1, 2011

Blogs, Prayers, and a thank you...

I cannot remember how I found her blog.  I am a huge blog reader.  I couldn't count the number of blogs I follow.  Sick children (oh those babies with cancer forever have my heart), grieving families, and adoption blogs.  I read many, many adoption blogs.  I'm sure somehow, a click here and a click there, I followed adoption blogs to Katie Davis.  This sweet 21 year-old girl and her family of 13 adopted daughters I will get to meet in Uganda.  I can't wait!  It was in reading her blog that it became clear that I needed to visit orphans in Uganda.  We will get to spend some time with Katie and the 400 children that her ministry sponsors.  We will be there on a Saturday.  That is the day that they ALL come to her house.  Yes, they all come for food, worship and play.  I read something like they cook 50 chickens, 100 pounds of rice, and lots and lots of beans.  Every single Saturday.  I can't wait to show you pictures.  I'm going there!

This is an entry from Katie's blog.  It's just a short summary of what she's done while she's been there. 

Friday, August 14, 2009



It is my 16th Birthday and I am eating sushi at my favorite restaurant with my parents when I tell them that I would like to explore the possibility of taking a year in between high school and college to do mission work. This is unheard of in my family and they say they are not sure and will think about it. I am nervous, but somehow I know it is right. He changes their hearts.


I have just turned 18 and find an orphanage online. I beg my parents to let me visit over break, just three weeks. A month later I am on a plane. I am so excited. I am so scared of being, but I know He is going with me. I fall in love.


I graduate high school having made the commitment to teach Kindergarten for a year at a school in The Middle of Nowhere, Uganda. In August I get on the plane. I’m apprehensive and I cry most of the way because I miss my Mommy and my boyfriend. I am eager, but so uncertain. I trust Him. I teach 138 children how to speak English and to love Jesus.


It is October and I am just not sure I can do it anymore. I live in the smallest room I have ever seen in the back of a pastor’s house. I am more uncomfortable than I had bargained for. No one understands, not people here, not people at home. I am tired. But I am prideful and I am not going to quit. I don’t like this. But I know He has a plan. I learn, I grow, He is there.


It is December and God has spoken very clearly about opening a ministry that sponsors 40 of the orphaned children in the village where I am working. This involves moving into a different house, ALONE. It is big and I cannot imagine how God will fill it up. I am lonely and I am anxious. But I am still trusting. He fills the house, and we now have 400 children sponsored.


It is January and I am looking at a little girl, crushed under a brick wall with no one to care for her or her younger siblings. I offer to take the three home with me until we find them a better placement. I am not really sure what to do with them, but I know they are God’s children. They stay.


It is three days later and the littlest looks at me and calls me mommy. My heart might break in two. Something clicks. I am even more scared than I was the day I stepped on that plane, but I KNOW. Today I have 13.


I have to deliver a baby, give a boy stitches, pull a tooth, give and injection. I am petrified. But no one will do it if I do not. He is present, He holds my hand, they are all fine.


It is August and I must get on a plane back to America to go to college, as I have promised my father. I do not remember how to be a teenager or what it is to be normal Brentwood, Tennessee. I will have to leave my babies. I will have to make new friends. I am sad and I am terrified. He wraps His arms around me. He puts just the right people in just the right places, and they help me and they make me feel at home.


First semester is over and He speaks clearly to me that I cannot serve two masters. “Go HOME,” He says, “and stay.” I am uncertain, but I want to be obedient. He squeezes tighter. I am thankful.


I have to look at my loving parents who have given me everything and tell them that I will not go to college right now, because I feel God wants me to be in Uganda. I know how disappointed and how angry they will be. I am more scared than I was when I got on the plane and more scared than I was when I took my first children. But I know that this IS the Plan. They love me anyway.


It is February and my daughter’s biological father comes to take her away. My heart breaks in half, and I am not sure I will ever be able to get out of my bed again, let alone foster another child. I am more than devastated, but I want what is best for her, what He wants for her. She comes back and her biological father learns about Jesus.


It is March and a lame little girl is brought to my gate. She is undoubtedly mine, but I am still anxious. What if I can’t do it? I don’t know what to do with a special needs child, especially as my 13th child. I am criticized and ridiculed. I wonder. I trust and praise God for her sweet little life. She starts to walk.


I find myself in a village full of starving people that for some reason seem to want to kill me. God says to serve them anyway. I am not sure how it is going to work, or if it is safe. I can’t figure it out, but I know He can. 1,200 Karamajongs, the poorest of Uganda’s poor, are now served hot meals daily.


We keep taking in more children until there are 400 in our program. There is no way we will raise enough funds, but by now I have stopped worrying. He has always provided. Blessings rain from the sky, and all 400 children go to school.


I am 20 years old and have 13 children and 400 more who all depend on me for their care. Who are all learning to love Jesus and be responsible adults and looking up to me. The reality of it all can be a bit overwhelming at times. However, it is always pure joy. There is a common misconception that I am courageous. I will be the first to tell you that this is not actually true. Most of the time, I am not brave. I just believe in a God who will use me even though I am not. Most mornings, before I even get out of bed I am overwhelmed with His goodness, with His plan for my life; I stand in awe of the fact that He could entrust me with so much. Most days, I don’t have much of a plan. I don’t always know where this is going. I can’t see the end of the road, but here is the great part: Courage is not about knowing the path. It is about taking the first step. It is about Peter, getting out of the boat. I do not know my five year plan; even tomorrow will probably not go as I have planned. I am thrilled and I am terrified, in a good way. So some call it courage, some call it foolish, I call it Faith. I choose to get out of the boat. To take the next step. Sometimes I walk straight into His arms. More often, I get scared and look down and stumble. Sometimes I almost completely drown. And through it all, He never lets go of my hand.


Isn't God amazing.  His love for us is something we cannot begin to fathom.  His love for these children is just as fierce.  We will be working with children that live on the streets while we are there.  We will also visit a children's prison.  Yes, a prison for children ages 7-17.  Some of them are there because of crimes they have committed.  Some of them are there because they were living on the streets, rounded up and brought there.  Locked up.  Forgotten.  I can't wait to love on these children. 

Please pray that God will prepare me to do what He needs me to do while I am there.  I need Him to prepare my heart for what I will see that will surely break it into a million pieces.  I am afraid, yet I have peace.

Please pray that God will make a way for the big financial commitment of this trip to be taken care of.  Of course the travel costs are large, but there is so much more I want to do.  I will be receiving lists of items that will need to be purchased to take with me to meet some very basic needs of the people there.  God is good!  He will provide what I need if He wants me to go to Africa!  (he provided 12 hours of overtime tomorrow night that I 'get' to work! YAY!)

Thank you for the sweet comments I received yesterday.  That was pretty neat!

Thank you for your prayers as I walk this journey!

Love you all!

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