Sleep deprivation, tenting in ninety degree weather, long transatlantic flights, mosquito-swarmed locations, bucket showers with cold water, and the question of “am I really making a difference?”.  This is just a short list of reasons why someone like me would contemplate every bit of the last three years.  Was it all worth it?  Is God really in this?
 
I began this whole journey in January 2007 which seems forever ago at this point.  I submitted my application to the World Race in search for something.  I knew I’d be graduating that spring and I hadn’t the slightest clue of where I was headed next.  I honestly didn’t think I would be accepted, let alone have some life-altering experience but God somehow managed to do both.  Sure, I thought it would be an adventure, I’d go bungee-jumping or scale some breathtaking mountains and I knew that I’d be among extreme poverty.  But this was only one year of my life right?  Then I could get back to what I was doing before….right?
 
I now find myself three years later preparing to go to Haiti for the third time this year.  I read books on social justice and the church’s responsibility to meet the needs of the poor and destitute.  I search the scriptures for hope and I read how Jesus spent his time on earth with the sick and the hurting and something stirs in my spirit that never did before this whole crazy experience.  I think differently.  It’s as if someone removed the brain and heart that I once had and replaced it with something totally and completely different.  Why am I doing this?  There are moments when I sit and reflect on all that has transpired but the only answer that comes is one that I occasionally forget.  Christ in me, the hope of glory.
 
When a starving orphan stares hopelessly into your eyes and finds love for the first time.  I mean, real genuine love: Christ.  When people have lost everything, house, family, stability, and they receive aid in rebuilding what was lost: Christ.  When one single believer in an entire city shares the news and hope of a savior and redeemer and their number is multiplied: Christ.  And when a dying single mother loses her youngest child but receives love from one who will never leave her or forsake her: Christ.
 
I don’t understand sometimes why God has me where I am.  But I am now realizing that it probably has something to do with him establishing his presence in dark and hopeless places.  I GET to do this.  I GET to be Jesus to these people.  After seeing and experiencing so much in recent years, I tend to get overwhelmed with the world’s problems.  How can I possibly do anything meaningful or significant?  I’ve heard it said once that if I was the only one in the world that Jesus would STILL have died and risen just for me.  Is that true?  I believe it is.  And because I believe it, it changes everything.  If there was only one orphan in the entire world, I would still go and hold them and pour love into their life.  If there was only one person who lost everything in Haiti, I would still go and help rebuild what was lost.  If there was only one mother who lost a child, still…
 
He’s about the ONE, so I’m about the ONE.  He’s the restorer and the one who reconciles.  That’s why I am doing this.  If I allow myself to become overcome with all of the world’s problems, it would be easy to curl up and do nothing but God is doing something in me.  I realize that I’ve had the opportunity to encounter more the one person in my life and I’m sure there will be more, but the focus remains the same; keeping my eyes on the One and for the one.