We’ve been here in Eldoret, Kenya for just over a week, and yet it feels so much longer. Our transition from China to Kenya has not been minor. We left crowded city streets, overcast skies, and restrictions on our personal freedom to find ourselves in a town with dusty streets, sun-filled days and star-filled nights, and the freedom to openly share our faith. There has been a big switch in the spiritual climate. Many in China have heard the name of Jesus, but many also believe that He is simply a part of Western culture. We discovered that those Chinese who are hungry for something more are coming to the realization that Jesus is the One they are seeking after. Most if not all Kenyans have heard of Jesus, and although most claim to be a Christian, we have discovered that many of these people don’t know what it means to have a relationship with Christ. They haven’t yet come to the understanding that He wants to be involved in every part of their lives, which greatly reminds me of the spiritual state of America.
We keep asking ourselves, “Why are we in Kenya?” We believe that the Lord has a purpose in bringing us here, but it’s not always easy to see. It’s so hard to witness people struggling in addictions and poverty and to see babies suffer as a result of that. I sometimes feel as though there is so little I can actually do when the problems are enormous. It reminds me that everything is completely out of my hands, and I can only do the little I have been called to. It’s clear that the only thing I can do here is LOVE the broken and PRAY for God’s power to make itself known. Our world is so broken and will remain that way until Jesus brings about complete restoration.


What do I really have to offer them? I’ve realized that all I CAN offer them is the love of God that is living inside of me, and that is more than enough, because the God I know is the God of healing! He is the God of hope! And He is the God of prosperity! I continually pray that I would love these people without even knowing I am doing it. For the children, it’s by hugging them, holding their hands, and letting them play with my hair for hours even when they are covered in muck. It’s in the smiles and the joy the Lord gives me that He can touch them. Because His presence is alive and moving in me, I am able to love them without doing anything out of the ordinary.
I have hope for this place simply because I have hope in God. I believe that God wants to take away the pain and replace it with joy, and I believe He is using us to do just that. We have not been called to fix the world, as much as our hearts long to do that. But we have been called to do our part by loving the ones in front of us.
You are called to do the same. By joining our hearts and our hands in prayer and action, we are living out our calling to be ministers of reconciliation to a world in desperate need. So step out; reach out. Love the unlovable and see what happens! God says that the measure in which you love others is the measure in which you love Him, and the measure in which you love Him is the measure in which you will love others.
Then the righteous will answer Him, saying, ‘Lord, when did we see You hungry and feed You, or thirsty and give You drink? When did we see You a stranger and take You in, or naked and clothe You? Or when did we see You sick, or in prison, and come to You?’
And the King will answer and say to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to you,
inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me.'”Matthew 25:34-40
