Jake is leading the vision of developing a sports mission complex in Chad, Africa complete with basketball courts, a soccer field and track, a handball court, dormitories, classrooms, cafeteria, etc. The land has been purchased and secured, and from here it will take $470,000 to build this sports complex. This project is so close to Jake's heart because it has been through the platform of basketball that God has opened the door in this area of the world for the gospel to penetrate into unwelcome territory. The beautiful thing with sports is that it breaks down walls that often stand between groups of people, which is a main purpose of this project. This weekend our local news did a story on the project, and they did a really great job of conveying the mission...
Read the article here:
http://whotv.com/2015/10/02/former-isu-basketball-star-building-sports-complex-in-africa-to-help-youth/
Saturday, October 3, 2015
Friday, September 25, 2015
Upside down
I won't ever get sick of telling it. Of how God interrupted our lives that day in September seven years ago. "I want you to adopt." Of how I feared we'd be losing - losing our picture perfect American family, losing our close relationships with our biological kids, losing opportunities of what we could give our 'own' kids if we were taking care of someone else's. And what if this adopted child hurt us? Hurt our kids? Was mean and had issues and ruined our family? Every thought I had about this coming adoption was that of loss. Loss, loss, loss. But I didn't yet know it - the upside down way of God's kingdom. "For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for Me will find it (Matthew 16:25)." I didn't yet know that when you lose for His sake, you actually gain so much more. It doesn't make sense.
It doesn't make sense that this adoption that I thought would mess up our biological kids has instead shaped them in ways that we want them to be shaped. That they've learned to lay down their lives and give until it hurts because that is what Jesus did for us. And they won't just read it in their Bible. They will know it because they've lived and breathed the surrender and the sacrifice every day in our home. Through Justice's adoption we've gained the uncovering of our calling, our spiritual gifts and how they are to be used for His kingdom. And when you are fulfilling your calling and operating in your God-given gifts, you feel ALIVE. We've come alive. We've gained a wild testimony of God's justice, His sovereignty, His grace. Who picks out an orange-haired African to match the same exact orange-haired children in a white family in Huxley, Iowa? God does. And through it He whispers to us all that He sees, He is not a distant God, He is closer than we ever dared to have thought. And more than all this, through Justice's adoption, we have gained an intimacy - a closeness with God, that we never would have experienced had we continued on living the comfortable, status quo path of a life we were headed down. You grow closer to God when you need Him. And oh how we have needed Him. It is worth our very lives if all we do this side of heaven is gain that.
So yeah when you look at it all on paper, it doesn't make sense. But I never really liked Math anyways. I thought we were adopting to help change the life of a needy child, but through it the Lord ended up changing us so much more. Today we praise God for this interruption, and celebrate 5 years of Justice being home and in our family. And today we know it better: He means to bless us. It just comes in unexpected, upside down ways.
Tuesday, September 22, 2015
Our Mission Center
Our mission center in Asikuma, Ghana has now been operating for just over 1 year!
We are currently home to 27 children.
In January 2015 we also completed a temporary structure adjacent to our mission center to serve as a school. This is where the children of our mission center attend and it is also open for enrollment to the Asikuma community.
For this 2015-2016 term, we have two teachers who just graduated from Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa who have jumped on staff at the school. They teach along with a team of Ghanaian teachers, and are purposing to help develop curriculum and teaching strategies for the school. These two students, Mary and Anna, went on one of our trips to Ghana a few years ago and now live at our mission center while they receive this one of a kind teaching experience. You can keep up with them on their blog here: http://kccschool.blogspot.com/
This is our head house mother at our mission center, Comfort…
Jake and I have known Comfort since 2012 when she cared for our daughters at her foster home in Accra at the time. At the opening of our mission center last August we had recruited Comfort to move from her city life in Accra out to the rural village life in Asikuma to care for the children at our center. Comfort runs a great schedule at our center, and the kids noticeably thrive under the daily routine that has been established. The children know what to do, what to expect, and what is expected of them. Comfort of course loves children, and is especially fond of babies and toddlers. She really lives up to her name - is genuinely welcoming, kind, and compassionate. One thing that I appreciated when I was at our center last month was something I noticed during bath time for the little ones. Comfort had a bucket a little over half full of cold water ready for the baths. But right before starting she ran inside to grab a saucepan of water she had warmed on the stove which she then mixed in with the cold water to take the bite off. Loved that thoughtful touch.
Comfort receives a monthly salary from Acts 2 Collective and her two children Ajete and Rosemund also live with her at our mission center.
Helena is the house assistant to Comfort at our mission center.
She usually can be found in the kitchen helping to prepare the next meal or playing with one of the children. In Ghana, cooking can be an all day affair so it takes a lot of time and effort to prepare meals.
Helena also has been a big help in guiding and teaching the older girls we’ve taken into our center from Cape Coast. During my time at our mission center I noticed that Helena has an integral role of modeling to the girls how to act appropriately and manage the tasks of a woman in the Ghanaian culture. The Cape Coast girls have never been taught these things before. Now they are learning how to be nurturing and caring to the children as well as learning how to cook, clean, and act socially appropriate....much of which they learn by it being modeled and taught to them by Helena who is close in age to them.
This is not an easy undertaking and there are a lot of battles that go along with guiding these teenage girls, but Helena keeps a very light-hearted approach to it, and holds accurate expectations of them. Helena was raised in Asikuma, left for a time to attend school, and now is back and lives at our center. She is also paid a monthly salary.
This is another of our house helps, also named Comfort, but I like to think of her as Grandma.
Every home needs a Grandmother's presence to bring in softness and gentleness. Grandma Comfort arrives at our mission center in the mornings and stays until evening time before going back to her own home in Asikuma. She is there to provide an extra set of arms to hold and love on the children and also helps with the day to day housework like laundry. The afternoon that I strolled up to take this picture it was midday. Grandma was sitting outside under our wrap-around-porch in the quiet stillness of the afternoon, all snuggled in with our littlest addition to the center, Madjoa. The whole scene was just peace to me, and I loved seeing Madjoa alert and bright-eyed yet content as could be on Grandma's lap. Just how it should be. Grandma Comfort is also one of our paid staff and we are so thankful for her presence at our mission center.
Next up we have Wisdom (pictured left), James (pictured right) and Patrick (pictured center).
Wisdom is the 'man of the house' at our mission center. He does EVERYTHING! He is Daddy to the kids living at our center, handles the intake process for the children who come to live at our center, hires and manages staff, coordinates volunteers, organizes paperwork for each child, runs errands, runs kids to doctor appointments, handles community relations, oversees each part of our campus including the school, feeding program and agriculture, is a leader, visionaire and manager of our Asikuma projects, and basically keeps the place running! Our mission center is thriving in large part to how God is using the leadership and presence of Wisdom. He is a trustworthy and humble servant of the Lord. They just don't come any better.
James works for AgriHope - one of the organizations under the umbrella of Acts 2 Collective. James is from Zambia, but the Lord recently led him to pick up and move his entire life to our mission center in order to help us with creating sustainable farming. And the man is passionate about what he does! On my recent trip I received a very thorough rundown of the farming methods he is employing at our center - all the way from irrigation channels to how to blanket the crops. In as much as we know that James has come to plant physical seeds to grow a harvest, we know that the Lord has also drawn him to Ghana as an evangelist to plant seeds of the gospel in hearts. Just recently he has become friends with one of our mission center groundskeepers and has been encouraging him in his walk with the Lord via using his Iphone to translate from English to French. We love how God is using James to spread His word among our staff, and of course his crop growing skills are top of the line too! Some photos of the corn starting to grow at the mission center….
Patrick, aka 'AJ', is one of the handful of young men assisting James with the manual labor portion of the farming. This is in exchange for Acts 2 Collective paying for his school. I first met Patrick one night when it was pitch dark and I was walking back to the hotel from our mission center all alone. He had just fetched water and was riding his bike back home. He stopped to introduce himself to me the foreigner and just had the friendliest personality....like that kind-hearted older brother sorta feel. It was like God used him on my walk back to the hotel to whisper peace and that He was right there with me, watching out for me. Patrick is the definition of hard worker. I feel the Lord has opened a door for him into our center to be rewarded for how he labors wholeheartedly to provide for his younger siblings.
Our prayer is that our mission center would continue to be a refuge, set apart in the community where all who set foot on the grounds will experience life and peace.
[Pictured: Patrick’s sister Patricia comes to our mission center to help do laundry for her family.]
We are currently home to 27 children.
In January 2015 we also completed a temporary structure adjacent to our mission center to serve as a school. This is where the children of our mission center attend and it is also open for enrollment to the Asikuma community.
For this 2015-2016 term, we have two teachers who just graduated from Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa who have jumped on staff at the school. They teach along with a team of Ghanaian teachers, and are purposing to help develop curriculum and teaching strategies for the school. These two students, Mary and Anna, went on one of our trips to Ghana a few years ago and now live at our mission center while they receive this one of a kind teaching experience. You can keep up with them on their blog here: http://kccschool.blogspot.com/
This is our head house mother at our mission center, Comfort…
Jake and I have known Comfort since 2012 when she cared for our daughters at her foster home in Accra at the time. At the opening of our mission center last August we had recruited Comfort to move from her city life in Accra out to the rural village life in Asikuma to care for the children at our center. Comfort runs a great schedule at our center, and the kids noticeably thrive under the daily routine that has been established. The children know what to do, what to expect, and what is expected of them. Comfort of course loves children, and is especially fond of babies and toddlers. She really lives up to her name - is genuinely welcoming, kind, and compassionate. One thing that I appreciated when I was at our center last month was something I noticed during bath time for the little ones. Comfort had a bucket a little over half full of cold water ready for the baths. But right before starting she ran inside to grab a saucepan of water she had warmed on the stove which she then mixed in with the cold water to take the bite off. Loved that thoughtful touch.
Comfort receives a monthly salary from Acts 2 Collective and her two children Ajete and Rosemund also live with her at our mission center.
Helena is the house assistant to Comfort at our mission center.
She usually can be found in the kitchen helping to prepare the next meal or playing with one of the children. In Ghana, cooking can be an all day affair so it takes a lot of time and effort to prepare meals.
Helena also has been a big help in guiding and teaching the older girls we’ve taken into our center from Cape Coast. During my time at our mission center I noticed that Helena has an integral role of modeling to the girls how to act appropriately and manage the tasks of a woman in the Ghanaian culture. The Cape Coast girls have never been taught these things before. Now they are learning how to be nurturing and caring to the children as well as learning how to cook, clean, and act socially appropriate....much of which they learn by it being modeled and taught to them by Helena who is close in age to them.
This is not an easy undertaking and there are a lot of battles that go along with guiding these teenage girls, but Helena keeps a very light-hearted approach to it, and holds accurate expectations of them. Helena was raised in Asikuma, left for a time to attend school, and now is back and lives at our center. She is also paid a monthly salary.
This is another of our house helps, also named Comfort, but I like to think of her as Grandma.
Every home needs a Grandmother's presence to bring in softness and gentleness. Grandma Comfort arrives at our mission center in the mornings and stays until evening time before going back to her own home in Asikuma. She is there to provide an extra set of arms to hold and love on the children and also helps with the day to day housework like laundry. The afternoon that I strolled up to take this picture it was midday. Grandma was sitting outside under our wrap-around-porch in the quiet stillness of the afternoon, all snuggled in with our littlest addition to the center, Madjoa. The whole scene was just peace to me, and I loved seeing Madjoa alert and bright-eyed yet content as could be on Grandma's lap. Just how it should be. Grandma Comfort is also one of our paid staff and we are so thankful for her presence at our mission center.
Next up we have Wisdom (pictured left), James (pictured right) and Patrick (pictured center).
Wisdom is the 'man of the house' at our mission center. He does EVERYTHING! He is Daddy to the kids living at our center, handles the intake process for the children who come to live at our center, hires and manages staff, coordinates volunteers, organizes paperwork for each child, runs errands, runs kids to doctor appointments, handles community relations, oversees each part of our campus including the school, feeding program and agriculture, is a leader, visionaire and manager of our Asikuma projects, and basically keeps the place running! Our mission center is thriving in large part to how God is using the leadership and presence of Wisdom. He is a trustworthy and humble servant of the Lord. They just don't come any better.
James works for AgriHope - one of the organizations under the umbrella of Acts 2 Collective. James is from Zambia, but the Lord recently led him to pick up and move his entire life to our mission center in order to help us with creating sustainable farming. And the man is passionate about what he does! On my recent trip I received a very thorough rundown of the farming methods he is employing at our center - all the way from irrigation channels to how to blanket the crops. In as much as we know that James has come to plant physical seeds to grow a harvest, we know that the Lord has also drawn him to Ghana as an evangelist to plant seeds of the gospel in hearts. Just recently he has become friends with one of our mission center groundskeepers and has been encouraging him in his walk with the Lord via using his Iphone to translate from English to French. We love how God is using James to spread His word among our staff, and of course his crop growing skills are top of the line too! Some photos of the corn starting to grow at the mission center….
Patrick, aka 'AJ', is one of the handful of young men assisting James with the manual labor portion of the farming. This is in exchange for Acts 2 Collective paying for his school. I first met Patrick one night when it was pitch dark and I was walking back to the hotel from our mission center all alone. He had just fetched water and was riding his bike back home. He stopped to introduce himself to me the foreigner and just had the friendliest personality....like that kind-hearted older brother sorta feel. It was like God used him on my walk back to the hotel to whisper peace and that He was right there with me, watching out for me. Patrick is the definition of hard worker. I feel the Lord has opened a door for him into our center to be rewarded for how he labors wholeheartedly to provide for his younger siblings.
Our prayer is that our mission center would continue to be a refuge, set apart in the community where all who set foot on the grounds will experience life and peace.
[Pictured: Patrick’s sister Patricia comes to our mission center to help do laundry for her family.]
Friday, September 18, 2015
Regina
On our August trip to Ghana, one of the needs brought to us
was that of Regina.
Our Acts 2 Collective team was taken to Regina by our
in-country staff member, Claudius, who had come across her need while visiting
her community during an outreach in Cape Coast, Ghana. At the time Regina was
extremely sick, lethargic, malnourished, 8 months pregnant and all alone. A2C
had since been providing for her prenatal care, getting her to doctor's appointments,
providing food, and ensuring that she returned to health so that she could be
strong for the labor process.
Earlier this week we had reason to rejoice as Regina gave
birth to a healthy boy weighing in at 6 pounds 13 oz! He was named Kobina which
means Tuesday born.
Mom and baby were discharged from the hospital yesterday,
yet the story and need did not end there. Regina is 15 years old. She does not
have experience in handling a newborn baby or in taking care of herself as a
nursing mother. Abandoned by her own mother as a young child, Regina is on her
own.
Traditionally in Ghanaian culture it is customary that a new mother
receives care and training in how to be a mother from her own mother. It is
customary that the grandmother of the new baby prepares meals for the mother
while she regains her strength. The grandmother also passes on the practical
knowledge of how to bathe the baby (of utmost importance in Ghana to prevent
infections), care for a newborn, and teaches the nursing mother how to care for
herself – eat appropriately for breast-feeding, etc. There are other cultural
values of motherhood that a new mother gradually learns as her own mother walks
her through it. Unfortunately, Regina has no one to walk her through this.
In order to meet this need, earlier this week A2C interviewed
for a motherly figure in Cape Coast who could serve as caretaker to attend both
mother and baby. Yesterday a surrogate care-giver was hired, and just in time
as Regina and "Koby" headed straight to her home upon leaving the
hospital.
Heading to the home of their new care-giver.
Baby Koby all tucked in at his new "home".
Our staff explains our commitment to the caregiver.
Getting baby Koby his mattress, mosquito net and bath kit.
These are the types of real situations and real lives that you are
impacting when you give to A2C. Specifically, we are always looking for 1200
Club members who can pledge to give monthly and help us to meet needs that come
to us, just like Regina's. You can find out more and sign up to be a 1200 Club
member here: http://acts2collective.org/donate/1200-club/
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
HIV Care ~ New Territory
Over the past month we have taken in five new children into our mission center in Asikuma, Ghana who are HIV+. Taking in HIV orphans to our center is new territory for us. We are starting to understand that the HIV/AIDS situation in this region in Ghana is more prevalent than initially thought. This is especially the case in a nearby town to Asikuma called Peki, which is a ten minute drive from our mission center. Currently we are becoming educated on the virus/disease and are working to understand the treatment options available in Ghana.
Many of the HIV orphans coming into our care have had their parents recently die of AIDS. For those families who are still surviving with the disease, they are stigmatized in their villages, which is in itself life-threatening as no one will buy the goods they sell to create a business for themselves. In the stigmatization, their opportunity to produce an income and therefore meet the physical needs of their family is not existent. At the same time, most of these living with HIV in Ghana are going untreated and unmedicated due to their situation of poverty. This means their body’s immune system continues to self-destruct as time goes by. This makes them even more susceptible to the diseases and sicknesses in the country that a ‘healthy’ immune system would be able to guard against. For young children, untreated HIV grants them a life expectancy of about 12 years.
On top of all this, we are finding that the doctors in Ghana also discriminate against HIV patients and do not want it known that they treat those with the disease. Additionally there are already few doctors in Ghana who are trained to assess and monitor HIV patients. These two factors combined have presented quite the hunt for us in uncovering access to effective treatment.
Long term, Acts2Collective is looking to develop an HIV Center/Clinic where HIV testing can be available, patients could come for checkups and have their blood levels checked consistently (imperative to the process of treating HIV with medicine), and the center would also contain a pharmacy and administer the doses for the daily medications needed – namely for the children in our mission center. The architectural drawings for the center are already complete. It will cost about $75,000 to build.
Short term, Acts2Collective needs to adequately be able to care for the HIV cases brought to us. Mainly funds are needed to cover doctor visits, medicine, and cost of physical needs for those we are caring for.
One such case is of a 9 year old girl named 'E' who is HIV+. She lost both of her parents to AIDS and was being taken care of by her grandmother, but just two weeks ago her grandmother also passed away. Acts2Collective has been turned to for help in caring for 'E'.
Another case is that of 7 year old 'B' who is also HIV+. He was recently abandoned by his mother in the village of Asikuma and is now being taken care of and living at our mission center in Asikuma.
Then there is 'M'….'A'….and 'J'…. The stories do not relent and the children in need keep coming. We want to be in position to provide a safe place for those turning to us for help, as well as to be able to take an offensive approach in effectively treating these children living with this virus.
HIV FACTS
HIV is spread in three main ways: Sexual contact, IV drug use (through the sharing of dirty needles), and mother to infant (through pregnancy, birth or breast feeding). HIV is not passed from one person to another by casual contact such as: touching or hugging; sharing household items like utensils, towels, and bedding; contact with sweat or tears; sharing facilities such as swimming pools, saunas, hot tubs, or toilets; or by coughing/sneezing.
HIV is not found in sweat, urine, feces, tears, saliva or snot. It is found in blood, semen, vaginal fluids and breast milk.
While HIV may live for a short while outside of the body, HIV transmission has not been reported as a result of contact with spillages or small traces of blood, semen or other bodily fluids. This is partially because HIV dies quickly once exposed to the air, and also because spilled fluids would have to get into a persons bloodstream to infect them.
Resources:
http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/
http://www.projecthopeful.org/hiv/hiv-aids-medical-facts
http://www.bethanylifelines.org/your-childs-health/adopting-a-child-living-with-hivaids/
Friday, September 11, 2015
Changes to our Non-profit
Letter from Jake detailing recent changes to our non-profit formerly known as Kingdom Cares International...
Families and Supporters:
For those of you not familiar with the current structure of our organization I will try to lay it out in as few words as possible. In 2009 we developed the non-profit organization called Kingdom Cares International to help support our work in Ghana, Africa. In 2012 we also merged Kingdom Hoops/Iowa Gym Rats into the non-profit entity of Kingdom Cares International. At the time this was the right decision as it gave us the ability to get into our local Kingdom Courts facility. Over the past 3 years Kingdom Hoops/Iowa Gym Rats and International Missions operated out of two separate bank accounts with two separate budgets. However, as both organizations grew over these last three years, the importance of raising funds for both entities also developed. Therefore, we have come to the conclusion that it is in the best long term interest of both operations - local and international - to become two separate non-profit organizations. Organizationally nothing will change with Kingdom Hoops and Iowa Gym Rats, however, moving forward all our international work will begin to operate under the name Acts 2 Collective. We understand that this transition of our international work may cause some initial confusion as we rebrand the name. However, we believe in the long run that the benefit of operating independently from Kingdom Hoops and Iowa Gym Rats far out weighs any immediate problems with rebranding.
The other reason I felt the need for change was that I felt God had laid it on my heart to begin to unite mission-minded individuals and organizations who want to see the Word of the Gospel spread amongst the nations. About nine months ago a group of us began to meet monthly to encourage each other and to help meet each other's needs whenever possible. The organizations involved in this group were myself and my wife who have led the charge into Ghana, Africa and Chad, Africa, as well as The Move Project ( www.themoveproject.org), Agrihope ( www.agrihope.org), and The Jonathan House ( www.jonhouse.org). Outside of the organizations represented we were also accompanied with a group of other believers who have a calling to world missions. These meetings spurred us on to some amazing partnerships and to the ultimate formation of Acts 2 Collective.
As we began to meet we began to see the power that Christ has created in us when we work together. For example in early August 2015 Agrihope moved one of their locally trained Zambians from Zambia to Ghana to our KCI Mission Campus (home of our children's center and school). The goal is for him to help develop agriculture on our campus and to move us towards our goal of being 100% self-sufficient by 2024. On another occasion one of the group members invited a young girl named Azlyn to the group as they felt as though she had a calling to long term missions. She thought she was coming to the group to learn more about Ghana. Instead she got connected with the Jonathan House and as I write this email she has traveled to Central Africa Republic to begin a long term mission experience there. I could write countless other stories about how God is working in bringing like-minded individuals together (you can read another one HERE written by one of our A2C board members). We believe that the Gospel was never intended for individuals to all be running alone doing their own things. Instead we believe the Gospel should unite us as it did in the early church that is written about in the book of Acts. We believe that together we can have a greater impact for the spread of the Gospel, and this will always remain the primary purpose of Acts 2 Collective.
We are very excited about what the future holds and what God is doing on the international mission field. I hope each of you can take some time to visit our new website at www.acts2collective.org. If any of you have an interest in getting more involved with missions or with Acts 2 Collective please feel free to reach out to me or to our international missions director Ashley Caycedo – ashley@acts2collective.org. For those of you that have been generously giving to our international programs in the past through Kingdom Cares International and the 1200 Club, we appreciate your continued support as this transition takes place.
In Christ,
Jake Sullivan
President of Acts 2 Collective
515-291-1542
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Saturday, July 11, 2015
Grandma's Story ~ To Heaven and Back
Thursday morning, June 11th, 2015. I had missed Mom’s call. But I heard the buzz of a text. I walked into the kitchen to check my phone.
Call me. Ambulance took Gramma to ER. Unresponsive.
A quick call to Mom solidified the dread. She had stopped by my Grandma’s house on her way into work as she’d been doing all week. Grandma had recently had gall bladder surgery a week prior and was on the up and up, recovering well at home. But on this morning, my Mom found something had gone horribly wrong. As she walked in the house she heard what sounded like deep snoring, but as she rounded the corner and found my Grandma laying sideways, sprawled halfway out of bed – like she had tried to get up – Mom realized what she was really hearing was very labored breathing. She tried to wake my Grandma but to no avail. In so doing, she noticed a red-purple, swollen tongue. Mom – a former RN, quickly called 911. Minutes later the ambulance had arrived and sped Grandma off to the closest hospital near her small town. She was unresponsive, not awake, not tracking with her eyes, but her arms and legs were moving.
The small town hospital said they needed to try to stabilize Grandma and uncover a diagnosis before transferring her the 45 minute drive to the big town hospital that was better equipped to handle her. But in the balance of trying to unearth what had happened to know how to treat her, Grandma’s life slowly began slipping away. They kept her comfortable with oxygen and fluids, but her now empty stare - head turned - eyes fixed hard off to one side - still no responding - seemed to invite reality that no one wanted. The nurses’ words to Mom hung in the air…stale, vacant, not willing to be received…
“She might not pull out of this.”
My white-haired Grandma....so full of joy, speaker of the best one-liners, lavisher of the warmest-unconditional love - you could do anything to her and she’d take you right back, maker of delicious strawberry pie, who stills calls a couch a ‘sofa’, she who gets delightfully giddy over ‘having company’, and perhaps the only one of us who downright enjoys the commotion of all our kids loud and tornado-like – one time I apologized for the sheer crazy of us all and she said, “Oh don’t kid yourself – I LOVE it!” And she meant it. “Just being together,” she’d always say. That was joy to her and she’d always write down little notes about our time together in her notebook that sat by her chair. She had just celebrated her birthday a month ago - #75…but now…this….could it really be over? Was God really going to call her home? Grandma had been a Christ-follower for many years, and we all had a peace that the Lord had given her a good, long life and that her inheritance after death would be eternal life in heaven. But no matter how many years you’ve shared, you still want more….
As I talked with God about His plans for her, He didn’t prepare me for death. Instead, He began revving up my faith. I started recalling dreams that the Lord had given me over the past year in which Grandma was present at future family events that hadn’t yet come to pass. This led me to rehearse and pray out something that He’d been teaching me from John chapter 11….that sometimes when it looks like the show is over….He’s really just setting the stage…setting Himself up for glory.
I began to receive the discernment that she would fully recover. Sometimes, faith can surprise you when the reality of the circumstances don’t match up. But if you’re going to follow after Jesus, then you’ve got to be okay with surprises.
Hours passed, and eventually the small hospital doctors had some sort of diagnosis of an infection in Grandma’s lung and a finding of a seizure. There was more to uncover, but they felt she could now be transferred. However, the doctors forewarned Mom that Grandma was in critical condition and may not make it through the drive. We felt the weight of it - her life was hanging by a thread…but aren’t we all?
The bigger hospital seemed to be her only shot at making it long term. Mom gave the go-ahead for her to be transferred. And so we prayed. “I’m just praying that God is speaking to her, revealing Himself to her while she is unresponsive.” That was Mom’s prayer.
Upon reaching the bigger hospital, Grandma was crashing, death’s shadow closing in. Immediately upon arrival a respiratory tube went in to physically sustain her life. She was then taken to ICCU, where she was sedated into a coma.
Rounds of tests ensued. Eventually the doctors were able to trace the results to give understanding of what had happened (of course this was integral to know then how to treat her): It all started with a seizure in the night. They believe the seizure had happened due to an unknown too-high blood pressure event that possibly was a leftover effect from her recent surgery. During the seizure she vomited, which she then inhaled back into her lungs. (This fluid later developed into aspiration pneumonia.) Because of this fluid in her lungs, she was not getting adequate oxygen to her brain and heart and she then had a heart attack. On top of all this, she had also developed sepsis – a life threatening blood infection in and of itself. No one was sure at what time of night the seizure had occurred and hence how long she had been without adequate oxygen. Of course, this then put forth the grave prospect that if she did recover, she could have brain damage. At this point her mental status could not be evaluated by the neurologist because of the sedation that was helping her body to rest and fight. So we were left to wait. And pray. Sometimes when things are at their worst, that’s the time to believe the most.
Mid-afternoon, we received news from the big hospital doctors that changed everything. The doctor and cardiologist said that all the things that had happened to Grandma were reversible. I had never been more in love with a word in my life. The doc said Grandma’s condition was now stable. Her heart damage was ‘not bad’. The neurologist assessed her next. He said he was observing no signs of stroke at this time, and did not see any signs of it or a brain bleed on the CT scan. He noted that she was fighting the tube in her throat which he said was good that she was gagging.
And we laughed. We laughed for the first time since morning. “That’s our girl!” we said. Because if you know Grandma, she is a gagger. Just the thought of going to the dentist could send her into a gagging spell. Once when I was a little girl I went to her appointment with her and I still remember the hygienist giving her a pep talk through the x-rays as she sat gagging and spitting out the mouthpiece just about each time that the picture was almost taken. I think it took 45 minutes to get the x-rays. And she’d always gag at dirty diapers, and certain smells, and would sympathy gag when other people would gag. So this…this was fantastic. Faith can surprise you and faith can make you laugh even when it’s dark and faith can bring a turn of events in a moment - in a single word. Reversible. And isn't everything under His hand reversible...redeemable afterall?
Late that night Jake and I visited Grandma in ICCU where Mom hadn’t left her side. Grandma looked like people do in the movies. All hooked up. Unconscious. Fragile. Still so many things yet unknown. The respiratory machine’s steady breaths were the backdrop to our prayers. Jake started… “Lord, if You’re going to bring her back, bring her back fully. Completely. Please give her a sound mind, restore her mind and body entirely…otherwise Lord, please take her home…”
I finished… “Lord, it says in your Word that when the Centurion’s servant was dying and He sent word to You to ask You to come and heal him, the Centurion had faith that if you’d just speak it – just send your Word – that his servant would be healed. Lord, we have this faith. We believe that you can just send your Word and heal her completely…”
Mom quietly affirmed and praised and thanked as we prayed. Tomorrow would tell. We headed home, and waited for Glory.
The docs started weaning Grandma off the sedation to allow her to wake up. She opened her eyes. Wiggled her fingers a bit. Mom said it was hard to tell if Grandma recognized her. Mom was telling her things and Grandma would shake her head yes like she understood. She was still unable to talk because of the breathing tube. She had an MRI scheduled to double clear her for a stroke and to check her brain. After that, the nurse kept her off sedation the rest of the day. Grandma is a popular one in our small town, so she had lots of visitors that trickled in to see her that afternoon while she was awake, but none that Mom could tell that Grandma showed signs of recognizing.
I couldn’t wait to go and see her. I got there early evening. When I walked in, her eyes were closed. Mom began to wake her, nudging her arm gently, “Janel’s here,” she said.
Grandma’s eyes opened and as she turned to look at me I said, “Hi Grandma…. it’s Janel. I came to see you.” And then. Grandma’s eyes crinkled up into a smile and tears filled her eyes and rolled down her face. As I continued to talk to her she just kept trying to smile as best she could, hindered only by the respiratory tube still down her throat….the soft tears rolling slowly, gracefully down her cheeks. I looked at Mom who was in a puddle of tears all her own. We knew it. She recognized me! Her emotions and thoughts were there! Faith can surprise you and faith can make you smile even when you’re in the unknown and faith can bring a turn of events in a moment - in the crinkling of an eye.
I smiled all the way home.
The nurses told us that chances were good that Grandma could get her respiratory tube taken out tomorrow. She was doing most of the breathing on her own with just a little assistance from the machine now.
Tomorrow would tell. We went to sleep, and waited for Glory.
The neurologist was in. He had the results from the MRI and said he was seeing a reversible encephalopathy called PRES in Grandma’s brain. Basically it meant that there was swelling on her brain. There was nothing to do for it, but he expected it to go down on its own over time. This condition mimicks the effects of a stroke, but it is not a stroke. He said this is why it seems she doesn’t always recognize everyone so far. All I knew was there was that word reversible again. Love marks of a Redeemer. Grandma was also able to follow the commands of the neuro test (wiggle your toes, squeeze hands, follow the light with your eyes). Everything was still a go to remove her breathing tube in the afternoon. We knew this would be the big reveal of how things were functioning in her brain – when she could finally communicate with us verbally.
At 2:09pm the excitement began…
At 3:25pm we were eclipsed by glory…
You better believe I busted a move into that hospital room. When I arrived, Grandma had her eyes closed, Mom was at her side, and the nurses were busy in the background. No more wires and tubes going everywhere – no lull of the breathing machine. Just one IV in her neck and something else hooked to her hand. I took Grandma’s hand and repeated the words I had said yesterday, “Hi Grandma…it’s Janel. I came to see you…”
She opened her eyes, lifted her head up with a start and looked at me, but didn’t recognize me this time. She gently rested her head back on her pillow and loudly proclaimed, “I see heaven! I see heaven! Beautiful. Beautiful…”
I looked at Mom, not understanding what was going on. Mom’s eyes were clouded with tears and she choked out a whisper, “She told me that too.”
I looked back at Grandma, the Spirit already testifying inside of me, “You got to see heaven, Grandma?”
“Yes! Beautiful….beautiful…”
Sometimes someone else can be your burning bush.
I looked up at the nurses, busy in the background. They didn’t seem to notice that we were standing on Holy Ground.
“When they took the tube out,” Mom said at a low whisper, “she was breathing at a 97 all on her own – even with pneumonia filled lungs. With the tube in you breathe at 100. The nurse said they’d never seen anything like it before – she didn’t even need any oxygen once it came out…”
Sometimes He speaks through a bush in flames. Other times, you just have to pay attention in a hospital room.
Mom and I spent the afternoon just soaking Grandma up – miracle that she was. As we talked with her many things would register, and some would not. She’d have us giggling one minute with comments like,“We have to have Thanksgiving! Feed those kids!” and flooding the room in our tears with the next, like when she turned to Mom and said, “I knew you’d be here Lori, cause that’s love.” Yet the one thing that remained constant was that she did not stop talking about her trip up to heaven. She told the nurses, she told the doctors, and she’d bring it up in the middle of conversations.
“I was too close to heaven if I wanted to live.”
“Yep, defeated the devil.”
To Mom, “I’m saved and so are you.” And, “ I’m going to heaven!” To which Mom said, “Not yet!” and then Grandma replied in return, “Nope - not yet.”
“I was there. Beautiful. I was there. Indescribable.”
Today she kept telling everyone, “I’m a Christian!”
She got to start eating puree food and by the time Jake and I got to the hospital to visit her late afternoon, they had busted her out of ICCU and given her a bright sunshine-filled room on the 4th floor.
And that wasn’t all that had changed. As Jake and I talked with her it was a NIGHT AND DAY difference from the day before. Her comprehension and recognition was right on. She was stringing thoughts together like normal ‘ol Gram. We talked about everything from the NBA playoffs and how Grandma does not like Lebron James (“he’s selfish” :)) to her making JJ’s strawberry pie for his birthday coming up, to more details about her trip up to heaven.
“I was there. I just went up, up, up (motioning with her hands) and then came back down and it was just peace on the way down. Just peace.”
As the days passed by with Grandma in recovery at the hospital, we literally encountered the Lord healing her body seemingly by the hour. First He strengthened her arms and hands and her motor skills and dexterity returned. Eventually she was able to sit up in a chair in her hospital room, then feed herself with utensils, then stand with the assistance of the nurse, then walk down the hallway with a walker, then attempt stairs, then shower on her own. The neurologist was in to test her daily and it seemed that as each hour, each afternoon, each day went by, her recognition and memory returned fully as the swelling ceased. She was passing tests and checking off boxes and reaching mile-markers every which way we turned. When you are in the middle of a miracle you can hardly believe He’s writing you right into the story.
In the days that followed, as I told and re-told the story of what had happened, I kept wanting to change Grandma’s first words about heaven from “I see heaven!” to “I saw heaven!”. Every writer wants to be grammatically correct after all. But then, the Lord showed me something.
So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. [2 Corinthians 4:18]
Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. [Colossians 3:1-2]
Eternal perspective was always meant to be present tense. It’s not just a one time happening of seeing God - an eclipse of His glory that then passes to the past. It’s a day to day way to live, way to see. It’s exclaiming as Grandma did each day of our lives, “I see heaven! It’s beautiful. I’m going to heaven!” We can let it - the thought of going - keep us going. Let it keep our minds right. Let it keep us focused and determined. Let it be our wisdom, our guard so we don’t fall for the trickery - the bribery - the glitter of this world. And then maybe, just maybe no matter our earthly troubles, no matter our pain, no matter our loss, no matter our day, no matter our wounds – our scars – our failures – our battles – maybe when we keep our eyes on heaven right now, then maybe like Grandma, we too can live in peace.
“I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” [John 16:33]
Saturday June 20th, they kicked Grandma out of the hospital – and she got to go HOME. Not to a care center, not to a nursing home, not to her real home in heaven yet, but to her little earthly home in Green Mountain, Iowa. And her sister came over and did her hair within the hour. :)
So the story ends good you see. And no, not every ambulance ride, not every brush with death, not every hospital stay has a happy ending…but every ending can be happy when you are in Christ.
And one day, just like it did for Grandma, our faith will become sight.
"Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God. Trust also in Me. In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you." John 14:1-2
Call me. Ambulance took Gramma to ER. Unresponsive.
A quick call to Mom solidified the dread. She had stopped by my Grandma’s house on her way into work as she’d been doing all week. Grandma had recently had gall bladder surgery a week prior and was on the up and up, recovering well at home. But on this morning, my Mom found something had gone horribly wrong. As she walked in the house she heard what sounded like deep snoring, but as she rounded the corner and found my Grandma laying sideways, sprawled halfway out of bed – like she had tried to get up – Mom realized what she was really hearing was very labored breathing. She tried to wake my Grandma but to no avail. In so doing, she noticed a red-purple, swollen tongue. Mom – a former RN, quickly called 911. Minutes later the ambulance had arrived and sped Grandma off to the closest hospital near her small town. She was unresponsive, not awake, not tracking with her eyes, but her arms and legs were moving.
The small town hospital said they needed to try to stabilize Grandma and uncover a diagnosis before transferring her the 45 minute drive to the big town hospital that was better equipped to handle her. But in the balance of trying to unearth what had happened to know how to treat her, Grandma’s life slowly began slipping away. They kept her comfortable with oxygen and fluids, but her now empty stare - head turned - eyes fixed hard off to one side - still no responding - seemed to invite reality that no one wanted. The nurses’ words to Mom hung in the air…stale, vacant, not willing to be received…
“She might not pull out of this.”
My white-haired Grandma....so full of joy, speaker of the best one-liners, lavisher of the warmest-unconditional love - you could do anything to her and she’d take you right back, maker of delicious strawberry pie, who stills calls a couch a ‘sofa’, she who gets delightfully giddy over ‘having company’, and perhaps the only one of us who downright enjoys the commotion of all our kids loud and tornado-like – one time I apologized for the sheer crazy of us all and she said, “Oh don’t kid yourself – I LOVE it!” And she meant it. “Just being together,” she’d always say. That was joy to her and she’d always write down little notes about our time together in her notebook that sat by her chair. She had just celebrated her birthday a month ago - #75…but now…this….could it really be over? Was God really going to call her home? Grandma had been a Christ-follower for many years, and we all had a peace that the Lord had given her a good, long life and that her inheritance after death would be eternal life in heaven. But no matter how many years you’ve shared, you still want more….
As I talked with God about His plans for her, He didn’t prepare me for death. Instead, He began revving up my faith. I started recalling dreams that the Lord had given me over the past year in which Grandma was present at future family events that hadn’t yet come to pass. This led me to rehearse and pray out something that He’d been teaching me from John chapter 11….that sometimes when it looks like the show is over….He’s really just setting the stage…setting Himself up for glory.
I began to receive the discernment that she would fully recover. Sometimes, faith can surprise you when the reality of the circumstances don’t match up. But if you’re going to follow after Jesus, then you’ve got to be okay with surprises.
Hours passed, and eventually the small hospital doctors had some sort of diagnosis of an infection in Grandma’s lung and a finding of a seizure. There was more to uncover, but they felt she could now be transferred. However, the doctors forewarned Mom that Grandma was in critical condition and may not make it through the drive. We felt the weight of it - her life was hanging by a thread…but aren’t we all?
The bigger hospital seemed to be her only shot at making it long term. Mom gave the go-ahead for her to be transferred. And so we prayed. “I’m just praying that God is speaking to her, revealing Himself to her while she is unresponsive.” That was Mom’s prayer.
Upon reaching the bigger hospital, Grandma was crashing, death’s shadow closing in. Immediately upon arrival a respiratory tube went in to physically sustain her life. She was then taken to ICCU, where she was sedated into a coma.
Rounds of tests ensued. Eventually the doctors were able to trace the results to give understanding of what had happened (of course this was integral to know then how to treat her): It all started with a seizure in the night. They believe the seizure had happened due to an unknown too-high blood pressure event that possibly was a leftover effect from her recent surgery. During the seizure she vomited, which she then inhaled back into her lungs. (This fluid later developed into aspiration pneumonia.) Because of this fluid in her lungs, she was not getting adequate oxygen to her brain and heart and she then had a heart attack. On top of all this, she had also developed sepsis – a life threatening blood infection in and of itself. No one was sure at what time of night the seizure had occurred and hence how long she had been without adequate oxygen. Of course, this then put forth the grave prospect that if she did recover, she could have brain damage. At this point her mental status could not be evaluated by the neurologist because of the sedation that was helping her body to rest and fight. So we were left to wait. And pray. Sometimes when things are at their worst, that’s the time to believe the most.
Mid-afternoon, we received news from the big hospital doctors that changed everything. The doctor and cardiologist said that all the things that had happened to Grandma were reversible. I had never been more in love with a word in my life. The doc said Grandma’s condition was now stable. Her heart damage was ‘not bad’. The neurologist assessed her next. He said he was observing no signs of stroke at this time, and did not see any signs of it or a brain bleed on the CT scan. He noted that she was fighting the tube in her throat which he said was good that she was gagging.
And we laughed. We laughed for the first time since morning. “That’s our girl!” we said. Because if you know Grandma, she is a gagger. Just the thought of going to the dentist could send her into a gagging spell. Once when I was a little girl I went to her appointment with her and I still remember the hygienist giving her a pep talk through the x-rays as she sat gagging and spitting out the mouthpiece just about each time that the picture was almost taken. I think it took 45 minutes to get the x-rays. And she’d always gag at dirty diapers, and certain smells, and would sympathy gag when other people would gag. So this…this was fantastic. Faith can surprise you and faith can make you laugh even when it’s dark and faith can bring a turn of events in a moment - in a single word. Reversible. And isn't everything under His hand reversible...redeemable afterall?
Late that night Jake and I visited Grandma in ICCU where Mom hadn’t left her side. Grandma looked like people do in the movies. All hooked up. Unconscious. Fragile. Still so many things yet unknown. The respiratory machine’s steady breaths were the backdrop to our prayers. Jake started… “Lord, if You’re going to bring her back, bring her back fully. Completely. Please give her a sound mind, restore her mind and body entirely…otherwise Lord, please take her home…”
I finished… “Lord, it says in your Word that when the Centurion’s servant was dying and He sent word to You to ask You to come and heal him, the Centurion had faith that if you’d just speak it – just send your Word – that his servant would be healed. Lord, we have this faith. We believe that you can just send your Word and heal her completely…”
Mom quietly affirmed and praised and thanked as we prayed. Tomorrow would tell. We headed home, and waited for Glory.
* * *
June 12, 2015The docs started weaning Grandma off the sedation to allow her to wake up. She opened her eyes. Wiggled her fingers a bit. Mom said it was hard to tell if Grandma recognized her. Mom was telling her things and Grandma would shake her head yes like she understood. She was still unable to talk because of the breathing tube. She had an MRI scheduled to double clear her for a stroke and to check her brain. After that, the nurse kept her off sedation the rest of the day. Grandma is a popular one in our small town, so she had lots of visitors that trickled in to see her that afternoon while she was awake, but none that Mom could tell that Grandma showed signs of recognizing.
I couldn’t wait to go and see her. I got there early evening. When I walked in, her eyes were closed. Mom began to wake her, nudging her arm gently, “Janel’s here,” she said.
Grandma’s eyes opened and as she turned to look at me I said, “Hi Grandma…. it’s Janel. I came to see you.” And then. Grandma’s eyes crinkled up into a smile and tears filled her eyes and rolled down her face. As I continued to talk to her she just kept trying to smile as best she could, hindered only by the respiratory tube still down her throat….the soft tears rolling slowly, gracefully down her cheeks. I looked at Mom who was in a puddle of tears all her own. We knew it. She recognized me! Her emotions and thoughts were there! Faith can surprise you and faith can make you smile even when you’re in the unknown and faith can bring a turn of events in a moment - in the crinkling of an eye.
I smiled all the way home.
The nurses told us that chances were good that Grandma could get her respiratory tube taken out tomorrow. She was doing most of the breathing on her own with just a little assistance from the machine now.
Tomorrow would tell. We went to sleep, and waited for Glory.
* * *
June 13, 2015The neurologist was in. He had the results from the MRI and said he was seeing a reversible encephalopathy called PRES in Grandma’s brain. Basically it meant that there was swelling on her brain. There was nothing to do for it, but he expected it to go down on its own over time. This condition mimicks the effects of a stroke, but it is not a stroke. He said this is why it seems she doesn’t always recognize everyone so far. All I knew was there was that word reversible again. Love marks of a Redeemer. Grandma was also able to follow the commands of the neuro test (wiggle your toes, squeeze hands, follow the light with your eyes). Everything was still a go to remove her breathing tube in the afternoon. We knew this would be the big reveal of how things were functioning in her brain – when she could finally communicate with us verbally.
At 2:09pm the excitement began…
She opened her eyes, lifted her head up with a start and looked at me, but didn’t recognize me this time. She gently rested her head back on her pillow and loudly proclaimed, “I see heaven! I see heaven! Beautiful. Beautiful…”
I looked at Mom, not understanding what was going on. Mom’s eyes were clouded with tears and she choked out a whisper, “She told me that too.”
I looked back at Grandma, the Spirit already testifying inside of me, “You got to see heaven, Grandma?”
“Yes! Beautiful….beautiful…”
Sometimes someone else can be your burning bush.
I looked up at the nurses, busy in the background. They didn’t seem to notice that we were standing on Holy Ground.
“When they took the tube out,” Mom said at a low whisper, “she was breathing at a 97 all on her own – even with pneumonia filled lungs. With the tube in you breathe at 100. The nurse said they’d never seen anything like it before – she didn’t even need any oxygen once it came out…”
Sometimes He speaks through a bush in flames. Other times, you just have to pay attention in a hospital room.
Mom and I spent the afternoon just soaking Grandma up – miracle that she was. As we talked with her many things would register, and some would not. She’d have us giggling one minute with comments like,“We have to have Thanksgiving! Feed those kids!” and flooding the room in our tears with the next, like when she turned to Mom and said, “I knew you’d be here Lori, cause that’s love.” Yet the one thing that remained constant was that she did not stop talking about her trip up to heaven. She told the nurses, she told the doctors, and she’d bring it up in the middle of conversations.
“I was too close to heaven if I wanted to live.”
“Yep, defeated the devil.”
To Mom, “I’m saved and so are you.” And, “ I’m going to heaven!” To which Mom said, “Not yet!” and then Grandma replied in return, “Nope - not yet.”
“I was there. Beautiful. I was there. Indescribable.”
* * *
June 14th, 2015Today she kept telling everyone, “I’m a Christian!”
She got to start eating puree food and by the time Jake and I got to the hospital to visit her late afternoon, they had busted her out of ICCU and given her a bright sunshine-filled room on the 4th floor.
And that wasn’t all that had changed. As Jake and I talked with her it was a NIGHT AND DAY difference from the day before. Her comprehension and recognition was right on. She was stringing thoughts together like normal ‘ol Gram. We talked about everything from the NBA playoffs and how Grandma does not like Lebron James (“he’s selfish” :)) to her making JJ’s strawberry pie for his birthday coming up, to more details about her trip up to heaven.
“I was there. I just went up, up, up (motioning with her hands) and then came back down and it was just peace on the way down. Just peace.”
* * *
As the days passed by with Grandma in recovery at the hospital, we literally encountered the Lord healing her body seemingly by the hour. First He strengthened her arms and hands and her motor skills and dexterity returned. Eventually she was able to sit up in a chair in her hospital room, then feed herself with utensils, then stand with the assistance of the nurse, then walk down the hallway with a walker, then attempt stairs, then shower on her own. The neurologist was in to test her daily and it seemed that as each hour, each afternoon, each day went by, her recognition and memory returned fully as the swelling ceased. She was passing tests and checking off boxes and reaching mile-markers every which way we turned. When you are in the middle of a miracle you can hardly believe He’s writing you right into the story.
In the days that followed, as I told and re-told the story of what had happened, I kept wanting to change Grandma’s first words about heaven from “I see heaven!” to “I saw heaven!”. Every writer wants to be grammatically correct after all. But then, the Lord showed me something.
So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. [2 Corinthians 4:18]
Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. [Colossians 3:1-2]
Eternal perspective was always meant to be present tense. It’s not just a one time happening of seeing God - an eclipse of His glory that then passes to the past. It’s a day to day way to live, way to see. It’s exclaiming as Grandma did each day of our lives, “I see heaven! It’s beautiful. I’m going to heaven!” We can let it - the thought of going - keep us going. Let it keep our minds right. Let it keep us focused and determined. Let it be our wisdom, our guard so we don’t fall for the trickery - the bribery - the glitter of this world. And then maybe, just maybe no matter our earthly troubles, no matter our pain, no matter our loss, no matter our day, no matter our wounds – our scars – our failures – our battles – maybe when we keep our eyes on heaven right now, then maybe like Grandma, we too can live in peace.
“I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” [John 16:33]
Saturday June 20th, they kicked Grandma out of the hospital – and she got to go HOME. Not to a care center, not to a nursing home, not to her real home in heaven yet, but to her little earthly home in Green Mountain, Iowa. And her sister came over and did her hair within the hour. :)
And one day, just like it did for Grandma, our faith will become sight.
"Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God. Trust also in Me. In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you." John 14:1-2
Wednesday, July 8, 2015
A Word from our Short-term Missionaries in Ghana
Written by our team's short-term missionary, Michael...he and his newlywed wife are serving with our non-profit ~ Acts 2 Collective (previously known as Kingdom Cares International) in Ghana for the summer.....
If you truly want to follow Christ, it will take everything you have. My heart is burdened, heavy, but yet compelled in a way that I have never felt before.
For those of you that are not familiar with what my wife Katie and I do....we are starting a ministry in Cape Coast, Ghana to rescue women from sex trafficking/prostitution. We are also looking to expand into child slavery as well.
In order for us to find the women we need to help, we have to go out in the middle of the night, and also deal with pimps and other people that society frowns on. Walking through clubs in the middle of the night with prostitutes doesn't give you the best reputation. Not everyone really understands what we are doing, and the ones that do (gang members, pimps, customers, ect) aren't too thrilled about our efforts to eliminate their income.
God made me strong....Physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually....by the grace of God. I believe God put men in a position of power. He also gave us a great responsibility to provide for and protect women. So when I see women being dehumanized, I believe that it is my responsibility to intercede in any way I possibly can, and to the best of my ability. When these women are brought to Katie and I wanting our help, I do not take it lightly. It is a terrible tragedy to watch people all over the world take advantage of vulnerable women and children.
This weekend, Katie and I had the opportunity to rescue the first two women from this world. These were two 6th grade girls caught up in prostitution. They are now far away from Cape Coast, smiling and enjoying their dream of attending school. When I returned to Cape Coast today, I received a list of 10 more girls that have been identified and are wanting our help. All ages 13-17.
Jesus was willing to minister to people that "society" frowned on. I want to bring light into the darkest places, love people who have never been loved, and do whatever it takes to show people Christ. In the end, when the girls grab my hand and say thank you all while shining with hope in their eyes.....it was all worth it. No matter what.
There is no greater joy than showing someone how much they are loved by God. So when a girl seeks out my protection and feels safe by my side, may I show them where they can find true strength and hope. There is no greater strength than the power of Christ that is afforded to all that believe!
If you truly want to follow Christ, it will take everything you have. My heart is burdened, heavy, but yet compelled in a way that I have never felt before.
For those of you that are not familiar with what my wife Katie and I do....we are starting a ministry in Cape Coast, Ghana to rescue women from sex trafficking/prostitution. We are also looking to expand into child slavery as well.
In order for us to find the women we need to help, we have to go out in the middle of the night, and also deal with pimps and other people that society frowns on. Walking through clubs in the middle of the night with prostitutes doesn't give you the best reputation. Not everyone really understands what we are doing, and the ones that do (gang members, pimps, customers, ect) aren't too thrilled about our efforts to eliminate their income.
God made me strong....Physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually....by the grace of God. I believe God put men in a position of power. He also gave us a great responsibility to provide for and protect women. So when I see women being dehumanized, I believe that it is my responsibility to intercede in any way I possibly can, and to the best of my ability. When these women are brought to Katie and I wanting our help, I do not take it lightly. It is a terrible tragedy to watch people all over the world take advantage of vulnerable women and children.
This weekend, Katie and I had the opportunity to rescue the first two women from this world. These were two 6th grade girls caught up in prostitution. They are now far away from Cape Coast, smiling and enjoying their dream of attending school. When I returned to Cape Coast today, I received a list of 10 more girls that have been identified and are wanting our help. All ages 13-17.
Jesus was willing to minister to people that "society" frowned on. I want to bring light into the darkest places, love people who have never been loved, and do whatever it takes to show people Christ. In the end, when the girls grab my hand and say thank you all while shining with hope in their eyes.....it was all worth it. No matter what.
There is no greater joy than showing someone how much they are loved by God. So when a girl seeks out my protection and feels safe by my side, may I show them where they can find true strength and hope. There is no greater strength than the power of Christ that is afforded to all that believe!
Sunday, July 5, 2015
Need Your Help to Fight Sex Trafficking in Ghana
Dear Women - I feel so heavily in my soul that you need to know this: We have sisters who right at this moment are being violated, hunted down by money-hungry men to be forced into prostitution. In other words, their 'job' is to be raped. And not just once. Day in, day out, their 'job' is to be raped over and over again. If you have ever felt the devastation of being raped, just imagine this fate awaiting you every single day of your life. Imagine as the evening falls, that a pimp comes to your door to take you against your will for your nightly assignments. Imagine the fear in your heart each night as you anticipate hearing his footsteps, dreading your worst nightmares coming to life yet another night. Imagine being stripped of your clothes, your dignity, your humanness, your worth, and for many young girls - your innocence. And not just once, imagine this scenario happening over and over and over again. They are our sisters and they are being treated as slaves - as though they were put on this earth to fulfill the sexual desires of men at any cost. They have no hope of education, they are drugged and coerced into addiction in the midst of this, they become impregnated from these rapes and their children either become orphaned or used as leverage for threats if the women ever try to run away. And just let your mind think for a moment of the psychological and emotional trauma these women are experiencing, that just gets deeper as each day goes by.
Men - you are to be God's human form of protection to us women in this world. You cannot stand by and allow this to happen. Step up. You've been given powerful positions, leadership, voices, resources, that many of us women haven't. God created us out of your rib. We are part of you. We are your daughters, your sisters, your wives. Please. It is your God-given duty to protect us, care for us and to intercede when evil pursues us.
Church - We cannot sit back and coast through this life, saved and free, while our sisters are waking up each day to a living hell. We were meant to not only bring souls with us to heaven someday, but to bring heaven to earth NOW. So let this unnerve us, let it tear our hearts to pieces, let it lead us to storm the doors of heaven with heavy - bold prayers, let it affect us and mess with us and make us uncomfortable. But far be it from us to numb ourselves, to turn the other way, and do nothing. Not on our watch, Church!
Right now our non-profit, Acts 2 Collective (we've recently changed our name - more details coming later) has a husband and wife team on the ground in Ghana in which all of the above is being exposed to them. The picture below is of the wife - Katie - being begged by a 12 year old sex trafficking victim to help her and get her out. We have people in position in Ghana to help and to physically do the things that need to be done on the ground to intercede. And now we need your help. We need financial resources to help get these victims out of their situation where they can then be cared for, loved, and rehabilitated. We have started to intervene into this sex trafficking ring with what finances we have, trusting in faith that God will provide what is truly needed. Our goal is to get 36 new 1200 club members so we can move with full force in these efforts. That's a pledge to give $100 a month - which works out to be $3.29 per day. If you can't do that how about $50 per month, or a one time donation? As we've just come off a day in America of celebrating our freedom, I plead with you to consider these women who wake up each day to a life of being hunted and dehumanized. We can do something. Click here to donate: https://acts2collective.cloverdonations.com/1200club/
Men - you are to be God's human form of protection to us women in this world. You cannot stand by and allow this to happen. Step up. You've been given powerful positions, leadership, voices, resources, that many of us women haven't. God created us out of your rib. We are part of you. We are your daughters, your sisters, your wives. Please. It is your God-given duty to protect us, care for us and to intercede when evil pursues us.
Church - We cannot sit back and coast through this life, saved and free, while our sisters are waking up each day to a living hell. We were meant to not only bring souls with us to heaven someday, but to bring heaven to earth NOW. So let this unnerve us, let it tear our hearts to pieces, let it lead us to storm the doors of heaven with heavy - bold prayers, let it affect us and mess with us and make us uncomfortable. But far be it from us to numb ourselves, to turn the other way, and do nothing. Not on our watch, Church!
Right now our non-profit, Acts 2 Collective (we've recently changed our name - more details coming later) has a husband and wife team on the ground in Ghana in which all of the above is being exposed to them. The picture below is of the wife - Katie - being begged by a 12 year old sex trafficking victim to help her and get her out. We have people in position in Ghana to help and to physically do the things that need to be done on the ground to intercede. And now we need your help. We need financial resources to help get these victims out of their situation where they can then be cared for, loved, and rehabilitated. We have started to intervene into this sex trafficking ring with what finances we have, trusting in faith that God will provide what is truly needed. Our goal is to get 36 new 1200 club members so we can move with full force in these efforts. That's a pledge to give $100 a month - which works out to be $3.29 per day. If you can't do that how about $50 per month, or a one time donation? As we've just come off a day in America of celebrating our freedom, I plead with you to consider these women who wake up each day to a life of being hunted and dehumanized. We can do something. Click here to donate: https://acts2collective.cloverdonations.com/1200club/
Friday, March 13, 2015
My Husband's Journey with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Over the past few weeks Jake has been writing out his journey of living with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and has been sending it out in chapters to his Kingdom Hoops program. I was waiting until it was all written out to post here on the blog. In his words....
After a couple week break from the
weekly devotionals it is time to get back to it. To be quite honest, the
reason for the break from the emails has nothing to do with me being busy or a
lack of time. The reason for no emails the last two weeks is
because of my reluctance to write the story that God wants me to
share. It is a story of a broken young man that suffered greatly from
anxiety disorders and in order to mask much of the torment that went on in his
mind fell in love with a game. This is a story of a young man who does
not deserve God’s grace and in no way on his own could ever be worthy of a
relationship with God. This is a story about me. It is a complicated story and one that
I will be telling in a few different chapters. It is
also a story of the amazing grace that is offered to all of us through the
cross of Christ.
Chapter 1
I grew up in a home that was
not centered around anything involving the church. Of course we believed
in a big God like most Americans and believed all we had to do was to be good
people. I thought everyone went to heaven as long as they did not commit
a big sin like murdering someone or breaking the law. My father was an
incredibly wise man who helped to develop many of my character traits that God
uses in me daily. I had a great Mom who had my sack lunch ready every day
for school, had my clothes beautifully folded outside of my door each morning,
and had dinner ready for me whenever I got home at night. My parents
sacrificed enormous amounts of time and resources to allow me to pursue what
many thought was my passion for basketball, which you will see shortly was
actually more of just an escape from what my life really was. From the
outside looking in I had the perfect family which led to us having the cool
house that everyone hung out at.
As time went on, the mask of my life
just continued to grow in its layers. I was starting on the varsity team
at a 4A high school when I was just in the 8th grade. My mug was on the
front page of the paper every Wednesday and Saturday morning and I was giving
interviews to all the local news stations on a weekly basis. I had the
perfect Mom and Dad who I would go to movies with on Saturday nights because
they were cool to hang out with. I was receiving national recognition for
what I was accomplishing on the basketball court and was on the path to not
have to pay for my college education. During these days I had a
girlfriend that was also a superstar athlete who went on to play division 1
basketball and soccer and graduated as valedictorian from her high
school. On top of all of this I was blessed with a personality that could
fit into any situation at any time and had taught myself to smile with
everyone. My life with the masks on seemed like the perfect big screen
movie of a young sports star that finds the perfect girlfriend, has the cool
parents, and goes on to the perfect life of living happily ever after.
The reality of my life was quite
different. Every day of my life was an internal war against an enemy I
could not defeat. As I moved in to my teenage years I had no idea what
was going on. My entire day was a constant fight against vain imaginations,
irrational thoughts, constant obsessions, and anxiety that I felt on most days
would kill me. My entire life off the basketball court was simply
survival. There were days I could barely get myself out of bed.
Once I pulled myself from the comfort of my sheets the torture of my mind would
begin. In order to appease the anxieties of my mind I created all kinds
of rituals and obsessional routines in order to survive another day.
Basketball became my escape where I felt like the constant obsessions of my
life could be used for something positive like perfecting my shot, obsessing on
my footwork, or picking apart the game of basketball. The fears and anxieties
of life would then subside for the time being as I escaped between the
lines. I literally feared stopping each night because I did not want to
return to my life. My parents would have to come and physically take the
ball out of my hands and order me to bed.
Growing up there was no one to talk to
about this as I was sure people would think I was crazy. My obsessions
ranged from everything such as 90 degree angles, white pieces of paper on the
ground, to imaginations that I ran someone over with my car when driving home
from school. The irrational obsessions would occur followed by a life
altering ritual that involved counting and trying to re-live each moment.
How do you tell someone this? Especially in my house growing up as my Dad
was helping me to become a leader and great basketball player. We were
supposed to be tough, confident, rational in all moments, and certainly not fearful
of moments in time. On the outside I had to keep up the great basketball
player role that I played in every gym I went into. I always wondered if
young people would really look up to me if they knew what I went through every
day. Would the TV cameras and newspapers still care who I was if they
really knew who I was?
All of this hit a breaking point my
junior year in high school when I simply could not get out of bed one
morning. I wanted to be done fighting. You can imagine how this
scenario caught my parents off guard and chaos reigned in the house for a few
days. Within a week I was seeing one of the top psychologists in the
Minneapolis area. I still remember my second session with this doctor
during the spring of my junior year. He gave me some medicine called
Zoloft and I still remember the joy that leaped through my body and mind
thinking that finally the suffering would be over. As the weeks went by
everything became worse rather than better. They did what all great
doctors would do as they just kept upping the dose of Zoloft that I took each
day. Not only had I become a walking zombie absent of emotion due to the
incredibly high doses of Zoloft, but all the obsessions and rituals still had
not gone away. In those days all I could ever think about was how in
my whole life, anytime I got sick, I would go to the doctor and they would give
me medicine - then within days I would be feeling all better. But not this time.
The realization in my mind that
medicine would not take away my torment sent me into a whirl wind
depression. The crazy part is that I hit rock bottom my senior year in
high school all the while averaging 30 points per/game, leading the #1 ranked
4A team in the state, and smiling for every camera in my face or young person
who wanted an autograph. For 32 minutes every Tuesday & Friday night
everything would go away. We would sell out high school gymnasiums 2-3
hours before the start of our games as people would come and watch me play. Yet, the pressure never phased me because
what was going on in my real life was the greatest pressure of all.
During the midst of my most difficult time was the first time I
ever heard God’s voice. At the time I did not know what it was. I know now that it was that voice on that
cold Minnesota night that spared me my life. That night is still as vivid
as any memory I have ever had. It was on a dark wooded road that
connected my house to the place my girlfriend at the time lived. It was
9:00pm and I was driving home when I had decided that it would be better to die
than live with this the rest of my life. I figured I could drive my car
as fast as possible into one of the gigantic trees that lined the road and the
torment would be over. Then I remember feeling a voice say to me just hang
on a little longer. You only have months left to graduation and things
will be different once you head to Iowa State. As the voice told me to
hang on a little longer I wept tears like never before. I decided that night I would hang on a little
longer as my journey to Iowa State was just a few LONG months
away..........
Chapter 2
Hope is defined as a
feeling of expectation and desire for a certain thing to happen. The long,
painful, and lonely final months of high school had come to an end and only the
hope of change carried me through. My day of hope had finally arrived
with a packed car full of all my belongings and one last good bye to my
childhood friend (my dog Cricket). It was now time to pile in the car and
head south for 190 miles. Ames, Iowa provided me a new start. In my
mind it would become a place where all my torment would leave me and I could
start anew while hanging on to a game I loved. I can still remember the
day my Dad gave me a final handshake and my Mom, drenched in tears, gave me a
final hug. The hope in which I believed had saved me that night on the
dark road was finally here as my parents shut that door behind them. As
the door shut I wept a few tears, some from the realization that I was now
alone without my parents, but more so of joy that finally I could start a new
life. A new life away from the pain of my anxiety disorders. A new
life away from the rituals that consumed my life. I was convinced in the
deepest part of my being that I was being released from all the pain that I had
bottled up for so many years.
During the first couple of
weeks I was consumed with new friends, new teammates, and life on my own.
I was finding joy learning my way around a new campus and learning how to play
basketball at the highest level. My mind could not consume anything
except the joy I felt as all those years of hard work had led me to this
division 1 university, where 15,000 fans would soon be celebrating every three
point shot I made.
Then it happened....no this could not be happening again.
I had this new hope. I had found a renewed joy. I had escaped the
prison that I lived in while I was in high school. This could not be
happening again.
It happened again on a
crisp fall day on the Iowa State campus as I walked through the hall of
Lagomarcino where my Psychology classes took place. It only made sense to
me to pursue a degree in psychology as I had a desire to understand what
took place in my mind during those days in high school. As class
dismissed I had to walk down an unfamiliar hallway to check on an extra credit
research project I was going to take part in. As I placed my name on the
line signing up for my extra credit time I turned to begin to walk away and
caught an image out of the corner of my eye. I turned around to check
what I had seen and of course nothing was there. I turned to begin to
walk again and then it happened again and I went back and counted to 7.
Then it happened again and this time I stopped and starred down the hallway
counting to 77. Soon I was walking in circles around the building
performing all types of counting rituals in order to relieve the anxiety I felt
in this unfamiliar hallway. Nearly 90 minutes went by before I was able
to finally get out the front door.
As I stepped out into the
cool breeze of a late fall morning I scurried back to my dorm room. I
threw open my door and fell flat on my face until 3pm when it was time to go to
our pre-season conditioning workout. I laid on that bed for those hours
in absolute terror. How could this be happening again? I had thought
that when I left Oakdale, Minnesota this would all be gone. Now the
reality was that the hope I had placed in Ames, Iowa was now gone. The
hope I had placed in Iowa State men’s basketball was now gone. The hope I
had placed in new friends and a new life had disappeared. The torment was
back. I had reentered the prison of my mind.
The part that simply amazes
me as I look back on the story is that my success on the basketball court
during my years at Iowa State was never affected. I can now see how the
Lord’s hand of protection was on me every time I stepped between those
lines. How in the world could I be locked in this prison of anxiety,
obsessions, rituals, and eventual depression yet still be Freshman of the Year,
3-time All-Big 12 selection, 3-time Academic All American. We won a Big
12 championship, got to the final four of the NIT, and I eventually graduated
setting all kinds of offensive shooting records. All those
accomplishments, championships, and records are what people saw but they were
just a few more layers of the mask I wore.
As people looked at me from
the rafters of Hilton Coliseum I was living the life that so many people could
only dream about. Except no one knew that off the court my life was
a spiraling mess. My life was not only consumed with the anxieties of my
mind but also with protecting my image from the thousands of fans and young people
who looked up to me. The layers of the masks that I wore in high school
became thicker and thicker. I could be in a full conversation with
someone while performing some mental ritual in my mind. At the same time that I was engaging in the
conversations I was struggling with the 90 degree angles in the room.
Random people could come up to me on Welch Avenue in Ames and ask for a picture
and I could stop, put on the most joyful smile in the world, and turn around
and pick up 4 white pieces of paper trying to suppress the anxiety in the pits
of my stomach. I had mastered manipulating my situations and had
created a heightened awareness of my surroundings just to make sure no one
would discover who I actually was. I had a reputation to live up to and
if I was ever discovered to be who I really was what would people think of me?
At night I would make sure
I would always be the last person out of Hilton Coliseum as I did not want
anyone to ride with me in my car. I would shoot and shoot and shoot until
everyone left. Everyone around me thought it was just my work ethic, but
in reality I did not want anyone to ride in my car, because some nights it
would take me two hours to travel 5 miles from Hilton Coliseum back to my
apartment. I would have to repeat the
route 7 times, or 17 times, or maybe even 77 times before I would pull into my
parking spot and head into my apartment. All of this was going on and yet
there was not one person in my life that had any idea. My parents were
190 miles away and they were easy to lie to on the phone. I wore so many
masks that I could put different ones on based on the situation in order to be
the person that I thought everyone wanted me to be.
During this struggle I
learned the most valuable lesson of my life. I learned about the reality
of hope within our circumstances. I learned that a true hope will never
be found in our circumstances. Many of us live our lives this way
believing in a hope that cannot fulfill and certainly cannot save. Many
of us have a hope that when we have a certain amount of money everything will
be made new. Others have a hope that when we get that new job or that
promotion then things will be made new. Others find hope that when they
meet that right person then things will be right. So many have a hope
like I had that was found in a new place and new surroundings. I believed
with every fiber of my being that when my hope of Ames, Iowa and Iowa State
University came to pass my life would be different. Instead all of my
hopes in the things, places, and people of this world let me down. This
type of hope had no saving power in my life. This hope could not release
me from the prison of my mind. This hope could not remove the layers of
masks that I wore. This hope could not save me and could not make me
new.
The hope I thought I had
found had let me down. However, there was a hope that found me amidst the
lowest moments of my life. A real hope found me that had the ability to
save me and would unlock the door to the prison of my mind. A hope found
me that offered the ultimate saving Grace...
Chapter 3
In Chapter 2 I talked
about hope being defined as a feeling of expectation and desire for a certain
thing to happen. As I study this definition now, I know looking back that
this was not the hope that I encountered at the lowest moment in my life. Actually I had no expectation of ever being
rescued from the prison of my mind. My
only desire each day was to survive another day with as little anxiety as
possible. I did have a hope each day but
that hope, no matter how hard I tried, would never satisfy me. No matter how many threes I made, how many
games we won, or how much attention I received, it could never satisfy. The hope I had was actually no hope at
all.
Over the years I
began to learn about a hope that could satisfy that is found in a God that
takes all the wisdom of this world and flips it upside down. I discovered a God that pursues us when we
are without expectation and without any desire for the hope that He
provides.
Much of the wisdom of
the western world is for us to be in control.
We are supposed to control our destiny, our success, and our hope. In my days of despair I was no different as I
wrestled and fought each day until God came knocking on my door in hot pursuit
of me. I was not searching for God and
had no interest in being one of those church people. Despite my lack of desire to find God as I
wallowed in the depths of the pits of my life, a Savior came and rescued me and
gave me the hope to unlock the door of my internal prison.
As I’ve learned more
about God and the life of Jesus, there is a consistent pattern throughout
scriptures of how God pursues people that many times, in the beginning, have no
intention of pursuing Him. Over and over
again God came after individuals like David, Moses, Elisha, Matthew, Zacchaeus,
Mark, Paul, and so many others. These
individuals were just out living their lives as shepherds, tax collectors, fisherman,
and Pharisees when God came to them in their most mundane moments - never to
live their lives the same again. My
story was no different. One day I was
without any desire for God and soon I would never be the same again.
So there I was at
Iowa State, living my life trying everything to save myself from the pits of my
anxiety disorder. I tried medicine and
psychologists. I tried gaining
intellectual knowledge. I read books, and studied articles. I attempted to rely on my own willpower and
even tried just escaping into the world of basketball. Nothing seemed to help for any sustained amount
of time no matter how hard I tried or how much I knew. Then without pursuit, knowledge, or any part
of my own strength, God showed up in the form of people and circumstances. God used a girl from a small town in Iowa
named Janel, a basketball manager named Dave Edwards, a church called
Cornerstone, and a list of miracles that could fill countless pages…
When I arrived at
Iowa State I was not the quickest athlete on campus, certainly not the most
athletic, and to compound my problem, not very flexible. Coach Eustachy needed me on the court
offensively but did not have a strong desire to have me on the court
defensively. With that being said the
day I walked on campus I had my very own speed/agility program that would be
closely monitored each morning.
Every morning I was
at the Lied Rec Center on campus by 6am for 30 minutes of speed/agility
training, 30 minutes of Yoga, and 30 minutes of a specialized stretching
routine. I would then be out of the Lied
Rec Center by 7:45am and would head immediately to my English Comp class. My class did not start until 9am and since I
was a paranoid Freshman, I was worried about being late so I would always
arrive early immediately following my morning workout. During my early arrivals I discovered this
couch right outside of class that fit my body perfectly where I could squeeze
in a 45 minute nap. As the 8am class
dismissed, this very attractive girl would shake my shoulder, wake me up, and I
would then head into class. There were
days I would just pretend I was sleeping just so she would wake me up!!! We never exchanged many words but God had a
plan to use her in my life. We continued
to run into each other in the elevators, in the dorm halls, in the cafeteria, and
other random places throughout campus.
During one of our random encounters she invited me to go to something
called Salt Company at a church called Cornerstone. As a division 1 athlete I lived a life
centered on me and had no real need for a God other than myself. I am sure my self-centeredness did not
surprise God as He orchestrated putting my life back together on His hope. God knew I had no interest in Him, but He
also knew that I would have a great level of interest in this shy, brown haired,
small town girl. Only because I held out
hope in dating this girl, I agreed to attend.
Janel was not a
Christian at this point in time either and her friends had invited her to Salt
Company and in exchange she invited me.
I remember walking into that Thursday night Salt Company feeling quite
uncomfortable and wondering what in the world I was doing. I even became more uncomfortable as this band
came up on stage singing crazy worship music while the people around me lifted their
hands up to the ceiling. What was
this? Where was I? This experience better get me another date
with this girl. These were just a few of
the thoughts going through my mind at the time.
There was also one other thought that was on my heart that night. From the outside looking in I had everything
the world could offer. I had a full
college scholarship, was a recognized face wherever I went, and I was on one of
the top 10 teams in the country getting ready to win a Big 12 title. Despite all these things the world could offer,
these people with their hands lifted high clearly had something I did not
have. They had a peace and joy about
them that did not exist in my life.
I left that night
quite curious and anxiously waiting to attend on the next Thursday and the next
Thursday and the next. I did not fully
understand what I experienced that first night but I knew I wanted to
experience it again. I was not ready to
give up all the worldly things that controlled my life, but God started
something that first Thursday night that would cause my life to turn ever so
slightly.
Then God, as He so
often does, sent a second person into my life.
His name was Dave Edwards and he was one of the managers on the Iowa
State Basketball staff. Every time I
struggled or hit some adversity Dave would be there to share a bible verse with
me. Dave was one of those types of guys
that never really got the fact that I was not interested in his random life
lesson bible verses. I never gave Dave
the time of day when it came to his Bible verses and like we too often do as
athletes, he became the butt of random jokes in the locker room many times. Dave never let our mockery discourage him
and never gave up on getting me to listen to what God’s word had to say.
Dave was up to his
ways one night after we had just gotten beat on the road again, and this time
by a below average Missouri team. Down
the stretch I had a handful of missed defensive assignments and took a real bad
shot with about 2 minutes left in a tied ball game. After the game I got a Larry Eustachy butt
chewing that was not pretty and could never be repeated in detail. To say that I was down after the game was an
understatement. As we boarded the plane,
Dave walked back to where I was sitting and opened his Bible to the book of
James - Chapter 1. He told me to read
James chapter 1 and that everything I was going through was God’s plan for my
life. At this point in my life I still
had no intention of giving up anything in my life for God. This God stuff was still crazy to me and I
had very little belief that it was even true.
However, that night I was so down with my play, and the prison of my
mind was only getting worse in my day to day life that I was up for giving
anything a try, even if that meant reading this Bible.
As the plane took off
that night I began to read through the first chapter of James. I did not understand most of what I read with
the exception of verses 2-4 which spoke to me in a unique way. James 1:2-4 read as follows - Consider it pure joy, my brothers and
sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the
testing of your faith produces perseverance.
Let perseverance finish its work so that you may be mature and complete,
not lacking anything. Those verses
rang in my head for not only that night after the Missouri game but for weeks,
months and eventually years to come. The
verses contained in the beginning of the book of James would wind up leading me
to God in the most unexpected places at the most unexpected times.
A few days after that
night in Missouri I was having one of those days. I was having one of those days where my
irrational thoughts would lead to irrational rituals which caused my life
outside the lines of a basketball court to be absolute misery. That day I had grudgingly made my way out of
my apartment to my CompSci class that was easily the most boring and mind
numbing class I ever took. As the
professor stood at the front of the room my mind raced with a million different
irrational thoughts as the anxiety ripped holes in my stomach. For some reason that day before I left my
apartment I had put my Bible in my school bag.
The only Bible I owned was a Precious Moments Bible that was bright pink
that my aunt had given me when I was in 2nd grade. I had found it packed in a box back in the
corner of my closet a few weeks earlier, and that morning I grabbed it for
reasons I still can’t explain. As my
anxiety seemed out of control sitting in that classroom, I pulled out that
Bible from my school bag as I wanted to go back and read the part from the book
of James that Dave showed me a few days prior.
I was just hoping to glean something from those words that would help me
in this moment. That day as the professor
continued to go on and on and on I decided to just keep reading my Bible. I soon had read chapter 1 of James and then
chapter 2 and then eventually into chapter 3.
Chapter 3 is all about taming the tongue and that day I felt convicted
in a way I had never been before.
Where I grew up and
how I grew up combined with being a division 1 athlete made it not uncommon for
many unwholesome things to come out of my mouth. There was rarely a sentence that ever came
out of my mouth that did not contain a cuss word or two. That day while sitting in CompSci class I
made a deal with God. I would not
encourage this method of following after God, but at the time I did not know
anything different. In the middle of
class as I read chapter 3 I began to talk with God. I still was not sure if all this Bible
believing, church going, Jesus on the cross stuff was real so I simply asked
God to reveal Himself in my speech. I
said, “Ok God, if you are real, then I will stop swearing. Despite the environment I am in, and the way
my friends talk, if you are real, God, you will tame my tongue and change the
words that spew from my lips.”
Then it happened like
I cannot explain in words. From that day
on my speech would never be the same. It
was like suddenly the normal talk that came from my mouth had changed. It did not mean that I still didn’t drop an
unnecessary word or two, but my daily, common speech had changed. I would be surrounded by teammates, coaches,
and friends that cussed like normal but something had happened to me that day
in CompSci class. This God who I was not
convinced existed had answered my prayer and suddenly my ears were being opened
to the things in God’s Word.
My life was never
going to be the same again. While I was
lost, God began to use people and circumstances in my life to show me a hope
that the things of this world could never offer. God was real and our relationship was just
beginning. Despite the blessing with my
speech I still wondered if this God that changed the words that flowed from my
mouth could really unlock the prison that was in my mind. Did this God really have the power to give
everlasting life and to heal the most broken of men? God had found me but would I surrender my
life to His unending Grace that had the power to heal? As you conclude reading
this chapter I hope that God is speaking to you through this like He spoke
to me in weird, unexpected ways. Nothing
is unexpected in God’s kingdom and like He did with me, I pray that God is
using this story to find others who desire a hope that can rescue, heal,
redeem, and save! Jesus died for each of
us on that cross and rose three days later so that we can all be unlocked from
the prison of this world with a Grace that none of us deserve!
Chapter 4
One of my favorite life stories in the Bible can be found in the book of
Judges Chapter 6. This particular piece
of scripture involves a guy named Gideon who was responsible for leading God’s
people against a group of people called the Midianites who worshiped god’s of
Baal. Why is this story so intriguing to
me? Because I can see myself so clearly
reflected in the life of Gideon. Before
we get to all of that let’s look at few excerpts of Gideon’s life.
When the Israelites cried out to the Lord because of Midian, 8 he
sent them a prophet, who said, “This is what the Lord, the God of
Israel, says: I brought you up out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery.
9 I rescued you from the hand of the
Egyptians. And I delivered you from the hand of all your oppressors; I drove
them out before you and gave you their land.
To give you an accurate picture of this time in history, this is shortly
after God had led the Israelites out of Egypt and out of the land of slavery. This is a time after the Israelites had seen
God rescue them from the ruthless dictatorship of King Pharaoh in Egypt by
helping them to escape through the parting of the Red Sea. What else could these people want? Why could they not fully trust in the God
that had already rescued them once?
17 Gideon replied, “If now I have found
favor in your eyes, give me a sign that it is really you talking to me. 18 Please
do not go away until I come back and bring my offering and set it before you.”
As God is calling Gideon to lead the people against these false gods of
the Midianites, Gideon wanted God to reveal Himself one more time just so he
could be sure God was with him.
22 When Gideon realized that it was the
angel of the Lord, he exclaimed, “Alas,
Sovereign Lord! I have seen the angel
of the Lord face to face!”
God did as Gideon had asked Him and revealed Himself. Yet Gideon still struggled to be sure!
36 Gideon said to God, “If you will save
Israel by my hand as you have promised— 37 look,
I will place a wool fleece on the threshing floor. If there is dew only on the
fleece and all the ground is dry, then I will know that you will save Israel by
my hand, as you said.” 38 And that is
what happened. Gideon rose early the next day; he squeezed the fleece and wrung
out the dew—a bowlful of water.
Come on Gideon where is your faith?
Have you not already seen God multiple times? Yet this is how so many of us live life -
constantly wondering if God is really with us.
Can’t you see yourself in Gideon?
I know I can. God has shown Himself
over and over to me yet I still have had doubts.
39 Then Gideon said to God, “Do not be
angry with me. Let me make just one more request. Allow me one more test with
the fleece, but this time make the fleece dry and let the ground be covered
with dew.” 40 That night God did so. Only the
fleece was dry; all the ground was covered with dew.
Once again Gideon was in doubt and asked God to reveal Himself yet
again. I know if I was God I would have
slapped Gideon upside the head or I may have just went and found someone else
to work with. However, what I have
discovered about God is that no matter how many times we seem to doubt Him or
even fail Him, He never turns from us.
We may turn from God but God never turns from us and I had the
opportunity to learn this lesson as God began to rescue me from the prison of
my mind.
Gideon is me
and I am sure Gideon is many of you. By
2003 I had seen God show up in my life in many ways from the people He put in
my path, to His Word coming to life when I read it, and to God literally
changing the words that came out of my mouth overnight.
Yet, no matter
what ways God revealed Himself in my life I still doubted. I can still remember a point in my life in
which my doubt was the highest. I had
done the Christian church thing and said the prayer of salvation - believing
that Jesus had died for me on that cross and rose again three days later
overcoming all of my sin. Just because I
had become a Christian did not fully relieve the doubt that I had deep in my
soul.
At this point
in my life my college basketball career was coming to an end and I was
beginning to wrestle with what the rest of my life would look like. I felt as though God was asking me to walk
away from all my personal desires that had consumed my life for so long. I had opportunities as my college career was
concluding to continue to play professionally over-seas. I could have stayed on with Coach Morgan as a
graduate assistant working my way up the ranks of division 1 coaching. I also had opportunities with ESPN to begin
to cover Iowa State and Big 12 games as a color guy. I was presented with so many incredible
opportunities but there was something deep in my soul that was telling me there
was more, and I felt that God was pushing me out of this type of world. My relationship and understanding of who God
was was very immature at the time. I
felt that I could not pursue any type of deeper relationship with Christ if I
stayed in the same world that consumed the first 22 years of my life.
In order to
walk away from the opportunities I had, I needed to know that God was real and
that He was actually with me. Like
Gideon I asked God to reveal Himself one more time and this time He would have
to enter into my darkest pits. I did not
just want God to reveal Himself to me but I wanted Him to rescue me from the
prison of my mind. During my years in
college my obsessive compulsive disorder had only gotten worse and more life
consuming. However, it was not like I
did not have answers. As I was falling
further and further into the bottomless pit that was obsessive compulsive
disorder, I was also pursuing a psychology degree in which I began to learn how
to treat something like obsessive compulsive disorder. In all of my studies, there was only one
concrete way to begin to overcome this disorder and it is through something
called behavioral therapy.
Here is an
example of behavioral therapy. I have an
obsession to pick up a random white piece of paper. Normally the compulsion would be to pick it
up, but in behavioral therapy you change the behavior and instead walk
away. By walking away you have a major
anxiety attack that may last some duration of time - let’s say 60 minutes
before the anxiety would dissipate. The
next time I would see a white piece of paper and again don’t act upon the
compulsion to pick it up, the anxiety attack may last 59 minutes and 30
seconds. Every time that I did not act
upon the obsession the anxiety would get less and less until eventually the
behavior changed to where I no longer would have obsessions over something like
a white piece of paper. Unless you have
gone through something like this there are no words that can actually describe
the anxiety that is experienced. When I
faced this type of anxiety I truly thought I was going to die and for however
long it lasted I was literally paralyzed with fear.
I knew what
the answers were in order to begin the healing process but I wanted no part of
it because no human strength can actually see an individual through the process
of behavior therapy. I wanted this to
all go away but I was not strong enough to do it. Then one night I sat down to watch the movie
‘A Beautiful Mind’ with Russell Crowe.
In this movie the character that Russell Crowe played struggled with
vain imaginations like obsessive compulsive disorder, and it destroyed his
entire life. Then towards the end of the
movie he decides that he is going to overcome his disorder by putting himself
through what essentially was behavioral therapy. As I watched the movie and saw how this
character, which was based on a real life man, was able to do this and restore
his life, I felt like God said to me that night that I was to take the same
steps.
As the movie
concluded I laid in my bed the entire night terrified of what my upcoming
months and years would look like if I started in on this path. That night I cried out to a God who I just
barely knew and pleaded for Him to come with me on this journey. I told God that night that if He was real He
would need to reveal Himself by being by my side every step of the way. I pleaded with Him to be my strength in order
to not act upon the hundreds of obsessions I had each day. I told God that night that I would give up
everything this world could ever offer me if He would just hold me up and
strengthen me during this process, and ultimately bring me healing.
I woke up
the next morning and the process had begun.
I have never told anyone about those months of absolute torture that I
would experience, but through every moment God never left my side. He held my right hand when I was curled up in
a ball not able to move from the anxiety.
God gave me the strength every time I needed it to resist an obsession and
to fight the anxiety.
However,
through all of that I did not develop my absolute hope in Christ during the moments
He strengthened me. Rather, I developed a trust that will never leave me
because God never left me even when I ignored His promptings and failed the
tests. What do I mean by that?
Let’s go
back to the white piece of paper example.
Let’s say that over a two month period of time I had 100 obsessions over
a white piece of paper on the ground. And
let’s say 100 times I was able to fight off the compulsion through the strength
the Lord provided me to the point that the anxiety would only last a few
minutes. Then all of a sudden the 101st
obsession would occur and I would not rely on the strength that God provided me. I would act upon the obsession, which then would
spiral me back to the very beginning of the obsession where the anxiety would
last for the full amount of time and once again consume my life. I found God most in those moments, and that
is where my faith was strengthened. In
the moments I failed He never left me.
He never left me when I ignored Him. He never hid His face from me and never let go
of my hand. He would always pick me back
up and walk with me once again through the valley of the shadow of death.
Today many
people ask me how I can have such faith even in the most difficult of situations. Normally when I am asked this question I deflect
the question and never answer it because how do I ever explain what I have seen
and experienced? The reason for my faith
is not what most people would ever expect.
It is not the fact that I was delivered from the prison of my mind. It is not because I have seen God’s countless
miracles and rescues in my life take place.
God gave me a faith that I truly believe can move mountains because He
never left me no matter how many times I ignored His promptings or failed to
trust in His strength in those days.
Every time that I fell back into the deep, dark pit God would be there
to pick me back up to walk with me once again.
The Lord always allowed His face to shine brightly even during the
darkest parts of my life.
No matter
how many times that you feel that you have failed God He has never failed us
and will definitely never leave us.
Jesus has never let anyone down and is certainly not going to start with
you. I pray today that you know He is
right beside you shining brightly. The
Lord’s Grace is abundant and He desires for all of us to turn from our ways,
and walk in step with His promises. When we find ourselves in a pit He is right
there to pick us up. He picked me up
over and over and over again and still does today. I know that in each of our lives He will
always be there with a hope and peace this world can never offer.
“The Lord bless you and
keep you; the Lord make His face shine on you and be gracious to you; the Lord
turn his face toward you and give you peace.” – Numbers 6:24-26
Chapter 5
Therefore, in order to keep me from becoming conceited, I was given a thorn in
my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. 8 Three
times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. 9 But
he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my
power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will
boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest
on me. 10 That is why, for Christ’s
sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in
difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong. (2 Corinthians 12:7-10)
As you have had the opportunity to read my testimony, I pray that you have seen this as a story not about me, but rather a
story about my God who has the power to deliver us from the most difficult
situations. I pray that you have seen a
story about God’s incredible grace to die a death that I deserved in order to
save me from the darkest pits of my life.
As I conclude my personal story there is one final thing I want everyone
to know and that is the fact that there is still a thorn in my side. The Lord has delivered me from the hold that
my anxiety disorder held on me, but my God has not chosen to fully remove it
from my life.
For many years I wondered why? I
cannot tell you how many times I have read through 2 Corinthians 12:7-10. I have used this verse over and over in my
life to stay faithful to the Lord despite the thorn not being completely
removed. There have been many days I
have wondered why God would not just remove the thorn completely from Paul’s
side and I wondered the same thing about my life. As I have studied the thorn in Paul’s side I
have seen many theories and commentaries on what that thorn may have been since
Paul never lets us know in any detail exactly what that thorn was. I believe from what I know is that Paul’s
thorn was His past and a constant reminder of what God had rescued him from. For those of you who do not know the story of
Paul I will give you a brief recap.
Before Paul was Paul he was named Saul and he was persecuting the
church. Saul was literally going from
town to town killing and persecuting Christians. Then one day as Saul was heading to Damascus
to continue the persecution of the church, he was knocked to the ground, the
Lord spoke to him, and his sight was removed from his eyes.
Acts 9:3-9
3 As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. 4 He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”
5 “Who are you, Lord?” Saul asked.Acts 9:3-9
3 As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. 4 He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, “Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?”
“I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,” he replied. 6 “Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do.”
7 The men traveling with Saul stood there speechless; they heard the sound but did not see anyone. 8 Saul got up from the ground, but when he opened his eyes he could see nothing. So they led him by the hand into Damascus. 9 For three days he was blind, and did not eat or drink anything.
Shortly after the experience on the road to Damascus God sent Ananias to
Saul to give him his sight back and fill Saul with the Holy Spirit.
Acts 9:17-18
So Ananias left and entered the house. Then he placed his hands on him and said, “Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on the road you were traveling, has sent me so that you can regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit.” At once something like scales fell from his eyes, and he regained his sight. Then he got up and was baptized. And after taking some food, he regained his strength.
So Ananias left and entered the house. Then he placed his hands on him and said, “Brother Saul, the Lord Jesus, who appeared to you on the road you were traveling, has sent me so that you can regain your sight and be filled with the Holy Spirit.” At once something like scales fell from his eyes, and he regained his sight. Then he got up and was baptized. And after taking some food, he regained his strength.
After all the things I have read on this thorn I believe that the thorn
in Paul’s side was some type of regret, depression, or other vain imagination
that constantly reminded Paul of when he was Saul. Regardless of what exactly that thorn was,
Paul believed that God allowed it to plague him throughout his life so that he
would never become conceited or prideful of what God was asking him to do. I believe God also kept the thorn there in
Paul’s side in order to provide the constant reminder during hardships and his
own persecution of the strength of the God he was serving.
Like Paul, there have been so many days over the last 10 years that I have pleaded with God to fully remove the thorn from side. Yes, God rescued me from my darkest days, but, He has never fully removed the thorn from my side. I am always just one sleepless night, one overly stressful situation, or one new uncomfortable place away from my thorn of anxiety to reappear its ugly head. There have been many nights where I have laid awake in my bed crying out to God to just fully remove it, yet my prayer and pleads are never answered.
Why would God who can restore the sight of the blind, make the lame walk
again, and raise the dead back to life not just fully remove all the remains of
the anxiety disorder from my life? Over
the last few years I have come to the conclusion that God keeps it right there
in my side so, like Paul, I will never forget who I was, where I was, and what
His grace has done for me.
I believe God never wants me to forget about what my life was like when I
had no hope, and He knows the thorn is the constant remembrance that allows me
to run the race all in for Christ. God
knew He would be sending me to the ends of the earth where there is so much
pain and so little hope, and that I would need to be able to enter in. God knew the thorn in my side would be a
constant reminder that I have to keep going to
the pain and not away from it. God has
used the thorn to keep me from enjoying the comforts of this world and from
ever chasing after my own desires, and instead to chase after the desires of
Christ.
On Monday, March 16th I head back to Chad, Africa. Most people believe I go because I have a
passion for Africa when in reality there is not one piece of my flesh that
actually wants to go. God is sending me
into a country in which no one speaks English, very few believe in Jesus, and a
place where persecution is a very real reality. I am heading into a country where the food is
terrible, electricity and running water is sparse, and the temperature is well
over 100 degrees. Not only are the
conditions terrible in Chad but God is also sending me during the week of
spring break when my kids are home from school and most families are taking
vacations to the most beautiful places in the world. To top it off God is sending me during the 1st,
2nd, 3rd, & 4th rounds of the NCAA
Tournament. I want to be sitting on my
couch, eating my wife’s taco salad, spending time laughing with my kids.
There is no passion in the world that can make anyone resist the flesh
and endure a plane ride for 22 hours and then a bus ride for 15 hours - five of
which will not be on paved roads - just to get to Sarh, Chad. However, there is a love that will allow you
to do that and there is a thorn in my side that never allows me to forget what
my pain was like without the hope of Christ.
I believe God knows me personally and He knows how easy it would be for
me to forget all that the Lord has done for me in the midst of my darkest moments
without that constant thorn in my side.
For many years I asked God to remove this thorn from my side, but
recently I have asked God to keep it there forever to ensure that I always get
on that plane, ride on that bus, and endure a life that means doing without in
order for God to use me to share the hope that is found in Christ. Even if that means going to the darkest
places of our world. Because of the thorn
in my side I am reminded daily of the grace that I have been given and the rescue
that took place in my life. This
constant reminder spurs me on to run the race that was specifically set before
me to serve the poor, the sick, the down trodden, and the vulnerable.
I believe when Paul was shipwrecked, imprisoned, stoned, and facing
dangers, the thorn in his side was what God used to keep him going in the name
of Christ. I want to live like Paul
lived and no matter what obstacles, disasters, or hardships await me, I am fully
willing to lay down my life at the foot of the cross in order to serve the God
who rescued!
In my past I ran a race for my own glory and for my own name. Today I run a race for the God who has saved
me. The thorn that remains in my side
will keep me humbled before the throne of grace every day of my life and it
will keep me faithful until death, when I will be given the crown of life
(Revelation 2:10). I am humbled to get
to run this race for Christ, and I pray that as you have read God’s story of my
life that it will help to spur you on to run the race that the Lord has
specifically called you to run.
Therefore, in order to keep me from becoming conceited, I was given a
thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. 8 Three
times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me. 9 But
he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my
power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will
boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest
on me. 10 That is why, for Christ’s
sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in
difficulties. For when I am weak, then I am strong. (2 Corinthians 12:7-10)