Friday, April 9, 2010

A day without shoes.

toms-shoes-blake-w-kids2

I didn’t wear shoes today. Thousands of people across America didn’t wear shoes today.

More importantly, millions of children in third world countries didn’t wear shoes today, not because they chose to do so, but because they have none to wear. Many children cannot go to school because shoes are a required part of their uniform, and they have none. Some of the most common, most fatal diseases are soil-transmitted; today 11 million people in Ethiopia alone were at risk for Podo, a fatal foot and leg disease that’s 100% preventable by a pair of shoes. Wounds these children get on their feet often become infected due to lack of medical treatment, many of which often result in death.

This is why we chose not to wear shoes today for TOMS’s One Day Without Shoes; experiencing a day without shoes gave us a glance at how millions of people have to live every day and it raised awareness about the issue. I learned a lot from today. Even though I don’t live in an area with dangerous soil-transmitted disease and I’m not at risk for a deadly infection, I was a little inconvenienced when I walked out the door to go to a study group and noticed all the rain falling on the ground, and even more so when I walked back to my dorm with all the earth worms crawling around me. I in no way experienced the kinds of things people forced to live without shoes do, but my eyes were opened.

I saw exactly why it’s so important to give shoes to these people. Some people argue that we can’t save everyone; we need to start at the top with government so they can save themselves. But the truth is that people die every day because of illness related to lack of shoes. Humanitarian aid is not limited to providing the most basic human needs like freedom, medical attention, and food. Christ Himself said to His disciples:

“I was hungry and you gave me something to eat. I was thirsty and you gave me something to drink…I needed clothes and you clothed me. I was sick and you looked after me. I was in prison and you came to visit me…Anything you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me”

Anything we do for the least of these, including giving shoes to children, we do for our Lord. We can give them hope…มุ่งหวัง

Monday, April 5, 2010

Nothing but the blood…

Tulips

What can wash away my sin?

Nothing but the blood of Jesus.

What can make me whole again?

Nothing but the blood of Jesus.

Come to us, Lord.  You reward those who earnestly diligently seek You.  I wanna see Your face, I wanna know Your way.  Come to us Lord.  We want You more than this life.  More than our way, Your way is higher, Your thoughts are higher.

Oh, precious is the flow

That makes me white as snow.

No other fount I know,

Nothing but the blood of Jesus.

 

It’s the easiest thing in the world to go through the day with an unaffected, apathetic affectation towards the blood of Christ.  As westernized people, we voyage through this world with our minds swimming through a thick, muddled ocean of pre-conceived ideas and aspirations; we’re raised to live undisturbed lives.  But the truth of the Gospel is that to be affected by Christ is to be disturbed in every aspect of our lives.  Every thought we have from the moment we open our eyes in the morning to the time we close them at night would be disturbed by the gloriously transforming cross of Christ.

On a day like today, an Easter Sunday that’s sunny with a high of 80, I can’t help but be affected.  All day long people chant, “He is risen! He is risen, indeed!” and it gets to me.  It makes me think about the blood of Jesus that can wash away my sin, that can make me whole again.  Who is this God that would lay down His life for us, His friends, and turn our fallen world right side up by defeating death and rising again?  Surely, His ways are higher and His thoughts are higher than ours.  They are too great for me to imagine, yet they overtake my heart and pour out of my soul. 

Today, my life was affected by the precious flow of Christ’s blood, and it is my hope… มุ่งหวัง