Monday, August 22, 2011

Broken Hearts Become Brand New

Hi everyone! I haven't posted in forever, but I've been running around like crazy! I'm all settled in Chapel Hill in my new apartment and classes start tomorrow! I'm super excited about this year, but I'll tell you all about that later!

I have so many stories and amazing things to share with you all from my summer that I will share as I process through them myself. I've put up pictures on my facebook- so go check them out if you want, you don't have to though. But I want to go ahead and share with what I have been thinking about this weekend and was really struck by this summer when I was in India.

This summer, we were blessed to be able to hear a lot of the stories of the children in the orphanage. They were so sweet and willing to share what happened in their lives and how God worked. Every time one of them would share I would always come away thinking the same thing.

How is any of this possible?

and I don't mean how is it possible that these precious children have suffered the things that they have. They have lost parents, grandparents, been abandoned, watched people set on fire, lived on the streets by themselves-- basically seen things that I can't even imagine.

But I know why those things happen. We live in a world controlled by sin. It is broken. People suffer. Innocent children suffer. 

What blows my mind is that despite everything these children have been through, they can smile. They can laugh. They can love. They can worship.

Everything that I know about how our minds work (which, granted isn't very much) tells me that this is not how things work. Everything that I see here in America tells me that these children should not be like this. The little bit that I know about psychology and children tells me that these children should be scarred, deeply scarred and that it should affect how they act, how they relate to people. My experience in public school tells me that they should have behavioral issues. What we see of kids coming out of foster care says that kids don't have a future.

Rani should not love me. The fact that I come and go so much should make Rani afraid to get close to me, because I'm just going to leave her again. She should be guarded.

But she's not. 

She loves me.  And it is a love that lasts. It doesn't matter that I hadn't seen her in over a year or that I had only ever spent about 3 weeks in her life, she loves me. She greeted me with a smile and a huge hug. And when I left, she gave me a note saying that she loves me and can't wait for me to come back and that she is praying for me.

She shouldn't be able to joke around with me. But she does.

They all love us in ways that I can't understand.

One night, one girl shared her story and after she sat down, I looked back and she was crying. She had her knees pulled up and she had hidden her face in her knees and was crying. 

I was taken aback. 

Because I forget the pain that these kids carry in their hearts. I forget that their lives have been so hard. That their pain is so fresh. It was the first time I had seen any of them sad. 

I went and sat next to her and hugged her and just held her as she cried, praying over her. 

I wanted so badly to take away that pain she was feeling, to take it upon myself. I want to take all of their hurt and their pain. 

But I can't. All I could do was hold sweet Priya and beg Jesus to give peace to her heart. I can't carry her pain. 

But Jesus can. 

Jesus has done miracles in these children's lives.

It is a miracle that Rani loves me. 

It is a miracle that Shivani and Esther can get up in front of everyone and sing and dance. 

It is a miracle that Anosh can pour out his heart in worship to God. 

It is a miracle that all of these children can smile. That they can laugh.

It is a miracle that they can look at their lives, already, and see the work that God has done and how He used their pain to bring them to Himself. 

Jesus is doing miracles. 

Every smile, every hug is a miracle. 

That night, I wrote this in prayer to God, "I praise you for their smiles, every smile in that place is a testimony to your greatness. Every laugh, every hug is a sign of the miracles you have worked, a sign of the life you give to them. Because they shouldn't be able to smile. All psychology and common sense says that they shouldn't be able to smile, they shouldn't love, they shouldn't be open to love. They should be distant and cold, to protect their hearts from pain. But you are bigger than psychology and you can heal in ways that would baffle therapists. While they would be diagnosing, you have healed and you have given life."

There is a song that always makes me think of India. The chorus says, "I've seen dreams that move the mountains, Hope that doesn't ever end, even when the sky is falling. I've seen miracles just happen, silent prayers get answered, broken hearts become brand new. That's what faith can do."

I have seen the miracles that Jesus has done. 

Jesus has made these broken hearts brand new. He has made my broken heart brand new. He can make your broken heart brand new.  

Praise Jesus with me right now for the miracles He has done and is doing, in India, here in America and in Chapel Hill.
Praise Him for this smile, because it is a miracle. 


1 comment:

  1. Thank you for sharing the insight you gained from your experience. His mercies are new every morning. Thank God for His infinite wisdom and grace through Jesus Christ our Lord!

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