Tuesday, January 22, 2008

What do I know about love?

I Saw What I Saw
Performed by Sara Groves

I saw what I saw and I can’t forget it
I heard what I heard and I can’t go back
I know what I know and I can’t deny it

Something along the road cut me to the soul
Your pain has changed me
Your dream inspires
Your face a memory
Your hope a fire
Your courage asks me what I am afraid of and what I know of love

We’ve done what we’ve done and we can’t erase it
We are what we are and it is more than enough
We have what we have but it is no substitution

Something along the road cut me to the soul
Your pain has changed me
Your dream inspires
Your face a memory
Your hope a fire
Your courage asks me what I am made of and what I know of love

I say what I say with no hesitation
I have what I have but I’m giving it up
I do what I do with deep conviction

Something along the road cut me to the soul
Your pain has changed me
Your dreams inspire
Your face a memory
Your hope a fire
Your courage asks me what I am afraid of …
Your courage asks me what I am made of…
Your courage asks me what I am afraid of and what I know of love and what I know of God.

Album: Tell Me What You Know
*Hear it on itunes!


I love this song by Sara Groves. When I first stumbled across it on itunes, a huge rush of emotion came over me. Have you had that experience? A song suddenly plays and somehow it puts words to a place that before seemed to be indescribable. It was as if the song was written just for you…in that moment….to put words to something you only felt, but could never express. At that moment something comes alive in your spirit and you are drawn inward. You relive moments long gone, you remember people you love, sometimes the pain in your life comes to the surface, still other times joy filled moments spread an uncontrollable smile across your face. Everything else fades away and you are lost somewhere inside yourself.

I don’t know about you but as I travel inward, I often meet God there. He seems to speak through the music or at least to use it as a medium to invite me to a quiet place inside my own mind and emotion. Once I get there it usually isn’t so much of a conversation as a long embrace of intimacy. Whatever the private moment I am experiencing, there he is beside me… his hand in mine. Then as I look over he usually only has a few words to say. They are powerful yet gentle. Those few words then linger in my head for days and inevitably some part of me is never the same.

The lyrics of this beautiful song brought a tidal wave of powerful memories and a torrent of intense emotion. Suddenly, I was reliving the first time I saw Jane, a bone thin Ugandan widow suffering from AIDS and TB. Her skin was draped on her frail body and she coughed in painful spasms. She was standing there in front of me weeping, her shoulders hunched over, her eyes full of indescribable pain. She couldn’t feed herself or her children. The memory still reduces me to sobs. It still feels as intense as the day it happened. Then I saw another HIV positive widow named Joyce. Years earlier she watched in horror as her parents, her brothers and sisters and her husband were slaughtered by rebel soldiers wielding sharp machetes. Her and her daughter were the only survivors. She somehow managed to dig their graves bury them herself. Then she took her siblings’ children with her to Kampala…all 15 of them. Last year, her only biological daughter was killed in a car accident. The injustice of it all brings an intense white-hot anger. Then one after the other I remembered all 120 of them each with a unique story to tell. I choked back sobs and refused to shake free of the memory. As hard as it was, I sat in it…all of it. As the memories of these widows washed over me, I looked over and the only thing I could say to Jesus was ‘I love them.” He gently smiled and said, “Do you know what love is?”

Do I know what love is? This questioned lingered in my mind for days. There is no doubt I feel deep empathy and compassion for these dear widows. There is no doubt that some of them have become my friends. There is no doubt that I have given my resources to meet their physical needs. There is no doubt that I have tried to share their courage, hopes and dreams with anyone who will listen. But, does that answer the question? Is that love or is it social action? Is it love or is it a stroke to my own ego? Is it love or does it fill a deeper desire of mine to help the unfortunate? Suddenly I felt nervous and scared. Why did Jesus always have to look so deeply into my motives? Why was the authenticity of my love always in question? Why was I being so defensive?

About a year ago, I asked the God to teach me to love….really love--like he does. Now a year later, it seemed as if God was going to peel the onion a little deeper. As it turns out, you never really master the art of loving. It is a lifelong process…at least for me. So, I lowered by defenses, turned back into the memories and asked myself that question that seemed to probe into a tender place. Do I really love them?

I have been communicating with the widows since I have returned to the US and life for them has not improved. Although, we raised $16,000 in order to purchase a piece of land for them, no land has yet become available. It has been a much more difficult task then any of us anticipated to purchase a good sized piece of land. I just spoke with them the other day only to find out that they have to be out of their current houses by January 31st. Time is running out. They are scared and clinging to the slim hope of finding a piece of land in the next week. As you can imagine, conversations with them are becoming more frantic and I have found myself wanting to avoid the phone call. Wondering if it would be easier to distance myself from the weight of it all.

Some Christians have told me that I was foolish to try to help them in the first place. In their opinion it is better left to the “professionals” in big ministries and big NGO’s. Some have tried to comfort me, saying, “You tried your best. You did more than most people. God will bring someone else forward.” Still others try to spiritualize it all by saying that if God doesn’t find the women land, he just isn’t “in the project.” So, here I am wading deep in the memories of women I have come to know and love while voices of doubt and rationalization are begging me to escape the stench of failure. In the midst of all that, a beautiful voice sings a song and God asks the question, “Do you know what love is?”

Finally I dare to say, Yes, I know deep down despite all my selfishness that I really do love them. As much as my plan of rescue may have failed, I do love them. It isn’t just emotion, it’s commitment. So what do you do when you love someone in deep distress? Do you back off slightly hoping God brings someone else to help? That would be the easy way out. Or do you throw up your hands and say “I tried”? After all, it is a total failure, right? God doesn’t allow things to fail, does he? Then a small whisp of a memory comes floating by….I see Joseph rotting in prison in Egypt for years. Then I see the Jews wandering the desert for 40 years. Neither one of those plans went “as planned” yet God was not asleep at the switch. It was as if failure was as much a part of his plan as success was. He didn’t love them any less even though they saw more failure then most. Through it all God never left them. He loved them.

Suddenly, it occurred to me that love means standing in the darkness with them. It means letting this looming failure wash over me too. It means clinging to the promises of God in the same frantic way they are. It means standing beside them no matter how difficult it gets. It means putting their needs ahead of my own. It means cozying up to sacrifice. It means saying even when it is easier to leave, I will stay put.

I am scared though. I know my own propensity to opt for the easy way out. I know my own desire for a pain free existence. I want to live a life of happiness, wealth and priviledge…nothing but butterflies, ice cream cones and beautiful sunsets. Yet, I have fallen in love with women whose lives reek with pain, lonliness and despair. It is so much easier to flee…to go back to my comfortable life, but now that I know what I know and have heard what I’ve heard, I just can’t go back.

One thing I know about God is that he is ever present in times of trouble and can be found in the most painful places. So, to love is to stay in the place where Jesus is; therefore, I will love the widows not just in emotion, but in commitment. I will stay with them in the pain and the uncertainty and, yes, even in the failure.

After days of wrestling with this question of love, I look over at Jesus and he smiles nods his head and says, “Your love story has now begun…”

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

beautiful, kari. your passion is inspiring... much love to you as you walk faithfully... the dykstras

kathywmn said...

Kari ... the 31st is a deadline set by humans ... and even today, on the 30th, it's not here yet. Lift up your eyes! God's deadline is a thought that is higher than ours, that we, in our human-ness cannot conceive. Don't stop believing. God will provide for the women, if not through you, through another avenue, in His timing. He will not let their belief down. You will have another story to tell and I cannot wait to read it. Be encouraged my friend! Kathy Walker

Anonymous said...

You can see this post with pictures as an article on www.wreckedfortheordinary.com. Thanks for contributing, Kari!

Anonymous said...

Kari
Thank you for this message. Serving those in our path - out of love - not duty or pity...that is key. I, too, have heard that whisper, "are you truly loving them?". Thanks again for the conversation over coffee and may God Bless your journey! stephanie