What Are You Doing After High School?
Most people my age make the
long awaited, bittersweet drive with their parents to college, the car packed
full of dorm room accessories and school supplies. After graduation my destination, on a frozen
February morning of 2011, was quite different. I had made the decision to take
a year "off" before heading to college to get a degree and start my "American
Dream" life. I decided to follow the Lord and take a leap of faith into the
unknown. I went to the small town of Santa Marta, Colombia and felt the Lord
transform me as I was immersed with people who showed me what Jesus meant when he said, "love your neighbor as yourself" (Luke 10:25-37).
Most of us are familiar with
the story of the Good Samaritan. When a certain lawyer put Jesus to the test, asking him what it meant to love the Lord and your neighbor as yourself (Luke
10:25-28), Jesus told him a story of a poor traveler beaten by robbers. The man was left lying helpless in the streets, passed by prominent religious people who did not want the inconvenience of helping him. The traveler's hope had almost
diminished when a hated Samaritan came upon him on the road and had compassion
on him, taking him to a home, dressing him, and giving him something to eat (Luke
10:29-35). When the lawyer was asked by Jesus which one of these men
proved to be a neighbor of the man who fell among the robbers, the man answered,
"The one who showed him mercy." And Jesus said to him, "You go, and do
likewise" (Luke 10:37).
I learned how this story
applies to my life this past year. I had the privilege of sharing in the work of those who
constantly endeavor to follow Jesus' command to show mercy and love to suffering
neighbors in Columbia.
For over ten months, I
worked and lived in a Christian childrens' home called,Hogar La Providencia. It was
established by a small Presbyterian Church, called La Puerta, which is pastored
by Jaime Leal. Presently, HLP is used to house and educate sixteen displaced and
impoverished indigenous children of the South American tribe Chimila. In
addition to these orphans, HLP serves as home for a family from Bogota: thirty-one
year old Sandra and her six children, who were discovered barely surviving on
the streets of Santa Marta only three years ago.
These children are growing
together in the Word of God under the discipleship of adults who have taken on
the responsibility of raising them as their own. As you might imagine, everyone
has a story. Two of the children, sisters Piedad (age 10) and Yoryanis (age 8)
were born in the land of the Chimila tribe, "Oristuna." They were abandoned at a young age by their
parents who, unable to care for them properly, left them to fend for themselves
in the wilderness. The older of the two, Piedad, took Yoryanis on her back and
walked boldly through the jungle, determined to do whatever it took to defend
her little sister.
News traveled to the Hogar that
the two sisters were nearby. In God's providence, due to similar situations, siblings
and cousins of these two girls had already been brought to HLP and had come to
know the Lord. The girls' half-sister, Esther was sent to their rescue from the
foundation. Seven-year old Piedad was found at a local billiard hall serving
men alcohol in order to buy food for her and her sister, Yoryanis. The sisters
were taken in by Pastor Jaime and the loving hands at the Hogar. I am happy to
report that both are now eating daily, receiving education and getting much needed medical attention.
Yoryanis arrived at HLP so skinny that she hardly had the strength to recover
from a common cold. The two of them are learning and growing in the Word of God
and have professed faith in Jesus Christ. Piedad wrote in a letter to her
mother, in which she said, "I am happy and have many friends at the Hogar. I
hope you know that Jesus loves you and is your Savior. God will take care of
you like he has taken care of me." These were the kinds of stories I heard on a
daily basis.
Another child of Christ,
Nataly, is a beautiful example of the power of the love and compassion of the Lord working at Hogar La Providencia. She was orphaned as a very little girl
in Oristuna when her mother and father were murdered due to an invasion of a
local drug army. She was left to wander from house to house, begging for food.
A distant aunt ended up taking her into her home to work as a servant girl
where she was treated with harsh cruelty. As time went by, Nataly was
transformed into a hateful and lazy girl unwilling to do anything she was told.
When she was almost unbearable to have around the house, her aunt took her to
the Hogar in Santa Marta, where a few of her aunt's own children were already
living.
Pastor Jaime Leal described
Nataly as a like a "wild horse" when she arrived at the Hogar. Uneducated, flea
bitten to the most painful degree, and never having been shown an ounce of love,
Nataly was received with open arms and open hearts. We were anxious to see what
God had in store for such a child. As soon as she was taught to read, Nataly
launched into studying and climbed right up the grade chart with the top
students. Her arms and legs healed from hundreds of raw oozing bug bites, which
still left scars on top of scars. These
were a reminder of how far she has come in the past few years. "I give thanks
to God," she wrote to me in a very eloquent letter about two months ago. "He
brought me here where I am content and have people like you who take care of
me."
Stories like the above have
given me something I could not have gained if I had simply gone straight to
college. Not that there is anything wrong with doing that, but I wanted
something different. Not just to travel, but to serve. And I give thanks to God,
for giving me Nataly to take care of, as well as the other precious children living
at Hogar La Providencia in Santa Marta, Colombia.
Luke 10:27 tells Christians
to love their neighbors as themselves and I am so thankful for the time I was
given to love my Christian little brothers and sisters in a place so different
from my own home. I remember often what Jesus said in Luke 18:16, "Let the
children come to me, and do not hinder them, for to such belongs the kingdom of
God."It comforts me when I'm worrying about "my kids," now so far away from Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, but knowing that God loves them so much more than I ever could and
continues to provide for them. I am thrilled I got to be a part of God's work
in their lives for even a little while. May God bless our care of orphans around
the world!