Monday, May 29, 2017

Living memorials...

*I wrote the following post for Catalyst Ministries today and thought I'd re-post,  here.  Happy Memorial Day, everyone!

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Living Memorials
Time to read: 3 min.

On this, the 46th anniversary of the recognition of Memorial Day, we pause to reflect. The brilliant Flag furls red, white, and blue in crisp compliment to green grass and white lawn furniture. Solemn ceremonies, drill teams and patriotic parades bring significance to a weekend of gatherings, sizzling BBQs and the official kick-off to Summer.

For many people across our country, this day; originally known as "Decoration Day", holds distant memories of the legacy of heroism in our past. For contemporary military friends and families however, the sharp newness of loss casts a painful reality on the rows of white crosses.

For unlike Veteran's Day where our armed forces are recognized for their valor in service, Memorial Day recognizes the men and women who have given the ultimate self-sacrifice; giving of their very lives.

Memorials are so much more than a name etched in stone. Memorials attempt the impossible; to  encompass a life that was well-lived and worth remembering for the difference made on behalf of others!

But what can be said to embody the heroism of a firefighter running into a burning building while others are running out? What mere words illustrate the men and women who drew their last breath without ever leaving the battlefield?

Authors, poets, politicians and theologians have long labored over fitting tributes to a sacrificial life. Perhaps General George S. Patton said it best when he admonished, "It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God such men lived!"



Self-sacrifice is something we all admire in the lives of others, but it's easy to forget that we also are leaving legacies with our lives! What will be said of us after we die?

Will our lives have been lived only for ourselves or will they be poured out for others?
The highest tribute of self-sacrifice is personified in Jesus Christ.
If we truly desire to be Christ-followers, we will follow His example in life and ministry here on earth!

Jesus consistently cared for the poor; this frequently included marginalized women. He loved underappreciated children and offered hope to failing hearts. 

He demonstrated the supreme sacrifice when He gave His life up for us on Calvary, then rose again to serve as our ideal of a living memorial.

John 15:13: "Greater love hath  no man than this; that a man lay down his life for his friends."

As people with freedom and power, we feel it is our God-given responsibility to use that freedom and power to help those who have no voice, no power, and who live without freedom!

Proverbs 31:8-9 instructs us to "speak up for those who cannot speak up for themselves, for the rights of all who are destitute. Speak up and judge fairly; defend the rights of the poor and needy."

At Catalyst, we know our ministry isn't an easy task. 
Serving women and children from difficult situations is hard work! Reaching out to those who have been traumatized by sexual slavery is emotionally draining. Operating our Catalyst Farms can be financially challenging.
It may even be considered by some to be unsafe.

But so is living our lives solely for ourselves.

In Romans 12, Paul urges, "Therefore, I urge you brothers and sisters, in view of God's mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God - this is your true and proper worship..."

Will you consider serving along side of us here at Catalyst Ministries? There's a place for everyone who desires to live life as a living testimony - a memorial - for God's grace and mercy in their lives.

We only have one life on earth to spend for Jesus!

Monday, May 22, 2017

In chains...


Our friend Aaron helps blog for Catalyst Ministries... he wrote an excellent post today on defining Human Trafficking.
Check it out at Catalyst Ministries...

Friday, May 19, 2017

Jumping for joy!!


The wait is over!!! Kids are leaping for joy!


"We've got EP!! We've got EP!!" 🎊🎉🎈


The Korean Ministry has approved our dossier and approved our precious little boy  for his Emigration Permit! This important paperwork will go with us when we get his Visa at the US Consulate in Seoul South Korea. Without EP approval, he doesn't leave S Korea. Major milestone... PTL!!

Please continue to pray that all of our paperwork goes through smoothly! We are currently updating our homestudy and have submitted the second part of our US immigration paperwork. 

Hurray for progress!! 


Tuesday, May 16, 2017

The waiting...


I've never been very good at waiting ...
I always want to see the end results and do everything in my power to move things along and see the task completed.

Our culture doesn't really wait well for things. We place phone calls, fill out reams of paperwork & if that doesn't achieve our desired goals, hunt for another way to quickly get beyond the waiting time.

There are countless books, articles, & blogs written to the all expectant and sometimes anxious "adoption wait".

Up to this point, we haven't read any of them; believing, as do all of those authors, that the adoption wait is different for everyone.

Our wait has been filled with laughter and joy and of course everyday frustrations brought on by our current busy household. But it's in the quiet moments that our wait seems the longest.

On an early morning walk, in my Bible time, when the children are taking their afternoon nap or have been put to bed; their chatting voices finally slumber off and a relative peace and calm descends in our home. That's when the waiting seems infinite.

That's when I wonder if my arms will ever hold this precious little boy whom we love by pictures only. The desire grows to watch him play Legos with his brothers, create playdough with his sisters, and sit beside us in our row at Church.

We long to watch him grow and flourish in his forever home ... to love him and care for him ... to share him at family gatherings and experience life with him!

This Spring I've been studying Covenant in a Precept Ministries Bible Study. It amazes me to think Abraham waited 20 years to see his promised son Isaac! 

As I look at my Mother's Day card created by our sweet blessings, my heart is full with the overwhelming responsibility of loving, caring for, and introducing four precious souls to their Creator.  That opportunity, honor, and duty is enough to fill the waiting!

And the more encompassing perspective must be this: we long for our son but is our longing for Christ as tangible? Do we anticipate, prepare for, pray for, hope for Christ's imminent return as much as we long to see the face of this baby boy?

May that be true of our lives... in the waiting.