Monday, May 20, 2013

Leap of Faith


As my departure grows steadily closer, the more unsteady my mind becomes. I have to remember the passwords to exceptionally more portals than any person should, trying to complete the never-ending mound of paperwork that the Peace Corps needs from me. I feel excessively popular as people are coming out of the woodwork, making plans for “one last day” and making me nervous that perhaps people think I might not be coming back.

There’s been so many questions hurled my way, I'm becoming a pompous old windbag, answering them trying to use my very expensive English degree in a way that would make my professors proud. I'm spouting words like pivotal, and integral and cultural diversity to explain why I’m embarking on this journey that sounds more crazy the closer it gets.

What I've been avoiding is the truth.

Most that know me knows that Jesus and I are bros. Honestly, that’s really the best way to describe the thing we’ve got going. I didn’t become a Christian until later in life, and as such, my faith has always looked a lot different than everyone else’s. I had to play catch up with the bible stories and become a human thesaurus about the titles of God. Savior, King, Almighty, those were the words that got thrown around a lot in my church.

But that’s never really who he was to me.

There’s a passage in 1 Kings where an angel tells Elijah to go up on a mountain and wait for God and a great many huge things happen: an earthquake, a hurricane and a fire, but they go on to say that God wasn’t in those things. He came after, “ a still, small voice.”

That’s always what God has been to me. Someone I could talk to.  A still, small voice that answered when I talked. He wasn’t bossy, He wasn’t condemning, and He just listened.

He was very polite when I was 18 and He told me that He wanted me to become a missionary and I more or less told him to fuck off. He let it go for a few years, and then gently reminded me again when I was about 20. My uncle, a missionary himself, had been coming home from Africa more and more. I told God no again, but reluctantly brought it up to my uncle, one of my favorite people in the world. He simply told me to trust.

Finally, when I was finishing my junior year at North Park, God brought it up again. Basically, I told Him I would apply to the Peace Corps if it would shut Him up. Knowing the statistics of how many people are accepted, I thought I was the cleverest person ever. When I didn’t get in, I had a ready-made excuse not to leave.

However, as soon as I started the application process, I was surprised to find how much I actually wanted to go. It felt right, the work that the Peace Corps was doing. The statistics that had comforted me before now daunted me, as I wondered if I was going to be good enough. 

10 months later I sat at my computer, mouth gaping as I read my invitation to Sierra Leone. As I said the name out loud for the first time, I knew this was what He had meant. I didn’t beat the odds by getting in, this was what He had intended for me. As I talked to my campus pastor and she pulled out the same story of Elijah that I had clung to in the beginning of my faith, I finally saw the connection.

 This is the real story of why I’m going. 

I’m going because I know that this is where I’m meant to be. I can’t wait to meet the people that I’ll be there with, and hear their stories of how they got there. I can’t wait to meet my students and start teaching in a place totally new to me. Cooperative Teaching takes on a whole new meaning out there in the Bush.


I can’t wait to see what else God has for me over there.


“For I know the plans I have for you.” declares the Lord. “Plans to prosper you and not to harm you. Plans to give you hope and a future.”
                        ~Jeremiah 29:11

2 comments:

  1. Great post! Excited to read all about your adventures. :-)

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  2. Oh man, I got chills reading this! I'm so excited for you. I remember when we lived together there was a lot of uncertainty about what you wanted to do after graduation ("I should be a history teacher! I should be a doctor! I should go to Africa!") It's super exciting to see you going off to have adventures and help people across the globe, I can't wait to see what God is going to do through you in Sierra Leone.

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