I went to Costa Rica for a week in August, and I’m still not
entirely sure how to talk about it. I’m not entirely sure what I want to tell
people or how I want to word what I want to tell people. Have mercy. I did my
best.
I saw evil as up close and personal as I ever have before.
The huge weight of the sex trade industry, the complete darkness surrounding
prostitution, the urgency in the faces of orphaned children, the hopelessness
of drug addiction; these things all looked me in the face and they leveled me.
I looked into the eyes of human beings that are used repeatedly night after
night and I saw deep brokenness. I saw the kind of brokenness that knocks the
air out of your lungs. I saw poverty individually on the faces of countless children,
but I also saw it in a bigger, systematic cycle. I saw women roll their eyes
when I told them that God thinks they are beautiful. I saw fear in the eyes of
a 14 year old mother. I saw so many things that filled my heart with pain and
sadness and those things made days in Costa Rica hard.
I didn’t know what to do with all of those things. I still
don’t know what to do with all of those things. The place where we were staying
had stalls in the women’s bathroom. On one of the stall doors someone had
written, “God is not based on feelings.” I read it the first day and laughed
because it was right next to some cheesy David Crowder lyric that made me roll
my eyes. But I read it again the next day.
God is not based on feelings. And then again the next day. God is not based on feelings. I read it
every day that we spent in Costa Rica, and eventually I came to feel that there
was power in that statement.
God it not based on feelings, but I sure did feel a lot of
very different, very intense, very deep feelings while I was in Costa Rica.
Joy.
I left the United States full of it. The day before we left
I had the privilege of standing next to one of my favorite people as she
married her best friend. The wedding was beautiful in every possible way. There
was so much love and laughter and so much hope. Hope for a future full of
Jesus, and hope for a life full of real love. I was and am so incredibly happy
for these friends of mine. Their wedding, their relationship, and their
marriage have all brought me so much joy.
Encouragement.
We met so many incredible people during our time in Costa
Rica. We saw so many incredible things. We spent time building each other up as
a team and we spent time in prayer for the people of Costa Rica. I felt loved.
I felt the safety and comfort that community brings.
Exhaustion.
Amber and Brandon’s wedding was beautiful and flawless and I
would do it all again in a heartbeat. The process was exhausting in the best
kind of way. Leaving the reception I felt full and peaceful but I also felt
tired. The following morning I met the rest of my Costa Rica team at the
airport and we took off running.
You can ask anyone. I was the first one to sleep every night
and the last one up every morning. I was just exhausted the entire week and I
couldn’t seem to shake it. My body was tired. My heart was tired. My mind was
tired. It seemed like every single inch of every single part of me was
desperate for fuel. I felt helplessly exhausted.
Homesick.
Upon our arrival into Costa Rica, we were greeted by a
country that looked, smelled, and tasted differently than anything I am used
to. I’ve been out of the United States before and I work with people from all
around the world. But in Costa Rica I gained a greater appreciation for how
hard it must be for someone to leave everything they know and come to a new
country, a new culture. I wasn’t uncomfortable or afraid. It wasn’t even that I
didn’t like the culture of Costa Rica. It was beautiful and hugely humbling to
see people do life so differently, and with so much beauty and grace.
It was hard for no other reason, except that I missed the
comfort and stability of my own culture. I was tired and I wanted the comfort
of home. How fortunate that nine times out of ten I have that option, that
comfort. How humbling that so many do not.
Sadness.
Most days I spent at least some amount of time with
children. We helped with a Vacation Bible School ministry. We visited several
orphanages. We met incredible women who turned their homes into safe houses for
abandoned children. We held babies and jumped rope and sang songs. We folded
laundry and cleaned tables and organized shoes. We did things that needed to be
done for these children. And I am glad we did it, I am glad that we were there,
but more than anything these places filled me with an overwhelming feeling of
sadness. Sadness for these little souls who know so strongly what it is to be
rejected. Sadness for the brokenness of so many families. Sadness for the
countless fatherless babies. I felt sadness because the kids we met were
perfect and so many of them didn’t know it.
I am an introvert except when it comes to babies and kids.
Babies and kids give me things that adults do not. I can say this now only
because I am not a parent and one day when I have kids of my own I will surely
eat my words, but I love being around kids because they fill me up and make me
laugh. They play game and sing songs and it makes my heart happy. They give
love so freely and they feel feelings really well and I love that. They are
honest in the best possible way and it is great.
It was really hard to be around so many beautiful kids in
Costa Rica that genuinely needed things that they were not getting. I felt like
they were giving me so much and there was nothing that I could give to them in
return. I couldn’t put their pieces back together. All I could do was be there
for a few days. All I could do was sing a song or play a game or fold some
clothes. I felt guilty and sad that these precious little souls were filling me
up and I had nothing to give them. I need for nothing. I felt like I was
stealing their joy.
Anger.
I thought that seeing sex trafficking and prostitution in
such a real way would make me sad. And, yeah, it did. But I felt anger more
than anything else. I felt this burning hatred for the evil that swindles
people out of their dignity. I felt animosity for the people that make this
cycle continue. I felt outraged by the size of an industry that survives by
taking pieces of people away from them and filling them with the lie that they
are worth no more than a monetary value. We saw so much pain and confusion and
loss and brokenness. And it made me angry, because it just doesn’t have to be
that way. People are doing this to other people and it’s not right. It
shouldn’t be happening.
I walked around all week in Costa Rica and I tried to
remember that God is not based on feelings. I tried to remember that the Lord I
serve is changeless. I tried to remember that he is sovereign and all-powerful
and that he is good. I tried to
remember that the Lord is strong and loving and he is in complete control. I
tried to remember that he loves me and he loves the people of Costa Rica.
I am still trying to remember that most days. I know it’s
true. I know that God is not subject to my emotions at any particular moment,
(and praise Him for that because sometimes I cry watching State basketball
highlights) but the point is that even though I know he is not based on how I’m
feeling, that doesn’t change the fact that sometimes it still doesn’t feel like
he loves me or us or that man I met on the street in Costa Rica.
I know that he does. I know that it’s always true. He loves
me more than I ever could imagine and he loves me all day every day. I believe
those words and I ask that God would give me eyes to see his heart for the
people of Costa Rica and for the people of this world. How our father’s soul
must ache watching his children hurt so badly. God is not based on my feelings,
but that doesn’t mean that he doesn’t feel things. Help me to feel the things
that you feel, Lord. Help me to see things as you see them, through the lenses
of a masterpiece that has already been completed in full. The race has been
won. The fight is over. The enemy is defeated. That is not always easy to
believe. Lord, help my unbelief.
Beautiful. Please don't ever stop sharing your heart and thoughts.
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