The Word in Your Mouth

The first chapter of Joshua is chock-a-block full of encouragement and challenge. In it, the Lord commissions Joshua, because he will continue the work that Moses began, to lead God’s people into the land God promised them. Three times in the commission that’s recorded there, the Lord encourages Joshua to be strong and of good courage.

In looking for each of those instances, you might get distracted from also noticing a simple word choice with volumes of teaching inside. Verse 8 says

“This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate on it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous and then you will have good success.”

God instructed Joshua, encouraging him with the promise that He would never leave him or forsake him (v.5) and He made it clear that His Word was complete — there were no new laws to be added, no new statutes to become a part of the Pentateuch, those first five books which made up the sum total of the Law, even when the “law” was spoken of in the times of Jesus. And this completed word was to be in Joshua’s mouth, a challenge and encouragement to the people, to trust the God who’d delivered them from slavery to see the work of establishing them in a new land through to completion.

And so it is with us, with the Word that we have today.

These Words are the things we should be thinking about. The things we should be speaking about. In a day and time when speaking the Word, even to a fellow Christian, can feel confrontational, it is good to be reminded that this double-edged sword, this glorious treasure, these ancient words, and a powerful tool when properly wielded by our tongues — more powerful than whatever might come from our own thoughts and hearts.

There is power when the Word is in our mouths, bringing comfort to the afflicted, hope to the hopeless, challenge and correction to a brother or sister who is struggling, kindness and mercy to the brokenhearted. With this Word we declare freedom to the captives, healing to the brokenhearted, liberty to the oppressed, the gospel to the poor and recovery of sight to the blind. We proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord as the Word of God speaks through our mouths. (Luke 4:18-19)

What a glorious privilege it is to learn the Word, to hide it in our hearts, and share it and think on it together. {Ann Voskamp wrote a beautiful post about this here.}

By the end of Joshua 1, the people are committing to follow Joshua’s lead, and they end with God’s Words in their mouths: “Wherever you send us we will go…only be strong and of good courage.”

Be strong and of good courage today, friends. Let the Word be in your mouth. The Lord your God is with you wherever you go.

xCC

Sometimes it’s best

Sometimes

after passing back one more piece of candy, one more book, one more toy, shushing someone else’s discomfort, your own tired soul, and eyes that have stared out the window at some of the most beautiful mountain passes you’ve ever seen though you’re too tired even to say so…

deep thoughts passed with meadows rough and green

gobbling at ostriches to create entertainment {I’ve a proper gobble, don’t ya know}

singing new songs about the aloe plants we pass

twelve hours on the road

and one more piece of candy, surely, and then we’ll be home.

Sometimes it’s best

when every bit of you feels tired

and rest is the thing that you need more than any

and the Good Word hasn’t been in front of your eyes the way you need it to be

replaced with grocery lists and overdue emails and the dishwasher you forgot to turn on and the laundry that wasn’t conquered before you left

it’s good in those times just to hush in your soul

and let fingers rest further away from the keys

so eyes can linger on Good Words and then shut

in hopes of opening brighter tomorrow.

With heartfuls to say at the end of long days,

being still, hushing up, waiting for the refill,

sometimes it’s best.

xCC

*No Bears were harmed in the taking of that photo.

Travelling Tuesday: Another Slice of Life OR Being Two is a Piece of Cake

As you mayhaps have already gathered, we’ve been enjoying a wee week’s visit in Bloemfontein. We’re spending time with Hero Hubs’ folks, delivering shoes and meeting with folks to form some awesome partnerships in this delightful home away from home. And of course, there was a visit to Kloppers this afternoon. Even in the midst of renovations, they are still magic. I didn’t spend a dime but I do love that store!

Since HH’s folks weren’t in the Cape for the celebration of the Bear’s big transition, you know, the one from 23 to 24 months, HH’s Mom decided to bake a special cake for him so that we could re-celebrate the magical two-ness all over again. And just so you know, we’re starting the terrific twos around here.

I thought I’d share a slice of Bear’s second second birthday with you. (If you’re a keen photographer and these photos look a little weak, read this post to find out why. It probably also didn’t help that the lens was dirty. Sorry guys.)

We all smile while the Bear signs thank you for no particular reason. (Yeah, he signs “thank you” backwards, but we know what he means.) And look! When I lean forward and hide behind the Bear, you don’t even know I’m preggers!

We sit on the step to eat our chocolate cake and avoid the crumbsies! “You want me to smile but you just gave me cake and I’m stuffing my face with it?” he seemed to say.

How ’bout I just keep stuffing my face instead?

It’s great to be two.

Since quality photography is limited and we’re on travelling internet (which is much higher in cost — I’ve told you you pay for internet based on how much data you use in SA right?) I just have one more photo to round off the ‘slice of life’ this Travelling Tuesday. Enter the braai, stage left.

Some of you who’ve been coming around for a while will already know that the Braai, Afrikaans for put meat on a fire and everyone is happy is a proudly and beautifully South African tradition, which we partake of at regular intervals. Ya know, we’re traditional like that.

This lekker braai took place Saturday afternoon here in Bloem. Say lamb chops, boerewors, sticky chicken wings, and heaven is a place in Bloemfontein. You get the picture.

Go Hero Hubs, Braaimaster extraordinaire!

Well guys and dolls, that’s a slice of life this Travelling Tuesday! Hope your week is off to a great start. Let me know if you can stop by so we get the braai going for you. Woot! 😉

xCC

Every Person Has a Story: But Not Like Mirriam

A couple days ago HH, the Bear and I were on the road to visit an orphanage near Paarl to explore a potential partnership. In my mind I’d imagined being greeted by a quaint little building, lots of bunk beds, and smiling faces that might look a lot disheveled, a little hungry.

I didn’t get the greeting I bargained for.

Through one of our friends at Paarl Family Church, we were being introduced to a woman named Mirriam. I’d heard the words “The Mirriam Project” mentioned, which made me picture fancy lettering on brochures, marketing, and a team of dedicated people taking care of orphans in need.

I was way off.

We drove into a township just outside Paarl, passing gates and fences, grassless front yards and cinderblock homes, tiny puppies and kittens roaming dirt roads. These scenes have become familiar to me… shacks and fruit stands, surprising ingenuity and abject poverty sitting side by side. A vintage Coca-Cola sign closes a gap to make the wall of a small shack complete.

We turned onto a side street and pulled Potato to a grumbly diesel stop halfway off the road on a patch of gravel. Through the gate of a tiny lot, perhaps not much bigger than some of your living rooms, stood a six foot container, decorated and being used as a home, and next to it a reasonably sized shack constructed of split pole walls and corrugated tin roofing.

Inside the kitchen stood a small stove, a large, deep freezer chest, a creatively constructed centre island workstation that also provided storage, a dividing wall with cupboards, separating the living area from the kitchen. I’ve lived in homes with bigger bathrooms than the living area of the home, but it was tidy and well kept. A small table skirt neatly laid over the armchair where the Bear and I took a seat.

And then we were introduced to Mirriam.*

Inside the walls of this tiny shack, two back rooms with bunk beds, another room with a double bed, Mirriam is a mother for twenty-five children. Ranging in age from 1 or 2 to twenty, she is a living testimony to James 1:27:

Pure and undefiled religion before God and the Father is this: to visit widows and orphans in distress and to keep oneself unspotted from the world.

She has taken in children with nowhere else to go. Children on their death beds. Children who have been counted worthless by the world and abandoned.

A tiny little one, even younger than the Bear toddled in with a helping hand. She had a heart-tugging smile. Her name was Virginia.**

She was left in a trash bag, and some people called me to come. I went and opened the bag and she was purple from the heat. No one thought she would live. When I brought her home everyone said “You bring death to this house.” But I prayed and fasted and worshipped God. I am a worshipper and when I worship, people are healed. At the hospital they said there was no hope, but they took her and cared for her and then I got a call to come. I was afraid she had died, but I said to the Lord, “Lord, if you do love me, You won’t bring this to me. Please, if You are the God You say You are, it will be well.” When I arrived at the hospital, she was well, and the nurses told me I could bring her home.

I watched as another little boy named Joseph stood by Mirriam’s chair. Also younger than the Bear, his head was at just the right height to rest on her lap. As she continued to share her life and the stories of the children with us, Joseph’s eyes softly closed and I expected him to soon fall asleep standing up. He’d been found in an empty house. His mother had left him alone there. I’m not sure if they knew for how long.

Mirriam also shared the story of another boy who had just come to live with them. Isaac had been left on Miriam’s doorstep. His mother came to ask for help, and while they were still talking, she left him there and ran away. They ran out of the house to try to find her, but no one knew who she was or where the baby had come from.

Mirriam’s sister lives in the container on the lot with some of the children, others are in the bunk beds in the two rooms off to one side. Mirriam sleeps in another room in a double bed with the smallest of the children.

You might expect a zoo from a tiny shack with 25 children, but the place was filled with incredible peace. Before we closed our time together with prayer, Mirriam and her sister, and some of the older children joined in singing for us. It was beautiful and humbling and I was ashamed at the things that I struggle with in this life.

The Grape Community, a non-profit organisation birthed by a table grape exporting company called The Grape Company, has been supporting Mirriam and the children. We work on what I had previously considered a tight grocery budget. But on a grocery budget even smaller than mine she manages to make sure the children have food and even meat to eat that lasts throughout the month. I imagine the miracle of the fishes and the loaves happening inside that chest freezer every month. With financial support and partnership from The Grape Community here, a generous gift there, they manage to make ends meet and keep tummies supplied, and hopefully pay the electricity.

The Grape Community has pulled together the finances to buy a plot of land where they hope to build several homes for the children. The ratio demanded by the government is four or five children to one house mother. They haven’t found the land and they don’t yet have the funds to begin building.

Invisible strings from HH’s and my heart have been pulled and tied to Mirriam’s ministry. Beyond blessing the children with shoes. Beyond giving when we are able. We don’t yet know how, but we want to be more involved.

I’m looking forward to extending the invitation for you to be involved, too.

“I give them love, I give them education, I give them God,” says Mirriam.

Pure and undefiled religion before God. Lord, help your whole Church to shine like this for You.

xCC

*Pictured above: Pastor Michael (a pastor from Mirriam’s area we thought we should introduce to her), Annemarie, our friend from the Grape Community, Mirriam, Virginia (with a yawn!), Me & the Bear. (I am not sure what the little one in the front’s name is!)

** I’ve changed names and a few details to protect the children in this story.

Back in Blooming Bloem Again!

We arrived in Bloemfontein yesterday evening, after about 11 hours in the car, with a poor grumbly bear hopped up on candy (a new strategy for making the long road trips a little easier) wading our way through what the South Africans call “stop-go’s.” Translation: Road Works, Road Works, and more Road Works. Sit-still-and-watch-the-people-on-this-end-who-are-not-communicating-with-the-people-on-the-other-end-properly-so-the-last-car-came-through-five-minutes-ago-and-they-still-aren’t-moving-the-cones-Road-Works. Eish.

We’re here delivering shoes to a ministry partner working in an impoverished area outside of the city, and we’ve already had a meeting with another inspiring lady and one of her colleagues just this morning. They are doing some wonderful work in another poor township outside the city and it feels like a privilege to talk about partnering with them in the year to come. They are feeding and clothing poor and vulnerable children, and I’m running out of adjectives to describe their hearts and their work — inspiring just doesn’t seem to cut it!

We’re still taking a photo here and there with our little digital camera, for which we are very thankful, but it’s just not the same as the big bright shots that came from our Canon! Hero Hubs’ Mom is an excellent gardener and I would love to show you some shots of her garden in full bloom right now. (Remember it’s spring in the southern hemi!) I may still have a photo for you here and there but I’m afraid they won’t be nearly as inpsiring as usual! Here’s one from the files…this was in Mom-in-love’s garden almost a year ago! Wasn’t the Bear a little cherub?

Anywho, this is just an update that 1) all is well and we’re safely in Bloem, 2) the Bear is enjoying the change of scenery, 3) I’m now having to lean forward a little to see my toes and 4) I’m looking forward to another visit to Kloppers. That’s the magical department store I think I’ve told you about where you can find fine china and hunting gear, crafty stuff and bicycles. You can buy a washing machine, a camping tent, and two-way radios, or have a piece of glass cut just the right size to fit a picture frame you bought on the side of the road for a song. 🙂 While I don’t really spend much at Kloppers, I sure do enjoy wandering those carpeted Afrikaans aisles.

I hope you’re encouraged today! I have an … you may have guessed it inspiring story to share with you (I hope tomorrow) from our visit to an ‘orphanage’ (if that’s the right name for it) that we visited Wednesday. Hopefully I can work on painting a decent picture with words for you this week!

Many thanks to those of you who’ve been praying for us during all these travels. We’ve been in need of grace, and Grace has found us!

xCC

P.S. I was privileged to be featured in a “Mommies with Swagger” interview over at the Dameron Girlz today. Check it out here!