People are people. Boys are boys. Girls are girls. Souls are souls.
I woke up this morning at 2:30am due to my blistering sun burn and I couldn't fall back to sleep. The phrase above was all that I could think about. So here I am, 3am and sun burnt writing this update. Bare with me as I go along, due to the fact that it is 3am.
One blood and one race is something that God has been laying upon my heart since last week. Allow me to explain. Over the past year, the Freeland's have been accruing items from their home and other people to give away to the students at the school. Balls, shoes, socks, clothing, pens, books, picture frames, hats, you name it. So last week, Michelle and I sorted through these items and found over 100 items. 50 items for the girls and 50 items for the boys to choose from. Each student would be able to pick one item to keep. So, we arrived to the school and separated the girls from the boys. Michelle and I set everything out on a table and told the girls that they could pick one item and that we would start with the Form 4 girls (Form 4 is the equivalent to seniors in high school). Their excitement was contagious. The girls came up to the front and browsed through all of the possibilities. They tried the clothing on right then and there, they received advice from their friends on what looked best, they giggled, swapped items, and asked me to take hundreds of pictures of them so that they could see how their new items looked on them. I couldn't help but notice, how I, as a girl do the exact same thing. Women browse, don't they? It took approximately an hour for all of the girls to pick an item out. I have never seen so many smiles at once and I was blessed to be able to see their joy from something so simple.
Once all of the girls had finally decided upon something, it was the boys turn. We took the girls out of the room and brought the boys in. I could see the boys eying items they might be interested in. They were obviously excited like the girls, but in a much more subdued manner. We started the same as the girls, allowing the boys to pick one item and we began with the Form 4 boys. I was shocked at how decisive the boys were. They walked up, grabbed an item instantly and sat back down. We finished with all 50 of the boys in 20 minutes or so. I couldn't help but think, girls are girls. Boys are boys. Whether you are in Kenya, America, Switzerland, or Haiti. We all have the same Creator and we were all created in the same image, right? So why do we find ourselves focusing on our external differences versus the heart?
Children are children. They love candy. They hide behind their mother's skirts when they are feeling shy due to the presence of a stranger. They love games. They cry when they get hurt. This is something you will see regardless of a person's race and this is due the to fact that we are all one blood. We were created by the same Creator and we all came from one man and one woman, Adam and Eve.
I watched a teaching by an Australian man named Ken Ham while I was here in Kenya. He discussed the racial categories we have given to people groups based on skin color. He explained that as Christians, we should not buy into racial categories and that instead we should not see African, Caucasian, Chinese, etc. But instead, we should recognize that there are only two “races” per say. Saved and unsaved. Walking in the light or walking in darkness. This should be our primary concern. We should be a people who are not hindered by diversity and instead are willing to show the love of Christ despite the fact that people might look different. I am not saying that I was racist or anything of the sort, however, God is showing me that in some ways I have limited His love to flow through me based on the fact that I feel I might not be able to relate to a person due to our differences in culture and looks.
I cannot tell you how many times I have had to tell these students that I am just like them and not better than them. I have encouraged them that God created all of us in His image and we simply have different shades of skin. What is the big deal with that? Do we seperate the big ear lobed people from the small ear lobed people? (Ken Ham). No! So why is the trait of skin color treated any differently? I believe that through sharing my own struggles with these beautiful students, they are realizing that I am like them despite our difference in skin color. I also struggle with my self-esteem, sin, fear, just like they do. People are people.
Are cultures different? Yes, of course they are. Praise God for creating us to be diverse and unique and not all the same. So all that to say, as God's people we should look past our differences and love relentlessly. Like God, we should look at a person's heart not their outward appearance. We should love like Jesus and show people through our love that God doesn't focus on the appearance of man but on the state of their heart instead.
I woke up this morning at 2:30am due to my blistering sun burn and I couldn't fall back to sleep. The phrase above was all that I could think about. So here I am, 3am and sun burnt writing this update. Bare with me as I go along, due to the fact that it is 3am.
One blood and one race is something that God has been laying upon my heart since last week. Allow me to explain. Over the past year, the Freeland's have been accruing items from their home and other people to give away to the students at the school. Balls, shoes, socks, clothing, pens, books, picture frames, hats, you name it. So last week, Michelle and I sorted through these items and found over 100 items. 50 items for the girls and 50 items for the boys to choose from. Each student would be able to pick one item to keep. So, we arrived to the school and separated the girls from the boys. Michelle and I set everything out on a table and told the girls that they could pick one item and that we would start with the Form 4 girls (Form 4 is the equivalent to seniors in high school). Their excitement was contagious. The girls came up to the front and browsed through all of the possibilities. They tried the clothing on right then and there, they received advice from their friends on what looked best, they giggled, swapped items, and asked me to take hundreds of pictures of them so that they could see how their new items looked on them. I couldn't help but notice, how I, as a girl do the exact same thing. Women browse, don't they? It took approximately an hour for all of the girls to pick an item out. I have never seen so many smiles at once and I was blessed to be able to see their joy from something so simple.
Once all of the girls had finally decided upon something, it was the boys turn. We took the girls out of the room and brought the boys in. I could see the boys eying items they might be interested in. They were obviously excited like the girls, but in a much more subdued manner. We started the same as the girls, allowing the boys to pick one item and we began with the Form 4 boys. I was shocked at how decisive the boys were. They walked up, grabbed an item instantly and sat back down. We finished with all 50 of the boys in 20 minutes or so. I couldn't help but think, girls are girls. Boys are boys. Whether you are in Kenya, America, Switzerland, or Haiti. We all have the same Creator and we were all created in the same image, right? So why do we find ourselves focusing on our external differences versus the heart?
Children are children. They love candy. They hide behind their mother's skirts when they are feeling shy due to the presence of a stranger. They love games. They cry when they get hurt. This is something you will see regardless of a person's race and this is due the to fact that we are all one blood. We were created by the same Creator and we all came from one man and one woman, Adam and Eve.
I watched a teaching by an Australian man named Ken Ham while I was here in Kenya. He discussed the racial categories we have given to people groups based on skin color. He explained that as Christians, we should not buy into racial categories and that instead we should not see African, Caucasian, Chinese, etc. But instead, we should recognize that there are only two “races” per say. Saved and unsaved. Walking in the light or walking in darkness. This should be our primary concern. We should be a people who are not hindered by diversity and instead are willing to show the love of Christ despite the fact that people might look different. I am not saying that I was racist or anything of the sort, however, God is showing me that in some ways I have limited His love to flow through me based on the fact that I feel I might not be able to relate to a person due to our differences in culture and looks.
I cannot tell you how many times I have had to tell these students that I am just like them and not better than them. I have encouraged them that God created all of us in His image and we simply have different shades of skin. What is the big deal with that? Do we seperate the big ear lobed people from the small ear lobed people? (Ken Ham). No! So why is the trait of skin color treated any differently? I believe that through sharing my own struggles with these beautiful students, they are realizing that I am like them despite our difference in skin color. I also struggle with my self-esteem, sin, fear, just like they do. People are people.
Are cultures different? Yes, of course they are. Praise God for creating us to be diverse and unique and not all the same. So all that to say, as God's people we should look past our differences and love relentlessly. Like God, we should look at a person's heart not their outward appearance. We should love like Jesus and show people through our love that God doesn't focus on the appearance of man but on the state of their heart instead.