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Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Don't Let Your Past Dictate Your Future

This past week I have had the privilege to shoot a video for the Correctional Ministry here in Kenya. I had to opportunity to meet and interview not only the chaplains at the prisons, but also the staff and prisoners. God is doing amazing things through this ministry and lives are being transformed. 

I interviewed one prisoner (with the help of one of the chaplains) who had been greatly impacted by the Correctional Ministry in the prison. He told me that  

“When I came to prison, I saw that I had no hope at all. Through the preachings of the chaplains that have visited many times, I have come to know Jesus Christ as my personal Savior.” 


He went on to tell me his testimony which was powerful and then talked about his conviction for the lost.
 “I am very much concerned for the perishing souls. Since I’ve been saved, I have seen the Lord Jesus Christ working in my life…God healed me through the Lord Jesus Christ while in prison. From 2010 til now I have been preaching Jesus Christ because I have seen He has done great things in my life, He has changed me completely, He has healed my insanity, and I have been trying as much as possible to bring many many to Jesus Christ.” 


He concluded by giving a beautiful depiction of Salvation. 

“Because I have been saved, I have that inward feeling that I must reach the rest of those lost souls here…I share my testimony with the inmates and the staff in the aim that I must reach them also that they may come out darkness so they may become children of God.”

Prisons are not the happiest and brightest places, but on that day, when this man told his testimony and talked about his conviction, the light of God illuminated the prison compound. Just because someone may have a rough past, doesn't mean that God cant use them. Think about it.  Moses was a murderer, Noah was a drunk, and Paul (Saul) was a persecutor of Christians. Your past may be rough, but through the power of the cross, your future is bright through the power and blood of Jesus Christ. 

Monday, July 7, 2014

A Kenyan 4th of July

The other day was the 4th of July. I enjoyed seeing everyone back home all dressed in the red,
white, and blue. I enjoyed seeing the pictures of fireworks and the lake and the cookouts. We
did have a cookout of our own with our Baby Centre family, the missionaries and Kenyan staff
here, but it didn’t quite feel like the 4th of July without being in America. We did have a lovely
time together and some really great food. However, the thing I will remember about this 4th of
July really has nothing to do with Independence Day.


Friday, I said goodbye to a very special little boy who went home to be with his forever family. It
is always a beautiful experience to witness the adoption ceremonies here, but yesterday’s was
bittersweet. Here at the Baby Centre, it is customary for each of our babies to have a temporary
“mother” and “father” until their adoptive parent(s) come for them. The moms and dads are
sometimes caregivers, staff members, or missionaries. It just means that those people have a
little extra love for and attachment to that particular baby or babies. These people say a little
something at the adoption ceremony and “hand off” the child to the parent(s). Well, just weeks
after we arrived here, the caregivers started calling me mama to a precious little boy named
Philip. Friday I was able to witness and be a part of the joining together of his forever family.

As I watched Philip bonding with his parents all morning, I could not help but feel happy and
sad. So extremely happy that God had answered my prayers and brought him parents, but sad
that I would no longer get to see him and play with him each day. I tried to hold it together during
the ceremony, but as his parents were speaking about how happy they were to make him their
son, the tears began to flow. It was a beautiful moment. We always sing songs and the Baby
Centre “parents” will hold the child and then hand the child to their new parents, their forever
parents. When they placed Philip in my arms, I had to smile for him as I saw the huge smile on
his face. I wondered if he understood any of what was going on. Did he realize that his life was
completely changing? He now had a family and an exciting chapter of his life was beginning. I
cherished those last moments with him and gladly handed him to his smiling mommy and
daddy. His father looked at me and said thank you, and I knew what he meant by those two little
words. Thank you for loving my son until I could. Thank you for holding him and playing with him
until I could. Thank you for helping to take such good care of him. I knew that is what he meant.
I said thank you back and I hope that he knew that I was saying, Thank you for choosing to love
this child as your own. Thank you for coming for him. Thank you for giving him the family he
deserves. Then his father looked me in the eyes and said, “He is in good hands” as his mother
said, “We will love him very much.” And I knew they meant it. The three of them made a perfect
little family and you could tell how much they already loved each other.


When the ceremony was over, April (a missionary who has been here a while) looked at me and
said “It doesn’t get any easier.” This work God has called us to do here is not easy. Saying
goodbye to these children is hard. The caregivers, the staff, and the missionaries here are often
the first people to truly love these precious babies. It would be so much easier to not fall in love
with them, to keep your distance. But they deserve to be loved, God has called us to love them,
and I will choose to love them until God sends them a family to love them. So, I will endure the
heartache as they drive away with their forever families. Yes, it is sad not knowing if you will
ever see them again, but as I caught a glimpse of Philip’s smiling face through the car window
as he drove away to his new home, I could not help but smile too, knowing that everything we
are doing here at the Baby Centre is worth it. All of the hard work is to help join these families
together and to give God all of the glory for what He is doing in this place. 

I hope you all have a wonderful 4th of July holiday. This was one that I will never forget. !

Much love! Tascha