It’s a Beautiful Day to Cry

 

They all demand my full attention. This very second.

They pull and yank and yell and scream and talk and laugh.

And… it’s beautiful. It honestly is.

 

Children behind me grab fistfuls of my “golden” hair. Twisting it around, braiding it messily and laughing.

Children beside me take my hands and wrap their little fingers around them. Smiling and content, staring up into my face.

Children in front of me hold up the books we brought for them. Touching the pages, showing me the pictures, sounding out the words.

 

Everyone’s happy.

Everyone’s together.

We’re a community.

My spirit rejoices.

 

I sit near the ground on a wooden bench between them, ignoring for once all our differences. Today we’re the same.

We sweat, and stink, and we’re dirty.

We smile, and laugh, and we’re happy.

 

Mira, mira, look at this!” says the girl with the picture books.

Juega, juega, play with us!” say the boys with the soccer ball.

Blanquita eres, you’re so white!” says the little one, giggling, holding my hand.

 

Today is amazing.

Today is beautiful.

Today should never have to end.

 

But I get up finally, and head towards the kitchen to see what the women are cooking. I can’t stop smiling as I round the corner of the little school. And then I realize I can stop smiling.

I stop smiling and I start shaking.

Shaking hard, with anger and fury, at the scene unfolding before me.

 

Covered by the screams of delight, a scream of pain and fear.

Hidden by the distant chatter, a voice bitter and full of rage.

A mother beating her two-year-old child behind the wall, thrashing him with a poisonous, stinging plant. You’ll listen to me next time, she tells her son, continuing to hit him. Oh, you’ll listen…

I can’t stop this. I can’t fix this. All I can do is stand and watch, eyes wide with horror and disbelief. Fear, even.

 

She looks up as she raises the branch again, and seeing me standing there, watching her. She drops the stem of poison-veined leaves and growls get up! to her son, who lays curled up against the building whimpering. Get up and put your shoes on!

I look in the woman’s face and see hard lines and angry eyes. She glances toward me again, she knows what I saw. What I know. What she’s done. Come! She shouts again. Get up!

 

Why did she hit so hard?

What did he do so wrong?

 

I can’t unsee it, I can’t forget it, and I probably never will.

Ever.

The day has lost its magic and beauty. Every single bit.

Because… it could have been me. I could have been that little boy.

It could have been me. I could have been that mother.

 

It could have,

But it isn’t.

I could have,

But I’m not.

 

I can’t tell you why.

I don’t know why God has protected me like He has.

And at the same time, I can’t believe He would allow me to see this.

I’m right here, but sometimes all I can do is watch.

And cry. Go home, lay in my bed, and cry. Cry because I couldn’t do anything. Cry because I didn’t.

 

This is more than a beautiful country.

It’s pain-filled.

Tear-filled.

Broken.

Captive.

 

It’s a battle field, do you hear me?

A battle field. There’s a war going on.

Here. Now. And I’m in it.

 

I’m not fighting against the woman with the switch. I’m not fighting people who taught her to hurt. I’m fighting, to bring them to Jesus. Struggling, to show them the Light. It’s frightening, it’s difficult, it’s draining. But I’m not giving up. Not without a fight.

 

Cause I believe it’s worth it.

Every minute of it.

Every second.

 

So I want you to pray for me. I want you to pray right now. Because I’m fighting.

We all are.

 

~Madeline Studebaker

 

We must choose faith…

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If only our eyes saw souls…

If only our eyes saw souls...

when helping hurts

 

I first read this book in paperback before we ever left for  the mission field.

I just finished reading it for the third time.

Each time I am left inspired, convicted and challenged.

Maybe you would enjoy it too.

 

 

https://soallmayknow.org/1794/

Praise Report!

Praise Reports!!

*Our friend from Shiripuno is on page 88 of the Bible. He has never read the Bible before and has been enjoying talking to Eric about creation and the plagues. As a community leader, he could be a powerful testimony right here in his own community. Please keep praying.

*A young man that attended the Bible studies with Eric our first year here contacted us via Facebook this week. He left the jungle to live in Quito, but is returning and wanted to know if he could come back to the studies. He said that he has separated himself from God. Please pray for him and that he would seek God with his whole heart.

*We recently were able to make a donation of Spanish books to the library in Shiripuno. A set of The History of Ecuador Encyclopedias, several classics, comic books and Bibles were well received. Thank you for the donations!

*Bella Vista needed to run a line from a spring into their village because the other went dry. They had been without water for several weeks. God provided us with an extra donation that was forwarded to the Pastor. Please continue to pray for this community of believers.

 

Are you blessed and want to make a contribution?

Whether it is a one time or a regularly occurring gift, we thank you.

You can make it online using our webpage: soallmayknow.org or

Paypal to [email protected]

Checks can be mailed to: Studebaker Family at 129 General Griffith Circle Rutherfordton, NC 28139

The Least of These

You grab the bread from my hands like a starving animal. Your nails are broken, your hands are filthy. Your hair hangs long and unwashed around your face. Your eyes are vacant.
I look away.
Some days, I don’t like this job. I don’t like seeing the things I see. Sometimes I wish we had been called to work with others. People who were clean and educated and came for something besides the food.
But I do it anyway.
Because behind the mud, the lice, and the scars? There’s a soul.
And so there has to be hope, too.
I’m surrounded by poverty and brokenness. I don’t get a chance to forget it.
Every day that I force myself to look in your face… I see less of the dirt and grime. More of a heart that’s broken and vulnerable. More of a soul that needs to be saved.
I look in your face, and know that I want to see it again.
Not here, but in a Place where you won’t need to cry.
In a Place where you won’t have to run.
In a Place that you’ll call Home.
There’s a King there, in that Place.
He told me about you.
And the King will answer and say to them, ‘Assuredly, I say to you, inasmuch as you did it to one of the least of these My brethren, you did it to Me.’ -Matthew 25:40
And the King said for me to come.
To right here, where we’re standing.
How then shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? and how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without a preacher? -Romans 10:14
The King said to me,
tell them, I love you.”

 The Least of These

A river, a sermon, a lollipop, and chicha

Bella Vista

Madeline. You’re getting your shoes all wet!” chides an accented voice from the front of the canoe.

Cecelia,” I grumble. “How am I supposed to get out of the canoe and onto the beach without getting my shoes wet?” I throw my hands in the air.

Like this maybe, she seems to say, jumping from the boat to the shore of the river, almost floating over the water. Like Pocahantas, like it isn’t hard at all to jump that far without face planting in the dirt.

I am… the opposite. I’m sloshing water everywhere, trying to balance on the slippery rocks at the bottom of the river. I can’t see where I’m stepping, I’m slipping, then I’m shrieking, and a nearby Kichwa tries to steady me by grabbing my arm with his iron-like grip. He says something in Kichwa, then tells me “be careful,” in Spanish. Maybe “learn how to swim” should have accompanied that piece of advice. It’s a big river and a catfish would probably eat me anyhow.

 

Okay! Follow me!” orders Ramiro from the shore. And there we are. Staring into the jungle. I don’t see any path leading in, but, apparently, the indigenous people do. It’s a ten-minute trek through vines, thorns, spiders, and lots of mud. Lots of mud.

We are here!” announces Cecelia. But… where are we? A wooden house on stilts, a couple of chickens, a giant fire pit, and a wall-less shelter with a palm frond roof.

Setting up under the palm fronds, we wonder if anyone is going to show up. Then Saul, the elder of the Alfa y Omega church, starts imitating bird calls and monkey noises, letting the village know we’re here. I can’t believe it. But they’re coming.

People of all ages walk (and run) down the paths though the woods – grandmothers, parents, teenagers, babies. There have to be thirty people, already!

 

We sit down on the wooden benches and start out with some games for the children. Then games for everyone. Then a rapid sermon in Spanish and Kichwa I do not understand much of. I think the basic idea is that you can’t make it to heaven on your own.

After that, some of the women start passing out bowls of broth and meat. I take a sip – there aren’t any spoons – and pass it down the line of people.

 

Then comes the other bowl, the bowl of chicha.

Chicha is just about the worst thing I’ve put into my mouth in every community I’ve visited. It’s murky, yellow, and chunky, with fermented fruit and yucca bits floating around. It smells like yogurt that went bad, like, three months ago!

It’s just nasty, and there’s no way to refuse it.

(I have the feeling that maybe missionaries who won’t drink it get blow-darted or something.) I had that old familiar feeling from https://soallmayknow.org/guinea-pig/. The feeling I had when I had to eat a guinea pig.

I hold my breath as the bowl comes towards me… and I continue to hold my breath as I lift it towards my mouth. It’s not like people are watching you, I tell myself, except, they are!

I sip it, gag, and pass it to my mother. Then I try to smile.

 

A few minutes later, Cecelia announces “Lollipops for the children!” and I keep myself from running to her with the others. I am not supposed to be a child. I am supposed to be a missionary. But what I am is hungry.

Still, Cecelia walks over and hands me a lollipop, with that funny little smile I haven’t figured out yet.

I thank her and stick it in my mouth.

 

So All May Know,

Madeline Studebaker

I Am Not Brown

Can I go play outside?” Elijah asks.
No, but maybe later, because the sun’s too strong right now. You’d get burned.” Mom explains.
Well I want to be brown.” He says stubbornly.
You’d get red, not brown,” I mumble, rolling my eyes but still getting his point. He’s like me: he can’t tan, but he sure does freckle. But I know what he’s really thinking.
Brown goes better with everything.” Elijah tells us, drawing out the word everything. “Blue, black, red, yellow, green, orange, pink-” He makes a face and giggles. “-Expect pink is for girls… It’s just… better.” He says confidently.
Everyone here is brown!
This is how a five-year-old boy tells you everything you’ve been thinking for the past two and a half years. Except he says it in just four or five sentences. And he breaks your heart.
My brother wants to fit in. Like I want to fit it.
He wants to be like everyone else. I want to be like the others too.
And nearly everyone else just happens to be brown.
I’ve been dealing with it too. Language, for me at least, is the big one, but we still have the same problem.
It’s that we are different.
It’s become an ugly word inside my own head – different.
Because the truth is? Different isn’t always fun.
Different means that, sometimes, I don’t understand them. I don’t always get the language, culture, etiquette, or what I’m supposed to do. It is hard.
Different means they have plenty of chances to laugh at us. At what we say, what we do, and what we try to say and do. It is hard.
Different means they stare. Different means they always stare. And that is hard.
Brown wouldn’t be so bad. Being able to fit in – any way at all – would be… nice.
But, even though it’s hard, I’m not here to worry about that.
I’m not here to mope around because I look different, sound different, and act different from everyone else. I do all that, but the truth is… I kinda need to get over it.
Because I am here to spread Jesus, I am here to love, and I am here to be a light.
And I have to take deep breaths. Lots and lots and lots of deep breaths. And accept it.
I am not brown. I am not brown! Waking up to another day – every day – of being an outsider can be hard. And it is hard.
It has taken two years to be accepted into this village’s community. Accepted, that is, for who I am. Which… still doesn’t make me one of them. Because I am a foreigner.
I do not speak fluent Spanish, I do not always “beautifully mesh” with this culture, and I will always be different.
Yes. It is hard.
But you know what?
Hard isn’t going to stop me.
And hard definitely isn’t going to stop God.
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Where Did You Get Your Pattern?

We use patterns for so many things.  Clothes.  Hair.  Buildings.  Behavior.

Often, we don’t stop and think about where our patterns are coming from or to see if they are of good quality.

Television.  Magazines.  Friends at school.  The Bible.

Nagi at Girls Bible Study soallmayknow.org

The main idea for the past few weeks with the girls that Christ should be our model and that the Bible tells us how to live our lives.  This is the best pattern created for us by our Creator!

Genesis 1:27

27 So God created man in His own image, in the image of God created He him; male and female created He them.

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Titus 2:7

in all things showing thyself to be a pattern of good works; in doctrine showing uncorruptness, seriousness, sincerity,

 

Girls Bible Study soallmayknow.org

Please keep us in your prayers because as we progress we will be delving into the wrong kinds of models- like idols.

 

Girls Bible Study- Ana.  soallmayknow.org

 

Praise and Worship

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Saturday Eric was out on the front porch having some time in worship when the boys came by.

Turns out, Emerson can play and the boys can sing!!!

We had an impromptu praise and worship time together and shared some grapefruit.

I am so thankful that God’s plans trump our schedule.