I have some ideas about how to present some of the
blogs. One could be on paper, one could be on an ipad, maybe one of them could
even be hand-written. Nice, right?
I thought
maybe we could do a timeline-to show how things have changed and where
Beautiful Response has gone in the past few years. We’ve got some great
pictures-pictures of the beginning, pictures of where we are now. The tables will look really great. Sonja is good at that. There are going to be
colorful pieces of cloth and jewelry made by the kids.
Bright screens with great resolution showing
pictures of smiling kids.
Brilliant displays for brilliant kids.
We will tell some great stories and share some
laughs. There will be food and drink. Sonja and I will walk around and talk to
people about the great things that are happening in Uganda-about where we’ve
come in the past few years. We want to raise $50,000 dollars because there is
so much hope, so much further that the timeline needs to go.
We are planning for a fun evening, and you are
invited-truly invited November 10th, 4:00-6:00 Quail Lodge Carmel
Valley, CA. There is so much hope and what God is doing at the orphanage is
full of joy.
The other day I was working on fundraiser stuff and
I accidently opened a word doc called Child Profile. I had meant to
open a letter I am drafting to send to businesses. I meant to open Business Letter for BR. I opened Child Profile.
Child Profile is a 46 page doc. Each page
has the name of a child, the age they were in 2010, their picture, and their
story.
I began to scroll down. I began to read their
stories again. Without food, badly beaten, parents died, unwanted, they had no
one, AIDS, abused, alone on the streets. I saw their pictures and
remembered the story behind each face. Couldn’t
earn enough, mother was mentally ill, locked them in the house, left without
hope.
It was their stories that got us in the first
place.
` It is their stories that get me today.
I read the stories again and remembered the
tragedies that started our timeline. I couldn’t stop staring at my computer
screen. I couldn’t move on.
In the fun and the hope and the joy of the new
things happening at the orphanage in Uganda I had forgotten the disaster-the wretched
reality that some things will not be as they should have been. I had forgotten that for these kids, the
timeline has things on it that cannot be changed.
There are some hurts that no fundraiser will ever
heal. We cannot forget that.
But these kids, they sing about a God who rights
all wrongs-a God who controls how the timeline ends. We are following their lead.
So
The tables will look nice.
There will be food and drink.
We will laugh and tell good stories
And we will be full of hope in a God who ends the
timeline so much better than it started.