At the Crisis Center, they met two young teenage girls with babies that were kicked out of their village. One, has a set of twins and another baby. The twins were going to be sacrificed by the witch doctor, and the young girl decided to flee, taking her babies with her. Today, she smiles and spreads hope to others. The other young lady is 14 years old and has a beautiful baby. When I see her innocent smile, I can only think of how this beautiful baby is raising a baby. Here, hard life begins much younger. Many young girls are raped. Many are forced (by their parents) into prostitution. Many do not know love and seek love from any male that they receive attention from causing them to end up pregnant at 13, 14, 15, etc. The beautiful young 14 year old that I have grown quite fond of was forced to bring money to her family by selling her body. I cannot imagine what age she began this if she got pregnant at 13. I cannot imagine a family that forces their child to do this. I cannot imagine the fear of a 13 year old giving birth. I cannot imagine getting pregnant and then the same family that forced me into prostitution becoming ashamed of me because I'm pregnant. But, I can now imagine that girl happy and being a good mom. I can imagine her slowly becoming confident and loving her baby. I can imagine a team coming and learning the love of Jesus through her. I can forever imagine this because I have now experienced this. I have felt the pain, the heartache and now the love and reward of being a survivor all because of new faith and hope in Christ.
A team member said this to me today: "Our team paid a total of about $30,000 to come to Uganda which includes airfare, lodging, food, shots, and everything including supplies for the ministry. Is it better for teams to spend the money to come here OR would it have been better to take all the money it took to get here, all the money on the meds and shots, and just give HEAL the $30,000 ? Would you rather receive the money or the team?"
I had a very simple answer: "I would rather the team come. I would rather my sweet 14 year old friend with a baby see the joy in your eyes when you hold her baby. I would rather give encouragement to the women of Masese by sending people to see them to show them that there is love and prayers for them across the world. I would rather see my sweet little orphans run and clap as the muzungus walk up because they are so happy to see loving arms about to embrace them. I would rather see the staff at the orphanages smile for days when I say that another team is coming to encourage them. I would rather see my Ugandan friends that help me with translation smile and receive encouragement because they know that their work is not finished. I would rather see the market ladies grin and hug me when I say that a team is coming to purchase their goods so that they can feed their families. I would rather see friends, like Fazirra, smile bigger than ever when I say that I'm bringing a team to her home because she has no family or friends that stop by. I would rather see my lame friend with a baby smile and have hope because a team cares enough to visit because she is an outcast in her own country. I would rather support my Ugandan church and see their laughter and excitement as a team gets out of the bus to worship God together. I would rather spread encouragement to my fellow missionary friends and offer service to their ministries. I would rather use God's people to spread His hope. I would rather teams come and see and experience and then return and spread awareness. I cannot put a price on the rewards of a mission team. $30,000 may have been the price tag for this team to get here, but the eternal rewards are PRICELESS!
"I have but one candle of life to burn, and I would rather burn it out in a land filled with darkness than in a land flooded with light" John Keith Falconer
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