Annie and I with the Georgia folks, Sponbergs & Griffins
Hello everyone! This is an update from Annie, post-road trip. We traveled a lotta miles. We also had quite a range of experiences. We got to visit some old friends who have moved away from Chicago, spend good time with our interns for next year (and meet their families!), speak to churches, pastors, missions coordinators, get wined and dined by a southern businessman, and Allan even got the chance to speak to a couple 7th grade classes in Georgia about South Africa! ...It was a public school and he couldn't tell the students about the Biblical mandate behind our work, but he was able to challenge them to consider the choice between only living for themselves, or living for others. Hopefully planted a few seeds of counter-cultural thinking that Jesus can water with deeper truths later on.
Low Country Boil at the Griffin's
Jamie, Greg & Tyson // Will Brown with his famous smoke house brisket
By far one of the best parts of our trip, however, was meeting Pastor Larry Reid in
Jeannie, Allan, Annie and Pastor Larry
No one before has ever responded to us like Pastor Larry did. We went to brunch with him after, where he asked us great, thoughtful questions, gave us some serious and very helpful advice, and told us that he wants his church to be regular supporters of the first orphan home. This meeting was a much-needed gift to us of like-minded fellowship and deep encouragement. It was also the latest installment of a long-term, focus-shifting lesson God has been working on regarding our faith in His provision for around two years now: when we are tempted to believe that God has failed to provide what is necessary to realize the vision he has cast, we are wrong. That one took a while for me to get. Then the rest: if we push hard into Jesus, get serious about taking him at his word, if we wrestle with him when we’re frustrated, confess to him and to each other when we fail or judge others or don’t believe in him, and do the last thing he’s told us until he tells us the next thing…well, good things happen. I don’t know exactly what yet, but I do know that the more serious we’ve become about these things, the more real Jesus has become to me, and the more I am forced to go to him for advice, for energy, for encouragement, for actual moment-to-moment sustenance. It is by far the scariest and most exhausting way I have ever lived daily life. I wouldn’t trade it for anything.
Annie
In Chapel Hill at the literal Chapel on the Hill