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Wednesday, March 09, 2022

Celebratory and Sober: paradoxical next steps

 In 48 hours, we expect to be aboard a jet lifting into the air above the Loudoun countryside where I grew up, headed back to the home that has now become our most long-term dwelling in life, Bundibugyo, Uganda.




Like all transitions, this one comes with sober celebrations, if those two paradoxical words can both be true. This week has been sobering at every turn. Ukraine first and foremost, hundreds of innocent civilians dead, children with disabilities stuck in the crossfire, over a million of those who could run displaced indefinitely, a raw reminder of the way power can be wielded for evil and greed. All while other conflicts smoulder on in Africa off-camera and out of mind as well. Meanwhile the background broken world keeps scratching us with its sharp edges. One of our two loyal dogs waiting for us in Uganda bravely battled a cobra on our porch just before we were to return, and though Bwindi managed to kill the snake, she did not survive the venomous bite. All creation groans, per Romans 8, and that is certainly true for Bwindi and for us. Loss of our beloved dog (a birthday gift to Scott two years ago) the very week we return, as other Serge friends lost theirs to illness this week too as they prepared to leave, well it just felt like a lot of grief. Our rental car to get to the airport was canceled yesterday, and our COVID testing appointment today got canceled at the last minute due to a printer malfunction, both issues adding hours of work-arounds in a week that did not seem to have spare hours. And none of that even touches the truly sobering issues of our hearts: leaving our kids and moms on this continent, returning to a place that is hard to reach and 8-11 hours off their time zones, making ourselves unavailable to their lives. 


And yet we celebrate, anyway, like the Apostle Paul writing in Phil 4:4, not because everything is neatly ordered according to our will and definitely not because everything is so much enviable fun. We celebrate the deeper truths that undergird us, available in glimpses if we pay attention. Actually in this case, pretty glaringly obvious: the mercy of God that I (Jennifer) am alive, and miraculously far enough along the long road of healing to start working. We celebrate the kindness of so many who prayed, loved, wrote, called, visited, gave, cared, the community that held us up when we had nothing to give, and now enables us to keep going. We celebrate the daffodils peaking out another year as winter recedes, the two new families approved to join Serge in East and Central Africa today, the visit of the Johnson kids back to Bundibugyo a decade after unexpectedly leaving when their dad got cancer, the record enrolment at Christ School after Uganda's COVID shut down became the longest in the world, new businesses and water projects and residency programs and creative work. We celebrate the reminders that love is stronger than death. That the resurrection reverses all the powers of evil.

Thanks to all who read this blog and have prayed and hoped to see this return, to all those we left in Uganda, Kenya, Congo, Burundi, Rwanda and Malawi whom we long to see and hold in our hearts. And please keep reading and praying with us. We've been limping along with our own unique mistakes and inadequacies for almost 29 years now, at times causing disappointment while trying to instill hope. This time on return we really feel the reality of our limits. I'm so much better, but I'm still impaired in energy, balance, vision, memory, speed. The docs at WVU cleared me to practice medicine but I know I need more rest, a healthy pace, and saying no. The return to work will put more pressure on Scott's already full plate. We go back with a God who can do beyond what we ask or imagine, and this time we see more clearly than ever how much we must lean into that. Even the numerous sobering setbacks of this week reinforce the truth: life is heavy and sober, and yet full of reasons to celebrate. 

So celebrate with us the upcoming trip, and stay soberly with us in prayer. Next message, D.V., from Uganda!


(Scott's going to miss the snow...)

13 comments:

mercygraceword said...

Committed in the mercy and grace of our precious Saviour to joining you in prayer with sober joy. For your work, your rest, your dependence, your team, partners in ministry, the school, your kids, your mothers, and anything else you or God communicate.
I'm always so blessed by your sharing and I know God has used it to change me.

Lee said...

Praying that everything works for you to get on that plane. So very, very thankful for Jennifer’s recovery and progress. Had many what I call “yelling loudly” prayer times during all of that. Glad to see so many answered prayers. Very excited about school reopening

Lissa Roberson said...

God gets the glory for restoring you to ministry, Jennifer. You've come an incredible distance in healing and recovery - and your Ugandan family is holding their breath, awaiting you and Scott's arrival. Praying that you will find the new rhythm that will sustain you and Scott. Please press back against any false guilt that you "ought" to do more than you are able to. He will work through you.

Diane VT said...

Praying for you both as you head back to Uganda. Rejoicing with you that you can go back. Praying for God's wisdom with all you will be doing!

Steve & JoAnn Hohenberger said...

Ah, Jennifer and Scott, praise God for his mercies and sustaining grace. He will be with you every inch of the distance you are about to travel. Learning to lean is spiritually healthy, as God resists the proud but gives grace to the humble. We will continue to follow your posts and pray for you. Sending love ��

Jim Starr said...

Soberly but soundly encouraging!
Offering celebratory prayers for God’s blessings and protection on your travels and significant first weeks back in Bundibugyo. /Jim

Unknown said...

We celebrate you and the doings of the lord,may His grace be sufficient for you Scott's and family

Lyds said...

Praying for your return! So glad to see you have been cleared to work again!! Sorry about your pup that’s a hard blow, praying for you as you grieve that loss. Much love to you both!

* said...

I am so sorry about Bwindi. Praying for you all as you travel back. We love you and pray for a seamless return to Bundi filled with laughter and joy. Team Ickes

Violet said...

Praying for you as you return, that the Lord will continue to work in and through you for His own glory and your best good. Your comment on leaning reminded me if this poem by Octavius Winslow.

“Child of My love, lean hard,
And let Me feel the pressure of thy care;
I know thy burden, child, I shaped it;
Poised it in My own hand, made no proportion in its weight to thine unaided strength;
For even as I laid it on, I said
I shall be near, and while he leans on Me,
This burden shall be Mine, not his;
So shall I keep My child within the circling arms of My own love.
Here lay it down, nor fear to impose it on a shoulder which upholds the government of worlds.
Yet closer come; thou art not near enough;
I would embrace thy care so I might feel My child reposing on My breast.
Thou lovest Me? I know it. Doubt not then;
But, loving Me, Lean Hard.”

Martha Ritchie said...

We are and have been praying for you and your family. May you find grace and peace with establishing a new normal for yourselves in Uganda. Your hearts for all those you intersect with is one of love. I appreciate who you are! May God abundantly bless you. May He bless your loved ones too, as they say goodbye again. Safari njema!

Larisochka said...

Praise Jesus who does all things well, and holds our hearts in a broken world. Much love to you as you head back.

Mutegheki@Joshua said...

So sorry about Bwindi, the turn arounds the waitings but everything happens for a reason and because we believe in God who sees beyond the edges, we trust aand wait for the positive reasons
Thankful to God and praying for strength for both of you as you come back to work and where a lot is waiting.
Like always God has always showed us a way. Am sorry for my brothers and sister you are making yourselves unavailable for by coming back and pray that God keeps them healthy and well. I want to believe that we (children) know the calling you took amd we need to be strong for you as we pray for you and ourselves
May God grant you journey mercies and welcome back
With love