Future of Ukraine Orphans (double click for full view, turn off music below)

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Gleanings From the Fields

Fields of the Fatherless that is.
I'm currently reading this book by Tom Davis.
In Chapter Two, Tom starts out talking about how some people tell him that Jesus said that we will always have the poor with us. (I believe He said that when He was anointed with oil, and the woman wiped it with her hair.) I love how he is just so frank in this book. (I've realized that if I'm gonna do much advocating for orphans, I'm gonna have to do some of that. Not so easy for a recovering people-pleaser, yes-man, ah woman.)
Tom's response, "Hmm...is that supposed to be some kind of acceptable excuse to go about our lives in comparative luxury while the rest of the world starves on less than a dollar a day?"
Wow, how many times have I used excuses to not do anything when faced with knowledge like that (people in need around the world).
They seem to just automatically pop into the brain, excuses that is.

"Once the words of Scripture are illuminated, the truth of what they say doesn't allow me to make excuses. This issue of how to treat the poor is something we have to pay attention to." Tom writes.
He goes on to quote Deuteronomy 15:7-11.
In that passage, God says, "If there is a poor man among your brothers in any of the towns of the land that the Lord your God is giving you, do not be hardhearted or tightfisted toward your poor brother." v.7 The next verse he pulls out is
Matthew 10:8 Freely you have received, freely give.
Tom asks, "What do the fatherless look like today?"
He gives examples. Among them are these:
The grandma who lost her husband ten years ago and spends her days watching soap operas. The unruly little boy in your child's class who keeps getting moved from foster home to foster home. The little girl who in Africa who has to sell her body for a loaf of bread because she's starving to death. The prostitute in Russia who knows no other way to live because both of her parents died and nobody would take her in."
Do you have any to add. If you comment and leave some I'll share them in my next post.
Some of mine...
An eleven yr. old boy in prison for stealing because he was hungry and living on the street. His mom threw him out because all she cares about is her new boyfriend and alcohol.
A fourteen yr. old boy living in a sewer to stay warm, selling himself just so he can eat.

2 comments:

ArtworkByRuth said...

Wow! I have not heard of this book. What a great read and find! Thanks for sharing. I go back to the simple scripture of loving our neighbors as our selves. We would not want to be alone, hungry, without family or hope of a future, so why should it be acceptable to not do that for others!
Love your blog, added you to my following list!

Ashley said...

I need to find this book. I have heard of it several times and now I know I need to go read it.

Thank you for your faithfulness and dedication.