You
find an old woman who’s dying of AIDS. She has tuberculosis, her body no longer
able to fend off disease. Her husband and four children are dead of AIDS. She’s
too weak to stand up, and lies in a filthy hut near a trash dump.
What
do you do? You already have 14 adopted children to cake for and a burgeoning
ministry to lead and maintain.
What
do you do?
Here’s
how Katie Davis answered that question: She took care of the dying woman. She
loved her. She got medical help to ease her final months, and she filled the
woman’s last days with love and joy. She was there when the woman died.
I
don’t know what I would do. It’s easy – too easy – to say I would do the same
thing. The temptation to do nothing would be great, with every justification
coming to mind as I walked away.
Katie
Davis didn’t walk away, even as she was plagued with doubts. And because of
what she did, people who watched and understood became Christians. If that’s what your God does, then I want
your God, too.
This
is the kind of loving action that set the early church apart from its pagan
environment – the Christians cared for widows and orphans. No one did in Roman
society. Widows could become beggars or starve; orphan children could be
enslaved and abused. No objections would be raised because it was standard
operating procedure in the Roman world.
The
Christians, however, were different. They took care of widows and orphans. And
people noticed. People responded because we are made to respond to human needs.
In taking care of widows and orphans, the Christians lived a Sunday sermon
seven days a week. And it was one reason why, through more than 250 years of on-again,
off-again, regional, local and national persecutions, some awful and severe,
the church continued to grow.
Because
it took care of those widows and orphans.
Because
Katie Davis took care of an old woman dying of AIDs. An old woman named Grace.
Led
by Jason Stayszsen and Sarah Salter, we’ve been discussing Kisses
from Katie: A Story of Relentless Love and Redemption by Katie Davis
and Beth Clark. To see more posts on this chapter, “A Jja Ja for Us,” please
visit Sarah at Living Between the Lines.
4 comments:
That is so powerful and humbling. It does make me wonder what I would do. "They'll know we are Christians by our love."
I thought of the same things. I have had justifications before that I let myself out of much simpler tasks that I had a "prompting" for. It spurs me to follow Him more closely and know Him more intimately. Thank you, Glynn.
Wow. What a powerful story - perhaps the most powerful in this wonderful series you've been detailing here. Thanks for it.
Amazing story!Thanks for sharig
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