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Monday, August 17, 2015

Rich Soil

 Over the past two months, I didn’t chase after Tenele.  I didn’t pursue her or go looking for her at Mangwaneni like in the past.  (In fact, I didn’t go to Mangwaneni very much because I couldn’t face the pain of seeing Tenele there.)  There is a time and season for everything, and that season of relentless pursuit was over and a new one began—one of patience and grace.  God had asked me to pursue Tenele, to take up the motherly version of Hosea’s story and continue to bring Tenele back, showing her over and over again the extent of God’s love redeeming love for her...until she could finally believe that she was worth it.  Then He asked me let go and to wait. 

So I am.  Though waiting is painful, it also brings hope.  And it has been a thorough test of my trust in God.  Do I believe His promises?  Do I believe He has the best for Tenele?  That no matter where she is, or what situation she is in, He can still restore her?  Do I have faith in prayer?  If you want to prove something is true, it must withstand the test of time.  If you want to know if someone loves you, ask them to wait, and see how long they’ll commit to waiting for you.  My faith has been tested many times during this seven-year long story with Tenele.  But with every test I realize how impatient I still am.  Yet, with every failure, with every new hope, my faith only grows stronger.  I rejoice in the hardships, in the tears, in the separation from Tenele, because it will be the source of our future joy.  So, over the past couple months, while I didn’t actively reach out for Tenele, I fought for her in daily prayer and waited for God to work wonders in her heart.  And He did.

Tenele sought me out every other week and sometimes weekly, whether through a letter, a quick hello over the phone, or coming to the volunteer house.  There has NOT been even ONE of these times that I haven’t seen her cry.  Every single letter she wrote said the same three main statements and one question: “I’m sorry for everything.  I don’t know what I’m doing.  I want to go back to God.  Please, mom, please forgive me.”  She had to beg for forgiveness, not because I haven’t forgiven or God hasn’t forgiven her but because she couldn’t forgive herself.  She hated herself, and the inner battle became clearer and clearer.  Finally, on one of her visits, I said, “Tenele, you keep saying you want to go back to God.  You tell me that you pray every night and ask Him for help.  But what are you doing about it?”  It was like she wanted God to magically rescue her from her darkness and pain without having to do anything herself. But that’s not faith.  That’s not a relationship.  For several weeks she wanted to go back to church, but every time Sunday rolled around she couldn’t.  She was crippled by fear and pride.  I told her she must pray for humility.  And she did.  And wow…

Finally, one Saturday night, she stayed over at the volunteer house with another girl Nomvula, who had run away from the girls’ home months ago.  On Sunday they both went to Potter’s Wheel Church with us; it was the church Tenele attended when she was in her rehab program at Teen Challenge.  She said she loved the Pastor and his preaching always made her cry, but she was afraid to see the people she had run away from.  During the service, she came alive.  She cried and praised and prayed.  At the end, she took my hand, trembling, and asked me to walk her to the pastor.  When we got to him, Tenele was so overcome with tears of repentance that she couldn’t even speak.  The South African pastor spoke encouragement and words of redemption over Tenele and then prayed over her.  Nomvula, who had been grumpy and disinterested the whole morning, lit up and glued her eyes on Tenele as she wept in front of the pastor. 

I wish I could tell you that in that moment everything changed and Tenele’s life was completely restored.  But that’s not the journey of faith I know.  Faith is a process in which growing pains are required.  This was another major piece of the uncompleted puzzle, but of course it’s not finished yet.
                During Friday Bible studies at Mangwaneni, Tenele tried helping, translating, praying, and keeping the drunkenness of other women under control.  She came to the volunteer house during the workshop hours and spent time with Lucia and Luciano.  One day, she read the Bible for a straight 2 hours.  Still, she refused to leave her sin behind. 

                Finally, last week, she came to me and said, “Mom, I need to tell you my problems.  I need help.”  I asked questions about her current lifestyle and she was honest.  She said the temptations surround her and she can’t always say no.  (I had heard from others that she was living with a "boyfriend" again.)  She talked about her prostitute friends and how she even asked one the other night to go with her to a different area but she told her no.  Offended, Tenele said, “You’re just jealous and don’t want me to come.”  Her friend told her sternly, “No, this is not a good life.  This is no good life for you, Tenele.”  Tenele asked me if she was right.  “Because sometimes they come in the morning with 400 rand and they always have money.  If they bring KFC and I ask them to share, they say no.  So I think, fine, I will get it on my own, too.”  She asked me if that was okay.  It sounds weird that she asked me, but they were sincere questions.  Was selling her body bad?  Was money bad?  If she didn’t have money how else could she get it?  What if she wanted KFC or nice shoes?  Where did God fit into all of that?
               
 Inspired by the Holy Spirit, I shared with Tenele the story of the Parable and the Sower.  As the words came out, I realized that I have had the incredible honor of seeing and experiencing this Scripture parable to its (almost) full.  Tenele had been the seed on the path where Satan came to steal the Word away before her faith could take root.  She had been on this path for years, her faith only being a topic of conversation and a means to getting what she wanted, but it never took root.  Until Teen Challenge.  Teen Challenge changed Tenele to the second soil: the seed on the rocks, where she sprouted up quickly but withered away because of the weak root.  Tenele’s faith during her time at Teen Challenge skyrocketed.  She was a plant higher than any others; however, with the pain of her past bearing more weight than the root could hold, she crumbled.  And now, now she’s on the thorns.  She is so hungry for God.  She wants to know truth.  She wants to understand.  She desperately wants God.  But she also wants the desires of the flesh, the pleasures of the world. 
                “Tenele, I cannot wait until you get into the fourth soil in the parable—the rich soil!  You will bear fruit for this nation more than you can imagine!”
                Her eyes were big and hopeful.  “Mom, I want to leave Mangwaneni…” and she started crying.  She couldn’t talk, so she wrote on a piece of paper.  She asked if she could come and clean the house for small payment so she could get bus fare to go back to her real mom’s homestead an hour outside the city.  I was shocked.  I was hesitant.  But that’s what she believed would help give her the necessary time she needed away from distractions so she can focus on her relationship with God.  She had forgiven her mother and believed it was safe to give the relationship another try.   
               
I dropped her off one week ago.  I am very nervous for her, as we had tried moving her to this homestead in the past and it turned out to be a wreck, hurting Tenele even more because of the lack of love she received from her real mom.  To be honest, I don’t believe things will be different from her mom, even though her mom said it’s okay for Tenele to stay with her for awhile.  But I think what will be different is Tenele’s relationship with God, and that will affect everything, making it an opportunity to reconnect with her mom and get the necessary healing she needs from her past.
                
Please join me in praying for Tenele and her mother and this time out in the rural homestead for Tenele to find her center in Christ again, to remove the thorns and become the seed on rich soil. 



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