Thursday, May 31, 2012

Newcomers


It was one of those situations that we realized too late.  Communion was being served and we hadn’t adequately prepped our unchurched,  international guests.   The communion plate came around and our guests stared at the two circles of unleavened bread.  Bewildered but trying to honor us the best they could, they picked up the circles and took a big bite like you would out of  a sandwich.  My mother and I and those in the pew behind us looked on in shock realizing the situation.  Our guests, aware that something was wrong but not sure what looked around uncomfortable and embarrassed.     We motioned them to pass the plate with it’s half eaten communion to the next person.  Thankfully the communion cups were  a little bit more intuitive.  Our guests though were humiliated, we were mortified and the other church folk were trying hard not to notice. 
            Not knowing the protocol when going to a new church is not unique to an international or unchurched guest.  I decided to go on a journey of my own to see what it was like to go to a new congregation.  I had the advantage of being a fellow believer in Christ as well as one who has travelled to scores of churches around the world.  The difference was that I was going not knowing anybody who would introduce me or show me around.    What I discovered was that in more cases than not, I felt completely like our friends—lost, uncomfortable and not sure how church “worked.”
            The first church I attended was a church I had seen alongside the road.  Just the mere attempt to attend was a challenge.  As I drove by I caught the name of the church and thought it would be no problem to use the internet to discover their service times or at least phone number.  What I didn’t expect was that there was no website and no phone number.  I abandon phone books long ago.   So I got in my door and drove back to the church where at least they had their services times on the marquee. 
            Sunday came and I walked in the door and immediately didn’t know where to go.  I was in a foyer with hallways that led left and right.  After a brief few moments someone came along and pointed in the right direction.  So I sat down in a pew and waited for the service.  I was clearly a newcomer in this small congregation but I felt almost like a burden, like the others in the church didn’t know quite what to do with me.  Do they come greet me?  Do they stay away?  Am I a Christian?  Am I an unbeliever?  To their credit one woman turned around and said hello, had 5 seconds of conversation and then turned to talk to others.   No real conversation, just the obligatory politeness.  The preaching was great and the genuine love for the Lord was palpable among but I left the church not really having made much human contact. 
            Then came the church that was “prepared.”  They had their little baggie ready for the newcomer.  It had a small New Testament, a calendar, their church schedule and a pen.  I walked into the building and sat down.  As the song service began from behind my back an arm reached above me and thrust the baggie into my lap.  I was actually quite startled and turned around to see who the arm belonged to but the woman was already leaving.   The only other thing I remember about that service was that the aging pastor was clearly a battle-hardened yet ready soldier who would preach the love of Jesus until his dying breath.  But I couldn’t come to grips as I left that church only having encountered an arm that if I were unchurched, I probably would not return.
            After having several more uncomfortable experiences, church #6 finally felt like there was potential.  Oh it had a few mishaps.  When I pulled in the only thing obvious was the “Pastor Only” parking.  It took several minutes for me to realize that the parking for the rest of us was out back behind the building.  But these things are forgivable when overshadowed by a warm welcome by the greeter.   I enjoyed the worship and the message was pretty good.  On the way out the pastor greeted me but only had 3-4 seconds before the next person leaving wanted to talk.     But then I remembered they had invited the congregation to pizza afterwards at a local restaurant.  It felt awkward but I decided to join them.  When I entered the restaurant it was obvious where the church folk were so I sat down.  The woman beside me asked me a few questions and I told her I had served all over the world laboring for the gospel.  That’s nice.   Now on to the people she knew.  I tried several more times to initiate conversation and they were polite.   But they were more interested in the friends they hadn’t seen in the last week.  I just couldn’t break into the circle of conversation.  They clearly enjoyed each other but I was on the outside.  I was glad I went, but I was even more glad when I left. 
            I could go on about the church that had such indecipherable communion time where I had no idea how it was done with their kneeling at the altar, opening their mouth to the pastor and bowing here and there.  Or about the time I sat in a pew only to have an elder tell the congregation during the offering meditation how he was having a bad day, partly because someone (who I discovered was me) was sitting in his regular spot.   Or how during one church greeting time with people to my left, right, front and back not a single person said hello or shook my hand.  
But the long and short of it is that attending these various churches made me realize something that is very important to the heart of Jesus and that is the importance of hospitality.   When I show hospitality in my home I naturally try to make my guests feel comfortable.  I tell them where they can put their coat and where the bathroom is located.  When it is mealtime I give instructions if I’m having it family style or buffet style.   If we are grilling outside I show them the way to the back and tell them where they can leave their potato salad.  I want to put my guests at ease so we can enjoy each other.  This kind of hospitality is no less important in the church.  
Here are some ways learned that perhaps can help us facilitate a warm welcome:
 
1)   Assign someone to newcomer hospitality.  Many large churches have an organized tea and cookie time after services where newcomers can talk to an assigned person to obtain more information.  This is especially needed in the larger churches where newcomers can come and go unnoticed.    But the bulk of churches in America averages approximately two hundred.   Newcomers usually come in the single digits.  It’s very important for these congregations to have someone the greeter can transfer them to in order to show them around, point out the bathrooms, sit near them and let them know how things flow.  Communion and offering are especially important to give them guidance and expectations (i.e. participation is however you feel led of the lord).  Each church celebrates these so differently and as the “holy time,” it can quickly become the most uncomfortable time for visitors.
2)   Express genuine interest.  That means time and relationship and the place where Jesus teaches that happens most often is around the table.  Perhaps the church could offer to the congregation that if anyone takes a first-time guest out for a meal, the church would pay for the meal of these guests. 
3)   Have contact information available.  Surprisingly one of my biggest challenges merely finding out service times.   Churches that didn’t have websites often had answering machines that said hello and please leave a message but had no service times.  Even with some of the larger churches I had to physically go there to find out their service times.  At the very minimum there needs to be a sign in front of the building, an answering machine with service times with a contact phone number, and preferable a website. 
4)   Encourage your people to go.  One church I know of sent out some of their people and encouraged them to go to other churches to discover how they welcomed or didn’t welcome newcomers.   This wasn’t about church bashing but about discovery.  One couple came back and reported,  “it was one of the most terrible experiences we have ever had.”  We want to honor these churches who are in the same growth process as ourselves, but I can assure you that this couple now bends over backwards to make sure new guests at their congregation feel welcome.  Additionally, good experiences cause us to learn from each other.   We are all learning together.

Nothing can ever replace the power of friends showing people they’ve invited around and how our time together flows.   But if someone has just moved to our city and doesn’t know anybody yet, having thought out hospitality beforehand and communicating that to the congregation can be the difference between them finding a church home or not.   And one day we may just find ourselves in that same boat. 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

40 Day Summation: Healing the Sick

 1 Corinthians 9:25
"Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will last forever."

 -----------

To say that this 40 days of praying for the sick/healing the sick did not look like what I expected is a bit of an understatement.  I truly thought finding sick people would be easier.  In the home stretch I think in some ways I stopped trying to find people and just started praying for sick I knew about.

Overall this has been a good training experience.  I was able to pray directly with 22 people and then for 18 other cities, nations, families, facebook requests and even for a cat.  Yes, a cat.  Gotta practice somewhere.

I do believe I've changed from this experience.  I am more keyed in on prayer requests now and don't take them as lightly.  If people are asking for prayer, let's pray for them right then and there.  I've also been challenged by what I believe about healing and my own heart's inhibitions.   I realized when I didn't see healing or find people to pray for  I slipped into casual, wishful thinking mode instead of contending intercession.  This issue needs addressing.  Lastly I feel like my eyes are more trained on seeing people's needs.  It's been good.  Really good. 

So the 40 days of "training for godliness" continues.  I have a whole host of 40 day challenges that I want to do and it seems like the Lord is leading me down a path of when to do these.  I do have another 40 day challenge I feel like I'm to do but I'm going to wait to start June 1st.  A little bit of a break isn't bad.  :)


Friday, May 25, 2012

Day 40: Lost

A lost wallet.  That's what they said that ruined their vacation.  It was 3 adults, 4 teens and a toddler.  They were at the Wal-mart tonight panhandling trying to get enough gas money to get back to Ohio.  From the looks of it they were getting enough although the man thought he had far less.  I don't know.  It's not my business to know.  It's my business to love.  And love meant talking to them and not just giving them a drive-by offering out the window.  Love also meant giving--a Wal-mart gift card that they could use for gas, food, or whatever but not an illegal substance.  As I was leaving I remembered this was Day 40 so I took a moment to pray for them.  They really didn't need healing that I could see.  Just money on a sweaty hot day.  It might not have been a glorious end with a story of healing, but maybe it was a better ending for a family trying to get to the place called home.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Day 39: Family

Encouraged.  That's what it felt like when I read my friend's blog today www.gowinfamily.com.  She almost died giving birth to her first.  She said this of her experience:

"One night, in the middle of the night I was awake—inevitably, since the blood pressure cuff squeezed my arm every 15 minutes.  I suddenly had this vision of angels over me in my hospital room and God saying to me, “You are going to be OK.  There are many people praying for you.” "

It's hard for met to reconcile in this experiment that prayers can be effective through the laying on of hands as well as praying for them long-distance.  I think of some of the people I've prayed for on the list and they have gotten better.  Would they have improved without people praying?  We'll never know.  But posts like the one above encourage me.


So tonight I will spend praying for my family.  I don't do this often enough.  They really and truly need prayers, and healing in different ways that they may or may not see.  And perhaps they too will be  touched by the Lord as did my friend Suzanne.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Day 38: Justice

Tonight I was meditating on Luke 18 and the woman who pesters the judge until she gets justice.  How much more God will give justice when asked than that of the unjust judge.  But perseverance is prerequisite.   So while this post is short, tonight I pray for healing of those mothers who have aborted their children.  May their own hearts live again.

PS--40 Day Summation coming soon.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Day 37: Facebook

If you are on Facebook and you have someone who is close to you in critical need, unabashedly you ask for  prayer.  And you hope some take it seriously.  One this this experiment has taught me is to do just that.  So today I read of someone who really is having congestive heart failure.  I can't lay hands on them, but I can lay my heart and words upon them.

What We Believe

If we knew outright what Hitler was doing during the Holocaust, would we vote for him?  Would other things he believed in outweigh what was happening during the Holocaust?

When Hitler wanted to kill Jews, he labelled them sub-human.  When the white folk wanted to abuse and oppress the blacks, they were "monkeys" and not really human.  When modern folk don't want to be inconvenienced, they label the baby a "fetus" and not "viable" tissue, whatever that is supposed to mean.

We often really don't believe that the life in the womb is indeed life.  If we did, we would see abortion as a holocaust...and take action accordingly (although many do).

This picture is so true, as well as the documentary beneath.  Definitely food for thought.  No...food for action:



 



Monday, May 21, 2012

Day 36: Healing for the City

This is the water tower where I live:



It kind of looks like a space ship up close.  Having just visited Joplin one of my thoughts is that it would make a great tornado shelter--the cement is two feet thick all the way around.

Having been inspired to pray for the healing of Joplin, I decided to pray for the city where I live (as I couldn't find any of the walking wounded to pray for directly).  This city desperately needs Jesus.  There's more crime per capita than the national average.  I'm almost numb to the fact when I hear of another shooting or another robbery, mainly I think because they haven't happened to me (I pray). 

May God heal this city.  It's wound is gaping and it needs the healing.  So I place my feet on it and ask for it.

Sunday, May 20, 2012

Day 35: Pray for your Enemies

If I say their names, you will immediately resonate with them as "enemies."  And if there is anybody who needs Jesus, it is them.  They are famous for protesting at funerals, against homosexuals, and against, well...anything.  They love the media attention.  I won't even mention their names here so web crawlers don't pick up any unjust press.  They are truly difficult to even think about loving, nonetheless praying for them (they plan to protest at Joplin tomorrow which is hard to think about).  But even they are precious to Jesus.  In fact, they are some of the most lost people I've ever known.

So tonight my mom requested we pray for them.  Has there ever been a more fitting way to obey this Scripture above?  We prayed for their lives, their repentance, their salvation.  Can there be any greater healing than that?  If they were to die today, I am no righteous judge but I at present do not anticipate seeing them as neighbors in heaven.  This has to break the heart of God as Father, yet their actions must anger him as Judge.  What if this man were your son?  Seriously, what if this grown man were your precious, yet seriously lost son?

"Pray for your enemies," says Jesus.

So God, I pray that you heal their minds and hearts.  It happened with the child-murderer Manasseh that he changed and that surely seemed impossible (2 Chr 33).  If he can repent, cannot this family? 



Day 34: Joplin will Sing Again!

The Scripture talks about the laying on hands of healing, but how about the laying on of feet?  I went to Joplin, MO to visit friends and decided that I would pray for the healing of the city.   And somehow praying onsite for insight felt very much like the laying on of hands.  And I can assure you this city still needs healing on this one year anniversary of the tornado.  The pain is still raw.

What I didn't know is that God would connect my mom and I with others to pray for Joplin.  We were sitting at Cunningham Park which has been redone.  It is ironically a beautiful place right next to the devastated hospital.  It was weird to sit in beauty and look at destruction, to feel peace and look at despair.

As we were sitting there the most lovely couple approached us and began to talk.  It quickly became apparent that they too were lovers of Jesus.   He was a "musicianary" who will be singing at Tuesday's memorial event.  Unfortunately we weren't going to be able to be there as my mom and I had jobs to return to.  But his wife (bless her) asked her husband to go get his guitar and sing for us.  How beautiful it was to hear this man's voice singing healing over Joplin.  His song has become well-known in the Joplin area and is entitled "Sing Again," written specifically for Joplin.  There we were on a beautiful Saturday evening getting a private concert from this precious brother and sister in Christ.

After he sang a few songs for us we gathered together to pray healing for the city and for blessing over each other.  It just reminded me that heaven on earth is the bride of Christ, and oh how beautiful she really is! 


I would like you to take a minute and join me in praying over Joplin that she would sing again, just like Mark's song that he sung to us that night (and by the way, please check out his website Mark LaPrele and get some of his music!). 


"Sing Again" by Mark LaPerle whom we met in Cunningham park.




 St. John's hospital one year later.




"The Miracle of the Human Spirit" dedicated to the volunteers of Joplin.

"He will be the stability of your times."  (Isaiah 33:6)

Friday, May 18, 2012

Day 33: How big is my faith?

Tonight I went out to eat with a friend in a wheelchair (and her little doggie too!).   I have prayed often for her healing as she so longs to be healed.  It truly will take a miracle of God.  I've prayed for her to be restored, but tonight I decided to pray for her thumb.  Maybe start small and see things healed slowly.  No instant miracle tonight but I do hope her thumb comes out of its curled position.  It did make me wonder though about the size of my faith.  I'm afraid it's not very big.  Thankfully Jesus takes mustard seeds.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Day 32: Real Joking

Someone had knee pain today and I said jokingly, "be healed in Jesus name" as the situation may not have been appropriate at that time.  It made me think, when we joke with that, does it still matter in the heavens?  I pray silently for her regardless.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Day 31: Who?

Again I came up empty.  But tonight I will pray for healing of the little girl's heart that I mentioned previously.  May her heart not be empty like that of her father's.

Every Day Heroes

As I was out picking up beer cans for Bibles, I witnessed an everyday hero.  As I was walking down the alley way an older man was walking with a 6 or 7 year old little girl.  He took her to where her father was at the car and that's when I noticed them because the father of the girl was yelling at her.  The man explained to the father that she was lost quite a ways from home, scared and crying.  The father did not hug her, welcome his lost girl home (it was early evening) but shouted that she was grounded for 3 days.  The man who brought her turned and walked away, saddened by what the little girl was returning to.  Perhaps it was this kind of environment that made her want to wander away.  But as I looked at the man who had brought this little girl home, I began to think that I had just witnessed an every day kind of hero.   Sir, the father may not have thanked you, but there is a Father who will.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Day 30: Different and Harder

This 40 day challenged has looked different and been harder than I ever thought.  I had pictured it would be easier to find 40 days of sick folks.  To be honest I''m not discouraged yet I'm losing hope and motivation in finding people.   I'm also losing radar eyes.  I wish I could have more exciting stories to tell here.  I can only say that I continue to pray for healing everyday for someone or something.  Like today, praying for healing of this nation.  A shift is taking place and it's unsettling.  I pray God would save us.

Monday, May 14, 2012

Day 29: Healing of Homes

Home is one of the most important thing to receive healing right now.   And one of my friends has suffered a terrible blow in their home.  I pray for healing.  I can't reach through the internet, but I can reach through the heavens and pray for healing.  Let there be healing in this home.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Day 28: The Woman Bent Over

I was reading the Scripture the other day of the woman bent over:

"On a Sabbath Jesus was teaching in one of the synagogues, and a woman was there who had been crippled by a spirit for eighteen years. She was bent over and could not straighten up at all. When Jesus saw her, he called her forward and said to her, “Woman, you are set free from your infirmity.” Then he put his hands on her, and immediately she straightened up and praised God." (Lk 13:10-16).

When I read this Scripture I immediately thought of a woman I know.  She too is "bent over."  There are medical reasons for her bent over situation, but she needs prayer.  If she were healed it would be a great relief to her and visible to everyone else.  So I gathered the church kids around her and led them in a prayer.  We're still awaiting healing.

One thing I'm discovering through this process is the shallowness of my faith.  The more I go on, the more I doubt that God will heal.  I know.  I've only probably had 18-20 actual people in this experiment that I've prayed for, but I'm starting to get casual about it.  I'm thinking if it took some other folks upwards of 700-800 people before they saw healing, do I actually think I'm going to start seeing at 20 or so?  My mind says no.  But why not?  Is God limited by numbers?  Are numbers the source of healing or God?  How little is my faith.  The problem is it creates a casual attitude instead of a contending one. 

Day 27: Healing of the Heart

For Day 27 I didn't find anybody so I prayed for someone I knew who needs deep healing of the heart.  The spirit of rejection is so strong from wounds that continue to happen.  Healing of the heart in this scenario would be far greater than any physical miracle.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Day 26: Out of Mind

It's a lot easier to remember who you've prayed for when they are in the flesh in front of you, but yesterday I prayed for healing for something and I can't remember.  I'm still in the dry spell of finding people.  I'm continuing to read healing in Scripture that I've forgotten about or haven't read in awhile.  I think my eyes are more attuned.  Maybe I will find someone tonight in flesh and blood.  That's the ideal anyway. 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Day 25: Pray On

I've been hitting a dry spell of finding people to pray for.  I was going through people today earlier and realized I'd already prayed for a bunch of them.  Or maybe I'm not being bold enough.  Regardless, I was walking the neighborhood tonight picking up aluminum cans again and decided to pray for healing in the neighborhood.  I live in a quite ethnic part of town and it is quite a hodgepodge which I really love--Hispanics, African-Americans, Caucasians, the elderly and the young.  But I know that there is always a need to heal among the races and so that was my prayer tonight. May there be a healing of relationships past ethnic lines. 

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Day 24: Prayer Requests

On the days I don't find anyone to pray for it forces me to get creative.  I had just written a post called "harder than I thought" and now am erasing it.  Yes, it is harder than I think, but I have to get outside the box.  My box is something along the lines of 'laying my hands on the sick and praying for them.'  Ideally that's what I would like because then maybe I could see if they were healed or not.  But now it's late and my list has run dry.  But then I remember...

I remember on Facebook the prayer request for Stephen Hinkle, the grandson of someone I know who was in a car accident.  His life is hanging in the balance.  Do I need to be there in person to pray for healing?  Does God heal any less from a distance?  No.

Then I remember John Campbell, another person on Facebook whom a friend is asking for prayer.  He's got a head injury and his life is hanging in a critical balance.  Do I need to be there in person to pray?  Absolutely not.

When someone I know is sick or when I'm not doing well, do I need to hear their voice or feel their physical touch to be prayed for?  Absolutely not.  Healing is beyond this.  God is beyond this.  I don't know why that for this experiment I created a box.  But it's time the box gets smashed.

So tonight John and Stephen will get my prayer time.   May God heal and restore these young men.

Day 23: Healing of the Nations

I didn't seek out/find someone to pray for (I was so exhausted I'm not sure I wasn't getting sick).  But  I did take some time to pray for Algeria.  This nation in northern Africa has seen literal rivers of bloodshed.  If there's any nation that has needed healing it is Algeria.  I wasn't even connecting this to the 40 days, but I took time to pray for this country that God's healing would cleanse and redeem this country from the hundreds of thousands of lives that have been brutally lost in the most sickening of ways.  And prayer is the beginning of bringing healing to this nation.  God cares for the healing of the nations. After all, he is the healing Balm of Gilead.

Rev 22:  Then the angel showed me the river of the water of life, as clear as crystal, flowing from the throne of God and of the Lamb down the middle of the great street of the city. On each side of the river stood the tree of life, bearing twelve crops of fruit, yielding its fruit every month. And the leaves of the tree are for the healing of the nations.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Day 22: Repeat

I know these have been short and sweet but I've been working and I'm tired and beat.  Anyway, someone I have prayed for previously still isn't better and so we went at it again.  Can there be too much prayer?

Day 21: Easy Sundays

Maybe it's because of the Sabbath but Sundays are easy--church seems to be full of sick folks and folks with pain.  But before I even asked around someone mentioned they had back pain.  Prayed for him and hope he gets better. 

Day 20: Myself?

Again I was at a loss of who to pray for when I thought, why not myself?  Earlier I had smashed my foot and had a large hematoma on top of my foot.  If God healed, I would certainly know it.  So I prayed.  Nothing happened.  So continued to pray again.  Still nothing.  Going to have to continue to work at this.  :)

Day 19: Unconventional

So tonight I had run out of folks so I did something unconventional, I prayed for the kitty!  He is a stray who has a heart condition that causes him difficulty in regulating his body temperature.  Why not?  Is he not too a living creature that God can touch?

Friday, May 4, 2012

Day 18: What does it look like?

I discovered someone who had feet and knee problems and as a group we prayed for her.  I was thinking during the time, what does it mean to "heal" someone vs. just pray for them?  Is it our sense of expectation?  Because so often we just pray and go on, not contending for healing.  What if we actually contended for it?

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Day 17 Reflections

When I pray to God with my concerns which include health, I just have this assumption and expectation that He will hear me and take my needs seriously.  Why?  Because He is a good God, a loving God and a caring God.  When someone presents me with their needs, do I deserve to be any less like God?

Where the beer cans are

Tonight I was out again collecting beer cans for Bibles and I hit a good area.  Filled up a Wal-mart sack which isn't a whole lot but when you're used to finding 5-6, finding 30 or so is a good day.  But it was also kind of interesting.  Obviously where I was at was a rough part of town.  The ditches were filled with trash.  Strangely enough though there were more fast food sacks and containers than anything.  It was a voluminous amote!   It filled the ditches and bushes even in remote places.  It's almost if some closet bingers were finding some clandestine place to do the deed.  And when I think of it, what is more deadly?  The beer folks are drinking, or the fast food?  Let me give you a clue:  many people have experimented with McDonald's hamburgers to see how long it takes before they go bad.  After 12 years, the verdict is still out (click to read more).   Without question the quality of our food and our penchant for eating it causes more death in our country and around the world than almost anything else.  We're digging our graves with our teeth.  

Day 17: The Stomach Bug

I woke up this morning and prayed he would send someone to me today for prayer.  He did and I'm glad for that.  Someone who was feeling cruddy all over so I took a quick second to pray for him. 

I still sometimes wonder how 23 more days of sick people can still be found.  Thankfully the Lord has been bringing them to me or pointing them out.  Although I'm still trying to discern if it is the Lord, me, or just being open to people's needs.  Regardless, we'll see what the remaining 23 days holds!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Day 16: Healing takes different faces

Tonight I kind of had an inkling that I might pray for someone but in a different way.  I'm not sure if it was the Lord or not.  I wondered if it would just be a general prayer for sick people I read about.  Or something different.

Then I went on my walk again to continue to collect beer cans alongside the road and I was listening to a podcast on cultural differences.  It is by Sarah Lanier whose book and teaching I think is the best on understanding culture.  A little while later it made me think of one culture in particular that I've had a particular difficult time with.  I had a roommate from this country whose attitude and behavior was very offensive to me.  Then I went on a ministry trip with another woman from this same country and we clashed terribly the whole time.  It was this latter person I began to think about.

The reality is that I was a total jerk--arrogant, demanding, caring me for my own desire to be respected than to actually be the one who shows respect.  I was a big part of the problem.  And the cultures clashed too.  It was bad. 

I was thinking of her and also thinking of who to pray for when I thought that healing takes different forms.  In fact, I really believe a lot of sickness is rooted in anger and bitterness of heart.  I wondered if she still feels bitterness towards me?  For me I know that while I don't feel anger and bitterness, I still don't have kind thoughts towards this culture.  

So I began to search for her on the internet to see if I could communicate with her.  I found where she lives but there's no address (unless you want to pay a strong fee).  I found her page on Facebook but she doesn't seem to check it.  But for now that's what I decided to do.  I wrote her a note, explained what a jerk I was (not much needing to explain that but confession is good for the soul), and I asked her to forgive me.  I hope she does.  I hope she has healed from that time and season. 

Maybe I didn't pray for a physical ailment to be healed, but tonight I prayed for someone's spirit to mend.  I think this too is a part of the healing process.