Friday, May 2, 2008

God's Healing for Others ~ by Kate Osborn


My Dad found this article in a Christian magazine...I think it was Turning Point. He read it to me over the phone because he knew that Gary and I have been thinking on the same lines of opening up our home for ministry to the international students in our area. I thought I would share the article with my readers and I would love to read your comments. I know it's a long article but it's worth the read.

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My mother's car hesitated at the end of the road for just a moment before turning out of sight. Through the rear window, I saw the outline of her hand waving overly enthusiastically, and I waved back, hoping I looked more confident then I felt. We both knew we were faking, but neither of us wanted to pull down the other's defenses. My new freshman roommates were gathering upstairs in the dorm, and as the car disappeared round the corner, I turned away from the chaos I had known to the chaos that awaited me at my first semester in college.

I had been a normal kid from a normal middle-class home. My parents valued curfews, education, and paying taxes. But, in my early teenage years, things started to go wrong, and they went through a very messy divorce; suddenly I was a kid from a broken home. Although I was on the Honor Roll and active in my church youth group, I disassociated myself from my parents, and on my fifteenth birthday, I moved out to live with friends.

Six months later, my mother and I relocated together from the Chicago suburbs to her native England, and we spent much time in prayer and counseling to restore our broken relationship. Over the next five years, God reconciled us fully, just in time for me to move out again to attend college in a city at the other end of the country.

Like many other students, I attended a church with no formal college ministry. Instead, neighborhood small groups provided weekly fellowship and welcomed new students. I signed up to visit a small group and met in a house several streets away; it was hosted by Chris and Judi and their two girls, Rachel and Harriet. On that first evening, Judi opened the door, offered me a cup of tea and a cookie, and the girls crawled up into my lap.

Over the coming weeks and months, and for the next seven years I lived in that city, they also opened the door of their family to me. Through my observation of Chris and Judi interacting as a couple and parenting their children, God began to teach me about His concepts of family. Before long, I began to catch a glimpse of what my own future family could be like.

I didn't need Chris, Judy and the girls to stop their own lives in order to help me; I just needed to be invited in to be a part of the normal chaos of a functioning family. I learned an argument doesn't mean someone is going to leave, and a bad day doesn't mean a divorce is coming. I learned families can survive hard times.

After our initial meeting, I started to spend more and more time there, and over the years, many of my friends were also greatly blessed through the openness of their family. We often just hung out together- I would study for exams, help the girls with homework, go on outings and run errands. As the girls grew up, we would discuss boys and relationships. Eventually, Rachel and Harriet were my bridesmaids, and today I am pleased to still call them friends.

How did Chris and Judy live their lives in such a way that God could use them to bring healing to me? How can I do it for others, now that I'm married and settled in my own home? How can you do it for college-age kids in your area? Here are some simple starting points, gleaned from my real-life experience with their family.

To start with, be willing. Host a mixed age small group; invite hungry students over for lunch after church; get to know your babysitters. Strike up a conversation- all students are happy to talk about what degree they're pursuing and where they are from, and they are also grateful for a free meal. Once you get started, if you're unsure what to do next try following these three principles. Then watch to see what God has in store as He uses you and your family to bring healing to others.

Don't wait until your family is "perfect."
Chris and Judi argued, the girls bickered, appliances broke, people made mistakes. They just got on with doing "family" as best as they knew how, and they remained real and honest with me and each other throughout. Don't put opportunities on hold-others could miss a chance to receive healing if we are fearful our family doesn't match the ideal.

Be available, but know when to say no.
Judi was a stay-at-home mom, and due to a chronic illness, she was in the house more often then not. As such, she was available almost 24 hours a day. She made it clear when we were welcome to be there and when it was time to go. I loved the freedom of knowing that I wasn't impinging on their family time or generally being a nuisance. She never "entertained" us- when the day was over, she'd say, "We're going to bed; you're all welcome to stay. Lock the door on your way out." At other times, when she or her family needed a rest, she would simply say, "Right, time to go!" Her honesty and forthrightness removed any fear, resentment, or manipulation on either side.

Be intentional but not structured.
Jud never sat me down with a formal discipleship schedule or list of areas for personal growth. She and her family just lived life in front of me, making the most of teachable moments as they arose, just as she did with her own kids. On occasion I needed her or Chris in more definite ways- to listen when I cried, to advise me, to pray with me- but it was not primarily a discipleship or mentoring relationship. They simply allowed me in to be a part of their family life.

Now, almost ten years later, my husband and i are expecting our first child. As we form our own family, we are so grateful for the role models we had in Chris and Judi, and for the healing that happened in my own life as a result of God's work. Because of this hospitable couple, I have some sense of the potential in God's concept of family, and some idea of how to make that happen in my own household. Psalm 68:6 tells us that God makes a home for the lonely. I was the lonely" and God placed me in Chris and Judi's family. Now, I want to be a part of making it happen for others. I invite you to join me in the challenge and privilege of our opening homes and our lives: Let's let God use us, imperfect as we are, to bring wholeness to others.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

In deep thought and preperation...


I may have lost all of my readers by now because it has been so long since I posted anything here. All I can say is that I've been spending the past few months in deep thought and soul searching. And most of these ideas and thoughts running through my mind and soul and ones I just can not share with anyone right now. But, I can assure you that God is doing a work in my heart. He has planted a seed there for a desire for ministry like none I've ever been involved in before. Right now...we are just in the preparation and waiting stages. But, I believe God has great things in store for my husband and myself. God spoke to me last Sunday and assured me that He had planted this seed in my heart and He would prepare and provide so that we may be able to complete it. This morning my pastor's wife spoke from her own experience of a time when it looked like they would never be in ministry again and they surrendered it all to God and now she can look back on God's faithfulness and how he prepared and provided. This reconfirmed everything in my heart. So, now I am laying all of my desires, goals, plans and wishes at Jesus feet and will wait while He prepares us for whatever lies ahead.

I am so glad I can trust Him with my life. :) Now...that's real PEACE!

Thursday, January 17, 2008

This world is not my home...


This world is not my home

I'm just passing through

my treasures are laid up somewhere beyond the blue

the angels beckon me from Heaven's open door

and I can't feel at home in this world anymore.


This song has been going through my head over the past few days as I become more and more filled with despair over the political situation in America and around the world. To pull myself out of this horrible funk I've had to readjust my focus on the fact that this sin filled world is not my home and I'm only passing through. I can only rejoice in that fact and try to make a difference while I'm here. A friend of a friend recently started a blog called Only the Title Page which I recommend for reading.


Peace is also the theme that has been running through my thought process. And the scripture that I referred to in my last post is now stuck on my mirror so that it becomes ingrained into my mind.


Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. John 14:27



Notice that the scripture reads - "not as the world giveth". I think when most people think of peace they think of the peace marches and trying to make peace between countries so that we can live in a peaceful world. I'm sure I'm not the only one sick of this war. But, the peace that God speaks of is that inner peace from the Holy Spirit which fills you when everything around you is falling apart.


These things I have spoken unto you, that in me ye might have peace. In the world ye shall have tribulation: but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world. John 16:33


I'm so glad that even when it looks like the human race is going to do away with it's own self and I see nothing but tribulation in the future....God has overcome the world. God is still in control.