Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Cuba Mission Trip 2013


So, about a week ago, I came back from a mission trip to Cuba. That was my first time to ever go there, considering it's a bit complicated. But we ended up taking three families, making our a team a total of 10 people. And it was incredible.

We landed in Havana, Cuba on Saturday, July 13th, and drove about 2 hours to Matanzas, the city where we were going to be working the most. That's where Tony Fernandez and his church is. Tony was basically the one in charge of our work, and we couldn't have been more blessed.

We got to ride in the church bus, which in Cuba they call a guagua. The church found the guagua practically destroyed and rebuilt it in order to transport members of the church (and even strangers who just need a ride) to activities.


That night, one of our team, Steve Austin, got to direct the church choir. And let me tell you, they are fantastic. There's not that many of them, and yet their voices fill whatever space they're singing in. They sing with so much passion that you feel every word. Being a choir girl myself, it was definitely a treat hearing them sing and watching them rehearse. They ended up doing four performances while we were there.

For four days (Monday-Thursday), our team went around to four different locations and did a VBS for the kids there. Our theme was prayer, so we told the story of Daniel in the Lions' Den. We would tell them the story, and then they would get to act it out. They loved it; we even had little lion heads for the lions!


After that, they split up into three groups. One would make a puppet that was praying. Another would write a letter to God saying thank you for... well, they filled out that part. And the last group got to do different activities with tennis balls. All four days were a success, and we had great turnouts. All the kids loved every part of the VBS.




After that last VBS day, our team got to take a little break and head to the beach. I can't even put into words how beautiful the water was. I mean, just look at it!


So yes, I kind of enjoyed the beach. It was a nice break after four very full days. 

That Friday night, the youth conference started. The great thing about the conference was that our whole team was involved in something. The teens were all either teaching a class or helping someone else teach, and the adults either had sermons to preach or also helped with the classes.

I was very honored to be asked to teach a class about theatre and how the young people in Cuba could use that gift to share their faith. I was extremely nervous going in, considering this was my first time teaching and it had to be in Spanish. Luckily, my mom was there to help me out. And it went perfectly. The class was very attentive, and they participated in my activities. They even got to do a couple of skits. The first one was a pantomime, which is a skit with no talking. They all did great on that one! We ran out of time, so they didn't all get to do the second skit. But I had students coming up to me and saying thank you, asking for my email, taking pictures with me. It was a great experience.



The last night we were there, we got the chance to serve dinner to the elderly members of the community. Tony and the church usually do this, and we asked if we could do it one time before we left. We got to go around and say hi to everyone, give them each a plate full of food, and there was even a live band playing. Eventually, some of the choir people got up and started singing, and then the funniest thing happened. All the elderly people got up and started dancing! They were doing the cha cha and forming a conga line. It was so infectious that all of us joined in.


One of the things I learned in Cuba is that, even though they barely have anything and the government controls everything, they are so willing to give. Not one person had any hostility because a group of Americans were trying to help them out. They welcomed us with open arms and friendly smiles, and shared their joy and faith with us proudly. I saw so much love there; pure, unfailing love.

I loved this trip particularly because, even though I was one of the youngest in the team, I was still considered important. I had a reason for being there, and everyone else knew that, too. We young people got told so many times how we were the main characters in this story. The thing that made me realize that the most was when two of our teens, Daniel and Daniel (yeah, weird, I know), got to baptize three young boys. They were so inspired when they saw us four young people coming and participating in everything that they wanted the same type of faith that we have. One of those Daniels is my older brother, and it was a very touching and memorable experience watching him baptize people for the first time.




I really can't express how much I enjoyed and needed this trip. My dream is to be a theatre teacher, and I got my first glimpse of that life, and it was amazing. I met some of the most loving people, and the most adorable and fun children. This trip to Cuba was a true blessing, and I hope I get to go back next year.

Sunday, July 7, 2013

"Always."

So, I was sitting in my room, trying to figure out what to talk about for a senior-led devo at my church. I decided to just go with something that I knew really well. Which is how I came to the conclusion that I could use Harry Potter.

Not the whole series, of course. Just one certain character. Severus Snape.

Allow me to set the stage (sorry, I’m an actress). Snape was basically Voldemort’s right-hand man. He was considered his most faithful servant, considering his role as a double agent. He pretended to be on the good side when actually he wasn’t.... or so it seemed, until the end of the last book, where we find out that he’s actually a good guy pretending to be a bad guy... who was pretending to be a good guy. Confusing, right?

Well, in the final book, he gives Harry some of his memories right before he dies. Harry, desperate for anything he can use to end the battle going on, takes them to Dumbledore’s study to see them. The memories reveal a shocking detail: Snape was on the good side the entire time. Everything he did was because of one person.

Lily Potter.

Yes, it turns out that he was in love with Harry’s mother ever since they first met when they were children. She became his best friend, but she never loved him back. Lily ended up marrying James Potter. Snape, however, never got over her. And so, when Voldemort tries to kill Harry as a baby and Lily sacrifices herself, Snape is absolutely crushed. He had begged Dumbledore to protect her, but none of them could do anything about it. Dumbledore then asks Snape to help him protect Harry from further threats. Despite his disgust for the boy, Snape agrees because Lily died to save her son. It’s what she would have wanted.

So, to get to the point I’m trying to make. Like I mentioned in my last post, at camp we talked a lot about how much God loves us. We can never fully understand how much. But it’s not a one-way street. Yes, God loves us, he chases after us, he wants us. But we should want him, too.

Just like Snape. Everything he did after Lily’s death was because of her death. He loved her so much that he didn’t want her sacrifice to be in vain. He protected the boy who looked so much like a person he had hated, all because of love. He risked his life, risked being hated by practically everyone around him. All because of love.

And that’s how we should be. We should love God so much that we want to do everything for him. Everything we do should be because Jesus died for us. We should love him so much that we don’t want his death to go to waste. Like it says in 2 Corinthians 5:13-15, “If we are ‘out of our mind’, as some say, it is for God; if we are in our right mind, it is for you. For Christ’s love compels us, because we are in our right mind, and therefore all died. And he died for us all, that those who live should no longer live for themselves but for him who died for them and was raised again.”

Obviously, if you’ve read Harry Potter (or seen the movies), there are some things that Snape does that I don’t agree with. There’s one thing that sticks out to me that goes along with this. When he agrees to protect Harry, he tells Dumbledore that no one can know about his part in the plan. I think we should be the exact opposite. Matthew 5:16 tells us, “In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven.” We shouldn’t hide our love and devotion for God. He tells us that we are the light of the world. And what does light do? Shine!

In 1 Corinthians 13, it talks about what love is, like “Love is patient, love is kind... it always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres.” The last verse of chapter 13 states, “And now these three remain: faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of these is love.” In my Bible, there are notes at the bottom of each page, like devotional thoughts. Here’s a little bit of what it says about that last verse:

“Paul wrote that love endures forever... Love is the greatest of all human qualities and is an attribute of God himself. Love involves unselfish service to others. Faith is the foundation and content of God’s message; hope is the attitude and focus; love is action. When faith and hope are in line, you are free to love completely because you understand how God loves.”

I think Snape is a perfect example of what love should look like. He performed unselfish service to others because he loved Lily. He had faith in her sacrifice because he loved her. He had hope because he loved her. He did everything because he loved.

There’s a scene that was perfectly written and fantastically done in the movie where Harry is watching a memory of Snape and Dumbledore talking. Dumbledore tells Snape that Harry has to die in order for Voldemort to be defeated. Snape is understandably frustrated; I mean, come on, he was told by Dumbledore to protect this boy! I love the line where he says, “You’ve been raising him like a pig for slaughter!” Dumbledore’s response is, “Don’t tell me now that you’ve grown to care for the boy.” Snape just looks at him in disbelief, and performs his Patronus, which, if you don’t know, is a spell unique to each individual person and takes the shape of an animal. Snape’s is a doe; just like Lily’s. Snape basically told Dumbledore, “No. I did everything for her.” Dumbledore then asks, “After all this time?” And then Snape utters one word.

“Always.”

That’s how we should be. People should question our devotion to God. We should let our lights shine, be so in love with God that people know exactly who we follow and why. 

So, my point here is, yes, God loves us even more than we could ever understand, but we need to love him, too. Let everything you do be for him, so that when someone asks you, “You’re still following that ‘God’ of yours?”, you can proudly respond: “Always.”