Last week was full of Nea Zoi. They have been in the process
of moving and so on Tuesday we cleaned the carpets at the new office. The
carpets were covered with dust and bits of plaster from construction. The vacuum
cleaner broke just as we arrived. Martha, the director of Nea Zoi was on her
hands and knees sweeping up the debris with a dust broom. Even though they were
going to bring a vacuum the next day and someone was coming to clean the
carpet, that’s where she was. So that’s what we did, because it was what needed
doing. God graciously gave me a servant’s heart, and I was surprised at the
end, looking back, that I didn’t question the job we were given. Yes, someone
was going to bring a vacuum cleaner the next day. Yes, it was incredibly slow
sweeping the carpets. Yes, it was hot. But that’s what needed doing and it was
just as important to the ministry at Nea Zoi than if we were going on an
outreach.
The next day, Wednesday, we went out on outreach. It was
very different than the first time. The first time, all I could see was the
pain, the brokenness, and the oppression. It was good for me to see and it
broke my heart and made me ache for the healing and restoration that only Jesus
can bring. But that was all I saw. I just saw the ugliness of it all. I hated
that they had perverted the symbol of light into something that signalize an
open brothel. But Wednesday was different. I went and I saw everything that I
saw the first time but I saw it through the eyes of hope. I was so confident in
the power of the Gospel, and so confident in the healing and restoration that
God is doing that instead of my heart aching, I had peace. I was able to have
peace, even standing outside a brothel, because I knew that God was working and
using the conversations that the teams were having to further the work of
Christ in the girl’s lives. That day the teams of two that went into the
brothels were able to have long conversations, and many of the girls or madams
asked for Bibles. Also, instead of feeling sick and being filled with hatred as
I watched the men go in and out, I prayed for them.
Praying changes everything.
After the outreach when we were having a debrief, someone mentioned a man named
Yanis. He owns more than 5 brothels and is also involved in trafficking. At
first I didn’t think much about it, just another brothel owner. But then I
started thinking about how much of a difference it would make if he came to
know Christ. It would dramatically affect not only the girls, but also that
area. I started thinking about Paul’s conversion and the testament to the power
of the Gospel that it changes hearts and lives of people that are in complete
opposition to it.
So I’m praying for Yanis, the brothel owner. I’m praying that
God will melt his stony heart, just like He melted Paul’s. Just like He melted
mine.
Thursday after a long day of moving the Nea Zoi office,
which meant carrying boxes up and down four flights of stairs, we decided to go
on the Friday morning outreach to Nigerian girls. Most of these girls have been
trafficked and they don’t have papers, so they can’t work in the brothels.
Instead they work on the street. For years they had all been working on a
street named Scratous, 30-60 girls all along one street. The outreach team had
been praying for years for God to do something on Scatous. We walked down the
street at 4:30am on Friday morning, and it was completely empty. No one was
there, and the hotels that they would use were locked up because they had
closed down. The police have started to crack down on prostitution on the
street which meant that the girls have scattered throughout the city. It is
much harder to find them now to do outreach but God answers prayer, and He did
something on Scratous. We drove around and were able to meet and talk with a
few girls. Some of them had never heard of Nea Zoi and one girl wanted to talk
with Rosie about getting a job because she wanted to leave, and several of the
girls asked for Bibles. Now I have names and faces to pray for, it makes it
real to meet these girls and talk with them, even if it’s just to offer them
ice cream or water. We got back around 6am and before I went back to sleep, I
sat out on the roof of the church and watched the sun come up over Hadrian’s
Arch. It was slow and gradual and then all of a sudden, the sky was radiant and
bursting with light. It was healing to have the light wash over me after experiencing
the darkness. God is light and He cannot be kept back. He comes out with force,
with power, with radiance and beauty.
“God is light, in Him
there is no darkness at all”- 1 John 1:5
God’s resurrection power cannot be held back by the
darkness, the darkness does not have any power. God is working, healing,
restoring, and bringing His people to Himself. Even though the girls have
scattered, God’s love and mercy shall pursue those that are His to the ends of
the earth.
Hi Caroline, I've enjoyed reading your blog and keeping up with your work. I'm praying with you. I will be at debrief in a couple of weeks and will look forward to seeing you/hearing more then. Take care, Kim Vaughn
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