“Remember the LORD your God, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons and daughters, your wives and your homes.”
Nehemiah 4
“While children go hungry, as they do now, I’ll fight; while there is a poor lost girl upon the street,
I’ll fight – I’ll fight to the very end.”
William Booth
I had met him before, last November, and he was then in no better a state than when we found him today. Walking into his home, a thatched hut no more than eight feet by eight feet, I recognised Dancel immediately, a 30-something man bent arthritically in the foetal position on the mud floor. I could see every contour of his ribcage through his wasted skin, which was covered in leprous sores. He hadn’t eaten in days, was far too weak to stand, and so his home became to him an unbearably smelly prison cell from which he was unable to get any relief. Having been long since abandoned by his family, I couldn’t imagine when he might last have seen visitors; perhaps not since we had met him five months before. Holding his hand for the second time, offering him all the same encouragements, prayers and sentimentalities I had before, was haunting. You always hope that your prayers will be an axis upon which someone’s life will turn; that you will leave a trail of lives transformed behind the moments that you encountered a situation. God knows I hope that’s the way this thing works, when it’s working well. But when it doesn’t happen that way, when faith toes the line of doubt and hope the line of despair, you find yourself undone before the hanging pretences of a faith you thought unshakeable. For the second time, I left David’s home in just the same state in which I had entered it.
I don’t know if in my whole life I can recall doubting whether God exists, but that night, sitting on the ground outside my own home, I'll admit to wondering whether perhaps he was a god of love without power, or a god of power without love. Either would make sense of a world in which Dancel exists. In that place, lost in the desert clutching as best we can for answers in the dark, we would do better simply to make a choice: give up on God, or give up to God. I prayed that night the only thing I could express of an honest heart, “God, where are you for Dancel?” And what happened I can’t explain. Whether it was a voice over my shoulder or a whisper in my soul I’m not even sure, but from wherever it was spoke it said to me, clearly as ever I’ve heard a voice in my ear, “Where are you for Dancel?”
Sometimes I feel like I’m just subjected to life. Sometimes I feel like life is subject to me. Really, both are true. Life is a series of choices we make in response to things over which we had no choice. You can’t guess what obstacles, what hills or valleys, sorrows or joys, will meet you as you walk the long road through the desert. That’s what makes it feel unfair. I can’t wrap my head around the reality that life doesn’t bend to the choices I make of it; there is only so much of me that is the sum of the choices that I have made, the rest I didn’t choose at all. Some would assume that Dancel is where he is because of the choices he made in the past, for which he’s now reaping the consequence. But he isn’t. And wandering in the wild confusion of life’s unfairness, I don’t hear the answer I want, but something different. The realisation, freeing and inviting and demanding all at once, that it wasn’t Dancel’s choices that brought him to this place, but it is mine that might lead him out.
Life meets us before we have the chance to invite it. It is a gift that nobody ever asked for. Some even think that were they to have been given the choice, they wouldn’t have taken it. But that’s the way it is, and I’m learning that God doesn’t ask our consultation before making us for one reason.
Because this life is not a gift to us only, but to all in whose life we were destined to make an impact.
We are not in the desert for ourselves alone. We were put here to fight for those who, for even a moment, have lost the capacity to fight for themselves. We were led here to meet those broken by the way side, and to give them strength enough to stand; to discover that this life is bigger than us, that our footprint will long outlast us and that our impact far outreaches us. Not to discover that is to deny the world the debt you owe it. There are some who have been so robbed of the right to offer a voice in what becomes of their lives that now, they need our choices to make a difference, to afford them strength enough only to stand and begin to walk again. And the God who leads us shoulder to shoulder through the desert would ask of us, “Where are you for them? Because wherever you are I will be too.”
Some people only need to discover that Jesus yet speaks over them,
I have a plan for you, a plan to prosper you and not to harm you; a plan to give you a hope and a future.
Jesus doesn’t need me to fight for him, he’s already strong enough without me. But he invites me to fight at his side, sold out to a cause worth my all; to seek and to save that which was lost.
Life. Love. Hope. Health and wholeness. The freedom to dream.
To claim back what was taken captive, to be a light of life to a world lost in darkness, is the gift for which life was given us. For Dancel I pray only that I’ll have courage enough to give it all. Sometimes I’m the first to walk away from the fight, but in my better moments I take up the courage to be the man that God sees in me. One who would walk within an inch of hell to draw Dancel back. One who would spend every breath to see him loved. Because there is a next place for Dancel, not in heaven only but here too. There is for Dancel a life redeemed and renewed in God. There is for him a life that in all its beauty and freedom and light and love is only a dim reflection of what is to come.
For that I’ll fight, just as we have to fight for anything that carries a worth greater and more lasting than itself.
Strengthen the feeble hands, steady the knees that give way,
Say to those with fearful hearts: “Be strong, do not fear,
Your God will come...he will come to save you.”
- Isaiah 35 -