There are days in life when you just have to stop and watch what the Lord is doing in the lives of the people around you. A few years back I experienced just such a day.
As a church, we were celebrating the baptism of two individuals and the Lord’s work of salvation in their lives. I stood in the crowd, with camera in hand, taking in all the activity that was surrounding me. The question plaguing me was “How can I illustrate through photography the movement of the Lord in the lives of people?”
Grasping at the Ever-Changing Moments
So often in international church work, it’s easy to come to the table with strategies and projected projects that will blow the socks off your people or woo individuals from the various neighborhoods into your services. However, may I offer another thought into the mix to be considered as one tackles the topic of international church work?
Learning to be a spectator as you watch God work among the people.
Soaking in the Sacred
There was a point during the baptism when our church members stood at the water’s edge watching the event take place where I just needed to stop.
This was a sacred moment. A moment amongst hundreds of thousands of moments where John and I have been seeking to serve here in southern France.
Learning to Watch
Don’t you find that sometimes in our fast-paced society you just want to grasp and hold on to people and experiences for as long as you can? Do you find yourself wanting to slow down time in order to soak in the enjoyable experience of just being together with people you love?
I think that possibly that is one of the better reasons for our world’s over-the-top obsession with photography! We desire to capture our special moments in an image in order to linger over them for years to come. To be able to document, as well as, to treasure those memorable times is something I love to do, too!
I absolutely love to be able to obtain that communicative photo for Instagram. I don’t enjoy the art of photography to impress in any way. No, for me it’s a way to be able to linger, remember, and possibly in an abstract way, to hold people in my heart for when they move out of my life.
Yet, here I was on our baptismal day at the Mediterranean Sea. I looked out over the people that were surrounding me – people from South Sudan to England and from Indonesia to Vancouver, Canada. People who are just passing through my life for a season.
So I stopped. I stopped looking for that great photo shot to express the day. I stopped fussing with the food table to make sure it was replenished.
And I just took in that sacred moment.
A Joyful Spectator
This was God at work and I was given the opportunity to witness it.
As John and I continue to try to live & serve intentionally here in France, we lift our hands up praising the God who is alive today and is still moving in the hearts of people. Yet, we also want to keep those hands opened. Opened – so as to allow God to move people in and out of our lives as He sees fit … so that His Kingdom can be advanced around the world.
To be honest, as the day progressed I did continue to look for that photo to express the day and I did continue to fuss with the food table. (No big surprise!)
This is the sacredness of international church ministry.