Feeling alone when you're surrounded by people--it's not a
pleasant feeling.
It happens to alcoholics who sit in bar after bar looking for
that special connection with a real person, but only finding it in a bottle. It
happens to the introvert who attends event after event, always staying on the
fringes, the outside, looking on but not being a part of. It happens to the
church hopper, the person that tries church after church looking for
something, but never staying long enough to find it. And it happens to those
who, through no fault of their own, are placed in difficult situations. They all
lose hope. They lose all hope.
But there is a cure, a remedy for hopelessness and some
lucky people find it, or it finds them. God is still at work calling people to him, calling peoples too him.
You see, the cure is not a pill or a shot. It's not a session with one
of the TV therapists, or a talk show hostess who invites people to share their
sad story and then gives them a package of things, usually including a $izable
check, that are meant to solve the
problem. No, the solution is not a thing, it's a person. A person by the name
of Jesus.
Shiuli's parents arranged her marriage, a common practice in
some parts of the world. At 14 she was a bride, by the age of 21 she had three children.
She was also a widow. A lingering
illness stole her husband from her, stole a father from her young daughters. A difficult
situation for anyone to be in, but it gets more complicated. To find work, Tarun had earlier decided that he and his
child bride would move to the Capital city of Katmandu, a city of 700,000
people. With her husband working, and she staying at home to care for the children,
and then, when he got sick, her husband, she had no time to make friends. Tarun
died, she had no family nearby, and no friends to whom to turn for help.
It looked like a hopeless situation, and then it got still worse, one of her daughters got
sick, and died. Hopelessness.
In Nepal, as in several other countries in that area of the world, there are several religions to choose from, and
Shiuli decided to try them all, but nothing seemed to help, there was still no
hope, until some missionaries stopped by and talked to her about Jesus. I don't know if Hinduism was one of the religions she tried, but I've
often said that it's fairly easy to talk to Hindus about Jesus, they quickly
accept him as another of their many gods, they'll pray to him for some things,
but they have other gods to whom they regularly pray for prosperity, good
health, good luck, good jobs, and well you get the picture.
But these women missionaries made an impact on Shiuli, they
talked about being followers of Jesus and invited her to join them. They shared
the hope of the one, true, and eternal God, and at long last this hopeless
young woman was able to find hope. She has found companionship, and in Jesus has
found what she was looking for. As part
of a GFA church she has friends, fellowship, and community. She's growing in
her faith walk, and she's no longer alone in the crowd. Read more about
Shiuli's story here.
A caveat here is that there are thousands of women like
Shiuli, arranged marriages are only a part of it. Some of these women are
widowed, divorced, or abandoned. They have children to care for, and because of
cultural taboos they often can't or won't speak with male missionaries. Shiuli
was lucky enough to ave women missionaries, with God's help find her and
introduce her to Jesus.
Pray for more women to be called to the mission field in
Nepal. Visit Gospel For Asia's website for more
information on other ways in which you can help.
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