Testimony 3
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We had teamed with a Sudanese refugee pastor to minister to local Sudanese children. Although this pastor was safely in the U. S., he had two daughters who were still refugees in Zimbabwe.
And despite being young refugees themselves, the oldest daughter had just begun an orphanage for other Sudanese children in Zimbabwe.
She started the orphanage because Sudanese kids living in Zimbabwe's refugee camps were being asked for sexual favors in exchange for food by those running the camps. (This was confirmed in a Newsweek article.)
The Pastor's daughter had removed the orphans from the camp and had committed to raising them herself. Now, however, the daughter was being evicted from her cold flat and needed to buy a home - as no property owners would rent to her with such a large number of children.
At the same time, white property owners living in Zimbabwe were being expelled by the government. So a suitable property owned by a missionary was put on the market for just the transfer costs.
Wanting to help the Pastor's daughter, we converted our savings to a certified check and used Western Union to affect the money transfer. But, someone beat us to the punch and acquired the low cost property before we could get her the money.
The Pastor's daughter was now confronted with what to do next. After considerable prayer, she decided to put the existing funds down on another property and depend on God for the balance. A large balance. A balance we didn't have. Within in a real estate contract that expired in a few weeks. Such that if she didn't raise the balance, she'd lose the entire deposit.
We had some life insurance cash value, which we had redeemed, but we lacked all that was needed. Despite our effort to raise additional funds, we were unsuccessful. In anguish, we began praying.
One option would be for us to take out a loan. But the problem was, we were in the middle of a relocation ourselves, and we had our own home purchase to finalize. On our mortgage application, we had indicated that we held no other loans.
While praying, I confessed I was concerned about getting the mortgage, about getting ahead, and about not having enough savings to pay for college for our four children. But the thought God put in my mind was, "You're worried about getting ahead, they're worried about surviving."
Convicted in my prayers that the girls needed our help, we went to People's Bank and took out a loan to supplement our life insurance cash value. That evening, we brought a certified check to Western Union. But this time, we were told Western Union couldn't accept the certified check like they had done the first time. Apparently the first check they accepted was in error - their policy required just cash. The transaction was thwarted.
In church the next morning, we heard a message about not going into debt and how God wanted us to depend upon Him. We became convicted that we shouldn't have taken out the loan. So we decided to return the funds to the bank and get out of the loan.
Later that night, I explained to the Sudanese pastor that we had borrowed the money, but that the payment was thwarted, such that we were returning the funds. He and I both cried.
I became convinced I should try to get the daughter's money back. I spent my early morning hours that week calling the Sudanese embassy in Zimbabwe, the real estate broker, and even the owner of the property to get the contract dissolved. My reasoning was that the girls never had the wherewithal to enter into a contract or secure the funds. They were young refugees without sufficient sources of income.
But my attempts failed.
The day before the contract deadline, I explained to the daughter all that had transpired. Again, I cried. And she cried.
But then, as though guided by God, I asked her what the currency exchange rate was that day compared to the first day when we calculated how much we would need for the transaction.
To our shock, the rate of exchange had ballooned so significantly, due to a financial crisis in Zimbabwe, that those life insurance proceeds we originally had were entirely sufficient to affect the transaction.
We immediately went to Western Union and sent the cash. The pastor's daughter was able to get a sufficient rate of exchange to make the transaction.
A funny thing happened, however. Within hours after the transaction had gone through, the government of Zimbabwe shut down the currency exchange because the situation had ballooned out of control. And when it resumed operations, the rate of exchange had settled back down to where it was at the time we had first calculated the amount needed. We had made it through a very small window.
I believe God had demonstrated his awesome, transforming power once again.
Now, if only we would trust in Him and His gifts - and lean not on our own understanding - what a transformed world we could have.
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