Tuesday, April 1, 2008

JOTB Testimony - Sarah Ago

On Sunday, Sarah Ago shared with us how her experience with her brother led her into a different experience of who Jesus is. Her testimony is below:

I have seen Jesus most clearly in places you might not expect. It all started when I was almost eleven, and a little angel came into my family. My brother Jacob was born with Down’s Syndrome. I can still remember the first time I walked into the neo-natal ICU to meet him. His chest looked enormous due to the enlargement of his heart and he was hooked up to many machines. Yet, my first thought was, “He’s so cute!” I couldn’t wait until he would reach his arms up to me and say my name.

To my delight, I have had almost eighteen years now of that adorable child saying my name and reaching out to me. There is nothing like his smile. When I look in those smiling eyes, I see the joy and the purity of Jesus in a way that I can’t through anyone else.

Yet, Jesus has revealed Himself in Jacob’s life in ways that my family neither expected nor wanted. Jacob has been ill for much of his life. Almost any ailment that a child with Down’s syndrome can have, he has. In recent years, we have been through one operation after another for various medical problems.

It is beyond comprehension to fathom why someone so innocent and pure should suffer so much. There have been times when he has been in agony from the pain he was feeling and I have screamed the question “Why?” in my heart. I have not received answers to that question, but I have seen Jesus glorify Himself, even in Jacob’s sufferings. I see parallels to the sufferings of Christ in his life. I have experienced the marvelous work of God on His behalf in each hospital stay and in every period of recovery. God has truly sustained us all.

I saw the same type of suffering mixed with determination and perseverance when I spent time in China this past January. I worked in an orphanage with children with special needs. Seeing the love they showed in the midst of great suffering has forever changed me. The unconditional grace they gave is unparalleled.

See, I have discovered that children with disabilities can’t be anything but REAL! How amazingly refreshing this is! A picture I will forever keep in my mind to illustrate this is how one of the girls would literally shake with delight when I walked into the room. She communicated that I was of great worth to her in this beautiful expression of welcome. These are children that have been abandoned and rejected, yet they are capable of much more love than I am! I asked myself if I have ever given as sacrificially as they do or loved with the same exuberant extravagance.

Can you see the pictures of Jesus in these examples? I see it in Jacob, in the disabled orphans of Hengyang, and in the special children here at this church. The love they offer us is not manufactured. It is true and pure and powerful. This is the beauty of Christ manifested in what the world calls weak. God delights in doing this! What we consider powerless, He fills with His power. What we call the least, God calls the greatest.

I have seen Jesus in their faces. I am convinced that we find Jesus in the lowly places, the forgotten corners, and the rejected institutions of the world. We see Him in the abandoned and the broken. We see Him in those who are pressing on in the midst of immense physical and mental challenges. Even in the suffering, His glory is manifested. I believe that He is there, just waiting to be discovered.

This is my story of encountering Jesus “outside of my box,” but right where He has always been.

What parts of Sarah's story do you resonate with? Have you had any similar experiences of Jesus?


4 comments:

JD said...

First of all, I was really moved by this sharing! I though it fit seamlessly with worship, and I was absolutely ministered to by it. That a story containing such difficulty and hardship and really tough "why" questions could also contain so much hope and redemption is a wonderful picture of the way God seems to engage with this world. I'd be willing to bet that I would see Jesus at work much more frequently if I choose to saw my own hardships in the same way.

Anonymous said...

Friends of mine have a downs syndrome child and I know that they thank God every day for Mo and what he has brought to their family in terms of unity and sense of closeness. Mo (Morgan) always brings happiness wherever he is!

Waiting4Arson said...

"Question: If God is good and is all-powerful, how does it come about that He tolerates the suffering of innocent people and children? Either He is not all good or He is not all-powerful.

Response: The premises are that suffering is an unmitigated evil and that, in this life, justice is on a purely individual basis, and I think both of those premises can be questioned."

Discussion 5, Section 5, entitled "Suffering." Bernard Lonergan's Understanding and Being

How might we go about "questioning" the necessity of the above "premises"?

Anonymous said...

Yes, Sarah, I can relate to your story of your Brother. I have a sister, Marcia, who was born unable to grow and my parents were told she would never walk nor talk and would not live long. My parents brought her home, believing the Doctors she would not live long. Marcia is 49 today and has had many deficiences from what we would all call "normal". However, when I think of people in my life who emulate Jesus, I think of Marcia. Marcia is incapable of being mean. She blocks out "bad" as she really can't deal with it, but she cares for people without end, often being taken advantage of due to her "simplicity". Today she is undergoing a liver biopsy. I pray such a kind soul does not suffer.