It took just took forty minutes to fly from Kitale up to
Lodwar, the district city of Turkana in northwest Kenya. On a bus the three hundred kilometer
trip is about twelve hours as the roads have deteriorated dramatically over the
past several years. Accompanying
me on the trip was Rev. Paul Gickuki, a longtime friend and pastor of his
church in West Pokot for thirty-five years. Overhearing his conversation on his cell phone he was
telling someone that, “If you have the money, Lodwar is close.”
Paul’s comment reminded me of the power of money; not the
common thought of power to wield power, but the power money has to make life
just a bit easier. The twelve-hour
bus ride costs about $15, whereas the forty-five minute flight, round-trip, is
$150. Instead of jostling in a
packed bus in ninety plus heat, the flight is clean, cool and enjoyable. Flying to Turkana is not a necessity,
but it does make the trip bearable.
In my case, if it were not for the flight I could not have visited the
pastors in Turkana as my schedule was tight which did not allow for two twelve hour
excursions. Having resources means
that a person can do more in less time.
Everything is close, if you have the money and if you have a
lot it you can do more. A private
or chartered flight would have been even more convenient as you could schedule
your day(s) based on your time rather than on the airline’s schedule. And, if the airline had mechanical
problems or delays due to weather, rather than fret about whether you would
miss that one flight a day into the bush and back, having money takes the worry
out of whether you will make that international flight you scheduled that night
in Nairobi.
Someone has rightly said that rich people plan for next week
or next month, while the poor plan only for the next day. If you have enough money you can chart
the future. If you don’t have the
resources you live each day the best you can.
In many ways missions is a money game. The ability to create programs, to help
those in need, to generate a vision based on the resources available is not a
bad thing. Money is a power, if
used properly, which can advance Kingdom work in a positive way. The lack of resources makes missions
even more difficult in an already difficult profession.
The power of money or the lack thereof, of course, is not
absolute and it can be a detriment in missions. The notion that one cannot serve because they don’t “have
enough” resources should be measured.
Do we live by faith, really, or is it based on the funds that are either
in the bank or forthcoming? If the
trip to Turkana is vital are we able to suffer the bus for the greater cause,
or do we scrap it because it is not convenient? Is the motivation for service hinged on what God is leading
us to do no matter what we have in the bank? These are important and difficult questions, but significant
in the life of every servant of Christ.
Indeed, Lodwar is close if you have the money, but whether
by plane or bus, the greater issue is not how near we are but how far we are
willing to travel to serve Him.
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