Dear family and friends,
It seems unreal that we are approaching the end of our time in Europe. In three days, we will be hopping on a plane from Basel to Amsterdam and then back to the United States.
I want to take this opportunity to thank all of you who have prayed for us over the last week or so (or long before as well!). God has been incredibly faithful to keep us together as a group, and to give us supernatural peace and love for one another in every circumstance. I
KNOW it is because of your prayers. We felt covered and completely blessed by your spiritual support.
I know, as far as I'm concerned, it will be an experience I will never forget....I know my other teammates would agree. We could not have done it without you.
God used this trip to show me many things about Himself and myself as well. The majority of our job at the Art Factory has been to clean and reorganize. The building is full of things either belonging to the Holladays or to other people. Our job seemed a hopeless case. But Rick Holladay owned the vision for each space. He showed us where to move things and what to organize. By the end of the day, not a whole lot appeared to have changed. But in the evening, the Holladays would pause to thank us for the work we had done. They assured us it made a world of difference.
Isn't that what God does inside of each of us, friends? We look at ourselves, or we look at the world, and it seems like a truly hopeless case. But when God looks at us, He sees the "vision" and sees us as beautiful vessels. He sees the end result.
Maybe God brought 11 people from the United States all the way to Germany just to show us that. Who knows? It certainly opened the eyes of my heart.
I'd say the encouragement from that lesson would be to keep God's perspective on things. When He looks at us, He doesn't see the mess, but rather the beauty. He sees Himself in the mess. And though it may take months, years, or all eternity to complete, He will complete it.
Like the Art Factory, we are all works of art; in progress and ever changing. But we have the Master Artist as our renovator. His changes (the cleaning, reorganizing) may seem small and insignificant sometimes (He can do drastic ones too!), but it makes the world of difference in the end.
Keep His perspective, which is high above the clouds of the world. He sees the horizon.
Thanks for letting me share a bit of my heart.
In His love ~ Stephanie