Guilty but Innocent

01Feb

Guilty but Innocent

Two men fled into the night—in opposite directions. One was the dead man's killer. The other was the dead man's best friend. It started with an argument that ended with a fatal gunshot. The body of Marcos' best friend, Daniel, lay dead on the street. Fearing the murderer would shoot him as well, Marcos ran for his life into the darkness. To the local police, his flight made him a suspect. They nabbed him and then locked him up. The real murderer was never apprehended.

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01Feb

Twice-Saved Sarah

"Your baby girl's skull is fractured, blood is seeping into her brain, and she is in a coma. Her chances for survival are slim." The doctor's words drained what little hope remained in the hearts of Daniel and Sung, parents of ten-month-old Sarah, who had fallen one story and landed on a concrete floor.

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01Feb

Little Woman, Big God

"Lord, You are the healer of this girl. Heal her and she will come to know You are the God of gods and Savior of the people's lives." As Dah Eh prayed, atheist Mah Za felt the Lord heal her body of its terminal disease. She immediately gave her life to Him.

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01Feb

Buckets of Sunshine

"They...we...are all still afraid." Those words, from the director of Mt. Zion Orphanage in Port-au-Prince, explained why, two months after Haiti's January 2010 earthquake, none of the children were sleeping inside their orphanage building. Along with two other Heaven's Family staff members, I had come to Haiti to assess the situation at two Christian orphanages that our Orphan's Tear division has been assisting since 2008. This was, however, my first time to personally visit Mt. Zion Orphanage.

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01Feb

Mual Zawl Gives Thanks

What a sensational, sunny morning for a motor-scooter ride, I thought to myself, as every mile proved more interesting than the previous one. I was following a two-lane "highway," a rural Burmese road that became increasingly narrower and potholed as I journeyed past endless rice fields, villages filled with waving children, and a row of towering mountains on the right that paralleled my track. Soon our entourage turned towards those mountains to follow a winding, upward path—a former road carved into the mountains during World War II, deep into a region that no Westerner had seen in six decades. I felt adrenalized.

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