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Seth Barnes, AIM Director Read Seth's Blog at www.sethbarnes.com |
During my senior year, a great human tragedy was unfolding. The Khmer Rouge was killing nearly two million of their countrymen. The Cambodian people were fleeing to the Thai border by the hundreds of thousands. As they spilled across the border on the brink of starvation, they were placed in large refugee camps.
So, I went to work in a refugee camp. I chose to do this in spite of the fact that I'd recently fallen in love with my wife to be and was earnestly courting her. As shocking as the situation in Thailand was, it inspired me to go deeper in pursuing a life of ministry.
A call to missions
After college, Karen and I were married. We went directly to Indonesia where I did economic development work to help the poorest of the poor. Later, we moved to the Dominican Republic and did the same thing there.
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Wanting to trust God, but unsure as to what His will was, my wife and I put a fleece before Him. To go into missions, we'd have to raise support. We'd have to do it in four months. Karen said I looked like a deer in the headlights. She suggested, “If God brings a quarter of the support in during the first month, then that will be His sign to us to follow a call to missions.” How did she come up with that? Just a shot in the dark, I guess. It seemed reasonable – four months, a quarter of the support a month.
With just one day left, we were significantly short of the goal. I think we were a little relieved. The path of missions seemed to have a lot of sacrifice involved. I didn't have any plans to try and gin up the support from other sources; Karen and I were persuaded that God had a different path for us.
Then, before the day was over, seemingly out of left field, a number of people contacted us with large commitments. At the last second, God provided far more than we needed. We had opened the door to walking the path of abandon, but hardly in a reckless manner. Still, that was enough for God to lead us.

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