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Tuesday, February 4, 2020

One Raw Moment in the Life of a Missionary


I stopped and stared. 

Jabez’s desk was empty. 

My other students milled restlessly about the room, wondering aloud where their fellow student was. “I don’t know,” I admitted. The evening before, the principal had mentioned that Jabez might transfer to another school, but I’d never dreamed it would happen so soon. I sat down and tried to quiet my students, but for once they paid no attention. “Where is he?” “He’s not leaving, is he?” “Surely he won’t leave without saying goodbye!” I just shook my head helplessly and studied the empty desk. All of his notebooks had vanished, and his school-issued textbooks were stacked neatly on his chair. I wondered momentarily where the vocabulary book was that I borrowed from him every day during class time—there weren’t enough books for me to have a copy, so I counted on him to let me use his while I quizzed them on their review words. Somewhere in the back of my mind, I noted that his desk was also bare of the unique name card I had drawn for him, and knowing that he loved artistic things, I hoped he had taken it with him and would use it to remember me by. I sank down into the chair at my desk and looked down. There was the vocabulary book, placed so neatly on the middle of the desk. I opened the front cover and saw his full name printed inside, along with the same smiley faces he always drew on his homework for me. Moisture threatened in my eyes when I realized that in the midst of the flurry of packing and cleaning up his desk, he had remembered that my vocabulary class was the next class of the day and had left his book just where I would find it. 

I looked up to find one of my students crying quietly in the corner, and my heart began to break. How was it that a quiet boy like Jabez could have impacted all of us like this? How could a boy who smiles much but talks little have written so much on our hearts? My students were subdued; not once did I find it necessary to quiet them. 

After class, my husband met me at the door of the classroom and told me that Jabez was leaving in five minutes, and that anyone who wanted to see him off was to come to the dock. We went. I was not embarrassed to be seen crying, but I looked around at the others anyway—the whole campus had shown up to see him off, and I couldn’t help but noticed that my face was not the only one wet with tears. He hugged everyone—which was no small feat considering how many people had come to say goodbye—and after my turn had come and gone, I stood there silently, with the arm of the high school dorm mom around me. She spoke only Portuguese, and I only English, so we said nothing—but I had seen her crying the same way several months before when she had said a permanent goodbye to one several of “her boys” so I knew she understood how I felt about “my boy.” Words cannot express something like this anyway, and since we had none, we said none. 

My husband and I then followed Jabez to the end of the dock, where a speedboat was waiting for him and his parents. As he climbed in, the sudden realization hit me that I had no pictures of him. I toyed with the idea of taking one right then, but decided against it. I didn’t want my only picture to be one of him leaving. So I stood there silently again, this time with Danny’s arm around me, and watched the boat speed off over the Amazon’s choppy gray waters until they rounded a corner and the jungle hid them from view.