Kimberly
L. Smith had me from page one of Passport
Through Darkness, but she
captured my heart from the moment she stepped foot in South Sudan for the first
time. I could well imagine the horror she felt on her first mission trip into
the war-torn country and the subsequent journeys that led to more heartbreak
and challenges to her mind, body, and soul. I never felt her soul was truly in
danger, though the enemy tried his best to convince her otherwise. She shows,
through perseverance and obedience to God, that His grace is sufficient even in
the most hellish places. He works through broken vessels, regardless of
mistakes and self-doubts. Kimberly is painfully honest about her mistakes, yet
her heart for women and orphans she ministers to comes through loud and clear.
There are humorous moments, especially with Kimberly’s
South Sudan orphanage leader James Lual Atak. My favorite is when she “test
drives” a donkey. The reader journeys with Kimberly and James on dirtbikes,
through the thorny bush, battling wild animals, across rivers, and in the back
of makeshift ambulances. In a country that lacks the most basic infrastructure
or even availability of clean water, the challenges of building orphanages
seemed insurmountable. Yet they never lost sight of the goal of providing for
the “least of these” living in the bush where evil and nature claimed lives daily.
Through James and Kimberly’s faithfulness, God helped them over each hurdle
encountered.
Based on previous reviews, I initially feared this book
would be too dark for me. I wondered if I could handle what I would read. After
praying, I purchased it then prayed again before reading. A book’s ability to
totally enthrall and inspire its reader legitimizes its existence. Passport Through Darkness has done this and more.
While death, disease, despair, and man-made cruelty riddle
the pages, a fundamental tenet of Christianity is dying to self. This means
willingness to give up everything for the cause of Christ, including fears and
doubts that you’ll be equal to the task. Sometimes it means going alone into
enemy territory when your sick spouse can’t accompany you. It made the author’s
journey more tedious, but residing inside the will of God means trusting His
hand to guide you, despite earthly troubles.
It could be said that if hell on earth exists, surely it’s
in South Sudan. Yet Christ admonished Peter that the gates of hell wouldn’t
prevail against his church. It’s incumbent upon Christians to bring that light
to humanity’s darkest places. Kimberly L. Smith has shown us through her work
in South Sudan that the hope and love of Christ can penetrate evil’s deepest
pits.
The question is often asked, “What can one person
accomplish?” when the question ought to be, “What can one person obedient to
God’s will accomplish?” The author answers this resoundingly in Passport Through Darkness.
Visit Make
Way Partners for
more information on Kimberly's work. Passport Through Darkness is available on Amazon.com.
Laura Hodges Poole
is a freelance writer with dozens of articles, devotions, and short stories in
publication. She writes Christian romance novels and is a 2012 RWA Emily finalist, with her fiction manuscript placing second
among a nationwide field of Christian and secular entries. Laura is also an
Associate Editor with Christian
Devotions ministry, as well as a ghostwriter. Her passion is
encouraging others in their Christian walk through her blog, "A Word of
Encouragement." She may be contacted at laurapoole565@gmail.com. Follow her on Twitter @ Laura_Poole.
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Passport Through Darkness sounds like a book not to be missed. Thank you for sharing this post.
ReplyDeletemauback55 at gmail dot com
Thanks, Melanie.
DeleteWow! Sounds like a perfect mixture of a book for me to read.
ReplyDeletecampbellamyd at gmail dot com
One of the best non-fiction Christian books out there. It will challenge you greatly!
Delete