Beneath a desert sky in Death Valley I went in search of U2’s Joshua Tree location. The tree itself is gone but I wanted to visit where it stood.
I explored areas that rivers run but soon run dry. I had climbed the highest mountains. I had run through the fieldsof vast desert spaces, walking obscure canyons I’d never seen. Searching Death Valley allowed me to feel sunlight on my face, before finding success in Death Valley had been like a dust cloud that disappeared without a trace.
In the quiet solitude a howl jumped out at me like a bullet the blue sky – a jet fighter shrieked from behind a hill and thundered low over me.
Instantly I was plunged back into the deadly desert silence to reflect back on all that I can’t leave behind when I still haven’t found what I’m looking for.
All of our hotel and airline rewards have taken a beating while we’ve all experienced being grounded due to COVID-19.
I personally made 3 attempts to take a vacation before I succeeded!
Now we can fly freely Miriam and I went to Fiordland – one of the most dramatic and beautiful parts of New Zealand.
Fiordland National Park was described by Rudyard Kipling as the Eighth Wonder of the World and is a World Heritage Site that includes Milford, Dusky and Doubtful Sounds and Milford Sound; take a look at the photos of my visit and you will understand why.
I\’m a HUGE Switchfoot fan like you! How huge? People say that as an artist I remind them of Switchfoot.
Even Kelly O\’Niell (CCM, U and CrossWalk magazines) said my music has a \”similar timbre to Switchfoot\” during her review, while Scoop News compared me to Jon Foreman.
Switchfoot\’s songs have got me through tough times and inspired me to make music so I wanted to put together this Switchfoot Fan\’s \’Can\’t Live Without\’ List. What better way to do that than to ask a bunch of other super Switchfoot fans what they couldn\’t live without … here\’s what they said!
The Switchfoot Fan\’s \’Can\’t Live Without\’ List
This line is a great inspiration and gut check. It reminds me to adjust my point of view and remember my ultimate goal of Heaven.
Jenna Malpass Vaughan
\”But I\’m not sentimental. This skin and bones is a rental and no one makes it out alive.\” I think the lyrics speak for themselves. How could anyone not be affected by those lines? It\’s just the simplest explanation of our life here on this earth!
Sarah Bowden
\”It was a beautiful letdown,
the day I knew that all the riches this world had to offer me would never do.\”
This whole song \”Beautiful Letdown\” speaks about not belonging to this world and how that\’s ok. How to live in the world but not be of it.
George Jones
\”I am the war inside.\”
[EDITOR – I love how guys cut straight to it :D]
Michelle Woodcock
It\’s not my favorite line or life theme, but my go to lyric has been
\”breathe it in and let it out.\”
I use it all the time and often quote it to my husband. We both feel stressed at work often (him more so, he\’s a chef) so it\’s sometimes a necessary reminder. And we ALWAYS hear the song when we read it. It\’s a line to be sung, and when sung it\’s brings a smile.
Danielle Johnson
\”If the waters of time are made up by you and I,
if you change the world for you,
you change it for me.
Is this the world you want?\”
I could actually write this whole song out as the answer to Q1. I love this line because it makes you stop and realize that everything you do in life affects more than just you. It affects everyone and everything around you. Think about what you\’re doing and how it affects the world.
Call Yourself a REAL Switchfoot Fan?
WIN 1 of 4 Prize Packs in Peter\’s \’Where The Light Shines Through\’ Contest
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
FOLLOW PETER
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
I cannot. Far too many incredibly important lyrics for so many different reasons I cannot choose just one.
Thomas Kopp
First of all there are so many different lines and songs that I love from Switchfoot but if I have to pick one…
\”You can\’t count us out we been running up against the crowds.
We are the dark horses.\”
I love this line because whenever I get down about something I listen to this song and realize that whatever it is cannot keep me down and I can get back up and keep going.
Susie Elizabeth Kennedy
\”Your love is my remedy.\”
It reminds me where my true inner peace comes from. It means so much to me I have it tattooed on my foot.
Marci Martel
\”Your Love is Strong.\”
Whenever I am weak I know there is power behind the love that He has for me and I will make it.
Megan Jackson
\”Is it fear you\’re afraid of ?
What are you waiting for?
Love Alone Is Worth The Fight!\”
This line hits deep because we should never be afraid to LOVE , at the same time LOVE is something worth fighting for! Also I have these lyrics tattooed on my inner left arm.
Vanessa Diaz
\’I can see sunrise, will survive the pain\’ – Dark Horses
I\’ve been through many sicknesses in my life, battling Type I Diabetes, Fypromalga, and many disabilities and everytime I hear that, I know with Jesus, I will overcome the pain I\’m going through.
Nikki Duran
Either \’live it well\’
or
\”I\’m living for more than just a funeral\”
Brenda Wright Hutchison
\”This is your life, are you who you want to be?\”
Throughout life\’s changes, this is pertinent. Making decisions about major or minor things, I ask myself this. I\’m still working on getting there.
Get the song from my CD that inspired 15,000 people worldwide
Fight rejection and fuel your dreams with Peter\’s alt-rock anthem that featured on The Voice EMC!
Download your free song now!
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
\”Saltwater Heart\” has been my theme song because being on the shore is where I am most alive and the weight of this life falls away.
\”Where The Light Shines Through\” could easily become a 2nd theme song … past emotional abuse left wounds for The Light to shine through.
Pam Branch
\”The Sound\” becuz of the line \”love is the final final fight\” becuz it is.
Megan Jackson
\”Meant To Live\” is my life theme. In 2012 I was going through a dark season, was on the verge of committing suicide when M2L came on iTunes and saved my life. I have \”Everything inside screams for second life.\” tattoed on my left shoulder. Over the past 4 yrs that song has changed me and the way I view life as a whole, there\’s so much more to life than what lies on the surface. You have to LIVE with desire, meaning and be driven with a passion!
Pragya Tripathi
There are so many songs so it\’s hard to pick one but I would pick \”The Beautiful Letdown\” as my life\’s theme song. Its resonates with me so much – every single line of that song, one of the best Jon has ever written
Nikki Duran
I would choose live it well, both answers for the same reason which is that I\’m at a place in life where I\’m transitioning into adulthood I guess, and I\’ve been thinking a lot about what to do with my life and how exactly my faith plays into how I live and what I do. I\’ve been thinking about all that for months, and then that song reminded me of what really matters with a simple 3 word answer, live it well.
Vanessa Diaz
\”Live It Well \” Is now my new anthem because its true…we do have one life and I been through near death experience with my Diabetes and last year I suffered from Conjestive heart failure that I almost died in….and hearing that song makes me wanna live life the fullest!
Max and Kris Weltens
\”Restless\” is my life anthem because it describes me perfectly & with everything inside,I long for the tide of pain & fear to subside, and for laughter to drink them dry.
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
\”Souvenirs\”. I try to live my life making valuable memories with my children and grandchildren.
Susie Elizabeth Kennedy
This one is hard as all their songs have meaning to me but I\’ll go with \”This Is Your Life\” as I feel it is a constant to push me to be a better person and to always ask the tough question of how can I do more and give more of myself.
Thomas Kopp
\”Where I Belong\” I have always loved this song ever since I first heard it. I think the reason this song would be the theme for my life is because since I am a Christian I try to live for the afterlife (no Switchfoot related pun intended). The lines \”On the final day I die. I want to hold my head up high. I want to tell You that I tried. To live it like a song.\” are super meaningful to me and are why I think this song is the theme for my life.
Helen Whitall
I think I\’m picking 24 as my life theme for many reasons – my life feels like a whole series of false starts, trying and failing over and over to get a career off the ground and make a difference. Ive sung it time and time again when I\’ve felt a failure, singing out defiance in the face of temptation to quit or despair \’I\’m not copping out!\’. I find a lot of layers of meaning in \’I am the second man\’ (I come second, I am living in the present second, I am \’in Christ\’ and living resurrected life, not \’in Adam\’ and death…) It always feels true to say life/ myself are not what I thought they were 24 hours ago, wherever I\’m at, which has been such a revelation over the years. We change, and life changes, so much, so fast. It is such a song of heartfelt desire to live a meaningful life, I can sing it from the bottom of my heart – I want my life to be coherent, to \’live it like a song\’ (yes I know a different song! But my symphonies…), to \’see miracles, to see the world change\’, and sometimes that is such a fight. This song says it all, and has always sustained me. The opening lines speak to me as a climatologist too (24 oceans, 24 skies…) 🙂
Danielle Johnson
\”This Is Your Life\” would be my life song. I think about it all of the time. What am I doing with my life? Am I where I want to be? Am I who I want to be? If my answer is no to either of those questions, it makes me want to get onto the path to where I want to be and who I want to be.
George Jones
\”War Inside\” – this song reminds me that my battle begins with ME. It is my old sinful nature that I battle with everyday. It is so easy to focus on what others may be doing that causes us to react the way we do, but the battle inside is truly our first battle, the battle against SELF, this song helps me to remember that.
Sarah Bowden
\”Hello Hurricane\”. Though every single song they\’ve written could be an anthem to my life in some way, this song is an upbeat anthem of not letting anything get in your way and stop you from living or loving. Greeting the problem with, \”hello hurricane, you\’re not enough you can\’t silence my love.\”
Get the song from my CD that inspired 15,000 people worldwide
Fight rejection and fuel your dreams with Peter\’s alt-rock anthem that featured on The Voice EMC!
Download your free song now!
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
\”The Dream Tour – Switchfoot & ________\” [PART THREE]
Jeff Piecora
I would love to see them tour with Twenty One Pilots. I think the combo of the 2 different styles would really flow together well
Michelle Woodcock
It\’s already happening and I\’m super excited! I saw the Appetite for Construction tour and this will be a great reprisal.
Megan Jackson
My dream was fulfilled when the guys toured with NTB last year, however it would be cool to see them tour with Crowder or Rend Collective. Mumford and Sons as well. They both are awesome and would be great on tour together. 🙂
Pragya Tripathi
Sigur ros or Radiohead – odd but it would be an interesting mix and plus I know Jon loves Radiohead and Tim probably loves Sigur ros (heard him talking about them in an interview and it made me so happy)
George Jones
I\’d like to see SF go on tour with Scott Stapp (former front man for Creed) and his new band. It would be awesome music by 2 awesome bands/artists in Jon and Scott. I think it would also be good for Scott to be around these guys and see how it\’s possible to be a Christian in a band that can appeal to the masses. Being that Scott reached stardom as a person who was raised in the church and was running from God because he was burnt out on legalism, I think Jon and the guys could help him to learn the ropes how to keep it all down to earth like SF does. Not implying Scott isn\’t or hasn\’t learned any of that, but it wouldn\’t hurt to be exposed to these guys . My life theme, especially since coming to know Christ, is again, \” I am the War inside\”, as we battle Satan and the way he influences the culture to do evil, it is my own war inside, with my own thought life, emotions, and decisions that affect how I act are all part of my own war against the lower nature of my sinful flesh. Ephesians 6:12—— For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places.
Jenna Malpass Vaughan
If Anberlin were still together, that would be an awesome tour!
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
Honestly I\’d rather just see Switchdoot alone. I\’ve seen them with other bands before and I prefer just them. What would be epic is if Jon Foreman opened with his solo stuff! 🙂
Danielle Johnson
I originally thought Mumford & Sons but I forgot about The Perks and think they would be much better as a band to tour with Switchfoot. Definitely The Perks!
Thomas Kopp
I would love to see a Switchfoot and Skillet world tour. I have loved both of those bands for quite a while and would love to see them in concert together. Also, if the band Philmont was still together I think they would sound pretty good with Switchfoot as well!
Susie Elizabeth Kennedy
Well they already toured with my second favorite band Needtobreathe so I would go for a Switchfoot and Noah Gundersen. It won\’t happen as Noah\’s music is much darker and moodier. But it would be an interesting lineup.
Vanessa Diaz
Matt Kearny should tour with them…
Helen Whitall
If it doesn\’t have to be an existing band I\’d say Delirious?. For many reasons. They are still my #2 band, their music is my second fallback and has a lot of meaning, resonance and sustenance for me too, if not to the same extent as all-things-Jon-Foreman. They\’re a good fit with SF for me as the things I like most about one band are the things I like least about the other though I love both. And I was an even worse letdown of a fan for D? than I was for SF, so totally missed their final album and tour, plus missed them tour with SF! So I\’ve old regrets I\’d like to make up 🙂 If it has to be an existing band… Fiction Family! Because I am a complete hopelessly incurable addict and cannot get enough 😀 😀 though I enjoyed Gungor supporting SF last summer in Edinburgh, and I reckon Mutemath would be cool too, don\’t know much of their stuff but I\’ve liked it so far and know the bands are friends and have worked together. Sorry for the essays 🙂
Max and Kris Weltens
I would love for them to tour with Tenth Avenue North because they are such like-minded bands and I love them both so much. I know you said 1, but Crowder should definitely be on that tour as well 🙂
Marci Martel
Switchfoot & Relient K again
Well I couldn\’t have said it better myself! What a great round of reflections – thank you one and all!
How about posting your own favorite Switchfoot lyrics or which Switchfoot song would be your life\’s theme song or who should tour with Switchfoot in the comments section below ….
Get the song from my CD that inspired 15,000 people worldwide
Fight rejection and fuel your dreams with Peter\’s alt-rock anthem that featured on The Voice EMC!
Download your free song now!
Listen to what others are saying about Peter Woolston!
\”5 out of 5 Stars\”
Heath Andrews, Music Critic
\”kicking rock … grand confident vocals … layered guitars
… similar timbre to Switchfoot\” Kelly O’Neil (Foreigner, Kevin Max, Jaci Velasquez, CCM & CrossWalk magazines)
“… drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith\” Scoop Independent News And now you can download Peter\’s latest single for free!
Easter is almost upon us and you know what it’s all about right? Chocolate and bunny rabbits …
But Christians like me will tell you different. When the first Easter happened (it was actually at a time called Passover) it was filled with everything we get in a gritty Hollywood blockbuster story … friendship, loyalty, envy, betrayal, hate, love, passion, murder and the impossible return of the hero when all is lost.
Have you ever wondered how Easter would have played out in your Twitter feed instead of trying to understand those cryptic stained glass windows or oil paintings? Watch this five minute video of the first Easter complete with hashtags and Twitter handles …
Here’s my take on this:
For me Easter is more than a Twitter feed, or a historian’s records, or a Biblical account – it’s remembering a collision of all of our troubles and turmoil, our mistakes and misgivings resolved by God in one fell swoop.
The Real Deal – before Jesus arrived on the scene God had outlined how he was going to resolve the differences between Him and us by sending the ‘Messiah’, from the Hebrew word mashiach, which means “anointed one” or “chosen one” – imagine the ultimate super hero who saves everyone for all time, and sorts out our sin that’s getting in the way between us and God.
God’s Checklist – God made us, so He’s the One who made us skeptical of people, including when the Messiah really is the Messiah. We can’t just have any Ordinary Joe proclaiming he’s the Messiah and messing with people’s lives right?!?!?! That’s why God provided requirements and specifications to be met by a ‘Messiah candidate’ so we could know we weren’t being duped. I believe Jesus fulfilled those Biblical requirements and prophecies meeting the measurement of ‘Messiah’.
Chocolate Eggs and Bunny Rabbits – so what’s that got to do with the chocolate eggs and bunny rabbits filling our world at Easter? Nothing …. kind of – before you throw away that chocolate egg that you’ve got in your hand hang in with me for a second … Easter commemorates the death and resurrection of Jesus which form the central events of the Christian faith. As with all things human, there were debates about the best way and the best time to celebrate Easter after it occurred on that first Jewish Passover, because Passover could fall on any day of the week, so Christians wanted it locked and loaded on a Sunday and it was matched to the first Sunday following the full moon after the vernal equinox (first day of spring in the northern hemisphere). This also aligned to the pagan spring festivals which celebrate fertility, life, death and rebirth. In the end, the Easter bunny and chocolate Easter eggs have nothing to do with Jesus directly. There is nothing in the Bible or Christian tradition that links the two together. Yet still, the “pagan” associations that eggs and rabbits have with life, death, and rebirth remain near enough to find expression alongside Jesus conquering death and coming back to life to provide the link.
So celebrate with me by grabbing a chocolate Easter egg (unless you’re still holding that one from earlier on) and reflect how these delectable delicacies remind us of death, new life and deliverance – the second chance we’ve all been given through Jesus’ death and resurrection to get back together with God and wipe out the barriers and separation that was between us. It’s fair to say Easter once saved the world – once and for all time. Chew on that and comment below 😀
Kiwi musician Peter Woolston is about to release his latest album release, Hope On My Horizon, but he’s giving fans a bit of a taster with the release of the Mercy Ships video for his title track.
Beneath Woolston’s alt rock tunes and catchy hooks lies a worthy ulterior motive. Woolston has partnered with Mercy Ships, coming aboard as their Musical Ambassador. To help Mercy Ships continue to provide free surgeries and life-changing medical care to some of the poorest people in the world, Woolston is ‘rocking the boat’ by donating 50% of EP, CD and iTunes profits from the song Hope On My Horizon to the floating hospital.
Mercy Ships is Africa’s medical God-send. Since 1978, the floating hospital has performed more than one billion dollars’ worth of life-changing medical services on hundreds of thousands of the world’s poorest people – all for free.
Yup, you read that right. Mercy Ships is powered by voluntary medical professionals from more than 40 nations all over the world, including New Zealand. The crew pay their way and perform vital – often life-saving – medical services including cleft lip and palate corrections, cataract removals, straightening of crossed eyes, and orthopaedic and facial reconstruction, all at no charge to the patient.
The powerful video for Hope On My Horizon takes you behind the scenes of Mercy Ships to see the sheer number of people who rely on the free life-changing procedures they provide. While some of the images aren’t for the faint-hearted, they provide a humbling eye-opening reality to the staggering need and desperation of people who don’t have access to the kind of medical care the Western world takes for granted.
But making a difference doesn’t come cheap. And that’s where Peter Woolston comes in.
“My first connection with Mercy Ships was in 1983 and I was amazed at how practical Christianity aligned with caring for the poor and needy,” says Woolston.
“My wife worked with Mercy Ships before we met, and we have stayed engaged with Mercy Ships since, eager to hear about the radical impact being made in the lives of the poorest of the poor.”
“My songs tell the stories of life – the good and the bad – pointing to hope and courage with lyrics that are distinctive to how I write as a songwriter. I connect with fans one person at a time in an honest and authentic way, trying to see how I can encourage them or inspire them to take what they’ve got and make a difference in the lives of people around them.”
Mercy Ships New Zealand Director Graeme Walls says a partnership with a musician like Woolston is invaluable.
“Mercy Ships works because of the dedication of volunteer professionals to provide world-class healthcare services to the poorest of the poor, free of charge. Peter Woolston’s determination to join us in using his skills to highlight both the needs in Africa and the opportunities for Kiwis to roll their sleeves up and get involved is a gift we are delighted with.”
Drawing comparisons to artists like Jon Foreman, Bono and Martin Smith, Hope On My Horizon counts its blessings and sees the glass as half full rather than half empty. Recorded in Sydney and due for release in June 2015, this album is characterised by Woolston’s melodic and guitar-powered alternative rock. Each track draws on his knack for deep-thinking, and is consistently introspective and serious-minded – and memorable.
Influenced by bands like U2, Switchfoot, The Police and Larry Noman, Woolston’s music-making has taken him all over the world, including far-flung nations like China, Romania, Bulgaria and Russia. His love for music isn’t something Woolston takes lightly, though, which is why he took up the role of Musical Ambassador for Mercy Ships NZ in 2014.
The music video for Hope On My Horizon was released on 15th May 2015 PST | 16th May 2015 NZ.
Since 1978, Mercy Ships has performed more than $1 billion worth of free medical services, directly impacting more than 2.35 million of the world’s poorest people. Mercy Ships providing surgeries, dental work, well drilling, and other capacity building services free of charge to the most destitute in Africa’s most impoverished nations, and all volunteers pay their own way. Mercy Ships has 16 national offices worldwide, including one in Auckland. More information at www.mercyships.org
Mercy Ships have:
Performed 78,000+ life-changing operations such as cleft lip and palate, cataract removal, straightening of crossed eyes, orthopaedic and facial reconstruction. All operations are free to patients.
Treated over 183,000 patients in village dental clinics and educated 5,800 local health care workers, who have in turn trained multiple thousands in primary health care.
Trained over 35,300 local professionals in their areas of expertise, including anaesthesiology, midwifery, instrument sterilisation, orthopaedic and reconstructive surgery, and leadership.
“I was waiting to die. I could not do anything. Every day, I was just waiting to die.”
Hope – something that Sambany desperately needed, something that was stolen from Sambany around 36 years ago when a tumor began to consume his life. In time, it was a monstrous burden, weighing 7.46 kg (16.45 lbs) – the equivalent of two heads.
The tumor caused unrelenting discomfort, “hot like fire”, said Sambany. “I cannot sleep at night, and even during the day it heated me up. When walking, it’s too heavy, I have to hold it.”
It was an emotional burden too. Sambany’s family and friends rejected him, mocked him, laughed at him, and shunned him. Some thought his condition was contagious hurling harsh words at him, “Why are you still alive? No one can help!”
Sambany had become so weak his home was now his prison and his life a deadening cycle of waking, eating, sleeping. He was useless to his family, watching them labour in rice fields while he wasted away, their poverty trapping them – if they dared to spend the little money they had trying to find help for Sambany they would have no money for food.
Sambany’s only escape was listening to the radio where one day an announcement sparked a flicker of hope: a hospital ship that would treat tumors for free was coming to Madagascar. Weak but with a newborn hope Sambany told his family, “Die or survive, I want to go!”
This was a desperate journey, a foolhardy struggle to survive. Sambany lived several days away from the nearest road and the Mercy Ship was hundreds of kilometers away… Sambany struggled to even walk around his house – how could he dare to dream of making the trip or even survive?
In our desparation hope gives us determination and those who truly love us do more than just smile or speak soft words, they rally with us behind the weak wish fanning it into dogged determination. Selling a rice field to pay for the trip they gathered what little they had and hoisted Sambany on the their back and set off. For two days they walked, six people taking turns to carry Sambany on their backs before they could even reach transport. Then Sambany sufferred a painful taxi ride for six hours…and arrived at M/V Africa Mercy.
Sambany’s monstrous burden weighing 7.46 kg (16.45 lbs) – the equivalent to two heads – would be extremely high-risk for Sambany and the medical team, for almost two weeks wrestled with the danger and course of action.
After a lifetime of hearing, “No, no, no,” Sambany heard the words “yes” from the Africa Mercy. Well aware of the risks Sambany said, “I know without surgery I will die. I know I might die in surgery, but I already feel dead inside from the way I’m treated,”.
12 hours in theatre with over twice Sambany’s volume of blood lost and replaced, Mercy Ships crew literally poured life into Sambany with blood from seventeen people from six nations.
Soon enough Sambany was free from the burden that had weighed him down for nearly two-thirds of his life. He held a mirror up to look at himself for the first time and reached out to touch the tumour that was gone, “I am free from my disease. I’ve got a new face. I am saved!”
Together, Mercy Ships and Sambany had fought for his life, and by the grace of God, they had won.
It’s my privilege to serve Sambany and all the other patients and crew of Mercy Ships as a Musical Ambassador and together you and I can use music with a mission to rock the boat!