What if?
Nov 9th by JonWhitney Houston tried to warn me. She belted out a proclamation that should have eliminated any sense of surprise in my tiny little head. And yet, despite her belief that children are the future, I didn’t see just how powerful kids were until mine started dropping nuclear bomb-sized ideas around our house.
Out of nowhere, my daughters will say something that is punch you in the stomach profound and then do a ballet twirl and go play with dolls.
That’s just how they get down on a fairly regular basis, but one particular thing my oldest daughter said more than a year ago is refusing to let me go.
We were looking at a book on storms and came to a page about drought and famine. In the corner was a little boy who was starving. His ribs were sticking out and flies covered his small face. I kept flipping the pages but L.E. made me stop and return to that one. She asked, “What’s that?” I told her, “That’s a little boy who doesn’t have enough food to eat.” She thought for a few seconds and then responded, “That’s not real though. That’s pretend right?”
Those are pretty simple sentences. On the surface, those aren’t deep by any means. But what L.E. was saying, what she was asking wasn’t so obvious. Here’s what I heard:
“Wait, wait, wait, are there other 6 year olds like me somewhere without food?
Is the L.E. in Africa starving?
Is the L.E. in Asia being sold into slavery?
Is the L.E. in Atlanta scared because she’s been home alone all weekend because her family abandoned her?
Are all these things happening right now dad? To little kids like me?
Why aren’t we doing something?
Why is that OK?
Where is the rescue? Where is the hope? Where is the sense of urgency dad?
If only you had a platform with hundreds of thousands of friends from around the world that could easily organize and radically change the world through the power of something like a blog. If only.”
OK, I didn’t hear that last part because L.E. is not that snarky of a 6 year old, but that thought is accurate.
Right now, right here, you and me and the Stuff Christians Like community have the chance to be much bigger than a blog. I am growing overwhelmed but the sense that God has given us all a tremendous gift called, “being alive on Monday” and He’s holding His breath in eager anticipation to see what we’ll do next.
And what’s next for Stuff Christians Like is that we’re going to build a kindergarten in Vietnam. (No segue whatsoever; we just jumped into that, didn’t we?)
L.E. was right, this can’t be real. So after years of supporting Samaritan’s Purse, I decided to contact them with an offer of help. And when I told them where my heart was and where my family was, they let me know about a kindergarten in Vietnam that needed to be built.
There are 240 little kids that need a six room kindergarten built in Hoang Then village in the Phong Tho district.
It costs $30,000. I’d like to raise it by December 31, 2009.
I’ve never done this before and raising $30,000 feels like $19 million right now.
But after interviewing the staff of Samaritan’s Purse about how the money would be used, discussing Franklin Graham and a host of other subjects I felt like this was the right thing to do. Especially watching how much L.E. loves going to kindergarten right now. So my family is all in and will be starting off this crazy thing with a donation because we believe in this.
And I believe in you.
Whether you help raise money to build a kindergarten in Vietnam or do something else with one of the many other awesome charities out there, I believe in you. I believe you are bigger than a blog. I believe with God, in God, through God, we can all be bigger than ourselves.
Click here to donate.
(I set up a page with Samaritan’s Purse that will handle all the donations in a quick, easy, secure way.)
p.s. Abraham Piper grilled me about why I’m doing this, where the money goes and why I chose Samaritan’s Purse. Check out the interview here.

This is the type of kindergarten building SCL is going to build in Vietnam.




Comments
[...] had a new post the other day entitled, “What If?” – In the post he made the commitment to use his sphere of influence through his blog to [...]
[...] drawn to charity sites, wanting to give as much as I can to things like Samaritan’s Purse, SCL’s Vietnamese School project, and as Abraham Piper pointed out earlier this week, adopt a child. The simple fact is that we are [...]
[...] Read More [...]
[...] this is the first you’ve heard of this, you can read Jon’s post about it here. Or you can go here to see how much has been given and donate [...]
[...] over at the Stuff Christians Like blog. On Monday, Jon Acuff shared an idea with his readers: let’s raise $30,000 to build a kindergarten in Vietnam. He hoped to reach that goal by December 31. Instead, it happened in 18 hours. From [...]
[...] Acuff of Stuff Christians Like challenged his readers to raise $30,000 to build a kindergarten in Vietnam through Samaritan’s Purse. They did so within 18 hours. [...]
[...] of the week 15 blogs of the week ============== This can’t be real (Stuff Christians Like – Jon Acuff – @prodigaljohn) and the follow up 30000 in 18 hours (Stuff [...]
[...] an instant. God did something absolutely amazing through Jon’s blog this week. Start reading here then move forward through the [...]
[...] order, (skip down to November 9, that’s the day this all started with the first post here. Then read backwards in chronological order to find out how much they raised the first day here, [...]
[...] idea a little while back to try and raise money to build kindergardens over in Vietnam. You can read the story here on how the whole thing got started. He wanted to build one through Samaritan’s Purse. [...]
[...] idea a little while back to try and raise money to build kindergardens over in Vietnam. You can read the story here on how the whole thing got started. He wanted to build one through Samaritan’s Purse. [...]
[...] 9th: Jon Acuff, a copy writer in an IT department in Atlanta, explains how it began here in this original blogpost. God led him to start a project to raise $30,000 by 31 December for a kindergarten in [...]