Fresh meat, fresh produce, fish swimming in tanks in the back of a pickup, new and used pants, brooms, eggs (duck or chicken), miscellaneous hardware and household goods. Even cooked food is sold on the street by stationary or mobile vendors (best way to get our Isaan style chicken and papaya salad is from a motorcycle with a side car modified with a grill and mini-kitchen.)
And while the prices may be a bit pricier than what you find in the market—it saves driving 6 kilometers to a convenience store and the nearest market that only functions twice a week.
Ingrid buying produce off a pickup truck |
Grilling chicken on a modified motorcycle |
That’s one of the things that’s nice about Christianity. It’s about God coming to us.
In most other religions, it is about how we can get to God. What kinds of things must I do in order that God will hear me or let me approach Him? What must I do to be a better person?
I think of so many people who are concerned about their eternal future that are trying to do good things in order that maybe, if they outweigh the bad things, they’ll be better off in some future life. But there is no guarantee and certainly not a lot of hope. Call it making merit, or doing good works, or whatever. Not that there is anything wrong with doing good things, in fact, they should be done.
But with Christianity, it is about God coming to us. It is about God sending Jesus to earth so that we can relate to Him. And then it is about Him doing the work for us, on the cross, in order that we might be righteous in the eyes of God. it’s not about whether we’re good enough—try as we might, we never will be—but about the fact that Jesus is good enough.
And so I do good works, not to attain salvation or to find my way to God, but as an act of love toward a God who drove His pickup into my community, offering all that I could ever need—and I don’t even have to pay for it.
9 This is how God showed his love for us: God sent his only Son into the world so we might live through him.
10 This is the kind of love we are talking about—not that we once upon a time loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as a sacrifice to clear away our sins and the damage they've done to our relationship with God.
11 My dear, dear friends, if God loved us like this, we certainly ought to love each other.
12 No one has seen God, ever. But if we love one another, God dwells deeply within us, and his love becomes complete in us—perfect love!1 John 4:9-12 (MSG)
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