Leah Stirewalt

Out of Deep Waters

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An African Miracle

May 2, 2013 by Leah Stirewalt Leave a Comment

When I traveled to Liberia, Africa in June of 2010, I had no idea what I was about to encounter. I thought I was going on my first overseas mission trip that encompassed leading 5 days of women’s conferences. While that did happen, something so much larger also took place.

Cecelia, a precious Liberian woman (30-ish) drove 8 hours on a borrowed moped with her 7-month-old infant girl strapped to her back. Baby Grace, as she affectionately became known, was born with an omphalocele (the medical term for being born with her abdominal organs on the outside of her body). Grace had a surgery, only a couple months prior, performed by a Chinese doctor, who “happened” to be traveling through the area. He gave her a thin layer of skin to protect her organs while her abdominal cavity grew large enough to be able to hold them. However, this doctor made sure Grace’s family knew that if she didn’t have a follow up surgery by the time she was a year old, she would not survive.

Grace’s mother heard that three American ladies where traveling to Monrovia, and she took a leap a faith and traveled to see them. She needed help. When she introduced us to Grace, and we saw her problem with our very own eyes, our hearts melted. Cecelia simply asked us to help sell the Christmas ornaments that she and her sister were making to help raise money for Grace to go to Ghana for surgery (the closest country with a surgeon skilled enough to do the surgery). However, when doing the math, there was no way they could make them fast enough even if we sold every single one they gave us.

At the end of the week, we were beyond tired but in a rewarding sort of way. We attended the “sending service” they had for us on Sunday morning, and towards the end of the service, one of the worship leaders addressed us and declared, “I don’t think God brought you here just to lead women’s conferences. He brought you here to help Baby Grace.” I looked at my speaking partner, and she looked back at me, we politely smiled and said, “We’ll do whatever we can.”

I can honestly tell you, I didn’t have the faith that Cecelia did. I thought we’d end up coming home and never see a happy ending to this story. But God is so much bigger than my little mind can understand. Through a series of events and amazing financial miracles…Grace traveled to the United States with her parents and a traveling companion (all compliments of Delta Airlines). She had her surgery FREE at Vanderbilt Hospital, was able to stay in the Ronald McDonald House, and spent two months in the United States visiting between Nashville, TN and Asheville, NC. Only God could orchestrate all of this! And, I thought I was just going on a mission trip to lead women’s conferences.

My daughter, Anna, has been invited to Uganda, Africa this summer…for FOUR weeks! She’ll be traveling with a team from Adventures in Missions, a mission organization based out of Atlanta, GA. She needs to raise $4,595 to cover the costs of this trip, and she’s already raised slightly more than $2,500 by selling bracelets through Trades of Hope, selling t-shirts, hosting a Thirty-One fundraiser, conducting a Pampered Chef basket raffle, babysitting, and of course through the generous donations of friends, family, and several people that have never even met Anna (or me, for that matter). The deadline is looming, and Anna will not be able to travel with this team unless she’s able to raise the full $4595. I can’t help but wonder how many other “Baby Grace-type miracles” God’s waiting to unleash through Anna’s faithfulness to go on this life-altering journey. I’m asking you to prayerfully consider helping with a financial donation to help reach the monetary goal, thereby helping to advance the Gospel.

If you feel led to give, please go to www.adventures.org, scroll over donate and select mission trip participants. In the program drop down box, select Ambassador and then enter Anna Combs’ name on the “Participant Full Name” line. All donations need to be in by June 10. I have full faith that you can help us get Anna to Uganda this July.

If you are unable to support Anna financially, please commit to praying for her. Prayer is THE vehicle by which all of this will come together. We don’t take that lightly and sincerely thank you for every prayer offered up to Heaven on her behalf and on behalf of the “least of these” in Uganda.

Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me. ~Matthew 25:40

Pic of Anna with Baby Grace just hours before her surgery in October, 2010. She’s now a thriving little 2 ½-year-old.
Pic of Anna with Baby Grace just hours before her surgery in October, 2010. She’s now a thriving little 3 ½-year-old.
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God’s Still in the Miracle Working Business!

October 20, 2010 by Leah Stirewalt Leave a Comment


I can’t believe the time has come. You couldn’t have convinced me 4 months ago that this would have even been possible. I guess that shows my faith level…shameful! Just a little over 4 months ago, I was attending a “sending” church service in the country of Liberia in West Africa on my last day in that country. I was finishing up a mission trip in which I traveled with 2 other women from the US to lead women’s conferences and share the love of Jesus with Liberian women. It was an amazing trip!

During the course of the trip, I had the privilege of meeting a precious Liberian family with a beautiful daughter, Grace. She is absolutely precious and looks perfectly “normal” from all external aspects. However, Grace was born in November, 2009 with an omphalocele, which is basically a birth defect in which some of her abdominal organs were born on the outside of her body. In America, this is a pretty major surgery, but it’s not completely uncommon, and children overcome this condition all the time. However, in Liberia, it’s an entirely different situation.

Grace wouldn’t be alive today if it weren’t for a Chinese surgeon that “happened to be” in Monrovia last spring and had the skills to be able to perform an initial surgery. However, this surgeon informed Grace’s family then that he had to return to China, but they would need to search for someone else to perform a second surgery for her by her 1st birthday, or she wouldn’t live. Receiving that type of news in America would certainly prompt any of us into immediate action…especially those of us privileged to be parents. We would do whatever it takes to get help for our children.

Well, Liberians love just as hard, but “help” is just not as readily at their disposal. Poverty is a way of life, and simply trying to figure out where they are going to get their one meal for the day is about all they can muster most of the time. Finding medical care for a child with a rare condition seems like an impossibility. But, again, Grace’s parents know the same God that I know, and their faith brought them to our conferences and brought them to that Sunday morning service. They knew the 3 American ladies could help their baby. Ouch! Looking back…their faith was so much larger than ours, and they put feet to it!

So…fast forward a few months…through the work of several, Grace and her parents are in Nashville, TN awaiting her life-saving surgery set to happen tomorrow morning at 7:30 CT. This entire process has been nothing short of a miracle. Some of you have followed this story as I’ve blogged about it previously. Thank you for praying for Grace! Don’t stop now! Please pray tomorrow for calm parents, skilled surgeons and staff, and a successful operation. I have the opportunity to travel to Nashville to be with the family and baby for the surgery, so I’ll update you again later. Thanks for yoru prayers blog friends!

I KNOW God is still in the miracle working business!

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Meet Leah

Leah StirewaltI became "twice widowed" when my beloved prince, Joel, went to his Heavenly home after a brief and sudden illness on February 12, 2017. I’m in a place of shock and devastation, but I intend to use this format to journal my second widow journey, much like I did my first. It’s my open journal, my electronic oasis, and it’s often the place I find true healing as I allow myself to “come clean” with my feelings. Read More...

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