The Classroom That Became a Movement
When Katie Davis booked a one-way ticket to Uganda at nineteen, she had a modest plan: teach kindergarten for a year, maybe sponsor a few children's school fees. She rented a small room in Jinja, bought some pencils, and started showing up.
She never imagined she would adopt thirteen daughters. She never imagined founding Amazima Ministries, which now feeds and educates over seven hundred children. She never imagined that her simple willingness to teach the alphabet would ripple outward into medical clinics, agricultural training, and a community transformed from the inside out.
Katie did not arrive in Uganda with a strategic plan for all of that. She arrived with a backpack and a prayer that amounted to, "God, let me be useful." And God took that prayer — that small, sincere, open-handed prayer — and answered it on a scale she could not have drafted on her best day.
This is the breathtaking promise of Ephesians 3:20. Paul does not say God merely meets our requests. He says God is able to do "immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine." The Greek word there is hyperekperissou — beyond all excess, beyond the furthest boundary of our dreaming. God's power is not limited by the smallness of our asking. He takes our pencils-and-a-prayer offerings and builds something we never had the imagination to request. Our job is not to dream big enough. Our job is to show up with open hands and let the God of immeasurably more do what only He can do.
Scripture References
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