Advent Hope: The Joy of Meeting Kenneth Bae

In the life of the church, Advent is a season of waiting -- waiting to celebrate the birth of Jesus. Advent is also a season of hope as the church lives in the hope that Jesus brings. Throughout our lives, we experience seasons of waiting of differing time periods and intensities.
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In the life of the church, Advent is a season of waiting -- waiting to celebrate the birth of Jesus. Advent is also a season of hope as the church lives in the hope that Jesus brings. Throughout our lives, we experience seasons of waiting of differing time periods and intensities. We also live in hope.

Kenneth Bae and his family and friends know something of waiting and hoping. For over two years, the Democratic People's Republic of Korea imprisoned Kenneth Bae. He was finally released on November 8, 2014.

We reached out to prisoners of war in the past. We reached out to prisoners in Syria, Cuba, Iraq, Yugoslavia, Gambia, and Liberia. In Libya, we sought the release of nurses. In North Korea, we also reached out to Kenneth Bae.

Kenneth Bae's mother and sister lobbied tirelessly for Bae's release. We met his mother and sister in January 2014 to identify ways we could help work for his release. We wrote 11 letters to Kim Jung Un, Supreme Leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. We met with Ambassador Jang, deputy ambassador to the UN for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. We met with U.S. State department officials and kept in touch with them throughout the year. We wrote a letter to Cui Tiankai, the Chinese Ambassador to the U.S. and connected with the Swedish embassy to help advocate for Kenneth Bae's release.

Throughout this year, filled with action and prayer for Bae, there were moments when our hopes were dashed. We believed the government of the Democratic People's Republic of Korean would release Bae before the joint military exercises in the Spring between the United Sates and the Republic of Korea, but that failed to happen.

Over the course of his imprisonment, Bae experienced health problems. He was moved from hard labor to the hospital and then back to hard labor again. His health issues gave hope that the Democratic People's Republic of Korea would release him on humanitarian grounds. But those hopes were not realized.

As we worked throughout the year, we hoped that Kenneth Bae would know we were trying for his release. We wanted him to realize that he was not alone in his struggle. We wanted to provide him some reason to hope. As we worked for his release, we never got permission to enter Democratic People's Republic of Korea and meet with Bae and tell him about our efforts. Thus, it was good to learn that he heard from the Swedish embassy that we were trying and working with his family for his release.

When you are in a hole, a deep hole of uncertainty, fear, and captivity, hope is essential. Hope comes from God. Hope comes as God moves people, sometimes people we do not know, to reach out to us. In the Old Testament, when Joseph was put in a hole by his own brothers, God watched over him and Joseph received new life through the strangers to whom his brothers sold him. God is at work in our lives even in our darkest moments. The season of Advent reminds us that hope sustains us and carries us through the darkness.

As Kenneth Bae found himself in a deep hole of solitude and loneliness, God delivered him. Through Bae's ordeal, God gave him hope. Bae never surrendered his faith. Sustained by faith and hope, he endured over two years of hard labor.

It was with inexplicable joy that we met Kenneth Bae on December 1, 2014 in Seattle, Washington, a few weeks after his release. We immensely enjoyed our time with him and his family. Bae is quiet and soft spoken, a kind man with an enormous smile and a beautiful heart.

During our joyous meeting, we learned that Kenneth Bae still hopes for reconciliation between the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the Republic of Korea. He remains committed to the well-being and livelihoods of the people of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea. His concerns speak for the type of man he is: a loving husband, a good father, a wonderful brother and a kind son. May God richly bless him.

Follow Reverend Jesse Jackson on Twitter: @RevJJackson

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