Saturday, July 30, 2011

H {Help Wanted!}

Hopefully by now, you're seeing that Bible Translation isn't just the people who go in to the field and translate the Bible. While those people have a huge task in front of them, there are hundreds of people behind them that make Bible Translation possible. We met just a portion of those people during our training...

-A telephone technician and his wife, a nurse...headed to PNG to serve where we're going-yay!

-Art & Ethnomusicology....see my friends, the Gasslers, to see what their role will be.

-Language surveyors

-Librarians

-Computer specialists

-The amazingly talented artist...headed to Thailand with her hubby to illustrate. 

-The other aviation nut with his school teacher wife...we're also headed together, Lord willing, on the same timeline...our kids are so excited!

-The family not quite sure where they're headed, but they know, for a year, they will help serve at the JAARS center before moving to the next location.

-The recruiters making the move from Austin to Nashville to go into churches, colleges, their surroundings and encourage those thinking about missions to "just do it!"

-The single guy that wanted to do missions, youth ministry and auto mechanics...he's headed to Waxhaw, NC to do all three. Yes, God is awesome like that.

I heard over and over, from the testimonies shared over those two weeks, it doesn't matter what God has given you the talent or ability to do, He can use it for His purpose in Bible Translation. There is a need for everything from business people, mechanics, school teachers, IT guru's, nurses...and yes, pilots to bring Bibles into the hands of those that have never heard.

Have a week of vacation and want to serve? There are opportunities to serve short-term and your help would be invaluable. Who knows, it could plant a seed that changes your future!

G {George Cowan}

We had the wonderful opportunity and privilege to meet Mr. George Cowan at our Wycliffe training.  He is a past president of Wycliffe and has had countless opportunities to see the fruit of Bible Translation.

Mr. Cowan shared many stories during his time with us. Each time, he spoke I had tears in my eyes. Still, even at 95, has a passion for every tribe, tongue and nation to have a Bible in their heart language.

Click here to get just a taste of the passion he shared with us.

Friday, July 29, 2011

F {Faith & Finances}

Today you get to hear from none other than Jason! I asked him to help shed some light on today's subject...

Faith and finances. At the outset they can seem to be two unrelated topics. However, for God's children, the faith we profess should have a profound impact on how we view and manage our finances.


As we begin our journey with Wycliffe, one of the big changes is financial. We are shifting from working a traditional job to provide for our needs to working with the Lord to build a team of partners to support the work of Bible translation by praying for us and supporting us with their finances. We cannot do the work God has called us to do without the support of a faithful prayer and financial team. We must have faith in the Lord that He will provide for us monthly through the gifts and prayers of His people.  This is definitely a different way of life but I don't believe it is as different as I first thought it to be.


Every since I graduated from college I have worked somewhere. I went to work, did my job, and the company sent me a check. I never wondered if the check was coming. I just knew it would be there. I had faith that they would pay me every payday.  


If I could have such an unwavering faith in an employer, how much more unwavering should my faith be in the Creator of the universe, the God who did not even spare His only Son for me? God owns everything and everything I have comes from His hand. 


James 1:17 says "Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning".  


The reality is, whether I go to work and earn a paycheck or depend on a team of partners to provide, God is the source and He does not change. He will not fail to provide.


That brings me to you. What is God calling you to do?  Perhaps you haven't been called to go and serve in a full time capacity, but all of us have a part to play.  Maybe the Lord is asking you to give Him more of your time in service or more of your money to His work.  Whatever it is, if you hear His voice, there is no greater thing than to obey. Even if you can't see then end or understand how it could possibly work.  


Remember, "faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things unseen" (Hebrews 11:1) and "trust in the Lord with all you heart, and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him, and He shall direct your paths"  (Proverbs 3:5-6).   

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

E {Education}

The next question people ask, after how the kids doing, is what will they do about school? Fair question since they are kids and they aren't natural geniuses or gifted and talented in every subject. (I know the grandparents are in shock right now...)

The educational issue was a big concern for us. Actually, before we decided to go into full-time missions we were in "discussions" of what to do here once our kids finished the school they go to at our church (pre-school through 2nd grade).

Here's the deal: I don't feel like I'm called to homeschool our kids full-time. I truly feel like it's a calling. It's certainly a commitment of your time, your resources, patience etc. I have many friends who do have that calling and I commend them for abilities! It's cool to see how each person does things differently, yet achieves the common goal of getting your child educated, ready for "the real world" or college, whatever is next.

When we looked at our viable options of where we could go, Cameroon West Africa or PNG, I started praying, "Okay, Lord, you know where my heart is about the school issue, but if you want me to homeschool I will." And I meant it. I knew that if that's what He wanted for our family, for me, then that's what I would do.

After much prayer the Lord started leading us to PNG and we found out they have a great school where we are going. The teachers are Wycliffe missionaries who have been called to come and teach the missionaries kids. Awesome right?!?

Needless to say, I'm excited. I'm excited that my kids will be exposed to over 13 different nationalities of teachers and kids (a.k.a. soon to be friends!) I'm excited that I can be involved some how, some way in their school. I don't know if they'll have PTO meetings or home room moms (cupcakes?!), but I'll find a way to help.

Think I'm off the hook with homeschooling? Not so much. We will spend 6 months in North Carolina in January for training and guess where the kids are going to school? Yep...right in our little abode in Waxhaw. We felt like they were going to go through enough transition next year that we didn't want to pull them out of school here, move, enroll them in public school for one semester only to unenroll (spell check says that's not a word, but it is now!) and then move to PNG.

I know those 6 months will be a stretching time for me. Honestly, I'm already a little nervous. I don't really know where to begin. "The plan" is for me to use the curriculum they will use this fall, but I also want to be creative (and CHEAP!) in what we do to implement the material. So...if you have any ideas or things that have worked for you in homeschooling...pass them along. I'll take all the help I can get!

Sunday, July 24, 2011

D {Dylan}

Almost everyone we talk to wants to know how the kids are handling the transition we're going through, especially moving and leaving everything they've known in their limited existence...just because their parents have made this choice to follow the Lord in this particular direction.

Sometimes I feel like they're politely saying, "You know you're crazy for ripping your kids out of a 'real' childhood..."

Well, no one ever said we were normal.

Honestly, I think they're okay and really? They'll have a childhood...it will be fun...it will just be different.

And that's okay.

Mo asks questions, but she's our laid back, go with the flow girl. She's more worried about which dolls she can take with her than whether or not she'll have access to hot showers and chocolate. For now, she's good. I know soon when things start picking up, she'll have questions and I pray we'll have answers to help her through.

Little Mal won't know any different, so for her the issues will be coming in for furloughs and dealing with the overload of stimulus that the U.S. offers. I'll cross that bridge later. She'll be older, we'll be a little wiser...

But my boy. My sweet, crazy, dirty, funny, smart D. He is old enough to know what's going on and I truly feel like the Lord has and is preparing him for this adventure.

Before we talked to the kids about going into missions, Jason and I talked alot privately (in this house: after the kids were in bed--the only time there's peace around here!) We didn't want to start something that wasn't going to go anywhere. You know how kids get when they think something is going to happen and then...it doesn't. Chaos...mass riots (we're outnumbered kids to parents around here!)...tears...

But during the "discussion" process, out of nowhere one night, D asks, "Why aren't we missionaries?" J and I just glanced at each other like "Did you say something to him?!" Neither one of us had and we told him that right now we were supposed to be missionaries here...to our friends, our neighbors, the people around us that don't know Jesus. That answer seemed to suffice his question for the time. And since then, he's amazed us with his boldness in talking about Jesus to strangers. It's seriously humbling not as his mom, but as a Christian.

Then weeks later, at dinner where we had a side of rice, D says, "I really hope, if one day the Lord tells us to be missionaries, that we don't go somewhere that they just eat rice. I don't like rice."

He couldn't let the missionary thing go! All of a sudden he was asking questions...lots of them...about places, people, food. He referred frequently to a visit several years ago we had with some dear friends who are missionaries in Indonesia. I can't believe he remembered them, but their visit impacted him. He thought what they were doing was so cool. Flying for Jesus? He was all over it.

It was obvious, we had to tell the kids what we were thinking. They could be praying for this process and whether or not we should "go for it". Plus we were hoping (and still praying) that this could be such a faith builder for them. To see God at work. To see how He opened and closed doors all along this way. How mom and dad handled it. (no pressure!)

Needless to say, D was pumped...but then nervous! Would he have to learn a new language? Would we ever speak English again!? And the kicker...no chicken nuggets? French fries? What would he eat?!

He's still not excited about leaving his fav foods, but he's relieved to know we'll still speak English. We're starting to work through the bigger issues...leaving friends, family, not being able to take all of our "favorite things". (Somehow when you're almost 8 everything seems to be a fav!)

We have confidence that the Lord will continue helping his tender heart through this process. He's excited, but nervous, fearful of the unknown...aren't we all?

"Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things unseen." Heb. 11:1 (NASB)

Saturday, July 23, 2011

C {Cameron Townsend}

Since becoming "official" members of Wycliffe in January, we have had 6 weeks of online training and, in April, spent 2 weeks in Orlando, FL at the Wycliffe Headquarters. This training included an array of information, including the background of how Wycliffe was founded. (Yes, Jason the history buff was excited!)

So today, here's a little about William Cameron Townsend, or Uncle Cam as he's affectionately remembered.

Uncle Cam was a college graduate, trying to sell Spanish Bibles in Guatemala in 1917. He discovered that the majority of people he was selling the Bibles to didn't understand Spanish. He was so convinced that it was God's will that the Cakchiquel people be able to read the Bible in their own language that he stayed among the people and stopped selling Bibles. The Cakchiquel people took him in, helped him learn their language, create an alphabet, analyze the grammar and translate the New Testament in just ten years.

But Uncle Cam didn't stop there. He was concerned for other Bibleless groups and opened Camp Wycliffe in Arkansas in the summer of l934. Named after the first translator of the entire English Bible, John Wycliffe (see yesterday's post!), Camp Wycliffe was designed to train people in basic linguistic and translation needs. Only two students enrolled. The next year, five new students enrolled and Townsend took the group to Mexico with him to begin translation work.

In 1942, Townsend and three associates—Kenneth Pike, William Nyman and Eugene Nida—officially founded Wycliffe Bible Translators and its affiliate organization, the Summer Institute of Linguistics (now know as SIL). In 1948, after surviving a serious airplane crash in Mexico, Towsend founded the Jungle Aviation And Radio Service...now known as JAARS...we'll talk more about this soon!


Townsend wrote many books and articles over the years. Many of these were on the topic of linguistics, for which the late Professor Edward Sapir, one of the world's great linguists, commended him. Townsend’s ultimate goal was to serve others scientifically, materially and spiritually. Uncle Cam passed away in 1982, but his vision to see Bible translation completed for every language that needs one has never been closer. Today, Wycliffe and each of its affiliate organizations continue to strive towards that goal.

Friday, July 22, 2011

B {the B-I-B-L-E}

Question for today...

How many Bibles do you have in your home? (Don't forget to include the one you may have uploaded on your phone, your iPad, your Kindle, your computer...oh and check the kids rooms too!)

5? 10? Maybe more?

How many of those Bibles can you read?

My guess is that unless you have a Greek or Hebrew translation laying around (I'm sure there are a few of you that do!), you can easily read every copy you have in your possession.

We are a blessed people. We have the opportunity to be educated, to learn to read in the language we best understand. For us, it's English. It's our heart language.

But for us to get the Bible into our heart language was no small task. There was a price paid and sacrifice made.

Jason is a history buff and loves to find how things originated. Several months ago, he spoke at church and gave some history about how the English Bible we have came into being. So for today, I completely stole borrowed his notes! :)

The Bible was originally written in the languages of Hebrew, Aramaic, and Greek.  The old testament in Hebrew and Aramaic and the new in Greek.


To make a long story short, eventually there later came a translation entirely in Greek called the Septuagint and one entirely in Latin called the Vulgate.  Christianity came to England in the days of Roman rule and the Roman Catholics arrived in the year 597.  Till this time, English Christians had no Bible and the the Roman Catholics brought the Latin Vulgate that they couldn’t read.  


David Ewert, in his book A General Introduction to the Bible says “It is staggering to think that for a thousand years of Christianity in England, English Christians had no Bible.”
That’s where the name John Wycliffe comes in. John Wycliffe lived from 1329-1384 and was a theologian at Oxford.  He became concerned with the Roman Catholic church of his day and the corruption in it and wanted to bring people back to a solid biblically based faith.  This was an impossible task without a Bible in English that the average person could read.  

So he began to translate the Bible into English and completed two versions of the Bible in English.  For this he was labeled a heretic by the church hierarchy.  His bible was banned by law, he was forced to retire from his job at Oxford, and died a year and a half later.  

Wycliffe wrote this to those who opposed his work:

“You call me a heretic because I have translated the Bible into the common tongue of the people.  You say that the Church of God is in danger from this book.  How can that be?  Is it not from the Bible that we learn who is the Builder and Sovereign of the Church?  It is you who place the Church in jeopardy by hiding the Divine warrant, the royal missive of her King.” 

Because of Wycliffe’s pioneering work in translating the Bible into English, Cameron Townsend, named the Bible translation organization he founded after him.
Another man came along after Wycliffe and furthered the work of an English translation. It’s a name you might recognize from today, but only as a book publisher.  William Tyndale (1494-1536) was his name.  

Tyndale’s work culminated in his edition of 1534.  David Ewert says in his book that “it is estimated that nine-tenths of the King James Version of 1611 is Tyndale, and where the Authorized Version departed from Tyndale, later revisers often returned to it.”  

Tyndale was also severely persecuted for his work and in 1535 was kidnapped, imprisoned, convicted of heresy and eventually burned at the stake.
 As you can see, it was not without great sacrifice that we have come to be able to read and understand the Bible in our own language.


In the world today there are nearly 7,000 spoken languages.

Of those 7,000 languages there are over 2,000 languages that do not have any Scripture.

Those 2,000 languages equate to more than 340 million people.

340 million people without the word of God to encourage, reassure and give them hope.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

A {Aviation}


To kick this series off, let's talk about aviation, but first, a little background...

As you know by now, Jason is a pilot. He's been flying since he was 16 and he's passionate about it, but with that passion, he wanted purpose.

Four years ago Jason took a regional airline position, it wasn't his dream job, but he knew that this was the best way to gain flight time. We knew if we were ever going into mission aviation one day (we thought in like 20 years!), he would need the hours and experience to get him down the road.

Fast forward to 2010. With thousands of hours now under his belt, the passion Jason had to fly was still there, but the urge to have a purpose in that flying was raging. Flying all over the U.S. and being gone 4-5 days a week isn't all that it's cracked up to be--he wanted more. Last March the Lord made it very apparent that it was time to give that passion some purpose for HIM.

Missions and aviation....an unlikely pair? Not really when you look beyond the U.S. and go into third world countries where isolated, rural, tropical areas are the norm, transportation and resources scarce. Add missionaries attempting to reach people groups living in these areas and you have yourself quite a combination of needs.

Here is a favorite story from Mary Pearson, translator in Papua New Guinea, for over 23 years and her thoughts on mission aviation.


It was an early morning in March 1986 the first time I laid eyes on a Cessna 206.
My friend and I grabbed each other in a fearful embrace.
We had never seen such a small plane. How in the world would our families fit into that tiny thing? Could it fly safely over rugged mountain ranges and miles of open ocean? Find a remote village and land on a tiny strip of coral jutting out of the water?
We were about to begin translating God’s Word into Lote, a language in Papua New Guinea that had never been written down. Its speakers had never seen the Bible in their own language.
That first weekend, we walked 3 1/2 hours down a coral road, six degrees south of the equator, to join an Easter celebration. We carried small index cards for reminders and said something like, “Ek Maria.” My name is Mary. “Iat nge Amerika.”I come from America. We’ve come to learn your language ... This is all I know.That’s how it began.
But to get there, we had to board the tiny, winged vessel that stood before us. As we squeezed into the cabin, we felt like we were taking our lives into our own hands.
We were wrong.
Turns out we were putting our lives into the capable hands of pilots and aviation mechanics, whose honed skills and sharp eyes enabled us to fly safely anywhere in this rugged country. They had received years of training and could be earning a comfortable salary. Instead, they used their expertise to serve missionaries around the world—giving their very lives to save ours.
Our first four years were the toughest. A strange place. A foreign culture. An unbearable climate. A new language. Learning to speak an unwritten language and writing it down phonetically often had us stumped, feeling we’d never get to the next level. But word by word, phrase by phrase, we got there. Meanwhile, we fell completely in love with the warm, friendly Lote people.
During those long village stays, away from everything familiar, we received visits from the angels: those beautiful white-winged planes we grew to cherish, no matter the size.
The hum of an engine breaking through clouds brought joyful anticipation. Mail bags! News from home! Fresh vegetables, meat, medical supplies—comforts to help us through the lonely months.
I’ll never forget the time a plane departed after one of its wonderful deliveries. A few minutes later, we heard it coming in for a second landing. I jumped to the radio and asked the pilot if everything was okay. “Yes,” he said, “I just realized I forgot to unload your Christmas presents.”
Those precious 20-minute visits connected us to the outside world.
On one extraordinary November day, the plane landed on our little airstrip loaded with precious cargo: books. The Lote co-translator stood over my husband’s shoulder as he opened the box and pulled out the first copy of the Gospel of Mark in the Lote language. It was the first time he ever held God’s Word in his own language. He took it, sat down in the shade of a tree, and read hungrily: “Helenga urana toto ngana nge Iesus Kristus nenge Nenut Non Palaungana Tuna.” The very good news of Jesus Christ, God’s Son.
One year, a cyclone destroyed our village house; we were rescued by a pilot willing to fly through turbulent winds, knowing the plane had been inspected and checked as always. A year later, pilots—once again—were key to building our new house, as they shuttled builders from the nearest town into our village.
It’s now 23 years since we arrived, and the Lote Scriptures are at the printers.
We’ve had twenty-three years of safe flights, medical rescues, mail and grocery deliveries, and flights for national translators to attend training courses. Twenty-three years of flights enduring high winds and wicked rain storms, over volcanoes, mountains and oceans. Twenty-three years without incident, bringing us to the place we now call home, so the Lote people can have God’s Word.
Because these pilots, mechanics and trainers have invested their lives in Bible translation, this will be the generation when the Lote people hold the New Testament in their hands, reading it in their own language for the first time.
The need is great for skilled pilots and mechanics to help carry out the work of Bible Translation into some of the true ends of the earth. 


This is why we're going.

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Wycliffe & the ABC's

As most of you know, or have at least caught on by now if you've been reading long, we're in the throws of an amazing, God-sized journey with our family. So many of you have asked us some great questions over the last several months, and what a better platform than my little spec of the net to try and cover some topics.

I'm going to start a series of posts about Wycliffe Bible Translators, JAARS, our upcoming roles and what part you can have to reach the Bible-less people in Papua New Guinea. Didn't think you were going with us did you? Well, just wait...you are!

As I thought about how to do it, my preschool teacher brain kicked in and I thought "Hey use the alphabet!" So every day I'll cover a topic with that letter. My prayer is that these will be insightful and informative for you as well as me since I'm still learning too!

While you're reading, if you have questions/comments, drop me a line in the comment box and I'll do my best to clarify or find a better answer.

Thanks for coming along for the ride.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Got Joy?

Our associate pastor started a series of messages tonight about happiness...joy...being positive in the midst of whatever in life that has you down.

I think it struck a nerve with people...in a good way.

So often we find ourselves in situations where it's easy to complain and grumble which ultimately leads to negativity. That negativity changes our moods. We're aggravated, short tempered, "Debbie Downers" and "Negative Neil" is who they are in our house! Our outward actions change (gossip, complacency) and our heart fills with guilt and sin.

Nothing positive can come from the negative attitude that we take on. I'm not saying that positive things can't be part of the outcome of a negative situation. I am a firm believer that the Lord can and does use the negative situations in our lives to bring Him glory and praise.

But sometimes the challenge is finding the joy in your life despite the circumstances around you. We're all going through things in our life whether we like it or not. That's called life and I'm pretty sure the board game is easier to play than the real deal...even if you lose the game!

A great quote from tonight:

"A lot of people say "under my circumstances" and that its their problem. (as if no one has ever gone through it!) They are under something that God has already gone over." (see Romans 8 for more!)

Nothing surprises God. But when you're faced with the situation, how will you react?

Honestly, I think sometimes it's easier to be negative about things than positive. Yes, some days the pit you're in feels like quicksand...you're sinking fast with no rope in sight. Some days you want to huddle up in the corner and cry for a few hours til your eyes are puffy and red and it's hard to breathe. We all go through those days of wanting to be left alone to have our pity party.

But there IS hope. There IS joy around us. Some days you may have to squint a little harder to see it, but it's there.

Tonight's challenge: find the joy in your life. Sounds easy right? Well, we've been asked to write it down! For every negative, look for the positive, write it down and acknowledge the One who is the giver of all we have on this earth...in this life we live.

Wanna join me in finding joy?

This week put a piece of paper on the fridge and start writing...the blessings, the answered prayers, the positive things, the little things that make our numbered days on earth a little better and you'll see...joy is closer than you think.

Friday, July 15, 2011

XI

Today, I'm celebrating eleven years with this man...who might shut the blog down if he finds out I found this picture (it makes me smile!) and posted it. Thankfully, his sightings of this blog are few and far between, so maybe I'm safe.


He was apparently quite confident in his decision to marry me because he was eating right before we walked down the aisle!! 

(Now I will say, if memory serves me correctly, that this is a bread that my parents sweet neighbor had made and it was DELISH, but that's besides the point...)

Who eats RIGHT before they're about to get married?!?! 

Women spend months just trying to fit into their dresses and look "just right"for their big day...food takes a back seat until the vows are said! 

But not the groom. Obviously Jason wears his tux handsomely, unconcerned (from this pic) that I'm  tucked away in another room almost ready to go, but fighting the huge zit that formed on my face overnight! If only "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" had been out I could have known I needed Windex to solve my problem! 

This post has really derailed...

My point is, I still love this bread eating man.

I love him more today than I did that day. 

I have a hunch I'll love him even more eleven years from now.

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Mug Shots

Question: What happens when you face the prospect of moving...to the other side of the world?

Answer: You realize how much stuff (some might say "crap" (mom...) but in the interest of being a child friendly blog, let's continue to say stuff!) you've accumulated over the years.

Through this process, I've come to the realization that we kind of have a "thing".

I know that some people collect magnets, postcards, pencils...why couldn't we be one of those people? Something smaller. Something more portable?

I really don't know how we got started.

I guess, once upon a time, we were newlyweds, we were young, he had hair, mine wasn't gray. We were carefree, child-free and going places. We would take weekend jaunts here and there, go places with friends and we always ended up coming back with a coffee mug from somewhere.

Back then, we drank coffee, but not near the copious amounts that we do now. Maybe it's because now we're older, he's balder, I'm grayer, not so carefree, definitely not child-free and well, we're going places, just long-term and not just for the weekend!

But this mug purchasing "thing" has multiplied to the point that a couple of years ago, I got rid of all of the "normal" mugs because we were overrun with "special" mugs.

Want to look inside my cabinet you say?

Okay, if you insist...

Maybe this is the mug that started it all. I'm sure we were leaving Longview, headed to Kansas and needed to remember our roots. As if getting college educations, each other and living there four years weren't enough!


You might be married to a pilot if you have mugs from various air shows, mugs that talk about being a pilot or mugs with airplanes, their history and their "specialities". Have I mentioned pilots are kind of geeky?

I happen to love geeks.

Then a few years ago, someone (pointed finger to me?) came up with a brilliant idea to paint daddy a mug for Father's Day...because we short on mugs?! Hardly.

It's one of his favs so I'm glad we did it. But because of the paint, hand-wash only.

B-r-i-l-l-i-a-n-t idea.


Old school design which he loves. Perfect amount every time which I love and it's used all the time. (It's actually dirty in this picture but you would never know because I'm not taking pics of the inside. Now you're wondering if the other ones are clean or dirty...thought so...)

Oh and it reminds me of when I did my first LIVE radio broadcast, so of course, buy a mug...seriously. It's out of control.

Then there are mugs that I buy just to drive the pilot crazy. As if he was ever really going to drink out of the crab mug...from a Girls Weekend...from Tybee Island!

So it became my "take to school" mug because the kids got a kick out of it. I took it home to wash it with actual soap and water...forgot it the next day and the kids flipped! They wanted me to bring the crab back! At least someone appreciated its uniqueness.

And on and on the tour could go... more airplane mugs (yes, there are more), the neon yellow Blue Bell mug, the USS Lexington mug...places we've been, things we've done. Kind of like walking down memory lane one sip at a time.

But for now, I'm banning mug buying. We'll have to figure out something smaller for the future.

I might turn into one of those magnet collectors after all.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

The Highlight Reel

Already Wednesday!? A brief re-cap of our fourth...



*After a day of shopping on Saturday and fireworks on the square here in town, I wasn't feeling well. I thought maybe just a combo of the heat and being tired, but oh no. About 5 a.m. Sunday morning I found out I was the lucky recipient of a good dose of food poisoning. Thankfully, the pilot was home and wrangled the three amigos so I could hibernate in my bathroom until I stepped out into the living room at about 4:15 that afternoon. After ten minutes of that commotion, I went into hibernation again. So thankful hubs was home!

*Monday, the 4th, Jason and I were supposed to celebrate our anniversary early by going to the Rangers game...and the all-you-can-eat seats and fireworks. Not really appealing after how my day went Sunday, but the tickets had been bought weeks ago and he was going...with or without me. Thankfully, this wasn't one of those fancy schmancy dates so t-shirt, shorts and pony tail were totally appropriate and I pulled it together enough to go. The heat (it was 104 on Monday) was a bit much and I only thought I was going to pass out once. I did not indulge in the all-you-can-eat aspect of the game but I got my money's worth in water, so I feel like I got something out of it. The fireworks were AWESOME afterwards. We moved seats only to be told we should really go out to the concourse to see them better. We went and ended up being yards away from where they were being set off! Seriously, it was raining cardboard and paper! A great show for sure and made me think about how much I'll miss fireworks once we're in PNG.


*And then to top off our holiday weekend, a man showed up at our house Tuesday morning wanting to look at the house. Well, that's fine and all...if you had called first! But, my husband who is living in this "Carpe Diem" mode, welcomed him in oblivious to the fact that the clean unfolded laundry was still on the couch, the kids rooms looked like, well, kids rooms. This oversight apparently doesn't bother men as much as it bothers women?! I just like to have it in "show mode" and it was a far cry from how I like to show it. Thankfully, most of the time was spent outside talking "structural integrity" and not so much "interior design".

So today it's back to "real life". The pilot is being a pilot and I'm upright a little more than I was yesterday and trying to take on my husband's "seize the day" mentality. Not sure what that will entail, but I'm guessing there are Icees in my kids future.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Thankful Thursday {VBS Edition}


Today I am overwhelmed. My heart is full of love and overjoyed. I still have tears brimming in my eyes.

All of this because of VBS.

VBS? Isn't she taking it over the top today? Sometimes, admittedly I do, but not today. We have finished an amazing 4 days of seeing God's people come together for kids pre-K to 6th grade.

So today's list includes...

*The 17 new brothers and sisters I have in Christ! Their decision means even though we probably won't spend much time together on this earth, that we will spend eternity together. The countenance on their faces was priceless. One boy said, "This is the best decision I've ever made!" There is such depth to that statement that I know at 8 he may not really comprehend right now, but my prayer for each of these kids is that they will grow to understand their decision they made. Some were fearful about what their friends would say, but had the courage to move past it...this was about GOD. Our big God who loves them and gave His life for them. They accepted all HE offers with child like faith and boldness. What an example I learned from these kids as they came forward.

*God's people showed up in a big way. We had some awesome volunteers that spent their time, resources, and creativity to make this week run so smoothly. One man even sacrificed his hair all for the sake of Samson's example (thanks Rob!!) There was such a sweet spirit this week that only comes when people forget about themselves and put others, this week about 150 kids, in front of them. The 54+ volunteers gave it all for these kids and because of it, we had an outstanding, fun filled week.

*Each year, we have snack and Tuesday is usually cookie day. All we did was say the word "We need cookies!" and the church kitchen was overrun with at least 45 dozen, mostly homemade cookies!

*I am thankful for our church and staff that are willing to take a week and devote it all to kids. There have been late nights, early mornings and months of planning all devoted to these 4 days but it has been worth every minute, every dime to see 17 kids come to know Christ. That is what it's all about.

*I am thankful to the kids that emptied out their change jars and sacrificed their allowances this week. Because of them, 2 missionaries in Peru will have over $900 a piece to spend on things they need to serve those they are working to reach. That.Is.Awesome!

*I am extremely grateful to my husband and kids. They have been long suffering through all of the days and long hours of prep and planning that has gone into this week. Poor Mal is, yet again, my little  trooper as she's been pulled out of bed because I needed to get going and napping in her stroller because she just finally gave up on waiting to get home. This afternoon she's just begging for some "MAMA!" time and I gladly caved!

Can you see why I am full this week? Months of prayers have been answered, kids saved and lives touched this week. I am completely blessed and humbled to be a part of it all.

The Unfinished Conversation

It's that time of year where, in the last month, my time has been divided between being mom, working and helping friends leave for their...