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30 January 2013

red-faced grace

I've been trying to figure out how to blog about a really culturally revealing, hilarious story I lived last week in a way that doesn't make anyone blush.  There is value to the story, and a look into the little everyday true joys of living in Haiti...so I'm gonna try!

Last week, Ta-Ta, Sofie and I got to school early to pick Lily up.  The scene outside the school gate is already very culturally rich.  There are only two moms picking children up in cars (Cammie and I) and so no one is sitting in their vans with the engines running, drinking their Starbucks and texting while they wait.  

Oh no.  This is key community time.  To the left of the huge fortress-like gate, clustered under the shade of a sole palm are the women.  Moms all standing and sitting around, some with infants in arms, talking and laughing, sometimes buying and selling, calling out to passerby's...waiting with friends.  

In front of the gate are the vendors, 6 or 7 women with pallets of hard candy, gum and potato chips to sell to school kids inside the gates, a few with broken coolers and cold drinks, sometimes a woman with fried dough.  

Then, on the other side of the street, but also in front of the school, are the men.  All their motorcycles are parked there, and the dads and moto-taxi drivers stand about, talking, and sometimes, joking, wrestling, trying out Jackie Chan moves on each other, and sometimes calling to the women.

Until the first ribboned 3-year old hits the other side of the gate, everyone stays in their designated area, in no rush, enjoying the company.  But the moment Belo pulls out his key ring and starts to unlock the gate, everyone rushes it, pressing the huge metal portay in, suddenly in a big rush to grab their kids (and usually, all their neighbor's kids) and get back to their homes.
It's in this intricate little community that I wait for Lily, with the women, of course, usually with several of them playing with Sofie and offering her sugar cane or hard candy.  

But this past week, right when I found my place in the shade and put Sofie down to play with another baby, another woman made her way into the middle of the group, pulling a huge yellow tub off her head, and placed it in the middle of the gaggle...an overflow of silky, but well-used, red, white, pink and tan soutienne: bras.

Bras are not easy to come by around here.  And trying to find one in decent shape that actually fits?  That must be some challenge. So, I wasn't too surprised when the women quickly gathered around the bucket, chattering excitedly and digging through the mountain, looking for something that might fit.  

You see where this is going, don't you?

Just a moment later without realizing I had gone there, I was in the middle of a dressing room at Victoria's Secret for the community bra fitting of a life-time...except we were still just sitting under our tree in the shade.  On the main road to Port-au-Prince.  With a million people around.

In a community of women who would mostly say they are Christians, sitting in front of a Christian school,  most everyone was wearing their culturally-moral and traditional skirts, but trying on and trading off bras on the main street.  Poking fun at one another as they worked, and when the occasional truly terrible bra was found, the boldest of the mothers would try that baby on, anyway, and dance around a bit, sending her fellow sisters into peals of laughter and hilarious uproar.  

I mean, I was laughing SO hard by the time Lily came, I had tears in my eyes, and as I went to wipe them away saw them streaming down Ta-Ta's face, as well.  

Suddenly, thoughts of "Oh man.  I am in the wrong place at the wrong time" turned to the realization that I was in the right place at the right time...in the middle of a happy woman community moment, accepting it for what it was, and full of laughter.  Life.  

As I thought more about this seemingly cultural contradiction later with Sarah, we realized that somehow, modestly wearing skirts and being half-naked at the same time "works" in Haiti.  Just as you will drive through town and see men outside their homes with a bucket, bathing.  They are not naked.  They are bathing.  These women weren't nude.  They were trying on bras!  Compartmentalized necessary temporary nudity.

If there'd been a Target, they'd be there.  And if the bucket came with a dressing-room, everyone would have picked a stall.   If there'd been a return policy, everyone would have just grabbed one and come back later with their receipt if it hadn't fit.

But what we had was what we had.  And everyone dealt with the manner not only quite efficiently, but with joy.

Which made me realize how often I throw my judgement out there--or at least mull it in my head-- without ever thinking from another's shoes.  

How often I know what you should be doing, how it should be done, what is not appropriate, without ever imagining where you might be coming from, what you might be going through, what might be complete and total SENSE for you, what might even be necessary for your situation.

The moment not only gave me joy and a red face, but grace.  

We have a lot to learn from each other.  How good it is to learn in the company of friends--and those who will be--when we are loving...not judging.

Get out there with me today with a heart full of grace, and meet every questionable style, every glare, every annoyance, every attitude as something we might not understand, but with LOVE.

Please don't do anything that'll get you arrested.





28 January 2013

the process of the family picture

When mom and dad can stand behind the camera, they will smile.
Meanwhile, Matt thinks this is the time to work on his rap album head shots.  
Sofie is confused and acts like Sarah is standing on her head.
And Lily is trying to figure out what in the world Junior is doing to make Sofie laugh...
And sometimes, Lily and Sofie are both just really confused about what is happening, despite a LIFETIME of daily picture taking...

Then, Lily is totally bored...
And then Matt's not looking...
And well, Sofie never closes her mouth.
Sometimes, we find one that is ok...but it's the process that says something about our family.  I love these three, smiley and posey or not!

A big 'ole THANK YOU SO MUCH to Sarah, Junior, Deb, Craig and Danielle for TRYING to get everyone to look and smile and for all of Sarah's time shooting and editing!  There will be an updated prayer card yet!



27 January 2013

heart overflow: where our faith lies

Have I mentioned we have internet?  Look at all these wonderful pictures that I can now start taking again because I can SHARE them again!  

Today was a great day at Saccanville Church with Pam S., Craig and Deb T. and Leroy L., who had the opportunity to preach.  It's always a joy to worship with our neighborhood brothers and sisters...Roselore and Pehpay, Abel and Magloire, Noel and Abdian. 

Tomorrow first and second year start on Systematic Theology together due to our first year prof. cancellation, and third and fourth year start their Christian Marriage and Family course.  

A Sabetha friend emailed a few days ago regarding our recent posts on faith, and asked how we can measure where we're putting our faith, and how we can know if we're putting our faith in God, or in His promises and blessings and calling. 

I talked to a few of our brains, and thought it through quite a bit myself, and this is what I think I think.
I think our hearts and true beliefs come out the most truthfully in heartbreak, stress, challenges, injustice, frustrations, hurt...the ugly stuff. It tends to bring out the truth. 

So when I'm in trouble, when I'm stressed, when things don't go my way, when I'm hurt or wronged or angered--where do I run?  What do I dive into?  What is my reaction?

Is it Christ?  Or is it something else?

If I'm not running first to God in trouble, pain, frustrations and problems, then whatever I'm running to, that's where my faith is.  That's my idol.

Since I believe God can use our ugly situations, I'll give an example from my own life.  Like, tonight.

Everything was good. We were all talking, all was fine, and out of nowhere, Matt said something that he meant absolutely nothing by with absolutely no intention of harm in a context he had just walked into.  And yet, an issue I thought I had entirely given to the Lord suddenly leapt at my pride with his comment and I was wilted...publicly humiliated, in my mind.  Doubt jumped out of nowhere, and the issue with which He had given me His perfect peace crumbled to despair, blame and hurt, even anger. 

Instead of saying to the Lord "God, you've met me on this.  You've promised and provided and peace-ened.  Now I feel threatened and the temptation to doubt.  Help me.  I trust you.", I lashed out, hurt, angry, defensive...and unkind.

I thought I had trusted in the Lord.  I thought I had placed my faith in HIM on this issue.  I'd heard His voice and felt His hand and received His peace.  But in a moment of turmoil, of insult, it was gone.  

My faith hadn't been truly rested in Him after all, because the moment that I had the opportunity to PROVE my faith, I abandoned ship and jumped to my own reaction.
 When our blessings or gifts or calling or ministry or efforts or self are threatened, how do we respond?  How do we respond when we're feeling led to do or act in a way that we REALLY don't want to?  When someone really messed stuff up for us?  When we'd really rather be mad?  When we suffer a complete injustice?  

With things of Him-- Peace?  Love?  Kindness?  Self-Control?  

Or with things of the world--Anger?  Bitterness?  Rudeness?  Fear?  Accusations?  Emotions?
When our faith is firmly planted in Him, our fears, our injustices, our frustrations, our hurts, our insecurities--and even our hopes and dreams and desires--will be entirely subdued by God...Entirely overpowered by Him in our speech, our hearts, our lives, our reactions.

Oh man, is that what I want!  To be entirely overpowered and subdued by Him, nestled unwaveringly in that mustard seed of faith I have in Him and in Him alone.
Our friend Brett used to tell this story about a speaker who asked a man to come up on stage with him, and handed him a cup filled with water.  The speaker then shook the man's hands, and water sloshed all over them both and onto the stage.

"Why," asked the speaker, "Did water just spill everywhere?"

"Well," sputtered the man, "Because YOU shook my hands!"

"No," said the speaker.  "Water just spilled everywhere because there was water in the cup."

Think and pray with me today about what is in our cups...and what therefore will come out: NOT because life or others shake us up, but because of what was IN our cup, to start with.

I want FAITH to slosh out of mine, everywhere, by His grace.  



"For out of the overflow of the heart the mouth speaks."
Luke 6:45

26 January 2013

speaking of miracles...

Due to the time and money and efforts of many many people, and countless trials and creativity and brainstorming sessions (and a lot of prayer for a long time), WE HAVE INTERNET.  For the first time.  Like, real internet.  
Facebook-able, picture upload-able, blog-able, Pinterest-able, Skypeable internet.  It is fast.  It is unlimited bandwidth.  It is WORKING.

I gotta say, we're going a little crazy.  I can hear my neighbors and all our visitors all Skyping family and friends at the same time, for the first time.  This is exciting!

Somebody pinch me, and then Praise the Lord.

Haiti might have just gotten a lot closer to home.

25 January 2013

THANK YOU!

Today was the last day of the first course, and it has just really been a special two weeks.  We're very thankful for and to the professors and translators for all of their hard work, for giving so generously and lovingly and patiently of themselves, and for taking the experiences and knowledge that God's given them to share it so freely at Emmaus!  

The body of Christ, sharpening.
Soteriology and Christology
top, l-r: Mogene, Moitoy, Leandre, Prof. Leroy L., Simeon, Jodenel, translator
bottom, l-r: Junior, Blaise, Berthil, Masson, Johnson, Fritzner, Jean-Marc

Homiletics
Professor Brent S. and translation by Belony
Josue, Napoleon, Samson, Luddie, Excellent, Brave

General Epistles
top, l-r: Ruphin, Jeff, Jean-Marie, Damas, Professor Larry L., Thelo, Eliphete, Wilex, Evens, Nehemie
bottom, l-r: Emanie, Jose, Frantz, Roziane, Walnique, Marie-Frantzy

Introduction to Business as Ministry
top, l-r: Professor Mark A., Gecel, Mondesire, translation by Elio
bottom, l-r: Desir, Titus, Kertnz, Mirlande, Phida, Junel

And, a really cute picture of Belony fixing Brent's tie :)  (extra duties of translators!)

24 January 2013

life altars

I've got three different posts in the works right now, but today I'm just going to share a little life...
This is a picture of Matt (theologian) and Mark (economist) replacing a something on Mark's broken truck.  At night.  With an iphone flashlight and a cement block and scraps of stacked wood holding up the truck.  And definite times that Matt was holding up the truck while Mark was crawling around under it.  Mechanics at its finest.  BUT, they fixed it after lots of "COMMON!" and "YEEESSSS!!", and we're all thankful, once again, for community.  And for trucks.
Mark and Sarah's parents, Jim and Sue (or Sim and Jew, as I accidentally called them more than once), were also here for a week this past week, and we were so grateful to get to know them a little and to "share" some family.  What an awesome couple and a walking testimony of the joy of the Lord and generous love.  

Meanwhile, the new part for our washing machine finally came, and Sam got that baby working!  SO excited to have a washing machine again.  Not having something for a month makes you extra thankful for it, and our machine has gotten more than a few hugs the last 24 hours.
All the parts coming meant a ginormous cardboard box for the kids, which of course, proved to be the best toy ever.  First it was an airplane, then a bus, then an animal hospital, and then a boat.  Gideon quickly decided that there were way too many girls with this treasure, and found his own one-man airplane/bus/hospital/boat.  Poor Gid.  Having 7 sisters can't always be fun.
But the seven sisters rather enjoy it.
In other news, our current group of Visiting Professors are truly a special group of men.  They have had great times in the classroom, great times with each other, and even great times of laughter and conversation packed in a car with balloons, candy and roadblocks (we're always trying to make things fun :)  

Matt, especially, has really enjoyed having other pastors and teachers here to grow/learn/share/listen/talk/tell terrible jokes with, and seeing these four men really invest in our students with abandonment has been sacred.  

They are on their way out Saturday-Monday, and three returning VP's head in on Saturday.  One VP who was planning to come has had to cancel, and if you know Jerry P., please be praying for all of the medical complications that have made this trip impossible once again.

The Cindy half of our good friends, Bud and Cindy, made it back into Haiti this week, but dear Bud is suffering with some pretty major back issues that are keeping him home-bound in Oregon.  I know they appreciate your prayers.

So, Cindy is just in for a week, and I didn't realize how much I have missed them and how sad I am that they aren't here until I finally got to see and catch up with Cindy a bit last night.  Man, we miss this couple!  (They've been out since the end of November.)  
Rick, Carol, Stacey, Matt, Bud, Cindy

Their friendship and their walks with the Lord and with each other have been a great encouragement and joy to Matt and I, and to our girls.  This missionary life of always making and leaving friends just never gets any easier.

Our continued study on Genesis 12 last night reminded me from Abram's life to be building altars in my life where God has met me...Not just to acknowledge His voice and presence, but also to set up permanent reminders in my heart and mind of His working and faithfulness for dark days in the future.  

As I find myself this week in the midst of one of those heavier times, and meditate on my altars, even these photos are reminders of His grace and faithfulness--to provide community, to provide friends for my children and for myself, to fix things broken, to bring people into our lives to meet us and love us right where we're at and of how active and at work in our lives He is and continues to be.  

As soon as I start remembering all that, this morning I feel nothing but blessed.




23 January 2013

miracle

As I'm smiling and teaching and calculating and cooking through these days, right behind my temples and right below my collar bone I'm carrying a heavy desire for miracles.

Something like begging.  

I don't even begin to pretend to understand how miracles work.  Maybe that's part of why they're so miraculous:  there is no equation, there is no formula, and even when they mightily come, there is no understanding.  Just wonder, and gratitude, and awe.  

Every single time I shake Pehpay's hand, I remember that TODAY is a miracle for Pehpay.  

Every time I watch Sofie sleep, and I remember my pregnant beg for a miracle moment: "Lord, change the circumstance entirely."

Every time I see the Light in eyes.  

Every time I truly remember and catch a glimpse of His love for me, for others.

And here I am again, looking at two situations that are beyond repair, beyond any reasonable hope, beyond what life has taught me is finished.

My choked-up father reminded me on the phone, when all seems to have already been decided, that he was still praying for a miracle...not even that things would work out, but that things would be entirely different.   Transformed.  My father will never stop teaching me.  

So that's what I'm praying, too.  

As my voice laughs and chats, sings and instructs today, my breath inhales His presence, exhales wordless beggings. 

Beggings for entire transformation for your world, dear Bex, and dear cousin, entire transformation of you.














21 January 2013

what God treasures

Something quite devastating and just heartbreaking has happened within my extended family today back in the States, and as I turned tonight to His Word for comfort and family, I found more to think about and a promise I could sleep on.

O. Chambers pointed me to Jeremiah 2, and said this: "Does everything in my life fill His heart with gladness, or do I constantly complain because things don't seem to be going my way?  A person who has forgotten what God treasures will not be filled with joy."

As I flipped to Jeremiah, thinking first, "What does God treasure?", I found chapter 2 to be scrawled with notes and underlines, but as I began to read, don't remember having ever read the chapter before.

It speaks rather boldly of Judah's apostasy, or abandonment, falling away, from God.  Listen to the passion in "Thus says the Lord", His heartbreak over the abandonment of his people and think, as I am, of the passion we once had for our God that has perhaps grown dull.


Thus says the Lord,
I remember the devotion of your youth,
the love of your betrothals,
Your following after Me in the wilderness,
Through a land not sown.
Israel was holy to the Lord,
The first of His harvest

So, what injustice did your fathers find in Me,
That they went far from Me
and walked after emptiness and became empty?

They did not say, "Where is the Lord
Who brought us out of Egypt, 
Who led us through wilderness, 
Through a land of deserts and pits
of drought and of deep darkness,
Led us through a land that no one crossed,
where NO man dwelt?

Even the priests did not say, "Where is the Lord?

Has a nation changed gods?
But My people have changed their glory 
for that which does not profit.
Be appalled, O heavens, at this
And shudder, desolate.

For My people have committed two evils:
they have forsaken Me,
The fountain of living waters,
And have made for themselves cisterns,
broken cisterns,
that can hold no water.

You might see a dozen different things here, but tonight, in the face of brokenness and shuddering, He speaks to me loud and clear like this...

1) He made us each, all of us, as ones dear to Himself.  Dear to Him.  Holy for Him.  With great love and great possibility, by His Grace.  By His love.

--Do I believe, do I realize, have I accepted, have I embraced, that I AM HIS HOLY ONE, dear, and set apart?  To be entirely different, as He is entirely different?  Bold and confident and found and defined fully and beautifully in Him?

2) We become what we search for.  When we walk after emptiness, we become empty.  When we walk after His love, we become it.  When we follow after Christ, He is in us.  When we search and invest only in ourselves, ourselves we find. 

--What am I walking after?  These days, right now, these steps I'm taking, even now...what are they pursuing?  Because I am becoming it... 

3) When we cannot find Him, we must ask for Him: "Where is the Lord?  The one who brought me out of slavery?  Who led me through complete wilderness?  Who has been beside me through places no other man could even stand to accompany, through all the deserts and pits and deep darknesses of my life?  Where is the Lord!?"  

When we cannot find Him, we cannot, not even for JUST the circumstance, "change gods" or rely on ourselves or others.  We must ASK for Him...for. He. will. be. found.

--What am I filling the empty, the hurt, the disappointed, the frustrated, the hungry WITH?  Am I stuffing frivolity and other "gods" in places He's not clearly popping up as I would like?  Or am I asking Him, "God, where are you?" and faithfully WAITING for Him to be found?

4) Anything but Living Water is brokenness and vain efforts. I see in the eyes of women desolate on the streets, of men still wandering in their wilderness, of children walking after emptiness--a complete and utter drought.  Completely parched and dulled and defeated by life.  

And there, here, He is, The Fountain of Living Waters.  Forsaken, and then replaced.  By broken things, that can't even hold water, much less produce it.  

--What broken cups am I about mending in my life? What springs of living water am I overlooking, what selfish desires and empty pursuits am I settling for?  In my reliance upon myself and others, have I forsaken my First Love?  


What does He treasure?  Am I after it?

"Faithless sons, declares the Lord, return." Jer.3:14, 29:13: "You will seek Me and find Me when you search for Me with all your heart.  I will be found by you."

















ouch.

Just so all you snow-birds know, there IS a downside to all the gorgeous weather January brings us...Haiti is swarming with large red fire ants year round.  Their bites feel like wasp stings that burn and itch for a long time, and yesterday, as all the kids were playing in the yard, Lily managed to lay down in a huge mound of them.
Poor girl's hair, face and arm was just crawling with them, and she headed off to school today looking like she had some kind of chicken-pox.  It was a terrible hour to be a little girl and her mother ("I'm all boo-boo-ey!" Lily kept wailing), but we're really thankful for Sarah who jumped to my aid, dousing Lily in water and pulling them out of her hair, and then fixing us up with some kind of awesome bite numbing spray.  

That, marshmallows I've been saving for a special occasion and her first viewing of "Aladdin" made it all better :)

Back at week number 2 for our visiting professors and students!





20 January 2013

friends

We had a great service this morning at the Vaudreil Church with VP Larry L. preaching, and a fantastic day yesterday at the beach with our VP's and neighbors, but the absolutely-infuriating-frustrating-patchy internet situation will only let me upload this one photo, and it on the ninth attempt.  I'm gonna try to be thankful for what we've got!  You've seen the beach before, anyway :)

Gertha's daughter, Thaliya, was way less excited to see the girls at church this morning than they were to see her!  Lily and Sofie both just adore babies, and smother-mother'd her to death!

Thankful for a GREAT first week of school for EBS and for Lily, for a really nice and beautiful weekend, and for precious little ones, like these three!


18 January 2013

thoughts on faith and courage

Matt's been leading our missionary body through Genesis each week, and this past Wednesday's study still has me reflecting on Genesis 12:1-3's powerful message...a message I never even saw until I got to study through Matt's brain and work.

We looked at the rather abrupt call of Abram, first in chapter 12 to...

Go forth from your country
And from your relatives
and from your father's house,
to the land which I will show you;
And I will make you a great nation,
And I will bless you,
And make your name great;
And so you shall be a blessing;
And I will bless those who bless you,
And the one who curses you I will curse.
And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.


...and then again in Chapter 22, to...

Take your son, your only son,
whom you love, Isaac, and go
to the land of Moriah, and offer him there
as a burnt offering on one of the mountains
of which I will tell you.

While we spent over an hour on these verses, these main discoveries have been working on my week and heart:

1) Our faith must rest on God alone, not even on His calls, promises or blessings.

Abram put his faith in God, left his country and culture, even his family, all that he had ever known, and stepped out to a land he didn't even know the name of yet.  God promised to care for him, and promised to make him one of global impact...even though his wife couldn't have children.  He promises to bless many through Abram.  And so Abram goes.

God promised him a child, and then God gave him that child.  And yet just a few chapters later, God asks for the child back, and if Abraham's faith had been in the fulfillment of God's promise, in the blessing, he would have been entirely unwilling to give Isaac up.  Instead, he rose early in the morning to obey.  His faith rested firmly on God alone.

I continue to see, in the lives of those we're working with and in my own life, a quickness to put my faith in His call or in His blessing...in His good stuff.  I was called to such-and-such, and so that is where my dependence, peace and hope lies.  I know God gave me such-and-such, so I'm going to hold onto that forever.  I know I'm right here, so by faith I'm not budging.  

Cadet was sure that money given by a missionary and attendance of a Monday night prayer meeting could get her the 'blessing' she needed and wanted.  She put all her eggs in that basket, put all her faith in what she saw as Christian things.  But to put her faith in God alone would mean MORE: facing the darkest corners of herself, surrendering her hopes and desires for her own life, letting go of many scraps precious to her.  Would mean leaving everything that she knew, and heading blindly to a place she didn't even know the name of.  

There is a call on my current life to be working and living and serving in Haiti. And it is easy for me to put all my faith on that call.  Working endlessly to successfully comply.  Comforting myself on hard days with the idea that as long as I am fulfilling that call, I am right where I need to be, doing just what I need to do.  Working to give more, do more, serve more.  

What if I put all my faith in this call, not even realizing that what He has truly asked for is faith in HIM?  Missing the boat? 

Faith in God.  Doesn't mean the assurance of things hoped for in my Christian life or calling.  Doesn't mean a conviction of the things in ministry or life I have not yet seen. 

If my faith is truly in Him, and not in my next step, not in His blessing, not in His calling, not in His people, not in people's praise but just in HIM, how simple...how EASY...to gather up my God given blessings in the early morning and be ready to sacrifice them before Him.

2) As such, we must be generous, and courageous, with our blessing. 

Such a big part of God's promise to Abram is based on God making Abram a blessing to others.  We rarely can make ourselves a true blessing to others.  It is GOD who does that work, who blesses others through us. 

As we put our faith in Him, there are blessings poured into our lives that may or may not be defined as "blessings" by the world's standards.  It is hard for some to imagine that God is indeed blessing Matt and I, because they perceive 'blessing' as looking a lot different than our current life in an impoverished nation.  

But as we continue to see His blessings pour in with each new morning, they are there not for the holding, but for the courageous giving.  

I'm starting to wonder if there is any place in the life of a Christian for holding.  For holding anything.  

Of course, there is no place in the life of a Christ-follower for holding revenge.  No place for holding grudges or bitterness or stinginess of self.  No place for holding onto being right or knowing what is best, for being recognized, for being rewarded.  

But perhaps there is not even a place for holding onto blessing!  No place for clinging to our spouses or children.  No place for relishing our talents or cherishing our fortunes or adoring our benefits.  

It takes some huge kind of courage to bounce our blessing back to Him for His use as quickly as He is pouring them out...and I'm wondering about what that courage looks like in my life.  I'm wanting to head off in that direction, even if I don't yet know it's name.  


When I read His word and better grasp the vision of what a life abandoned fully to Christ LOOKS like, I desire that beauty, that death, that freedom of holding nothing but Him whole-heartedly.  

Working today to evaluate where my faith lies, where my blessing lies, and praying for courage!


16 January 2013

just the starting point.

Wow, these have been busy days.  

As we speak there are four professors and 3 translators and 40 students diving deep into Business as Ministry, the General Epistles, Homiletics and Soteriology.  It's a fun day to pop in to take a few pictures, hearing good teaching and good questions.  
As I hear transforming truths uncovered, you can almost SEE them permeating and changing the students minds and hearts.

And when I see that, it's easy to picture them teaching and sharing these truths.  

And as I know they will share what they're learning, I'm picturing more hearts touched, changed.

  Before you know it, walking these halls, I can see HAITI changing. Hearts changing.  

It's an awesome opportunity these hours have at Emmaus, to spread the transforming Truth throughout Haiti.  These four rooms just the starting point.  
This professor, Larry L., lived in Haiti from the time he was 8 until he graduated from high school.  Even though he hadn't been to Haiti for 20 years, somehow his Creole has come flooding back and he's teaching without a translator.  How neat is that??

Meanwhile, the new goats risk being loved to death.  "Baby Goak!" is always on Sofie's lips, and Lily was devastated at not getting to visit the goats before she went to school this morning.  Ah, life. 
It's good!