Showing posts with label direction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label direction. Show all posts

Friday, August 2, 2019

Video blog!


We've heard the feedback: people read less and watch more today (no kidding?! Thanks social media!)

So ... we've sent video updates to a few people. In the interest of more exposure (without going to Vimeo or YouTube yet!), we're publishing our latest update here.




More will be coming, with an improved publishing format. Stay tuned!

Thursday, July 25, 2019

Interview & Status Update

I (Michael) recently sat down for a far-ranging interview with our pastor, Adam Baker. It was a longer interview, so the videos are broken into three sections (duration indicated in the parenthesis).

I apologize in advance: I thought my legs would not be shown, so I wore shorts.  Oops!  😎

Take a listen and enjoy!

Sunday, June 23, 2019

Why language learning?

We are investing the month of June at MTI, a learning / preparation center for living cross-culturally.  The first few weeks focus on phonetics, phonology, the production of (often non-English) sounds, etc. To learn the method of language learning, we practiced in Russian, Mongolian, and a southeast Asian language spoken by fewer than 50,000 people.  Fascinating!

Why invest this way? 
Recognize that language learning will affect your personality and self‐expression.  ... As a Czech proverb says, “Learn another language, get a second soul.”  A‘new side of you’ will begin to emerge as you get into this production!  You will begin to take on their mannerisms, behave as they behave, respond how they respond, bristle where they bristle, etc.  And you may actually relish it!  
- MTI Perspective page 7
This is our initial step: to gain a new side of ourselves, to take on the perspective and understanding (imperfect though it will always be) of the Bosnian people.


Friday, March 1, 2019

Joy in the journey?

There is a joy in the journey
There's a Light we can love on the way
There is a wonder and wildness to life
And freedom for those who obey...

Those words of Michael Card take on more meaning than I once understood 25 years ago when Michael sung them at our wedding. Now we are entering into a new wonder and wildness to life as we have been officially appointed by the Christian and Missionary Alliance to serve in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Forget not the hope that's before you
And never stop counting the cost
Remember the hopelessness when you were lost...

Because Jesus suffered outside the gate (Hebrews 13:11-14), I will go to Him in Bosnia. I will forget not the hope before me, and never stop counting the cost. For the joy set before Him, Jesus endured the cross, so I take up my cross and follow Him. Getting rid of most of our possessions, selling our house of 13 years, leaving the comforts and security of this life, moving across the ocean from our family, church family, and two oldest children are all the costs I am counting right now.

Yes, there is a joy in the journey, but the joy that Jesus spoke of is one of submission, suffering, and sacrifice. Jesus, Light of the world, went there first and promises to be with me (Matthew 28:20), and so I go.

Wednesday, February 20, 2019

Day of Decision

On this day when many people are praying for the Alliance's National Board, and our future, these lyrics are going through my mind...

The Stand
So I'll stand
With arms high and heart abandoned
In awe of the One who gave it all
I'll stand
My soul Lord to You surrendered
All I am is Yours

(Hillsong United, Joel Houston)
These words cause us to think of charismatic worship, of people raising their hands and closing their eyes in praise.  However, may we envision another image?

These words are very individualized (I'll stand).  The visual picture is not worship, but rather arrest by a higher authority (arms high, heart abandoned) and laying down of one's life as a living sacrifice (Romans 12.1) (surrender to You Lord). The image is surrender to a higher, sovereign authority of our entire being (all I am is Yours).

Today I sense this arrest by my merciful, loving, holy, righteous, beautiful, awesome Lord. What do I know of holy, of He Who gave all for me?  Nothing in my hands I bring, simply to Thy cross I cling.

I am frightened, uncertain, feeling out of control. Even in this, I rest in my Savior.

Friday, January 18, 2019

Are we crazy?

Have you ever made a decision, started down a road, and thought "What am I doing? Am I crazy?"  These and similar thoughts have gone through my head (several times!) over the past two years.  From the perspective of the so-called American Dream, from the misshapen goals of stability and security, from the false worldview that this temporal, existential life is all there is, our journey toward a major life change makes no sense.   

And yet, the adventure begins.  The adventure begins.  These are captivating words.  I've used the language of "adventure" with my children over the past year, partly to explain, and partly to capture their imagination.

This past week, Janie Cheaney shared this commentary on The World and Everything In It podcast.  It encapsulated these ideas, using references to Scripture and literature (I also spoke of Bilbo and Frodo with my children!).  Below is a link to the audio and the transcript.

The challenge to you, my reader: 
What adventure, what path, what mission, what action has He called you to? 

Audio: worldandeverything.org/2019/01/janie-cheaney-the-call-to-adventure/

Transcript:
JANIE CHEANEY, COMMENTATOR: Have you heard this story? The hero is toiling in the mundane fields or shops of everyday life when the summons occurs—a special calling or challenge. Gandalf appears in the Shire; Lucy walks through the back of the wardrobe; the burdened Pilgrim flees his doomed city.]

The adventure begins.

The quest model is built into human DNA. All our lives we’re leaving home on a journey into the unknown and returning somehow changed: a new job, a new relationship, a birth, a death. Could we call it an adventure?

Several weeks ago I watched an online discussion between professor Jordan Peterson and commentator Ben Shapiro. In their two-hour give and take about duty, responsibility, and meaning, Shapiro made this observation: “The only thing America guarantees is an adventure.”

He compared it to the call of Abraham: “Leave your home and family and go to a place I will show you.” God does the showing; Abraham the leaving, casting himself into an unknown future.

That was also the call to Moses from a burning bush and to Elisha while he plowed his fields. And it’s the call of Jesus: “Come, follow me.”

The men who left their nets and fields and counting tables clearly understood they were off on an adventure. It didn’t go the way they expected, but turned out to be more than they could imagine: more danger, more difficulty, more challenge.

That’s the side of adventure we miss from the couch: it’s dangerous, difficult, challenging, and even, for long stretches at a time, boring. It takes us away from our everyday comforts and distractions. It may end in failure. But it still calls us.

At the turn of the year, our thoughts turn to “resolutions” rather than adventures. Resolutions are an attempt to get control over our hectic lives—to encourage self-discipline and responsibility.

That’s all to the good. As Peter says, “Therefore be sober-minded and self-controlled, for the sake of your prayers.” But what else is discipline for?

Adventure calls us every day, even in the well-worn tracks of the routine and monotonous: “Come, follow me.” Jesus says, “Don’t shore up your life against disruption; don’t automatically say No. Don’t be a slave to well-meant resolutions.

Make yourself a little uncomfortable today: take some cookies to your grouchy neighbor or stop to talk to that panhandler on Walnut Street. Before collapsing in your recliner to click on Netflix, do something for Him—text an apology or invitation; write a note of encouragement; pray.

“Open the door to possibility”, Jesus says. “In your successes I am making something through you; in your failures and disappointments I am making you.”

Like America, God guarantees an adventure—and more. His Kingdom begins with a call into the unknown, with only his promises to guide us, and ends with a sure inheritance. You’ll never outgrow it, and it will grow you.

For WORLD Radio, I’m Janie B. Cheaney.