missionary musings

morning chuckle

I start off each morning by checking out my friends' blogs (seeing a new post makes me smile) and perusing over the various leadership blogs I read. I've got a pretty good list of blogs I read that are written by people I don't know -- church leaders who I find to be inspiring and intriguing. (A condensed list of some of them are in the links on the right...)

This post on askingY.com made me chuckle this morning. I've been guilty of a few of these myself at times... A good reminder to remain relevant -- so that our light shining in the darkness is one that attracts people rather than repels them...

soapbox

"Public servants" in South Africa (government workers) went on strike on Friday. This includes hospital staff and teachers! Schools across the country closed, just a week before the students are required to take national exams. Teachers who still wanted to show up and do their job were threatened with violence by the teachers' union. The union actually threatened bodily harm to the people they are supposedly representing -- the teachers themselves!

Entire hospitals are also closed down. Doors locked. Turning people away. One woman died at the door because they would not let her in to be treated.

Why aren't these principals, teachers, doctors, and nurses thinking at all about the people they are supposedly in their profession to serve?

True lasting change will not happen in this country until people in leadership use their influence to improve life, not for themselves, but for those they lead. I don't believe we'll see the this type of change with the current generation. That is why our focus is on raising up next generation leaders to be Godly, strategic influencers.

The future of this continent depends on it.

what i enjoy most

The features I enjoy most about our car:

  • Automatic transmission (most cars in South Africa are standards) ~ Hands-free for snacking!
  • Cup holders everywhere ~ The more the merrier!
  • Cruise control ~ For my lead foot...
  • Back 2 seats fold down for storage ~ Shop-ping!
  • Parking alert (as you reverse, it beeps progressively faster the closer you get to whatever's behind you) ~ Just in case...
  • Mirror on the driver's side sun visor ~ Joy in the little things
  • Six-CD changer ~ For non-stop tunage
  • Volume control on the steering wheel ~ I'm all about convenience!
  • Seat-position memory (which is so great since Niel is much taller than me) ~ Easier to return to my perfect position 'sweet spot' after Niel drives
  • That it's ours! ~ We can make ourselves at home in it!

thirty minute meal?

When I was home over Christmas, I bought one of Rachel Ray's 30-minute meal cookbooks. I've made a few different recipes from the book over the past several months, and, for the most part, have enjoyed the new meals.

Last night I attempted a new recipe. I picked it because #1 - I can get almost all the ingredients here, and #2 - I liked the name of it: "My Sister Rita's Lazy Chicken or My Lazy Sister Rita's Chicken".

It turned out great. Niel and I really enjoyed it and I think it is a meal I'll make again. However, the name is a bit misleading. As is the fact that it's in a 30-minute meal cookbook. It took me over an hour, from start to finish. I'm wondering what's so "lazy" about it?!

I wish I could see Rachel Ray make it. I want proof that it can be done in only 30 minutes!

rationers anonymous

Hi. My name is Alece, and I am a rationer.

For so long now, I've had to live on limited supplies of American goodies -- from hair products to snacks. Because I can't just run to the store and get more when I need to, I've gotten very good at rationing. Maybe too good. I've unfortunately found myself eating things that have long since expired (2-year old salsa con queso, anybody?!). But I've always enjoyed knowing my supply wasn't depleted -- that there was more still left in the cabinet.

When our grocery store started selling Snapple, I bought quite a few and stocked them into my fridge. And then never drank any. Even though I knew I could buy more in town, my brain was still telling me to ration. "What if they stop selling it?!"

Well, I decided yesterday that even if they stop selling it, I'm going to enjoy it while it's here. I drank two Snapples in one day!

The guilt was so overwhelming, I haven't drank any today.

the best medicine

My friend Kelly and I are on a learning journey. We are working together through a DVD correspondence course on Biblical Studies. Last night's classes, though, were a little bit rough. The speaker was unbelievably dramatic, droned on and on, and sang entire lines of his messages. Kelly and I were literally doubled over with laughter through most of the 5 sessions.

While I'm not sure I learned much on the topic of praise and worship, I definitely enjoyed a good dose of laughter!

twenty-four

I've heard the observation that we all have the same number of hours in a day. And while I know it, sometimes I don't believe it. This week went by so fast, there's no way each day had 24 hours! Yet I know they did, and many of them just escaped me...

Then there's Jack Bauer's day. It never ceases to amaze me how jam-packed each of his 24 hours is. How does he accomplish so much in such short amounts of time?

Forget getting better at multi-tasking or increasing my time management skills. What I really need is some lessons in Jack Bauer-ing!

rules and idiosyncrasies

We spent a few days in Johannesburg this week to attend a leadership conference. I love learning and developing, so I really enjoyed the event. (But talk about information overload! My brain has been working overtime ever since, trying to figure out how to apply all I learned!) It was also great to drive our new car to the city for the first time, spend that time with Niel, and get to eat out anywhere other than our handful of local restaurants.

One of my rules when we're in a city is that we're not allowed to eat at a restaurant we have in our town. I figure, if I'm all the way up in Joburg, I want to be eating some place I don't often have access to. One of my all-time favorite city eateries is Primi Piatti. It's got a casual, fun atmosphere and some of the best Italian food I've eaten in Africa.

I'm a pretty boring orderer -- anywhere I go, I tend to always order the same meal. (At Primi, it's Pollo Giorgio...mmm-mmm!) I guess I'm not very adventurous. I'd rather stick with what I know .

In the spirit of full disclosure, let me just share that I even do this in public bathrooms. If it's a restroom that I've visited before, I will inevitably use the same stall I did the first time. I don't even plan it; it usually just happens. And it always makes me smile to myself as I'm closing the stall door...

Do you have any rules or idiosyncrasies to share?

a great day

Yesterday was a great day.

It all began when Niel came into my office and handed me a Snapple Peach Iced Tea! Apparently, our newly-expanded grocery store is now carrying Snapple...and now our fridge looks like this:


Just a few hours later, something even more amazing happened. We bought a personal car! Since we've been married, we've been trusting the Lord for our own car. We've always only had ministry vehicles, and while we've never been without transportation, there have been times that it's been challenging because of a shortage of cars. We are now the proud humble owners of a new-to-us car!


Then, as we climbed into bed last night, Niel leaned over and said, "Thanks for being my wife."

Yesterday really was a great day!

reason #982,654 i love my job

On Monday we asked our staff and interns to stand in faith with us for something specific. This morning, at our weekly prayer meeting, I was able to share with them how God has already begun to answer our prayers. It was so neat to see their faces light up and hear their expressions of praise to God. It was as though you could physically see their faith being strengthened by hearing of God's faithfulness.

I love getting to help lead a team of people not just in ministry, but also in the journey of discipleship as we all grow in faith and Christ-likeness.

harrismith's bravest

Last week, when we had the fire, I called the Fire Brigade in our town. It took me a while to track down the phone number, as the one listed in the phone book was no longer in service. I called the local police station to get the number, and was left on hold while they tried to locate it. I finally got the right number and got through to someone -- but they didn't speak English. At all. Thankfully, a neighboring farmer who speaks fluent Sesotho was here to help, and he got on the phone. He talked to them for about 10 minutes because he had to provide them detailed directions on how to find us. I was really missing our trusty "911" service in America where they not only speak English, but automatically know where you are calling from.

When the Fire Brigade finally arrived, we began pulling our guys off the roof. We figured the firemen would rush right up there, and our guys would only be in the way. Boy, were we wrong! The firemen saw the ladder we had set up, which all our people were using to go up and down, and cringed. They were afraid of heights!

Very slowly, three of them made it up the ladder to the first (lowest) portion of the roof. Then they were faced with the dilemma of getting the hose up there. They were too scared to carry it up with them, so our guys ended up getting it and dragging it all the way up.

Still, the firemen wouldn't budge. The three of them sat in a row on the peak of the low portion of roof, holding onto each other's shoulders. They refused to go up any further or actually do anything to fight the fire. Thankfully, our guys were far braver -- they took that hose all the way up to the highest point where the fire was, and fought it till it went out. Literally, the firemen just sat there and watched.

After we had the fire completely extinguished, the firemen very cautiously shimmied down the roof to the ladder, where they proceeded to, very slowly and carefully, climb down. Pausing on each rung and literally trembling with fear, they took an extremely long time to get all the way down. As they were loading their equipment back onto their truck, the fire chief approached Niel. "We'll be sending you a bill for our services," he told him. Niel just laughed and told them that we'd definitely be disputing it when we got it, seeing as they did nothing at all to fight the fire.

The incompetency and cowardice of these firemen was unbelievable. They are, sadly, nothing like "New York's Bravest"... Good thing our trust was in God and not in them!

beauty for ashes

"No weapon formed against you shall prosper." This verse holds hope. Promise. It also holds an undeniable fact. If weapons formed against me shall not prosper, it means there will be weapons formed against me. Saturday night, the roof of our dining hall caught on fire. Somehow, sparks from the fire in the fireplace made it all the way up the chimney and set the thatch roof ablaze. After six hours of prayer, hard work, and brave efforts, the fire was completely out.

While the entire building suffered extensive damage, things could've been much worse. We were experiencing strong winds up until just minutes before the fire broke out. Had they not suddenly stopped, the fire would have spread much quicker (and affected other buildings). The temperature was only 40 degrees, and we were soaked from all our efforts to douse the fire with water. Although we were all exhausted and freezing, no one was seriously hurt.

We had a mission team with us from a Spirit-filled church in Michigan. We were so strengthened by their prayers and faith, and their eagerness to jump in and help however they could. Our staff and interns were also all involved; everyone really pulled together as a team. It was a blessing to see unity at work.

While facing the possibility of losing the entire building, Niel and I felt our resolve strengthening. The enemy could take our "stuff", but he could not take our vision. We were determined that we'd find a way to continue reaching people and raising leaders, with or without a dining hall. We knew that there was more at stake than just a building. The enemy's aim was to discourage us, to distract us from the vision, to cause us to lose heart. He did not win.

We are now faced with the challenge of figuring out how to feed our interns and host mission teams without our industrial kitchen and eating hall. We are faced with the uncertainty of how to rebuild and where the money will come from. It's hard. But the decision to not give up isn't.

We will move forward. We will continue doing what we've always done. We will keep our eyes fixed on Jesus and on the vision He's given us. We will not give up. We will not slow down. We will not wallow in our losses.

Yes, a weapon was formed against us. But it did not prosper.

times they are a-changin'

It was 1993. I was on my first mission trip -- one month in Managua, Nicaragua. I quickly made a dear friend in Andrew Parker. He was quirky. Eccentric. Funny. And passionate about the Lord. Andrew wore his watch upside down, which perplexed me. When I asked him about it, he said, "It's easy to read it this way. Try it for a day!" So I did.

And I kept it that way for 14 years.

Yep, for 14 years I wore my watch upside down. I, too, was often met with confused looks and puzzling questions of, "Why?" And although I'd recant this story as my explanation, I can't say that I inspired anyone else to ever do the same.

For the first time since I was 14 years old, I am wearing my watch "normal". Right-side up. The way they were intended to be worn.

I lost my watch last year and finally got a new one when I was in the States. Since it has no numbers on it whatsoever, it just seemed like it would be best to wear it in the conventional manner. And so I have.. But it's almost like the sad end of an era. I'm not quite sure how I feel about it...

fuel for passion

The tragedy at Virginia Tech has loomed over our week, even here in Africa. Yet I saw a glimmer of hope this morning. This is certainly the best thing I've read/heard all week on the subject:

I AM PO’d

The Virginia Tech thing has me FLOORED! ...It didn’t take long for political “experts” from both sides to jump all over this tragedy and try to use it for their gain. The gun control people are screaming…the anti gun control people are screaming back…finger pointing is going on all over the place…it’s a mess and people are trying to figure out what in the heck happened.

I have a theory…it’s a simple one…but I believe it is true. This is WHAT happens when people do not know Jesus! Maybe the problem isn’t political or social at all…maybe this is exactly what happens when sin manifests itself inside a person and expresses itself through the most horrid act of violence one could ever imagine.

I have seen in society AND Scripture that the potential for evil inside a human being is pretty much limitless…and what happened at Virginia Tech proves my point.

What does do to me personally? Well…it didn’t make me want to jump on the gun control bandwagon. It didn’t make me want to try to make our society a safer place. NO–it STOKED MY FIRE for evangelism, this tragedy screams a fact that Scripture has been screaming for centuries–PEOPLE NEED JESUS!!!

It makes me mad…AND it convicts me…when I look at the church and then this tragedy. I believe we live in a fallen world–sin happens, and when it does it is always gross. HOWEVER, I believe less and less of these things will take place in the future IF the church will freakin’ wake up and begin to do what we were commissioned to do in the first place–take Jesus to the world!!!

I am through fighting!!! THROUGH! I will not engage in the emergent vs. emerging debate any longer. I will not entertain the traditional versus contemporary…nor will I involve myself in the missional verses attractional debate. I can’t–PEOPLE ARE DYING AND GOING TO HELL ALL AROUND US…and to engage in meaningless arguments that are NOT going to matter this side of eternity–OR the other side, well, that is playing right into the hands of satan. If we are passionate about anything other than Christ and reaching people for him…he is not threatened.

NewSpring…we are called to reach people for Christ!!! We will ALWAYS be a church where you know you can bring your friends and family members who do not know Christ…and they WILL hear the Gospel in a way they can understand. We are going to do church the way God has called us to do church…and people who do not like it can scream all they want…and we will keep ignoring them and reaching people for Christ!!! We will no longer cater to the naysayers and the critics–there is WAY too much at stake.

We WILL preach Jesus…we will honor His word…we will worship with passion…we will do church in an excellent and creative manner…and I am praying that one day God will allow us to see over 3,000 people saved in one day…just like in Acts 2!!!

People need Jesus!!! PEOPLE NEED JESUS! If the church does not get serious about reaching the world for Christ–we are going to see WAY MORE of what happened at Virginia Tech happen all around our country!

Question–who comes to your mind when you read this? Who in your life needs Christ? Pray for them right NOW!!!

...One more thing…God is using our church in ways that I never imagined. On Tuesday morning I received an e-mail from a student who attends NewSpring during the summer…but goes to school at Virginia Tech. After reading it I called him because his story was incredible. He said that the night before the shooting he was watching a NewSpring service on the internet…and when the invitation time came around he received Christ. He said he just knew it was the right thing to do. And so when the shooting happened the next day he told me that he was not in the building where it had taken place–but if he would have been there then he would have been ready!

It’s our COMMISSION to get people READY!

We live in a fallen world–sin IS real and nasty–but we serve a RISEN KING…HE REIGNS…HE IS GOD…and HE HAS CALLED US TO REACH PEOPLE FOR HIM. WOW…while this tragedy has broken my heart and I have grieved–and it has awakened me to what is important…and this church will NOT stop until we IMPACT the entire Southeast…and then the WORLD for Christ!

(from www.perrynoble.com)

you've (probably) got (no) mail

One of my biggest personal challenges in light of my current predicament, is insufficient time to stay in touch with loved ones. My days are long and even more jam-packed than they used to be (something I didn't think was even possible just weeks ago). As a result, I have become much slower at answering emails than I want to be. With growing to-do lists, piles on my desk, and an overflowing email inbox, I'm just not able to get to everything I need to in a day.

Unfortunately, with pressing needs, personal emails are bumped to the back of the list. Not because I want to, but because I need to do the most urgent things first. Sadly, this has put me out of personal touch with friends and family...

I wrote 119 emails today. Most likely, you, my friend, didn't receive one. It's not because I didn't think of you. In fact, you crossed my mind often. I want to write you the reply you deserve, but I can't seem to find the time. Despite my silence, I appreciate your email, your encouragement, your strengthening prayers.

So while you didn't get an email from me today, others did -- putting me one step closer to being able to write you the email I've been wanting to write...

nine years

Nine years ago, this past Saturday, I arrived in South Africa. Hopeful. Excited. Passionate. If I am to be honest, also a little scared. Intimidated. Unsure.

I knew I was called to Africa, but that was possibly all that I knew. I didn't know what I should be doing. Or what my specific "calling" was. Or what it would all look like. I just followed. "Here I am, Lord. Send me."

Niel and I have been reminiscing back to our "early days" a lot lately. Things have changed so much in the past nine years. I have changed so much. I still feel like I don't know what I'm doing and I still wonder what it all will look like. And while I don't fully grasp my "calling" -- that which I was born to do -- I know I am walking in it.

In many ways, I feel light-years beyond that young girl who stepped off the plane nine years ago. Yet in many ways, I am still the same. If I'm honest, I'm still a little scared. Intimidated. Unsure. Scared of messing up, of missing the mark, of not being or doing all I'm supposed to. Intimidated by responsibility, by the demands of a growing staff, by the unfinished task. Unsure of myself, of how to do all I must, of what the future will hold.

But I'm also still hopeful. Excited. Passionate. Hopeful that the mark I leave in Africa will change it for the better, that the lives we touch will transform this nation, that our work will truly turn the tide of the AIDS pandemic. Excited by all that has been accomplished, by the lives we have seen changed by the Word of God, by what lies ahead. Passionate about the potential in the African people, about seeing the nations come to Christ, about Africa...

Nine years. And yet just the beginning...

breathless but strengthened

Our intern housing, common area, and classroom are up the hill from our main complex area (where our staff housing and offices are). The walk up the hill always gets me way out of breath, and today was no exception. I like to blame it on the altitude. (Our main complex area is over a mile above sea level--higher than Denver!) It has nothing to do with the fact I'm out of shape. Nothing!

I caught my breath and started teaching my first Introduction to World Missions class. I normally start teaching in January, but with Niel and I being in the States in February and March, I put off starting my classes until the second term (which started this week). And since we didn't have interns last year, this was my first intern class since November 2005. I didn't realize how much I missed it until I was doing it...

With 11 students, discussion came naturally and easily, and was a breath of fresh air. (In the past, with 3 interns each year, discussions were often labored and challenging.) Time went by quickly and before I knew it, I was walking back down the hill to my office.

During my walk down, I was reminded of our staff meeting. This week, we began a series about playing to your strengths (Trombone Player Wanted). It is unique and innovative, and profoundly insightful. My biggest "light bulb moment" was hearing that, contrary to popular belief, our strengths are not necessarily what we are good at. Our strengths are those activities that make us feel strong. That definition largely changes my perspective on things. I can now determine my strengths by those things which strengthen and energize me, which I look forward to, and which naturally hold my interest.

Teaching my missions class, I realized today, is a strength of mine. I went up the hill feeling breathless and came down feeling strengthened...

do the math

It's starting to get cold. I've already had to swap the lightweight blanket on our bed for a down comforter. It's actually supposed to get down to 45 tonight -- and without indoor heating, the temperature inside our house won't be much higher than that.

But even while my senses know that winter is approaching, sometimes my mind still glitches.

The other night I saw a commercial on TV advertising a women's magazine. While the cover of the magazine filled the screen, with its bold headline: "Autumn Fashions", the announcer informed me that "the April issue is now on sale." I did a double-take to make sure my eyes and ears weren't tricking me. Surely, there must be a mistake. And then I remembered! And chuckled.

No matter how long I live in the southern hemisphere, April will always equal Spring.

two weeks of singleness

Niel will be home tomorrow night. I'm getting excited about it and am so glad that we have a long weekend off work right after he gets back.

As much as I'm looking forward to having Niel back, I've enjoyed the past 2 weeks that I've been home alone. I often hesitate to say things like that as I can already hear people gasping. No, it doesn't mean I don't miss Niel. No, it doesn't mean I'm a cold, calloused person. No, it doesn't mean I'm glad he's far away. It simply means my life doesn't fall to pieces when he is.

In spite of the fact that I miss my husband, there is a joy in my time alone. I do things I normally can't do. Like work until 8:00 (or 10:00!) at night. And watch 7 Judging Amy episodes in a row. And not have to think about feeding someone other than myself (which doesn't take much thought besides, "Should I bother to make a sandwich, or should I just eat cereal?")

As always when I'm by myself, I create lists (some mental, some typed, some scribbled by hand) of the plethora of things I intend to get done by the time Niel returns. And, as always, my lists far outweigh my time available. Once again, I won't have finished everything I wanted to by tomorrow night. But I've gotten quite a bit done, and at this point I'm just eager to have my hombre home!

My two weeks of singleness is coming to an end, and I'm ready to be a married woman again!

oh dear

After being at the retreat in Cape Town for just a few hours, I already felt like I'd received so much. It was amazingly refreshing to connect with a new sisterhood of women who "get my life" and understand the complexities of the challenges I face. That alone made this weekend well worth it.

There was a drawing for an "extreme makeover". Along with all the rest of the women, I wrote my name on a small slip of paper and tossed it into the bag. When they drew the winning name from the bag, the woman hesitated as if trying to read it correctly. "Alice..." she said, and then paused. "Oh dear," I mumbled, and Rebecca looked at me with a confused look on her face as if to say, "What?! That's not you." Then the woman finished reading the paper: "van Rensburg". Rececca just started laughing! "Oh dear" is right! When I wrote my name down on that paper, never did I imagine that I'd actually get picked!

My mind immediately said, "I don't deserve this". I began thinking that it should have gone to someone who wants it more, someone who lives in a far more remote place than I, someone more deserving for any other number of reasons. With all eyes on me, and everyone cheering and clapping, I smiled and shrank back in my seat. I figured if I was thinking that I'm not deserving of this gift, that surely everyone else was thinking the same.

As time went on, though, I quickly saw that people weren't thinking that. I was often greeted with, "You're the lucky winner!" or "It's so exciting that you won!". The other missionaries were genuinely happy for me. Although I still felt a tinge of guilt every time someone said something about it, I learned to just respond in humility and gratefulness.

While my mind was telling me that I didn't deserve to receive this amazing blessing, my heart sang another tune. In one of the sessions, it was stressed that regardless of our area of service or level of difficulty in our living conditions, we stand on a level playing field. We are daughters of the King and He delights in us. God delights in me. It was an internal struggle, but I received this gift as coming straight from my Daddy God.

I was pampered with a full body massage, pedicure, color analysis, make-up artistry, and hair style. It was such a fun, special, and memorable day. I was overwhelmed by the women who came to serve us. To think that they raised funds, traveled so far, and humbled themselves so much for me, whom they'd never even met, left me awed and deeply humbled. Ministry board members painting my toenails?! Unbelievable. These women are my heroes.

The entire retreat was just what I needed. At first my natural perspective told me that so many of the other women present needed it more (because of their length of time on the field, the years since they've been home, or the primitive conditions in which they live and serve), but I quickly realized how much I needed it too. Although my challenges may be very different from some, I was still at a place where the physical, emotional, and spiritual "filling up" at this retreat was exactly what I needed. It's as though you don't know how dry you are until you start soaking up, soaking up, soaking up...

I was strengthened and encouraged by the messages and our small group discussion and prayer times. I was uplifted and blessed by the women I got to know and relationships I got to build. I was humbled and validated by the women who came to serve me. I was energized and challenged by discussions I had with wise women about how to handle some of the challenges I'm facing in our ministry. I was renewed and refreshed by lots of laughter and fun times with Rebecca, my friend who went with me.

Strengthened. Encouraged. Uplifted. Blessed. Humbled. Validated. Energized. Challenged. Renewed. Refreshed. Yeah, that about sums up my weekend!