The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love. Galatians 5:6

Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Every Sad Thing That Doesn't Really Matter Any More Because of This

Only existing photo due to camera restrictions.  But it's a winner!


We're planning our day trip to Chiang Mai Zoo.  Yupa tells me me that not too long ago, they opened a Snow Dome.  For an additional fee, "We can play in the snow," she says.   I vow to make sure it will happen, not knowing how much the extra fee will be but not caring one bit.  Give these kids a taste of winter?  You bet! 


Zoo Day is hot.  We stop for water and frozen treats half way into the hour long drive there.  We arrive slightly wilted, but still very excited.  There's lots to see along the shaded pathways.  First we visit the giraffes.




It's the closest I've ever been to one, actually.  They're very interactive since there's leafy food you can buy to actually feed them by hand.  Such beautiful eyes on these creatures.

We won't get so up close and personal with the lions or rhino, but we will be entertained by a white-cheeked gibbon who has become an expert at catching morsels tossed to him.  Hilarious!  He should be signed up for some baseball team, he's that good.





Later I will remember all of this with fondness, mostly because of the way the children are impressed with the animals, reading the information plaques, holding hands with one another, and always some little hand slipping into mine, as we sweat make our way from one exhibit to another. 

But it will be the Snow Dome where I hear Him say it.



The signs warn us that, inside, it's  -7C.   Standing in the hot long line up, this sounds wonderful to me.  We are given red jackets, and I consider refusing mine, but not wanting to push it, I settle for putting it on but not doing it up.  Even stepping into the first room, an ante-chamber of preparation to reduce the shock, there is life and vigor pouring out from behind the larger refrigerator-type door.  My inner Canadian is clamoring to get in there!  But first we listen to the rules, and the warnings about how cold it will be.

And then.

We tumble into a room full of packed down snow with blocks of ice and benches and rubber tubes for the 'sly-DER' aka a short but satisfyingly spinny toboggan hill.   Suddenly the flip flops are ridiculous, but nobody cares.  Just stepping into the cold air brings laughing and squealing and exclamations of wonder and surprise.  It's so cold!  Yes it is!!!!  Welcome to Canada, I say. 

Two by two we climb carefully up a set of stairs where an attendant (read, brave Thai person for working in -7 C all day) helps position us on the tube and pushes us off.  Commence the screaming.  Yes, even the big boys.  Yupa insists I sit at the 'front', which, poor thing, is sort of on top of her, but she's afraid and wants me, the experienced winter sports person, to sort of steer the thing, or manage the thing.  But there is no steering or managing to be done.  We are hurled off without much warning, to whisk up and sideways against an icy snow bank, and thrown, screaming, down and around to where we come to an abrupt stop, aided by yet another brave Thai attendant.

Yupa wants to do it again!!!!!!  And so it goes with all of them.  Their first ever toboggan ride, something they will always remember, because they can, because they weren't months old when it happened for them, like it was for me.

And their finger tips are tingling and their noses red and they can't stop smiling, it's that cold.  They don't mind it at all.  They are loving every single moment.  And it is joy in its purest form.

And that's when He says it to me.

I'm not sure if it happens this way for others, but for me, there are moments, like this one right here and now, when it's as if everything goes into a freeze (pun intended here) and time stands still.  And I have the chance just to look around at the faces and the joy, and I feel it in such an overwhelming sort of way that it's as if the voice of God is speaking.

"See this, Ruth Anne?  See this purity of joy?  Doesn't this, this moment of shalom, shalom (everything as I mean it to be) override all those sad things?"

Pause the pause for a bit of back story.  I think it's because I was eleven years old when, having a missionary speaker come to our church, I first entertained an idea of coming to southeast Asia.  I was just a child.  And I think it's also because because now this is all about the children, I think that's why I make so much connection, so often when I'm here, to my own childhood. 

A lot of sad things happened for me in my childhood, at least that's how I remember them.   And a lot of sad things have happened for these children before coming to live with us. 

But today, in this joy-packed moment of cold amazement, it's as if all those sad things don't matter any more.  It's not like they never happened.  They did, and they are part of our stories, becoming, under God's good grace, part of who we are in strength and compassion and capacity.  But the stink has gone out of them, the sting, the wounding.  There is such healing for me in this frozen moment.

When I was eleven, experiencing the sadness, the weirdness that I couldn't figure out then, if you had told me, don't worry, one day you'll be tobogganing with outrageously delighted children on the other side of the planet and it will all makes sense, I could never have imagined.

And that's what He gives me this day.   A beyond-imagining way of healing for me. 

Time's up for our Snow Dome adventure.  But that's probably okay because some of them are actually shivering by now.  We all reach down and touch the snow once more in fond reverence, and move back as a group to hand over the red jackets we certainly won't need outside.



The fun isn't over, and I will hear echoes of His voice at the Splash pad and also on the ride home when all the fun has napped us all out, and sweaty sleepy littles are told that we're home.  


The whole of it, the admission to the Zoo, and the Aquarium, and the Snow Dome and the Splash Pad, and the frozen treats and lunch and supper, all of it, will only have cost $15 per kid.  Didn't have to worry about the budget one bit. 




Saturday, October 19, 2019

Random Musings Of A Farang With A Camera On A Sunday In Thailand



Random Musing 1. 
I am a Sunday morning sunrise junkie.  Can't get enough of that first-dawn freshness and a day laden with possibilities.  Especially when it includes the gathering of faithful folks with simple lives in complex contexts.  And especially when it includes the chance to be together to remember that first Resurrection morning and the reason for the hope that makes us recklessly brave in the face of anything.



 

Random Musing 2.
Love my Thai ladies.  These three are especially faithful in coming to worship every week.  How did I ever get to be so honoured to be counted among them as part of this church family? 






Random Musing 3.
Could the greeters be any more adorable?



Random Musing 4.
Moved this morning by music and lyrics I am understanding more and more, and by the sweet way the Spirit dances with us and among us, voices lifted in exuberance and defiant praise.




Random Musing 5.
What am I doing, thinking I have anything of consequence to bring to these people as a preacher?  If anything this whole cross-cultural teaching thing only exposes all the weakness, and drills me down to the bare bones of what I believe about anything.  I love/hate the humility of it.  Wouldn't even do it except one of those bare-bones-beliefs is that the Holy Spirit is an excellent translator.  Also and unrelated, a small bug flew right up my nose, right at the end of the sermon, propelled by the perfect intersection of inhalation, fan rotation, and it's own unfortunate misdirection.  Problem solved discretely.  But I do have to put that into the 'never happened to me before' category of preaching stories. [No picture included.  You're welcome.]





Random Musing 6.
Pumpkin Tapioca for dessert at lunch!  Had two helpings and bragged about it to the cook - Yupa's Mom - who couldn't help looking terribly pleased.  You know you've been in Thailand for a while when this kind of stuff makes you hungry!


Wednesday, October 9, 2019

What Makes God Happy and Other Beautiful Things About Ken Being With Me This Trip



It's almost impossible for me to put words to how important it is to my heart that Ken is here.   My own frequency of trips requires a lot from us as a couple.  Ken's enthusiasm, support and love in sending me, time after time, is without question a corner stone of what makes it even possible.

He's the 'home front' guy most of the time.  So, when it works out, on many planes of planning and scheduling, for him to be here for a visit, it's just...the best!

Our first week has been quite full just with adjusting to the time change and also having our dear friends Bill and Celine with us from Sunday night to Wednesday afternoon.  Even so, there have been lots of opportunities for those 'moments' when 'something of heaven touches earth'.

In reflecting on his presence here with friends even before we left for this trip, Ken was asked to write out his thoughts about one particular moment from 2015, the last time he was here.  It's a fantastic story.  And I wanted to give him some space here to tell it.

Ken writes:

For about 6-9 months, I had been doing a personal word search on What Makes God Happy?
I started out with the concordance, but there were only a very few references to 'happy', and not much could be gleaned from these.

 
So... I took the alternative path, and said, What Makes God ANGRY or MAD, or what does God HATE?  Whoa.... Immediately with only a few alternative words, I found 75 different verses. That made for some very interesting reading, and secondary research and analysis.


Taking this train of thought with me to Thailand, we are sitting in the fellowship hall / gym,  and I am looking around at the faces of the 19 kids, of the cook (a widow, currently awaiting knee surgery), Suradet and Yupa, and of a trio of Bible College students also staying on the church grounds.   Their faces are blissfully entranced in worship, focusing totally on God and on Jesus, and on what He has done for them.
 
I couldn't understand a word of what they were singing, but I knew they really meant it.



One evening, after devotions, comes Games Time.  As the children line up for the game, this old guy decides that this is a good game to sit out.  Included in the collage of children is one recent arrival, May.   When May came to Hot Springs, just a number of months before, they took a 'welcoming' picture of her.  In her picture, May looked sad, and a little bit afraid, and under-nourished.
 
Now, in my perspective of watching the participants line up on the other side of the gym, I hear the leader call out "GO!" [OCTOPOOT!!!! A form of tag that involves a lot of running and happy screaming.]

 
Running, at full speed, directly towards me is May. She is no longer afraid, she is confident, knowing that she is going to make it across the gym safely. Her face has filled out in the short time since she arrived, and she is using all of her round, healthy face to laugh out loud, while she enthusiastically races towards my side of the gym.

God very clearly tapped me on the shoulder, and said to me, "Ken, You were looking for what makes me happy?
Look around at the widows and orphans, with their bellies full, and their hearts full of joy, singing praises to Me,  in a foreign tongue, and in a foreign land.  That is what makes me happy."

 
I looked up from where I was, knowing only a little bit of where these kids had come from, from families that could not afford to send them to school, or even to feed or clothe them, and I lost it.   I started crying then and there.

God is Good... All the Time    All the Time ... God Is Good.

And then,, a couple of days later, I was directed to Psalm 104, verses 33-34, where God DELIGHTS in our worship.  Just sort of as a Stamp of Confirmation that God is interested even in my own personal devotions.

Now I have a whole new set of words to search through to find out what DELIGHTS God.


It's so very affirming when your life-partner 'gets it' at such a deep level.

Can't wait to see what God's got for us this time out.