- Over 12,000 miles of driving to churches.
- A donated can full of cracker crumbs.
- Many cookouts full of love.
- 3 long plane rides to America and back.
- Different floors to sleep on each night.
- Packing and unpacking and loading.
- Convention.
- New friends and new support.
- Our kids thinking Wal-Mart is a zoo.
- And finally being back home.
My family and friends accuse me of constantly organizing things. I make lots of lists. When plans change or go differently than I had thought they would, I get frustrated. So, God using us as missionaries on a foreign field has us all laughing. Trying to keep everything perfectly organized is useless. I still try. But.....
everyday I need God's grace
because I can't order it all perfectly.
Only He can.
And because I am human, I have to be reminded of this daily, maybe way more so while on furlough. I can't control times we have to be places and arriving late when construction is going on. I can't control that my kids don't nap in the car and have to stop often for potty breaks. So most days in my orderly world were chaotic this summer without our routines. It wasn't often we all got out of the car at a presentation or new place clean, happy, and eager to present. Sometimes we were tired, grumpy, and extremely messy.
We try to be back about 5 weeks every summer to see family and visit supporting churches and families and share about the work of WISE. This summer we had to be back a little longer to see a few more churches, since support has been down lately. We got to be in several weddings, and see lots of places and faces.
If you have visited, you know despite my planning and apologies in not having a clean house- usually it is a home filled with kids, chaos, crumbs, and love. If we stayed at your house this summer you know I had great intentions to be very organized with 1 bag for the boys and 1 bag for the girls and we would live out of those 2 bags. But of course: encountering garage sales, extremely cold weather (Hey- upper 70's to us means pull out the winter wear!), and dirty laundry we always toted around so much.
And after living and overnighting at 18 different guest homes these past few weeks, we grew so much in blessings and encouragement. I can't even begin to list all the ways we have been blessed. I still get amazed that all these families are willing to put up with the 5 of us. We're blessed to have families that have space for us and lend us their cars and watch our kids and the list is endless.
2 BIG things I'm thankful to not have or do in St. Vincent:
1.Driving-We drive on the other side of the road in St. Vincent, so I don't drive there as I'm not a great driver in the states. On our last day in the States this time, I took the new van graciously given to us to use while back this summer and hit a curb in an effort to avoid a semi. So, it's a really good thing I don't drive in St. Vincent!
2.Dryers- We don't have them in St. Vincent and it is a great thing. My poor in-laws dryer and the clothes in it got ruined by things left in our pockets.
Being back with you, our prayer lists have grown. We pray just as we are extremely chaotic people that Christ will continue the good work in you and us and carry it on to completion forming and growing us until Christ returns. (Phil 1:6)
We try to be back about 5 weeks every summer to see family and visit supporting churches and families and share about the work of WISE. This summer we had to be back a little longer to see a few more churches, since support has been down lately. We got to be in several weddings, and see lots of places and faces.
If you have visited, you know despite my planning and apologies in not having a clean house- usually it is a home filled with kids, chaos, crumbs, and love. If we stayed at your house this summer you know I had great intentions to be very organized with 1 bag for the boys and 1 bag for the girls and we would live out of those 2 bags. But of course: encountering garage sales, extremely cold weather (Hey- upper 70's to us means pull out the winter wear!), and dirty laundry we always toted around so much.
And after living and overnighting at 18 different guest homes these past few weeks, we grew so much in blessings and encouragement. I can't even begin to list all the ways we have been blessed. I still get amazed that all these families are willing to put up with the 5 of us. We're blessed to have families that have space for us and lend us their cars and watch our kids and the list is endless.
2 BIG things I'm thankful to not have or do in St. Vincent:
1.Driving-We drive on the other side of the road in St. Vincent, so I don't drive there as I'm not a great driver in the states. On our last day in the States this time, I took the new van graciously given to us to use while back this summer and hit a curb in an effort to avoid a semi. So, it's a really good thing I don't drive in St. Vincent!
2.Dryers- We don't have them in St. Vincent and it is a great thing. My poor in-laws dryer and the clothes in it got ruined by things left in our pockets.
Being back with you, our prayer lists have grown. We pray just as we are extremely chaotic people that Christ will continue the good work in you and us and carry it on to completion forming and growing us until Christ returns. (Phil 1:6)
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