1/23/2012
Good day today – so far – it is one of the two days in the
week that I take an antibiotic dose that sort of set me back the first
time. I think I’ve figured out how to
better manage the hit to my digestion.
Today has been a day to really appreciate the encouragement
many have extended to us. The email
notes, written notes, blog responses, offers to do – well, just about anything,
gifts of music or reading material, dinner (tonight thanks to the BFA Personnel
Department), the countless folk pledging prayer support – why, it’s all quite
overwhelming and I know we’re going to miss thanking some people properly so
here’s a general THANKS! right now.
Today we also had a delightful and encouraging visit from a
young couple dear to our hearts, Molly and Nico. We’ve known Molly since I had her as a
student in World History at BFA in the 2001-02 school year. Molly’s one sharp cookie (from a family of
likewise sharpies) and is the one person to accurately and succinctly nail my
teaching style in one word (a secret observation gleefully spilled by her missionary
Dad later to me). The word was
“pontificate” – bot, did she get that right – I do pontification well and was
secretly delighted that she understood that.
Well Molly went on to finish well at BFA then attended a secular
university in Boston – not so far from RI – and she flourished there. When I asked her how she was able to be so
successful at not only surviving but thriving in the transition to the U.S. she
shared a powerful secret – she went there with a mission/as a missionary. I had to admire the wisdom in that – she went
to shape things rather than be shaped by them because she already knew what was
important in life. Following university
she eventually ended up in student/community ministries in Rhone-Alps region of
France. There she met Nico, a young man
who came to faith as, well, a young man.
A few summers ago we had the privilege of attending their wedding which
was a blend of Asian, Alsatian, and Scottish culture (anyone familiar with the
BFA community would not be surprised at this sort of eclecticism). To fast forward, Molly and Nico now are
serving in a major city/university area in central France. They’re leading investigative Bible studies
as outreach, serving in leadership with a church youth group, investing in the
lives and discipleship of students. When
this semester wraps up they’ll be moving to a new location and, with another
couple, starting up a similar work there.
This was all such an encouragement to me, to us. Here’s this little half-pint sized young
woman who, seemingly yesterday, was a student in my class but in reality, ten
years on she’s on the frontline of reaching out to students in a nation not so
friendly to the Gospel. Nico will preach
at a baptism this weekend – he says it’s the first time he’ll be preaching to a
non-church crowd. She’s stayed the
course – man, that’s encouraging. He’s
grown so much in a few short years. The
girl I used to pontificate over joined with us and her husband to pray together
– to pray for us and for what God’s doing here and to pray for them. It really doesn’t get much better than that.
5 comments:
Amen. Praise God.
Good News! Thanks for sharing.
lovin your comments about Molly...that she went to shape things rather than to be shaped by them....that missions mindset should be so for all of us. Praying you through this week's assault!
Pontificate? Russ? Hummm. Lol Praying for a lot more!
It's great you can see fruit from your labors - how encouraging to know you played a part in the development of her faith!
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