4/9/2012
This was to be
posted on Easter but I’ve waited a day in light of an unfolded event that will
be obvious as you read.
A few mornings
ago I woke thinking of exploration.
I love to
explore.
I love not fully
knowing where I am, recognizing that the answers may appear as I proceed
through the peculiar challenges of being slightly lost.
I enjoy teaching
units on the Age of Exploration (in the fashion of the day I should call it the
Age of Exploitation – often with good, if culturally anachronistic,
reasons).
Have you ever
been in one of those getting to know you sessions with a new group and were
asked, “When would you most liked to
live in the past?” I don’t answer with
the spiritual answer of “I’d like to have walked with Jesus” or some such. I always answer – “I’d go with Lewis and
Clarke and the Corps of Discovery”. Imagine
being the first of your cultural experience and heritage to see the wonders of
the Rockies, meet a grizzly bear and canoe to the Pacific.
When I take a
walk I don’t like to return the same way I went. When I’m in a new place I’m tempted to get up
early and wander and discover. This
stuff feeds some yearning in my being.
Following God
certainly offers opportunities to feel a bit lost and to explore strange
regions both literal and metaphoric.
We’d all like to know just where God is taking us but when we get there
it’s often a relief that we were kept in the dark along the way.
M-trips are a
concrete example of watching this work.
One of my happiest memory snippets in life happened on an M-trip to
Croatia. The group had traveled to
Croatia on Good Friday of Spring break to provide lots of manual labor for a
camp that would open in the summer.
The student portion of the team. |
The camp cabins newly stained by our labors |
Our
first nights were to be spent in an apartment in Zadar, an old coastal
city. We had been left with instructions
to call our host (whose house across town we’d already visited) in the morning
when we were ready to start the day’s activities. Simple right?
Here’s my card, call me in the morning.
Simple. The apartment’s phone was not connected. OK, must find a pay phone. In a residential
zone there were none to be found. This
meant getting in the van and negotiating the ridiculously narrow roads of an
old Croatian city – off I set on my own – I am not complaining about this – my
joy level is rising with each new impediment because it’s an adventure that
requires exploration into the unfamiliar.
I find a pay phone. That was
easy. But, the pay phone requires a
special sort of card. The card is not
available at the small “convenience” market next to the phone. I must find another type of store, on Easter
weekend, early in the morning, in a language I do not begin to get. (Well, I knew what “Happy Easter” was “Sretan
Uskrs” – it was plastered all over the Zagreb airport when we arrived.)
Sretan Uskrs! Happy Easter! @ Zagreb Airport |
Off I set on the
road again. I’m following the coastal
road and can feel my smile growing with the challenge. Two or three stops later I find an outlet for
these cards and now head back to the pay phone (there’s not one by the place
that sells the cards.) I scrape off the
security cover to reveal the magic code and begin the process of making the call. Many incomprehensible sounds from the
earpiece later I figure out that the phone number on our host’s card was in
error – just plain wrong or out of date.
I can’t make the call. It turns
out we’ll have to set out as a group and drive across a city we whisked through
under jet lag to find a home we’d visited the night before – no problem and we
did. It was in those moments not knowing
where I was going or how it would turn out but confident that it would turn out
that I experienced great joy.
This trip had a
few more moments like this including solving our “last night in Zagreb/no place
to stay problem” at the hands of an opera singer. That’s another entry.
In thinking about
this on Easter morning (and reminded through the Easter sermon) I realized that
we have an advantage over the followers of Jesus so shattered, bereaved and
disappointed the way things had worked out on Good Friday. We know how the story turned out. We know that God had the perfect plan in what
had happened – perfect for His glory, perfect for our peace. His followers didn’t know on Friday or
Saturday but how a resurrection changes things.
And that is the greatest reversal and hope for our lostness and grief
we can ever count on. I knew God had a
plan in my not “solving” the phone quandary – real small beans in comparison to
the followers of Christ on Easter weekend but we, on this side of Easter, can
be confident in confusion.
This particular
Easter Day in 2012 the resurrection’s vitality was driven home real hard. A friend and fellow worker in the Kandern community,
Mari Ellen Reeser, passed away following unexpected complications related to a
hip replacement surgery. Diane was
visiting with her when Mari Ellen suffered whatever it was that brought on her
death. It was tough for Diane please
pray for her. Pray for this community as
Mari Ellen has faithfully poured her heart and soul into the ministry of
counseling here. She is and will
continue to be deeply missed. But Diane
was able to tell the docs that Mari Ellen was with the Lord. Others later affirmed that sure hope to
hospital personnel. The power and the promise of the resurrection are just
about everything at this time we’ll all face.
Anyway, as I
began, I woke up thinking about exploring.
I was born out of time to experience the great moments (for the
explorers at least) of discovery and I’ve had to be content with the little
moments. Maybe it’s a good thing to have
missed he unfortunate episodes where exploration went too far and turned into
ugliness. But I realized that the story
really isn’t over yet. I live in a
community of missionaries and work with the children of missionaries. I get to hear a great deal about how
frontier, exploratory missions gets done creatively and respectfully. For here and now there are new areas to
explore and a great reason to do so.
But what I really
started thinking about was someday.
There are delightful biblical indications that when all is said and done
the people of God will be established on a New Earth joined by the presence of
God in the New Heaven. Will these people
God has redeemed for forever then have the privilege and joy of exploring this
new earth? If so, won’t it be without
the mistakes and mixed motives of the past – won’t it just be good? Won’t it just be an absolute pleasure offered
to us by the Giver of all good things?
To wander, to discover, to delight. Sign me up for those expeditions.
Mark Buchanan, in
his book, Things Unseen accurately
describes the basic human longing to seek and find what is refreshingly
new. He also speaks of our longing for
the familiar, for the sense of wholeness that comes with being “at home”. Both are deep desires of the heart. My students who are kids raised apart from
their passport countries in all kinds of unique situations generally like
exploration and are generally confused about “home” but both are valued and
important.
But someday both
longings will be totally fulfilled.
When we first
came to Germany our family lived across a narrow bend in a side street of
downtown Kandern from Mari Ellen and her apartment mate. Sound traveled well in
that narrow canyon way of a street. Mari
Ellen had a particularly distinctive laugh – come to think of it so did her
apartment mate. We always knew when they
were entertaining and I dare say they must have known much about our then six
people in a small apartment. Mari Ellen
loved the hills nearby and the mountains not too much farther from here but
degeneration in her hips had come to greatly inhibit her ability to walk those
hills and mountains. There will be that
day when those children of God who have embraced and trusted in Christ’s death
and resurrection celebrated over this past weekend will have their heads turned
at the sound of Mari Ellen’s signature laugh as she delights in painlessly
walking the hills of the New Earth. Yup,
the resurrection means everything.
Sretan Uskrs!
3 comments:
Wow. What a shock. What a gift to MariEllen that Diane could be there, but I'll be praying for Diane.
Russ, Thanks for posting this. I'm so glad that Diane was with MariEllen when she died even though I know it must have been hard for her. Tell Diane I'm thinking of her and praying for her and appreciate her witness and testimony on MariEllen's behalf to the hospital staff. That is truly what MariEllen would have wanted.
I continue to pray for your whole family. May God give His grace and peace. Thanks for these comments about the Journey with the Lord; may He give us joy and excitement on each step of the Way.
Post a Comment