Thursday, December 24, 2015

How can I sing His song far from home?

Christmas Carol 2015-- This is my Christmas gift for you this season, though I haven't the means to readily post the melody to accompany it at present. That may follow at some later point, but be assured that my love for you and for He who showed us the way home is strong and secure, even from afar. May you also be drawn home through this marvelous gift #ASaviorIsBorn !!

How can I sing his song so far from home?

The snow won't drift into soft piles of white
No mistletoe will hang from lofty boughs 
No fir nor pine trimmed gay to its full height
Nor wassail set to greet cold carolers.

How can I sing his song so far from home?
Sing it softly, sing it sweetly, sing true!
Sing it warmly, sing it gayly, sing through
Until all sad hearts feel it bear them home!

Christ left his home, descended from a throne,
Bowed to mortal state, so low he had no home,
A stranger among his own, foreign as Rome,
But yet the chos'n King of our one true home.

How can I sing his song so far from home?
Sing it softly, sing it sweetly, sing true!
Sing it warmly, sing it gayly, sing through
Until broken hearts feel it make them whole!

The babe in the manger so far from home
A man of sorrows, broken to the bone,
Rejected, alone, Forsaken by his own-
Yet it is He who now can make us one!

Oh I will sing his song this far from home!
Sing it fully, sing it dearly, sing true!
Sing it fondly, sing it boldly, sing through
Until all men through Him are yet brought home!

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Mid December

This week included more government visits as Gerrit Gong, who has been serving as the church representative for Southeast and Southern Asia for the last five years, has accepted another assignment and needed to introduce his replacement, Randall Funk, to the various heads of various government organizations.  So we spent time with them and other local church leaders as they visited with the Fatherland Front, the local and national Departments of Public Security and the Committee on Religious Affairs. The meetings were cordial and generally positive, a tribute to Gerrit's careful, considerate and honest work to build bridges of transparency and trust.

Public Security

Lunch at a small eatery in-between meetings
Given the social and political history here, there are understandable concerns about religious organizations in the minds of some government leaders and in the minds of various segments of society in general..  And so we are very clear about what the church is doing here, spending extra time on the parts that they are generally the most concerned about and are wary of. ie., what it teaches about responsible citizenship, the humanitarian work that really is humanitarian work and not a cover for proselytizing, honesty, obeying the law, and family respect and harmony.  Some of the people we visited with had been able to be part of delegations to the U.S. to see for themselves what the church is there, and that has been very helpful too.

So a shout out of gratitude for the short-staffed, stretched hosting department in the U.S, who did so much of the work to enable these government delegates to meet with church, educational and civic leaders there.  It really helps to see more of an international organization, how it works, and how it relates to education and government on its own turf, when you are dealing with a new, unfamiliar, branch of it in your own country.




The rest of the week has been the usual teaching and helping as best we can in medicine, English instruction, family relationship classes and ecclesiastical support as our little church tries to keep up with many requests and needs that are part of any ministry.   (And cheering on the Noordas, our LDSCharities directors in the early stages of a provincial project training opthamologists.)  I have a great deal of respect for the local church members and leaders who do so much while struggling to also financially support themselves and their families in their day jobs. It takes long, long hours of work and more than one worker to feed, clothe and house a family here in this emerging economy. The tradition of multi-generational living helps, but even in families where that is geographically possible , it is long hours of work. So I really appreciate their efforts to serve and minister beyond those many demands.

It is nice to have Christmas coming. Of course, we did not have room to bring any of our Christmas decorations with us, and it seems silly to purchase baubles or an artificial tree (no live ones near here) when we have no room to store them the other 11 months of the year. But the previous tenants left some small, lovely straw ornaments behind. And there was some red ribbon. So today, before supper, Lewis put up our Christmas tree.






 A joyful Christmas season to all!