Archive for December, 2007

  • So, what is it like?

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    I’ve had a number of people ask me, “What is it like being a missionary in Thailand?”  Here is something I wrote to one person who asked that; I thought I’d post it here for other people who are curious.

    What is it like to be a missionary in Thailand…  There are definitely some perks about serving here.  Learning the language and culture is an ongoing adventure of discovery, even though Thai is said to be one of the most difficult languages in the world, and there are so many layers to the culture that I’ll always have more to learn.  One main aspect of the culture is FOOD—which is delicious, in abundance, and cheap.  The Thais love their food and take pride in it, and every activity involves eating.  A common greeting (like our “how are you?”) is “have you eaten yet?”  So much of missionary life is sitting with people and sharing meals, developing a higher spice tolerance and learning to eat parts of animals that would never get cooked in the States.  J  There are beautiful beaches here and jungle areas to explore during retreats and time off, the streets are always teeming with open-air markets, and it is sunny for at least part of every day.  I’m glad God called me to this place.

    But it’s not all easy.  It is extremely hot here, and serving the poor incarnationally means I suffer from the heat, humidity, mosquitoes right along with my neighbors.  This and other physical stressors, as well as culture shock (feeling like you have to relearn everything that once came naturally) often bring out the worst in missionaries.  This is actually a good thing—it keeps us humble, helps us to remember we need Jesus just as much as those we came to share the Gospel to.  Almost everyone here believes in Buddhism, as well as everyone they admire, from the king and prime minister down to the public school teachers.  It is infused in everything, and every other religion feels foreign.  It is difficult for Thais to believe that they can become a Christian and still remain Thai, that they will not be a traitor to their culture and upbringing.  So while we don’t face persecution or danger as missionaries, we face very stubborn walls of resistance in most Thais’ hearts.  The Gospel has made slow progress here.

    But it has also been exciting to learn about Buddhism and Thai culture and see ways that God’s fingerprints are all over them.  For instance, the Buddha prophesied a man who would come to save people from their wrongdoing, who would be injured in the hands and the feet.  Thai culture has many values that God has placed there, like the high value of doing good and sacrificing for others, honoring one’s elders and showing hospitality.  It is beautiful when Thais become believers and we get to see God work at redeeming their culture, using practices that previously were part of Buddhism now used to honor Jesus.  And worship using traditional Thai forms is especially powerful.  In many ways being a missionary is about getting a bigger picture of who God is, seeing a side of Him that you miss if you stay in one culture.  I have hope that as more and more Thais express their worship and the Gospel in their heart language and their native forms, more and more Thais will understand that being a Christian is what being fully Thai means—being the Thai that God created them to be, following Him.

  • From a fellow laborer among the poor

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    I wish I had written this.

    Location
    -Alexis Spencer-Byers

    They say I’m brave to live here—
    A courageous soul, more so than most
    And I believe that they intend it
    As a compliment to me
    But what they fail to understand
    Is the grave insult implied
    To those I choose to live among
    If being their neighbor
    Makes me a hero

    Why should it be harder
    For me to dwell beside
    A family who differs from mine
    In hue and size of paycheck
    Than it is to share a street
    With those who show no sympathy
    For the differences and weaknesses
    Of others?

    What would they say
    If they knew the truth-
    That the suburbs with their perfect lawns
    Their swimming pools and soccer moms
    Terrify me
    Far more than the dangers
    (Real and alleged)
    Of my beloved ‘hood?
    What would they say
    If they discovered this fact—
    That I am not brave at all
    Just more at home
    Where I can be
    As broken as the next?

  • On Waiting

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    This is something I wrote for an advent devotional one of my sending churches put out this year.

    Waiting…

    Especially in fast-paced, efficiency-oriented Western culture, that word seems to have a negative connotation.  For me I think of idleness, listening to the clock ticking away seconds and minutes, an uncomfortable in-between stage.  It’s an unpleasant time to just make it through in order to get to the anticipated end.

    But James’ illustration of the farmer paints a different picture (James 5:7-8).  He is anything but idle, continuing to work the ground as he waits.  It is a picture of partnership between him and God, who provides the “autumn and spring rains” and is author of the mystery that turns a small, hidden seed into life-giving, “precious crop”.

    It is a picture of faith that this labor is not in vain, though the process lies hidden beneath the soil for so much of the year.

    It is a picture of perseverance, as James tells us to “be patient and stand firm”, even in the face of suffering (v. 10).

    It is a picture of anticipation, as the farmer knows that something good is coming, a reason to celebrate.

    For me, as I look toward Christmas, it is a reminder that waiting for Christ and his Kingdom to come here in Bangkok is a joyful and active thing.  While I often focus on what is not yet or what is needed, I can forget that there are seeds germinating in the soil even now.  When my work feels fruitless, this is a challenge to trust God with the seeds I have planted.

    Here in Bangkok, few people know the King of Kings, but they are highly devoted to their earthly king.  The King of Thailand will celebrate his 80th birthday this December, and Thais have been doing many things to anticipate the event.  From wearing yellow every Monday, to an upsurge in charity and environmental work to honor their king, it is clearly on the forefront on everyone’s minds.

    As I anticipate Christmas, this is a challenge to me.  If this is how Thais honor a man who has served them well, how much more should we honor our King and Savior as we await his coming birthday!  Would our continued planting of seeds of the Kingdom around us be a way to anticipate our Lord’s birthday and future coming.

  • An advent prayer

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    the thing about babies unborn
    is that their only task
    is to prepare for the life to come

    and the only urge in their every cell,
    is a yearning to be born

    this advent, put me back into your womb, God
    so every cell in me finds that single-minded longing
    for life again

    - Cheryl Lawrie