Sunday, January 25, 2009

House Progress?

January 2009 has been cold and snowy. I had days off from school so the video tracks the progress in our painting of the living and dining areas of our 1933 Sears house. The floor refinishing was started on Saturday morning and will be totally finished on Tuesday, sand, fill, sand, stain, seal, seal, seal. The large rectangle you will see in the floor is where the "central" heat advertised in the original catalog provided coal heated air to the entire house. It drifted up through registers to heat the second floor. Conversion to a gas furnace had the floor patched, we elected not to try and do anything fancy but simply kept the patch.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Facing the Future With Confidence


I have had several days off from school due to the cold weather in the middle of the U.S. It does appear that we will finally get back to school tomorrow! This has been a good time to paint the living room and dining room in our 1930s era Sears home. We are attempting to return to more of the look of the 30s, colors etc. The living room and dining room are now Sage and the stairs up are Oyster Bay (green and tan for those color challenged like me).
Our pastor had another great sermon on Sunday and it started with a question he was asked when interviewing as a candidate for Bishop in the UMC; if you had five minutes with the president of the U.S. what would you say? Dr. Bias made some really good points that can be boiled down to some thoughts that brought joy to a history teacher's heart. The Renaissance brought us the Age of Reason and the Scientific Revolution which brought us the ideas that we can solve all our own problems. The Age of Faith was replaced by the Age of Me. We now have enough history to examine that a conclusion about the success of that change is clear. . . it hasn't worked. Our problems have continued to grow totally unabated. The time to recognize our need for a relationship with our Lord is more important than ever. Our prayers must align us with God, get us working WITH God and not trying to change God. Prayer is a submitting process, submission to God's way, it is working with God, a pursuit of holiness that can only come by recognizing we don't have all the answers. This life is bigger than us. There are problems that can only be solved by God, even problems in our own life. God is not going to act unless we are willing to cooperate. We can't call out the evil without submission to God and following Him in trust and obedience. Evil won't be thrown out by a dictatorial God but by a relationship and partnership with a living and loving God. The impossible becomes possible to those who trust and obey. May our new leaders recognize this, may we recognize this and begin anew an Age of Faith. God is good, He has taken us to a church where our faith is challenged regularly. If you are in Peoria, looking for a church try us, First United Methodist, downtown Peoria.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Springs of Living Water

This photo was taken far from the "modern" world. Vicki and I were in Brazil in 2006 and had the opportunity to deliver this water purifier to a village about 180 miles south of Altamira. Living water came from this purifier, not the river water that made people ill but clean, clear, healthy water that people could drink and find sustaining life. This morning I was privileged to attend a memorial service for Farai Chimvinga, the brother of a close friend from church. Farai passed away November 28, 2008 from complications of skin cancer. He lived in Zimbabwe. How large my world has become.

"Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on. Yes," says the Spirit, "they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them." (Rev. 14:13) No spring of living water kept Farai from joining the Lord but at his memorial a "spring of living water" from the Holy Spirit surrounded all of us present. Five African nations were represented, Holy Scripture was read, Amazing Grace, Soon and Very Soon, Blessed Assurance, and Ndofamba were sung. Farai's sister, Irene, shared remembrances and we left filled with the living water of our Lord. We were not Americans or Africans, we were people of God, joined together by a belief in one Lord, one faith, one baptism and confidence that we will join one another in the hereafter.

The family sang Shona Song and the words follow below:
1. Ndofamba ndofamba
Ndosuwa kudenga
Kunyika yatenzi
Isina nenhamo
2. Madzinza ariyo
Hakuna urombo
Hawacha zochemi
Hawana rusuwo
3. Watswene wariyo
Wofara zwikuru
Kuona yonyenye
Mufuri wewese
4. Neniwo ndinoda
Kufamba murwendo
Runoda wasimbi
Kuswika yonyika

English:
1. I'm on a journey, I miss heaven,
where there are no troubles
2. There are tribes there, there is no
poverty. There will not be crying,
and no sorrow.
3. The saints are there, they are
rejoycing, to see the sheep, who died
for all
4. I also want to be on this journey
it takes faith to reach that place.

May you allow yourself to be immersed in the living water of our Lord.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

January 2009


Happy New Year! Vicki and I stopped at Frontenac State Park along the Mississippi River while traveling home from Minnesota. I thought this tree, valiantly holding its dead leaves, was interesting. We had hoped to snowshoe but the trails had very little snow and lots of ice. We almost needed our snowshoes because of the bite they provide on a slick surface.

May hope abound in your life as we enter another new year.