Friday, November 30, 2007

Great night with friends

Just one more night here in Ruskin/Apollo Beach for our little honeymoon getaway. I can't really call it a "second honeymoon" because Larry and I have been on so many "second honeymoons"...we've just decided to live life as a honeymoon as much as possible. :-)


Tonight for our last night here, I surprised Larry by setting it up for our good friends, Gary & Tammy Rice (Senior Pastors, Evangel Assembly of God, Orlando) to come and meet us here for dinner. They met us at Inn @ Little Harbor for dinner. Larry was so pleasantly surprised! First of all, if you're looking for a great place to eat and watch the sunset, Little Harbor is IT! Great little private beach, just absolutely exquisite. We took the photos here at sunset...as we were getting ready to eat.

I am very, very grateful for the friends in my husband's life. While I open up with many people, there are not many people that Larry shares with and really gets candid about the challenges in the pastorate. The two men he really talks to are Pastor Randy Visconti (our dear friend for 22+ years, along with his wife, Pastor Dawn) and Pastor Gary. I thank God for these two men because aside from them Larry shares mostly just with me. And although I'm so glad he does I also want him to have the perspective of another pastor friend, particularly a man who can understand. These two relationships are very important to him. I knew it would mean the world to him to go to dinner with them tonight as it's just so refreshing for him - and for me.

So tonight the Rice's met us for dinner and we had such a great time! After dinner we decided to go somewhere else for dessert. We found an absolute treasure, probably the greatest dining jewel we have found in five years of living here...a place called "By the Bay Cafe" that serves REAL Maryland seafood, right down to cream of crab soup, blue crabs with old bay, real Maryland crabcakes, and more. First we were disappointed that we only went there for dessert but we decided to go back tomorrow for lunch! :-) And being that it's only 45 min. away from our house, we plan to go there on a more regular basis, and take people there for special occasions, maybe even have them do some catering for the church. We met the family that owns it...they were so excited to meet us...you know, all four of us are Marylanders... (Larry is an honorary Marylander being that he's been married to me for 20 years) and Gary and Tammy are Baltimorians...as well as me, so...we all just FELL IN LOVE with the place. They even have a big crab feast every year in September and they are going to e-mail us about it! We are psyched. So, By the Bay Care is our new place.

We had such a good time - staying there talking and eating our homemade ice cream...and then we brought them back to the place we're staying to show them around. They really loved it and agreed it's a great place to come and maybe even have a little retreat of sorts, or something for the church for a small group, party or a staff/leadership retreat.

Well, only one more night here with Teeby before we have to get back home...so it's time to stop blogging and savor every last moment here...

This has been so fun. I love it when we get away like this...nothing else makes me this happy. Honeymooning is even better after 20 years of marriage. Practice makes perfect. :-)

Where we are

Here are some photos of this cozy place we have until tomorrow...






by the way, if you want to do some slow dancing with your spouse or significant other, (yes, I do that even though I'm A/G), just come right here to http://www.lifetimeintimateportraitds.blogspot.com/ and turn up the volume on your computer...it's perfect if you haven't already realized that. :-)

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Celebrating with the man


So, here we are on our getaway for Larry's 40th birthday.

We are in Ruskin/Apollo Beach. Spent all day in this great room we have, (we even have a little mini-kitchen so we really don't have to leave unless we really want to) and then went to Circles in Apollo Beach for dinner. We love the food at Circles in Tampa but in Apollo Beach the highlight is the view...GORGEOUS.

It is just good to be away, and have all the time in the world to do whatever we want. Today we watched half of the movie, Out of Africa, but decided to save the other half for later. I really wanted to see it because it's filmed in Kenya. Even thought the movie was from 1985, it holds more meaning for me now...

Not a lot of time to blog tonight...having so much fun with Teeby and want to get right back to it...

G'night

DVD Presentation from Larry's 40th B'day Party

Beforeyou click play, be sure to go to the bottom right corner of the blog and turn my "Unforgettable" music off... This is the DVD we showed last night at Larry's party after the "speeches"...everyone loved it and I think my blog readers will too. By the way, we're at a very quaint place in Ruskin, FL the next few days, and just loving it. I'll blog more about it later...

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

My darling is 40 today!


Well, today's the day! My babe turned 40. I have not blogged yet about what I have been planning because it's been a surprise til now.


This morning when he woke up I greeted him with my standard morning greeting (rolling over and snuggling with him for a few minutes before I get up) and then I said, "Happy Birthday Teeby!"


Things are very rushed in the morning as we are getting out the door so I waited until work to give him a gift. This morning I gave him a Callaway (golf) hat, a golfing book, and a new really sharp red tie (wanted him to have a new one for Christmas.) For lunch the staff went to the Acropolis for his birthday, and basically ate food that had me moaning the whole time. We had bread that was AMAZING, calamari, spanakopita, and a lot more... I seriously needed the elliptical machine today but had no time for it.


At the office today I had to finish up a TON of work because the rest of this week I won't have time to (more about that in a minute!)


Then tonight we had Larry's "surprise" party after church. We had things decorated in Steeler colors, and Stryper music plus a few other 80's hits playing. We had lots of his favorites planned like my chicken salad, fruit and veggie dips, meatballs, of course ICE CREAM - his all time fav - and birthday cake.


Tom, Bernie and Pastor T gave some short "speeches" of sorts. Tom spoke about how he wouldn't be here if it weren't for Larry...and how he's changed his life so much. Pastor Trinity talked about how much fun he has with Larry and how great it is to work with him and for him. Bernie talked about Larry's great example as a pastor, a friend and also as a husband and father. (I seconded that and talked about Larry being the best thing that's ever happened to me, aside from salvation...and how I am hoping to have AT LEAST 40 more years with him! I spoke a little of how I'm so glad God knew what I needed...and gave me him.)

After the speeches, we showed a DVD that Russ Brown created for the occasion. It was to the song, "40 something". It was so funny, and nostalgic. I'll try to put it on here in a day or two if I can get it on YouTube.

Then I announced to Larry that we were going home to pack because...we're leaving in the morning!!! Oh yes! Yippee! That's right, I have a getaway planned for him to celebrate his 40th, mainly taking him away to a place by ourselves and making him feel like he's 20 again instead of 40. You know, "40 is the new 20", ha ha! I said that at the party tonight and Joel said, "Um, will he be in the hospital on Sunday?!" Everyone really laughed when he said that. Well, no he won't be...but he will either be very tired, or extremely relaxed. (GRIN)

So we will be away until Saturday afternoon, get back right in time for the Sunday School teachers Christmas dinner, and I'm so excited! We'll have internet where we are, so I'll blog and tell you what a great time we're having. Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! I'm going to have time alone with my man...there's nothing more, nothing, nothing, nothing more that I love. And I do have some more surprises up my sleeve for him...

I've lined up everything for the kids...Dustin and Jordan will hold down the fort here at home, and Savanna will be with the Harts...you know, she really is "Savanna Hart Shrodes" when it gets right down to it. (SMILE)

Ta-ta for now...off to pack and do a last minute clean sweep of the house...

Thank you Jesus, for sending Teeby to earth 40 years ago...if for no one else but me.

Great loss today!




"Although no one can go back and make a brand new start, anyone can start from now and make a brand new ending."

- Roberta Brenick, Weight Watcher leader, Williamsburg, VA



Today was my first day back at Weight Watchers since I came back from Africa. I lost almost 5 lbs! I'm not surprised...my eating habits (how much I ate, and what kind of food) was so different while I was away. But I'm pleasantly surprised that I have been able to keep it off and I've been home 11 days now. So, I'm only 5 lbs. away from Lifetime Membership now.

The leader and class were astonished today and said, "how did you do it?" I said, "just went to an impoverished country and ate like they did..." Everyone laughed and said, "oh, so that's what we all need to do?" I said, "Actually I would highly recommend it..."

Well, only 5 lbs. more to go by their standards, and by mine personally, 11. I want to be about 6 lbs. under goal and not have to worry at my weigh in every time because if you are 2 lb or more over, you start paying again and have to re-gain your status. Two pounds can fluctuate just by eating some salty potato chips. I don't want to have that little wiggle room. To me, at least 5 lbs under will help me quite a bit to not be so nervous to step on that scale each time.

Today our leader talked to us about the following:

KEEPING THE HOLIDAYS IN PERSPECTIVE:

1) Choose a winning outcome.

2) Commit to strategies for success.

3) Enjoy the results

I started out excellent today but honestly didn't totally stay on track because it was Larry's birthday. I had an incredibly nutritious breakfast but for lunch he wanted to do Greek and we ate so many yummy favorites...and I didn't worry about points. And then after church we had his party with lots of favorites including my chicken salad sandwiches, grape punch, ice cream, of course birthday cake, and lots more. But I didn't overindulge in fact all I ate was one small chicken salad sandwich and a few bites of spinach dip.

I'm only 5 lb. away and I have a feeling with a little more elliptical work this week, I can knock off at least another pound this week...I just need to find the time amid this Christmas crunch and having our women's meeting and our holiday open house coming up -- both of them are this week. I'll do it.

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The way things COULD have gone but for the grace of God

So yesterday I wrote a post on the fact that I'm so glad I didn't marry somebody stupid.

Today I want to share with you what COULD have happened...without the grace of God - and the discernment of the Holy Spirit.

When I was in college, I was dating someone who seemed like a wonderful guy. My friends really liked him a whole lot especially because he seemed so wonderful compared to a guy who had asked me to marry him (who I really did love), and then dumped me in a rather cruel way. Well, compared to him (a guy my friends nicknamed "the viper in a pretty box"...) this guy seemed like the next best thing to Jesus Christ himself. I would come back to the dorm and a dozen roses would often be waiting for me. When I went to get in the car, if I tried to open my door he would shout, "DON'T TOUCH THAT DOOR!" and race to open it. He would be late to his own classes to walk me to mine. He was attractive...he smelled delicious (always important to me). He hung on every word I said. He was so gentle and kind. He was called to pastor. My friends said, (and I quote), "Deanna, if you let this one go, you're crazy."

Well, we had been dating a few months and I could tell he really was falling for me but I wasn't quite yet there - in fact, I didn't really feel in love with him, just very interested to keep dating him and see if any deep feelings developed. Quite honestly I was still getting over my previous flame that had been so cruelly extinguished.

One night I was ministering in Allentown, PA on behalf of the school and it was an overnight thing. I stayed at the pastor's home and ministered there on Sunday. Saturday night as I was getting ready to go to bed, the Holy Spirit said to me, "Break up with Sam (not his real name) and don't pursue a relationship with him anymore." That really made no sense to me. I said, "why, God? He's so nice. Especially after dealing with this horrible pain of someone I love breaking up with me. He seems like everything I'm longing for. What harm could this be? We're just getting to know each other. I'm not even at the serious stage yet..." But the Holy Spirit would not take no for an answer. I was up tossing and turning half the night wondering how I was going to break this news to Sam that I was just cutting our relationship off, just like that. Worse yet, a lot of people do this kind of stuff in Bible College and they blame it on God. (And a lot of it is really not God, it's their own stupidity.) However, this was not stupidity, this was genuinely God speaking to me.

I came back to school just dreading the conversation I would have with Sam. When I got back, he met me at the dorm and literally ran to me and scooped me up and swung me around. "I missed you so much!" he said. Then before he could go on I said, "Um, wait a minute...I need to talk to you." I didn't tell him it was God, I just blamed it on me and said, "I can't really explain it, I just can't date you anymore." He was so upset. He said, "please, just give this some more time..." and I said I couldn't and he said, "you'll never guess what I did today..." and he pulled out a paper and showed me that he had just gone that afternoon to the mall and put a downpayment on an engagement ring for me. I told him I was so incredibly flattered, however if he had proposed to me that day or even a month or two from then I didn't think I would be ready as I didn't feel the intense feelings he did yet, and I was still in the "getting to know you" phase.

It was a horrible break-up for him. He didn't get over it for a long time. When I started dating Larry later on, he hated Larry. I felt bad for him because quite honestly he was a nice guy and I prayed, "Lord, PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE, send him a wonderful girl." Well, about six months later he got one. She was an attractive, very talented girl, also at our school. (For the sake of anonymity, I'll call her Susie.) She looked absolutely nothing like me, but she possessed pretty much all the same giftings/talents that I had. It was amazing how much we were alike except that she had strawberry blonde hair (mine was dark brown at the time), and she had different facial features and stuff...but she sang, played piano, preached, loved teaching, etc. etc. So Sam and Susie dated and some time later got married. I was relieved, and very happy for the both of them. When they graduated I heard something about them going up to Northern New England where they were staff pastors at a church.

Fast forward a few years...Larry and I were married and staff pastoring together and one day I ran into a few minister friends who also went to school with us at Valley Forge. After initial greetings, we began catching up on old friends, where they were, what they were doing, who got married, who had kids, where people were pastoring, yada yada yada. Then someone piped up and said, "Oh, Deanna...surely you've heard about Sam and Susie..." and I said, "Noooooo....what's going on?" And they said, "they're divorced!" WHAT??!! I was shocked. They went on to tell me that it was due to Sam having an affair. I couldn't believe it. Surely it couldn't be true. To say this is the LEAST person I ever expected this out of is an understatement. I really believed surely somebody had the story mixed up. But I did a little investigating to find out if it was really true. I didn't want to believe it. I thought, "I'll find out and set the record straight."

Well, it was true. I found out that Susie came home one day to find Sam in bed with another woman. When confronted he basically poured out all this stuff about being "jealous of her ministry." He told her that she was intimidating...that he was uncomfortable with all her many giftings as compared to how he perceived himself. He said, "I'll never compare to you when it comes to ministry..." All these feelings were festering within him and he was secretly harboring a lot of resentment because of her success. I am not a psychologist but I often wonder if he didn't start with another woman to try to prove himself in some way more desirable or something, I dunno. Who knows? All I do know is this...he divorced Susie and from what I hear, he now doesn't even ATTEND church, nor profess Christ as his Savior.

I experienced all kinds of feelings like, "should I have ever prayed that he would find a great girl?" I felt very sorry for Susie. I wondered many times, did the Holy Spirit try to speak to her about it too? Maybe so, and maybe not. I'll never know.

But I do know this...if it were not for the prompting of the Holy Spirit and His relentless call to me, I could very well be married to Sam today...or divorced from him! I could have been the woman coming home to find the other woman!

I thank God everyday for His grace.

I thank Him that He helped me to make right choices when I wasn't mature enough to make them on my own.

I thank Him for protecting me.

I thank Him for sending me somebody who celebrates my talents and doesn't just tolerate them.

I thank Him for keeping me up half the night until I agreed to break up with Sam.

I thank Him for giving me what He knew I would need, and placing me with somebody who would need me too.

So glad I didn't marry somebody stupid


The other day I was having lunch with Lisa. And over a cuban sandwich at Weck's Deli, she remarked that Larry really is the perfect man for me.


When Larry announced in church two Sundays ago that I was back from Africa and the congregation clapped, he said, "believe me, that wasn't the reaction I had..." what he meant by that was the fact that their reaction was only a fraction of the reaction he had when I got off the plane. He was never so excited to see me. As I've said before in my posts...it was a hard week for him without me, actually an excruciating week. Nobody really knows the extent of what he went through without me in dealing with some things and nobody ever will know. This is because Larry is a very private individual and the type of pastor where a bomb could go off and he'd remain calm and just pray about it, clean up the shrapnel and mess, and bear the burden upon himself for the sake of others. That man goes through hell and back sometimes and keeps it between him and God...and me. I'm the only one he tells things to, aside from two pastor friends outside the church and even with them, he tells them about 1/3 of what he tells me or asks advice on. Even though I lined up everything for him at home and the office, there was nothing like having me here to confer with, 24/7 on everything big and small. I am the perfect woman for Larry in that I'm his absolute partner. At the same time...

I really don't know where I would be without Larry, except... quite possibly (well, actually probably) in a very confining marriage. Lisa remarked, the majority of men aren't secure enough to handle a woman like me. Many men are threatened by the calling, achievements, or opportunities their wife has. I know of a well known preacher who most would consider very secure - in fact he has held major denominational posts, and appears to be a confident leader. But he says he only lets his wife preach on Mother's Day and that one time alone is very difficult on him. This is because his wife is very gifted and in fact she has a secular job, speaking outside the church. She'd make a great staff member in the church but he has never allowed that. He hears the comments for months afterwards when she speaks about how great she is, and how the people wish they could hear her more, and in his words, it makes him feel "terribly insecure" and he wonders, "do the people like her more?" Larry has been asked by other men how he handles it when something good happens for me, but not for him. He always tells them, he's proud of me.

Many men wouldn't be proud and if I were married to them, would simply wonder why I haven't given up everything to follow them, instead of giving up everything to follow Jesus. Truth be told, many men are jealous of Jesus and the commitment their wives have to Him though they would never be so unspiritual as to admit it out loud.

I'm glad I married a man who has released me to love and follow Jesus. He looks forward to having me away again as much as having someone bash him in the head, however because of his love for the Lord and for me, he is not only releasing me to follow the call of God, but he's sending a bunch of Northsiders with me next time to Africa! His first reaction when I came home was, "ugh! don't leave me again" but then after getting his equilibrium back again after a few days he realized of course I'd go again, though not right away...if Jesus wanted me to go somewhere, of course I would and Larry would weather whatever to see that happen, for the glory of God.

God really looked out for me. When I was 19, I thought I was making the right choice about Larry but the truth is, I was too young to really know what I'd need. How would I have known at 19, that many women called of God are limited by the insecurities of their husbands? How would I have known that this would be the most constricting, or freeing decision I could possibly make - dependent upon what way I chose? I couldn't have. But God's grace covered me. Grace, grace, God's grace...greater than all our sin, our mistakes, our misjudgments, our cluelessness...powerful, infinite matchless grace.

I marvel that God knew He would want to use me in certain ways, and made sure He had it covered that I'd be married to a man who wouldn't be so insecure as to hold me back. I'm not a male basher by any stretch. All I'm saying by this post is that I know a whole lot of women who are held back by male egos and insecurity of the particular men they are married to. Of course plenty of stupid wives are holding their men back too and this is why we have men dropping out of the ministry like flies because their needy, whiney, materialistic, unsacrificial wives talk them into it. That's a whole 'nother post. But right now we're on this topic. And I just thank God everyday that my husband is different. Because if he wasn't, I honestly would feel that I might as well not live.

"That's dumb," you say. Is it really worth dying over if your husband won't release you to freely minister? Well, yes. For somebody who is called to ministry, that would make you want to die. "Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel..." Paul said. Here's the thing. Some women are content to live for a man. I'm not content at all unless I'm living for one specific man - and that's Jesus. And after that if I'm blessed to be living with the gift of an earthly man who also lives for Jesus - FANTASTIC. But if not, I'd rather do without the earthly man and just live and breathe for Jesus. Because I don't think anything in life is worth it or enjoyable without being able to abandon yourself fully to Jesus.

How great it is to be married to someone who realizes that first and foremost, you are Jesus's -- and He has entrusted you to your husband to love, protect, and fulfill. He can't do that fully without releasing you to fulfill the call on your life. (Which a Godly man will realize - is more than just a call to him, but is a call to Jesus.)

Now that I'm 41, and a few years away from 19, and I do know what's important in a marriage relationship, I realize that men like Larry are not a dime a dozen, in fact they are like needles in a haystack. Finding somebody like Larry comes along only once in a lifetime, so fortunately for me, he is my once in a lifetime.

Otherwise I'd be reading my Bible, having the Holy Ghost show me things, and lamenting that I can only share it with my kids and my dog and maybe with the church on Mother's Day once a year, being ever so careful not to out-shine my husband. Dear Lord, what a pathetic thought for someone who is called to preach the Gospel. The thought of it is a nightmare. Thank you Jesus, for your protection on my life when I didn't even know I needed protecting.


Monday, November 26, 2007

Watch DVD of my Africa Trip!

Here is a 5 minute video presentation of my trip to Africa. Pastor Trinity put this together for me to show at the end of my message this past Sunday. I hope you enjoy it... it's to the song, "Here I Am" by Michael W. Smith...a song that has meant so much to me over the past year as I've prepared to go.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Church signs


At every church we have pastored, at some point we dealt with individuals who would leave signs around the church in abundance and they were not always of a positive nature although the people always thought they were doing something needful. There are times I've constructed a sign myself and then had to check myself and ask..."is this positive?" and "how is this looked upon by others who read it -- especially first time guests or newcomers?"

My husband often says that many churches are churches of "signs and wonders"...with all the SIGNS, it's a WONDER anyone gets saved!

I found this cartoon above and just had to chuckle...

Any other pastors/pw's deal with this? I'm sure you've all got your own stories to tell!

This is the day the Lord has made

I am rejoicing...I am glad in it! Very good day in the house at Northside today. It's all about expectancy and I for one was believing for a great day.

I thought we had a good number of people for Thanksgiving weekend. So many are away and with all the folks telling me, "we won't be there this weekend...we'll be in ________________" I wondered if anybody but the faithful few would be there!

It was so good to get back to teaching Sunday School. I've been two weeks without teaching my class and I really missed it. I live for SS. This is my 25th year of teaching, can you believe it? I always crack up at people who say, "I've been teaching SS for quite a while and dealing with some burnout...I think I need a break..." and I just shake my head. After 25 years you couldn't pull me away from this if you tried. And if somebody made me quit, oh well, I guess I'd just go down to McDonalds and gather a few unsaved people and form a new class or something, which doesn't sound like a bad idea for somebody to do anyway! (But not me for now, I'll keep the sanctuary class, thank you...)

It was good to see a number of people who I just haven't connected with since coming back from Kenya. I saw Kerry Todd in the hallway!!! Wonder of all wonders. (Kerry and I never cross paths at church although we are both there! We connect on the blog and happen to be in the same church and never see each other...but today I caught her in the hallway after she was done teaching.)

I preached today - the last message in our "Life Swap" series. My message was, "Life Swap: A Consecrated Life." My message was from Romans 12: 1 & 2 and it was interwoven with testimony from my Africa trip. We ended with a DVD of photos of my trip to the song, "Here I Am" by Michael W. Smith. (Pastor T put it together for me...thank you, T...you are always so faithful to help me!) Then I gave an altar call and we sang, "The Potter's Hand". We had about 4 re-dedications this morning and I think one new salvation. And lots more people coming forward for prayer to set themselves apart for God in a greater way. Good stuff!

I met some first time guests in the hospitality room afterwards and then Larry and I headed to lunch with John Torres. Always a delight to spend time with him. (For those who don't know him - he is the head of our media at Northside ~ got saved in the last few years and is just a wonderful man who loves Jesus so much...we are blessed to have him as part of our family.) We go to a Peruvian place with him - Terra Sur...it's an incredible place he introduced us to. They have steak that is like NONE OTHER YOU HAVE EVER HAD. Everything there just melts in your mouth.

After that I came home, and have been laying across the bed with Teeby ever since, checking mail, updating some things, watching a little TV here and there. So good to just relax a few moments before the day takes off like a rocket tomorrow...

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Decking the halls...


Well, we're all ready to get into the full swing of the Christmas season. Today we put up our two trees and all our other holiday decor. Usually we do it the day after Thanksgiving but yesterday we had David & Cathy's wedding so we didn't. Dustin worked today at the church and then went to Casey's so it was up to the other four of us to do it. Larry and I arranged things the past week so that we were able to have most of today to ourselves at home to do things versus church work. I would say I only did about an hour and a half of church work today and for a Saturday that is par excellance!


We got the tree in the living room up with relatively little problem which is incredible since the paper was lost somewhere between last year and this year. (Yes, I put up artificial trees now...stopped with the real ones once we moved to Tampa.) I figure, department stores do it, and so will I. Our living room tree is all of our ornaments that the kids have made and our special ones we've been given over the years. I haven't purchased any ornaments for that tree, it's basically a "memory tree" of things given to us or made by the children.

Then last year I added another smaller tree in the family room that is my "sugared fruit" tree. I wanted to do a tree in that theme sort of after the "fruit of the spirit". I have enjoyed it last year and even more this year, as I added some things to it and probably will again next year. Except next year I want to add a third tree in the kitchen, which is really flipping Larry out...he says, "is that really necessary?" Um no, I guess not but when did we start doing things that were just "necessary"? (Grin) I don't think we're doing lights outside this year due to the fact that it's just too difficult with Larry's shoulder still healing from surgery.

So the house is decked out as much as it's going to be for Christmas...my message is finalized for in the morning...powerpoint ready...roast for tomorrow is in the crockpot...and it's time for me to sleep. G'night all.

p.s. you know, I notice on my blog stats that about 1/3 of my readers only read on the weekdays. So that leaves me to wonder if they catch up when Monday morning comes...? Do they read the weekend posts, or just start where we're at? Not that I really care...I blog for myself more than anybody. So whether people catch up or not doesn't make a difference, I'm just curious!

The beauty of Africa

Although I consider it's people most beautiful, you can't deny the awesomeness of the African landscape.

What a wonder to behold.


I found myself transfixed by the beauty of each morning ~ the colors of the foliage, the sound of birds that wake you up every day, and more. The photo below is my view out my window at the missionary's home, in the A/G compound there. I loved to get up when the rain woke me in the middle of the night and just look out the window for a while and listen to the sounds.

I really love the Jacoranda and Acacia trees...

and the giraffes...

I came home with abuot 50 giraffe photos, reason being they are my favorite. I think they are so tall and graceful, and until going to Africa I had never seen one run. I had only experienced them at the zoo, where they are just standing there, or maybe walking a few steps. It was so incredible to see several of them together, running. They are still graceful, in my opinion, when they are running. I think they are such beautiful creatures.

Barb had never seen one with it's legs bent, leaning down in the water for a drink. She said, "I would love to see that and have a photo of it. In all the years I've been in Africa (30) I've never seen that or gotten a photo of it." Less than an hour later, we saw a giraffe doing just that! She had the top down in the land rover and I got up on the seat, went through the roof and snapped a few photos. What a day!


Friday, November 23, 2007

Scenes from today's wedding...

Today was David & Cathy's wedding...what a beautiful day! It was just perfect...the weather, the ceremony, the bride, the groom, the preacher... (smile)...EVERYTHING!








The wedding was held at the Davis Island Garden Club. How absolutely exquisite the place was...and the bride and groom were just beaming...such a delight...


I really love weddings...not only because I'm happy for the bride and groom but because it reminds me of my own commitment to my marriage, and why it's something to be so cherished. I think at every wedding, the married couples there can't help but reflect back to their own day, and squeeze hands a little tighter during the ceremony...


I thank God every day for the blessing of my husband. Everyday I realize more and more how fortunate I am to have a relationship that has stood the test of time for 20 years and is headed for 20 more. It's amazing to think I've now been with Larry longer in my life than I've been without him. We have weathered so many things together, there is so much about the past 20 years, only we understand about each other because we've been the one constant in each other's lives.




The boys enjoyed the wedding a lot. Here they are texting and doing their thing before the ceremony. They all had a lot of fun at the wedding but I know as well they are all beginning to understand a bit more the seriousness of such a commitment. I know my boys greatly desire marriage - it isn't something they are iffy about...or are afraid of commitment. My prayer is that daily Larry and I can be an example to them in the way marriage is supposed to play out in real life, at least Godly real life...


Speaking of every day real life, here's one last parting shot for tonight, of Larry and I at tonight's wedding...

So glad to be home with my Teeby...



With some special people in Kenya

Today we are headed to David and Cathy's wedding and I hope to post some photos later. However for now I'm going to post more Kenya photos as promised. Today I thought we'd do some of me with "special people"...so here we go...


with some of the "big boys" and a "big girl" from Mathare Valley A/G



Barb Kuert and me with some of the Kenya Kids. My favorite is Samantha, the girl right next to me.

with Barb Kuert...a great woman of God and an extraordinary hostess!


with Dr. Bill Kuert ~ one of the smartest men in the world not to mention a very Godly man & his wonderful wife, Barbara ~ my missionary hosts. I have them to thank for so many things, the first of which is extending the invitation for me to come to Kenya. I am forever grateful.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

My Thanksgiving list

Well, it's officially Thanksgiving day! Oh how much we have to be thankful for. We had 15 at our table today for Thanksgiving and I'm posting some photos of our day here with this post.

Okey dokey...things I'm thankful for. Here's my short list.

Last night I went to sleep sans clothing and in the middle of the night woke up to my husband laying beside me, massaging my bare shoulders, saying, "you're so beautiful..."


He's so glad I'm home from Africa, for more reasons than just helping him lead the church. :-)


This morning I woke up to begin my day at about 8 am and wanted to sit up in bed and read while having my tea before cleaning again and getting ready for our guests. Larry got up, warmed up a piece of pumpkin bread for me and put my special low-fat butter on it, and brought me a cup of hot tea with one of my tea bags I brought home from Kenya. I'm also glad he rolls with my mistakes and helps me fix them. I woke up this morning, opened my eyes and the realization hit me..."Oh no!!! I forgot the sweet potatoes!" Not to worry, Larry said he'd run out to Sweetbay and quickly get some. In all my busyness of getting my house back in shape and planning the menu and inviting people for dinner and doling out food assignments, I completely left out my favorite dish on the Thanksgiving table! He was back in short order and I quickly peeled a bunch and we got them on so that I could make my casserole.

I'm so thankful for a thoughtful husband who values me... and tells me I'm beautiful...and comes to the rescue to fix my gaffes.

Last night I caught up on watching Kid Nation with my family. They taped it while I was away. They were all gathered in the room when I came in and Jordan said, "sit with me, Momma!" I went over and sat with him and we snuggled on the couch the whole time we watched the show. Not all 16 year old boys would do that with their Mom, but both my boys are very affectionate and don't hesitate to show their love. I'm thankful for three healthy children who all love me and are glad I'm home. I'm glad I'm home too. By the way, side note: Larry tells us last night mid-way through watching the show that he actually LIKES Taylor from Kid Nation. WHAT?! He is the only one of the Shrodes that feel this way and we cannot for the life of us understand his view on it. I tell him, all the rest of us can clearly see that girls like Taylor who are not whipped in to shape as young girls end up like some lazy young women we've encountered in the church (ahem, ahem) who won't lift a finger to do much of anything, and think they are there just to make the place look better. But I won't go there right now, after all we're on "things we're thankful for" and not "things we want to strangle." :-) It does make something for Misty, Cathy and I to laugh over, however! (Being that we are all so "un-Taylor like" - but that's another blog post.)

Today Pastor T & Misty and their children and Cathy and her family came over for Thanksgiving dinner. I'm so thankful for a staff that we can count on not just as "employees" but those we consider family and cherish so much. It's one thing to work together but another to want to be together outside of work. I'm I thankful I have this with them. We had a good time of talking and sharing today as usual. And our kids play well together. They have had fun doing everything from video games to board games, to dancing, to running too close to Larry's big screen TV and being reprimanded about it.


Bill Letaw joined us for Thanksgiving too. I'm so thankful for wonderful church members and friends like him in our life. We are so blessed. I've said it over and over again that the percentage of our church that is with us has always been overwhelming. We really do not have mean spirited people at Northside. The dissenters are so few they are really miniscule when you think about it. (Which is why Larry and I try to not ever think about them!!! We try to keep our focus on the 98% who are totally with the program. God told me years ago, "Deanna you do have to love everybody but you do not have to focus on everybody!") We are blessed to pastor a church of God-honoring and pastor-honoring people who love the Lord and love us.

Other things that quickly come to mind that I'm thankful for...

I live in such a peaceful neighborhood.

The sunrises and sunsets are so beautiful. (I don't see as many sunrises, but they are still beautiful!)

Right now some of my windows are open and the breeze is wonderful. I'm glad I'm in a place where I can occasionally open my windows, and it's safe.


We have an abundance of food on our table and didn't have to worry about how we would get it or pay for it.


I have many friends I love dearly and that I believe love me too. (if you don't, please don't burst my balloon and tell me...ha ha! Just let me be clueless and think most of the world adores me.)

I'm thankful Dustin finally got his car. Actually, a truck. While I was in Africa he got a Mazda pick up truck. He's so happy. And when he's happy, I'm happy!

I'm thankful for a wonderful bed to sleep in tonight, the most comfortable in the world.

I'm thankful for the movies Larry rented me from Blockbuster. (He picked up Out of Africa for me!)

I'm thankful that God sees the big picture of my life and has already figured out how things are going to work out before I get there. As Larry always says, "he's already in the future, waiting to show us around..."

I'm thankful for coffee and warm pie out of the oven.

I'm thankful our kids are happily playing a board game right now.

I'm thankful that Larry did the Thanksgiving dinner dishes today! Don't men become suddenly more sexy when the do the dishes?!


I am thankful more than anything for Jesus' love for me. While I was yet a sinner...He died for me. And would have done it if it were just me. Oh, the thought.

One of my favorite photos from Kenya



There was no more room in the church at Mathare Valley A/G when I took this photo...these children along with this little baby were looking through the bars of the window to see what was going on inside. I could only think... what would it take for American churches to be full and have people looking through the windows to see what is going on?

***

Probably persecution, famine, desperation...without a doubt, prayer. God help us.

***

In America we are so abundantly blessed and it takes a tragedy most times for us to turn to God and surrender completely to him. For anybody reading this who has not totally surrendered their life to the Lord...please do not let it take a tragedy for you to come to Jesus.

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Twas the night before Thanksgiving...


and I'm still getting things ready!

So much to do, and so little time. I have a lot of catching up to do since I was gone for 9 days. I will be doing it right up til' the time everyone gets here tomorrow.

I want to get all of this done and then relax and enjoy my husband, children and friends on Thanksgiving Day once the festivities begin. We have a wedding on Friday, however with the rest of the time this Thurs-Sat, I would really like to enjoy some time off with my family. Larry had the wedding rehearsal today for Cathy and David and normally I would have gone but since I had an overwhelming amount to do I stayed home and worked on everything. By the way, guess what Cathy and David gave Larry and I as a gift? A cruise! Yes, can you believe that?! I must say, that's the nicest gift we've ever received from any couple for doing counseling/wedding ceremony. WOW-EE and double WOW-EE. I have to check out all the details of this but looks like it's a short Carribean cruise that promises to be awesome! I can't wait!!! What a wonderful, incredibly thoughtful gift.

You know...side note: ministry can be such a rollercoaster. I think when anyone goes into full time ministry or is ordained instead of giving them a Bible, you need to give them a seatbelt and say, 'HANG ON FOR DEAR LIFE.' One moment you'll be dealing with a carnal antagonist who will try to half kill you and the next moment you'll have some sweet couple from the church give you a cruise. One moment somebody will say, "you're the most inept Pastor I've ever met" and the next moment somebody else will step up and say, "your ministry has impacted my life and meant more to me than anything." One day someone you least expected to leave the church will walk out the door and it will hurt like the dickens and the next Sunday somebody wonderful will come in and say, "this is just what I've been looking for." Hang on dear friends in ministry, hang on. The ride gets interesting but we shall all arrive at the same place one day and hear WELL DONE GOOD AND FAITHFUL SERVANTS. Glory to God!

Back to Thanksgiving prep...I've been cleaning, making 7-layer salad, peeling potatoes, making Paula Deen's stuffed cranberry recipe, prepping sweet rolls for in the morning, washing loads of dishes, loads of clothes, lining up everything to make my homemade yeast rolls for Thanksgiving dinner, making many quarts of iced tea, setting both tables in a formal setting for 15 people, and doing general house cleaning. Like I said, I won't be done til' everyone walks in tomorrow but at least we've got a great jump start going on.

I missed my family so much while I was gone. I loved Kenya with all my heart, but I also missed the daylights out of my family. I remember before I left, I had a countdown going on in my head each night...Larry and I would hold on to each other before bedtime and I would think, "four more nights until I will have to sleep alone..." then the next night, "three more nights until I will have to sleep alone..." and I was dreading it, as excited as I was about the trip. No, not just dreading being without intimacy, but the simple fact of...presence. There's that word again! There is nothing like the presence of the one or ones that you love.

I am slowly catching up, and actually enjoying doing it. I realize now how nothing in my life should be taken for granted. I walk into my walk-in closet and see that I have to straighten up my shoes which have become a mess. Instead of being irritated that I have to do that I think about the fact that my walk-in closet is the size of some people's homes in Africa. I think about the fact that I have about 25 pairs of shoes and some people have none. I think about the fact that even cleaning is something to rejoice in because you actually HAVE SOMETHING TO CLEAN!

Well, I'm off to clean again...and get more things ready for in the morning before I drop - however - please keep checking back because I'll have many more Kenya photos as well as some Thanksgiving ones too. Happy Thanksgiving everyone...this has always been my favorite holiday but now, even more so for obvious reasons.

Kenya Chronicles ~ Photo Album III

The first two days at the conference I had the privilege of speaking to the nation's women's leaders. I just adore these women. I made so many friends and can't wait to see them again!

The national women's director, Mama Taifa (pronounced "Tie-eee-fa") prepares to introduce Barb Kuert who will introduce me to the women's leaders.

The women I spoke to were national leaders, sectional leaders, presbyter's wives, and pastor's wives.

The women that you see to my right are the national executives' wives, as well as Mama Taifa - the national women's director.
The ladies listened with rapt attention to every word I had to say. (Um, can we bring them to America?! ha ha No seriously 98% of my ladies here listen too and are just incredible, and for the 2% who don't, they are just do-do heads anyway...)

Waiting for the interpreter to finish so I could continue with my point...

I absolutely loved teaching these women and getting to know them. They brought such joy to my heart!!!

Explaining another point to my interpreter to have them get it across to the ladies in a way they could understand.

Me with one of my interpreters, Mama Joshua. Someone would always be assigned to sit by me and interpret for me what the speaker was saying.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Having his back...the power of presence



"Was there anything I could have done for you?"

Several friends have asked me since reading my blog the other day about the difficulties that I faced upon returning from Africa.

No. Please rest easy.

The issue is between my husband and I. Are we having problems? No. Allow me to explain.

Being gone in Africa 9 days, the issue was not that I could have had his clothes lined up better (they were perfectly lined up) or that I could have had more things squared away at the office (it was all done) or that I could have reminded him of things better (I left him about 50 AOL pre-scheduled reminders.) It's not a matter of working hard enough. The issue is one of "presence".

By saying, "I keep our world on track", I don't just mean that I make sure clothes are ready or that I have meals on the table, or the weekly orders of service lined up. That is relatively inconsequential in comparison to just being a steady presence in his life. What's most important to him is that I'm there as his right hand partner, confidante, defender, comforter, advisor, etc. And...I wasn't here. All I'm saying is, last week was a time that it would have really been helpful for me to be here to "have his back" and...I wasn't here to have it. All we had were text messages since phone calls are astronomically expensive from Africa to the USA. So every morning and every night we had a sentence back and forth between us but that was it. And he needed more than a sentence last week.

When you have a relationship like ours and one person is not there for a significant amount of time, it feels like half your brain and your body is missing and quite honestly that's because - it is!

So understand my friends ~I couldn't have really solved anything...the circumstances were and are the same. However, while going through them I would have been there to stand beside my man, just like I am now. Instead of him facing them alone, I am standing here with him. Notice, I'm not solving anything. But I'm HERE. And that's what matters to him. Pluses of this situation:

1) I realize more than ever how much my husband values me.

2) I know what I do for him (and the Lord who I am ultimately serving) is of great worth.

3) In time, all things will all work themselves out for the glory of God.

Thank you for caring my dear friends. God is in control. I am not in control nor do I have all the answers.. I do know that. At the same time, I do realize my role is to be a prayer warrior, steady rock, and seek God's wisdom in ministering to my husband. That's what I'm seeking to do now that I've picked my own self up off the floor, or peeled myself off the ceiling, however you want to look at it. The devil is such a liar and he knows when to attack. I have to admit, I was blindsided but now I'm back up again and I've come out with my armor on, fighting and I will protect my husband, my family and my church through the power of prayer, and steadfast love and faithfulness.

Please keep reading in the days to come with more Kenya photos and reflections, and be sure to check below for the photos I've posted in the last few days. There are some great photos and thoughts from me, so please go back and read if you've missed anything about my wonderful God-adventures in Nairobi!

By the way, despite the fact that he missed me and needed me, my husband is also crazy-proud of me and what happened in Africa.

Kenya Chronicles ~ Photo Album II




These are photos from Mathare Valley - the slum I toured with Pastor Jane Nuthu. The Mathare slum is three kilometers from the center of Nairobi, and it is home to half a million people. It is the largest and worst slum in Africa. Mathare is notoriously the most dangerous and filthy of the many slums in Nairobi and most people who live in Nairobi have only seen it from around the perimeter. Few dare to go inside the slum.

The woman you see washing the clothes in basin with the little boys is doing her "clothes washing" business. She washes some clothing items each day in this water (which isn't real clean - but the best available) and she gets paid a few pennies per piece from others who live there. She was glad to have me take a photo of her with her children, doing her clothes business.



There is no electricity, running water or sewers in the slums. Water by the jug, is purchased from those who have illegally tapped the city water main. The rate of HIV infection is difficult to determine since few are tested, but it is assumed that most adults are HIV positive. Once becoming infected the average life span of an adult is five years due to the lack of any medical attention at all. Amazingly most children are born free of the infection. Those that are infected usually die within months of childbirth, so most school-aged children are free of HIV. Due to the rate that adults die of AIDS, there are thousands of orphaned children living in the slums. Many live with the oldest child - perhaps 10 years old - being the head of the household in a 8' x 6' rusted-tin shanty where 6 or more may sleep on cardboard.

















The unemployment rate in the slums is 70%. Those who can find "day labor" earn about $1.00 to $1.50 per day. A shanty costs $5 to $10 per month to rent. The smell in the slums is something to behold. There is the obvious human sewage. Residents deposit their waste into plastic bags when they can, and throw them either into the ditch in the alley or the black stream which runs through the middle of the slum. The bags have earned the nickname of "flying toilets". There are every form of farm animal in the slum from chickens, pigs, goats, to cows along with their droppings.


This woman here at the right invited me into her "home" which was just a little square of dirt inside, about 6 ft. by 4 ft., dirt floor, tin roof and plastic grocery bags lining the sides to make "walls". She has been very sick. Months ago she had an operation paid for by the government but when she came back "home" she was not able to heal and keeps getting infections because her living conditions are so horrible.

While I was in the Mathare slums, I was invited in to three homes by various people, this woman being one of them. I couldn't believe how small they were - none were more than 6 ft. by 6 ft. and they were all dark...no light at all, and had nothing more than a broken chair or small mattress on the floor. It is mind blowing to realize that some people in the world live this way. Some of the "big boys" of Mathare live here including Peter, the worship leader I met. I was shocked to walk through one of the alleys and see him in a doorway. I said, "Peter! What are you doing here?" He smiled and said, "this is my house." AMAZING.

By the way, Peter and Moses (another one of the "Big Boys" from Mathare A/G) have been keeping in touch with me once I got to the USA, by e-mail. Obviously, they don't have email living here in the slums with no electricity however they walk somewhere where they have access to a computer and e-mail various ones they want to keep in touch with. These boys are amazing to me. They love the Lord with all their hearts and have a dream of getting out of Mathare Valley and following the call of God upon their lives. I pray for them daily. Oh how they have touched my heart.

Just FYI


(Picture at left is from one of the services I preached at Mathare Valley A/G on the first Sunday I was there...you can see me on the front row there, by the pastors, Peter & Jane Nuthu. This is from the 2nd morning service.)


I have cleaned up my Kenya Chronicles posts a little bit (didn't have time to correct my typos when I was on the trip as my computer time was so limited!) and I added a photo to each post. I will post more pictures tonight as I have time and do a second photo album.

I am busy playing "catch up" as you can imagine. Lots to do this week to catch up with church work, and, this week is Thanksgiving and we are having 15 people here at the house. :-)

Monday, November 19, 2007

Kenya Chronicles ~ Photo Album 1

Me with the national leaders ~ from left - Mama Jane Tembu (Gen. Secretary of Kenya's wife), Asst. Gen Superintedent's wife, Assistant Women's Director of Kenya, Me, Mama Taifa, Mama Supt (General Superintendent's wife, Naomi Ngiri) On the last night after they presented me with the outfit and their wonderful words...

Mama Superintendent (national supt.'s wife) to the left, Mama Jane Tembu in blue suit, with arm around me, and the asst. general superintendent's wife, to the right.



The executives on the last night...placing the headpiece on me...


Me with the Mathare A/G "Big Boys" as well as one of the "Big Girls"...pictured here


Me with the national executives and the regional leaders (I spoke to them on Monday and Tuesday before the conference and developed great relationships with them.)



during one of the powerful altar services...



The altar time during the first service when I spoke on God's healing for sexual abuse, rape, domestic violence, etc. The first time anyone spoke on this in their national meetings, and in most of their services locally as well.



The same altar time...you can see me right above the pulpit, praying for the women I could get to...



Another one of our power packed altar times...God is so good.


I'll post more pictures tomorrow...these are just a start...

Re-entering the earth's atmosphere


I haven't fit back into my world since I came home.


I'm not going to give too much detail other than to say please pray for me, my blog readers. It was a challenging week while I was gone and this has made coming home and getting back on track difficult.

I'm the one that keeps our world on track. Things were difficult without me. No one really has any clue how much I do. They might think they do, but really no one truly knows to what extent. Sometimes the pressure on me is overwhelming. There's nothing I could have done to have lined anything up better before I left. We are talking about circumstances out of one's control.

Unfortunately I have come back not really to the same world, but one that is more challenging than when I left. Fitting the things God has done in me last week into my world I walked back into seems rather impossible. I have to admit to you I have given up on wearing eye makeup this week.

I try my best to be as honest as much as I can. So I'm just telling you, I am at a really low point right now. I did go to service yesterday morning, and also our church dinner last night. I was very tired after 33 hours of travel, but I really wanted to be there. I realize some of the way I may be reacting to the changes I've come home to could just be tiredness and fatigue. However, last night I went to bed early and got 9 and 1/2 hours sleep, which is a huge amount for me. I don't feel any better.

In case you are wondering if I'm clinically depressed, maybe so but probably not. Reason being - there's are real tangible reasons for me to feel this way - actual circumstances, not just a vague, "I don't know what's wrong with me and I just can't snap out of it." I felt like I was coming back from Africa from outerspace and re-entering the earth's atmosphere, the trip was so "other worldly." The issue is, I have reentered the atmosphere and it's a difficult one right now. Please pray for me because this Thursday is Thanksgiving and we have officially entered the holiday season ...

Thursday, November 15, 2007

He saved the best for last - final Kenya Chronicles


I thought I had ended my Kenya Chronicles.

But here I am again. Jesus had SO MUCH MORE IN STORE.

I'm writing this in the internet lounge as I sit in London Heathrow airport, by the way! (having a Pret Manger croissant and a breakfast tea!) Only two more flights to go. Well, here's the postscript to my last chronicle.


I had finished my time of ministry or so I thought. I was going to attend the final service, preached by the General Superintendent's wife, Mama Superintendent. This service was followed by communion, served by the national executives. Barb and I came in and took our seats. The message Mama Supt. preached was great. Then communion started. All the national women's execs were serving as well as the district leaders and Barb. After the communion was distributed, they stood across the front. It was a powerful time of worship... During the last song I started crying not just because of God's presence but because I realized it was the last time I would hear them sing, at least until my next trip. I was trying to keep my emotions under control and not lose it. Mama Taifa started praying and it was so powerful. Mama Jane (Nuthu) left her place among the execs and came over to my seat and began interpreting for me. She realized no one was there and quickly ran over. This made me cry worse...it would be the last time. I was just weeping. Then we took communion.


My thought was, "these Kenyans are famous for having you come up and say a few words without you expecting it." In the state I was in I knew I would lose it if they called me up there to say goodbye to the women. So I prayed...please Lord, don't let them do that.

Just then an older woman came shuffling and limping to the front and approached Mama Taifa at the microphone. She said, "Mama Taifa, my legs have been like this for eight years..."she had some crippling problem (not sure exactly what) and one leg shorter than the other. She asked her to please have prayer for her. Mama Taifa called Barb up to the front and then she said, "Pastor Deanna, would you come and lead in prayer for this woman?" I could handle that. Prayer for the sick...yes. A goodbye? No.

I took the microphone and knelt down and touched the womans feet and legs. I prayed and as usual the crowd was like a rushing wind behind me where you could distinguish no words except for a shout of YES! each time I made a specific emphatic point. Such as, if the person praying shouts, "HEAL HER NOW!" the people will shout 'YES!!!". Otherwise they pray all together as loud as they possibly can saying whatever is in their heart or speaking in tongues. You can't even imagine how these people pray. So we believed God for this woman. The way Kenyans pray is electric. I said a final, "In the name of Jesus, amen..." stood up and then another woman with a tremendous need was asking for prayer. We were going to start praying for her but suddenly we heard a thunderous roar behind us. The women were shouting with abandon as the woman with the crippled legs was running around the tent praising God, completely and instantly healed!!! So it was total pandemonium in the place. We prayed for the next woman and then there were so many needs, Mama Taifa asked me to pray a general prayer for all needs in the place or else with this many people in a convention you would be there for weeks. Women ran up and threw papers with their prayer requests that they had scrawled on them, and placed them in Mama Taifa's hands. We laid our hands upon them and I prayed.

What happened next is the most glorious event that has ever happened to me except for salvation or getting married. Mama Taifa said, Mama Stephen (that is Barb Kuert), we want you to come to the platform and bring Pastor Deanna." So I said to myself..."oh no...this is it...I am going to have to tell them goodbye...they are asking for a final greeting of sorts..." My soul just could not bear to speak the words aloud. As we walked to the platform there was a great applause.

The national execs lined up on the platform and Mama Jane (Tembu) brought out a gift. They laid it in my hands. I gave up on trying not to cry. First, Mama Taifa spoke and although she and Mama Jane Tembu's presentation for me was about 10 minutes, this was the paraphrase of what they said: " Pastor Deanna, you will never know what your visit has meant to us...how much you have blessed us. We leaders love you. The women of Kenya love you. We are so thankful to you and we must show our love. We are thankful to your husband, your children and your church for letting you come to Kenya and releasing you to be a gift to us..." Like I said, this is greatly paraphrased. The whole time I am standing up there while they are saying this, I am blubbering uncontrollably and Barb is snapping photos.

When they finished their presentation the crowd gave an ovation and then I began to open the gift. Please realize the significance of this. These women are living in poverty. What they gave is extravagant. They presented me with a beautiful African dress, complete with all of the pieces...the top piece, bottom piece, shawl, head covering, and even a purse to match. It is pink! (They know that's my favorite color because it's what I wore a lot.) When I opened it I was just sobbing. I think they thought I would just accept it and take the gift back to my room but instead I took off my jacket... and they began to go crazy. They couldn't believe I was putting it on, right there. They just clapped and clapped. They were so happy to see me receive their gift in this way.

Mama Jane Tembu took the skirt and put it on over my other skirt. (It fit perfectly!) Then I slipped the top piece over my blouse. Mama Taifa put the shawl over my shoulder and Mama Jane Tembu took the headpiece, folded it and placed it on my head. The shouting was so loud in the place it was unbelievable. Then Mama Jane said, "Pastor Deanna, surely we know with all of the nations represented in your church, you may have some Kenyans or perhaps they will come in the future. Should you go to their home or out for dinner, surely you need a handbag!" And then the pulled that out. (Insert thunderous applause here) Then she said, "and of course we can't forget your husband. He allowed you to come to Kenya and we will be forever grateful." And then they placed a very nice gift for Larry in my hands. (I won't say what it is yet, I haven't presented it to him.)

They wanted me to model the outfit for all in the tent because it's such a large crowd, everyone can't see well so they had me go on the stage and face all the different sections. As Mama Jane led me over to the various sections when I came to them each one would just cheer. When I got to the section where the woman who stands up and throws her arms in the air and gives one of those tribal yells (when I am introduced and come to the platform), I threw my arms up in the air like she did, toward her section. They went crazy. So then I had to go over and do it to the opposite section. And I'm still bawling... They gave out awards for about 40 minutes after this, to various women's groups in the nation and the whole time I was sitting there on the front row in my new outfit, sobbing into my hanky.

Mama Taifa dismissed the service and everyone was to go to dinner. (Africans eat dinner at night, after the services.) As Barb and I were walking from the tent across the field, women were pushing forward and asking us to stop and pray for them as they had AIDS, and were experiencing domestic violence and all sorts of other things. We prayed for as many as we could. Finally Barb said, "We have to go get some dinner...we are exhausted..." One more woman pushed through. She said, "please...please...I have HIV..." So we couldn't refuse her...we stayed and prayed for her, and then Mama Jane Tembu came out of the dining hall the leaders were eating in and said, "Come...you must come and eat..." She could see the weariness and that we needed to get something. So we came with her. The last woman we prayed for was just precious. She was just a little thing and so frail. I took her in my arms and prayed the most faith filled prayer that I could for an extremely exhausted person.

During the evening several other women came and presented me personal gifts. Again, understand the magnitude of this because they are struggling more than you could ever imagine. For them to do this is tremendous sacrifice and shows how much they love you. One district superintendent's wife presented me with a blouse and scarf...a pastor's wife presented me with a necklace she personally made for me (it's pink!) and a woman not in leadership, just among the crowd and one in extreme poverty somehow scraped her money together and gave me a brown leather-like purse. I was blown away. Barb was crying when they gave me these things, she was just so shocked. She said, "I just cannot believe it..." She was surprised as although Kenyans are the most warm and loving people, they cannot afford to do this for people to this degree and the fact that they did with me shows just how they feel. I felt strange to accept it knowing that but the thing is, if you do not accept it, it is a huge hurt to them. In fact it becomes an offense. So, you must joyfully receive their gift.

After supper I went to my room and it was late. I got ready for bed, then laid down and cried myself to sleep. I used the whole box of kleenex I had purchased the day before. When I woke up at 3 am to use the restroom, I still had the wad of tissues tightly clenched in my hands. Then I started crying again thinking to myself, "I love my family and home and I do miss them terribly...and I can't wait to see them. But at the same time, saying goodbye to these people is going to absolutely feel like somebody is cutting my heart out. It hurt so much.

I was wondering how I was going to manage the 'final tea' with the leaders the next morning as we said goodbye, but I did well. In the morning, Barb and I went for tea and I spent my last moments with Mamas Jane T, Jane N, Elizabeth, Gladys and Ruth. Many had to go back the night before as it was an all night bus ride for them. I also spent my last time with the 'big boys' from Mathare Valley. They let me know that a few of them have a music group called Talented Guys, and they have recorded a CD that someone in the USA made possible for them to do. Right on the spot I said, 'I need one!' They had none there but their co-pastor, Mama Jane Nuthu arranged to have a copy dropped off at the Kuerts before I was to go to the airport.

I said goodbye to all of the ladies and the East Africa School of Theology and then Barb and I headed off by ourselves to the Nairobi Game Park. It was great. Barb can navigate anywhere. We saw many giraffe's. They are so graceful. We got up close, right next to them in the land rover. It was almost like a giraffe nursery as there were many babies as well. Barb said to me, "in all the time I've been going to game parks, I've never gotten a photo of a giraffe with it's legs bent, leaning down drinking water." She said she always wanted a photo. Amazingly, a giraffe did just that about an hour later. Barb had opened up the top of the car, and I got up on the seat, went through the roof and snapped a few great photos of it. Now she has them! We had a great time there seeing all kinds of animals and then we headed to Village Market.

We were surprised to find four or five AG Missionaries there and we joined with them at a table and ate. It was fun talking and I got to say goodbye in person to Bonnie Ness which was very important to me and I didn't think we'd get to do it but the Lord arranged it! I just love her...and I'm glad she'll be there the next few years and doesn't go on furlough for a while because when I go back she'll be there.

Barb and I went shopping. We got all kinds of African stuff for me to take back including lots of African coffee and tea. Yum!

We came home so I could shower again and re-pack. Due to 33 hours in route, I wanted to start out with a fresh shower. Bill and I got to talking before I got in the shower and we got carried away with our conversation about the testimonies from the week and I had to sprint to the shower to get done in time. Barb was gracious to finish packing my bags for me and weigh them. Barb is an amazing woman of God if you haven't figured it out by now.

We headed for the airport. I did fine until Barb hugged me for the last time and then I started to break. I let her talk, mostly nodded...we said our "i love you's" and "will talk to you soon's" and then I headed in to check my bags and get my return from British Air for my shoes. She and Bill waited outside the glass windows to make sure they saw me get my bags checked, get my boarding pass, and ensure that BA paid me the money for my shoes. I gave them the final thumbs up and waved bye, and then headed up to my gate for departure.

I went through three security checkpoints, then found Java House outside my final boarding area. Went in for a half a sandwich and one final African tea while actually being on site... I chose a seat at a bar facing the windows where the planes were taking off...ate my chicken salad, drank my tea and cried for 30 minutes. Then got myself together and decided, "I probably need to get my contacts out..." I knew I was going to sleep on the first flight and besides that my eyes were swollen from crying. I went to the W.C. for the last time (water closet is what they call it here...) and headed to my final boarding. There was yet another security checkpoint. It's much stricter in Africa and the UK. And I'm glad for it!

So, here I sit in LHR airport, waiting another few hours for my next flight to Newark, NJ and then I will arrive home in Tampa on Saturday night. Right now it is 2:10 am in Tampa on Saturday. After I get home and get settled for a little bit I will put some of my photos from the trip here on my blog. I can't wait for you to see the beautiful people I have been telling you about.

I told Barb and Bill before I left, what I am looking at in my life right now is a 'new normal'. I have been on missions trips before. They were good, even incredibly inspiring. They showed me a different aspect of the world and I can say I was somewhat changed. But this is altogether different. This is something that has turned upside down my whole perspective of the world, Christianity, the church, relationships and so much more. I don't even know where to start...all I know is that I am no longer the same person and I am wondering how I am going to fit into my world once again.

There is no question that I'm going back, it's not an "if" just a matter of how soon. It's not a matter of am I going back once to visit, it's a matter of how many times I will be able to go repeatedly with the time I have left until Jesus comes back.

I really don't know how all this will translate to my world. Part of me tells me it can't, it won't. The other part of me says, 'it must.' All I know is, life for me will definitely be a 'new normal.' You know, they talk about a 'new normal' when something significant happens in someone's life and it can't go back to the way it was...things are different and their definition of normal becomes new.

Yes, Jesus saved the best for last. God, please help me fit back into my world somehow with my 'new normal.'

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

The Kenya Chronicles - Part III

(photo I took of some of the children I ministered to in Mathare Valley)

November 13




I got up early today (as I have every day here - they start exceptionally early) and I was surprisingly not real tired because I had stayed up so late re-working my messages to fit better with the Kenyan culture. I wanted things to go smoother with the interpreter today. Now that I am here and have spoken three times, I see how I need to re-work some things to make it more understandable between our cultures.



I was up and completely ready with my bags packed to leave for the convention site, before time. Barb made some of her incredible smoothies with her homemade granola, milk and toast. We headed to East Africa School of Theology. I met with the leaders this morning and it was 100% smoother. Much greater flow. The interepreter and I got into a rhythm and were just rolling. The Holy Ghost came into the room in a powerful way. I challenged the women about not allowing themselves to be deceived into quitting the ministry.

At the end, I called Mama Taifa to lead prayer. Wow. Things erupted. Tears everywhere. My own face was red as a beet from crying and I don't think I stopped blowing my nose for an hour. It was intense. Again they said it was amazing how the Holy Spirit knew what was needed for the leaders at this time.


After the meeting we had tea. The Kenyans have tea each day mid morning. (These are really my kind of people!) We have tea with toast every morning for breakfast and then again at mid morning.


Then Barb took me to her office at the school. We got on the computer and I retyped all my messages that I had completely reworked the night before. We ate lunch after that - rice, cabbage, a piece of stewed chicken and tomatoes, in her office and talked. Good stuff...the food, but the conversation better.


After that I went to organize my room and get ready for service. I came up to the tent before the service. Some of the "big boys" (thats what young adults are called here - big girls and big boys) from Mathare Valley A/G were up at the tent running sound and setting up. They had their keyboard. I sat down and played and they sang for me. It was amazing how things flow although we are from different cultures.


Service started late because registration took forever. Unfortunately the lights and sound went out as we started but the worship went on without missing anything and it was amazing. When I walked into the tent it was a feeling like I have never had before. Just a huge mass of people praising God so passionately, you couldn't distinguish any person from another as they prayed, it was just as the sound of rolling waters or a wind blowing. As I was standing there, my first thought was, "I need to get saved." Allow me to explain. You really think you are saved until you come here. Then you see the intensity of these people and you realize you know squat about God, church or much else of the world. Your whole perspective changes. This is a loaded topic that I can't fully explain but I will just say that I stood there during worship thinking, "what in the world do I have to say to these people?" and "God, please save me now because I am nothing in comparison to them."


These leaders are amazing and that's the understatement. Mama Taifa (their national women's leader) was the first night's speaker. Her message was about Jael and seizing opportunity. What a prayer time at the end. I thought the sky would open up and Jesus would come back right there, the people were so intense.


Something funny happened in the opening service. They have an interpreter for me at all times. She speaks for me, and tells me also what others say. It's not always the same person but they always provide someone. My interpreter this night was Gladys, a pastor's wife and district leader. She was interpreting as we sat in the service and Mama Taifa was talking. She was talking about spiritual stuff and then she said, "and we're going now." I just sat there listening. Then she said, "we're going now." I was thinking she meant "we're going to a new level now" or "God is taking us somewhere" or something like that but what she meant was "you (Pastor Deanna) and I are going up to the stage now". But I didn't get that. So finally she grabbed my arm and said 'WE ARE GOING NOW!" and started pulling me up. When I realized I was the one who was going now, up to the stage and that all eyes were on me I had a look of shock and the whole crowd roared with laughter because they realized I did not understand the interpretation and was shocked. We had a good laugh about that.


Mama Taifa had just called me up to introduce me and greet the people before she spoke.


Tonight after service we had dinner (they eat late at night after the meetings) and I had tea with Debbie Barthalow - a missionary here - and we talked for a long time. I love all the missionaries here and have a good opportunity to spend time with them. Time to study and sleep. It's my big day tomorrow!


November 14


I had the cell alarm set but didn't need it. The praise and worship woke me up again. They are so loud I can hear them while I'm in the shower. Of course the windows are open so that helps but still, I am pretty far from the tent. They get up before sunrise and there are a mass of women in there just shouting to God, praying. It sound like rolling waters...what an awesome sound. You may wonder why I am not up there in the tent. The answer to this is, no American can keep up with these Kenyans. None of the missionaries were up there either. I am telling you they pray and praise all night, every night. There are times we are in a service (one just rolls into the next) and a leader comes and gets me from my place in the tent (after I speak) and says, "come, I'm taking you to eat" because if they don't, we never would eat. Usually the leaders take turns going in and out because there is always something going on.


This morning when I got up the water was scalding. They forgot to turn on the cold water as well (it's not available all day long - too costly) so I couldn't get in the shower. I just stuck my head in the sink and made do with washing my hair that way and then sponged up. Got dressed and headed to breakfast in the leaders room where I ate with Pastor Jane Nuthu. We went to first service where she interpreted for me. I have had several interpreters here but with Jane it's different. They are all good but she's a pro. She could do this for a living. It's like a hand in glove with her and I like we have always known each other.


She interpreted for me as I preached. I spoke on healing from sexual abuse, domestic abuse, and sexual sin. It was like a Holy Ghost bomb went off in the place. They have told me no leader has been bold enough to come in and preach on this. It is the main problem among women in Kenya. I thought I would address it first and call them for healing. As I called them to the altar I sang, "Say the name of Jesus...say the name of Jesus...that can calm your fears and dry your tears and wipe away your pain..." The altars were packed. Before the song was even over, I couldn't hear myself sing. Women were crying out, pushing against the stage so much we couldn't even come down to pray for them. We had to just reach out from the stage and pray for them. It was like a roar was in the place for the longest time. I have not felt the presence of God to this degree in my life when ministering before. Jane stayed with me the entire time on the stage, interpreting every word I said, or walking with me as I prayed. We couldn't reach many women for the sheer mass numbers but we would press in, touch heads and hands. Then we came back to the microphone. I would shout, "The bondage of sexual abuse is broken in the name of Jesus!" and she would shout it after me...and so on. We just worked together like we have been doing this for 100 years or something. Whenever I talked or sang, so did she. Mama Taifa came up when we turned it over to her (just by pointing at her because the room was still full of weeping and wailing) and she hugged me for a while and just kept saying, "thank you, thank you for what you have brought to Kenya." She took the mic said, "God has sent us a prophet from America." She went on and on about it - about the significance of the message. While she was doing that Barb Kuert walked across the stage with the camera taking pictures of the mass of women at the altar and she just looked at me with tears in her eyes and said, "powerful...powerful..."


In the afternoon, Co-Pastor Jane Tembu, a pastor and also the General Secretary of Kenya's wife, was the speaker. About 50 women were filled with the Holy Ghost. The morning services went on for about 5-6 hours. By the time this was over I was absolutely drenched. (in sweat) Barb said, "go back and take a shower...the water should be fine now and you'll need to be prepared for tonight's service. " There is hardly any time in between services because they go so long. They are basically all day. I went back and sure enough the cold water was on so I mixed the hot and cold as well as I could and stood there. Ahhhhhhhhhhhhh. Wonderful.


Last night the women were amazed that I was staying with them overnight. Most speakers stay in a hotel but I wanted to be with them. The leader that opened up the service said, "ladies, our speaker has CHOSEN to stay with us. She wants to be with us! She wants to eat our food! She wants to put up with our mosquitos! She wants to put up with the conditions we sleep in!" The crowd just roared with applause. They were so blessed that I was staying here. I had no idea, many speakers do not. It is my delight to. I wouldn't miss it for the world. They do this all the time. What's it to me for four days? If you don't stay here you don't really have the experience. Every women in the world needs to stay here at least once, I'm convinced. You haven't lived until you do.


I showered and cleaned up and got ready for the night service. This time I was preaching on the power of Pentecost.


In other news today, the "Big Boys" from Mathare Valley A/G have been helping me so much. With carrying things, serving me food, doing whatever. What a delight they are. They live in the slums but they are SO HAPPY. My interpreters have been great - Gladys, Esther, Mama Joshua, and Pastor Jane...they are all fantastic but Jane is the one I work with best.


We have been eating standard Kenyan fare each day. Rice with beans, cabbage, ungali - my favorite food so far - it is like a corn mush and you put the juice over it. For myself and the missionaries and executives they have given us a piece of chicken each day. Only wealthy people here eat chicken unless it's a special occasion like Christmas. But they save up and prepare for this with guests and their leaders. I realize this is a big sacrifice for them just to give us meat for a few days. I don't like that all the other mass of women here are eating rice and a vegetable while I eat meat each day but it is the way they expect it to be and would be offended if you do not accept it. The always honor the guest. It is their custom and very important to them.


Speaking of customs in the first service, Pastor Jane got up and made an announcement to everyone, telling them how to go to the bathroom. I'm not kidding. Evidently with all the different tribes here they go in different ways. (Remember the hole in the ground I told you about?) Well, evidently they all go in different ways and some have even broken the toilets here trying to go "their way". So they had to tell everyone the proper way to go while here at the school. (Which is the American way). I have never been in a women's meeting before where the leader had to explain in great detail how to go to the bathroom and sit down on the toilet seat. Interesting!!! So cute.


The gift giveways from my ladies are a huge hit. Barb Kuert has been passing them out each service. They decided on their own to do them just like we do at our church for princess luncheon. The leaders come down and stand across the front and they call numbers and pass out the gifts to women in the room. They have been so excited and doing it before each service. The ladies were SO grateful, it was amazing. I only wish I could have brought many many more. Nex time.


Later on...........after night service...


Bonnie Ness (missionary) came to get me for the evening service. We went to the tent and as usual worship was in progress. It's like walking into an atmosphere like you've never experienced no matter how many times you've been in church before. Tonight I spoke on the power of Pentecost and how to live a Pentecostal lifestyle. It was amazing. The altar time was so powerful...Mama Taifa got up again and said, "the prophet has spoken!!!" I had talked as a side note in my message about the fact that the same way they were treating me as a guest is the same way they should be treating their pastor's wife and their co-pastors. Many pastors in Kenya are honored but their wives are left out or not looked upon the same. One of the pw's had shared with me her hurt over this the night before. In my message, I worked it in and I had the co-pastors and pastor's wives stand and I recognized them as Kenya's heroes and asked the convention to honor them. I spoke to them about what it means to honor your pastor's wife/co-pastor and why. There was much emotion over this. At the end Mama Taifa came up and said, "this is a prophetic word that has been needed for this nation..." She called for the people to pray and repent of the sin of not honoring the pastor's wives. This just broke something in the place. One pastor's wife leaned over to a missionary and said, 'DO YOU REALIZE WHAT A MIRACLE THIS IS FOR THIS TO BE HAPPENING RIGHT NOW IN THIS NATION?" I have heard over and over again what this has meant to these women.


After the service I ate dinner with all the leaders, then talked to Jane Nuthu and Debbie Barthalow for a while. I stayed late after and counseled two pastor's wives, Gladys and Ruth. It was a good time and we had powerful prayer afterwards. I am so glad to see these ladies countenance change. You can tell they have fresh hope.


Time to head to bed. Gotta study, crash and get up early to preach again.


November 15


Early this morning I was up before the alarm again as I heard the roar of the prayer and the praise. There is no way one from America can fathom or keep up with this. These people are amazing. They literally press in to God 24/7. I have to get some rest in between or my head is banging like crazy. How they live this way I do not know but they are so intense for God, I have never experienced anything like it. Like I said, I'm the speaker and supposedly this anointed "prophet" but every service before I get up I'm saying, "Lord, I need to get saved again............"


I showered and dressed and headed to breakfast to meet with the leaders. As soon as I came in the "big boys" from Mathare were ready to serve me. I will miss them so much. I got a picture with them today to cherish and remember their faces always until I come back next year. (Oh by the way, the General Superintendent was here today and has already invited me back!)


I ate breakfast with Jane Nuthu and said, "I'm not leaving your side because you WILL be my interpreter for the last service." The thing is, usually whoever is nearest you who is the best interpreter steps in, not necessarily who you work best with. If I want Jane to interpret, I just need to keep her right by me. So I did. We walked in together while the roar of praise was going on, and took our seats together. The atmosphere is such you just wonder how on earth Jesus has not heard these cries and come back yet.


When I got up to speak this morning Mama Taifa introduced me. She went on and on about what it's meant for me to come. When she said, "will you welcome our speaker..." the crowd just roared and stood. After they sat one women stood and raised her hands and let out this shout that was like some kind of a tribal scream or something (a scream of delight) like, "I LOVE YOU" type scream." I said, "I'm taking that woman back with me to America!" Again the crowd laughed and clapped. I said, "I'm serious, because my people don't greet me like that when I come to the pulpit." They laughed their heads off when I said that and then the woman stood up again and let out the scream AGAIN. It was awesome. Then they just kept responding as I said, "I love you...I'll miss you all so much...although I miss my family and can't wait to get back to see them, I will also cry when I leave you because I have grown to love you so much and my heart already wants to come back." They just kept responding with their clapping and their love.


I preached this morning on the call to be spiritual mothers in the faith. Again the message was flowing powerfully under the anointing and the electricity in the spirit was just flowing like a current between Jane and myself. Whatever I do she mirrors right down to jumping, waving my bible, whatever - she's like a carbon copy just in Swahili.


We had a lot of fun today with my message as well as it being something that was a shouting/clapping type thing. I took my time more than any other service. Most of the speakers have been about 2 hours and sometimes more and the services go about 5 hours. I figured, hey, this American can do it too! The end of the service was powerful once again. The whole "women pressing the stage thing" and us trying to get to them. I went myself on the platform and reached out to as many as I could but left Jane at the pulpit to lead in Swahili as I prayed for the women.


Mama Taifa came to the pulpit again. She said, "have we been blessed by our speaker from Amercica or WHAT?" She said, "WHY DID IT TAKE A PROPHET FROM AMERICA TO TELL US THIS?" She was exhorting the women...God knew what we needed...this is a brand new thing that we have heard for the women of Kenya...she also said, "have you ever heard anyone take John 17 and teach it that way before?"


We had another few hours of church with the General Superintendent coming up to preach right after me. (yes, they do that! they go right from one several hour service into another.) So we did that and he had very kind words too. He said, "you (meaning me) must come back to Kenya!"


We had lunch this afternoon and I ate with the leaders and then we took pictures together. One of the district superintendent's wives came up to me and was crying. She said, "you will never know how much your ministry has meant to me. It was life changing. I have to do something for you." And she handed me a shopping bag. In it was a beautiful blouse and a shawl. It's perfect for me. I was so touched. Barb started crying and told me that I have NO IDEA what this superintendents wife has been through. So much hardship in her district.


Another district superintendent's wife came up and told me the same thing and she wants to keep in touch with me by email. Many of them do. (And remember, this is a conference for the whole NATION with the general superintendent and his wife here as well as the district superintendent's wives from 26 different districts here!!! So I have been ministering to all of them in the leaders meetings and the general services.)


This week is such that I can't even in human terms adequately describe it and these blogs have only scratched the surface believe it or not. I want to come back and in addition to whatever else, be at Mathare A/G next year. Jane and I have been talking about it and I approached Barb about the subject and will talk with Bill when we are out tomorrow. It's hard to believe this is the last day of the conference and I fly back to America tomorrow. It will be a 33 hour trip home. I'm so missing my family and my church and I can't wait to see them. But I have to admit, a piece of my heart will be in Kenya.


Monday, November 12, 2007

The Kenya Chronicles Part II

(this is a photo I took as we were driving down the street)


November 12, 2007

Got up early this morning and had breakfast with the Kuerts at their home and then we all headed to the East Africa School of Theology where I would be speaking to the leaders this morning. It took us an hour and a half to make what should have been a very short trip. Traffic was crazy. But it gave me more time to look over my notes. Part of the issue was it was raining hard and there were some breakdowns and accidents.


I received such a warm welcome from the women's leaders. They were so excited I was there. The Kenyan women are so incredibly hospitable and treat their guests in such an incredible way. To experience these leaders in worship and prayer was an awesome thing. I have never seen such a passionate group of people than these people when they begin to pray or sing and it is so genuine. After worship, Barb introduced me (again as Mama Dustin - I love that!) and the first thing Barb did after introducing me was to say that I had brought a suitcase full of things for the ladies, starting with the leaders, and that we had jewelry sets for all of them specifically. They went crazy with delight! Mama Joshua (one of the sectional leaders) started passing them out and the ladies were beside themselves with glee. Barb was trying to go on in asking me to come and begin speaking but the excitement in the room was so great we just gave up. We took time (probably 15 minutes at least) for every woman to get her necklace and earrings and then to actually put it on! Mama Tafia (national director) had one that matched her outfit so perfectly it was as if God had designed it just for her. After everything died down from passing the jewelry out, we tried it again and I got up to speak. I spoke to them about pressing on despite discouragement and things that come our way in ministry. At the conclusion I had the "Ministry Survivor Africa" bookmarks to give them and they loved them too!!!


Mama Taifa (the national women's director) got up afterward and said, "this WAS definitely the Word of the Lord for us as it is exactly what many of you are dealing with..." she was exhorting the women and said, "we must pray again after this message and deal with what God has said to us. And they started passionately praying again for the longest time. I was amazed. Afterwards, they had their business meetings all day to handle national business, and I went out for the day with another missionary, Bonnie. When we left, the national general superintendent's wife, Mama Willie, told Barb that it was exactly what the leaders of the nation needed to hear and that Satan tried to come against this message being delivered and she had no doubt I was God's person to be here. It was so encouraging to hear this from Barb.


After speaking I left with Bonnie and we went to lunch. She took me to another area of Nairobi and we went to a place called Java House. OH MY. Not only was the food incredible, but get this...the water at this place is perfectly safe and Bonnie said, "go ahead and order an iced tea - I guarantee you will not get sick." So I did. I was so excited. Not only did I get an iced tea but it was one of the best I've ever had in my life and no, it's not because I haven't had any for five days! It was genuinely THAT good.


We had such a good time talking and sharing. She's an incredibly woman with so many ministry stories to tell. We were stuck in traffic for hours today going everywhere we needed to go but the time just flew as we had so much to talk about concerning ministry. Next we went to the airport to try and get my money for my shoes but they did not have the person there who is supposed to take care of it so I have to go back Friday. After that we went shopping!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! It was great. Bonnie took me to a place she takes everybody and so the owner knows her and gave us a discount on every item. I got some great stuff, including the PERFECT African dress for me. Obviously, it's PINK! I was so excited, I let out a squeal like I often to when I'm excited and the two Kenyan guys running the place must have looked at me and thought, "crazy American woman" but I didn't care!


We drove home and it was getting dark but Bonnie is a pro just like Barb and knows how to navigate. As we were getting into the car to leave a group of men were standing on next to our car where it was parked. As I was going for the door one of them looked at me and said, "Hey, white person!" and I thought, "oh no...what does he want?" and jumped in the car and locked the door. I said to Bonnie, "what in the world did he want?" Bonnie said money. I said, "why did he say, "hey white person!"?? Bonnie said, "that's all he knows of you...so that's what he said. This is why you are glad you have missionaries to guide you closely.


We went home to the Kuerts and they were waiting for me with dinner ready. It was so awesome. They had rice with peanut sauce which is one of my favorite things...I eat peanut sauce type stuff back in the USA too. We sat and talked for HOURS during dinner...wonderful conversation about ministry stuff.


Right now I just repacked my things to go stay at the school tomorrow and it's late here - so I need to get to bed as I'm speaking to the leaders again first thing in the morning and then the other conference attendees (several thousand of them) will descend upon the campus. I can hardly wait! Keep praying.


The internet at the school may not be available. As with every time I post, it could be my last until I get back to Tampa. I may have to finish the Kenya Chronicles once I get home, but if I get a moment and a computer at the school is available with up and running internet, I'll post.


Love to all...

Saturday, November 10, 2007

The Kenya Chronicles Part I

(this is me preaching at Mathare Valley A/G on Sunday, with my interpreter co-pastor Jane Tembu)


JAMBO, MY FRIENDS! (Jambo means "hello" in Kenya).

I have been keeping a written journal of my trip...and for the past few days the internet here has been booting me off except a brief email to my husband. My goal has been to update the blog a little bit daily to tell you what's happening. It seems right now it's letting me on so we're going to give this a try! Here we go...my journal so far:




November 8


Wow - I can't believe the time is REALLY here. I am actually sitting here on this plane, leaving for Newark (EWR) in a few minutes. Susan met me in the waiting area (she works at the airport and has clearance) so we had a soda and waited til they called for boarding. I think my bag has everything it it but the kitchen sink. I not only packed enough to keep me busy on the plane for all these hours, but I packed a skirt and blouse, my Bible and message notes for the week just in case my luggage is lost.

November 9


Long flight from EWR to London Heathrow (LHR). I had to literally RUN to make it. EWR required that for my flight, I go back down and go through security all over AGAIN. I only had one hour to do all this and to say it was tight was an understatement. So there I was literally sprinting to my gate but praise God I made it. This plane: THE BIGGEST I HAVE EVER SEEN. It's an airbus. Very nice amenities - everything from socks to eye masks to toothbrushes, loads of movies, tv shoes, even complimentary wine with dinner although I didn't have any - I'm a good Pentecostal. :-) Or at least an obedient A/G minister...one or the other.


I sat next to a nice man from London...we had a seat in between us which we were both thrilled with because we had more room. After small talk we settled in, had dinner and got ready to watch a movie and sleep. They had little pillows on our seat - two blue ones and one pink one. I said to the man, "do you mind if I have the pink pillow?" (It was on HIS seat, not mine.) He said, "No, please take it. I don't have much use for it." (Picture this said in a voice sounding like Hugh Grant) I slept about an hour...it was hard to sleep even with this 7 hour flight because people were walking around, getting into the overhead bins, etc. They served us continental breakfast in the AM but I wasn't too keen on it, I just enjoyed the tea, and GET THIS...British Airways makes their tea in TEAPOTS. Yes!!! Amazing. It was good, just like mine that I make at home.


So I arrived in London and had to go through security AGAIN, and this time much tighter. The security is so much tighter there because the threat level is higher than the US. At least the people were very friendly. I got to my gate area and got an absolutely AMAZING croissant from a place called Pret Manger. (Come to find out, it's Bill and Barb Kuert's favorite place at LHR as well!!! It's sooo good.) I ate my croissant, exchanged some money so I could pay to get on the internet and write to Larry. I can't believe the computers are different in the UK. So confusing. WHERE IS THE @ sign?? Where is the shift? Ughhh!! So confusing and I was "on the clock" paying for this making a zillion mistakes.


With my remaining time I pulled out all my "supplies" that I brought. I had been traveling all night long and so I was able to go into the restroom with all my stuff and clean up. Like I said, my bag was stocked. Thank God for Ponds Makeup Wipes!!!


I think my favorite beautiful moment of the day was between 5:30 - 6:30 am, coming into London, seeing the lights in the dark, and then experiencing the sunrise while flying in. BREATHTAKING!!!


The trip from LHR to Nairobi is so long. I'm on it right now as I write this. It's 11 hours, this flight. Add to that my days and nights are now switched. I have gotten a whopping 1 hour sleep. I will arrive in Kenya at 9:30 their time...and be ready for bed because although days and nights are switched, I have had no sleep so I don't care anymore. On this flight, there are much fewer people although we are on another identical airbus. I have an entire row to myself. So I have lifted the armrests and acted like this is my bed at home. Ahhhh.... Most people have this much room on this flight. Lots of happy people. The service is excellent on this flight but we are having a lot of turbulence. The captain just came on and addressed it because people are a little afraid. He said it's because we are over the mountains and it is windy and it will go away in 15 minutes. So, we'll trust Him...and the Lord. :-)


Right now I decided to watch the movie Hairspray. It's pretty good. They also have a channel that shows our flight path and exactly where we are all all the flight specifications. Right now as I write this we are flying over the Nile River. So far we have gone over Rome, Cairo, the Darfur Mountains, and An-Nuhud. Right at this moment we are at 37,000 feet going 559 mph. We will be THERE in 1 hour and 35 minutes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!



that night...


Got here on time and got in line to get my Visa. Stood in line for about 30 minutes and started talking to a girl in front of me. She is here for missions work. She lives in Lancaster, PA. I said, "My husband is from Pittsburgh and we met at VFCC." I said, "what is your name?" She said, "Hilda Stolzfoos." I said, "Oh we know of Gerry Stoolzfoos who is pastor of an A/G in Gettysburg, and we went to the same bible college." She said, 'OH MY GOSH! THAT'S MY UNCLE!!!" So she's freaking out standing there in line saying, "this is amazing! the world is really smaller than we think!!!" I said, "Yep, just think of those 7 degrees of separation." The Visa line was long but we had a great time talking and even hugged and stuff when we parted - it was like we knew each other for years or something though we had just met, and that's the beauty of the body of Christ..


Went down the baggage claim, and.........they lost it. Think about it, if I was running to my gate in Newark, do you also think the bag man or woman was doing the same thing? I think not. The truth is, they took their time and missed my flight. So, I didn't freak. Believe it or not I was really calm but felt sorry for the Kuerts because they were standing on the other side of security and couldn't do anything and this took forever. A very kind boy named Daniel helped me, who works for Airport Security. He went outside the security line and talked to the Kuerts and got all the info on how to get to their house. This is not easy as many Kenyan homes including theirs has NO ADDRESS. Barb has to draw him a map. Literally "go around this tree, then hang a left at this bush..." I mean it was crazy. We were there getting this all straightened out and I was relieved I had a change of underwear, one dress outfit, and makeup in my bag. However, I didn't have a lot of toiletries and dress shoes. Thankfully Barb gave me all the personal care items I needed that I was without, and then she demanded that British Airways buy me shoes. No problem!


Tonight I am wearing Barb's PJ's to bed. We washed my clothes I wore on the plane so I can wear them tomorrow when we get back. We are going tomorrow to the orphanage and some other places.


I'm staying here at the Kuerts home the first half of my time here. It's beautiful...this missionary compound is just incredible. There are 8 families living here. There is a high fence that has barbed electric wire at the top and a big gate and two guards at the gate 24 hours a day. Bars on all the windows...very tight security. I am in their guestroom which is just wonderful. So cute. Has two twin beds in blue and burgandy and little mosquito nets over the bed. I can hear all kinds of birds outside and the windows are open all the time. It's now 12 am. I texted Dustin. Hilda told me if you have cingular it's only 50 cents. Time to sleep....after much more than 26 hours with only 2 hours of sleep I am so ready.


November 10


7 am... beautiful morning here in Africa. I woke up to the sound of a very loud rooster outside my window. I slept from 12:3o am til now. Ada just texted me. She's praying for the bags to come. Hey, she's my hair dresser and she knows I need my Rusk Wired hair product!!! :-) ha ha. Just kidding. Time to shower...


10 am... Barb made smoothies for breakfast from fruit trees on their property..yum! The landscape here is breathtaking. We went next door to one of the other missionaries to try and find me some temporary shoes but none fit so we are going shopping. Barb is on the phone with British Air right now demanding money for the shoes. I can hear her saying, "you can't expect this woman to wear TENNIS SHOES in the pulpit! And besides that, she needs to buy some more things than that to be fully prepared. You need to give her at least $100." The guy must be arguing back. Barb just said, "ARE YOU MARRIED? DO YOU BUY THINGS FOR YOUR WIFE? HAVE YOU SHOPPED IN WOMEN'S STORES LATELY?" Now she just said, "let me talk to the manager..."


10:30 pm ....time for bed. such a long day at the Kenya Kids orphanage for street kids. I LOVED IT! Precious children. I ate lunch with some girls, and one in particular, Samantha. Her parents both died years ago and she was left on the street until the missionaries picked her up. She was just delightful and insisted on sitting next to me as we ate our rice and beans.


On the way there I saw such poverty...masses of people and animals everywhere... crazy driving, kids pushing wheelbarrows, little kids all alone, crippled peopole. You can't really describe it justly.


After visiting with the Kenya Street Kids we went to the General Superintendent's home - Peter and Naomi Njiri. They wanted to meet me before the conference. We had some apple juice in their home. They are just delightful people. Then we left there and got SHOES! Beautiful pink and silver ones. Ordained by God. Compliments of British Airways!!!


I can't adequately describe the roads here. People everywhere. No rhyme or reason to traffic...just massive seas of humanity everywhere. Goats walking around. People walking in front of cars. Dust flying. We drive around in a land rover (which you have to have - all the roads are trecherous...) and Barb had to pat me on the back a few times from getting choked up with all the dust flying. These road are dirt roads, very rocky, tons of holes in them... The transportation here is an EXPERIENCE.


Time to sleep...getting up early and preaching two services at Mathare Valley...the worst slum of Africa. I can't wait!!!!!!!!!!




Sunday, November 11



Woke up at 3:35 am with the rain pouring down loud. I looked out the window and it was so beautiful. Africa has slums but also such beauty!!! I stayed awake a while and read my Bible, then slept again and got up real early to head to Mathare Valley A/G. This church is pastored by Peter and Jane Nuthu, co-pastors. They have about 800 worshippers each week and it's an amazing place. It's in a slum however the people are so giving and loving and they go after God in a way like you've never seen. They treated me like gold. Such servants. They have so little yet they give SO MUCH. I was surprised the Bridge of Hope/Convoy of Hope from the USA was there today and they had their leader and a camera man filming the services...today of all days! How exciting! They are featuring the church for an upcoming project. The worship at this church is AMAZING. The worship leaders live in the slum yet you would never know by their professional demeanor as they lead and their anointing. They have all been personally mentored by the Nuthu's. Most of the leaders on the stage were very young adult kids who the Nuthu's started pastoring when they got them off the streets at 10 and 12 years old. Now they are their church leadership. I love it!!!!!!!!


Jane is co-pastor of the church. I learned today that a co-pastor is called Mama Pastor. All ladies (including co-pastors) are also referred to as "Mama" followed by the name of their first born child. So here I am known as Mama Dustin. Barb Kuert is Mama Stephen. Isn't that so cute?


After service we changed shoes and Pastor Jane gave us a tour of the slums. We literally went INSIDE houses. It was amazing. They let me take a zillion pictures. The people were so welcoming. It's extremely dangerous there but everyone knows Mama Pastor Jane so we were alright. We also took three young men (some of the leaders who are the college age young men) who guarded us and our land rover while we were inside the houses, which are really more like huts. When you open the car door you are immediately hit with the smell of sewage. Raw sewage is running in the streets. Kids everywhere, even little tiny ones, unsupervised, roaming around everywhere. Several ladies welcomed us into their "homes". They are about the size of six foot by six, dirt floors and a piece of tin on the roof with plastic bags as the side walls. A few bowls and things inside, maybe a broken chair but not much else. Eight people are living in some of these little tiny things. The filth is indescribable. Everywhere you turn, sewage, flies, and children running. As I came many of them put their arms out, hugged me, wanted me to take a picture (they would actually ask me...) and they seemed so happy I was there. Ladies were outside of their huts, washing their clothes in water that was not clean, as best they could. One woman goes to the dumpsters in the mornings, and she gets out the packets of condiments people leave at places, and little dinner rolls in packages people have thrown away at places where the people have a little more and she gathers them up and brings them back to their hut and this is what they eat every single day.


As you can imagine I was choked up with tears much of the day. Yet these people were in church and so happy. In fact, they stayed most of the day. Their attitudes and passion were amazing. Service got out, we went to the slum houses, came back and the youth were having their own service in the sanctuary (youth that were also all in the adult services - but stayed after) and the children were putting on a concert in another room of the church. About 100 children were packed into a small room. They invited us in. They sang for us and did poems. At the end they asked Barb to come up and address them and me as well. I wasn't prepared but just flowed with it. They were so happy to have us there. I had no idea we were coming back to a program...it just happened as the day unfolded. Then Pastor Jane took us into another small room where some ladies had prepared rice, peas and cabbage for us with some apple juice. We ate with her in this room. Her husband was at another meeting also on the church property. Probably 100 children were still on the property, barefoot many of them just running around and playing.


After a while I told Pastor Jane, "I have to use the restroom." She said "okay I'll have to take you." She walked me down to a room, unlocked the door for me, told me she'd wait outside for safety purposes and she locked me back in. I was shocked. What was there was a hole in the ground, a bucket of water and a small roll of toilet tissue. I wondered, "what in the world am I supposed to do with this?" But I just went with it. I had to figure it out as I went along. How do you go to the restroom in a dirt hole in the ground while dressed up? Very challenging, but when I came out of the bathroom I acted like, "no big deal, this was a piece of cake..." and just went back into the church smiling like it was the most natural thing in the world. We took some photos with the pastors and then needed to head back home.


About 15 minutes into the ride home Barb says, "alright, are you okay about the bathroom?" I think she was totally amazed I didn't say anything or even flinch. I said, "Oh yeah, no problem..." She said, "I know it shocks most people at first..." Well, it did, but I was fine with it. You know, these people have to live this way every single day of their lives. If I can't do it once, what in the world is wrong with me?




6:00 PM

We came home and my luggage was laying on the bed. It arrived at 5 pm, praise God. I was able to change into fresh clothes and I hardly knew what to do with my stuff it felt amazing to have it. Bill and Barb took me out to a place in downtown Nairobi tonight that is an incredible Italian place...very upscale here. It was so incredibly good. The conversation was even better.


This concludes Kenya Chronicles I. I will post again as soon as I am able. The difficult thing is, there is not much opportunity for the internet because so many people are sharing the server here and it's so slow and boots you off. Love you all and can't wait to see what God will do next! I speak to the leadership tomorrow morning at 10 am. Pray for me as I continue this journey. I will post photos when I can but due to the fact that the internet is so slow here and doesn't want to let me post or send photos it might be til' I get back to the states.






Friday, November 09, 2007

I'm here

I made it safely here, and on time. All of my flights left and arrived on time and except for having to run to make my connecting in NJ (because the layover was so short) and having a bit of turbulence (about 15 min worth) from London to Nairobi, everything was just great. I had no problem getting around at all. I am a woman...and we generally stop and ask for directions. The second I got off of each plane I just asked somebody in uniform, "point me in the right direction" and things were great.

One glitch: they have lost my bags. Yup. I would venture to say that while I ran and made my connection, the man or woman with the bags did not! So my bags are probably back in London right now or at worst, in NJ. They are supposed to arrive sometime Sunday more than likely. I thought ahead and brought a skirt and blouse, my make up, message notes and bible in my carryon. However I don't have shoes for Sunday AM or a few other items I would need to get ready. So we'll go to the store tomorrow. I didn't freak or anything...I figure it's not THAT big a deal compared to many things that could happen. I do have to preach Sunday morning and my music tracks are in my lost baggage and also I had not prepared a Sunday message (I am preaching five times Mon-Thurs but did not know about Sunday.) No big deal, I'm used to being prepared in season and out...

I am going to be preaching at the church in Mathare Valley, which is the worst part of the slums here in Nairobi. I am so excited I could burst! That was one of the main places I wanted to go. Tomorrow, Barb (the missionaries I'm with are Bill and Barb Kuert) is going to take me to the orphanage to see the kids. Then I'll preach there on Sun. So excited!!! In between all that I'll get some shoes for Sunday as well unless by a miracle my bags come sooner. This is a prayer request - life would be a lot simpler right now if the bags came before Sunday, so please pray that way. And I especially want them here by Monday because all the gifts for the ladies are in one of my suitcases. Thank you!!!

I am doing a journal and will blog it all later but for now I must sleep...only had 2 hours within the last 28, and...it's 12:30 am here in Kenya. Time to turn the lights out. I'm at the Kuert's house in the missionary compound. Actually it's quite lovely. Time to put on my borrowed PJ's from Barb and hit the sack. Tomorrow's a big day at the orphanage!

My love to all...

Thursday, November 08, 2007

I'm gone





This is my last post before I get to Kenya. I will post something brief while there if I can and let you know how I'm doing and more important, what God is doing.


I'm not going to have my laptop for 9 days. WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?


I got a new book for the flight, something about being fearless and over 40. Sounds good, eh?


A full MP3 player...


Message Bible...


Notebook... (I have to write even though I can't type)...


A few magazines...


Low fat snacks...


I'm good to go. Larry and I are having breakfast together on the way out. Not sure if Dustin will join us or if he will be working. We'll see, but I will savor our time together either way. Then Susan is meeting me at the airport at my gate for coffee before I leave. (She works at the airport so she has clearance to be there.)

Thank you for praying for me. My flight takes off at 2:20 EST. I'll get there late tomorrow night. Also keep me in specific prayer as I speak Monday - Thursday each day. I turn around to come back on Friday...little longer trip home - 33 hours. More reading...writing...sleeping...and I do understand they have tons of first run movies.

Please pray for my family too. I have left everything as well lined up as possible and I'm not going to worry about it, but please pray for them. Thanks...love you all, readers I know about, and those I don't too.

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

My last night


at home here in Tampa. Tonight we had a missionary from Asia Pacific. Normally Larry and I would take him out after service but tonight we made other arrangements so I could come home and spend time with the fam and get my very last minute details in order.

We usually watch Kid Nation on Wednesday nights after church (we Tivo it) and I wanted to do that as usual and see the kids tonight, as Jordan and Savanna will leave for school in the morning and I will not see them again until November 17th. You know what they say about the "best laid plans" and how they often go awry. Well, in spite of having Pastor T take the missionary out so we could go right home it seemed like things came up that kept us from leaving. (This does not include those who stopped to hug me and pray for me and wish me well on my trip - those were very appreciated of course. Besides worshipping God, this WAS the main reason I wanted to be there tonight...to say bye to everyone and get last minute hugs and "love you's" and stuff...) But a bunch of other things besides that held us there and then we couldn't find Jordan when it was time to go and I got home and the phone was ringing like it has been all day.

I wrote an e-mail to anyone I thought might want to know what was happening with my trip, my schedule, etc. and I thought this would be actually more informative but my phone still rang off the hook today/tonight. Everytime somebody called I was either running around my bedroom folding more things to put in the suitcase or I was at my desk trying to print stuff out. Most who called just said, "I just wanted to hear your voice before you left..." and you know what? Yes, it made me busier, and yes I was going a little crazy trying to keep up but at least I feel REALLY LOVED. Some people just want to "hear my voice"...is there any greater joy? I am happy despite the craziness. Some people don't have anyone who just has to hear their voice.

PRAISE REPORT: I started the anti-malaria medication yesterday (a large number of people get sick when they take it - throwing up, etc., in fact they warn you to call and ask for more meds if you are throwing them up. You have to find some way to keep it down because ya gotta take it - no way around it. The pharmacist warned me: "you will more than likely get sick when you take this.") Well, guess what, I have not been sick or even a little nauseated AT ALL! I'm so happy. God is in the details. I do feel a little more tired taking it (which is one side affect) and my mouth did break out a little but the thing is, when I am stressed I also feel tired and my mouth breaks out...so not sure if this is just stress or anti malaria meds.

Larry and I had to go separate ways this morning instead of working together which was a bummer. But it was for a good cause. (At least he followed me from bed into the shower this morning which was nice...every moment counts, you know...especially since we will be without each other for 9 days) After getting ready for work he headed to Lakeland. Dr. George Wood (our A/G General Superintendent) came to Lakeland today to meet with our district superintendent and some pastors in Florida. The district supt asked Larry to come for the meeting. I wouldn't have wanted him to miss that!

I went to work and wrapped up last minute details for the coming days. I have left detailed instructions on anything imaginable however I still get concerned. I usually have my finger right on the pulse of whatever is happening at home and at NS. One of our deacons lovingly calls me "the kidney". In the body, everything has to go through the kidney first. Wanna know what's going on around here? Just ask the kidney! Seriously.

I have left Larry's clothes lined up in order complete with sticky notes on them that say things like, "wear this November 11th". Seriously, I dress him everyday. I'm the "clothes fairy" as he calls me. Come to think of it, I guess I have all sorts of names that go with my roles in life. For such a contemporary woman as I consider myself most would never guess that I do such things as prepare my husband's clothes. When he gets up in the morning he's the one that has to ask me, "what am I wearing?" or "what's the schedule?" I'm the administrative mind of this duo. He always says, God gave him a gift of administration and it's called: Deanna. Tonight Adam came up to me and said, "we've told Pastor we're just a phone call away if he needs help with anything..." That reassured me as well as Sue F. telling me, "DON'T WORRY ABOUT ANYTHING BACK HERE..."

So I have left instructions on everything from the church Thanksgiving dinner to a staff reception to orders of service reminders, to WHATEVER! I'm sure it'll go fine, I mean the world won't come crashing down if my instructions are not followed...things will just be a little messy in Tampa, FL. :-)

Today I got my hair done. It was perfect as I needed it desperately before I went to Africa and also it gave me one more chance to see Ada before I left. She did a stupendous job, as usual. Today was highlighting day and we always love that. Ada is an absolute hairstyling super-talent.

Oh how I will miss my family, my church, my friends, my bed. I'm a blessed woman, and I know it.

p.s. something funny from tonight...before the kids went to bed, Jordan came out and gave me about 10 hugs/kisses and then said, "Goodbye Momma...I love you. Watch out for little people with spears..."

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Getting ready


Haven't had a lot of time to blog - I'm doing last minute stuff to get ready to leave for Africa. I am all packed except for a few items which just have to be tossed in my bag after I get dressed to leave. It's been a day of running around getting the last minute small items that I've needed to take with me.

I cleared my schedule of things to spend more time with the fam before I leave. Tonight we went to dinner -Japanese - our family favorite.

Last night I did one of the hardest things I've ever done...wrote letters to my husband and the kids that I hope no one ever has to give them. (In case you're wondering I did not follow Rosemay's advice to talk to them before I left...I decided to write a letter and that way hopefully they will never have to deal with it.)

I have a lot of faith that they never will have to deal with it. So many people are praying for me - this is going to be a great trip filled with God's presence, power and protection.

I'm going to try to blog if I get a moment or two on the computer while I'm there, so be watching, although I definitely won't be monster-blogging like I normally do. G'night...time to snuggle with Larry for one of the last times until I leave...oh how I'll miss him.

Sunday, November 04, 2007

Eventful Weekend


Teenagers!

That should be enough said in itself, but...for those who don't have any teens or young adults in your home yet, let me say...you think you know, but you have no idea.

This evening Larry and I had the couples cruise with the church. Dustin was staying with Savanna, and Jordan was going to the Underoath concert. Stephen got them tickets a while ago for Jordan's birthday. It isn't Jordan's birthday right now however Underoath was coming now, not in March, so they went tonight. Jordan has talked about this for so long...as in, YEARS. This is his favorite group.

This morning I did my "usual". When the kids are going anywhere besides between home, work and church (and sometimes even then) I pull Stephen aside and have a talk..."no speeding...", "no racing through to beat a red light..."..."no running red lights..." "no talking on the cell/texting during the car ride..." etc. etc. Of course they always roll their eyes, "yes Mom, we know, we know..." like I'm a martian from outer space who has no clue what I'm talking about.

As we're leaving for the cruise tonight Jordan calls and says, "we got in an accident." Larry says, "are you alright?" Yes, they are both alright but Stephen's car is more than likely totaled. They were about 1,000 feet from the venue where the concert was taking place and both got enamored in looking ahead at what was happening in their surroundings and then, "bam!" at a red light, had a clash with another lady who just so happens to be unisured. (oh great!)

Stephen's Dad was coming to the scene and it happened to be in St. Pete, where we went for the cruise. Jordan calls back a few minutes later and he is sobbing so hard we can't hear him straight. He says he's waited four years for this concert and doesn't want to miss it and can he stay there and we will pick him up after our cruise. Despite a full car we figured we could squeeze him in our car and fit Stephen in Pastor T's car, if Stephen's father will agree to it. They were all upset, sobbing - not over the car, but over the Underoath concert. KIDS!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! No comprehension here...

The car was towed away, the boys went into the concert, Larry and I went on the cruise with our couples and then swung by the concert afterwards to pick them up. They came out all dripping with sweat (literally) having been in this environment with 2,003 other kids (Jordan knew the exact number for some reason), crammed into this building standing, jumping, body surfing and whatever else. Jordan was beside himself that he got a photo with the Underoath drummer. They also saw some group called Maylene and the Sons of Disaster. What crazy names some of these groups have. Jordan said one of the highlights was when they came out and shoved cake in each others faces. Sounds like a blast, huh? I tell you, I know we did crazy things as teenagers ourselves but quite honestly none of that sounds like fun to me...not the standing for four hours sweating, body surfing or cake smashing. What they find fun in this, I do not know. But he talked non-stop about it afterwards. He is on an incredible high (emotionally not literally) and can't wait to go to school tomrrow to show everyone his pics and wear his t-shirt.

In other news, we had a really great couples cruise...a lot of fun with our NS couples -- always a good time. Larry and Pastor T out did themselves on the dance floor. SO FUNNY. Larry got Pastor T to do the "worm" again. Come to think of it, maybe the kids aren't that crazy after all.

Bleeech! I hate nausea


I didn't blog yesterday because at the end of the day I was too sick to. I allowed myself to be talked into something...

Yesterday Larry wanted me to go to the Flapjack Festival with him. He and Savanna went in the morning for free flapjacks and I slept in. To me, a flapjack, no matter how good, is not worth waking up for. I would rather sleep.

So in case you've never heard of this, it's the Flapjack Festival in Land O' Lakes Florida, which is actually the town right next to mine...it's just a stone's throw away. So they went in the morning but Larry wanted all of us to go back in the late afternoon/evening. Now, this is really NOT my thing. When I was a little girl I loved rides, but now I hate them. Somebody today (Pastor Linds, actually) told me that there is supposed to be some reason women get sick on rides once they have kids, things change. I believe that. I used to love them when I was a kid but I hate them now. For that matter - believe it or not - I'm not into crowds...

Most people would not know that because whenever I'm at a big event I don't just sit there - I get up, work the crowd, say hi to each person, and mingle. There's a reason for this - you have to, for successful ministry. It's not an option for an effective minister, in my opinion. So, I "work the crowd" at church and events. But truth be told, I don't like crowds. I tolerate crowds and I love small groups. My idea of a perfect evening is not going to a concert or a festival, but going out to dinner with just my husband, or with one other couple at the most. Even two couples is stretching it. Once it blossoms into three or more couples I start getting a little uncomfortable, and again this would be a shock to most. I enjoy life most when I am with one or two friends sharing tea or coffee and having intimate conversation - talking about deep things and solving the world's problems, laughing and crying together.

Tonight, we're going on our couples cruise for church. I love it -it's one of my favorite events of the year, but mostly because I do not work the crowd the entire time - just usually the beginning. I make sure I say hi to everyone but then I'm with my husband a lot of the time or with one or two other couples talking. If 100 couples were on this cruise, and I was mingling the entire night I have to be honest I'd be a bit nervous but for the sake of the ministry I would shake every hand, work the crowd and make a point to have contact with everyone. I know, I know...it's odd perhaps. But it's just my personality. I've said before, I could live in my bed and it's true. I would never need to come out except maybe to go on my patio or join a friend occasionally for coffee. I've always been the type of person who would rather have one or two very close friends than 100 acquaintances that I "party" with. Larry on the other hand, wants to be at a party with hundreds of people or even preferrably thousands.

So, now that you know about my dislike of large crowds, let's go back to the Flapjack Festival...

Last night we went and we met Bernie and Lisa there. We ate wonderfully delightful things such as corn dogs and funnel cakes. Mmmmmm it was so good and I realized with every bite just how much I was going to have to be on the elliptical this week, but didn't care. We sat and ate and talked and it was just splendid. Then it was time to ride rides. I told Larry before we went that I was not riding any rides. I said, "I don't know why you got me a wristband...I'm not riding anything." Famous last words. You know how it is when people want you to be "part of the group". Personally I could care less about being "part of the group" but you know, people often care because they feel if you aren't part you might feel left out, or they just want to experience it with you. So, I rode a spider/scrambler type ride that wasn't too bad...but then they wanted me to get on the Fire Ball. This is a ride where you are all in a circle, sitting on a seat strapped in and then the floor drops out and you go around and around, WAAAAYYYYY up in the sky and it almost takes you upside down, not quite but very close, and you hang up there in the sky for what seems like forever and come back down and just keep whipping around over and over again. Several times I said, "I really don't wanna do this..." but everybody just insisted, "no, this is a great adventure, we really want you to do it with us..........." So I did. And I got so sick. I could barely make it to the car. The kids came home with Bernie and Lisa and we left right away. I came home and laid down and never could get back up. I ended up going straight to bed and got over 10 hours sleep. That was nice, I do have to admit. :-)

I had lots to do when we got home and had even told Larry, "I know it means a lot to you that I go with you to the festival (he loves that stuff), so I will. But I have several hours of work to get done when we come back..." Well, that all went by the wayside. I was in bed for the night and so glad to wake up this morning with the nausea GONE.

No more fire ball for me. No more rides. I don't care what happens - the Holy Ghost Himself could come down and say, "get on this ride" and I tell you, I would say no.

Friday, November 02, 2007

Fun Friday and Comedy Night

Just a quick re-cap on my day...I'm tired and in need of sleep... I just got home from our women's comedy night. Well, actually I'm getting home from going out with Joy after the comedy night. She came over from Lakeland for the event and helped clean up afterwards and then we went out to spend some time together, which was wonderful. We both needed it immensely and both commented about how this kind of thing and taking the time for it absolutely keeps us going.

For those blog readers who don't know who Joy is, she's my friend Joy Conley who is a pastor's wife at Harvest Assembly of God in Lakeland. We are both on the women's leadership team for the district - we are both "reps" and that's how we initially met. These photos here are of us when we were at the All Church Ministries Conference, both as speakers, two years ago...the one is of us actually having coffee together somebody snapped the candid shot of us in the church cafe and the other pic is of us talking in one of the classrooms. Anyhoo...she's become a real special friend here in Florida and I so enjoy meeting her for coffee, going shopping, having double dates with our husbands and long talks about life and ministry. She's someone I feel refreshed being around and through the past few years we've really been able to lean on each other through many things.

Today was a much better day for me. I got up to get Savanna ready for school and let the dog out, which I do every single day, whether it's a day off or not, it's just responsibilities I have regardless. Once Savanna was settled and off to school I went back to bed for 2 and 1/2 glorious hours. Friday is my day to catch up on sleep unless I happen to have a Saturday where I can do so occasionally. Most Saturdays I work in some regard so it doesn't happen all the time but I get it where I can. So anyway I went back to sleep for a few more hours and when I got up I discovered that Larry had cleaned the kitchen. You can't imagine how happy I was about this. I did a few housework chores today but it did not seem so overwhelming as it could have because the work was shared. I was able to do three or four things but otherwise got rest with sleep and some reading before I went to the church.

I had to go several hours earlier than normal because Dustin had to work and I needed to take him there, so we went on our way and while he worked I decided I might as well too since I was there and so I got two projects done and then headed down to get some things done for comedy night that still needed to be done.

Our night went well and I think it was really enjoyed by all. Missy (our speaker) is dealing with ovarian cancer right now and going through treatments. It's a real inspiration how she is continuing on so strongly and fighting the good fight just like she's done with so many other obstacles in her life. The message she brings is very relatable to most people as we have all faced something she talks about in some way or another. I love the "you can not only survive, but thrive" type of messages and it's so encouraging and motivating to hear that despite whatever we face, we can make it through God's help and our the love and support of our friends.

I knew Joy was coming tonight but I didn't realize she would be able to stay and have coffee with me so late. Although we've done that many times I guess I just didn't think about the fact that she was going to do that til' the time got right up on us. And I also didn't stop to think beforehand about how much I needed it. It's AMAZING how much the love and perspective of a friend helps you. I've learned in 20 years of ministry that unless you have a really good ministry friend (besides your spouse) to lean on, things can be unbearable at times. I'm glad we can be that anchor for each other.

Playing catch up is worth it


Tonight I packed one of my suitcases for Africa and got rid of all the accumulating boxes in my room. So now the scarves, jewelry and perfume are packed. Only 6 more days until I go. Tonight I got a wake up call as far as what I'll probably come home to. And I'm bracing myself.

I came home, crashed for a little bit - I was so exhausted - it was such a long day. I fell asleep on the way back from lunch. But no matter how tired I was I knew I would come home and work out on the elliptical. (I have a commitment to do that on Tuesday/Thursday/Saturday no matter what). Then I proceeded to pack, and clean my room. I was busy in here cleaning up not just my mess but just the usual junk I clean up. I went out to get myself a drink in the kitchen before bedtime and saw a colossal mess, plus the dog needed to be taken out. My heart sunk.

Well it's like this...is Africa worth a messy house? Yes.

Are people getting saved worth a mess? Yes.

Are "God opportunities" worth coming home to a pile of stuff to do? Yes.

And that's the bottom line and why I continue to take them despite having to play catch up all the time.