Thursday, December 27, 2007

thoughts after some time

probably no one reads this anymore, so i'm going to process here...

It's been an entire semester since summer and PNG. That experience brought up a lot of questions I didn't have answers to, questions about doctrine, and questions about myself and what I was capable of. In my head I know "it's not about what I can do, but what God can do in and through me and about his power and plan in the world"... but it's a different thing to really believe that and live believing it. Doctrinally questions I have are mainly about salvation and baptism. Because to think about teaching someone something, or being married to someone who's teaching something, I have to know what I believe and why, and be able to back it up biblically.

I began the semester feeling so unable to cope with these questions that I kind of rebelled against thinking about them, and about the possibility of missionwork in my future. In numbing myself to pursuing these things and inadvertently numbed myself to God's spirit to a degree. I repent of that sin. Wherever he leads me, I trust that he will hold and protect me. He will give wisdom, strength, peace. I am still struggling to believe this completely, but choosing to trust, knowing that he will catch me as I step out into the dark. I have feared the future, feared being alone in it, not knowing. I have seen God bring people face to face with their fears. It is always a blessing, a refining process that comes with pain. But glory after, and sometimes during, the pain.

I just want to be with Him, whatever that will mean, wherever it will lead.

Friday, August 10, 2007

Final

This is going to be a final blog on the summer and also a brainstorming outlet for my final report to be sent out to my reporters.
It was extremely weird to come back to the states. It’s been really good to be home. It took a while, like a week, to get over jet lag. I’m not close to having finished processing everything, but I can at least attempt to report the progress so far.
I see two categories of what to say in the report letter. One is an overview of what we did on the internship; I’ll skip that here since this blog already covers that. The other is what I took from the experience, what I learned. Like I said, I’m sure I will continue to discover and learn lesson from my summer in PNG as time goes on, but this is what I can come up with for now:
I learned about missionwork, as done by the Alotau team, on a practical level. I now know enough to know what questions to ask other missionaries and what goes into it on a logistical level and I have a better idea of what goes into missionwork on a mental/emotional/spiritual level. From to missionary families themselves I learned gentleness as I’ve never known it before. I learned a lot about parenting, and the roles of the man and wife in a family, applicable to being on a foreign mission field or not. I saw that wherever I end up, on a foreign mission field or not, if I’m going to be married, my first ministry and responsibility will be to my family. By having to work with the other interns, planning, communicating and just being around each other ALL the time, I learned a lot about giving and accepting grace, teamwork skills, how to respectfully disagree and compromise, etc.
I learned a lot about myself this summer. It was very humbling. I have no idea if the other interns read this blog, but if you do: Thank you for putting up with me and loving me through everything. I appreciate and respect and love each of you… I was brought face to face with my selfishness and weakness and insecurities. It is clear to me that I have a lot of learning and growing to do before I could be a missionary. I need to have more biblical knowledge and a firmer grip on doctrinal truths before thinking about being able to teach anybody else. In my weakness and insufficiency, I saw God’s power and goodness and strength in such a greater more beautiful way.
One of the biggest things God taught me while I was in PNG was to have an active hope of my true home in heaven, something I’ve hardly thought about before. He showed me the verses “Store up for yourselves treasures in heaven” (Matt ?), “Everyone who has left houses or brothers or sisters or father or mother or children or fields for my sake will receive a hundred times as much and will inherit eternal life,” (Mat. 19:29), and “whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven” (Matt. 18:18).
I hoped to come away from this summer knowing for sure whether I would do longterm missionwork or not. I do not have a yes or no answer, but the answer I do have is that it’s ok not to know and it’s good to have to trust God. Whatever occupation or place in life, every christian’s primary goal should be to seek God and know him better and to please and Glorify Him. This is what I will do, and trust God for each next step.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

last post in png!

Tomorrow we fly away from PNG, but not to home yet. We will be a week in Australia first. The last two weeks have flown by.

Last week Tuesday morning through Thursday afternoon was the youth camp. It was out at Opalai, a village about an hour away. They have a big house with several small rooms that all the campers and interns stayed in. We had 43 campers, with a good mix of church kids and non-church members. Marcus taught 2 out of the 4 big “lessons” and Logan and Leslie Williams each took one. After each lesson, the campers divided into their groups and each of us led “group discussion” which in this culture basically means the leader talking because they’re so shy. I had the oldest girl group, and they did talk a little bit. None of the missionaries stayed there overnight so we were basically in charge. We had some organized games and team building activities, and lots of soccer and volleyball in-between scheduled activities. Overall it was a good time. After the last session we had a time for them to ask questions individually to the group leaders. One of my girls, Jacinta, asked me “how many times do you have to be baptized?” We talked for nearly half an hour…I’m leaving out so much about youth camp but that will have to do, for my sake and yours.

Friday we did some souvenir shopping and that night had dinner at the Reeses. They told us story after story about their time at Harding (they were there 8 or 9 years ago I think). Diane told hilarious stories. The best one is that at their wedding, instead of kissing at the end, they gave each other a high five!

This week has been our “dis-orientation” week. Tuesday we hiked several hours up a mountain to a point on the ridge that the Allies used as a look-out point for all of Milne Bay in WWII. Then we hiked back down to a gorgeous waterfall. Coming down it was very steep and very muddy and we had jam our walking sticks into the ground for every step and even so we were slipping the whole way. Our guide, Wesley, was a man from Gama village. He got lost a couple times and by the time we got back to the main river we were all exhausted. The rest of the hike was down the river over huge boulders and slippery rocks. I kept thinking of how much my brother would have loved it. That night Gama church had a goodbye dinner for us.

Wednesday we went out to an Island, a couple hours from Alotau. Leslie, Tate and Thomas fished most of the time, but the interns stayed on the island and played on the beach. There was several islands in view from our beach and it was absolutely amazing. We came back Thursday night to delicious Mexican food Loopie made, icecream, and hot showers.

It’s so bizarre that we’re leaving tomorrow!

Prayer requests: Safety and harmony in Australia.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Rachel and I flew to Kiriwina island of the Trobriand Islands on Monday, where Luke, Daniel, Bekah and Marcus Reese and 4 local women from Alotau had been for 3 days already. Lots of prayer and mental/spiritual preparation went into this trip because of the difficulties of the village stay. It was the same kind of village setting, with grass huts and village food and an outhouse with only a hole in the ground to squat over. The experience, however, was completely different than the village stay. First of all, we were all together, and we had a purpose for being there and activities to accomplish that purpose. I was not sick. Also, the atmosphere was MUCH more relaxed and we had our own space. Three small houses were completely cleared out of for us to use. With the exception of fat, hand sized spiders with red eyes in the latrine, I rather enjoyed the week there.

Our “plan” was to have two nights of “cultural exchange” and then invite the attendees back to 3 nights of bible studies. That was to be in the evenings, and then we would be doing survey type work during the day. No one showed up to the cultural exchange the first night so we had readjust our plan. Basically there was no plan and Marcus did as many Bible studies as he could muster up and we were on our own to plan the surveying. Our main “survey” project was to walk 2 hours to the only “town” on the island which is only a few government building, a clinic, and 3 canteen type stores. Kiriwina is small and FLAT. I hyper extended my right knee over the 4 hours of walking (I blame my shoes) so I couldn’t walk very well the next few days. I felt good about the information we gathered that day. The rest of the time we did a couple more interviews, swam in a lovely, cool fresh water cave (about 30-40 feet in diameter, and I’d guess about 15 feet deep), and observed Marcus doing bible studies. It was wonderful getting to know the 4 PNG women that came with us from Alotau. The last full day there we met with the high chief of the island. Walking everywhere on the island kids would shout out “dim-dim” which means white skin, and follow us, grabbing our hands and stroking our arms. People told us that the Trobriand people would be more bold, and they weren’t kidding.

Please keep praying for our group, I think people are getting ancy knowing we only have 2 weeks left. I really am so grateful for how are group has bonded. God has answered prayers beyond my expectations… The time has flown by!

glory

Two Mondays ago I was beginning my village stay after a trip to the hospital for some antibiotics which Diane advised me getting. Since I was still not feeling well, the village stay was a hard time. Rachel and I stayed in the same village and the other 3 were in a different village so we didn’t see them until it was over. Even though it’s only a 15 minute drive out of town, village life is like stepping into another world. They live in grass huts on stilts, and sit around most of the day not doing much, and are all together as a community family. Their “parenting” is rough and harsh and it was hard to be around. We learned to weave fans, make a “broom” scrape coconut, peel taro and yams and kau-kau (all of which taste similar and are dry, tasteless starchy vegetables), saw a man making a Taro-leaf roof, and another man’s canoe half-carved, hiked up to their gardens which they plant on the side of the mountain, hiked a long ways out to a WWII memorial, had baths in the river (with an audience of a few women and a dozen kids), played with the kids and visited with the adults as best as possible. It might have been enjoyable had I felt well, but I was very relieved to get back to the Williams on Wednesday afternoon. I was overwhelmed by just the sheer differentness of everything and the strain of effort to function and communicate and not show our hosts how tired and sick I was feeling. All this made me even more homesick than I’d already been feeling, and I had a good cry when it was over… girls have to do that sometimes.

The group was scheduled to leave Friday morning for our trip to the Trobriand islands. Diane suggestested the option of Rachel and I staying until the next flight on Monday, and after much prayer and inner debate I decided that would be wise. Those few days of rest were such an energizing, encouraging gift of a time! The Lord is faithful to provide strength for the weak, and joy for the sorrowful. He is so good and it has been such a delight to seek and know him, and just be with him. I’m learning that that is and must be my primary goal above all else. And when it is there is no fear of failure! I am also learning the hope of heaven, when all strivings will cease and we will be Home.

The weekend was by no means empty or boring. On Saturday, Rachel and I had a tea party with the 3 Reese girls, and the William’s 4 year old, Bailey. Diane needed the afternoon off, and we were thrilled to do it. I also taught Sunday school for the youth since no one else was scheduled to do it. That was a blessing because it was open to whatever I wanted to do, and through teaching it, God taught me in a clearer stronger way what he was already teaching me, that being to seek him and delight in him, and then other things follow. I used psalm 27.

I had been overwhelmed with tiredness and homesickness and culture shock and physical sickness, but in that God showed me Himself in such a glorious way that would not have been possible without the difficulty driving me to collapse at his feet. I am knowing and loving my Lord, and enjoying His love, as never before. I am so thankful that I have real pain in my past so that I already knew what turning to God for healing meant before this trip. Thank you for your prayers! I think this is long enough that I’ll have to wait and write a separate update for this past week.

Friday, June 22, 2007

sick

I had planned to update again today (Saturday) with plenty to tell. However, I’ve pretty much just been a bump on a log this week, having come down with either a stomach virus or malaria (Loopie thinks it’s malaria, and I’m on malaria medicine, but Leslie doesn’t think that’s what it is) on Tuesday (along with the rest of the household except Bekah) and staying pretty sick through Wednesday night. It’s been up and down since then. I always get to the point of feeling enough better that I think I can do something normal like eat a regular meal or go out on an errand, and end up overdoing it. Friday night we all felt pretty well except Luke, and enjoyed the bi-weekly dinner at Masurina Hotel. They had broccoli! I was so excited. Diane told us that one rare occasion when broccoli was available, she splurged and bought a bush (a head? A bundle?) of it for 21 kina (which comes out to be 7 U.S. dollars). When her second daughter Hadassah was born here in Alotau, the hospital fee was only 20 kina. :o)

I forgot to mention before our interview with the SIL bible translators. They have been here 15 years working on the same language translation. I forget how much of the bible they’ve finished so far. I loved listening to them. They talked about the power of prayer like I haven’t heard anyone do in a while… It was refreshing.

Friday morning we ran errands and then I wasn’t feeling well so I napped in the afternoon. The others went out recruiting for our youth camp coming up very quickly after our time in the Trobriand Islands on a survey/evangelistic one week trip (we leave the 29th and get back July 6th). When I look at the calendar for the rest of the time here, I think the time will fly by with all the things we have planned.

Today is Saturday, and therefore another free day. Rachel and I felt pretty bad again this morning, so we stayed home while everyone else went to the beach to snorkel and have a “glass-bottom boat” ride. I’m relatively occupied with the Anne of Green Gables series. Rachel and I are both feeling pretty useless and homesick at this point. The morale of the motley crew is under siege. We appreciate your prayers and love.

This coming up Monday-Wednesday is our village-stay. Please pray that we will all be over our sickness for that.


Saturday, June 16, 2007

almost 3 weeks!

Some things I could not express yet in my last update are becoming more clear in my heart and mind. Some of those include: awareness of my great selfishness, need for grace to give grace to others, learning to really respect people I don’t necessarily agree with in every way, etc. God is teaching me a lot.

I wish I could just transcribe my conversation with Diane Reese from 2 days ago. God spoke straight to my spirit through her, to my struggles and worries and hopes. I asked her the same questions I asked Jeri, and she had very different answers because she’s very different and because she’s been here a lot longer. I’m beginning to see through things she said and through being here how true it is that this world is not our home, that our purpose here isn’t to be comfortable, how real God’s truth and strength and power must become in your life when you’re NOT comfortable. There’s struggle and pain and frustration and disillusionment. But transcending all that, there is the Lord in his glory and goodness, giving everything we need, giving joy and blessing and fullness of life in him. My heart is so full today!

So much has happened, I can’t recount it all to you, but I’ll try to give a few highlights. Things are certainly busier now. Saturdays are our “day of rest”. Today was very restful, but last Saturday we had a fun, tiring day snorkeling and hiking through the jungle. A PNG man from the village nearby led us up to some “skullcaves” which is just what it sounds like: caves with dozens of skulls of victims of cannibals. Our guide assured us though that they were not skulls of his people, but skulls of people his people had eaten. (Cannibalism is no longer in practice, so no worries).

Two big things this past week have been the female youth bible study on Monday. I’m not sure how well we’re communicating, but I think it went well. I know that at least one of the girls, Jacinta, is not a Christian. We invited the Sunday school class and their friends. About 12 came, which is more than expected. Rachel and I shared the teaching about equally, which went smoothly (praise God!). We drove some girls home and on the way one asked us “If you sin one day and God forgives you, and then you sin again the next day, will he forgive you again?” It just blew me away to be able to explain God’s grace and forgiveness, and the gospel basically, to someone who wasn’t familiar with the concept already!

The second major event of the week would be giving a presentation to the town high school on American culture and as much of our Christian viewpoint as we wanted. They don’t have the trouble with Church and State being mixed like the U.S. does. About 400 students were there, and 3 of us sat on stage and answered some prepared questions Marcus asked, and then students came up and asked questions. Afterwords they flocked around us for almost an hour asking more questions and getting our address to be “pen-friends”. Our main purpose for doing that was to invite them to the youth camp we’re doing later this summer, and also to make contacts and hopefully correct misconceptions about America. The people here generally have the attitude that white people are better, because we’re seen as richer and better educated. I don’t like it, and I try to take every opportunity to praise them and their culture and to ask questions and learn from them.

prayer requests: intern relationships (they're ok, but that they will be filled with grace and wisdom and stay healthy and have good communication), that when we go to the Trobriand Islands the elections will be done, the youth camp coming up, health of missionaries and interns (several people have been sick lately), our girls bibly study. Thank you so so much!

Thursday, June 7, 2007

What is a missions internship?

We hadn’t really realized that different missionaries might have very different answers to this question. We expected to be told what to do, and that most of what we would be doing would be observing, shadowing, and learning from what the missionaries are already doing. However, the missionaries have expected us to have goals and take a lot more initiative and come up with our own things to do. Since everyone speaks English here that’s a lot more possible that in most countries. We do have scheduled things to take part in, but not enough to fill up our days. We have had a hard time between that and the slower pace of life in general, some of us more than others. Communication is starting to be better though and we’re starting to get a better feel for what’s expected of us. This is what Marcus outlined as goals for the internship in a “session” with him last week:

-to be a case study of this mission team’s work (to learn what mission work is on a practical level)

-to try some work ourselves-grow in skills

-talk to missionaries on field, get advice, learn from their wisdom, experiences, etc.

-doing-productive time

-adapting to culture

Since my last blog: One day of learning with Marcus: sessions on goals, how to treat yourself and others on this internship, schedule, history of all churches in area, and animism/witchcraft in this culture. Most people are “churched” but churches are very territorial, controlling, political institutions. Missionaries came in years ago and literally divided up the land geographically for where each one would evangelize. So each area or village is “owned” by a certain denomination. Also, the old traditions of magic and witchcraft and are very embedded in life still and mixed with their christian religions. That night Logan got home and us girls made Pizza.

The next day was the “Amazing Race” where we were divided into teams and ran all over town with clues finding places, completing tasks, etc. That was fun and helped us learn our way around. Sunday Luke went to the Gama village church, and the rest went to town church. The female interns are taking turns teaching the female youth (12-20) class, so I sat in on that even though it wasn’t my week. I’ll do it this Sunday coming up. Sunday afternoon we sat in on a study with a new Christian, named Minnie, which me and Bekah will take over starting this Sunday coming up. That night we went with Leslie to an evanglistic study with a teacher at the International school named Josephine. So far this week we’ve had meeting for the youth camp, and one for the survey trip we’re taking to the Trobriand Islands, went to two mid-week bible studies with the church, met individually with Marcus to talk about anything we need to talk about and short and long term goals, sat in on a church history class Leslie taught (which was really really interesting. I’m coming to respect Leslie a LOT as a scholar and theologian), met with Jeri one-on-one, and met with Diane to talk about a study with the youth girls Rachel and I want to start.

Talking with Jeri was very helpful. She encouraged me not to feel the pressure that I need to know for sure whether I’m going to end up doing long term missions or not. She shared struggles and doubts she’s had along the way and before coming especially. Even before talking to her I’d say that the main thing I’ve learned so far is that I can’t know what’s going to happen in my future and so I don’t have to commit to anything for sure. Lots of missionaries that I talk to never thought they would do end up doing this. I’m also learning that God has power over my shyness, and that that doesn’t mean I won’t FEEL shy still, but that He can work anyways. There’s so much more that I’m learning but can’t express yet. Thank you all sooo much for your prayers.

I’d love to hear from any of you. My email address is: bethany.cannon@gmail.com

Thursday, May 31, 2007

1st blog onsight! Basic Info, etc.

We’re here and if I put off writing any longer I’ll be too overwhelmed with the challenge of conveying everything and probably will just avoid trying… So I’m writing now. Internet is really slow and they pay by the minute so I probably will only update once a week or so.

The girls are staying with Leslie and Loopie Williams who have 4 sons, 2 of which (Tate and Thomas) are at home, and an adopted daughter, Bailey. The oldest son, Logan, is going to be a sophomore at Western Christian College in Canada. He arrives this afternoon. The boys are staying with Craig and Jerri (sp?) Ford until they leave in a couple weeks to have a baby on furlough. Then they will go to Marcus and Diane Reese’s house, and David and Jenna (Marcus brother and sister in law) will live in the Fords house. David and Jenna are not technically interns, but they came too and will do a lot of the same stuff as us. All the families are great, it’s fun to see how they interact. They have fun and a lot of respect for each other.

Traveling took about 30 hours from start to finish and we were all pretty beat. We all had dinner here at the Williams house and then went to bed. 7:00 pm here is 4:00 am central US time and that is what Loopie calls “pumpkin time”. I think being so tired from travel actually helped jumpstart us on getting on schedule here. I still wake up very early, but I stay in bed until 6 and then it’s nice to have time to get ready leisurely and read my Bible before the family is up. I’m going to try and stay on that schedule. It’s such a slower pace of life here, there’s no overwhelming sense of rush and stress like at school. It’s nice.

We skipped Monday flying over the international date line, and then we arrived Tuesday here and Wednesday was a “groove day” as Leslie called it. Basically nothing was planned and we rested. A coconut tree in the yard fell down at lunch and Susan, the woman who works around the house, showed us how to husk a coconut. The women, especially the young women and girls, are very shy here, but Susan talked with us plenty.

Yesterday we went over the tentative schedule for the summer and drove out to the location for the youth camp we’re doing in July. Luke and I rode in the back of the truck on the way out there and enjoyed to GORGEOUS scenery and the friendly people who all wave. People walk everywhere here there’s always lots on the road. We drove out of town about ½ hour and saw more of village life and bush houses than we had so far. At the village where the camp will be we met the man who translated the new testament into T’wala, one of the village languages nearby. There’s about 6 languages just in this Milne Bay area, but pretty much everyone speaks English.

Every update won’t be this long, but there’s some basic things I needed to explain so anything else would make sense.

Pray for: us to have wisdom and boldness and not be selfish. I’m kind of slapped in the face with how selfish I really am. That won’t work here. And pray for the church here.

Sunday, May 20, 2007

One week from today we will be on our way to PNG!

Looking back over this past year I can see God working in ways I couldn't have seen at the time. On the surface I would say not all that much happened. I was always busy, and things did happen, but in contrast to other years it was relatively uneventful. But that was used, or caused, by God to give me a firm foundation on Him and to teach me to rely on him and trust him for my future. I think those are things that will be important this summer and in life in general. Also this year and even especially this past week I've been thinking and praying about my identity in Christ, and that goes back to Him being my firm foundation. And I can joyfully and confidently say that whatever context I'm in, I know who I am in Christ, because I know who He is, and I know what He says is true. I was talking with my friend Lacy recently and she was talking about giving God a name for each year, based on what he's done in your life, etc. Well for this past year I would call God "My firm foundation" or "the God who knows". A treasure which I discovered in Matt Miller's bible study this year, and my new favorite verse as of a few months ago, is Psalm 11:3-4 "When the foundations are being destroyed, what can the righteous do? The Lord is in his holy temple; the Lord is on his heavenly throne." I think that verse addresses both of those names for God simultaneously.

I haven't tried to directly prepare myself for this summer. I don't think I really can, there's no way I can know what to expect. But I have prayed about it and sought God, and he will give me strength, and each next step as me feet fall, and everything else I will need.

Thank you for praying, God bless you all! I want to hear about your summers and what God is doing in your lives!

Friday, May 11, 2007

First Post! 16 days until departure!

I'm very excited for this summer! We finally got our plane tickets 2 days ago, Hurray! We will leave for Papua New Guinea May 27th and the team will meet up in L.A. I still have to do intercession (a full class in 2 weeks), which ends the 25th, so my mind will be on American History until that's over. I will update when I can over the summer. I don't know how reliable internet is over there, or how much time we'll have to do it anyways.

For those of you that don't know, my fellow interns are Luke Shaffer, Daniel Nicholas, Rachel Gould, and Bekah Gibb. They're all great people and I think we'll have fun and work well together. God has been faithful in this whole process and will continue to be. Praise Him! Please keep me (us) in your prayers this summer. I would love to receive emails or responses to these blogs, it would be a great encouragement! God bless!