THOUGHTS ON THE FIRST YEAR
It's hard to imagine that we completed our first year of training and have made the 2,000 mile trip back to Montana for the summer (which was uneventful except the pig manure water sprayed all over the suburban in Dalhart, Texas). This first year of training has been so good. As I reflect on the year, three areas keep coming to the forefront of my mind. Here are a few quick thoughts.
This year I have been given a tremendous amount of theological tools for long term mission work. How to rightly divide the Word of God is critical. I have been given the confidence to take any section of scripture and teach it. I had the privilege to use this skill many times in Mexico and in various bible studies throughout the year. To see that everything in the Old Testament was written to anticipate, prepare, and show in a shadow form Jesus Christ has opened wide the Scriptures to me. I shouldn't be surprised, Jesus said almost the same thing in Luke 24:44. I have so much to learn, but I'm excited to continue teaching and training others what I have received!
One of the amazing aspects of this program is that we spent one week every month for a total of 9 weeks with the people of Village "M". We were able to practically apply our classroom training and build real relationships with the village. "R" and his family(pictured above) have experienced wonderful growth in Christ! He and his family are hungry for more discipleship and looking to help share these truths with others in the village. My heart is excited to build on this foundation for next year.
Finally, the way the Lord has worked in my heart this year. It has been an up and down roller coaster to depend fully on Christ alone and seek my joy from Him through deadlines and disappointments. Constant school work, learning at warp speed, going into Mexico and leaving Brita and the kids for a week every month, and most notably with the disappointment of being diagnosed with diabetes and missing the Papua New Guinea trip last February. I do know that through those experiences Jesus satisfies fully because He is all sufficient. Those same disappointments and stresses have also been some of the greatest sources of joy this year. As David Sitton, the president of To Every Tribe reminded us, the Christian life is a paradox of sorrow and rejoicing. Not one and then the other, rather both at the same time. We've tasted some of that this year and long for others to taste and see that the LORD is good!
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