Saturday, February 16, 2013

Making Lemonade


Our granddaughters, Zoe and Mykah Bontrager-Thomas,
with their lemonade stand in their own living room,
because outside is winter.

We are not really making literal lemonade, although it would taste good to have a glass. I am thinking about the saying, “When life gives you lemons, make lemonade.” Just for fun, I added a picture of our granddaughters and their lemonade stand. 
We were invited to attend the bishops’ missions workshops the last few days of January (see the previous blog post). The main purpose for the workshop was to build vision and ownership among the bishops for missions outreach, and then they will share the material with their pastors. We were asked to put the proceedings and presentations together in a format that the bishops can use it as a manual to present to their leaders.
Now for the lemons. During the workshop, we were told that our residence permits for Tanzania had not yet been applied for (we have been here 4 months already) because some documentation was still needed, and that we should not begin leading seminars in Tanzania while we are in the country on a tourist visa. We won’t go into detail about the missing documents, just to say that we had submitted them but they apparently got misplaced.
We had scheduled 2 training seminars for the 2 weeks following, so suddenly we had 2 weeks unscheduled, available for whatever. As it turned out, we decided to go to Nairobi, where we needed to check in with a couple people anyway and we would have a quiet place to work on the missions manual.  So that is what we did. By Wednesday of the second week, we had finished the manual and took it to a local copy center to make bound copies for the bishops. It includes the presentations, and we wrote and added a study guide to help with presenting the materials to others.  So the manual was the “lemonade” that came from the “lemons” of our permits being delayed.
Workshop participants gather for prayer.
The presentations included biblical foundations for missions, Anabaptist perspectives on missions, the role of African churches in missions, and practical pointers on engaging in cross-cultural missions. Our prayer is that the workshop and the manual will energize the churches to follow Jesus’ command to “preach the gospel to all peoples.”
Another bit of "lemon" came after we printed the manual. I took the finished product on a flash drive for them to copy. When I got back, I discovered a virus had gotten into the flash drive and corrupted all the files. Apparently, the virus came from the copy center. But at least, I had the hard copy. However, I did a Google search and found a way to recover the lost files, and it worked. So grateful!

1 comment:

  1. You guys are amazing! Such grace in making "lemonade." Sounds like an awesome resource!

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