Saturday, November 25, 2006

Go Hoatzins? :)


Thanksgiving has come and gone. Is it now the big rush to get ready for Christmas? Not quite. Give me a minute. My son, Joel sent us a Thanksgiving greeting and entitled it “What does your Thanksgiving look like?” Good question--What do you think?

When I was kid it was awesome—we got a 4 day weekend with a great meal on Thursday and turkey sandwiches for a week with mayo and mustard—great stuff. Mom (the more spiritual one in our family) would make sure that we invited others to dinner that were lonely or needy so I never remember a meal at Thanksgiving, Christmas or Easter with just our family. We would play sandlot softball or football in Florida or just play outside a lot. We did a lot of visiting too as I remember--oh, the good ole days, eh? Later on I always tried to be thankful for the blessings God had given me and not focus on Christmas yet. For me it was great. Share a memorable one with me, wouldya?

The Thanksgiving we just had was great. After speaking on Sunday in the interior of Guyana at a river town called Kwakwani and helping to dismantle an old house (I love being positively destructive—destructive in a good way) in order to build a new church building, Thursday found us with another missionary family remembering Thanksgiving back at the coast. We had a swell (that is a retro word, I suspect) time singing, praying, reading a couple of Psalms, sharing and eating together (victualizing, if you are inclined to play Scrabble.)

After dinner while you perhaps watched football to settle your stomach we bounced around in the back of a truck to a special area in the bush called the backdam where we were able to observe the National Bird of Guyana, the Canje Pheasant also called the Hoatzin (It is quite unique with spurs on its wings, I think.) ¾ of the residents in Guyana have never seen it so we are blessed.

So what really made Thanksgiving special for me was the worship time and fellowship that we had with our friends—the food didn’t hurt the day either, believe me! Our God is so compassionate to forgive our life-long sins, provide eternal life and a relationship with Him through the death and resurrection of Jesus. Do you know Him for sure? Write me.

I miss you all, especially at the holidays but I have found that if I pray intensely for those I miss I become quite content knowing that God will bless them in my absence and provide people in my neck of the woods to befriend or have fellowship with.

Well as I sign off I want you to know that we have been treated real well down here lately. I am sipping “Yuban Coffee” from my French Press Starbucks cup because I am running low on coffee filters. The entire country of Guyana seems to out of stock of them. However—as God would have it, I mentioned my need to a store owner who is friendly with me and he said that he would have his wife pick some up for me when she comes from Canada for Christmas on December 3rd. You see how God provides even in little insignificant ways as well as the major ways. I also used our microwave for the 1st time since in Guyana this go around because we have full voltage now (115 V instead of 90-100 V). We now have hot water for our shower too so I starting to feel guilty as a missionary—like I am not really being deprived of much!

I am thankful and trusting that the Lord will use us for His Glory as we interact with others this Christmas. I prayed this morning that I would not be in such a hurry this season that I would not listen to the Holy Spirit as He leads me to opportunities to share the Love of Christ with my neighbors and those I interact with this during this special, wonderful season.

Love to all ~ Joe

2 comments:

Jihan said...

Hiii, I just found your blog... Its very interesting... Makes me miss Guyana even more.. I guess you now have a new Audience..

Anonymous said...

Joe and Terri, We met very briefly when y'all came to Grace Community Fellowship in Newnan GA. My kids remember y'all because both of you treated them as real people! Our eldest is studying Bible and planning on going to New Tribes Mission Training Center. She has been to SA 2x and hopes to work there. We are so glad for blogs in general and yours in particular. We want to know how "real" missionaries live. God bless, Kaycee Mancas