Wednesday, March 25, 2009

A BEAUTIFUL SUNNY DAY

We had a beautiful sunny day in Cesis on Wednesday. While it was still very chilly, it was a nice day to get outside for a few hours. Our friend Ainars took us to a couple of local spots of beauty. One is the site of an old mill with a bridge over the cascading waterfall. There is a tradition in Latvia that as people get married they take a trip to a bridge and secure a lock on the railing, signifying that the marriage will last. In the photos below some of the locks are visible.

The second spot we visited was a location deep in the woods where two rivers come together. The water was incredibly cold but clear as glass. I've got my eye on this place for some good wading and fishing this summer.

Ainars' car is just regular two-wheel drive but we were going down some pretty rough terrain. The ground is still frozen so solid that you don't have to worry about getting stuck in the mud. Now, getting stuck in the snow is a different story.

It was a great afternoon, we still have clear skies tonight and the low is forecast to be 16F.

 

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Ainars and Laura

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

NO HOT WATER

 

The article below is from a good blog - Latvian Abroad . The financial problems are hitting everyone hard, even the college students.

Signs of crisis in everyday life

A Latvian college whose funding has been cut by 30-something % cuts off the hot water in the student dormitories:


Translation of the sign:

"Attention! From now on, hot water will be supplied only on Wednesdays from 15:00 to 23:00. Administration of [name of the institution]"

There are multiple reports of this happening in different places. And there are many more reports of heating turned off/down in classrooms and students sitting in classes in coats.

POSTED BY LATVIAN ABROAD AT 6:58 PM 0 COMMENTS LINKS TO THIS POST

LABELS: SIGNS OF CRISIS

ENCOURAGEMENT

State Basketball Tournaments, Spring Break, lousy weather, NCAA basketball tournament, Laura battling the flu; all of these combined to make us homesick and a little depressed this week. We’re not talking about can’t-get-out-of-bed depressed; just a little down and feeling sorry for ourselves.

Then, as God seems to always do, he put three things together that just touched our hearts, lifted our spirits and sent us on the way we need to go.

I was out Saturday in downtown Cesis and one of our elderly soup kitchen (diners?, clients?, eaters?, attendees?) ladies stopped me on the sidewalk. Now, this is really strange because in Latvia, even though you know someone, that doesn’t mean you are going to be acknowledged. She speaks no English but with just my basic Latvian I understood that she was going to the hospital; would not see us at the soup kitchen on Monday and would we be sure to pray for her. It seems like a small thing, but so many times we are ignored or get a blank stare here, that it was a great breakthrough that she felt comfortable enough to talk to me on the street and ask me to pray.

The next encouragement came on Monday and it involved almost the same thing. A lady that we have not seen in over 8 months stopped us and initiated a conversation. Her daughter has stopped coming to our youth group (neither she nor her mother are members of our church). She wanted to know if we knew why because she really wanted her daughter involved with what was going on with the youth. We were able to walk with her over to where Laura meets with the women’s Bible study and invite her to the meetings. Her daughter just emailed Laura to tell her how happy her mother was that she met us and to thank us for the kindness we showed. We will tell the daughter that her mother was the encouragement that we needed.

Lastly, today at the soup kitchen, Laura and I were working together filling the soup containers. A guy that eats quite often was in line. I spoke to him and tried not to stare at his face. He had dark sunglasses on (I don’t even remember what the sun looks like!) and I could tell someone or something had done a very good job of re-arranging his face. It was not a pretty sight. When he gets up to us, he starts talking to Laura and is trying to hand her something. We stop what we are doing and we can see that he is trying to give her a picture. A picture of Jesus. A very old black and white picture of Jesus, which is actually a post card. Laura at first didn’t know if he was showing it to her or giving it to her. He made it plain he was giving it to her. Wow!

Now this guy hasn’t seen too many sober days recently. You just have to wonder, why?

Why did he have this picture of Jesus?

Where did he get it?

What did it mean to him?

He has no money, he has no home, he has no car, and he has no other possessions that I can see.

Yet he chose to give that picture to her. Talk about bringing a lump to your throat.

What was God trying to tell us? Was it just encouragement? Was it a small sign that maybe this guy is thinking a lot more about Jesus than we give him credit for?

I don’t know but I do understand that each of these three situations ended up with both parties being blessed. Five people brought together in unique circumstances. Each seeking encouragement; each receiving encouragement from the small acts of kindness of others. Just a word on the street, just a kind voice, just an old wrinkled picture of Jesus.

How about you? Who do you need to encourage today? How much encouragement would a phone call, an email or an old-fashioned letter bring to someone today?

You might be the picture of Jesus to someone today.

 

Jesus 30001

Saturday, March 14, 2009

A DAY OF FIRSTS

Today, Saturday, March 14, 2009 was definitely a day of firsts:

  • First day in a l-o-n-g time that the temperature was near 40 degrees
  • First day since we have been back from the Christmas trip home that the sidewalks are completely clear of snow and ice. It sure makes getting around easier.
  • First day since we returned that I haven't worn my long handles (thermal underwear) outside.
  • First day since we returned that I haven't worn my biggest coat...switched over to my fleece.
  • First day that I actually just went outside to walk in the sun...without a knit cap, gloves and scarf.

I don't know how long it will be before there are more signs of spring but today was surely a great day.

It looks like we have some snow forecast for the end of next week but why look ahead?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Tough Questions

Laura at flat In Cesis, we live literally a ‘rock’s throw’ away from the entrance to the grounds of a restored castle. The actual building we live in is a house that has been converted into eight small apartments. In the eight apartments there are several older residents and a scattering of other ages. A couple of apartments have at least three generations living there together.

There is only one entrance; no lobby, just a small hall and stairway to the individual doors. As far as outside looks, it is about as uninviting and unimpressive as they come.

Across from our apartment door is an older lady that is nice and was a former organist at the Lutheran Church. Next to us is a lady that has a dog for her companion and he is quite vocal when we walk in front of her door. Diagonally from us are a couple of men that have a bit of an alcohol problem to say the least. I’ll never forget the look on Laura’s face when we stepped out of our door one day and there was one of them passed out on the floor. She looked at me and quietly said “What do I do?” I said “Don’t wake him up!”. Thankfully that only happened once but we always check the door before swinging it open.

Through the thin walls I can often hear the lady next to us as she sings, hums and sometimes even plays the piano. The singing often reminds me of my grandmother who would sing hymns as she worked around her house and garden.

The other lady on our floor seems to be a good cook. On weekends, we can often smell potatoes, chicken and fish being cooked. Most of it smells appetizing but some seems to not agree with our American sense of smell.

The third apartment is a different story. There is a constant smell when we walk by but it is never a pleasant odor. Cigarette smoke, mixed with alcohol, combined with wood stove smoke flows out of an apartment that hasn’t seen a clean floor in long, long time.

We have little contact with most of the people in our building, mainly because not a single one speaks any English. They know we are missionaries, they know we are Americans and they know we are different than them. We have tried to break the ice and it has thawed somewhat, especially since we gave small gifts to each apartment at Christmas. We nod and smile and give a few greetings in our beginning Latvian.

I have formed my impressions of each of them by what I hear (even though I don't know the language), what I see, what I smell and what I perceive their attitude to be.

I wonder what impression they have of me? What does the lady next door hear through her walls? When I come upon the two guys across the hall what type of attitude do I give off? How does my American way of life smell to the others in this building?

Do people know by our lives that we are Christian? We can’t tell them but do they see it? Do we smell like we follow someone different than the world follows? Does our daily voice sing a type of song that would make others want to know the words?

Tough questions.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

WORSHIPPING IN A BAR

Our good friend, Sams, is a Latvian pastor that also just happens to be from India. He is one of the most dynamic, God-inspired and God-led preachers that I have ever met. He started a new church about a year ago in Riga so Laura and I decided to visit him today.

He had told us that the church (House of God) was meeting between two casinos, of which there are numerous ones in the cities of Latvia. As we found the right entrance (next to the Las Vegas Casino) we were directed to the back of the building. The usual banquet room they rent for Sunday services was actually being used for a banquet so the House of God had to move. Yes, it moved to the bar...actually two bars joined together to get the approximately 125 worshipers into one place.

I have always heard that the church is not the building and that was proven today. Sams preached from Matthew 15:21-28, the story of the woman with the demon possessed daughter. He did a great job of relating the lady's history and where she came from to what many Latvians feel today. Most new Christians in Latvia have no other Christians in their family. Many come from divorced families, or alcoholic relatives and the suicide rate for Latvia is always in the top 5 of the world. His point was that we can't keep making excuses for our  problems today from what happened in our past. We have seen the same thing happen in some of the people we witness to. They feel that God cannot accept them because of what they have done or the generations before them have done. He zeroed in on 2 Corinthians 5:17 to prove his point. (Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!)

We always enjoy Sams' enthusiasm for worship, his desire to give all the recognition to God and the special way he can relate the scriptures so that everyone can understand God's messages. He is doing a great job of helping a new generation of young believers see the light. We pray that God will continue to bless him and the new church.

My parents always told me to stay out of the bars and get into the church. Today I did both.