A Collective Thank You!

My support-raising thermometer has been steadily going up. With all the one-time gifts factored in and a couple more pledged contributions coming in, I think it will probably reach 100% within a few days!

To all who have contributed: Thank you for sharing in the financial costs of ministry at BFA. Thank you for supporting not only me, but the families of many missionary kids. You are making it possible for me to go back for a 4th year!

To all who have spent time with me: Whether it was a half hour, half a day or half a month, your time was more precious to me than money. Thank you for being willing to move around your schedule to meet with me, listen to my stories, share your own, laugh with me, and spend way longer at restaurants than the typical American waiter understands! I hope you didn’t find the hovering waitresses as awkward as I did. You put up with my rambling stories about a place you’ve maybe never been and even asked questions to make me ramble even longer – the truth is, you actually wanted to know, and that means a lot to me. Thank you for the hours spent sharing coffee, waffles, ice cream, running, oatmeal, milk shakes, Mexican food, tea, books, soccer, sandwiches, camping, pancakes, thrift stores, Schnitzel, violin, smoothies, chicken, geysers, burgers, fondue, salt water, trails, concerts, and dunes. Thank you for the gift of your time and your physical presence with me.

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Earthen Vessels

This summer has been a time of physical presence in America. I have been physically present with friends, family, supporters – people I haven’t seen in months or years. Emails and blog posts keep people in the loop about what I’m doing; Skype allows me to talk face to face with my family. But technology cannot replace the significance of being bodily present with someone else. I can’t give my mom a hug over Skype. I can’t sense a friend’s mood through a blurred image or Facebook status updates. I can’t be sitting in the same room with someone while they’re on a different continent.

In a sermon today at Grace Church of DuPage, Dan Brendsel discussed 1 Corinthians 16. He raised an interesting question: Immediately after proclaiming the glories of the resurrection in chapter 15, Paul discusses such mundane things as travel plans and financial arrangements. What’s the connection?

God became flesh, so our experience as humans is not complete without addressing things of the body. Here’s the connection: If God made Himself bodily present in Christ, surely we should prioritize making ourselves bodily present with people (without a curtain of technology). Paul’s travel plans centered around his desire to be physically present with the Corinthians.

 I will visit you after passing through Macedonia, for I intend to pass through Macedonia, and perhaps I will stay with you or even spend the winter, so that you may help me on my journey, wherever I go. For I do not want to see you now just in passing. I hope to spend some time with you, if the Lord permits.But I will stay in Ephesus until Pentecost, for a wide door for effective work has opened to me, and there are many adversaries.

This passage from 1 Corinthians 16 suddenly struck me as very relevant to my particular situation. I was spending a summer in the US so some people could “help me on my journey” to BFA (aka financially). Yet Paul’s focus, and mine as well, was to spend time with people, not “just in passing.” Support raising is not so much about the money – it’s about developing partners who want to share in the ministry I do. They want to be physically present with me here so they can be present with me in spirit while I’m there (much like Paul’s yearnings for the Colossian church – see Colossians ch. 2).

Talking with so many people has been a stretch for my introverted self, but God has been blessing me with deepened relationships and an understanding and partnership of those “here” with me “there.” I know I have a network of people who will welcome me with open arms and help me with the transition back in a year. People who visited me in Germany (Mom & Dad, Erich, David, Abby & Chris, Kristin) have a fuller understanding of life there because they were present with me in the place I now call home. Their physical presence is now included in my collective memories of the place.

The ideas in Dan’s sermon coincided with concepts in Earthen Vessels by Matthew Lee Anderson (thanks to Jonathan for giving me the book!). I haven’t finished it yet, but a lot of the ideas were interesting and worth considering. Anderson claims that “the evangelical legacy with respect to the body seems to be more one of inattention than outright rejection or even a conscious ambivalence” (41).  Christian theologians tend to ignore the importance of the body in our faith, choosing instead to emphasize the exercise of our minds to grow in knowledge of God. Yet looking at the Bible, God makes his own declaration about the importance of the body through creation and the incarnation.

God created this body of dust in His own image. Then He came to live in that dust, that skin – “If ever there was a question about the goodness of the physical body, the incarnation of Jesus Christ definitely answered it” (21). Then God decided to dwell in all believers through the Holy Spirit – “the body is nothing less than the place where God dwells on earth” (50). “This is the paradox of the body: The body is a temple, but the temple is in ruins” (31). As it is a temple, we should treat the body as the dwelling place of God, not as an idol to fashion and shape into our own ideal image. We’re not to be in ruins forever, though. Jesus’ incarnation, death and resurrection are the inauguration of our own future bodily resurrection. We’re not going to be weird floating translucent spiritual beings in Heaven – we’re going to be resurrected with real, physical, glorified bodies!

So as a real embodied human with God living in me, I am an earthen vessel. I have a physical presence, and this body is in Illinois right now but will be in Germany by Thursday. I’m thankful that I have been fully present here this summer, present with people physically as well as mentally and emotionally. I also look forward to Heaven when I won’t have these physically and emotionally demanding goodbyes.

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Videos about BFA

About BFA:

About TCKs and BFA students:


About my work at BFA:

Thanks for watching! Financial contributions go to WorldVenture.

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Road Trip Statistics & Overview

Jill’s stats:

  • Miles traveled by car – 3838.6
  • Miles driven – ~100
  • Average miles per gallon – 33.3
  • Days away – 17
  • # Places Slept – 8
  • Photos taken – 704
  • Hey Cow* score – 21 Cows + 4 Horses + 3 Sheep + 3 Antelope + 2 Llamas = 33
  • Bible books read – John; 1, 2, & 3 John; Jude; Revelation
  • Books read – Orthodoxy by G.K. Chesterton, Mother Theresa: Come Be My Light by Brian Kolodiejchuk, Der Schiefe Turm von Brooklyn: Über Lehre und Leben der Zeugen Jehovas von Martin Döring, More than a Carpenter by Josh McDowell
  • Started but incomplete: Kleider Machen Leute von Gottfried Keller, Earthen Vessels by Matthew Lee Anderson

David’s stats:

  • Miles traveled by car – 5859.6
  • Miles driven – ~5760
  • Average miles per gallon – 33.5
  • Days away – 21
  • # Places Slept – 9
  • Photos taken – 848
  • Hey Cow* score – 9 Cows
  • Bible passages heard – John; 1, 2, & 3 John; Revelation
  • Books read – 0

*Hey Cow is an unusual road game played in rural areas. Participants shout “Hey Cow” out the car window when cows (or other animals) are within hearing distance. Each animal that looks up in response is one point. Passengers have an obvious advantage over drivers; David’s cow points demonstrate impressive skills in shouting shockingly loudly across the median of an already loud interstate.

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Road Trip Days 17-21

July 19-23 (Thursday-Monday) – Denver-Chicago (via Wyoming, South Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin for David)

This 17th and final day of The Great Road Trip was not actually David’s last day, and it wasn’t entirely a road trip.

After a final chapel session at headquarters, we had one last coffee stop and drove to the airport. When I landed in Chicago, I went straight to a bachelorette party for my friend from high school. The following 2 days were a blur of weddingness, and Sunday I started recovering. Monday I started doing more things on my to-do list, including these blog updates!

      

While I was flying and doing wedding stuff, David was on the road. He drove to Wheaton’s Black Hills campus to visit his former roommate, then drove to Minnesota to visit his girlfriend again. He returned home today!

Whew, what a trip!

I have 2 1/2 weeks left to see people here in Illinois, and my schedule is filling up, so email or call if you want to meet up!

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Road Trip Day 16

July 18 (Wednesday) – Littleton/Denver

David and I both forgot to take pictures that day. Katrina and I had meetings all day at headquarters; David drove in to Denver and explored (after sleeping in late). He was an amazing little brother and brought me coffee in the middle of the day! I may have fidgeted a bit more in the afternoon meetings due to the caffeine rush, but that’s better than falling asleep, right?

Amanda came again in the evening. The Watsons fed us all dinner – it was an entertaining dinnertime conversation. Their daughter Hannah has been in orchestra with me the last 2 years; in fact, she’s the one who dubbed me The Blond Tomato. I tried to convince her to call me something besides a tomato – like maybe a stop sign or something else red. “The Blond Stop Sign” doesn’t have quite the same ring to it, I guess.

When she saw David, she knew right away he was my brother. She even guessed that he’s younger. Why? “Well, you’re in your 20s since you’re a teacher, but he still looks like a teenager.” Everyone else guesses that David is the older one (or that we’re twins), but this smart cookie won’t be duped by looks when logic can give her better information!

The Watsons are leaving for a year, but when they return to BFA, I’ll be leaving. I’m thankful for the support and encouragement the Watsons have given me in the past 3 years at BFA. We’ve celebrated birthdays, eaten meals, and played rowdy games of Dominion at their kitchen table. Next year Emily and I will be using their car, which is a huge blessing, but I’m still sad for their absence in this coming year.

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Road Trip Day 15

July 17 (Tuesday) – Littleton/Rocky Mt. National Park

Katrina and I went to headquarters in Littleton. We collaborated on our presentation so we wouldn’t overlap so much in our talk about BFA. We had other meetings throughout the day as well.

Meanwhile, David drove out to Rocky Mountain National Park to go hiking. He had to deal with sun, heat, high altitude, and dry air. On his way back, he felt a bit sick, and then the car had some minor brake troubles! He eventually made it back to Littleton safely, though.

After our meetings, Katrina and I met up with Amanda, RA and travel buddy during her 2 years at BFA. It was good to see her again and catch up! We ate at a Turkish restaurant in memory of our trip to Ephesus a year and a half ago.

It’s helpful to meet up with her in different stages of her transition back to the US, knowing that I’ll be doing the same thing in a year.

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Road Trip Day 14

July 16 (Monday) – Littleton

We arrived one day before the Home Assignment Debriefing time at the WorldVenture headquarters. This was intentional – I wanted to settle in and have time for extra meetings.

Katrina arrived in the morning, so David, Katrina and I ventured out and found a good coffee shop – Solid Grounds. Katrina and I planned our presentation for the next day. We were working hard, contrary to the happy-go-lucky facade these pictures portray. Honest.

I met with my mid-term mission coach at Headquarters. It was encouraging, and great to see her face to face to debrief my time with WorldVenture in Germany.

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Road Trip Day 13

July 15 (Sunday) – Idaho-Utah-Colorado

We woke up, packed our tent, ate breakfast at a little diner nearby, and had church on the road (nothin’ like reading the book of Revelation for a bit of excitement on a Sunday morning!). I was hoping to run into a Mormon in Utah, but it was not meant to be. Utah was a beautiful state, though.

We arrived at our hotel around 10pm. It felt nice to sleep in a bed again!

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Road Trip Day 12

July 14 (Saturday) – Seattle-Oregon-Idaho

On the road again! David and I decided to split up the drive to Colorado so it wouldn’t be one long strenuous drive with an early-morning start and a late-night finish.

  

We camped at an RV park for a very cheap $12; the grass was super cushy!

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