Sunday, August 28, 2005

Introvert's Society



Board meeting of the Introvert's Society at our home yesterday.
Very little was said.


Monday, August 22, 2005

Bringing Together Worlds Apart

By any measure our week in the Algarve, Portugal’s Mediterranean sandbox, was a success. Everyone, including Debbie and Vitor, had a nice time. Drex snorkeled and bonded with Austin over Pokemon cards and shell collection. I swam in the sea each day. We got a dog, or, more precisely, got on the waiting list for a puppy from the next litter of a Portuguese Water Dog (motto: “The dog and the sea are one.” This is said to be the only breed of dog with webbed feet.) We bought a house.



The Portuguese Water Dog.
Drex was looking for a pet with whom he shares things in common.
Hairstyle, for example.
For more trip photos click http://www.flickr.com/photos/vitor-austin


Some people read books when they go on vacation. Some people play cards. Some people sleep. Debbie does all those things, but she also looks at real estate ads. Its her way of getting oriented. That’s nothing new. What was different on this trip was that she had Vitor to make her telephone calls. It is presumed that a Portuguese voice, as opposed to a foreign one, lowers the price of real estate here 5 - 10%. So along with family outings to the nature preserve and water park, there were family outings, led capably by Vitor, to look at houses. We hadn’t looked long before the wedding money in Vitor and Austin’s pocket began burning a hole. VisitingPortugal had been thinking about adding another property for some time in hopes of coming closer to providing a living for its proprietors. Offering our clients an alternative outside Lisbon was one strategy that had been discussed. Ilha da Armona, or Armona Island, where Casa Armona is situated, is three hours from Lisbon, a bit further than we might have expected, but the Algarve is arguably the most logical place for people to stay who are also spending time in Lisbon. Partnership with Austin and Vitor was also a huge part of the appeal. I don’t know what it is about my family and remote islands accessible only by ferry where motorized vehicles are not permitted—my parents live on Mackinac Island, Michigan—but apparently it’s contagious. Please pray that God would glorify Himself through VisitingPortugal and everything it touches.

For the August 2006 Habitat for Humanity Global Village trip I hope to lead to Mozambique we have tentatively chosen the theme, “Bringing Together Worlds Apart.” One of our goals is to raise money for at least four trip scholarships, two for young people from America and two for young people from Portugal. It is hoped that, from each of those pairs, one scholarship would go to a writer and the other to a visual artist. Their writing and art in response to the trip would be one benefit we offer our supporters. What usually happens with Global Village is that participants are older people with considerable disposable income. Nothing wrong with that. Homes get built for families in need and people are touched by the gospel of Jesus Christ. But a Global Village trip can be an especially powerful, formative experience for a young person, and if that young person happens to be an artist or a writer, skilled at conveying something of an experience to others, all of us might be richly blessed. Of course, for anything of value to come from all this God must bring it to fruition. Will you pray with me that He does so?

Thank you for your prayers. The Lord bless you this week.






Monday, August 08, 2005

We are not a beach

If Drex’s transfer from school in Braga to school in Lisbon had gone smoothly, it just would not have seemed like Portugal to us. True to form, “Não é possível,” for Drex to go to his neighborhood school, even though we’ve jumped through all the right hoops. But we aren’t rookies at Portuguese bureaucracy any more, so we’ve dutifully, cheerfully, prayerfully run all over town trying to discover the place God has for Drex in the fall. We’ve ended up where we began, at the neighborhood school, where, ironically, we met the one administrator who has not been helpful, sympathetic and encouraging. She may not be happy when she finds Drex’s paperwork back in her inbox but, again ironically, she was the one who marked out for us the path that brought us back to her door. Officially it remains impossible for Drex to go there. The school is temporarily being housed in a converted bank while its regular building is remodeled and students are already “on top of one another.” Thankfully, all things are possible with God. Thank you for your ongoing prayers.

People who have been following our news from Portugal for a while will be acquainted with the story of our first visit to church in Braga, in the summer of 2000, while we were in town volunteering with Habitat for Humanity: We went to the church of then-president of Habitat, Silas Pego. His son, Jónatas, greeted us exuberantly at the door in perfect English, having grown up in Iowa. Jónatas is now Austin’s brother-in-law; Austin is the aunt of Silas’s grandchildren. But another striking thing happened that first Sunday in Braga, another little manifestation of God’s love and care for us. Visiting Jónatas and his wife, Carla, that weekend from Lisbon were their friends, Canadian Ron Fairbanks, his Portguese wife, Idália, and their four children, Hannah, Tamara, Jason and Joel. Tamara was the first person his age Drex had seen in over a month who spoke English. While their parents talked, the four-year-olds got acquainted, and as the conversation drew to a close, the tiny figures of Drex and Tamara, walking hand in hand, could be seen silhouetted against the light at the other end of a pedestrian underpass. It is one of my most precious images of that summer. The Fairbanks had never been to Braga before and have never returned. Now it appears as if the answer to your prayers that God would show us where we ought to go to church in Lisbon may be Tamara’s. Debbie and I met with the pastor, Paulo Cheveiro, last week and he said a lot of things that made us think we might get along nicely. The church strategy for growth is through small groups. Pastor Cheveiro does a daily radio show based upon sermons of old-time Southern pastor J. Vernon McGee, one of Debbie’s dad’s favorite radio pastors, of whom Debbie does a passable imitation. Tamara has grown into a lovely young lady with blue lagoon eyes. Neither she nor Drex has any recollection of their meeting in Braga. All of us will be starting fresh.

If you needed Debbie and you heard she was on vacation you would probably want to look in the more remote corners of the Iberian peninsula. Nontouristy places the guidebooks recommend for long walks or historic esoterica. If you saw crowds you would know you could look elsewhere. Beaches would be out; what’s a beach but sun that burns you, wind that makes you cold, water that makes you wet and the invasion of your personal spaces by sand and inappropriately dressed persons, neither of which will go away? Why would anyone go to a beach? Love. The Algarve, Portugal’s Mediterranean coast, is the one part of Portugal Drex has not visited. He loves the beach. He wants to go. Coincidentally, so do the other 9,999,999 inhabitants of Portugal, even though they were all there last summer. Each August Portugal takes a group photograph with everyone arrayed along that sandy strip. Lisbon is empty, except for a few Spaniards who are also forced from their homes by custom in August. So for the next seven days, by the grace of God, Debbie will be looking on the bright side: sleeping late, quality time with her loving family, no food preparation responsibilities. Austin and Vitor are coming along, though not without some trepidation. Just as Debbie came from a quiet, nonverbal family culture twenty-three years ago and married into the Kleber Family Circus, so Vitor has heretofore led a peaceful life. But we are not strangers to introversion. We can handle this. We know how to respect people’s personal space, even when it is more ample than average. We are not a beach. Please pray everyone has a nice time.

Thank you very much for loving us and praying for us. Boas ferias (Have a nice vacation). The Lord bless you this week.