Sunday, June 13, 2010

The End

My time in New Zealand is coming to an end, and I have many mixed feelings about it. I’ve been on two more weekend trips since my last post—one to Cathedral Cove again, and one out to the Napier area—and I’m now on my second ministry week. For this week, I’m up in the Beachlands and Maraetai area near Auckland. We’re doing a kids afterschool program, Bible in Schools, helping with services, community service, and more. Basically we’re showing God’s love to the people around us.

Anyway, back to the subject of going home…I absolutely love it here. I’m learning and learning and growing and growing, and I don’t want it to stop! Not that it has to when I go home, but it won’t be as prevalent. And the people I’ve met here? Wow, I’m going to miss them! Yes, I’m excited to see my family and my friends from home, but it’s definitely bittersweet—especially concerning some people here…

Well, I’ve got about ten thousand pictures to show all of you when I get home! Just kidding. I’ll go through them and only pick out the good ones. :) Home time in two and a half weeks. I can’t believe it’s been five months….

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Eventfulness...

Wow, this past weekend has been eventful! First, I found out that Dan, one of the guys who came on our trip to the Far North last term, was going home Tuesday. The five of us who went on that trip decided we had to go on another one this weekend before he went home. So Friday night after we all got back from our various youth groups, Mark, Janessa, me, Dan, and Matt headed to the beach. We stopped at some glow worm caves on the way and went on a midnight hike through the caves. It was amazing! Glow worms look like bluish stars.

When we got to our camp spot, it was about 2:00 AM, so we set up our tents in a picnic area and went to sleep. The next morning, we all went for a walk down Marokopa Beach, which was absolutely beautiful. The sand was black, and there were cliffs and hills and rocks. Wow, it was nice. And the tide was coming in, so we kind of got trapped and a little wet on the way back.

Next, we headed to Marokopa Falls, which we’d been to on two-week break, but Dan hadn’t been there before. It was raining though, so we didn’t stay long. Then we headed to Kawhia Beach, which is the hot water one I went to one my first family night here in NZ. Mark stayed in the car because I guess the plan was to only stay for like twenty minutes. We had a birthday party to get to that night still. So the other four of us headed to the beach. I should mention that Janessa and Dan started dating about three weeks prior to this trip, so they of course went on a walk by themselves, and Matt and I hung out.

Well, twenty minutes turned into an hour and twenty minutes. Mark didn’t notice because he fell asleep in the car. It was a really great time, and that beach is beautiful. One of my favourites I’ve been to in NZ for sure.

Anyway, we headed back to Hamilton for Ewen’s birthday party, which was a medieval dress up party (that was awesome). We ate food and then had a dance party. :) Janessa and Dan left part way through to talk outside. They’re both pretty quiet people, so it made sense. Matt and I were both extremely tired from staying up so late the night before, so after a while, we just sat on the stage and talked.

All right, here comes the crazy part. We got back to Capernwray about 10:00 (curfew is at 10:30), and Matt and I went for a walk. I should let you know now that I’d liked him for a while, and we’d been hanging out a lot more often lately, and I was going to tell him I liked him because it was obvious to about everyone but us that the feeling was mutual. Anyway, I was about to say something, but he brought it up just before I did. We talked, and…well, I have a boyfriend. :D He’s from Colorado, going to school in New York in the fall. I know it’s going to be difficult, but if Jesus stays in the center of it all, we’ll see what happens.

As for lectures this last week, the director of the South Island Capernwray (The Crossing) and his intern were teaching about the Progress of Redemption. Basically, we went through the entire Bible and saw from start to finish what God’s plan for saving us is.

Thank you all again for your prayers.

Sunday, May 2, 2010

Update

Wow, I haven’t written on here in a long time! A lot has happened since my last entry. Ministry week was awesome. I absolutely loved it. My billets were cool, even though they lived 40 minutes outside the city we were working in. We did a lot of driving. Ended up in a ditch at one point. ;) If you want to hear about that one, ask me sometime.

Shortly after ministry week, we headed out on two week break, which was actually 18 days. That was absolutely amazing! I have to say, I was slightly worried about it at first because there were 13 of us in our group (we took a van and a car), and it’s hard to coordinate that many people. The first night camping pretty much sucked. We did a lot of arguing and getting annoyed with each other. But the next morning we prayed together, especially for unity in our group. And guess what? It happened! Things just got better and better after that prayer. The weather too. We had absolutely gorgeous whether the entire time. I mean, it was cold sleeping in tents and we had frost in the morning a couple times, but every time it rained super hard, we just happened to be staying with someone in a house! God is good!!

Hopefully you’ve seen my three albums of pictures on Facebook, but basically the gist of our trip was driving a lot, seeing lots of sights, bungy-jumping :D, and all sorts of other things. It was so much fun, and I got to know everyone so much better.

As soon as second term started, wow we had a lot of assignments. Bible studies to write, oral reports, study papers, organizing a big youth event called Breakthrough. It's crazy! I'd appreciate it if you'd pray for my stress levels. ;)

As for what I’ve been learning…well, I don’t know if I can even explain it. I feel as if I hadn’t grown at all last term, and now that second term is started, I’m just learning and growing like crazy! Simple truths that I always thought I understood have jumped out at me in new ways. Questions I didn’t struggle with before are coming up and confusing me like crazy. I wish I had a profound thought to share with you all, but I don’t. Well, except one...

It’s not about us. It’s about Jesus.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Ministry Week

Last week was ministry week at Capernwray. Basically, it's like a local short term missions trip. My group went to a church called Calvary Chapel in Hamilton. The church was based out of a school because they didn't have a building. Their denomination teaches straight from the Bible all the time, passage by passage, which I thought was pretty cool.

Anyway, our group did a lot with the church. We went to the service Sunday, church scavenger hunt picnic that afternoon, led worship at the prayer meeting Monday, led a homegroup on Wednesday, youth group on Thursday, street evangelism on Friday, another picnic on Saturday, and took the whole church service the next Sunday.

Besides the church, we worked with the school. It was about age 5 to 12ish. We were split into groups at lunchtimes and led optional activities for the kids. I helped with drama games. It was crazy because the kids were crazy, but it was really fun. And the kids really enjoyed it. :)

We also did community service type stuff during the mornings and afternoons. The first day, we dropped off letters in people's mail boxes, then the next day we knocked on people's doors to see if they wanted any help with anything such as housework or yardwork. We got a few jobs to do, and I think the people we helped were really thankful for it. The point of that was just to show Jesus' love to people through helping them out with practical work.

Some of the most challenging things for me on ministry week were sharing my testimony and street evangelism. I did my testimony at the youth group and...well, let's just say I felt I had to be open with them, and it was hard. But I'm glad I did it. And street evangelism was just something I've never done before. We went on in partners and had a youth culture survey to get people to fill out. There were a couple questions in it to start conversations about God. The hardest thing was actually walking up to someone and starting to talk to them. But I think we genuinely got some people to think about God more carefully and seriously. And maybe to ask more questions.

Okay, now a funny story. Sunday night, the first Sunday, a bunch of us went out for supper for one girl's birthday. On the way home, we dropped off a couple people at their billets. But it as dark and we couldn't find the next one. So we're driving around in the country (four girls in a van) in the dark, passed the house, turned around...passed it again. Then we tried turning around on this random side road. Not a good plan. Our wheels got stuck in a ditch and we absolutely could not get that van out. After probably 15 minutes of trying to get out and failing miserably, we called the pastor of the church we were helping out (also my billet) to come tow us out. He laughed. 45 minutes later, we're out of the ditch. It was hilarious and quite a good story to tell later.

Anyway, that's all for now. I've just left for two week break. Might get to a computer again. We'll see. Heading to the South Island!! :D

Thursday, March 18, 2010

The Far North

Last Thursday, the guys at school all put on a girls’ night for us. It was super awesome. We all got dressed up and met in the seminar room. Then one by one the guys each came up to the room and escorted a girl. Basically it was just whichever was closest. At least for most people. We walked through the garden in partners and got pictures taken, which was kind of awkward but kind of cool. Then we ended up on the porch of the homestead. It seriously looked as if we were at a wedding or a grad banquet. The setting was beautiful. The food and dessert was great, and the guys served us all evening. Really great. Really cute. :)

Friday, I went on another weekend trip. Five of us—me, Janessa, Mark, Dan, and Matt—took Mark’s car and drove up to the Far North. The first night, we left about 10:30pm and reached the Bay of Islands at 4:00am. We set up our tents in a random lot on a hill and slept till 8:00. Then we went to a bakery for breakfast and headed off to Ninety-Mile Beach. We drove around there for a while. It was super fun! And we attempted skim-boarding but failed miserably.

After that, we went to some huge sand dunes that were 200 feet tall and so steep! We rented a board (sort of like a boogy-board) and sledded down the dunes. It was so fun! We got very, very sandy. Then we went to a beach and went swimming…tried to wash the sand off…failed. Then we had macaroni and creamy tomato mozzarella sauce—well, what Mark didn’t end up wearing. Check out the pictures on Facebook.

Then we headed to Cape Reinga, which is the north point. Oh my goodness, it was amazing! We stood on a huge cliff and looked out at the ocean, and there was nothing there. It was so cool! Again, look at pictures.

We drove to the Karikari Peninsula after that and set up our tents near a beach. Slept till 8:00 again, then headed home. It would have only taken us seven hours to get back to school, but we got caught in construction/accident traffic in Auckland for two hours. Anyway, great trip. So fun! Can’t wait for two week break!

Next week is ministry week. We’re split into teams of around ten each and spread all over the North Island. My group is in Hamilton at a church called Calvary Chapel. They’re based out of a school because they don’t have a church building. We’re leading a couple church services, hanging out with school kids at lunch times and doing activities with them—basketball, soccer, drama games, crafts. I’m involved in the drama stuff. We’re also doing community service stuff where we’re just going to go to people’s houses and ask if they need anything done. Like gardening, car washing, vacuuming, that sort of thing. Friday we’re doing street ministry. I’m kind of nervous about that, but it should be a good experience. Anyway, I could use a lot of prayer for that week. It’s going to be stretching. And pray for the people we’re going to meet, just that we’d be able to show Jesus’ love to them.

Thanks everyone! I really appreciate your prayers! :)

Friday, March 5, 2010

Wow...

Last weekend was absolutely amazing! Seriously one of the best weekends I’ve ever had. Ten of us took two cars and drove up north Friday night for the weekend. We stayed at one girl’s (Mel’s) house in Paeroa the first night. Then Saturday we headed up to the Coromandel Peninsula to Cathedral Cove (Narnia :)). That was one of the most beautiful places I’ve ever been. We climbed over some rocks and went swimming at a beach where there were no people. Cathedral Cove was pretty busy. However, when we got back to our stuff, the seagulls had taken our loaf of bread out of the grocery bag, out of the bread bag, and eaten all of it. No lunch for us. Later we walked to a cave, looked around in there, swam to another cave, went in there. After that, we hiked back to the cars (it was about a half hour walk to the beach), and went to Hot Water Beach. Basically, it’s the same idea as the other beach I wrote about, except that the water was so hot that we couldn’t even stand in it. That is, once we could actually get to the water. We accidentally went at high tide instead of low, so we had to wait around till 10:00 at night to get to the hot water. But it was fun. We made spaghetti for supper…it didn’t end up getting cooked all the way, but whatever. It was still good. After supper, we went for a walk to some rocks and climbed on them. Yes, we did a lot of that. Then we went back to our picnic table and sang worship songs. That was fun. Finally, when 9:30 rolled around, we found the hot water…boiling, scalding water…and dug a little hole. It wasn’t really big enough so we ended up having a sand fight.

That night, we set up tents in an unfinished neighbourhood with only streets and grass. I slept really well.

The next morning, we got up and went to a town called Whitianga to eat breakfast. Well, we parked ourselves at a beach, but that was short lived. A police officer drove up to us and told us we had to leave because there was a tsunami warning. So we went to a cafĂ© and bought muffins instead. Then we went to Mel’s friend’s house and hung out there for a bit. They were super nice, and their house was amazing! I don’t think I’ve ever been in a house with a better view than that.

After we left, we headed to Wairere Falls. The hike was only about half an hour, but it was all uphill. It was fun though. And the falls were beautiful. We got back to Capernwray about 3:30 that afternoon. What an amazing weekend!

Monday was Quiet Day. Basically, we had worship in the morning, we made a packed lunch, and we headed off by ourselves to be quiet and spend time alone with God. It was really cool. I took a blanket and sat in the garden most of the day. It was a really great day.

This week we had lectures on apologetics. We learned so much about how science and archaeology confirm what the Bible says.

Yesterday, me and two guys who lead youth group together went to a special creek before we had to go to youth. The water is special because it’s been underground for a hundred years. It’s really blue because it is so pure and clean. And it’s so cold! Oh my goodness it’s cold! We swam down the river and absolutely froze, but it was worth it.

Well, that’s all for now.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Praying Trees

Yesterday at Sunday fellowship in the evening, we did something really cool. At least, I thought it was pretty neat. There are a lot of trees on campus here. Some are native to NZ, but there are also a lot of them that are from other countries. Basically, we got into small groups and then went around the campus to different trees on a map we got and prayed for the country that specific tree was from. We prayed for the believers, the missionaries, the unbelievers, the governments. We spent a couple minutes at each tree, and it was so cool. We all learned a lot, and I figure, each country got about a half hour of prayer all together. Remember to pray for our fellow Christians in countries around the world who aren’t free to worship as we are.