Dear
Friends, Brothers & Sisters – We have landed at Narita, sent our baggage on
to Chino, and are finally all settled into our hotel rooms. It is 10:15PM Thursday here – 6:15AM
Thursday in California. I’ve been
up nearly 24 hours now and am fading fast. Please excuse typing, grammar, and thinking errors. Thank you to everyone who came out to LAX
to see us off. It is always a
great blessing to be with everyone there and to leave with your love and
prayers. The plane ride was
great…except for the two wailing babies…and the lady behind me who forgot to
use her indoor voice when talking to the person next to her…throughout the
entire trip. But the plane ride
was very, very good for me. The
food was good and the attendants brought us plenty of snacks and drinks. The past few days I was busy preparing
for the trip, buying some last minute things that I needed. So me head and heart have not been
focused on what we go to Japan to do.
After dinner, I decided to watch a movie – Les Miserables. For those of you who know the story or
have seen the movie, you’ll have a better idea of what I will be talking
about. The main character, Jean
Valjean (I believe), has been serving a 20 year sentence for stealing bread to
feed his starving nephew. The
soldier overseeing his stay in prison has tortured and tormented him
brutally. Valjean escapes from his
probation and is a man on the run.
A priest takes him in, and shows great compassion in feeding and housing
him when no one else will. Valjean
slips away during the night, after
stealing silverware and such, but is caught by the police who return him to the
priest. The priest shows
compassion once again by saying Valjean had permission to take the stolen items
– preventing Valjean from probably spending the rest of his life in prison. Because of the mercy and forgiveness of
the priest, Valjean turns his life around and his raging anger is replaced with
a desire to help his fellow man – to show the same mercy and kindness shown to
him. But in the midst of this new
life, the jailer reappears, sees Valjean and attempts to arrest him again. At one point, Valjean has the
opportunity to kill his jailer, but refuses, and lets him go unharmed –
unconditionally. It is not hard to
compare the forgiveness shown by the priest as the same forgiveness we receive
as Christians from God. As I
continued watching the movie, the comparisons of the priest to God, and of
Valjean to every Christian touched my heart more and more. It’s a good thing I was watching the
movie in the dark – so no one could see how much it moved me. But what struck me most was the reality
that this is why we go to Chino year after year – to share that great
compassion shown to us by God. His
love has been life altering to everyone who has received it. This forgiveness that we receive allows
us to remain in the presence of God forever – and less than 1% of the people in
Japan have received Him into their hearts. I took a break from watching the monitor after the movie –
to reflect upon what I had just seen.
When I tried to watch another movie, there was no sound coming through
the headphones. I played around
with the dials to see if I’d pushed something accidentally to turn off the
sound, but could not get the sound to return. I sat there wondering what to do for a while, when it
finally hit me – I need to continue sitting there in silence – away from all
the visual and audio stimulation and distractions I usually have that cause me
to kill and waste so much of my time.
I then spent time reflecting upon the movie, time to ponder and
meditate, and most importantly – time to pray. Instead of trying to cover up the crying and screaming of
little babies, and the loud conversations behind me, I was able to spend a very
blessed time in silence – blocking out all the noise around me
unconsciously.
All
of this has been to say that “God is good!” He knows what I need when I don’t have a clue – and gives it
to me in great abundance. I need
to get ready for bed, and also to let Daniel get some sleep, too. All this, and we haven’t even gotten to
Chino, yet.
God
bless you all
P.S.
– It’s now Friday morning and we’re sitting in a Starbucks at the Narita
Airport. I’m able to download this
message to the blog, because of the free wi-fi here. We’ll be taking a train into Tokyo shortly, where we’ll buy
bento (boxed meal) to eat on the train when we transfer to another express
train into Chino. We’re going to
have a short team meeting now – I’ll be back, later.
God Bless you and the team Don! Love the blogs and it is SUCH a blessing to read! My prayers are with each of you and please give my love & hugs to all the Chino people...Tracy
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