Saturday, November 14, 2009

Christmas Truce in Seattle

Being back in Seattle, I thought I might start organizing peace and justice concerts and events again - my little votes for a more assertive peace church personality for my local congregation (and denomination). I was playing songs for my daughter about the incredible "Christmas Truce" on the Western Front of World War I in 1914, when I realized that this year is the 95th anniversary of that belief-defying night.

On Christmas Eve, 1914, soldiers on both sides along the trenches from Flanders to the Swiss Frontier spontaneously and almost universally negotiated with each other an informal "truce" for the night. In the night, soldiers from both sides came out from their trenches and met each other in No Man's Land, exchanged greetings, cigarettes, and trinkets. Carols were sung, improvised Christmas Trees decorated, contraband liquor shared. The next morning, the truce miraculously held, and each side gathered the dead from the battlefield and buried them together side-by-side. In many places, the truce lasted past New Year's Eve, by when of course Generals and Colonels had heard about this treasonous truce negotiated without their consent - and were taking steps to stop it (replacing and moving regiments about that had participated in the truce so that they were facing troops along the trenches that they hadn't met and comisserated with over the holidays). And WWI went on. But not without a profound note of the possibility of Peace being heard across a continent mobilized for war.

I am organizing a celebration of the 95th anniversary of this momentous event, and it seems the stars are aligned, because so much is coming into place so quickly. West Seattle Neighbors for Peace and Justice is on board for helping with promotion and logistics. The Seattle Labor Chorus has eagerly agreed to participate. The Seattle Peace Chorus is considering amending their already-busy holiday schedule to include the event. I have a readers theater piece about the event almost fully cast with fine readers. I have a sound system lined up to use. Organizations and other local events are very cooperative in advertizing and promoting the celebration. People are coming out of the woodwork to help. And just today I received a cd of a singer who performs one of the best songs about the 1914 truce - and he wants to play at the event.

I am giddy with excitement and amazed that this event is coming together with so little time to be put together. Somebody must want us to celebrate peace, I tell ya!

The event, if you'd like to come, will be at the Highland Park Community of Christ (8611 11th Ave SW, Seattle), at 7PM, December 24th (Christmas Eve). It will tell the story of the Christmas Truce in narrative, letters, songs and images from the period. There will be an opportunity for other local peace and justice organizations to set up tables for people to look at and learn more about them. There will be no charge for the event.

I'll try to post updates as the event develops. Needless to say, I am thrilled to death about this, and can't wait until Christmas Eve! :-)

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Saturday, April 04, 2009

Palmzondag 2009

Mijn Predikatie voor de Gemeente Rotterdam


Hij kwam in een optocht terecht. Overal waren er mensen die juichten, zongen, gilden, marcheerden – sommigen hielden zelfs boomtakken omhoog. Pelgrims, koopmannen, vrienden, families, vreemdelingen, dieren voor transport en offers. Kan je de drukke straat zien? Kan je het geluid horen – muziek en conversaties en beesten, schreeuwen en lachen en verwarring? Kan je de hitte van de zon aan je armen voelen? Kan je het stof in de lucht ruiken – kamelen en hun mest, oud zweet van jou of van diegene naast je? Kan je het allemaal in je mond proeven – zo dik in de lucht dat je niet weet of het je doet stikken of dat je het uit wilt spuwen? En overal om je heen zijn er mensen in beweging – een enorme massa die naar de heilige stad gaat.

En daar in het midden zat hij op een ezel, de enige stilte in de storm van chaos en verwachting. Het zou helemaal gek lijken.

Later zou Johannes de evangelieschrijver zeggen dat die boomtakken palmtakken waren, omdat het die tijd van het feest van tabernakelen was, en mensen gewoonlijk feesten in kleine veldhutten die van palmtakken gemaakt waren. Matteüs, Lukas en Johannes allemaal voorstelden ze dat de massa van pelgrims en plattelanders daar voor Jezus waren. Dat die mensen Jezus als hun redder zagen, de Messias – zelfs als ze de verkeerde soort Messias verwachteden. En wij – Christenen – houden van dit beeld: hier is ons koning, met de intocht die hij verdient. Misschien denken wij dat het een beetje zoals het de dag van Sinterklaas is – onze intocht van de goede heiligman – duizenden krioelende kinderen in de straat, iedereen zingt liedjes van vreugde, en dat de heiligman langzaam door de straten gaat om elk kind en ouder te ontmoeten. Zelfs Beatrix komt om de sint te begroeten. Dat zou het zijn – de intocht van Christus.

Maar vandaag lezen wij niet van Lukas of Johannes, maar van Markus – en Markus verteld en andere verhaal. Misschien is het niet de verhaal dat wij verwachten.


Laat ons vanaf het begin beginnen. Jezus heeft twee van zijn leerlingen vooruit gestuurd, om een ezel naar hem te brengen. Hoe zouden ze het uitleggen dat ze niet betalen voor de ezel? Ze zouden alleen zegen de Heer heeft het nodig.

Een klein vraag – wie is de Heer? Is de Heer God? Misschien. Is de Heer Jezus? Waarschijnlijk denken we automatische zo – maar Markus noemt Jezus in zijn evangelie nooit “de Heer”. (Misschien is het nu de enige keer, natuurlijk, maar het is niet zo duidelijk dat wij dat hier zo zeker kunnen zegen.) Misschien is het een woordspeling, omdat in het Grieks het woord kurios ook “de eigenaar” kan betekenen. Misschien hebben die mensen op straat het niet goed begrepen! Ze dachten dat de eigenaar de ezel nodig had! En de leerlingen hebben van het misverstand voordeel gehad.

Maar er is nog een mogelijkheid. Misschien had Jezus alles al geregeld met de eigenaar van de ezel. Misschien waren er al mensen in Jeruzalem die Jezus kenden en hem wilden ondersteunen. Misschien was er al een ondergronds netwerk van mensen die wachten op een moment om Jezus te helpen. Misschien wisten de leerlingen zelfs niet hoeveel mensen of wie hen wilden helpen, wie aldoor de heilige geest voorbereidt waren.

In dit verhaal, zouden wij ons met de eigenaar identificeren; de stille maar essentiële karakter van de onbekende ezelmeester als onszelf zien? Zijn wij een deel van een ondergronds ondersteuningsnetwerk, altijd zoeken we mogelijkheden om de Geest te helpen, altijd voorbereid Jezus binnen onze stad te brengen?

In de middeleeuwen kreeg een andere karakter van de verhaal veel attentie. In de middeleeuwen was de ezel de focus van het verhaal – en de ezel was in tekeningen en gedichten herinnerd. In deze tijd dachten de mensen de ezel symbool stond voor gewone mensen, gemiddelde Christenen – rekruteerde tot dienst zonder toekomstplannen of kennis wat of waroom. De Heer heeft ons nodig, dachten de middeleeuwse mensen, we weten niet wanneer of voor wat, maar we zijn geroepend. Wij moeten Jezus’ persoon binnen de wereld houden. Wij, nederig en stoom, doen onze best. Wat voor een symbool. Zoveel over een ezel naar gedacht, waarover alleen in een paar verse is gesproken. Misschien is dat ook wat – we spelen een kleine rol in het verhaal van Jezus, een kort moment, maar belangrijk.


Daar zit Jezus op een ezel, en iedereen om hem heen zingt en juicht. Wat zeggen ze? “Hosanna! Gezegend hij die komt in de naam van de Heer. Gezegend het komende koninkrijk van onze vader David. Hosanna in de hemel!” Het is geen wonder dat Matteüs, Lukas en Johannes dachten de mensen juichten voor Jezus. Natuurlijk! Is het niet duidelijk? Voor wat anders konen ze juichten? (Aha… zelfs wanneer we Markus lezen, horen we de andere evangeliën! Laat ons naar Markus luisteren zoals hij bedoelde te spreken.)

De mensen zijn op de weg naar Jeruzalem. De feesttijd van tabernakels en Pascha nadert – ‘n heel grote feesttijd, wanneer duizenden mensen naar Jeruzalem komen om offers te brengen, hun geschiedenis te vieren, en ook – weten de Romeinen wel – te genieten van hun nationale trots. Pelgrims komen vanuit heel Israel, en ze zingen allemaal dezelfde liederen – ’n series van liederen vanuit de psalmen en profeten. Van heel ver beginnen ze dezelfde liederen te zingen, en wanneer ze Jeruzalem naderen zijn er meer liederen voor elk deel van de weg – zodat iedereen dezelfde woorden zingen. De eenheid van de volk begint veer weg in zang. Dit lied dat Markus schreef was voor het laatste stuk van de weg. Mensen zingen dit lied als ze in de buurt van Jeruzalem komen – het was echt de intocht van het volk!

Elk jaar zongen ze dezelfde liederen, honderden jaren voor Christus en tientallen jaren na hem. Zongen ze over hun hoop, hun redder, hun Heer, de koninkrijk van David. Ze zongen “Hosanna!” Hosanna is ’n Hebreeuwse woord dat “redt ons” betekend.
“Redt ons nu,” zingen ze. Voor Markus is hierin ’n sterke ironie. Overal om Jezus heen zijn er mensen die zingen “redt ons,” en willen het koninkrijk van God zien. Overal om Jezus heen zijn er mensen die hopen op ’n nieuwe wereld, ’n antwoord tegen de pijn en lijden in de wereld, ’n nieuwe Heer die hun nog een kans geeft de wil van God te doen. Om hem heen zijn duizenden mensen – voor hem, achter hem, naast hem – verenigd in zang en devotie. Maar niemand van hen weet dat hun antwoord met hen meerijdt, binnen hun kring.

Ze zingen en aanbidden het beste dat ze kennen, doen het beste dat ze weten, maar zien niet dat hun dromen en hopen naast hen loopt. Ze zingen de juiste lieden, bidden de goede gebeden, maken foutloze offers, maar ze missen het punt als ze niet weten wie in hun midden rijdt. Voor Markus is dit een suprême toneel van ironie. Hun liederen zijn juist maar ze weten het niet. Hun gebeden zijn beantwoordt, en zij zingen over het antwoord, maar zien het niet. Het koninkrijk is gekomen, maar het is net begonnen.

Kan het dat ook wij het punt missen? Is het mogelijk dat wij ons best doen maar de ironie missen? Of zijn we gelijk als de ezel, Jezus onwetende houden voor de wereld? Of zouden we zoals de leerlingen, die naar het komende dorp gingen om daar het werk van de Geest te zoeken, meer mensen zoeken om de Heer te dienen?

Maar te vaak verwachten wij Jezus zoals Sinterklaas komt, en zoals een Koning of General het regelt. Wij houden ons palmtakken om hoog en juichen. (En zo snel vergeten we het lijden dat komt.)


Jezus kwam niet om te beginnen met alles te regelen. We moeten ons herinneren wat er vervolgens gebeurde. Avondmaal herinnert ons – zijn laatste avondmaal, zijn lijden en kruisiging. Te vaak willen we naar de overwinning gaan – van de intocht onmiddellijk naar het paaswonder – van overwinning naar overwinning te springen. We willen niet aan het lijden denken, over het angstgevoel, de onzekerheid.

Maar Jezus, het middelpunt van alles dat zou gebeuren, deed het wat kalmer aan, en nam de tijd voor een maaltijd met zijn broers en zusters. Hij gaaf hen wat stille tijd om over de komende dingen na te denken. Zeker te zijn dat wij niks zouden missen. Avondmaal is voor ons ’n gift van Jezus.

Jezus zal sterven, nog en nog eens. Maar onze hoop en geloof hoeft ook niet op het kruis te sterven. Jezus’ leven en werk gaat verder. En als wij leerlingen zijn, aantwoorden wij op Jezus’ roeping; of zijn we een deel van ’n ondergrond die wacht om liefde in de harten van mensen te slaan; of zijn we een ezel die Jezus naar onze stad brengt, de vraag voor ons is als wij wel of niet deelnemen aan dit grote werk. Jezus offerde persoonlijk zijn leven voor jou. Kan jij er aan deel nemen?

(Hartstikke bedanken naar Geesje voor haar hulp met het Nederlands.)

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Saturday, February 21, 2009

Dutch Frankness


I found this posted in a Dutch home recently. Seriously - in their downstairs bathroom.

It reads:

After you make a large delivery, kindly look to see if you left any tell-tale signs (literally "tracks", as in railroad tracks), and kindly clean them up. It makes it so much nicer for the next person.

Ah, Dutch candor. Sometimes, I just have to smile. And, of course, catch a snapshot on my phone. :-) I suppose it must be said that this family has three young adult sons, so that might have something to do with it.

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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Finally!

I have my driver's license!

After nearly a year in residence in the Netherlands...

After nearly six months of not being allowed to drive...

After four attempts at the Theory Exam (one of the most difficult in the world)...

After six lessons for the Practical Exam...

After doing my Practical Exam in Dutch (and holding a conversation while driving)...

After the rigormarole of Dutch beauracracy...

I received my Dutch driver's license.

Finally!

It has been a long time coming - long awaited by both me and my co-workers (who were forced to chaffeur me around in the meantime). I am now free to drive in the Netherlands.

When I passed the Theory Exam (unexpectedly, as I'm convinced it is pure chance and luck that determines who - if anyone - passes), those of us who passed nearly cried with joy. I'm still a little stunned that it ever happened. The practical exam was interesting - the examiner spent most of the time chatting with me about my church and job, just giving me a few instructions here and there ("turn left here" or "take me to the airport"). But I have been prevented from driving for so long, that I'm a little nervous driving now - so, in fact, I'm a worse driver after this process.

But at least it is over.

This was the last, final step of my more-or-less complete administrative resettlement in the Netherlands. The only thing remaining is my first year of income tax to be paid... next year. But otherwise, I'm an official and complete resident of the Netherlands. I'm European.

Just in time, too. Perhaps a year for all this to happen isn't such a bad timeline. But, man, it sucked not being able to drive my own errands.

The silver lining to this story? Christie and I learned by heart all the best bike routes for virtually all our needs within about a five kilometer radius. Now, a bike tour from our home to the city center is part of our repertoire we can offer to visitors. And taking a seven-kilometer round-trip walk for a few trifles seems like nothing out of the ordinary.

Perhaps there's something to not-driving after all.

Ah, who am I kidding? I'd rather drive.

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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Pics from Brest, France


I visited the French minister and his wife at their home in Brest, France - and they showed me Finistere, Brittany - the "end of the earth." I have to say that I am now in love with Brittany: the scenery, the climate, the pace of life, the architecture, the ancient celtic influence, the ruins and midieval structures at every turn. Beautiful. Just beautiful.

It was also lovely to get to spend some time with Thierry and Amelie - my brother and sister in the faith. And they were exceptionally generous hosts.

Here are just a few pics from the weekend - and if we had time, there's a story to every one of them. Perhaps next time we find ourselves over a cup of coffee. :-)

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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

My Ancestor Was Here

While cleaning out the attic here at my new residence, I must sift through layers of junk and treasure left behind by so many previous residents. The other day, I came across a pile of old books - bound periodicals of church history from the turn of the 20th century.

Thumbing through the 1910 volume, I saw a familiar name: Joseph Burton - my great-great-great-uncle. It was a biography of Captain Burton (he was a merchant ship captain) written by his wife, Emma. Surprised to see my own relations mentioned, I started to read, following the serialized biography into the 1911 volume.

Being a merchant sea man from Nova Scotia and New England, it isn't surprising that Joseph sailed all over the Atlantic - from Europe to the Caribbean and all along the Eastern United States. What was surprising - at least to see it in print - was the brief reference to Joseph making a trip to Amsterdam in 1867. Then, not too much later, another trip from the US to Rotterdam. My great-great-great-uncle was in Rotterdam more than a hundred years ago.

This was, of course, before he had joined the church, and some thirty years before he would captain the missionary boat Evanelia from California to the Society Islands. But still, to have such a random and concrete connection with Rotterdam - to imagine my great-great-grandfather walking the downtown streets (or approximately, since the whole of downtown R'dam was destroyed in World War II) - touches me deeply.

I am, truly, just following in others' footsteps.

(The painting above is something of the scene Joseph Burton might have seen approaching Rotterdam. Johan Barthold Jongkind, The Schie Near Rotterdam, 1867.)

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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Remembering Resistance

By Flannel Christian

While visiting congregations in Germany, my partner Christie and I stumbled upon a surprising memorial. We were walking around a medieval cathedral in Braunschweig and on the ground lay a stone marking the spot where a memorial briefly stood. The stone read: “Here stood from 1 September 1994 until 1 January 1995 a memorial to military deserters. After twice being vandalized, it was on New Year’s Day stolen altogether.” It was the first time I had ever seen a memorial for a memorial, and I realized how difficult it is to remember unpopular ideas sometimes.

Not only is a monument to deserters rare (I had never heard of one before!), and not only was this monument attacked three times in four months, but the entire monument was stolen altogether! Who steals a whole monument? Someone who desperately wants us not to remember – someone who wants us to forget. Without the memory of those who went before us, we are more likely to just go with the crowd, obey orders, buy into popular ideas, and not question the powers and principalities of this world.

As Christians, we cannot afford to forget.

At every turn – from the television to history books to parades on holidays to international politics – war and violence are lifted up and praised as the ultimate good, the ultimate sacrifice, the ultimate service one can do for one’s country or family or community.

But where are the stories of those who refused to fight? Where are the stories of those who were so horrified by war that they chose not to follow the crowd? Where are memorials to their sacrifices, their courage, their vision? Where are the histories of the deserters, stories of their bravery, songs about their commitment, recognition for their service to humankind? In a world governed by governments that rely on the projection of power – either economic or military – we rarely hear the stories of those who resist the drums of war. They are erased from our collective memory – no mention in history books, no discussion in current policy, no news headlines, no memorials. We are not allowed to remember them or their sacrifice.

The ironic thing is, that is the same thing the Roman Empire thought it was doing by crucifying Jesus – making him a common criminal, anonymous, unremarkable, erased from our collective memory. I can only begin to imagine what it must have been like for the first few generations after Jesus died – the government refused to acknowledge Jesus’ sacrifice, let alone his resurrection, following a resister – let alone worshipping him – must have seemed close to treason. And then, just as now in many of our governments, treason toward the state comes with deadly consequences.

The absence of the Braunschweig memorial echoes the symbolism of the cross: a negative symbol redeemed. The cross and the missing monument at first seem to declare defeat and negation, but the cross was adopted by the early Christians as the very sign of Jesus’ victory and love for the world. The cross symbolizes both Jesus’ victory and our awareness of the brutality and power that Jesus was up against. Placing a memorial to the stolen memorial in Braunschweig is a sign of the refusal to forget – and also a sign of awareness of the powerful reactionary forces of patriotism, militarism, and violence. We know what we’re up against in our countries – just as Jesus and Paul knew what they were up against under Rome.

We worship a God and man that declares that all people are of inestimable worth, and that since we are all equally loved by God we should love each other just as dearly – regardless of citizenship, race, or language. Jesus died because he resisted the social, political and economic machine of oppression in his country and culture – a machine that declared some people more important or more holy than others. Jesus defied the expectations of his culture, his nation, even his own followers, and bravely and actively loved people that the crowds around him saw as unloveable.

Surely, those who deserted from the German army (or any army) in World War II (or any war) did so for many reasons. But it seems reasonable that most of them (if not all of them) felt that what their nation and culture and crowds were saying and doing was wrong. No one is of less worth than another – everyone is equally loved by God, and ought to be loved by those who follow God.

War and imperialism and greed and a thousand other vices are fed by the idea that “we” are better than “them.” Both the deserters and Jesus confessed with their lives that that idea is not true. But disagreeing with this idea is sometimes a very difficult, unpopular, dangerous statement to make.

It is easier for us to stand strong if we remember that we are not alone in resisting the urge to elevate ourselves above others – others have gone before us: Jesus and Paul, Peter and Mary, and the almost-forgotten wartime deserters. Stand as a living memorial to the missing memorial; live and love as a living sacrifice; be a symbol of Christ and the cross in the world.

(A version of this article will be published in the June editions of the church magazines in Germany and the Netherlands.)

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

New Favorite Matches

Ummm... well, that's interesting! :-)

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The Island Church

The church and parsonage building where I live in Rotterdam is - like every place in the Netherlands - virtually surrounded by water. There are canals on almost all sides, and not your rinky-dink trenches, mind you, but full on Venetian canals. Access to the church can only be had by walking one narrow strip of land.

Can you start to see the problem?

The Netherlands is already secular enough to make it difficult for anyone to want to come to even the nationally-supported Dutch Reformed Church, let alone a strange and foreign import church from America. But in addition to that, you can't actually get to the church except across an out-of-the-way spit of land.

Now, you could say that this is a metaphor for walking the narrow road that scripture mentions. But this is church, not heaven, we're talking about. As far as the church was concerned, Jesus seemed much more interested in gathering all kinds of people in, and that would require a pretty broad road, or at least multiple points of access.

Frankly speaking, the church can't afford to be inaccessible. It has enough going against it these days that it shouldn't be getting in its own way. The geographic placement of the building actually works against the church's mission to be in the world and converting the nations.

Now, I sympathize with the saints in Rotterdam. They inherited the building from their forebears. They didn't build it. Even their forebears didn't build, truth be told - the denomination leadership decided to build a European HQ, and they chose the design. The building is perfect for the 50's theology and self-image of the church then - "we are the true church; if you want to know the truth, you have to come to us. Our doors are open (over here)." It isn't so good for our 21st century ecumenical sensibilities. But it is the building we have.

It isn't so different a problem than has much of mainline Christianity these days.

How does one minister from an island? You go off-island. But what do you do with all the infrastructure anchored in the old space? Is it best to simply abandon the accomplishments, efforts and resources of previous generations just because they are inconvenient for us?

How can we get off-island - both literally and metaphorically - and build transformative relationships that could bring people into a transforming community. I think the key is to think of church differently.

Church isn't where the frontline ministry takes place anymore. The primary location of transformative ministry is in personal relationships - friendships, family ties, pastoral relationships, and even professional interactions. The actual church building and weekly (?) church service is for energizing and guiding the faith journeys of people during the week in their relationships.

Perhaps we shouldn't be measuring congregations by how many people are in attendance on a Sunday, but by how many people are being touched in transformative relationship throughout the week, directed by those who are in Sunday services. At the same time, however, attendance at church is an indicator of whether or not you are offering something that people need.

I guess, in the end, the island church has to offer something so much better than the world around it and competing interests, that people consider the extra effort worth it.

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Saturday, February 09, 2008

Pics from Dokkum, Netherlands


Christie and I visited Dokkum - a small city in Friesland, the Northern part of the Netherlands. It is the location of the matyrdom of St. Boniface, who famously lifted his Bible as his only defense against the axe-blows of his enemies. The museum and chapel was closed for the winter, but the city was adorable regardless.

We also toured some of "Terpeland" - where the centers of villages (usually where the churches were) were raised onto little hills ("terps") where people could flee the floods resulting from high-tides and winter storms in the days before dikes.

And finally, we visited a random memorial - a monument on the site of the first Mormon baptisms in the Netherlands, back in 1869. By funny coincidence, not five kilometers from this little monument is the largest congregation of Community of Christ in the whole Netherlands. Coincidence, or conspiracy?! (*cue dramatic music*)

All in all, a wonderful day, and a much needed break from Seminary paper writing. Many thanks to our hosts, Kees & Lukke! Enjoy the slideshow!

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Thursday, February 07, 2008

My Latest Favorite Thing

About Our European Flat:
The radiator in the bathroom is designed to be a towel-warmer and dryer. You hang several towels over it at a time, even.

You can also lean against it for a quick back-warm-job. Ahhhh.

Ok, I know this is a lame post to make after a week of no word about our move. Forgive me. Here's the skinny: we arrived a week ago in the Netherlands and set to work legally registering our presence (beauracracy is the true international language). We also started arranging our new apartment (or "flat" as they call it on this side of the pond). Right now, the Europe Church office is still in our livingroom (we're living in what used to be the Europe Church HQ), but I hope to soon be able to move the stuff down to the actual "office" across the hall so we can start distinguishing between work and home life (always a problem with church work).

But all in all, we're LOVING it here. The work is a bit stressful, and living out of a suitcase and trying to do your job on the run is a pain. But for all the stress and trouble, we haven't doubted our decision to come and start this new life and step into this new ministry. The neighborhood is as cute as we remembered it from our visit in November - and we're now able to have short, halting conversations with the natives (if we can keep them from replying in English, that is).

And just to make sure we know why we're here - surprise! - we're preaching this weekend. Christie is the "PJ" (preach jockey) for a Solid Rock Cafe tomorrow night. I'm speaking at church this Sunday. I'm tempted to at least introduce myself in Dutch. We'll see.

It is strange to be an immigrant worker. Even with all the support and relative guarantees I enjoy here, there is still so much uncertainty. I can't imagine what it must be like for an undocumented worker in the States, facing so much legal and cultural persecution. My heart goes out to them even more, now. (And perhaps those xenophobic white Americans ought to try living abroad for a while, to give them some perspective!) :-)

At any rate, while I miss the USAmerican Northwest, I'm excited to be here in the European Northwest. From Seattle to Rotterdam... at least the weather's not a big change. Hey... is that sunshine out there? Ach, must've been my imagination.

Peace and Blessings, everyone! (I'll try to make a more insightful observation soon.) :-)

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