Thursday, May 31, 2007

Food for thought

I've had this in my inbox for over a year thinking about it...
 
"My discouragement largely comes from fellow pastors and associational leaders.  It seems that they bought into the latest fads of mega-churches, worship teams, gen-X churches, the emerging church, etc. and now look with scorn on simple local church pastorates.  
 
"I remember back 32 years ago.  I was the new young pastor riding in a car with 3 other pastors. One of the pastors in the front asked me a question.  My answer probably reflected my recent seminary training. The pastor who asked me the question replied, "that's what I like about you young pastors, you're so honest." What I remember about the incident was the reaction of the older pastor sitting with me in the back seat.  The older pastor asked, "what does that mean, that the young pastors are honest? When I hear that, I hear that us older pastors are somehow not honest."  The pastor then went on to describe the different types of ministry in which he had been involved.  Everything that he described was so out of the 50's.  It seemed clear that those ministries would not work in the 70's.
 
"Two thoughts were clear to me. First, ministries must change as the times change, but why do those who advocate the new ministries have to denigrate the old ministries to the point that those who were once very involved in them, and saw great response from them, are made to feel that they did something wrong and need to be replaced by new enlightened leaders.   My heart went out to that older pastor. My second thought was that someday the role will be reversed.  I will be the older pastor. That day has come.  My first thought still remains. "Why do those who are advocating the 'new paradigm' have to denigrate past ministries in order to promote the new ones?"

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

One Definition of Success

I don't know who Scot Ventrella is and I've never read the book from which the following quotation was taken... but I sure like it!

"A friend of mine, Olga, has developed her own personal definition of success. She says that 'Success is when you are happy to go to work in the morning and happy to come back in the evening , and you are very welcome and liked in both places.'"

(I got it from Guideposts. They got it from Mr. Ventrella's book, "Me, Inc: How to Master the Business of Being You".)

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Annual Trip to Kanagi

Hirosaki Cherry Blossoms are famous but we like Kanagi! So the annual Ajigasawa Church Cherry Blossom Expedition usually ends up in Kanagi.

Mary enjoying the blossoms

Ayaka and Shion (sisters)

Mary took lots of PHOTOS again - but she ran out of steam just before we headed over to the church for lunch. We always end at Kanagi Church just across from the park where we have lunch and then sing together. (Before we part we often wander over to Mr. Sakuraba's Art Gallery - this year he was featuring a photographer from Ajigasawa!)

Friday, May 18, 2007

Teens Apart

Conventional wisdom says that kids want to be with kids. Personally, I was never too sure about that. And as far as I can tell, there are a lot of kids out there who find it hard to mix.

Our recent Cherry Blossom Expedition was a case in point.

Ajigasawa/Goshogawara Sunday School

The girl in orange came because the girl to her left invited her and that girl came because the girl to right (of the girl in orange) wrote a letter of invitation. But this is about as much as they ever mixed.

Together but not together...

Hurry Up, Grace!

My granddaughter is a precocious child - just ask her father or her grandfather! (Probably her great-grandfather, too.)

However, to my great disappointment, this precocious child still isn't ready to listen to me read to her.

Yesterday Mary and I met up with Yuko and Grace at Charan Poran (the same Korean restaurant in Mutsu where I met them last month). This time I brought some books up with me to read to Grace, but she wasn't interested...

Emma Grace Elliot

Sigh... My mother will probably laugh at me when she reads this. She says that when Grace's father was just a little baby I phoned her up in tears because he wouldn't listen to me read to him.

Maybe next month!

So beautiful it hurts...

Often on my way home from Hirosaki late in the afternoon Mount Iwaki is so beautiful it nearly takes my breath away. So today on the way home I stopped to take a photo of the sunset. Of course, photos never really capture the reality...


Sunset on Mt. Iwaki

A few minutes later my cell phone rang and just as I pulled over to take the call the clouds began to to wisp and swirl. For the next 10 minutes or so the "show" was so beautiful my chest literally ached. (Music is like that, too, especially Baroque... I can feel it in my body. )

Watching the display I thought of how God paints the sunset new every evening and I remembered again Ray Bradbury's words:

"There's no use having a universe, a cosmology, if you don't have witnesses. We are the witnesses to the miracle. We are put here by creation, by God... We're here to be the audience to the magnificent. "

Thursday, May 03, 2007

No Cherry Blossoms for John

Its seems like so many years the weather turns cold and rainy as soon as the cherry blossoms bloom. But this year Golden Week (April 29 - May 5) has been truly golden with the weather warm and sunny much of the time.

Of course, the season hasn't exactly been golden for my husband... The Dr. scheduled John's operation for Golden Week.

John after his operation

Mary and I went to view the cherry blossoms in Hirosaki on Monday and we're going to view them again in Kanagi on Saturday. But my husband says he's staying home so he won't be tempted... He's not supposed to talk for a week.

One of his sisters said, "John - going a whole week without speaking?!!!!!!"

Another one said, "How on earth is he going to that? Tell him it's good that it's him & not me because I'd NEVER be able to that. Be lucky if I could manage it for a day!!!"

How indeed?! That's why he's planned a brief hermitage in Hokkaido.

Photography as art

I think most everyone in our family has a good eye for framing but put Mary behind the camera and its pure art. Here are just a few of her (100 + ) shots.

The Trees


Reflections

Hanging Cherry Blossom



Traditional house - now an (expensive) Soba Shop

Self - portrait

For more of Mary's "art" (but not all 100 +) ... or just more cherry blossoms - CLICK HERE.

Cherry Blossom Camaraderie

Personally, I think cherry blossoms are best viewed in quiet solitude. Traditionally, however, Hanami (Cherry Blossom Viewing) is essentially a group activity...

Me, Mary, Renee, Karl & Mr. Kudoh

This is the closest we got to a full group photo. (Renee was intriqued with the apple mirror.)


Our Monday night Bible Study Group

The group consisted of our Monday night Bible study group ... minus Kris (in Korea), April & Yakumo, my husband... In the end it was just Renee (missionary with Shion Church), Karl (teaching English for Itayanagi Church) Mary, & me from the Bible study. And a gentleman from Renee's church joined us.

Checking in with my husband

My husband stayed home to get ready to check in to the hospital next day. (I missed him.)


Hirosaki Park is VERY Big - we walked a lot!

The park is also very beautiful with its big trees.

And we talked a lot.

Camaraderie - isn't that what Hanami is all about?!

What's Hanami?

In Japan, Cherry Blossom Viewing is a national past time.

In Aomori Prefecture the cherry blossom trees usually blossom during the Golden Week vacation so it seems that a great deal of the nation is free to come flooding into the prefecture, usually heading for Hirosaki Park with its picturesque castle tower.

What is Hanami 「花見」 ? Well, its....



Tradition!

Romance!


Crowds...


Photos...

Since everyone is taking photos of everything... we simply couldn't resist this line-up of ladies having their photo taken.

A picnic under the trees

The open spaces are filled with ground sheets where parties gather to eat boxed lunches or to enjoy a Japanese style barbecue. I favor a picnic under the trees - preferably in a secluded corner like this!


Stalls (Can you find Renee?)

Renee, on the other hand, likes eating at the stalls. Her favorites are: sweet potato sticks, deep fried cheese wonton, and apple ice cream sherbet.



In Hirosaki Park - its the Castle remains

This year we didn't take one of those traditional "We were here!" group photos on the bridge beneath the castle remains. But Mary did try to capture the reflection in the moat.

Enjoyment!
" God... richly provides us with everything [including cherry blossoms!] for our enjoyment." 1 Timothy 6:17