The Glow Continues

We just stayed home that Wednesday. It had been a long journey, those four seminary classes. And a stressed Mommy tried not to make her fantastic four CSI victims. We all just needed a night. A night to settle. Get into pajamas a little early and enjoy the nothingness of a cleared evening.

But we were waiting for him. Because without him our evening doesn’t end like it should. Nope, I’m not talking about mass chaos breaking out, I’m talking about how they relish in His teaching of God’s Word around the kitchen table.

But tonight was special.

Sometimes you just have to make the ordinary special.

By the power of candles.

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It was a glow from some of the 100+ candles from our wedding eight years ago.
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They waited so quietly and patiently for his footsteps to cross the threshold after youth group.
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The fascination of the flame.

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It’s the simple, really,

that makes it all so beautifully extravagant.

-Thankful, grateful and blessed.

(Sur)real

Well dear ones, It’s a bit hard to believe it but I have completed the biggest seminary term required of me in preparation for Africa. It. Was. CRAZY taking my four online one-credit master’s level courses. And honestly after seven weeks (plus 3-4 prep weeks before the term even began) of pounding through lectures, quizzes, papers, worksheets, discussion threads, textbook reading, and over four hundred chapters in the Bible… I’m still in a bit of shock that it’s over. It’s quite weird not to live in this constant state of mild panic that I’m forgetting some assignment in the daily shuffle. But I’m doing my best to come to terms with a more calm normal.

I have 2.5 (one of my classes drags on for a few extra weeks for some reason) classes left to complete my Missionary Certificate. One continues from last term (I seriously have no idea why, but whatever. LOL) and one, Old Testament 2, begins on October 14th. Then my final class, New Testament 1 (I already took New Testament 2) is from January to mid-March.

Old Testament 2 (OT2) is no walk in the park, dear ones. I have a huge amount of textbook reading, 526 Bible chapters of reading, weekly worksheets, weekly quizzes, weekly discussion threads, weekly lectures, and a final paper. Um…. OT 2 is just as exhausting as OT1 was, but alas, I too shall overcome it. So when I burst into spontaneous tears on the term’s completion on December 4th (in honor of my Mother’s birthday. hehe), you’ll know why. 😉

This week the kids and I are taking a break from school (in theory), which really means that I try to get ahead in my schooling (cause I know how much it’s going to drain me when it begins so I can’t help but kill myself to get it done now) without having the added responsibility of homeschooling my masses. I’m thankful that our jubilant running amuck this week is providing temporary distractions from seminary stress.

So other than seminary requirements, God has been narrowing down the African horizon for us as we are now actively pursuing one job match. Our Sub-Saharan Africa Affinity leader is currently scoping out the job we’re applying for so he won’t return to the office for another week (lucky traveler). But in the meantime, we have made contact with a cluster leader (cluster = small grouping of countries primarily focused around similar people groups) on the African missions field and made an initial contact with the veteran couple that, Lord willing, would be training us on the field. Things are going wonderfully and we continue to covet your prayers as we seek God’s direction for our family. We are told that the country matching phase can be long and grueling, but we have yet to get the full specifics until the return of our affinity leader from the preview trip.

I will tell you one thing, though, dear friends… it’s quite humbling to begin to see literal streets on which God is potentially calling us to serve. Thanks to the internet, we have been able to take a virtual tour of the job area, hear the native tongue, watch videos of past missionaries serving in the regions surrounding the job location (this job is the first one to this specific location), and even learn about local foods, climates, conditions, see the market places, check out area boats (because there are boats. hehe), and so much more. It’s a little crazy, dear ones, how close African can feel when we’re still what feels like light-years away from seminary completion and potential job matching.

And then again it’s also crazy to think that 6.5 months from now we will complete the last thing on our list that binds us to the United States.

That is so unbelievably crazy to think about.

Freeing.

And kind of like the floor falls out at the same time.

So in the mean time, we keep praying. And seeking. And preparing. And yearning. And biting our nails off. 😉

Because it’s all so real.

And yet so surreal too.

*Watching Him guide us one day at a time is just so astounding.

Wordless Wednesday: Because We Can

This is just a little random fun we’ve had lately:

Hannah Cheese

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(Yes, she’s sleeping with half her body IN her pillowcase.)  

(Sister dress-up love.)  
 

(Peekaboo. From a friend’s phone. Hehe.)
 

(Super baby helping with homeschool, naturally.) 

Music to My Ears

It’s one of my favorite sounds in the world. Coming over the baby monitor. Against the distant bellow of a train whistle announcing it’s passing through a sleepy town.

In the quiet. The melody rises of a Daddy singing to his baby.

He jokes that his voice would never hold applause.

But her trusting calm is one of the greatest applauses he could ever esteem to hold.

He has gently bounced each of them to sleep.

Singing praise songs quietly over their heavy eyes.

They don’t remember. They think it’s just for the newest baby.

But I love that they’ll think it’s normal.

The gentle bouncing.

The snuggling in close.

The melody being knit into their dreams.

His love is so amazing to witness.

His love is one of my favorite sounds in the world.

Ahoy!

Yesterday we took a fun field trip to life sized models of the Nina and the Pinta. With the lessons on Columbus fresh on our minds, it was so neat to watch our studies come to life. 

  
We brought a dear friend, Heather, and her precious son with us on this adventure. 

   
   
The girls enjoyed exploring every inch of the ships. 

   
    
    
   
    
And we also enjoyed a picnic lunch and some playtime at a local park to conclude our field trip. 

  
Everyone had a wonderful time!

Roadside

I’m thankful for a sweet friend to chat with when this happens on the way back from a fun homeschool adventure:

  
  
And I’m incredibly blessed by my precious husband who came to our “two hour waiting with five small children in the van on the side of the highway during nap time” rescue with a frosty per person. He. Is. My. HERO! 

  
And I am beyond thankful for God’s provision in keeping us safe during a challenging but not unmanageable detour. 

  
– He is and will always be more than enough!

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