Wednesday, January 30, 2013

THE GREAT ADVENTURE OF WALKING WITH JESUS!



A couple of years ago I became friends with a lovely Peruvian lady who works at a local diner bussing tables.  I took 3 years of Spanish in high school more than 40 years ago now.  I was not very fluent in the language then, so as you can imagine, I’m even LESS fluent now.  Martha speaks almost no English as well, yet somehow, we manage to “converse” about children, grandchildren and the weather.  That friendship made me think that it would be so helpful to learn to teach English as a second language so that Martha and others like her might better adjust to their new culture and navigate more easily.

With our close proximity to New York City where many men work, our county draws people from all over the world.  The street we live on is a cul de sac on both sides and the population occupying the homes represents people from all over the world!  We have Asians – Koreans, Chinese, and Japanese.  We have East Indians.   We have Philippinos, Malaysians, Egyptians – all of them first generation – and their children, some of them American born.  And then we have us - second, third and beyond European types but we are quickly becoming the minority!  We don’t have to travel far these days to hear other languages and experience another culture – and I love it!

After meeting Martha one of the desires the Lord put in my heart was to get some kind of training in ESL (English As A Second Language).  It wasn’t long after that I notice a flyer at our library offering free training and I was very excited!  The down side was that the training was offered at a time when I was not free.  

The next year it was advertised again and my excitement was renewed, however, I discovered that with the training came a commitment to participate in the library’s ESL program for a year, meeting once a week for an hour and a half with your student.  That year I was doing a number of other ministry related things at church and was afraid I wouldn’t be able to fulfill the commitment, so I had to let the opportunity go.

Then finally this fall everything came together.  The class was offered at a time I was free and I thought I could fit the year long one and half hour sessions into my schedule, so I signed up.  I met with about 20 others for 8 hours total of training, which was interesting, informative and challenging.

The librarian trainers told us that most of the people who are interested in ESL tutoring are beginners.  Although I’m a trained teacher, all of my teaching was with young children.  That lack of experience teaching advanced grammar concepts, combined with the many years since I’d actually studied English grammar, made me anxious about teaching anything but a beginner.  So I breathed a sigh of relief.  

And then I received information about the young woman I’d be teaching – she was described as intermediate.  I immediately began to kick myself for not paying better attention in class when they gave some suggestions for teaching intermediate students!  In her e mail of information about my student, the librarian said that if I thought for any reason the match wouldn’t work, I could request someone else.

I have to admit, my initial thought was, “yes”!  I thought I was getting a beginner, I’d never done this before.   What would I do with someone who might actually need help in advanced grammar???  

And then I stopped whining and complaining, and faith kicked in.  I knew the Lord had been leading me to do this for some time.  I hadn’t requested any particular level of student because I had prayed for the Lord to do the matching, so now I had to walk by faith that this student was HIS student.  So I said yes and made arrangements to meet Eri.

Eri is a lovely young Japanese woman (whose name is actually pronounced Eddie) and has been living in the states for some time.  She’s the mother of two young children and her husband works in New York City.  In her former life, before kids, she was a dietician in Japan, so she’s well educated as well as sweet and smiling and polite.  And her grammar is excellent!  Whew!  What a blessing!

In those first conversations back in the fall when we were still finding out about each other, Eri told me that she and her husband had been living in Idaho (yes, there apparently really are people living in Idaho – although I have never met anyone else from there – sorry you Idahoians!) while Kaz went to school.  There they were befriended by Kaz’s ESL teacher – a woman who, along with her husband, had been missionaries in Japan for 19 years and who had a ministry to international students!

I heard “missionaries” and my heart did a flip!  That was the confirmation I needed that being paired with Eri was not a chance encounter.  It was a divine encounter, orchestrated by God to bring her and me together.  

At some point I mentioned something about my church and Eri told me that they attended a Christian church in our town.  When I asked if she was a Christian, she said, “We’re learning”.  I was already impressed that this young couple had sought to continue to learn about what it means to be a Christian by venturing out on their own here in New Jersey to become part of a Christian fellowship.  That takes courage!

So Eri and I are new friends, but we are more than that, because the Spirit of the Lord is moving in both our hearts, drawing us together and blessing us in ways neither of us imagined, and in ways we’ve yet to see.

Following Jesus is an adventure – an adventure that has taken me to exciting places I didn’t plan to go and never would have dreamed.  His plan for us is so much bigger and better than anything we could dream for ourselves.  

And what could be better than encouraging someone seeking to know Him so that one day they too will walk with Him.  And I didn’t have to go to Japan to do it!

Want to live more than just a ho-hum Christian life?  Then “delight in the Lord” and let Him put HIS desires in your heart, and get ready. . . . adventure will surely follow! 

All you have to do is say, “Yes, Lord, lead the way.  I’m right behind you!”

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