Friday, May 16, 2008

Back from Russia


Well....we made it safe and sound. The trip was a success...we have commitments to get teachers who will write a complete Russian language curriculum with a Christian Worldview...and some strong interest by a group of Ukrainian teachers to do the same. Once again our trip was filled with divine appointments.
Greg will be returning in August with a small team from our school to train teachers in online course writing, as well as an enhancer. (No, I won't need to be there for this)
Marina and I did have a couple days off to explore St. Petersburg....it was a wonderful time and we saw many amazing things. I've posted most of our photos on Facebook: Here, here and here.
I must say, this being my 5th visit to Russia, that things steadily improve. There is a middle class now. But my heart is still in the country, where poverty and lonliness prevail. I'm hoping that the model of schooling being set up, will also work in the villages..where the need is still great. Thanks for your prayers...and those who sponsored and prayed for me throughout the years and many visits to Russia..know that your committment has paid off!
This wonderful photo of Marina was taken at Peterhof, a palace built by Peter the Great. The lavishness is amazing!

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

School of Tomorrow



We arrived safely in Russia and have hit the road running, so to speak. The first day was spent in meetings with teachers and then the admin team. We are endeavoring to explain the concepts of online school to them, they are eager to grap the concept, but it is, after all, outside the box.


The school is located in Moscow and is quite a nice facility. Russian law dictates that all schools must provide both breakfast and lunch to students and staff..so we are well taken care of. The student population gets 2 hot meals per day, in keeping with a nutrition chart. It would be an interesting endeavor in Canada to implement.


We are exhausted, though. Marina has had trouble sleeping and adapting to the new time. She is amazed at the Russia she sees...we went into some Moscow kiosks near the metro...very dirty...yet we were in a new mall and it was like any mall in Canada....with differences in the food court of course.


Friday is Victory Day so everything will be closed to mark the victory of Nazism. There will be a big parade which we will try to see...Friday night we will take the train to St. Petersburg.


No word from Stephanie on how they are doing in Mexico...although we did get an email from Mr. Smith saying all is well. Please pray for Steph...and pray for strength for us. See you soon!


PS: We are staying in the missionary apartment with Julie and 2 girls from South Africa. Here is a shot in their kitchen.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Off to Russia

Wow...the time has crept up on us...Marina and I leave today for Russia! It will be Marina's first visit back to the land of her birth since she left in 1976 at the age of 15. She naturally has mixed emotions.

When we arrive there will be lots of meetings, but it looks like we will have the weekend off to explore...so we may be going to St. Petersburg...a dream of Marina's...and a great Mother's Day gift.

Please pray we have a safe trip...that all our meetings go well...that Greg and I will accomplish what needs to be done to get online schooling up and running for this September.

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Off to Mexico!


Our Dear Stephanie is on her way to Mexico for 6 weeks!

It's a yearly trip with the school, for kids in Grade 11, where they finish up and complete various course studies and make a difference in the life of a Church and school down in Puerto Escondido.

Steph raised her support herself, and it took a LOT of hard work...and I mean a lot!

I'm proud of her, the goal she set and her willingness to stretch herself to go on this trip.

Please pray for her health, that she will be ok, and that God will use this time to remind her just how much He loves and cares for her!

Thursday, May 01, 2008

With a different father in mind

Written by Tony Woodlief May 2, 2008 World Magazine

Lately I’ve grown ashamed of how often I discipline my children out of anger, or annoyance, rather than a genuine desire to train them up. If three year-old Isaac’s repeated thumping of a table leg penetrates my consciousness at dinner, I’ll tell him to stop it out of irritation, not because I want him to have good table manners. If eight year-old Caleb tells me I said A and not B, I’ll glower and tell him not to correct me, as if it’s a principle I’m standing on, rather than my expansive pride. If six year-old Eli mumbles, I’ll snap at him to speak up, not because I am, in that moment, concerned with the development of his elocution, but because it’s consuming mental bandwidth to discern what he’s saying.

My disciplinary actions too often have me at the center — my wants, my ego, my sense of how things ought to be in my domain. I suspect we all fall prey to that impulse from time to time, or perhaps a lot of the time, or perhaps it’s mostly just me. But maybe I’m not the only one who tells himself some subconscious story about the righteous anger of God, to justify my own anger. Maybe other parents repeat to themselves how they’ve tried and tried, in order to justify their barks when the whippersnappers forget yet again to close the back door. Maybe too many of us we pretend that, because our children have become outwardly inured to our browbeating, that our glares and raised voices don’t wound them — worse, that it’s only our anger that gets through their thick little skulls.

So I’ve been practicing patience. Emphasis on “practicing.” When Isaac launches into one of his interminable monologues, right in the middle of a discussion between me and the wife, instead of shushing him, I’m trying get down to his level, put a hand on his small shoulder, and explain that mommy’s talking, and that the polite thing to do is wait his turn. I’m also trying to listen more, to really look him in the eye and stop whatever I’m doing and just listen, so he feels less inclined to interrupt just to be heard. I’m trying to patiently, lovingly guide my children, rather than gripe at them so much.

But there’s so much work to do, isn’t there? There’s bills and laundry and the daily grind of jobs, and meals to be made and dishes to be washed, lawns to mow, and — in our case — fallen trees to cut up and rooms to paint and essays and books to write. There’s much to be done, and it’s so much easier just to shush them or glare at them or talk over them to make my point and get my way.

Yet if you were to ask me what is the most important thing I have to do here on earth, I would say it’s training up my sons. So I’m going to start trying harder to act like it. I’m praying the Lord will have mercy — on me, on them — every time I fail.