Month: <span>July 2008</span>

flagindependenceJuly the 7th marked the 30th Independence day for the Solomon Islands. As Solomon Islands formal ceremonies tend to go – you wind up sitting through a good 3+ hours of it all, so when the option was given to avoid a 7:30 start, my tired self jumped at it. These plans however were foiled when I was worded up. So a small conscript of us – namely my family members and Wendy made the early start without the others.

It was interesting how well set up Lawsentama (The sports ground) was, with a crowd of volunteer school children making up the Solomons flag and the bibleindependancemore standard police marching band and cultural dancing. The dignitaries took forever to arrive, but the Primeminister’s speech was well articulated and in Pijin. My Dad and ‘Uncle’ Bob and the rest of the translators got to present a copy of the Pijin Bible to Dr. Sikua (the Primeminister) in honor of the Year of the Bible. There are so few countries where it would ever be the case, but much of the later funding for printing came from the government and the recent support has been really positive.

So the speech, although good, drew out, a dancer fainted in front of us from the heat or perhaps malaria, the Police men and women finally got given water after standing still 2 hours in the sun and the PM began to read out a list of medals.

dadMy clueless dad sat there with Geoff Hall’s (Who was over doing some general filming for Wycliffe) camera chained on him. I have never seen my dad look so surprised and I cannot wait to see the footage of it. So Bob, Jack (Senior Translator) and my dad who recently had his PHD accepted can now add another set of letters to his name.

The Solomon Islands Medal Silver (there is no gold) is roughly equivalent to someone getting the Order of Australia.

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General

My fingers are not as fluent as they are with a pen as they are with a keyboard so here is my confession that my journal writing was not so up to scratch as I would have liked while being away. In a small way my brain stalled. I will share what I did wind up writing, but the perpetual blow by blow will present itself in the group journal – to which I contributed to on Day 11. Trivial information for you, but I do not have access to that particular entry until the rest of the crew return, so there will be an intentional gap alongside the many unintentional.

What I do want to recount tonight is not the blow by blow nor the vague emotion based recap of revisiting where I grew up but some thoughts on mission. Despite my desire for the experience of a short-term mission (after seeing so many of them trepass ‘my country’), I don’t really feel like I got one. We lugged a lot of boxes, waited around a whole deal, handed out flyers and generally seemed to do a whole heap of menial tasks – yes it was useful and intended and part of being on the trip…

Tonight I had a read of The Pink Elephant in the Missional Room and had to agree on the lack of courage displayed in the act of my generation sharing ‘their faith’. My biggest fear or hurdle or perhaps ‘bother’ was something I didn’t end up actually doing. As part of preparation for the trip we were asked to work out how we would share what God has done in our lives – in a way that was vaguely culturally appropriate, should we have to share it in the Solomons. And I got stuck in pinning it down. And this is a position that I’m not exactly comfortable in being in, because opportunities can launch themselves at you very unexpectedly. It personally disturbs me that I don’t really know how to talk specifically about God in my life.

While away, we had a ‘day off’ snorkeling down at an old haunt, Bonegi Beach. My sister Laura managed to get into a conversation with a western (aka. white) diver and they wound up having an indepth chat about Christianity and belief…

Although God can use our mouths and willingness when approached, I don’t think that we too often go searching for those conversations. I know I pretty much wait for them to drop into my lap, at most I might pray for an opportunity.

When it comes to ‘mission’ – and by that I mean, talking about Jesus, we are cowards.

bevkumasiThis is Beverly Kumasi. She doesn’t ask permission to be a Christian.

On the outside she looks like a fairly average Solomon Island, Malaitan woman. She has five kids. Her husband is a pastor. We used to play with their girls, Sherry and Queenie.

On the other hand Bev is an a-typical Solomons woman. She is outspoken, her wantoks (relatives) extend far beyond her blood. She is mother to many, pastors her own church, advocates for HIV education – telling UNICEF to take their condoms to hell* (HIV is a recent occurrence in the Solomons and will soon become a huge problem, there’s been a jump from 3-300 affected by AIDS in the past few years), and she somehow raises enough money a year to send one of her ‘street kids’ to Bible School, she wants to build a youth centre.

Bev tells this story of two local gangs based on islands in Lunga river, based just outside Honiara. Gangs like these formed after the ethnic conflict that began back in early 2000. She went down to this ostracised group of young men and asked to speak to them. The gang leader threatened to shoot her and she retorted with something like, “A man who shoots a woman is a woman forever”. He let her approach. She hugged him, accepted him and shared Jesus with him. Those same Lunga gangs no longer exist.

She is entirely legitimate. She talks about the Kingdom of God as if it runs through her blood. She seeks out people to love and to share Jesus with and her home. She expresses her frustration at churches who sit singing and never go and ‘do the work of the gospel’.

This is courage and makes the rest of us looks like pansies.

Mission is not for pansies. Yet sometimes that’s all we’ve got to work with – ourselves. Let us at least be willing.

*In relation to their request for her to distribute them to some of the young prositutes she helps rehabilitate.

Christianity Church Relationships Social Justice Solomon Islands

A brief interlude from nothing while I continue ploughing through my Google Reader items to catch up on all the blogs I missed while away before I update my own.

I highly recommend these sessions from Steve Said about the Kingdom of God. I was present for some of these particular recordings and I’ve heard him talk on it before, good stuff. Have a listen.

Christianity Church Social Justice

Hullo. I have returned.

However I have not gotten out of bed today – flying ~7hrs does that to you, I should really get off my bum and return later when my brain has woken up enough to write more.

General

Should there be some almighty drumroll? I surely don’t deserve it, I haven’t put half as much thought into any of this as I would’ve liked.

Tonight we fly to Brisbane, tomorrow to the Solomons – about a 3.5hr flight – the country I grew up in.

They spot interviewed us at a ‘team meeting’ the other day and my answers sounded hashed and somewhat shallow. In reality, returning is very much more for me about showing off to Geoff a part of me and revisiting the place for myself, than it is about handing out Bibles. How ignoble. It’s unfortunate it possibly wont be quite as easy as a tourist holiday.

The one thing I have thought about is my reaction to when we get off that plane at Henderson Airport and I suddenly get hit by that distinctive smell. Reminds me of that annoying MercyMe song, “I Can Only Imagine”. Well, I can only imagine I will either start crying (probably less likely) or I’ll be struck somewhat dumb and the emotion will resonate only in my eyes which will grow wide (probably more likely)… or hey the converse. Perhaps the excitement will creep speedily through my body and come out my mouth in words. I think I can probably predict the combination of a enormous lump in my swallowing machine and a contrasting, yet genuine smile.

It will be interesting.

Do I know what God will do me when I’m there? No. But I think I might take the opportunity to ask myself some hard questions and we’ll see where that all goes.

In two days I will be back in the 32 degree weather, with the 100% humidity, the dust, the green, the sea, the birds, the mosquitoes, the dogs howling, the locals calling me ariquo and better fruit than the likes of Australia has ever seen.

In the next week, I will have seen the dog I haven’t seen for the past 7 years, the house I lived in, the beaches I snorkelled at, the basketball court and the ERC, the SWIM base, the local markets, the ‘city’ much changed.

And in another again, I will be back here. I do not know if I will want to be back here. My patriotism has never been very cemented.

Life Solomon Islands