Archive for November, 2006

Why Are You Here?

Monday, November 27th, 2006

I (Mitch) wrote this a couple of weeks ago to help gather my thoughts…

As we’ve been getting settled here in Olomouc and meeting various people, the questions we keep getting asked are, Why are you here? Why would you want to study Czech? You plan to be here how long? And the question potential landlords want to know is, Where’s your paycheck coming from?

In sum, Why are you here and what are you going to be doing?

Each time we get these questions it’s kind of awkward. It’s easy to tell believers back in the States about the where tos and why fors. But how do you explain it to someone with a totally different belief system—and not to mention a suspicious mindset—in a way that makes sense?

The short answer that sometimes appeases realtors and the like is, “We’ll be studying Czech for a year and then working here for several years after that.” Sometimes landlords don’t like to have university students as tenants, and so explaining that language school is a temporary means to an end opens up more apartment opportunities. But sometimes they still want to know what exactly we’ll be doing after language school.

Another short answer that often comes out of our mouths is, “We’re here to teach English and to teach the Bible.” People usually accept that and change topics, which, in this place where relationships and trust develop slowly, is fine with me. No reason to get too personal too early.

But, while that answer may satisfy the inquirer’s curiosity, is it really satisfying? Seems a bit imperialistic to me. We come here to teach! Because we have everything figured out and we have all the answers, right?

Ummm, I don’t think so.

Yes we have things to share and teach. But maybe there’s a thing or two we can learn from the Czechs as well.

No, teaching isn’t a satisfying verb for me. Hmm…

Maybe to “talk about the Bible” is better. That sounds less one-way and a bit more conversational. Dialogue. Discussion. Discovering together. I like that.

The Czechs are very intellectual and philosophical. They seek truth.

And it seems to me that if they (and we) are going to be intellectually honest—that is to say, if we are going to give different philosophies and points of view a hearing—then this Jesus and his sacred text should be put on the table.

Therefore, I’m in Olomouc to join in the search for truth and beauty already taking place here.

Yeah, that’s what I want to do here. I want to be a part of communities (eventually of faith) that seek truth and beauty together. That engage in deep discussions about things that matter, about the meaning of life, and about how it should be lived.

But not just intellectual communities. Practical communities of love and service and joy and peace. Communities that love each other and look out for one another’s needs. But they don’t just love and serve each other; they also look outward to those around them and seek to be a blessing in their lives as well.

They seek to share what they’ve learned, and hope to grow a little more in the process.

Yes, I think we’re getting somewhere—and it sounds pretty exciting—but wait. We’ve mentioned the Bible, but it’s in the name of Jesus that we’ll be doing all that we’ll be doing. Our reason for being here is not centered around a book or an organized religion, but a person.

Religions fall short. But Jesus is who he is. And I believe that in the incarnation, ministry, death, and resurrection of Jesus something big happened. Something of enormous and eternal proportions.

In a world of hopelessness and hate and oppression and sickness—in other words, a world held captive by the power of sin and death—Jesus changes everything. The firstborn over a new creation. The Adam to a new humanity.

Yes, in Jesus there’s new possibility. For change, for wholeness, for healing, for peace. And we seek that transformation in our own lives and want to cultivate it in each other. God is with us (and we are with each other) in our pain and despair. And, death is not the end.

This is good news—with impact on life now, and forevermore.

So, I’m here to love people in the name of Jesus. To serve people in the name of Jesus. I want to be a blessing to people.

And a spark to a holy fire.

I want to share in their lives and they in mine. To be with them and to be like them and to experience their culture and learn from it. To expand my horizons to see from another’s point of view. And hopefully in the process we’ll both see things more and more from God’s point of view. Together we’ll find truth, and that truth will set us free.

Extra! Extra! Read all about it!

Monday, November 13th, 2006

Hello from Olomouc, where the cobblestones glisten on misty evenings.

In case you haven’t heard, Saturday before last we here in Olomouc had a rather unexpected visitor — a reporter form the Prague Post, a daily newspaper situated in Prague that is written in English and covers many of the events going on in the country. This reporter had gotten wind that our team was launching in Olomouc and wanted to do a story on us, so she contacted us and met us in the train station on Saturady afternoon. The conversation went well and we were able to communicate what we felt to be exactly what we wanted to say. So the story ran last Wednesday and is now available online. When you get a moment, please click over to the article.

God continues to bless our transition to life in Olomouc. Our apartment search has come to a close and now we are working on contract details and hope to move in soon. Praise God for that, and also pray that God will also bless Christie with a good and advantageous apartment when she gets here, too.

Tomorrow Phil Jackson will be here! He’ll be staying with us for a few days and then all of us will train to Berchtesgarten, Germany, for our first ever missionary retreat. It should be attended by missionaries and other expats from all over Europe. Plus, Scott Karnes and his family will be attending and after that they will be joining us back in Olomouc for Thanksgiving! What a blessing to have wonderful mentors and friends like the Jacksons and the Karneses.

Well, Graham and I are off to visit our realtor and set our commitment in stone. Yes, I know what a lot of you are wondering, “I thought Mitch and Graham were going to each have their own apartment.” Well, that was the plan, but due to a limited availability of apartments that suited each of our needs, we’re living together. Plus, this was a deal that we just couldn’t pass up. Hopefully in a few weeks we can get pictures uploaded of all of our new homes.

Until next time…

Snow on November 3rd!

Saturday, November 4th, 2006

Hello from Olomouc! We already had our first snow on the 3rd — can you believe it! — and it snowed again today. Not much has been sticking but there has been enough for a snowball fight or two!

Our friend, Danielle, from the church in Prague, has been here for a few days helping us to get settled. She headed back to Prague just a few hours ago.  With her help we now have cell phones, which is very cool. We’ve also been visiting real estate agency after real estate agency this week and have visited several apartments, a few of which have potential. Several factors make the apartment search a slow process: the language and culture barrier, budget limits, and our strategic and personal desire to live close to each other in a particular area of Olomouc. For now we are staying in a pensione. Please keep our search in your prayers.

Well, I guess that’s the latest. Thank you to everyone for your comments on the blog and your emails. Please keep them coming because they’re so encouraging. Also, thank you to those of you who have signed up for the prayer vigil over the last week. As soon as I can get online with my laptop (rather than in an internet cafe) I’ll update the prayer vigil page.

Much love,

Mitch