Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Closed Ears

This week in language, we started talking about opening and closing objects.  Should be pretty easy, right?  Not so.  As it turns out, there are at least 3 different ways to close something in Lugbara, depending on what it is.  Doors and windows always opizu, but other objects only opizu if the lid doesn’t come off when it’s upside down.  Putting on a lid, cover, or box top is akuzu, and if it’s closed and hidden, like a wrapped gift, it’s abuzu.  Body parts are a whole other matter.  When you close your mouth, hand, or eyes, you abizu.  Now that we’ve got these different words and understand the patterns, it makes sense, but in the middle of it, we were totally confused, trying to figure out what determines whether you opizu or akuzu something. 

But I started thinking.  (Always trouble!)  Many times we talk about having closed our ears so we don’t have to hear what we’re being told.  When we were young and someone told a story my sister didn’t like, she would stick her fingers in her ears and sing at the top of her lungs to drown everyone out… and I know that I’ve been guilty of doing that with God.  So I asked Pamela, our language helper, if you can abizu your ears just like you do your mouth.

She said no.  The ears don’t close on their own; you have to intentionally close them.  You opizu them, just like a door.  You have to choose not to hear.

And how true that is.  When God speaks to me, I hear Him.  I know what He’s saying.  But I choose to listen to Him, to follow Him in obedience, or not.

Lord, please help me to remember to njizu my ears, not to obizuˆthem!

Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves.  Do what it says.  Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like.  But the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it, he will be blessed in what he does.  (James 1:22-25)

Tuesday, September 1, 2009

Sunday Adventure

It all started mundanely enough.  On Thursday Kevyn, one of our students from Latibo, asked us to go to church with her Sunday morning.    We’d love to go!  We had no idea where St. Luke’s church was, so we agreed to meet her on the main road out near where she lives so she could keep us from getting lost on the dirt paths that pass for roads out here.  Services start at 8, so we would meet her at the sign for a local school at 7:45.

Kelli and I left the house in Pearl, our truck, right on time at 7:30.  On the way out to Kevyn’s neighborhood, the lorry in front of me slowed to a stop on the main road, and I stopped behind it.  Before I could realize what was happening or throw the car into reverse, the lorry starts backing up.  I “hooted” the horn, and the man in the bed of the lorry tried to get the driver’s attention, but evidently not quickly enough… he backed right into me!  Fortunately, he was going slowly already and stopped when he realized what he was backing into.  He had barely touched the bull bar on the front of Pearl, so when he pulled into the parking lot  he was trying to get into in the first place, we went on to meet Kevyn… with a whole new appreciation for the black metal tubes across the front of Pearl!

We got to the area known as “Muni” where we had agreed to meet Kevyn… who wasn’t there.  What to do?  We had no idea where to go next.  I turned down a side road to see if there were any clues to where St. Luke’s might be, but chickened out when the road forked.  Meanwhile, Kelli tried to call Kevyn, but she didn’t answer her phone.  I drove back out to the main road and pulled into the closest parking lot.  Finally, Kevyn called me… she was already at the church!  I tried to explain to her that we didn’t know how to get to the church, and she said to go back to the road I had turned down in the first place.  I drove back to the road and pulled over for my next instructions.  Kevyn called back and asked why we weren’t at the church.  Finally she said that she would come out to meet us.  By this time, one of the men on the side of the road had come over to see if he could help us.  I told him we were trying to get to St. Luke’s church, which he said was in town. (!)  Fortunately, he asked around and found out where the church was… straight down the road I chickened out on fifteen minutes before!  After getting relatively clear directions (for Africa, anyway) we tried it again.  About halfway there, we found Kevyn riding a piki (motorcycle taxi) and picked her up to take her back to the church.    The bright note:  “parking” was completely painless, since we had the only vehicle there, besides a couple of bikes!

Even though we were twenty minutes late, the church service was just getting started and half the pews were empty.  Even so, Kevyn paraded the two of us up to the very front of the sanctuary and sat us right up on the platform.  (Lovely… the two mundus get to be on display???)  During the entire service, I expected to be called on to share a “word from the Lord”… whether I felt led to or not!  In addition to the two “foreign visitors from Europe”, there was also a team of 3 visitors from Congo, one of whom preached.  (Good- we’re off the hook!)  His text was from Luke 18, where Jesus talks about counting the cost of being a disciple, but somehow he turned it around to make the point that “the church must plan” and Christians must give to the church sacrificially.  (Kevyn didn’t have any money with her, so she put an IOU in the offering bag!)  During the service, Kelli and I were asked to introduce ourselves twice, partly because the parish priest arrived after our first introduction and he wanted to know who we were!  After the service concluded, Kevyn’s friend Eric asked us if we were free Sunday to preach… uh, NO!

Kevyn wanted us to go back to see her home, so we loaded up in Pearl with her and her cousin, Victoria, and hit the trails… literally.  We turned off the main dirt road onto a smaller dirt road, and then onto a tiny path.  As I was pulling off the road beside Kevyn’s homestead, Pearl’s right front tire went right into an 8-inch wide ditch—just barely wide enough for the tire to fit, but we were stuck nonetheless.  Yikes!  We tried a mix of four-wheel drive and pushing to get it out, but nothing worked.  Now what???  Well, Kevyn’s father and brother (or cousin, I’m not quite sure) and all the kids in the area went running to find broken bricks and rocks to build up a ramp for me to drive out.  Her brother dug a slight ramp into the road (for once, a dirt road is a good thing!), I tried four-wheel drive again, and out Pearl came!

Since the crisis was now over, we went to officially meet Kevyn’s family.  Her mother and “follower” (the sister who came immediately after her in birth order) were away, but the twins who are her follower’s followers were there, as well as the youngest.  We sat under a mango tree for a while just chatting with Victoria, Kevyn, and her father, Oscar.   One of their dogs had puppies a few weeks ago, so Kelli and I both got to love on a puppy while we talked.  After a short while, the twin brother came walking towards us, carrying a chicken.  Kevyn said they wanted us to have the chicken, and that Jesca could show us how to prepare it.  (Giving a chicken, especially to mundus, isn’t uncommon, but it’s usually a “thank you” gift for something big… not just “We’re glad you sat and talked to us for half an hour”!)

Kelli and I had been planning to have a “real” Italian dinner later this week, with garlic bread, olive oil for dipping, Caesar salad, and chicken pesto pasta.  Well, now we’re having FRESH chicken in our pasta… and Kevyn’s joining us!    The chicken, Roo, had a decent ride home in Pearl’s backseat; he was surprisingly calm and quiet, but his feet are tied together!  We were afraid Hoosier might try to eat Roo before we got the chance to, so we sent him to stay across the street at the Waflers’ until Jesca finishes him off on Tuesday. 

So, the morning turned out completely different from anything I could have planned… but isn’t that just the way God is?  I can just hear Him saying, “You think you know… but you have no idea!”