These are the thoughts of one who has felt the warmth of the African sun, whose eyes have beheld the ravages of war, whose ears have heard the song of the bushveld, who has smelled the tantalizing aroma of southern BBQ, and whose tongue has tasted of flying ants and injera. But above all, these are the unashamed writings of one who has been called by the grace of God. May He be glorified!


Sunday, February 28, 2010

My birthday thoughts

As I begin to type this, the clock on my computer lists the time as 23:46; I am 14 minutes away from beginning the 22nd year of my life. I find it fitting to step back from my homework for a few minutes and recall this last year of my life.......

March 1st, 2009, my 21st birthday, passed without much of an incident. I had a small celebration with my family and a couple friends from around the Indianapolis area. I didn't go out partying like many of my generation do on their 21st. I had a beer, visited with my friends, and went to sleep- coherent.


Also in March, I received a letter from Patrick Henry College saying that I was accepted on probationary status. The acceptance letter did not flatter me in the slightest; it listed the strengths that they perceived me to have, but it also listed the criteria for my probationary status. Due to rather poor grades in high school, I was told that I was not allowed to be involved in any extra-curricular activities and that I had to enroll in a peer mentoring (tutoring) program. I was not thrilled, but I pursued the option, largely due to my wonderful mother's promptings.

Two things happened that changed my mind. The first was that I received a letter from the Financial Aid director that detailed the amount I needed to come up with in order to attend school. I am firmly against going into debt but the amount needed after all of the generous scholarships and financial assistance made attendance of PHC financially reasonable. The second thing that changed my mind was my visit to Patrick Henry during the final week of classes. I was pleasantly surprised by the campus, students, and faculty that I interacted with. The visit opened my stubborn mind to the idea of attending Patrick Henry College.

As a few of you might know, in addition to all of this, I had applied to be a Fishers (IN) police officer in December of 2008. I progressed through the various physical tests and written examinations. I passed the interview panel and was selected as one of ten candidates for the eight positions that would advance to the final hiring stages. Two more candidates were to be cut from the group.

All that was left was the decision between the two options of becoming a police officer or attend Patrick Henry. I desired both for different reasons but acknowledged that I ultimately was not in control of the situation. I committed the matter to the Lord in prayer and asked that His will would be done, and that I would accept it. Shortly thereafter, I received a phone call from the recruiting Sergeant of the police department. He informed me that because some of my military paperwork was still in Washington DC, the police department could not hire me that year. My application was filed away and the Sergeant asked me to apply for the job again when I got the paperwork sorted out. It was the answer I had been praying for.

Less than 2 weeks later I found myself hauling my goods down to North Carolina for the summer. In a recent conversation with my parents, I had the understanding that they were leaving for Kenya later that same month. I decided that the best thing to do was to vacate my part of the house earlier than all of them, so that everyone wasn't moving out at once.

My destination in North Carolina was Morganton. It is a small town in the foothills of western NC where my Dad pastored a PCA church for six years. I still knew some of the folks from the church but it had been at least eight years since I had been back. The Lord was taking me back to the South for His purpose.

I immediately went to work and worked all summer for a friend and her family, fixing up an old building. I was scraping paint, reconstructing windows, helping to install cabinets, pulling nails, and painting--- laughing, singing, and talking with my friend the entire time. It was for this purpose that God brought me to Morganton. I was challenged daily with hard theological issues, and each time I didn't know the answer. The questions were deep and sometimes irritating to my proud heart, but each time humility came when I turned to the Scriptures. I spent much of the summer laughing, but I spent much more of it beginning to uncover, by the grace of God, the man that He wants me to be. I decided to do what I had never done before, make a public confession of faith and become a member of a church. The pastor and the elders examined me, and later that same morning in July, in front of the congregation that knew me so well, my father (who had made the tiresome drive from Indiana the night before) witnessed my profession of faith. 

The summer ended much too quickly. Once again I found myself in my truck, but this time I was heading north... The calender ordered me to, against my desires. Just kidding. Part of me wanted to go to school, but a part of me was at home in North Carolina. The cool mountain air was clean, the accents were Southern, the cookin was like Moms, and most importantly, the people were wonderful.

God brought me to Patrick Henry College. His hand has been upon my life, guiding me and providing for me. I have never had enough money for my tuition, even with all my scholarships, but for two semesters now God has provided the funds for me to attend this fine school. I did not stay on the probationary status any longer than I absolutely had to. At the end of last semester, my first set of college grades were better than any grades I received in high school. This is no boast, rather it is a proclamation of praise to my Father, and it is to Him that I give the glory!

So at the end of this 21st year, and the beginning of my 22nd.... I find it fitting that I am sitting at my desk with a mountain of homework due in the morning. It serves as a reminder that I have a job to do and a limited amount of time to do it in... Even in my limited amount of time and in the next year of my life may I magnify my Savior. For to Him be all glory, power and honor; May His name be praised.

In Christ,
Martyn

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Safety, snow and snowballs

Praise God for safety! The snow has ceased.... for a time. In the last 12 days we have had over 50 inches worth of snow, and I think I am being conservative with that estimate. The grounds crew has worked tirelessly throughout the past 6 days, often going 12 -16 hours without rest. I have been thoroughly impressed with their work and have told them so many times. So to any of my friends that are reading this that spent countless hours out in the snow shoveling and ploughing.... hats off to you!

According to the weather gurus, Virginia is in for another snow on Sunday... although we are not expecting another blizzard. Despite the enjoyment of the flurries and the thrill of snowball fights, the snow really needs to melt. The roofs are not taking the weight of all the snow very well. We had several leaks in the roofs of two of our buildings that damaged the ceiling. Hopefully no lasting damage was caused. Random side note, I enjoyed the snow immensely. I threw a few snow balls, shoveled the side walks with friends, and was on the recieving end of a hail of snowballs while on Security. I threatened to ticket the offenders.. haha... it was all in jest, except I was the one wearing the snow. :)
We had school cancelled for Wednesday and Thursday this week so I have been able to catch up on some homework, chat with friends and family, and play some sports. It was like a weekend in the middle of the week. My personal calender is all screwed up right now.

My activity of the last weekend, besides the occasional shoveling, was writing a paper for Western Civilizations. I read Blaise Pascal's Pensees (French for "thoughts", and thats not the entirely correct spelling) and felt inclined to write about the nature of God, the nature of man, and the role of human reason in the relationship between the two. It was an intriguing subject which had me glued to my chair.... so much so that I stayed in an office that I have access to for almost the entire weekend.

I am rather worn from the work this week and am in serious need of rest. However, we have a basketball tournament this weekend. Lord willing, we will do well. I suppose I can rest after that.

In regard to Scripture, I have had a reoccurring thought, and the more I read, the more I feel the truth of it is confirmed. The truth I speak of is that of the nature of our faith. The more I examine the life of Christ and the lives of those who sought him truly, the more I am convinced that our is a Gospel of Suffering. The direct application of this truth is frightening to me, as it ought. I read passages like Psalm 116: 12-16 which says:

"How can I repay the LORD for all his goodness to me? I will lift up the cup of salvation and call upon the name of the LORD. I will fulfill my vows to the LORD in the presence of all his people. Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of his saints. O LORD, truly I am your servant; I am your servant, the son of your maidservant; you have freed me from my chains."

While I echo the last statement of the psalmist, I am undone by the sentence before it. For if "precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of his saints," ought that to be my desire? Should I not desire to bring glory to the LORD God, even in death... in a death that He finds precious? These have been my thoughts of late.... and I do indeed marvel at what an uncomfortable Gospel we are called to proclaim.

Praise and Prayer:
Thanks be to God for the safety and well being of both students and staff here at school during a literal blizzard. Safety is something so easily taken for granted of....
Praise for the safety of my sister who was in a second accident the same day as her first one. I am unsure of all the details but it amazes me how God protects lives...
Praise God for the snow! Even in the midst of the chaos of it all... the might of the Creator and Sustainer of the universe is proclaimed! Man and all that surrounds him ought to be brought to his knees in awe of such a display.... and we were, figuratively at least :)
Pray for my parents ministry in Kenya. Pray that my father's teaching will reflect our Fathers teaching, and that the students of NEGST would be able to understand and put into practice the truths being taught.
Pray for Mom and Dad's health as well. In my conversation with them today, mom told be of the various ailments that both of them are battling. It seems the enemy is striking our family where we are most human... health and finances. Please pray that we all will continue to place our faith in the Word of God! (See John 1:1-5)
Prayer for wisdom and guidance in all that I think say and do... I desire to be more like Christ... which means I have alot of work to do...
Prayer for dedication to the schoolwork. Its so easy to be distracted.
That I will proclaim the love of God to all whom I interact with...

Thank you for taking the time to read. I apologize because I promised pictures... but sadly I am struggling to find a good way to incorporate them into the blog. I will remedy the situation soon. Blessing upon you, in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

In Him,
Martyn

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Doom and gloo.... Wait, actually--- Snow and Igloos

We are about to get hammered by a blizzard here in Purcellville, Virginia. I have made my grocery run to the store to get the essentials (2 gallons of whole milk, its not enough but I can ration it) and afternoon classes have been cancelled for tomorrow (Friday). This is gonna be quite an experience!
If you are interested, please come on back to my blog this weekend. I will post some of the happenings, the outcome of the snowball fights (the guys will win btw :) ), and the effect that 22+ inches of snow has on a small conservative Christian school out in podunk.

Warmly- for right now, :)
Martyn

Update: 36+ inches and counting. More to follow.... and pictures.