Greetings from Neiafu Tonga,
"I wish I could tell you about the South Pacific. The way
it actually was. The endless ocean. The infinite specks of coral we called
islands. Coconut palms nodding gracefully toward the ocean. Reefs upon which
waves broke into spray, and inner lagoons, lovely beyond description. I wish I
could tell you about the sweating jungle, the full moon rising behind the
volcanoes, and the waiting. The waiting. The timeless, repetitive waiting."
This first paragraph of Michener's Tales of The South
Pacific is more than a little ironic, from our perspective (as you will
soon see) and, to some degree, helps to develop my theory that God's sense of
humor is quite like that of the British in many regards. First we need to get
caught up though, as we've not written since Tahiti and now are in Tonga.
You may remember that in Colombia they sent out a welcoming committee
of a respectable young troop of dolphins who performed their duties quite admirably,
however, here in Tonga they do things a bit bigger. We'd had a fairly rough
passage of roughly 1300 nautical miles from Bora Bora (although we'd stopped briefly
on the way) so were delighted just after dawn on our last morning while
entering the calm waters of Va’vau, a group of dozens of islands, to be greeted
by humpback whales. First they spouted great sprays in the air here and there
just to let us know they were in the area. Then, by and by, they timidly
started showing off body parts, a fin here, there a back and tail. Finally they
started waving enthusiastically and splashing about like children, which some
of them were. The mothers come here this time of year to calve, so our timing
is good. We should say God's timing is, for had it been up to us we'd have
passed through already.
We had quite a pleasant stay in Tahiti accomplishing almost
all of the boat repairs and maintenance issues that had piled up on our long
passage from Panama. We had a wonderful experience visiting one of the local
churches their on Mother's Day and seeing the bright faced young children sing
a song to their mothers. It was great fellowship with the body, and in the
process we got to know David from Sea Angel... sailseaangel.org (working right
now in Tonga for Sea Mercy seamercy.org) who I mentioned in the last newsletter
and will again in this. It is truly amazing how God is continuing to knit us
together with other believers as we continue on this journey. From Tahiti we
went just a few hours sail over to Cook's Bay Moorea where we spent several
blissful days enjoying that beautiful place.
From there we sailed overnight to Huahine and after a couple
nights there went on to Bora Bora where we'd planned to spend about four days
or so. Those four days turned into four weeks, but God's timing is always
perfect and though waiting is often frustrating at the time, it becomes clear
in retrospect what God had in mind. Although we'd still hoped to visit the YWAM
base in the Cook Islands, as days wore into weeks and we learned that they had
just dramatically increased fees for visiting yachts and there were no good
options for leaving the boat for even a night, we decided we would not try to
make it to the Cooks.
Some unruly soul had gotten ahold of the number of one of our
credit cards and tried to use it at a hair salon in California, but Chase being
the wise bankers that they are, recognized that we could not be in Panama and
California simultaneously, so they promptly canceled that card. We'd asked that
the new card along with some important papers be sent over from home, and as an
afterthought I requested a book which I'd read not long ago which I thought
Josh might enjoy since he is interested in all things military: Tales of the
South Pacific. Without the book the express mail rate would have been
reasonable. With it, it was not. Still, by priority mail the U.S. post office
predicted a 6-10 delivery. I went to the post office in Vaitape, the village in
Bora Bora on the seventh day and was greeted with something not unlike belly laughter
when I explained my package had been sent seven days ago. All the same, I returned in a couple days and then every
day afterward. It became part of my daily routine to take the dingy into the
heart of town, walk to the post office, take a number, sit down and wait 10-20
minutes, rise and take my driver’s license (now expired) from my wallet and
watch the clerks disappear behind a closed door, where I'm pretty sure they
took a coffee break, only to reemerge about five minutes later with the simple word
"no."
God used those many trips to shape me. The time spent provided
opportunity to pray. The waiting exercised my patience. The disappointment of
hearing "no" again and again resulted in soul searching and
evaluation of where I really place my trust. Is God really faithful 100 percent
of the time? Does He always really work all things together for good for those
who love Him and are called according to His purposes? Mixed into that, rather
heavy stuff, was the fact that Beatrice and I were really wrestling with what
exactly our purpose out here in the middle of the world's biggest ocean really
is in God's grand scheme of things.
This all probably seems a bit like whining. There are worse
places to be stuck than Bora Bora afterall. Buford, Wyoming, for instance, may
be considered by some as a less desirable spot to be stuck for a full month.
Certain unused portions of current day urban Detroit perhaps, although I have
not been there so I can't say for sure. The thing of it is, no matter how idyllic
one's surroundings, if the heart is not at peace it is virtually impossible to
enjoy the place. We feel accountable to God and to those who pray for and
support us and we can't abide the sense of feeling we are slack in our duties.
God, as He usually does, came with a resounding answer to our many questions
and calmed our troubled minds in doing so.
One day at church way back on Marco Island, where this whole
adventure began, Beatrice was really struggling and went forward for prayer at
the end of the service. Sometimes God delivers to a person's mind an image or
word as an encouragement or direction when they are praying for others. The
pastor's wife told Beatrice that morning that this rarely happens for her, but
while she was praying for Beatrice she had two pictures. The first was our boat
with sails full. The message was that God would be the one who filled our sails
and ushered us where He willed. The second, a net. The clear message of the
net, as she saw us sewing it together, was that we would "network" with
others in the Body as we travelled the world and in so doing would edify and
mutually encourage one another as well as building connections God will use in
the future. God provided dramatic confirmation of that prophetic message to us
in Bora Bora and has continued to do so since.
The day our package arrived, a Monday, so did our good
Australian friends Phil and Pam aboard Maranatha www.maranatha.id.au.... whom
we first met in Panama and had been in touch with ever since. The following day
David and Karen from Sea Angel pulled into port. On our first day in Bora Bora
we saw a boat with the words "Joyful" and below, Aspen, Co. We
thought we should probably knock on their hull and have been good friends with
Jeff and Anne mission joyful.wordpress.com, and their crew Bill ever since.
Now, by God's grace we would be able to introduce our new Christian friends
with our "old" ones and what wonderful fellowship that turned out to
be. We all went into the village to experience Heiva (the almost month long
festival of Polynesia music and dancing) one night and on our last night in
Bora Bora we joined one last time for a potluck aboard Sea Angel, which, being
a catamaran is the only of the four boats big enough to comfortably accommodate
us all. What sweet fellowship!
During that time Phil blessed all of us with 28 Gigabytes of
video of the greatest bible teaching. David Pawson, an English Pastor has
taught all the way through the bible chapter by chapter in a way that is
engaging, extremely interesting and informative and so helpful in really
grasping and understanding the word of God.
The kids like his teaching so much that we've decided it will be one of
their courses this year!
Here is a little glimpse into God's humor. The package we'd
been waiting for had been, as evidenced by the postmark on it, sitting at the
same post office I'd been visiting everyday for the past several weeks, since
the previous Wednesday. They had been looking in the wrong place for it.. Had
we received it then we likely would have left Bora Bora and not only missed out
on what was truly wonderful time spent with dear friends, but also failed to develop
what we are now starting to see is a key component, if not the major thrust of
God's purpose for this whole mission. Like Monty Python's, God's sense of humor
often involves human suffering. In God's version, however, suffering produces
endurance, endurance character and character hope which does not disappoint us
since His love has been poured out into our hearts.
Then there is this. Halfway between Bora Bora and Tonga is a
tiny atoll, of exquisite beauty called Palmerston Island, which Cook discovered
and mapped in the late 1700s. William Marster, an Englishman who'd tried his
hand in the California gold rush then, apparently not finding much, set out
with a whaling boat into the South Pacific. He liked Palmerston so much that he
returned to live there permanently and now, six generations later the island is
populated almost exclusively of Marsters and there lives among them a rich and
fascinating history, a history of ship wrecks and progress and friendship and
fish. Lots of fish, for that's the primary protein source there. Palmerston
would have been worth stopping at just for the snorkeling and diving (think aquarium
with 200 ft. visibility, grey reef sharks, sea turtles and brilliant reef
teeming with all manner of tropical fish) and since the wind died entirely just
prior to our arriving and stayed flat for two days it made sense anyway.
However, the people there and the way they live and their history is what
really made the experience special. Edward Marsters, 5th generation, the island
host brought us in through the reef (sail boats are moored outside the reef)
passage on his skiff which he'd found washed up on shore one day all the way
from Tahiti where it had broken off it's mooring six weeks earlier. He fed us a
delicious lunch of barracuda, rice and a boiled root like taro. Afterward, his
son, David, took us on a tour of the island. It was on this tour that we met Ros,
an Englishwoman who is one of four teachers teaching Christian home schooling
curriculum to the five children on the island.
Her father first visited Palmerston over a half century ago by
sailboat and one night felt God was saying to him "I want you to teach my
people here about me." He said, "But God, how should I do that since
I shall set sail tomorrow." That night he was washed up on the reef and he
spent the next nine months on Palmerston repairing his boat. Repairing his
boat, and, as you've probably guessed by now, teaching the people about God.
David told us on the tour, after I'd asked him what one of the majestic trees
in the village center was, her father had used Mahogany from the island to
replank his boat and when he went to New Zealand to have it inspected they
drove a nail into it and could not get it out again. Anyway, Ros heard her
father talk so lovingly of Palmerston all her life that when he passed a few
years ago she felt compelled to come and see the place. "I was offered a
job so I went to New Zealand for a couple months, to get my head right,"
she said "and then I came back." She has been there four years now
and it was a genuine pleasure to have just the few minutes we spent with her,
to hear her story and exchange contact information. When we arrived in Tonga
there was an email from her expressing how she enjoyed meeting us and was sad
that our time was so short, which mirror our sentiments exactly. Here again we
see God's hand confirming his purpose for us.
We have now another part of the net. Some more seeds have been
planted. The net grows bigger. We want fruit and fish now, but we likely have
to wait for both. In the meantime, we will continue to follow God's leading,
plant seeds where we can and continue our stitching in this network of
believers wherever He places us.
We hope very much to be in Townsville, Australia by the end of
August to work as Mission Builders (as we did at YWAM St. Croix) at the Youth
With a Mission base there before and during a big conference called YWAM together
ywamtogether.org
While we are here we will continue to strengthen those
relationships God has blessed us with as Maranatha and Joyful are both here as
well. Tomorrow, here in Neiafu, Anne will be doing an art lesson (a part of her
ministry) for about fifty to sixty children and young people and teaching them
about Jesus. Beatrice and Gabriella will go along to help out. Sunday we'll go
back to a beautiful anchorage where Maranatha is and go with Pam and Phil to a
Wesleyan Free Church in the small village nearby.
On our long and sometimes quite difficult passage from Bora
Bora God began to speak to my heart about another integral part of our
ministry, namely prayer. What better thing could we be doing on those long
watches, alone at the helm in the middle of the night then pray? I've sent an
email out to all the pastors we've been so blessed by and asked for their
personal and ministerial prayer needs (and I've not heard back from some of you
who will be receiving this., but don't worry we'll pray for you anyway : ) ). It would be our great joy and pleasure to
hear back from any of the rest of you as well with your latest news and your
prayer requests.
Meanwhile, as we continue to wait on the Lord, abiding in His
presence, seeking His purposes and enjoying the fellowship of believers He has
placed in our lives, we'll also continue to have hermit crab races on the beach
( draw circle in sand, place crabs in center and voilĂ : instant fun! ) marvel
at the Creator's amazing creativity as we watch humpback whales and fruit bats
and sample the juicy mandarin oranges we can pick up off the jungle floor at
will and delight in the brilliant colors of the coral reefs teeming with even
more colorful tropical fish. What an amazing God we serve. Just imagine, this is
but a dim and blurry glimpse of all we will enjoy for eternity!
God Bless You,
Kenny, Beatrice, Joshua and Gabriella Shoemaker
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