Fly, spin, adjust


We arrived in Detroit, after a very long flight from Korea, with transfers through Narita and Chicago, and a surprising upgrade to business class. Japan Airlines - this is the second upgrade John received from them. We landed on Dec. 19th, and drove up to Windsor, Ontario. Jetlag wasn't as bad this time around, and we had a nice reunion with our siblings (-inlaws), and the parents.

It's been somewhat of a cultural adjustment. That word- adjustment- I think sometimes has a negative connotation- so how about cultural 'enlightenment' - staying at beautifully painted/decorated/spacious homes, with two bull-dogs, conversing with the cutest babbling toddler nephew, shopping malls and 'stuff' neatly organized, smooth engine cars, and so much food, variety variety. All things that were not the norm in Nepal.

We love being here, mostly because we get to spend time with family, but our minds are sort of turning, trying to find crevices to hook ourselves into place. All this moving and hopping around from the east to west, from cities to suburbs to mountain life to somewhere else, is more than thrilling but at times requires a lot of spinning and processing. I guess adjustment is the right word.

But we are so thankful to be at "home", wherever that is. Thankful for family - for grandparents and parents, aunts and uncles, and cousins, and their inlaws - so warm. And friends. Old and new - friends - like family. Starting from Windsor, we begin the flights and we plunge in.

Visit You?

We will be in Canada/USA in January and February.
We want to visit as many family and friends as we can.
We just returned from 2 months in Nepal.
We were touched by the needs of the Himalayan mountain children. So,
We have committed to go back to Nepal as full-time missionaries.
We want to raise awareness, prayer, and support for the long-term work in these regions.
We want to share with you the vision that God has given us for this work.

But most of all...
We miss you and want to see you!
Would you be interested in getting together?
We are trying to map out travel plans.
So if you are available, we would love to visit you.
We would love to hear from you.

Adventures continued in Nepal and India...

hello dear friends, just wanted to write a short update from an internet cafe in kathmandu. so much has happened and is happening, wish i could share in detail (we hope to put together something detailed at the end our trip) but for now, just a brief overview.

TREKKING: loved every bit of it. we were joined with 4 from alabama and 2 boys from the children's home. we were so encouraged by the team spirit and the boys' leadership. we were able to pass out some medicine as well as share some stories with the mountain folk. we drove up on the bumpiest 12 hour busride of my life, saw the most incredible himalayan scenery, and experienced an instant internal connection as soon as i saw the tibetan aprons on the mountain women, an experience i knew i couldn't explain with natural understanding. God spoke individually to all of our hearts in ways that i believe will have lasting effects and give vision for the future. we continue to wait on God to reveal to us his heart for these people. and there was so much more...to be continued...

DAILY LIFE in KTM: kathmandu is one of the most polluted cities i've been in, but one of the most eccentric and exciting. one thing i am learning is to BE FLEXIBLE. i thought i wouldn't have any problems with that, only to find that it was exactly what God needed to work in my heart. time doesn't mean much here, and everything changes all the time. life happens with more struggle, everything takes a little more effort and time, the convenience of korea or the west is not here, and there have surely been moments of frustration and insecurity about whether or not we would make it out here, but it never ends in defeat. God continues to remind us of his purpose and help. but it has been very healthy for us to see a tiny glimpse of the joys and struggles of daily life in kathmandu. we have been working on different projects, such as organizing the library for the children's home, standardizing short term team logistics, developing a music camp curriculum, and some tutoring. we joined them in morning prayer, and their evening activities and homework time. we have been blessed to get to know the kids and their individuality a bit better. the hosts and the hostel parents have been so wonderful and we are thankful to be getting to know them and their hearts as well.

INDIA: 15 hr bus ride to india. overnight. i can sleep anywhere, so i slept most of the way. but john and the other intern said they were up all night. i woke up and noticed the bus was flying, and i had an urge to pray for our safety, for the first time on that trip. just as i prayed, i saw headlights coming fast and another bus crashed into ours. we were sitting on the opposite side of the bus so all the glass that shattered didn't get to us. only two people were injured, and a few got some glass cuts. thank God for keeping us safe, we transferred to another bus and arrived in india a bit shaken up and tired. the two weeks in north india were quite incredible. we stayed at the bible school and had some opportunities to share our testimonies and lead prayer times with the students. we enjoyed getting to know some of the staff and learned from their personal stories of how God has taken them through a journey on the mission field. we gained some real and practical insight into what life is like when fully devoted to God. we were so blessed to have a visiting pastor from england come and speak for a couple of days. again, i wish i could write in detail about some of the internal growth that happened for john and i. we hope to share that with you someday soon. the pastor spoke at a local church and 30-50 people (i think mostly hindus) came to know of Jesus Christ and how he saves. we saw an eagerness in them that is very rare to see. we saw the Holy Spirit work in ways we have not personally witnessed before. amazing! we then went up to a lower mountain area, and john gave a message at one of the local churches, and we had some sweet fellowship with the local believers. the hospitality was beyond beyond. i saw giving in a new way and we were so encouraged by the families there. we didn't have bottled/filtered water up there and i think that was the cause of john being admitted into a hospital for a day. lots of iv drips, and the next day he was fine, but it was quite an experience. the next day we were on a 15+hr bus ride back to ktm. a nightmare of a ride, by far the craziest, most scariest ride of my life. an angry driver who sped through potholes and mountain curves. but we are now back in ktm, safe and sound, recovering and processing all that the Spirit worked into our hearts.

TREK 2: on wed, we plan to trek again. it'll be one of the hosts, john, and myself. we are open to whatever God opens and inspires for us during that trek. it'll probably be about 10 days total. there is church we may visit, and we'll probably visit one of the children's parents. we are really looking forward to this. i love the mountains, just as much as my husband, i think:). God knew what he was doing when he brought us together.

AFTER THE INTERNSHIP: on nov 28th we head back to korea to finish off the last bit of our internship. after that, on dec 19th-march 2nd, we plan to be in canada and the states, visiting family and friends. we hope to use that time to be with family as well as travel around to bring awareness about the work we have been a part of for the past couple months. we know it would be impossible to meet with everyone but if possible we would love to meet with some of you personally to share stories from our two months here.

OKAY! that's all for now. thank you all for your prayers and your support. we love hearing from you (sorry i haven't been able to write back to you individually, internet is limited here).

love,
john and soyon.

Week 1 in Nepal

"jaymasee" (i don't know if that's how you spell it in nepali), it's the "hello" greeting amongst christians here. otherwise, "namaste". i hope you all are well.

just wanted to send a quick email about our first week in nepal. we're currently chilling at our lovely hosts' home, helping out with last minute logistics before the US team arrives late tonight. and in between i get a few min to write you.

20 members from alabama, will be arriving to join our trekking team. we're dividing up into four groups, going through different routes. john and i will be taking a group up the most remote places of the four, and we have been informed that it will be a "rough it" 10 days. we're so terribly excited about it. i know john the mountain man who's been growing the beard i requested, is especially thrilled to be in his element. i too, although a little bit nervous about the physical aspect of the trip, especially since i haven't gone running all week and feel a bit weak today, am still very eager and excited to see life in the mountain villages. we'll have four people from the us join our team, along with our nepali trekking guide, and of course, two boys from the children's home. obviously, we won't have internet there, but we'll be sure to update you upon return, with stories and photos.

the third intern, who is going through this experience with us, is going to stay here in the city with the korea team, to faciliate a program with the children. she has been having eye problems, please pray for her.

i wanted to update you on the past week. due to security issues, i'll leave out names of people and places (i know i've mentioned them before but if you could, please leave those out when responding to us via email). the hosts got us our own house to rent during our two months here, which is a far better deal than staying in hotels or motels. they have so generously provided some furnishings and it's a cozy space. and the best thing about it is that we live literally six steps across from the children's home. we have been able to eat breakfasts and dinners there with the kids. we join them in their morning prayer time and witness God's power in that little prayer room. one morning one of the girls, probably in grade 6, told us that as she was praying God gave her a picture of all these rivers flowing down from the mountains. She kept seeing more and more separate rivers and they all eventually met into a big ocean. She went on with such insight that God was showing her that these individual rivers were leading into God's ocean of unity. The host who was leading the prayer time went on to talk about how all the Koreans, Nepalis, Americans, Canadians, British, Australians, Tibetans, people from all the tribes would be flowing into that ocean, where though we are so different, we would all join in to praise God. It was such a beautiful vision and the way the girl told it with authority left an imprint on my heart.
another 13 year-old girl came up to john, the other intern, and i individually and told us that as she was praying, God had given her a verse from Eph 6:19-20 specifically for the trekking team. And she's not even going on the trek, the selfless obedience and encouragement that a girl that age would give. I was moved. the passage says, "Pray also for me, that whenever I open my mouth, words may be given me so that I will fearlessly make known the mystery of the gospel, for which I am an ambassador in chains. Pray that I may declare it fearlessly, as I should." These words really reflect our hearts. Please pray for us in this way.

during our time here we were also able to offer some music and art classes to the kids. the third intern is a pianist and piano teacher. she has prepared a music camp for the kids that she will be doing while john and i go on our second trek in a couple of weeks. the chidlren sing with such life and heart. she is introducing some harmonizing, and basic music theory. i'm sure the kids love it. i taught some art classes, and felt completely in my element. the classes were divided up into three groups, two days. so the first day i taught basic color theory and had them mixing colors. mix mix mix, i kept telling them. with a flashlight against the wall, they traced silhouettes of their faces and then i had them apply the color mixing into the their profiles. i think they loved it. i kept encouraging them not to copy each other (as i've been told that they do often here, as they do in korea:)) but to come up with a unique piece. they are such creative children. i kept thinking of my "art grandma" from korea, as i call her now, who tells me everytime i telephone her that she prays for john and i everyday, that we'd go out to the mission field, and that i'd be able to teach art (when i first moved back to korea, she spent several months teaching me an elementary art curriculum that she had developed and used for years, so that i could use it on the mission field, this was before i ever wanted to be a missionary, but she kept praying and here i am now:)). the next day we had more classes, and i had each kid draw/paint/collage/create their own rivers that would all meet into one big ocean (using the vision that the girl had shared the previous morning). i loved seeing what they came up with. i brought back a lot of the craft materials that i had from korea, and was glad for it, as they have very limited art supplies here. during the classes i kept thinking how much i loved the informal class setting, not being part of a formal educational institution, but free to be organic in the learning process. and the kids here absorb everything!

while the art and music was going on, john was helping out with the logistics of the teams that are coming, and also helping with standardizing some of the prep work that goes into hosting short term teams. his organized, engineering mind went into play:).

we also spent one night playing a whole bunch of team games, as part of their family night event. they wanted us to facilitate some team building games. john led that and the kids had a blast. and so did we.

there are five new little boys, that are to DIE for, they are so so so adorable. they are starting to learn english so we can communicate with them. all the other children, we remember from our last visit and they love on us and we love on them and it's a place that john and i both feel so alive. it has been wonderful to see how some of these chidlren have matured since our last visit.

if you haven't figured out yet, we love being here. john says that the thing that sealed the deal for him in knowing that i was to be his wife, was when i said that i felt most alive in the third world. well, here we are, back in our element, and still waiting eagerly for the Holy Spirit's leading for our future. We still have 7 weeks or so left of our field internship, so there's a whole realm we have not explored yet. But we pray that God will reveal what he wants from us and for us. we would really appreciate your prayers too. that we would be so soft hearted to know what God's will is, if this is the place we belong, if the ethnic tibetans are the people that he wants us to be with.

this morning, i was flooded with tears and emotions of awe and wonder at how big our God is. i thought of all the dots that he connects to make his perfect plan align. and those dots, we don't always see, but there are certain times in our lives where we get a glimpse of that wide picture, and wow it's so big and glorious. That he sent his son Jesus Christ to die and bear our punishment, show his power in his redemption, and then to give us the freedom that he so freely gives when we believe in him. That no matter how big our problems seem, how many our issues may be, he still holds us and wants us to know how much he loves us, and then he gives us wings to soar, to give to others, what he has given us. And all this, to bring glory to God. God is so good and glorious. i hope you all are experiencing that wherever you are.

thanks for reading all of this, i didn't expect it to be this long!!!!!

love you all, soyon and john.

Missions Internship

Dear family and friends,

Here is our first big update since getting married last year in August. We apologize that it’s been a while since we have updated you. We’ve been waiting to come out with a big mass email like this only at the right time. We think it’s time now to share some exciting news with you! No, it’s not a babyJ. We’re heading back to Nepal!!!

Many of you already know that we went to Nepal in 2007 on a short-term missions trip with
our church from Korea. Prior to this trip, we didn’t really know much about each other. But after the trip, we started dating and were married less than a year later, a wonderful story of God’s goodness and master plan! Even before anything had sparked between us, we had both individually fallen in love with the rawness of Nepal, and had told God that we’d come back to live if he made it clear to us that he wanted us there. Then it sparked between us, and turned into a fire and we got married, with Nepal still deeply marked in our hearts. But with marriage and life happening, we thought, oh why not a few years later, money saved, self-supported, and more ready. Then we’ll go, everyone else seemed to think that was the wisest thing to do. But God seemed to have a different plan. As always, He wanted us to exercise faith. The decision to go to Nepal came sooner than we thought. The Spirit nudged and was simply asking us to trust and go. So here we are now. You can read more about this process from John’s perspective on our blog http://sojothomps.blogspot.com/2009/04/future-is-now.html

Since going to Nepal 2 years ago, we have not stopped thinking about and praying for its people, specifically the ethnic Tibetan refugee groups residing in Nepal. There are so many needs. Nepal is one of the poorest countries in the world and one of the darkest. Hinduism and Buddhism consume over 95% of its population. We desire to serve the needs of the people of Nepal, however God leads.

For the next 4 months we will be going through a Missions Internship through an NGO focusing mainly on bringing the gospel of Jesus Christ to the unreached parts of the Himalaya.

SEPTEMBER: We will be residing in Korea at the Chun-parents’ home (who are in Charlotte, NC right now on furlough). We will be going through an intensive, in-depth period of study, using the Missions Perspectives course with the leaders of the NGO. This course is filled with insightful and reliable material on mission work from all over the world, but we will be focusing mainly on the application of this material in the Himalaya. We are excited to be learning about sharing Christ’s love and truth in ways that can be received by the ethnic Tibetan people groups. We also look forward to picking the brain of our pastor who has served as a missionary in the Himalaya for many years.

OCTOBER: We will be arriving in Nepal to assist at an orphanage home in Kathmandu. The children at this home have all come from remote and unreached areas of the Himalayas of Nepal, rescued from trafficking, abuse, disease, poverty, hunger, even death. They have come to the home and become followers of Jesus Christ. Many of them are teenagers now and are leading groups back to the very villages where they came from, preaching and teaching God’s Word boldly and powerfully in the Spirit. They are remarkable children with some of the most moving testimonies you’ll ever hear of God’s rescuing mercy.

We will also assist a short-term missions team from Alabama and our church in Korea who will meet us at the children's home and go into very remote areas of the Himalaya. One team will hand out much needed medical supplies, most notably de-worming medicine. Another team will go on a story telling trek from village to village. Nepali people, especially from areas void of all media love stories! A whole village will gladly come to hear Bible stories. Another team will stay at the home and have VBS (Vacation Bible School) with the children.

NOVEMBER: We will head down to Northern India to see a Bible School for indigenous pastors. Believers from India, Bhutan, Nepal, Tibet, Myanmar, and other countries of the Himalaya come to this school to learn more from God’s Word, to know God more, and then go back to their home countries to make Him known. We are excited to meet and learn from these people.

We will then go back to Nepal for a week before coming back to Korea in December.

DECEMBER: We will have 3 more weeks of study again in Korea, this time with a more narrow focus on the Himalaya and its unreached people groups.

We finish the internship on December 18, in time to rest and celebrate Christmas. It is our hope and prayer that at this time we will be making preparations and raising support for going back to Nepal sometime in 2010 as full-time career missionaries, God willing.

So our purpose for participating in this internship is to discover if this is the path God has for us. We are praying for Godly wisdom, for clarity and vision while we are there, and for God to show us if He is opening or closing the door for us in Nepal. We feel it is an excellent ‘trial’ period for God to test us and stretch our faith. We are praying for boldness and a faith to simply step out and obey His call. We have a heart and true passion for Nepal, and we want to show compassion to its suffering people. We desire to be a light that shines for Christ in the darkness and to serve there with all of our spirit, soul, and body. God grant us favor and grace.

Another reason for going is to see the work firsthand in the Himalaya, to come back in December and to inform you about the needs and the work there. We desire for our friends and family to get involved in the work; most importantly by giving your time in prayer, or giving finances to the work there, or even coming to visit and see the work for yourself.

We can do nothing without the power of the Holy Spirit working in and through us and we recognize how important it is for us to dedicate ourselves to fervent prayer, and to be lifted up by the saints in prayer. Please pray that God would be glorified.

Thank you to all of you who took time to read this and pray for us. We are so thankful for each and every one of you for being a huge and significant part of our journey. We are so excited to see God’s light and life spread through Nepal. We love you all.

Peace and love,

John and Soyon Thompson

P.S. We are working on a website so we can keep you updated on all that is happening with us on a more consistent basis. Please be patient as it’s our first crack at a website. Until then, check out our blog. sojothomps.blogspot.com

Some Prayer Points:
God’s work in the Himalaya
The Nepali people
God’s workers
more laborers to go to the children
the Bible School in India
the USA team and our church team
the Internship
protection and safety in traveling
physical health
financial provision
our equipment to hold up
open doors and open hearts
connections with people
the Holy Spirit’s guidance
Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done

Happy 1 Year Anniversary in Jeju Island


Right before taking off for the wonders in Nepal and India,
we decided to spend a few days between the end of our
3+ years of teaching Korean hakwon students and
the start of the Missions Internship to vacate,
and celebrate our one year of marriage, which we would say
has been the best year of both of our lives.
It was a beautiful time away on Jeju Island.
My boss got us reservations at a resort that was
everything we could have asked for. We
lounged around some, mainly fed off of budget food from
the convenient store, climbed to a volcano crater, and played
coastal photography. And as seems to be the typical
past time of the Thompsons these days, we
hiked up Mt. Halla, the highest peak in S.Korea,
on the day of our anniversary, drenched in
cold rain and wind, sloshing through mud and puddles,
nearly breaking our knees. We enjoyed every part of that day
in reflection of year one, thanking God
for what he's given to us in marriage, and
looking ahead with deep anticipation
for the uncovering of the coming year.




Click for more photos.

The Future is Now


Hi all,

This is John. My first blog entry on here. Sorry for my lack of communication and my constant procrastination. I think I was just afraid to write this earlier because I was searching my heart for my motivation as to why I was writing this. I hate writing about how God is working in my life sometimes because when I write it, I think it can sometimes sound boastful and arrogant. I wonder if it comes across to others that I have it all together and that’s why God has been so good to me. That is so far from the truth. God is so good to me and you because He’s just that good. He loves us that much. And I shouldn’t be ashamed of that. But I struggle so much with self worth and accepting that the Creator loves His creation so much. And I constantly think about those who read it and are struggling with God and comparisons start being made as to why God seems to favor some more than others. But God showers his grace and love on all, especially the ones who are struggling. Again I think about how awesome God is, and how much He works through people who are so flawed and full of sin and I think, how can I not share this with my friends and family.

So for those of you interested in what our plan is for the near future, here it is: Read along.


Have you ever done something that, at the time, made no sense, but later worked out well? I think this may be one of those times for us...

One day Jesus was standing by the Lake of Gennesaret. He saw a boat along the shore and got into it. It was Simon Peter's boat.

Jesus said to Peter, "Let's go into deep water, toss the nets in and catch some fish."

Simon answered, "Master, we worked hard all night and haven't caught anything. But because you said so I'll let down the nets."

They did and caught so much fish the nets began to break. They needed another boat to come help them. Both boats were so full of fish they began to sink. Peter and his companions were astonished.

Peter fell to his knees and said to Jesus, "Go away from me Lord. I am a sinful man."

Jesus said to Peter, "Don't be afraid; from now on you will catch men."

So they pulled their boats to shore, left everything, and followed Him. - Luke 5:1-11


A few months ago I enrolled in the Korean Language Program at Seoul National University. After much thought, prayer, endorsements from former students of the program, and conversations with in-laws; my wife and I decided it would be best for me to go through the program for one year. It would only be a year and by the end of that year I would have a firm grasp of the Korean language and culture. Our vision for going through the program was to:

I) Help me better communicate with my in-laws and their extended families so we could get to know each other on a deeper level.

II) Use what I learn and pass it on to our children when we had them so they would know their background, language, and culture.

III) Allow me to make important decisions for my family rather than be told what to do because I don’t know the language or the way the system works.

IV) Use the language to connect with people and churches within Korea for raising support when we were to go to the mission field.

V) Be able to make a better income which would be much easier for an English speaking foreigner with an F-2 spousal visa and the ability to speak Korean. The job opportunities are endless and the advantages great for a person with that skill set. This would allow us to be able to pay off my student debts quickly after the one year program concluded.

Our vision and reasons for the Korean Language Program were well intentioned, well thought out, and probably the most reasonable course of action for us at the time.

Then about 2 weeks before I was to start the program, my wife and I decided to take a week and commit it to prayer. At this point our missions training would have to wait a year or two until after the Language program, but that was fine with us. Korea had become our safe home. And we felt that after a year or two in Korea, we’d be better prepared, better educated, and better suited for the mission field.

Halfway through that week of prayer we met a young married couple who had been through part of the Himalayas mission training (at our church). They were about to leave for India and Nepal for the short-term-on-the-field portion of the training. They began talking about Nepal and the fire in our hearts started burning again for Nepal and its people.

At the end of our week it was becoming quite evident that God didn’t want us to delay going to the mission field for two years. My wife recognized it before I did… or more accurately, I didn’t want to recognize it. I was starting University in less than a week, we were actively involved in church and the community, we were developing new friendships with people, we were connecting more with our family, and I was in Judo classes that I really loved. For the first time in my three years in Korea, I really felt like I was starting to connect with and embrace the Korean culture. I love this country and it feels like home for Soyon and me. I certainly didn’t want to give that up.

My wife is awesome! What I love the most about her is her big soft heart. She grew up as an MK (missionary kid) in Nigeria. She loved her time there, but still carries some deep hurts about her upbringing as an MK. If you’re an MK, I’m sure you can relate. Recently I’ve seen God do some amazing things in her life that show that she really is being healed of those past hurts. I think for the first time in her life, she’s feeling some consistency. She, like me, has come to love Korea and call it home. It’s safe and offers her stability, something I was afforded living in a small town for over 26 years, but something she has just come to find. For an MK that’s always been moving around, it’s a new and refreshing change not to up and move around so much. I think she would have been content to establish some roots here and settle down.

But at the end of that week of prayer, God really started speaking to her heart. She listened. She let go of the stability and safety that Korea offers us and suggested we radically change our life and our direction. No more delays to the calling God has for us. It’s time to start the missions training. I saw the change in her. She was teaching me a thing or two about obedience and faith and she didn’t even know it. She still struggles from time to time (like we all do), but she’s faithful and responsive to God. I love her for that!

So here I am with an itch to go back to school and improve my judo throws. I figured it was too late to turn back. I was enrolled in University, tuition was paid, in-laws were so proud of me for learning Korean, we’ve got a nice apartment, sweet car (KIA PRIDE!!!), and great life right here in Suji. Why would I want to give all that up? Why risk all that? It makes no sense.

And then I think about Peter in that passage in Luke. He says, “Master, I worked hard all night and caught nothing. But because you said so, I’ll put down the nets.”

Peter is a fisherman. Fishing is all he knows about. He fished that same spot all night with no success. It made no sense for him to throw the net back out there. But he did. And Jesus rewarded his obedience and faith. We believe He’s the same gracious God and will do the same for us if we just listen to what He’s telling us.

It made no sense, but we quit the Korean Language Program. It made no sense, but we probably offended our Korean family slightly. It made no sense, because I already quit my job a week prior to this…

But because You said so, we put down our nets.

God has since filled our boat!

I was able to quit the Language program with a 90% refund for tuition. I got my old job back and got another great job (2 jobs now) that I’ll work until the end of July, thus allowing us to pay off my school debt (finally after 10 plus years!) in less than two months and save a bit too. It looks like we’ll be able to start the 4 month training for the Himalayas as early as the end of August. Praise the Lord! And miraculously this all occurred in the span of our week of prayer.

We are excited to be starting this new journey and new adventure.

Like Peter and his companions we are astonished at the improbable things God worked in our lives in such a short time frame.

And like Peter, I think, “Go away from me Lord. I’m a sinful man.” I feel so unworthy of it all. I struggle with thoughts of not being adequate enough and strong enough to go to a place so foreign. I feel like I don’t measure up at so many things that the mission field will hold for us. Unskilled, uneducated, unready are we.

And yet the words of Jesus jump out and hit me right in the face. “Don’t be afraid.”

Peter was a fisherman. It’s all he knew. He wasn’t adequate to preach, skilled to teach, educated to witness, brave enough to stand for Christ, or strong enough to go where God called him to. He knew how to bait a hook, untangle a net, and gut a fish. But he pulled his boat to shore, left everything, and followed Him anyway.

We feel like Peter. We know a few things that we are familiar with. But if we leave everything that makes sense and follow Him anyway, God will fill our boats. Sometimes our boats may be full of water and we’ll feel like we’re drowning. Sometimes our boats may be full of the catch of men. Peter failed God miserably and he stood up for God triumphantly. I expect some of the same struggles and successes for Soyon and myself.

God’s plan seems to be constantly changing, refining, and morphing our lives into His perfect will as we seem to be dragging our feet, kicking and screaming, “No. Not yet. Wait for my time God.”

And Jesus says to not be afraid and just follow Him. We’re gonna try.

I read my blog entries from a year or two ago and the plans I had. I think about what’s happened over the past month. I keep thinking, “My, how things have changed.”

Please keep us in your prayers as we start this new phase of our lives we feel God has laid before us.