Thursday, August 19, 2010


              

                   At the start of July, while most staff departed for their summer holidays, I hit the busiest part of my summer: sports camps.  Having never been involved in sports camps at Bethany before, I relied on the expertise of Jaylin, a seasoned pro and conveniently also a summer worker helping out specifically with the camps.  The weeks leading up to the camps were spent planning, scheduling, re-scheduling, re-scheduling, staffing, re-staffing etc.  So when the first day of camp arrived, I was nervous and excited, nervous because I didn’t know what to expect and excited because all the work done in preparation was finally going to go into effect.

                  The main way that I was in front of the campers was during Courtside (similar to our Selah time).  I had prepared a four part series coming out of Romans 8 and although slightly apprehensive as to how the campers would take it, I was mostly looking forward to being able to share.  At Bethany sports camps we attempt to bridge the gap between faith and athletics, trying to explain the connection that naturally exists, not create one.  I went into the first Courtside with optimism that what I had prepared would make huge waves.  Perhaps this was too idealistic or simply proud, but when I spoke it seemed like the campers simply didn’t care, that they weren’t interested in what I had to say.  Insert extreme disappointment and discouragement.  Here was my major opportunity both to connect with the campers and share about what Jesus has already done for all of us, and indeed what God is doing in and through our transformed lives, and it seemed like it was missing the mark. 

                  So I gave it up.  Not “gave up” but I gave it up.  I gave up my expectations of how I expected God to work (this was far more out of necessity than some super-spirituality complex).  I wanted to see the fruit immediately.  Oddly enough, one of the great encouragements of Romans 8 is that God is indeed at work; we sometimes don’t see it, we sometimes wonder if it actually is happening, but He is.  Christ’s sacrifice is evidence that God is at work, that He loves His world, and desires to restore it.  He desires to restore us.  I think that maybe this experience was restoration for me.  It restored me to a proper place in my relationship with God and my expectations of how He would use what I offered.

                  Of course God did use it, to what extent I’m unsure of, but He was generous enough to give me a glimpse.  A camper approached me during basketball camp (the second week of camps), after the first Courtside of the week (an interesting restoration of the first day of the first week).  He explained that he had never before heard of Jesus’ sacrifice, of God’s love in the way he had heard it that night.  I give more credit to God than to whatever I may have done differently that second time through but knowing that I could be a part of what He was doing, of what He wanted others to hear was an encouragement that was even sweeter after having my experiences of the first week.

                  “For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angles nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depths, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:38-39)

Nick Boschman 
Athletics Director

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Word of the Week - Summer Edition


Unbeknownst to most, the Word of the Week club has not been inactive over the summer months. Here are several words that are being nominated by Randy Klassen as particularly evocative of select portions of his aestival peregrinations (a.k.a. “summer travels”):
myriad (ME-ree-ad, adj, from the Greek murias, muriados “ten thousand,” as in Rev 5.11: “I heard the voice of many angels, numbering…ten thousand times ten thousand”):
1.     any large, almost incomprehensible number, “gazillion.”
2.     the number of kilometres the Klassen family drove in a three week span, visiting both Dallas, Texas, and Abbotsford, BC.
Titan (TIGHT-un, noun):
1.     member of (ancient Greek) race of giants or gods (such as Prometheus).
2.     Something of superhuman size or strength.
3.     Tallest, fastest, longest roller coaster in Texas (250 feet tall, reaching speeds of 135 km/h), located at Six Flags Dallas, upon which Randy rode, to placate his son. (Once was enough.)
conference (KONF-runts, noun, from the Latin conferentia, from verb confero [co-, con ‘together, with’ + fero ‘bear, bring, carry’ =] to bring together, contribute, unite, connect, engage, interchange, discuss, join oneself to):
1.     a consultation
2.     (esp. annual) meeting of any organization
3.     the inspiring gathering of Mennonite Brethren held in the Fraser Valley in July, representing some 430 MB congregations (= 72,000 members) in Canada and the US, plus a number of delegates from some of the other 19 countries with MB churches, to mark the sesquicentennial (150th) anniversary of this small but lively branch of God’s global family. Combine the following in liberal amounts, and you’ve got Conference at its best: reunions with friends far and near, sessions that offer food for thought, food for the body, food for the soul, all served up with spectacular surroundings and a cooperative climate. Some surprising glimpses of God at work: in reconciliation (did you know that 15 years ago, a dance at an MB youth event at Banff set off a wave of concern across the country? we heard words of reconciliation!; but another, and more significant, moment of peace-making was noted with the Lutheran World Federation making a formal apology to Anabaptist/Mennonite churches for their persecutions in the Reformation), in mission (it’s no longer just N. Americans going out to the “other countries”—for example, the Congolese have a mission among the Pygmy peoples of the African rainforests), in service (prison ministry among the African-American MB churches in N. Carolina), in proclamation (evangelist Samir Youssef, based in BC, is widely known as the Billy Graham of the Arab world because of his media ministry). Gil, Howie, Rob and myself attended the Conference to represent Bethany among the several hundred delegates (click here for a glimpse of Gil’s workshop session). The week spent at the Conference was exciting, and it reassured me to see that Bethany is part of this large and well-supported network of Jesus-scented service and scholarship.
Randy Klassen