Stories in the Missional Journey of Bruce & Deborah Crowe

Month: July 2012 (Page 1 of 4)

July 26, 2012

Tonight we made a quick fire, busted out some coveted imported marshmallows and made s’mores. We took advantage of our ‘adopted’ child Svychek and had him snap a quick family picture. I think it’s the first one since we had Abigail 4 months ago. The weather has been amazing this week in Ukraine, going for nightly walks and not breaking a sweat!

Abbey continues to bring smiles to all our faces.  She has a bit of a temper, and her fiery red-ish bonnet suits her.  We still get many comments as we walk in public with a new born.  In Ukraine they keep their babies stuffed inside for the first year, and do crazy things like not let them sit up or stand because it’s bad for them.  Many times you hold a baby here and their muscles are poorly developed, they just wobbled all around like jelly:)

Noah the pirate.  He’s armed and dangerous.  We’re looking at some public school options for blackbeard and his three older shipmates.  Time for them to learn the language and take to the seas.  We were originally hesitant to put them in school for the sake of negative influence, but I think they are ready to do the influencing.. hopefully mostly for good.

The Village – деревня (Der-ev-nya)

Not the M. Night Shyamalan movie. The isolated small community in the forest or on the side of the hill. Nestled around the countryside of Ukraine are thousands of villages. I’ve found a number of interesting discoveries in the last couple of weeks as God has built some relational bridges for us in several of them.

1. Population Unknown – Every time I ask the question of population from anyone living in a small village, they never know. In fact, by the looks they give me, you’d guess they’ve never pondered the question themselves.

2. They are VERY friendly. Maybe it’s infrequency of visitors, or lack of entertainment options but the smiles are abundant.

3. Drinking is as bad, or worse in the village. Many families are fatherless, losing the Patriarch very early in life often from chronic alcoholism or what it produces.

4. God can create bridges into the most remote village.

That last point has been made abundantly clear to me. Several villages in the past month have been on my heart as I’ve pondered the reality of most of them never hearing or experiencing the life found in Jesus Christ. I’ve prayed and asked God for open doors. I can’t say they’ve been faith filled prayers. “I have no idea how you will do this, but would you open some doors here God?” is pretty much the prayer. I have no idea what I’ll do once the doors open either, but trust Him for the next step.

Some of these villages have centuries of history, survived wars and famines. Some families have lived in the same dirt floor houses since the early 1800’s.

Anyway, God has opened some opportunities this week in two more villages. Contacts made ‘by chance’. Someone needing a ride, our dog needing a vet. I’m pursuing these relationships and excited that God is involved. I want to see His hand at work. To God, there is no such thing as ‘off the radar’, even in the smallest of villages He sees, loves, and is powerful to save.

Bruce

Optimistic?

I enjoyed this 12 minute clip, especially the last 5 minutes if you have time. I really like being around positive thinkers and find that it does stimulate ideas and creativity. In my business we have to remain positive because everything we’re asked to do is technically tough and fraught with pitfalls. If you think it’s impossible however, it is and you may as well not even try.

The only caveat I would add is that the pursuit of ‘happiness’ outside of peace through Jesus Christ is vanity. We have a sin problem, and no amount of positive ‘energy’ is going to erase that reality. But I do think we were created in His image, and part of that reflection is more accurate in a positive person.

« Older posts

© 2026 Lift Up Your Eyes

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑