Friday August 29, 2008

 

We know

that God is always at work for the good of everyone who loves him.

Romans 8:28 Contemporary English Version

 

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Thursday August 28, 2008

 

 

Catching Up

Part 2 of 2

Grandchildren

 

 

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August 20 was the day we celebrated the “big” boys summer birthdays.  It is amazing how much fun these three can have – and how much noise they can make.

 

 

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Lunch at Hoss’s

 

 

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Nathan blowing a straw cover at someone!

 

 

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Miniature Golf

 

 

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Go Carts!

 

 

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Batting Cage

 

 

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 Visiting Great Grandma High

 

 

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They asked to stay another night and go along to Chuck-E-Cheeses with a “younger set” of grandchildren.

 

 

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 Jana enjoying a horse ride

 

 

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 Deb and Jesse at the Chuck-E-Cheese photo machine.

 

 

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 Davy driving a car

Happy Birthday – August 27

 

 

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 Josh and Zachary

Happy Birthday – Zachary – TODAY!

 

 

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 Ian on the bike

Happy Birthday – TODAY!

 

 

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 Jesse and Deb in the ceiling tube

 

 

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 Zachary and Jesse.  Jesse loved when someone made the balls bounce.

 

 

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 Jesse started walking just before we left for Maine on Wednesday.

 

 

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 Jared on the bike

 

 

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 Davy

 

 

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 Ian and Zachary getting their photo taken at Chuck-E-Cheese photo machine.

 

 

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 I loved the result of that photo session.

 

 

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Thursday August 28, 2008

 

 

Catching Up

Part 1 of 2

Ministry Happenings since we returned from Europe

 

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Jason, Cerwin, Gary, and Mike installing paneling on the Racine, Wisconsin, Chapel.  (This actually happened just before we left for Europe.)

The men came as the result of a ministry outreach from their church in Ohio.  The church also provided the finances for the paneling. 

Thanks to the men and the church!

 

 

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 Farewell party for Bill and Ted on August 12

 

 

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 Bill Rumpf and Ted McCoy have faithfully volunteered their construction skills in helping build chapels for the past dozen or more years.

 

 

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Since both are retiring due to health issues, the TFC International Office honored them with a luncheon.

 

 

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 Bill, Cerwin (background), Ted, and Thelma McCoy

 

 

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 Scott Weidner, TFC President and CEO presented them with a certificate and photo journal by Inge.

 

 

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 Inge (Executive Assistant to the President) presenting them with miniature chapels, as Scott and Glenn Fahnestock (current construction volunteer) look on.

 

 

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A few days later we took the International Chapel to the Buck Truck Show, Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

 

 

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 This show is a benefit for Children’s Miracle Network.

 

 

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  It was the busiest day Cerwin and I ever had on the chapel when parking it at a truck show. 

We take the chapel to shows to be available to the drivers and to promote the TFC ministry.  Most of the day was spent answering questions about our chapels, however, one couple came in for prayer.

 

  

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Wednesday August 27, 2008

 

 

Happy Birthday, Deb

(our youngest daughter)

 

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We love you bunches!

 

 

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Wednesday August 27, 2008

 

What kind of man is this?

Even the winds and the waves obey him!

Matthew 8:27  NAS

 

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Tuesday August 26, 2008

 

 

Final Entry on Germany & Switzerland

 

Memories That Will Stay With Me For a Long Time…

 

 

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The people – especially those in our tour group (Jim, John, Arlene, Cerwin, and Pam in the background were part of that group) and those who made us feel welcome at Schwarzenau.

I loved the story of the two women in the foreground – the lady on the left was (from the USA), and had lost her glasses.  The woman on the right (from Germany) found them and turned them in to authorities.  Neither knew about their connection until they sat next to each other at the Brethren Celebration.  There were close to 900 people – and they sat next to each other.

 

 

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 This lady was one of my favorite German friends in Schwarzenau.  I first met her at the Alexander Mack home/museum – holding flowers for a gravesite.  We met and talked many times throughout our two days there. 

 

 

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 The Schwarzenau folks (all 800 of them) went out of their way to welcome us (all 600 of us) and helped us feel that we were spending a few days in the 1500s.

 

 

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 I understand that living the 1500s is not an act for this family.  This is how they live.

 

 

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 This young boy was learning to make small objects with a pedal lathe.  I think we have a few grandsons who would have enjoyed this.

 

 

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 Making slate roofs.

 

 

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 My one purchase (I am not a souvenir person) was a long-handled wooden spoon with Schwarzenau, Germany, burnt into it.

 

 

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 These holsteins made me feel at home – and I wondered if any of them had lineage in our area.  My grandfather was part of the Heifer Project and helped deliver holstein heifers to Germany following World War II.

 

 

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Walking across Chapel Bridge in Lucerne, Switzerland.

 

 

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 I just must post a few more photos of our hike on the Alps

 

 

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 If I listen carefully, I can still hear cow bells.

 

 

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 This photo makes me miss our tour friends.

 

 

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 A riverboat ride on Zurich Lake took us by beautiful scenery and this amusing scene of one seagull per post.

 

 

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 This pretty scene of Limmat River in Zurich gave little hint that this was the spot where Felix Manz was drowned for his beliefs.

 

 

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 A magnificent Benedictine Monastery in the village of Einsiedein, Switzerland.  We were privileged to listen to evening vespers by the monks who live here. 

 

 

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 Bicycles!  I will never forget the bicycles, blowing horns and zooming around and between us.

 

 

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 I was most suprised at the many women who rode bike while dressed up for work or shopping – many wearing dresses or skirts.

 

 

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 Breakfast was another neat memory – not bacon and eggs – but smoked salmon, fish, cheese, and lunch meat.

 

 

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 And, oh, those wonderful breads and rolls that were available at every meal.

 

 

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 This was one of my favorite lunches!

 

 

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 None of us in the tour group will forget the delicious spaghetti ice cream, and that Bruno (bus driver) found this great restaurant for us.  (It is ice cream pressed through a strainer.)

 

 

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 This Sprungli chocolate pie was “to die for.”  Cerwin and I shared it – eating it slowly and carefully tasting every morsel.

 

 

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 This is how beds were made up each day – with coverlets that reminded us of light sleeping bags.  They were almost too heavy during the early days of the trip when the evenings were very warm, and there was no air conditioning. 

 

 

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 There were Gideon Bibles in almost every motel room.  Good for you, Gideons!

 

 

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 I will always remember the narrow, cobblestone streets.

 

 

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The beautiful vegetables and flowers sold in street markets.

 

 

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 Little cars on sidewalks!

 

 

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 The autobahn was sometimes full of vehicles like above, other times we had open road.  Trucks must stay on the right.  Cars and buses were usually in the middle, and passing cars (sometimes very fast) were in the left lane.

 

 

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 We saw lots and lots of swans.

 

 

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 Often searching for food.

 

 

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I liked the pretty, purple feathers under this ducks wings.

 

 

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 I have not been able to identify this duck.

myhopeisinjesus (husband) identified it as a Eurasian Coot.

 

 

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The windows

 

 

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I loved the windows

 

 

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 Many gave us a view into the landscape of  a history that was interesting, amazing, and sometimes painful.

 

 

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The history and beauty made it a trip of a lifetime.

 

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 I feel blessed to have been granted this fabulous experience.

 

 

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Tuesday August 26, 2008

 

Be exalted, O God,

above the heavens;

Let Your glory be above all the earth.

Psalm 57:11 New King James Version

 

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Tuesday August 26, 2008

 

 

Bringing Our Trip to Germany and Switzerland to a Close

 

Part One of Two

 

I’ve heard from many of you that you have enjoyed our trip via my photos and thoughts, but in an effort to not drag it out any longer, and because I posted some of the later part of the trip while in Europe – this one and the next will be my last entries on Europe.

 

 

Wartburg Castle

 

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Wartburg Castle was an amazing place to visit, and is one of the best-preserved medieval castles in Germany.

 

 

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Crossing the old drawbridge and walking through the large castle grounds, made me feel like I had traveled back in time. 

 

 

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We saw some incredibly old architecture and artifacts, as it was founded in 1067.  Though much has happened here, the castle is most famous as a hiding place of Martin Luther.

 

 

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A scale model of the castle gives you an idea of its size.

 

 

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 The room where Martin Luther spent most of his time while hiding here.

Martin Luther sought refuge at the castle, from May 1521 until March 1522, at the request of Frederick the Wise, after being victimized for being one of the originators of the Reformation. It was during this period that Luther translated the New Testament into German.

  

 

 Johann Sebastian Bach

 

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Johann Sebastian Bach was a contemporary of Martin Luther, and his music was a driving force during the Reformation.

 

 

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The front of the Bach House.  The museun is the grey building on the right.

The Bach House was originally two houses, built in succession in 1456 and 1458.  In 1611 they were joined to form one building.

 

 

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The back of the house.

At the time, the ground floor was used for agricultural purposes; today’s instrument room may have been used as a barn, the room next to the stairs for cattle and horses, and the hallway as the gateway.

 

 

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This talented young woman honored us with a concert on several old instruments.

 

 

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The builder of this unique organ believed that the person who was playing it should not be seen.  It only worked when someone pulled the bellows.

 

 

Marburg Colloquy

 

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This castle was the location of the historic meeting between Martin Luther and Huldreich Zwingli.

 

 

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This painting depicts the meeting when Luther and Zwingli’s differing beliefs in the meaning of communion…

 

 

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…led to an early split in the Protestant movement.

 

 

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Sunday August 24, 2008

 

Love is

patient and kind.

Love is not

jealous or boastful or proud. 

I Corinthians 13:4 New Living Translation

 

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Yesterday – at Kevin and Amy’s wedding reception – each person received a whoopie pie with the following note.

 

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Sunday August 24, 2008

 

 

The Wedding of Kevin and Amy

Edition 1 of 3

 

Photo Shoot Prior to the Wedding

Glenn & Bernice Wagner’s Home

 

 

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I was the “official candid photographer”, so had opportunity to take photos while the “real photographer” set up the shots.

 

 

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 Amy and her sisters – Chelsey, Melissa, and Karen

 

 

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 Amy and her dad

 

 

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The bride’s parents – Marlin and Nancy.  (Nancy is my sister.)

 

 

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 Amy and the flower girl – her niece – two-year-old Kelci Sauder

 

 

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 Chelsey

 

 

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 The mothers – Nancy and Christine

 

 

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 Kevin and his parents – Ronald and Christine

 

 

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 The bride with her attendants

Chelsey, Faith, Amy, Keri, Melissa, Karen, and flower girl Kelci

 

 

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 The Wedding Party

The guys:  Colby, Derric, Kevin, Derek, Jason, Dave, Regan

The girls:  Chelsey, Faith, Amy, Keri, Melissa, Karen, and Kelci

 

 

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 “I’m getting tired of this.”

 

 

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 Jason (husband of Melissa) holding flowers for his girls

 

 

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 Larry and Karen

 

 

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 Kelci needed mamma and her bear

 

 

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 Yes!  This photo-taking is soon over.

 

 

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My sister’s family – The Beckers

 

 

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The bride and groom with their parents

 

 

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 Glenn and Bernice provided garden tea.

 

 

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 When they weren’t in photos, the children enjoyed watching the fish and frogs.

 

 

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 Relaxing

 

 

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“Going to the church, and we’re gonna get married.”

 

  

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