The Good Kind

“Did God say anything to you, today?”

My question—phrased something like that—was a bit out of the blue, I suppose, but I didn’t expect the blank reactions I got around our dinner table that night.

One of our younger ones, after a couple of false starts, concluded, “I don’t know what you mean, Dad.”

“Like…”  a chewing teen deadpanned, “a voice? Nope.”

Yikes! Who’s raising these kids? 

I feel like every day is me craning forward, desirous of hearing God’s voice. 

Maybe I haven’t talked about it out loud enough with these guys? 

Only to have another teen chime in and relieve me that I’d at least been doing some child-raising all these years. 

“Guys, listen!” he said. “God speaking is like something inside you, not something in your ears, necessarily. He puts things in your mind when you’re reading the Bible, or listening to a song, or in church…” 

“Exactly,” I went on. “Guys, I’m just meaning to ask if he put something on your heart, led you to do something, say something, filled your mind with a thought from a verse, anything like that.”

“Oh…!” came the chorus. “Why didn’t you say so?” Our time took an upswing as I asked one kid after another, with clearer wording, I guess, and we all got to listen to some very sweet answers. 

I think the only kid that didn’t get asked was Everett. Not that I did it on purpose. I wasn’t sulking from having had a particularly hard day with him, nothing beyond the normal surviving him. He wasn’t behaving “badly.” The day had held no tantrums or sabotage or big lying. 

I chalked up my inadvertent exclusion as legitimate byproduct of his maturity level.

Only to get twinged by the reminder that our faith is a faith for children. It calls me to be like a child. 

But it was no big deal, right? What was he going to say? He didn’t even seem to notice, and I was sure the whole thing would be forgotten before we left the room. However, I could identify some regret in the fact that, in that moment (and I know there are others), Everett hadn’t gotten from me the grace that our Heavenly Dad always extends to us. 

We went up for bedtime. A half hour later I was lying on the floor guarding his door because now there had been problems. An ugly fight with Hope. Blatant defiance of Tammy. Yelling, stomping, and what looked like another tantrum brewing. 

I just let him be.

Time helps him these days. It never did in the beginning. Past a certain emotional point, it was always going to go all the way over the edge into violence. But we’ve moved beyond those days, and sometimes, now, he can stop himself.

I gave him time. Didn’t even say anything when he got out his headphones and music, though he often needs to be kept from playing or goofing if he’s in the middle of defying us or acting like there isn’t broken relationship in need of mending… But I decided to give him the benefit of the doubt and believe he might actually be trying to calm himself down. 

5 minutes. 10. Not long after that, he takes off his headphones. 

“Dad, I’m ready.” 

Our signal that an episode is over. He’s ready to make things right. Wow.

“OK, Everett, good words. I’m glad. Ready for what?” 

“To say ‘sorry’ to Hope.”

“That’s wonderful, son, but I think Hope’s about asleep. We’re probably going to have to do that part tomorrow. You could make things right with mom. And me.”

“Could I just call to Hope from the hall?”

“That’s really good asking bud. OK, let me see if she’s still awake.”

“She is!” Eden (who lies awake for hours every. single. night of her life) yelled over, saving me from getting up.

And Everett went out in the hall and did just lovely. 

Coming back to where I was lying on his floor, praying through some silly stresses about money, my conundrum of a son knelt down and whispered in my ear.

“Jesus talked to me.” 

Eyes popped. I cocked my head to look at him. “What do you mean?”

“In my music. A song came on. John 13:thirty…something. It said ‘love each other,’ So I had to talk to Hope.”

 

The tears Tammy and I shared as I told the story before we fell asleep that night were not the usual tears we’ve cried over this son. This time, for a change, we got to cry the good kind. 

 

Why and What For

Our family moving is news becauseit means our two-year limbo period is over. Hooray!

Our family moving is news becausebecause we’re so excited about what we’re moving FOR and towards. That’s been awhile for us. We left China only knowing God was finished with us there. We left lots of places in 2016, always moving on but never seeing around the next bend. This time, we know what’s ahead. We’re not leaving upstate NY ‘cause we hate it or because I just couldn’t stand my friend Verlyn any more; we’ve been called to Atlanta. We will be working among refugees in the most ethnically diverse square mile in the United States. We’ll be a part of Envision Atlanta (itself a part of the CMA, the organization we’ve always belonged to) which is already meaningfully meeting the personal, educational, economic, occupational, spiritual, etc. needs of these families who find themselves far from home. Perhaps we know a little bit about what that’s like.

Our family moving is news becauseGod used the closing of our culture center and coffee shop in 2012 to move us from Xi’an so he could move us to Xining where he would give us Everett so he could move us back to the U.S. so he could move us to Oswego Alliance Church which had connections to Envision Atlanta so he could connect us to the EA site coordinator on his visit north so we could go visit south and see EA and know: this is the place He has been preparing us for for years. Wow. Wow! [At least that’s how things appear from our little human vantage point.]

Our family moving is news becauseit won’t happen without YOU.

1. We will not be able to thrive in this new ministry without a team of committed prayer partners. And we have no desire to merely survive; we want to thrive. His Kingdom come. His will be done.

2. But we will not even survive without an invested team of financial partners. Or be allowed to start, for that matter. It’s already April and we’ve got to raise 50% of the cash and 80% of the commitment towards some pretty big numbers.* And soon after that reach 100%. It feels crazy, it really does. But we’re moving once school’s out, regardless. We did not choose this path. We are not driving this…what are we on? A ship? A train? An avalanche? A story. God Almighty is the only real Author around here. And what is the lesson he has hammered home the past two years? “YOU CAN TRUST ME. I can take care of your family.”

 I am not being facetious when I tell you I did not have the faith for a decision like this when we came home two years ago. Possibly not even close. Not for a family this big. Not for a ministry inside the US. Not for numbers this big. But I mentioned that we’re not driving?

So what if the money doesn’t come in?

Sorry, we’ve already leapt. What, I couldn’t get a job at Ace Hardware in Atlanta if things got as harrowing as 2016 again? We couldn’t live below the poverty line in Atlanta as well as we have in Oswego? We could. 

I just don’t happen to think that’s what He is doing this time. Not again. 

But time will tell. I have no guarantees, and have been wrong before. At this point, the final outcome is more in your hands than it is in mine.

Most of all, this is news because…it feels like dawn after a long, long night. It feels like Aslan on the move again. And when does that ever fail to send chills up your spine?

Envision Atlanta has a vision to start a movement that will see 1000 churches planted by the year 2027. Getting there will take creativity and work, and already in the works are after school programs, kids’ clubs/camps, English classes, job training,  and small businesses, with plenty of wild ideas to come. We’ll share about our roles soon, but it’s going to be a great fit for both of us. 

The snow is melting, and the Kingdom (as well as the Johnson family) is on the move. And we couldn’t be happier about it (please, Lord, make it the last move for a long, long time). One advantage to having lived in so many places is how many people we know. One seeming disadvantage might be that most of our friends made in the last decade and a half are living off of raised support themselves! But we are not afraid. Our God is big. And, hey! What about that crazy “HH for WK” campaign? A whole bunch of you know exactly what I’m talking about ‘cause you just knocked our socks off with it! But this time…far less than something like a couple of people pledging ten grand a month…we need an entire army who will pray and pledge…a few dollars a month.

Be one of them? 

 

P.S. Details coming! If you already know you want to join the financial side—and people do PRAY where they PAY—save us a step! (We’re really at a loss to understand where in the world we’re supposed to fit in all these phone call contacts that our fundraising coaches talk about…) Send a private message telling us of your monthly (or one-time) commitment, and we can at least start filling in blanks. An online giving option will be available WITHIN DAYS.

 

 

*We’re still waiting on those final numbers, actually. There’s a living allowance and then housing, health insurance, retirement, funds for ministry, travel, etc. These healthy and good numbers are decided for us by wise and experienced leaders (and our official employer is the South Atlantic District of the CMA).