Running a week behind…
Going into the last week of the lecture phase seemed unreal. This last week of lectures by Don Stephens covered Worldview’s and the Kingdom of God. To introduce worldview Don began by describing glory as “God’s invisible character reflected in the visible world.” As humans we are created to reflect that glory, to understand glory, to hear glory, to see glory and to speak glory; God loves beauty, harmony, justice, romance and grace, and so we love them because we are made in his image to reflect him. He went on to teach how the Christian life is Grace, emphasizing that grace and legalism means life and death. We looked at worldview and how it has changed and we compared world views from different cultural and religious backgrounds and the influence they have on our thinking and actions. With these teachings in place the last day was spent on the Kingdom of God and what it looks like now, (or should look) “may your kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven.” and what it will look like.
Takeaways are many but here are a few to ponder…
* we live to reflect God
* the law is a widower, the dead spouse is me, being under the law is like a woman married to a husband who expects perfection.
* Conversion is the miracle of a moment, sanctification is the labour of a lifetime.
* Worldview is like a story that organizes your beliefs about the world, but we all view the world through the distorted lens of sin.
* many Christians have a “born-again spirit, Babylonian brain.”
* The Kingdom is a story written in your heart.
* The Kingdom is a culture of power Luke 10:9 Heal the sick, and as you heal them, say “the Kingdom of God is near you now.”
* The Kingdom is a culture of radical inclusion and hospitality. xenophilia love of strangers, hospitality. A culture that values people, not just converts.
* The Kingdom is a journey – disciple-making is a process, not a one-time conversion event. When did Peter get saved? or Matthew? The scriptures don’t say, Jesus invited them and loved the “hell” out of them.
* Jesus had no circles, he hangs out with all the wrong people, it was all about relationship.
Joy to the World! Thursday evening at Ohana Court , at YWAM Kona, 54 teams representing 50 nationalities were commissioned and sent out to 39 nations to make a difference in this world. Loren Cunningham led the commissioning of the teams.
Before leaving Hawaii we watched the Big Island Christmas Parade –

it was held on Saturday evening, somehow Santa on a sleigh,
with
his bright red suit with white fur trim being pulled a long Ali’i Drive with a backdrop of Palm trees and the Pacific Ocean seemed a bit surreal. St Michael’s RC youth group had the tallest Wise Men I have ever seen in their walking nativity scene.

One last Hawaiian sunset. Our days have been full and time has passed very quickly, if it wasn’t for our journals and the weekly blog post we would have argued that we had only just arrived. We sent our first team off in true YWAM style, they boarded vans heading to the airport and Fiji.
Many of our fellow Crossroaders and other friends, came out at 5:30 a.m. to send us off! We piled into 15 passenger vans for the short trip to Kona airport and a long day of flights to Hanoi.
I began writing this about the time we crossed the dateline, as we sat in an Asiana A330-300 we gained 24 hours, and Sunday had become Monday. The fabric of the seating on Asiana is a light brown, rather than the blues and purples that I am used to, the lighter colour makes the inside appear larger, but in reality the seats are wider and there is more room between rows than I recall having experienced in a long time. The cabin crew is very attentive, regularly offering water and juice, and lunch was Grilled Beef Tenderloin with a marinated shrimp starter, the dinner menu has Chicken Cacciatora with steamed rice or mixed seafood pasta. We even got to watch “Good Morning Vietnam” as one of the many free in flight movies on the way to Vietnam.
Arrival in Hanoi airport, these are my flatmates – Sophie, Glenda and Leslie.

Seems like Vietnam has excellent internet, wifi everywhere and we can communicate with you all quite freely. So until next time, be blessed and be a blessing! A&G
S.D.G

Around campus. These are the stairs that run through the middle of the school here in Kona, we get to
climb 96 of them on the way from the front gate to our room. The GO centre is at the top of this picture and past that are the Flags. On Saturday the campus hosted their Christmas Fair and the Amazing Race (5Km with 15 obstacles). The campus has been decorated and it certainly looks a lot like Christmas, although the 28C highs strongly contrast with the snowy trees. The children were entertained with inflatable jumping castles and a water slide on the soccer pitch by our bedroom window. And there was singing in the cafeteria most of the day with worshipers rotating through. The
open house meant another chance to visit to the Natural farm where Aquaponics and permaculture techniques are being taught and researched for the developing world. Two young inventors are working on water aeration using gravity as the drive system, and others are working on wind generation making prop blades from PVC sewer pipe. This is a quickly growing new part of the Science & Technology Department with lots of exciting opportunities for making a difference in the world.



Our Crossroads leaders hosted a fantastic Love Feast for us on Saturday night, the meal was amazing, we began with three tables of appetizers, followed by Prime Rib and Coconut encrusted Mahi Mahi, with lots of vegetables and salads, all followed by delicious desserts. Everybody dressed for dinner, almost didn’t recognize people. It was the first time in long pants and socks for me since leaving Canada. The entertainment was a wonderful variety show performed by our own classmates and leaders, ranging from hilarious to serious, Glenda and her ladies small group had a lot of fun demonstrating a western line dance as one of the acts.

Not much on the wildlife front, this gecko is unusual in that it is not green.
always a messenger, a message, a motive and a method, he unpacked each of these in great depth revealing five levels under each. We talked a lot about the importance of seed planting, watering and reaping, and the need to develop relationship and walk alongside. For the Cursillistas reading this, he built on both our Action statement to “make a friend be a friend and bring your friend to Christ”, and our talk about the Study and Evangelization of our Environment, but with great enthusiasm coming from his experiences in world-wide missions and he has us pumped up and ready for sharing our faith with a greater boldness.
It was a great expression of gratitude that began with
a time of worship and praise followed by Darlene Cunningham sharing about many of the great things God has done through the first 54 years of YWAM, especially here in Kona. She related one story from the early days where there was nothing to serve for Thanksgiving Dinner and after praying for a solution to the problem, some ladies from the local Episcopal Church showed up and invited the 150+ YWAMers to Thanksgiving Dinner for free. Loren Cunningham shared the BIG plan for future development of the undeveloped portion of the University of the Nations campus.









followed by a drive over the Saddle Road back to Kona. Sunday morning we took Andy & Beth to Living Stones Church then down the coast to 


