We've had a pretty calm, "normal" week and have started to have the head space to look back and process the last few months. It's easy to look back with regret.
Home assignment is required by our mission, though how and when you do it is a negotiable thing. So we look at the last six months and start to think: "Did we do the right thing? Did we make the right choices?"
The fact is that there is no good way to do home assignment. It means a lot of disruption in the missionaries' lives. When those missionaries have children at school, that disruption is bigger. If they are teenagers, the disruption escalates to a high level. If those children are settled and the missionaries are established in good-fit ministries, then it seems so unnecessary to volunteer for this amount of disruption.
The other side, though, is that our mission relies on missionaries coming "home" to give a field-side perspective to their mobilisation efforts. People at churches we visit repeatedly say how good it is to see us face-to-face and that that makes a big difference for them.
So, at this point you ask: was it worth the effort? I can't answer that question, though I know we've paid a significant cost as a family to do this home assignment. I also know that there are a few benefits we gained. Here are some tangible ones:
- we went through a crisis in late November that made us, and various related parties, look carefully at our calling to Japan—the result of that was great confirmation that we are indeed in the right place doing the things God has called us to
- home assignment triggered us to get some help for one family member who had been struggling for some time
- we were able to see our extended family members face-to-face and get a feel for how things were going for them: the benefit of that on relationships with them is immeasurable, but definitely not negative
- we also reconnected more deeply with our home church and as a result see the start of changes there with regards to involvement in mission
- I was able to address a slow-burning issue with a psychologist and find remarkable answers that will help me stay this journey long-term
- we got to spend time with our eldest son and witness first hand that his transition to Australia has gone remarkably well (and got to help him on the way to a drivers licence)
There are a variety of benefits that are more difficult to discern, including how this will affect our younger two boys' abilities to transition to Australia after they graduate from high school.
But one, very tangible, result, was a realisation that we can do regular dates now. Many Fridays we dropped our son off to youth group and then went to a local restaurant (and played Scrabble). Our boys are quite old enough to manage a meal on their own (often left-overs). Last night we had our first date-for-no-special-occasion in Japan. I can't remember the last time we did such a thing, and it was great, especially being able to indulge in a spontaneity that has just not been possible for nearly 20 years! We have home assignment to thank for this. Possibly not something our mission leaders had in mind, but I'll take it.
A coffee-flavoured cake called an Opera Cake! |
My decaf coffee (8pm at night) came with this dollhouse-sized jug of cream! |
2 comments:
I didn't really realise how difficult adjusting to life back in Australia must have been.
I would have loved to see one of your live talks, as with the business of ordinary life, I do struggle to understand how your life and ministry are going in Japan at times (even though I read your blog). Perhaps we can do that next time you visit Sydney, in a few years ?
@charlieK why am I only seeing this now? I think it would be interesting to find a way to do a "live talk" in Sydney. If there were a small group of people who were interested in learning more about our ministry, that would probably be possible. Next time around we'll be quite a bit more flexible to travel outside of SEQ because we'll have no boys at school!
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