Time to Laugh: The Reactions of Children

Just to remind you, the "Time to Laugh" feature on the diary started because I felt that this job gets too serious sometimes.  We have a lot of fun on the 3W team and we still do very serious work.  So last year (this year?) I decided we would post "Time to Laugh" segments to lighten up people's day. 

This one comes from the Jimmy Kimmel show.  It's a bit mean as children are told that their parents have eaten the children's Halloween candy,  but the reactions of the children are priceless.  It's so amazing how kids wear their emotions completely on their sleeve.  Children are so unpredictable and transparent at the same time.  They are a blessing to the world.  God's greatest creation?  The child?  Enjoy?

 

Let's NOT be Jesus for a Day

What if every Christian chose one day to go out into the community to make a difference by serving the way Christ served?   Wouldn't that be awesome?  No.  Not really, and here's why.   

Often challenges like this go up from the Evangelical Community---a moment for Christians to go forward and do a deed that helps others and shows how generous and selfless Christians are.  But there are hidden, arrogant assumptions behind all of this.  

First is the idea that it's great if we do this, when in fact, should we not be doing it all the time and everyday?  Aren't we supposed to be the "salt of the earth" everyday?  Why would one chosen day make a difference? Wouldn't it look like any other day, if we are taking our faith seriously.

The second assumption is that what we are doing is just purely good and free of self-interest, while at the same time, there is an unspoken agenda that we are trying to convert people through our pious actions.  A bunch of Christians handing out sandwiches in the park might be nice, but let's be honest--it is also usually agenda-filled.  It's meant to convey an image and hopefully convert.   

These first two points are going to be disputed and get people hot under the collar. After all, doesn't Jesus want us out there washing feet and proclaiming the "Good News."  But Jesus also had no patience for the prideful religious person praying so that all could hear or giving money so that all could see his super awesome goodness.  Bygones.

But the third to me is the most important and it is this simple fact:  Even people that are atheist, agnostics, pagans, or Muslims are often good people that like to do good.  Christians don't have a corner on the market of being generous or loving.  How about the secular atheist that works as a nurse in a Convalescent home caring for disabled senior citizens in diapers.  What about the agnostic that helps refugees in Darfur, Sudan with a relief organization.  Or the pagan that contributes a large part of their annual income to salary.  Or the Muslim girl who gets shot in the face at 14 and immediately forgives the shooter.    

I'm a Christian and I may believe that Christianity offers the most rational and real foundation for human existence and good, but it does not mean I have perfected that good or that non-believers aren't out there changing the world for better every day.  I believe I know who gave us our moral compass, but we are not the only ones that lead our lives by a moral compass.  The following video shows some Middle School kids doing a very touching, humane act of good.  There are many other wonderful, kind, decent acts done everyday by people that are not believers.  

Let's NOT be Jesus for a day.  Let's be humble servants everyday, and that starts by admitting that we need Christ to forgive us for our selfishness and arrogance, and we need to not only love our neighbor but view them as capable of love too.  We are not the measure of goodness; Christ is--and all of the rest of us fall short. 

 

They Will Know We are Christians By Our Love

This is a powerful video that I recommend you all watch.  It will lift your spirits and encourage you.  The title of this video should be: "They Will Know Christians by Our Love," because it is Christian love that transformed this Muslim man's heart.  But here is what we need to think about: 

 Why is it that Christian agape love melted the hatred that this Muslim had for Americans and Christians, but many American Christians are choosing to give in to prejudice, hatred, and a desire for revenge against Muslims around the world and in the USA?

In other words: How can Christian love transform the heart of a Muslim terrorist, but many American Christians are choosing to view Muslims with anger instead of compassion?  Aren't we the ones who are supposed to be intimate with Christian love and the power of Christ's forgiveness. 

There isn't just a lot of pro-USA Nationalism amongst many Christians today, but there is also a Spirit of Fear.  A fear or terrorists and Muslims that that squelches Christian compassion and forgiveness against Muslims.  And it is fueled almost entirely by Evangelical Christians that have never met a Muslim or had a Muslim friend.  

This video shows a different alternative.  And it should cause us a lot of soul searching.  Are we being driven by our most base self-protective impulses, or are we viewing things from a Kingdom perspective? Are we remembering the story of the Good Samaritan or are we only thinking about the desire for revenge and fear we felt on September 11, 2001?  What is the mature Christian response?  And are we up to it?  If a 14 year old Muslim girl in Pakistan can forgive the Taliban boy that shot her in the face, then why are so many Evangelical Christians that have never even encountered a Muslim in real life so filled with fear and anger?  

 

 

 

 

He heard a voice call his name and saw a vision of Christ. This was miraculous, because up until then, Kamal was a Muslim... The Christian Broadcasting Network CBN http://www.cbn.com

Time to Laugh: Shame (as exemplified by dogs)

Well, that seemed like a short break from the diary.   And the reality of my Father being gone has hit hard in the past few days.  So it's probably a good time to have one of our "Time to Laugh" segments.  As I reflected on the years 2000-2013, I have felt like being in ministry has often made life too serious, robbed me of some joy, and has made me less light-hearted.  So I started the "Time to Laugh" segment at the Diary.  A time to step away from all the seriousness and just have a good laugh. 

So in today's episode:  The look of shame.  Shame is never a good feeling, but we all feel it at some point or another.  But no one wears there shame on their sleeve quite like dogs.  When they are guilty, their eyes just fill with remorse and even their whole body looks shamed and ready for castigation.  Luckily, there's usually grace from their owners who love them very much.   Dogs truly are man's best friend.  (Trivia fact: They have the ability to emotionally connect at the level of a 2 year old).  

Kimiko Yoshida: The Anti-Self Portrait

From Patrick's Facebook:  "Kimiko Yoshida is a Paris-based Japanese artist who does not believe that any self-portrait tells the real truth about a person. To subvert this idea, she has produced "self-portraits" of herself that cover her real self with unbelievably gorgeous images and costumes--many inspired by traditional and tribal costumes from around the world. Her creativity and images leave me speechless. Have a look and lets go see her in Paris."

 

400 self-portraits by Kimiko Yoshida, shot between 2001 and 2010, edited by Maison Europeenne de la Photographie (Paris, France). The artist's statement: Art is above all the experience of transformation. My Self-portraits, or what go by that name, are only the place and the formula of the mutation. The only raison d’être of art is to transform what art alone can transform. All that’s not me, that’s what interests me. To be there where I think I am not, to disappear where I think I am, that is what matters. Listen to the first verse of "I Am the Walrus" by John Lennon: "I am he as you are he as you are me"...

Donations in Memory of Harry Nachtigall

For those churches and individuals that would like to honor my father Harry Nachtigall with a financial gift, we suggest giving to one of two causes he greatly believed in:   

 

THREE WORLDS (NextGen Fund)
Three Worlds (www.three-worlds) was very much inspired by the thoughts and ideas of Harry Nachtigall and his desire to see true health and international cooperation on the mission-field.  The Three Worlds Next Gen fund managed by his son Patrick and daughter-in-law Jamie Nachtigall has the goal to empower a new generation of young leaders in Europe and the Middle East and is helping to create a new healthy paradigm of international mission work calibrated for the 21st Century. The NextGen Fund creates opportunities to train emerging pastors and leaders to be global leaders. Funds also support evangelism, ministry training seminars for the region’s leaders (3W Seminars), catalytic youth events, strategic travel, networking, and member care for the region’s missionaries.

Checks can be made payable to:

Church of God Ministries, Inc.

P.O. Box 2420

Anderson, IN 46018  USA

Project number: 42.30401 – H. Nachtigall Memorial

Or give online:

http://chogmissions.org/node/225

Scroll down to find Europe & Middle East NextGen Fund 42.30401 with the

online giving options.


CHILDREN OF PROMISE
Harry and Julia Nachtigall were the Costa Rican directors of Children of Promise: a child-sponsorship program providing food, education, basic medical care and spiritual nurture. 

Children of Promise is accepting donations in memory of Harry Nachtigall. All donations will go directly for the benefit of children in the sponsorship program in Costa Rica. Donations may be made in the following ways:

1. Check made out to Children of Promise with a note on the check or attached that says, “Memorial for Harry Nachtigall” (or similar message) sent to Children of Promise, P. O. Box 2316, Anderson, IN 46018.

2. Donate online by following these steps: Go to www.echildrenofpromise.org Click the green “Donate Online” button Complete the donation page information In the Fund category, select Memorial Gifts In the Comment section, write “Harry Nachtigall.” Hit “Submit.”

 

The Quiet Missionary: A Tribute to My Father Harry Nachtigall

The name Nachtigall is German for "Nightingale."  The Nightingale is a common bird.  It is not endangered.  It does not have particularly beautiful feathers.  It is even officially known as "the Common Nightingale."  But the Nightingale sings--and it is often the male that sings more beautiful than the female.  But most miss it because the Nightingale sings a lot at night, and can be found in loud urban areas where its beautiful song is hidden by the noise of the city.

My father Harry Samuel Nachtigall was a nightingale.  He was a man who lived a quiet life.  His closest brush with fame was as part of the handsome Anderson Trumpet Trio in the late 1950's that praised God but broke some girls hearts as they toured America.  The music is remembered by those that saw them and there was even a triumphant reunion a few years ago. The trumpet was only one of the ways he sang his song.

Harry was born in Camrose, Alberta and named after Harry Gardner of Gardner Bible College.  His parents Sam and Irene were missionaries to Canada and pastors in Cleveland, Ohio, and Lincoln, California.  As a pastor's kid, Dad had no home until he later discovered the place where he would thrive and one day be buried:  Costa Rica.  He was deeply interested in the world and married a remarkable young woman who pushed him to be a servant to everyone he met.  Her name was Wanda Jene Nachtigall.  Together they traveled to Kenya and my Father became the first Western headmaster at the Emusire School to hire non-white and Western faculty, and handed off the school into African hands.  In 2009, I made a special trip to the secondary school and saw his name and picture on the wall--Harry surrounded by his faculty of multi-colored people.  The school is one of the few institutions in the area still thriving and the school was being lead by a wonderful, handsome young, Kenyan man. Quiet people would rather see others succeed than themselves.

Together with his wife Jene and daughter Marcel, they traveled to Central America.  There they picked up a dying orphan and fought to take him home despite his severe illness.  They shortened his long four-part Spanish name and gave him an Irish/German name with a Spanish middle name.  They taught him to love the world in all of its eccentricities and complexities.   They did not teach their kids to spiritualize everything and run from the secular world; they demanded that they engage it fully.

The family loved Costa Rica and Harry saw the church in Costa Rica flourish during his time as a missionary.  The large Christian Center he built brought in youth throughout San Jose and helped to change many lives in a neighborhood that is still a Nazareth in San Jose.  Harry was not one to shove Bibles down people's throats, recite Scriptures at every event, or wear his faith on his sleeve.  His was a quiet manner; a Nightingale song that could easily be drown out amidst the darkness of relative obscurity and the daylight noise of an urban jungle.   

In a world obsessed with celebrities and showy achievements--(even in the church!)--my father rejected those things.   He was happy to never have his name mentioned, his achievements forgotten.  The very idea of getting credit for the things he had done would have been ludicrous to him.  He viewed himself as a husband and a father.  Nothing more.  Nothing more was needed.  Quiet people are not ashamed of being simple. It's a simplicity that the world doesn't crave.

What is known best about my Father is the women he shared his life with.  His first wife Jene, who fused a wicked sense of humor with an unbelievable intellect and servant-heart.  She pushed him hard.  After Jene passed away in 1991, he discovered love with Julia Monge.  Together, they would become a well-known force for good in neighborhoods in Costa Rica.  Free of pay, (paying out of pocket) he traveled the country visiting lonely, isolated churches.  The day before he died, an 80 year old woman from the poor port city of Limon rode the bus all the way to San Jose just to spend 90 minutes with him.  He loved those forgotten places and abandoned churches that no one cared to visit.  He had a special relationship with the Afro-Carribean people of the Atlantic zone.

Julia and Harry were the center of gravity for the little town of Patarra and an inspiration to many throughout San jose and Costa Rica.  Everyone who knew them knew how much Julia spoiled my father.  She bathed him in love and affirmation daily.  He always responded "Gracias mi esposa preciosa."  They were never apart and he was always requesting one more "cafecito" or another piece of devilishly unhealthy cake.  Anyone who spent any time around them will remember their lovey-dovey banter which was 100% genuine.  He could talk about Julia for hours.  In many ways, she saved his life.

My father was not a preacher and he did not sit people down and berate them about their spiritual lives.  He did, however, try and hook up as many people as possible, and many happily married couples are together today because my Father insisted on playing the matchmaker.  

His years of missionary service behind him, he spent his life as a math, science, and computer teacher.  He was a nerd and he never claimed to be anything else.  He was the teacher that was easy to take advantage of--the one who sometimes made the test too easy, and was too nice to the jocks making jokes behind his back.  I asked him why he was so patient with bratty kids while working in suburban and inner-city schools in San Francisco and Portland, and later, in San Jose.  "You never know what these kids are going through at home," he would tell me.  His heart broke for the poor math students in his class who were being robbed of joy by having to grow up too quickly in homes of chaos. I never looked at trouble-makers the same way.   

He was the opposite of those neglectful parents.  He poured love on us and was very proud of his kids.  When we moved to the United States, I had to learn the American sports:  American Football, Baseball, Basketball and Tennis.  Despite having a brutal commute to his school in San Francisco and putting in the long days of a teacher, he would come home without fail and play ball with me.  "The Montgomery Wards parking lot was our field," he recalled as recently as a couple of months ago.  The parking lines were yardage markers.  And he was so proud when my spirals were better than his.  Quiet, humble people are not threatened when others succeed.

He taught me to ride a bike in Marin County, California and we spent endless hours at Granada Field playing sports.  Only after I was an adult with my own son, did I realize how exhausted he must have been each day playing up to 2 hours daily with me after hard days of work.  He was my best friend and I demanded long, hard, playtimes.  In each sport, I surpassed him pretty quickly and he loved it.  He was so happy, when in 5th grade, I accidentally broke his rib while we were playing tackle football in our living room.  During a baseball game once, I made a pretty spectacular catch--the kind a grown man re-lives in his mind time-and-time again.  The sense of joy I felt at making that remarkable catch was quickly dampened when my Dad stood up in the stands and yelled in front of everyone: "That's my boy!"  I was humiliated.  Of course today those words are priceless.   

I remember saying to my Father when I was my son's age:  "You will be my best friend forever!"  My father replied, "No. One day soon you will want to spend more time with your friends than me, and that will be okay."  I can still remember my shock.  "How could I ever not want to play with my Dad?" I wondered.  But his words came true.  In my teen years, I was out of the house more than I was in the house.  Quiet people can let go and not remain the center of attention.   I now know one day my son will find his old man not as exciting as the boys in his crew and the girls down the street--and that's okay.

His final years in retirement were spent with virtually no money.  But it didn't stop him from giving everything he had away all the time.  Sacrifices for his children, gifts he couldn't afford, donations that would put them on the edge.  "My father is poor," I would tell close friends.  "Blessed are the poor in Spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven," said Jesus.   Jesus called them blessed, because they were not tied to the need to be artificial.  Those with vision were actually blind.  Those that were blind, could actually see.  

My father had no enemies.  Not one.  A remarkable thing to say about any human being.  Neither was he ever a different person behind close doors than in front of them.  He was the quiet missionary.  Long before Pope Francis and the Emerging Church called for the church to start walking the talk, the Nightingale sang his song as loudly as he could in the midst of the world's indifferent noise. 

Harry loved Costa Rica more than anywhere in the world.  He was genuinely happy here amidst a tribe of people whom he loved and served and loved him back.  He was the much adored "Don Harry:"  The man with a heart of gold in the background, bragging about others all the time.  I never heard him say one boastful thing about himself in my entire life.  I did hear him proclaim other people's greatness constantly.  The people of Costa Rica gave him the recognition that he deserved but did not seek.  He was a citizen of the country and of their hearts.  There is an enormous hole in the hearts of the people here because of what the quiet missionary did in silence.

Harry leaves behind a wife, Julia Monge, a daughter Marcel Boggio, a son Patrick Nachtigall and three grand-children:  Daniella, Marcellina, and Marco.  He loved Jamie Nachtigall and Daniel Boggio as his own children and those two grieve mightily today--the way unrecognized but legitimate children do.  But with his quiet footprint he leaves much more behind for everyone: a song of humility and service that has penetrated many hearts.

Julia and I did not know that our unexpected 4 1/2 hours with him would be our final moments with him.  Recovering from a surgery earlier in the day, he spent about 2 and a half of those hours very lucid.  He was grateful for all the people around the world that were praying for him.  He was emphatic that his beloved trumpet must go to my son Marco.  He asked about his kids, he said "Great job with Three Worlds" and he said at one point, "I trust God."  We talked about something I heard Bono of U2 saying regarding his strong father's recent death in a cold, undignified hospital:  "Dignity is over-rated."  In a place with tubes, bedpans, and invasive procedures I shared how my time in a Hong Kong hospital brought me great lucidity. We are dependent on others.  The idea that we are not is an illusion.  How many people needed the song of Harry the Nightingale? And how many got it?  More than we will ever know. 

"Did you know that one of my students gets beaten by her father when the toilet paper is put on incorrectly in the bathroom.  The paper has to be facing out," he told me once  in high school about one of the students who was in his math class at Tigard High School.  How many more people needed the song of the Nightingale.   

Tonight, the Quiet Missionary is no more.  His song is sung to the heavens as he soars above us all.  What made the songbird so unique?  The answer is this:  his selfless, intentional, ordinariness.  When the Quiet Missionary stripped himself of everything, all that was left was his song of love. 

What is our song? 

What is my song? 

What is your song? 

Thank you Dad for giving me my life.  I'll love you FOREVER.

"O sing unto the LORD a new song: sing unto the LORD, all the earth."

Psalm 96: 1

Patrick age 2 & Dad.jpg

Three Worlds Diary Taking Time Off

This diary/blog has been operating for 11 years with entries on average, once every 3 days for over a decade.  About two years ago, I decided that each year I would take a break from the diary for a short time.  In light of my father's death, I think this would be a good time to take this year's break.  I will post a tribute to my father here at the diary shortly.  I will resume posting sometime before the 1st of November.  Please stick with the diary and Three Worlds.

3W Roundtable III: Arco, Italy

Each year, the 3W Roundtable gathers somewhere in Europe and the Middle East to hear my reports about the work Three Worlds is doing, to challenge me, and to provide an extra layer of accountability.  The meetings are intense, fun, and highly educational.  Every year great ideas are generated by the wise group of people on our 3W Roundtable.  All of it makes Three Worlds better.

The participants are:  Rod Stafford and Alan MacDonald (Fairfax Community Church--Washington D.C.), Nathan Tatman (County Line Church of God--Auburn, Indiana), Bob Moss--Salem Church of God--Clayton, Ohio), and George Lutzer (GracePoint Community Church--Edmonton, Canada).  This year we have also had Greg Wiens with us (Healthy Growing Churches).  

Not only do I review every key decision made by Three Worlds in all of our 18 countries, but we also talk about strategy, organization, personal issues, and even have Case Studies that try to look into the future to anticipate future problems or issues as Three Worlds grows.  It is the highlight of my year each year.

Our first one was held in Paris and London to introduce the 3W Roundtable to the two most important cities in Europe and to meet our churches there and see the challenges they face.  RT II was held in Cairo, to introduce the Roundtable to the Middle East and to Ken and Keli Oldham.  RT III this week was held in Arco, Italy to introduce the 3W Roundtable to our Italy Expansion Initiative that Three Worlds has kicked off this year.  And next year, the 3W Roundtable will be held in Phoenix, Arizona as we focus on Three Worlds' work in the USA and Canada.  It will be held in November 2014.

The 3W Roundtable challenged me hard this year, encouraged me constantly, and set the stage for even more health from Three Worlds.  I am very grateful to them and their churches for supporting the 3WRT.  Yes, it is a group of all men, but that is because these are men that have walked alongside me through some extremely difficult times over the past 13 years and there is a level of sharing there that is only appropriate to share with men (and my wife).  It's important for men in ministry to have other men to walk alongside of them and be a true and deep sounding-board.   

I am already looking forward to Roundtable IV in Phoenix.  And I have walked away with many great pieces of advice as we set up things for Three Worlds for 2014 and beyond! To the churches that have allowed the pastors to visit:  Please continue to support them on the Roundtable and allow them to join me each year.  Their strategy and words of advice is empowering Three Worlds to be a wonderful, healthy organization.  We need them.   

 

 

 

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