Monday, October 17, 2011

17 October - Settling In

Wow!  I can't believe that two weeks have passed since our last post to the Blog!  Sorry!  A big part of the reason is that we are spending more time at our apartment, getting it ready for move-in, and we don't have internet access there yet.

"Thank the Lord & Ikea!"
We have been very busy.  We have purchased some furniture, and received the supplies that were donated by Frontline Community in Ramstein.  Thanks to the Lord and Ikea, we have a bed in our apartment!  We really felt blessed by the whole process.  We had a hard time finding what we wanted, but when we did find the right one, it was at a really low price.  When we went to purchase the springs/mattresses, they were half-price!  We have actually spent one night at the place - and it was great!  The sounds of the traffic outside were very minimal, and did not wake us at all.  Almost all German homes have "rolladen" on the exterior of the windows.  These are wooden or aluminum "blinds" that are raised or lowered from inside...they work great at night for blocking out light, sound, weather, and for added security.
"Rolladen"

We installed ceiling light fixtures in all the rooms but the living room, and are working on our bathroom medicine cabinet and shower curtain at the moment.  Today an electrician came and hooked up the water heater (somehow that had been missed in the remodel work).  Carol spent a lot of time today working on the door latches in the apartment - they had been painted as part of the renovation, and some of them were not working properly - but she did a great job of getting them ready for action.  When you come to visit us, and are able to close and lock your door - be sure to thank Carol!  We also recorded a brief video update for our friends back at Gateway Community Church in Mayville.

Living/Dining Room
Last week Pastor Darryl came from Ramstein with a truck full of the furniture that was donated by the folks there.  He also brought a strong young airman from the base named Ken to help carry everything up two flights of stairs!  We also had help from Dennis, a new friend from the Darmstadt area.  It was so exciting!  Like Christmas morning in October!

We got sofa and chairs, coffee table and end tables, lamps, dining room furniture, and tons of small wares - 8 fans, 2 room air conditioners, 3 irons, 3 toasters, 2 televisions, lots of Rubbermaid and Pampered Chef items, two sets of dishes, flatware, glasses, blankets, towels, curtains, more than a dozen European extension/power cords!

Living/Dining Room
The last major hurdle is the kitchen.  We have decided on the kitchen, had a technician come and double check our measurements, (always a good idea when Bob is working in metric...well, any time Bob is measuring!) and tomorrow we go to the store to place the final order.  Hopefully it will be in place in two weeks...we'll see.

Our boxes from the US will arrive in mid-November, with our "touches of home."  It will be great to put a few things on the wall and around the place that have that familiar feel and look.

Carol & Melanie (two pastors' wives) at ICF, Oberursel
We've had a couple of great weekends - Bob was asked to preach at the Wiesbaden church two weeks ago when the pastor there had to make an emergency trip to the States.  It was especially fun because he got to play drums with the worship team - which is led by Stewart and Judith Lynn Maxwell, our hosts during these first months.  Last week we worshiped and shared at International Christian Fellowship in Oberursel, which is a suburb north of Frankfurt.  We met lots of people there who are very interested in our work in Darmstadt.  Some live close by, others work in Darmstadt.  It was very encouraging to worship with both of these great churches that are so supportive of our work.

ICF Worship Center
Our vision/mission team has met each week, praying, sharing and having fun together.  We are anticipating some new faces in the weeks to come - pray for us as we sharpen our focus and keep our eyes and ears open for new members of the team.  Pray for the people that each of us has in our circle of friends who are not yet followers of Christ.  Pray that we will have boldness and sensitivity - clarity and simplicity - grace and love as we build relationship with those around us so that the Holy Spirit might use us to accomplish His work of drawing people to God.

Lunch with some friends!
Pray for us as we prepare to leave this Sunday for Rome.  We will be attending the International Baptist Convention annual meeting, followed by a LEAD Team meeting, and will return on Sunday, 30 October.  Pray also as we prepare to speak at the IBC Singles Retreat in Madrid the following weekend, 4-6 November.  Pray for safety in travel, and wisdom in sharing from the Word of God.
Italian Pizza, German Restaurant,
Bulgarian Soda!  Gotta love it!

We would love to hear from you!  Drop us a note on facebook, Twitter, email, or snail-mail...all the information is below:

We love you all!  Thanks for your prayers and support!

Pastor Bob & Carol Marsh
Eschollbrücker Straße 3
64285 Darmstadt
Germany
email: bobthepastor@gmail.com / carolmarsh72657@gmail.com
facebook: bobthepastor  / carolmarsh72657
SKYPE: pastorbobmarsh / carollynnmarsh
Twitter: @pastorbobmarsh

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

3 October - Tag Der Einheit

Today was a national holiday in Germany.  October 3 is celebrated each year as "Tag Der Deutche Einheit" - The Day of Germany Unity.  It was on that date in 1990 that Germany was officially reunited after 40+ years of separation of East and West.  For all those years, Germany served as the visible symbol of a divided world.  But there was much more than a political and philosophical division.  A people were torn assunder - friends and families suffered and grieved over the loss of intimacy and fellowship for a generation

I thought of the significance of the day several times over the weekend.  On Saturday we travelled to Bielefeld, Germany to speak at the International Baptist Church located there.  As we drove there and back, the Autobahn was filled with families travelling to get in one more weekend of great summer-like weather before fall and winter arrive.  And it was a beautiful weekend!  But I wonder how many people really thought about the significance of their holiday weekend.  Has it become like so many of the National holidays in the US and other countries, where we make the most of our opportunity to enjoy a day off work, and indulge in play, food and fun, with little regard to the original meaning of the day?  I suspect that as the years pass (it is alreay 21 years since Germany was re-united), that the significance of the event will be lost...

Worship at International Baptist
Church, Bielefeld
As we worshipped on Sunday morning with our brothers and sisters at Bielefeld, I was struck by the fact that every day is reunification day for the follower of Jesus Christ!  And we have much more to celebrate than any nation or people have.  In Ephesians 2:13 Paul wrote, "But now in Christ Jesus you who once were far away have been brought near through the blood of Christ." He further wrote in Colossians 1:21 "But now he has reconciled you by Christ's physical body through death to present you holy in his sight, without blemish and free from accusation--" Inspired by those words, Daniel Webster Whittle wrote the words to a hymn in 1891:
Once far from God and dead in sin,
No light my heart could see;
But in God's Word the light I found,
Now Christ liveth in me.

Christ liveth in me,
Christ liveth in me;
Oh! what a salvation this,
That Christ liveth in me.

If you have discovered reunification with God through the blood of Christ, then you have reason to worship every day - not just on Sunday - and certainly not just on some holiday on a calendar.  If you have not experienced the amazing salvation, it is available to you by God's grace.  You can recieve the gift of reconciliation - and celebrate your own Tag der Einheit!

I am aware that a week has passed since we last posted a blog.  It has been quite a week!  We spent Wednesday taking posession of our apartment.  That turned out to be a longer event than we planned!  We walked through the apartment, noting any problems, taking pictures, writing down meter readings for water, electricity and heat.  Those all got entered onto a contract.  Then we had to pay the deposit.  In Germany, the security deposit is held in a joint savings account in the name of the renter and the owner.  Opening that account took some time at a local bank.  Then we went back to the apartment and began to do some cleaning while the realtor went to the owner to have him sign the contracts.  We went to the Pizza/Gyros/Kabob stand that is just below our apartment, and got two sandwiches for our first meal in our new home.  The owner was there, Orlan, a very nice young man from Turkey.  The sandwich was great!  I told him he would be seeing a lot of us! (If I keep eating those sandwiches, he will be seeing more and more of me!)
First meal in our new place!

Thursday and Friday were spent purchasing basic cleaning supplies for the house, washing windows, floors and shelves; sweeping the balconies, and taking measurements for the kitchen.  We have done some shopping for the kitchen, but have not done enough work on it to make a decision yet.  We have done some shopping for bedroom furniture, too.  We got our electricity account opened, learned how to do electronic banking in Germany, and even paid our first month's rent.  We also contacted our shippers, and gave them our new address so that our winter clothes can be shipped ASAP!  By the way, our new mailing address in Germany is:

Bob & Carol Marsh
Escholbrücker Str. 3
64285 Darmstadt
Germany

Wisconsin???
Due to some scheduling conflicts, we moved our "Mission, Vision & Prayer" meeting to Friday night.  It was a wonderful time!  We spent the great majority of it praying for the people of Darmstadt who do not know Jesus.  We prayed specifically for the individuals in our own little circles of friends who do not yet know Him, and we prayed that we might live Christ-like before them, and share Christ with them.  It was so great to hear the heart of each person there for their friends, family and co-workers who have not been "re-united" with God.
Our weekend of ministry in Bielefeld was a great time!  We had a beautiful drive through central Germany.  The Autobahn was very crowded, and on several occasions, our GPS would direct us to back roads to avoid a "stau," the infamous German traffic jam.  We loved it!  Though the speeds are greatly reduced, we loved driving on more country roads, through small towns and villages.  It was simply beautiful, and remided us of our homes in Wisconsin, Minnesota and West Virginia (except for the castles, of course)!
Oh, maybe not!!!
 
This week includes more settling in the apartment - we hope to find and settle on a kitchen, bedroom and other furnishings.  We would love to get the stuff that was collected for us in Ramstein and bring it to Darmstadt, now that we have a place for it to land!  We will be setting up our telephone/intenet/television plan and installing light fixtures.  We are also on the "cleaning crew" for the apartment building this week - so we need to learn our responsibility and take care of it (it's a rotation of tenants cleaning stairways, etc., and we are on this week).

All along the way, we meet people.  People like Orlan, at the restaurant; our realtor, Kolja, who has promised to come to the church when we open; Peter, our building manager, who is about our age and lives above us with his wife and daughter; and Jennifer, the kitchen sales associate we met at the local "Home Depot"-style store. 

That is the work of church planting.  Actually, it's the call each of us has as followers of Jesus - to live life in the midst of people who are blinded to the truth of the gospel, and bring the light of the love of Christ to them where they are, as they are, no matter who they are.  That's our life's calling - to bring the good news of reunification between God and humanity to those who are still, in Paul's words "far away."  Pray for us as we live out that call - and be the heralds of the good news in your circle, too!