Categoria: ‘English’

A Spiritual Legacy—Part 2

24 de outubro, 2008

Growing up in the Faith. A Farmer’s Daughter but also Child of the King

I spent several hours recently interacting with our oldest son, very grateful because he decided to update the version that my blog is made in. I’m quite proud of the fact that I have learned to post by myself (and even insert images!), but I always end up confronting obstacles—be they small or big. My italics disappear, the spaces between the paragraphs vanish, I add an image and the entire text gets centred, the information on the right decides to take off to the bottom of the page… I fix everything and, then, when I push “save,” it all goes back to the wrong way it was before…. Since David lives on the other side of the planet, I often have to wait for him to wake up or come back to the computer to help me. In less than two minutes, he works with the “html” (something that I understand very little of) and everything is wonderful again.

Read the rest of this article »

A Spiritual Legacy—Part 1

14 de outubro, 2008

The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off.

—Acts 2.39a

An Album full of Memories (1941)

BeppesPage.jpg

(I have translated the previous blog posting in order to share thoughts and memories of our spiritual legacy with the non-Portuguese-speaking members of my family (and any others who may be interested). Please feel free to comment at the end. Other postings in English can be found through the link “English” on the right-hand side.)

Ever since we moved (over a year ago) to our current apartment in São Paulo, Brazil, I have been occasionally intent on examining and re-organizing the contents of dozens of boxes that are the fruit of the accumulation of 35 years of marriage, four children, documents for companies where my husband worked, bills paid since 1974, etc., etc. So much stuff! I rarely have time to dedicate to this task but now and then I enjoy the pleasure of filling a garbage bag with paper items that are no longer relevant to our lives.

I bought some pretty (and smaller) boxes to substitute the old, mouldy or ugly ones which have stored the special memories of our lives as children and adolescents, of our siblings and children, of our parents and grandparents….  The memories of births, marriages and burials of the persons that were, or are, part of our family, both here and around the world, are being moved into these, as I discover the treasures in the middle of the “stuff”. And it is about one of these that I want to write this time.

Read the rest of this article »

Only Six Little Words

21 de agosto, 2008
An anxious heart weighs a person down, but a kind word cheers up.—Proverbs 12.25

Posted on August 17, 2008 on the blog www.cronicasdocotidiano.com
by Elizabeth Zekveld Portela in São Paulo, Brazil

A few days ago I was reminded of the impact on my life of six little words, spoken by a lady that I actually never got to know very well. This happened when my sister forwarded me a thank you note that she had received via e-mail from the wife of a former college professor of ours.

Read the rest of this article »

Reflections on Two Churches — Redeemer Presbyterian (New York) and Mars Hill (Seattle)

10 de agosto, 2008

(Meu Filho traduziu o post anterior e resolvi postar esta adaptação para meus amigos e parentes que apenas lêem inglês).

(This blog posting was originally written in Portuguese and translated by my son in Bangladesh for his own use. I decided to “double-post” it so that family and friends might also have access to it, as well as other interested English speakers. These reflections came about after a three-week trip, from São Paulo, Brazil to the USA, in order to participate in our youngest son’s wedding in Boise, Idaho, at which time we also did some sightseeing in New York and family visiting in the Tacoma, Washington vicinity.)

Read the rest of this article »

Snapping the Present, Perpetuating the Past

5 de dezembro, 2007

I thank my God every time I remember you…. Philippians 1.3

I wrote a thank you letter a few days ago. It was to one of my father’s sisters, a Christian lady, energetic and active, that lives in Canada. This aunt and my mom were born about a month apart, but she actually married after I did.

When I was a girl, Aunt H worked with her brothers on my grandfather’s farm (my grandpa died when I was about three). Besides milking the cows, she took care of an enormous garden, drove the tractor, worked in the field… She also helped her mother with the housework. She was always a cheerful and vigorous person. I thought that this would be her destiny forever.

Picture of me in front of the hospital where my brother was born. Taken by my Aunt.

Since she left Holland before finishing her studies, Aunt H did not have a high school diploma. I didn’t accompany the details of this phase, but I later learned that she studied at night to receive this diploma and, one day, she appeared in our home to say goodbye. We all were sad, not understanding…

Read the rest of this article »

My Purse is Gone! What do I do now, Lord?

1 de março, 2006

Guarulhos airport, São Paulo, Brazil.

Neto and Isabel had gone there to meet a Dutch cousin of hers. He, together with his wife, was making a tourist excursion through Brazil. When they discovered that they would have a four-hour wait, they had written to suggest that they meet. So, after the initial greeting, they took care of the check-in for the next phase of the trip and then went to drink guaraná in the restaurant of a well-known fast food chain, sitting down way in the back. Isabel and Lia sat on a sofa with their backs to the wall and Neto and Alex placed themselves on the other side of the table. They joined hands and closed their eyes while Neto asked God’s blessing on the food, on those moments together and on the remainder of the couple’s trip.

The couples pulled out albums with the photos that represented their lives and stayed there showing them to each other and talking animatedly. At a certain point, cousin Alex pulled out two photos, with relatives that they shared, to give to Isabel. Since she wanted to remember the name of each person, she put out her hand to take her pen from her purse. Startled, her eyes met Neto’s.

Read the rest of this article »

Eulogy for Gilbert Zekveld

1 de março, 2006
January 13, 1928—December 28, 2002

As we are gathered together here, this afternoon, we remember Gilbert Zekveld, our beloved father, grandfather, brother, uncle and friend.

Gilbert was born as Gijsbertus Zekveld, on January 13, 1928, on a farm near the town of Aarlanderveen in South Holland, the second of seven children. Most of his childhood encompassed the years of the great depression, while the Second World War raged in and around his country throughout much of his adolescence, ending shortly before he reached military age. His character was forged during these difficult years, as he watched his Godfearing parents act and react with courage to the difficult circumstances around them, and as he learned to be frugal and to work diligently on the family farm.

Read the rest of this article »

So much Commotion… So little Prayer…

1 de março, 2006

But you, when you pray, go into your inner room, close your door and pray to your Father who is in secret,
and your Father who sees what is done in secret will reward you.

–Matthew 6:6

It was the first week of January (in São Paulo, Brazil) and Isabel had just closed the lid of her Christmas trunk (a large chest made of Dutch cedar). Inside, she had again placed the artificial tree and its ornaments, together with the objects that always made up the family atmosphere at this time of the year. The house now seemed empty and cold, without the colourful glitter of the decorations and devoid of the happy presence of the relatives and friends that had been part of the celebrations of the birth of Christ and the arrival of the New Year. She was already missing them. Nevertheless, after so many days of shopping, planning and serving meals, taking care of guests and participating in services and programs, she now seemed to have finally reached the peace and quiet she needed to start keeping her “New Year’s Resolution”.

Read the rest of this article »

Meditation upon taking the Lord’s Supper

1 de março, 2006
I Corinthians 11:23-29

Lord, once more I have eaten and drunk in your house. I stretched out my hand and brought bread to my mouth. The taste of the wine still lingers. They are reminders of the body and blood of your only Son, broken and shed for me.

Father, I have done this so often, in various churches, cities and even countries. Now I wonder if at any time, in any of these places, I ever truly “discerned the body” of my broken Master. And when I participated today, was it “worthily?” Why did my heart not cry when I thought of the broken body and of the death that I should be “showing” while I swallowed twice?

Read the rest of this article »

A “Tower” for the Glory of God

1 de março, 2006
It is more blessed to give than to receive.—Acts 20.35

The telephone rang. It was Saturday, but Isabel’s husband had had to go to work. Neto was tired and sad. In his company, the owners were fighting amongst themselves. Relationships were being permanently broken. In a climate of fear and hate, Neto was trying to maintain his testimony while he dealt with treason and corruption, with the demands of his bosses, and with the insecurity of the employees.

But, now, Neto was thinking about something else.
– Tell me, ‘Bel. How did it go today? Was it like you expected?

Read the rest of this article »