Over the last few years
as we have pushed on the door to arrive in Helsinki, God has put us on a
course, which has required us to trust him. As an individual who is not
naturally disposed to this and as one who normally gets through life with a
large scoop of self-sufficiency topped with a drizzle of I can make it
happen and a sprinkling of I
am in control, it has been a
challenging personal journey!
Through the last year or
more, God has been working things out to address this and teaching us to trust
in him. Throughout this process we have faced a number of Israelites at the Red
Sea type moments [although far less dramatic by comparison, but in some ways
equally scary for little us]! He
had spoken to us about these things and the journey he would be taking us on, directly and through words from friends. Emma Whittall last
year, when visiting us in Helsinki from Stockholm with Phil and their kids said
that there would be lily pads and large turtles appearing on the surface of the lake to step onto, rising up at the last moment before each step
forward. Jonathan Farnham in Canterbury echoed
this, he felt God say that he was wanting us to learn to trust him more deeply
and that there would be times when we would have to go ahead, when everything
was not yet in place, a bit like the Israelites at the Red Sea – God would
provide at the very last moment! More recently Mark Nottage said that as we
were sharing with The City Church Canterbury about some of the challenges we
were facing, he could see a picture of a magician, dazzling a group of kids
with tricks and them really not knowing what was going to happen next and witnessing hilariously unimaginable things, but the magician and others who
could see from behind the stage knowing exactly what he was going to do next
and how he would do it. We were like the children and God’s promise to us it
that he is orchestrating everything together in complete control, but for us it
will seem hilarious, unexpected and impossible. There were many other similar
words to these.
Barry & Barns Removal Co.® |
Sad goodbyes to dear friends outside a spotlessly clean
25 River Court, Chartham
|
Lydia after rushing across the city to collect the apartment keys, last minute on a rainy Friday afternoon. WooHoo! |
apartment, not only meets our very immediate need to have a roof over our
heads, but it's within one minutes walking distance to Lydia's work and is a
really nice place that we know we'll be happy in.
So at risk of sounding like a Craig David song [and showing my age]:
We packed up the van on Tuesday
Started our drive on Wednesday
Heard we have the flat on Thursday
Lydia collected the keys on Friday
We arrived in Helsinki with the furniture on Saturday
And moved it all in on Sunday!
Barry and Maureen stayed with us for a week. This was a mix of spending
time together [for the last time in a while], seeing some of the sites and
enjoying some of the good weather. But, for them and us, lots of hard work
helping move us in, unpacking boxes, trips with us to IKEA, looking
after the children while we got things going with bank accounts, immigration
stuff etc. It was hard work, but a great time together and we couldn't have
done it without them.
Lydia outside her new classroom |
Lydia has started a new job as a nursery teacher and is settling in
well. She has been busy planning, producing resources, and making stuff to make
her classroom feel more vibrant and creative. The last few days have been spent
welcoming the new children and dealing with anxious parents! So far it seems
like a good working environment with nice staff. Although Lydia was a school
teacher for many years back in England, she is new to working in a nursery or
daycare and has some difficult kids who don't speak or understand English.
When she applied for the job it was for a classroom assistant type roll. But
she has actually been made the main teacher. This is a great compliment, but
also adds to the challenge and level of responsibility.
We had a super time with our dear friends Steve & Hanna who have
been developing a house church type group over the last year. We don’t know
them extremely well, but it feels as if we have known them years and there is a sense of joined hearts. Steve collected Lydia and the family from the airport when they
arrived. They had put together a bag of groceries for the first few days and a
houseplant as a welcome-to-Finland gift! Their group has been built on strength
of relationship and a desire to be open and hospitable, welcoming in anybody.
They have seen success through running an English speaking group in their local
neighborhood. As a result there are several families who have joined the group
and become knitted in – but have not yet come to faith. It is exciting and
inspiring for us to see what has happened through them and from such small
beginnings. We are delighted to be in relationship with them and are interested
to maintain this and explore possible ways to work together and support one
another, we eagerly look forward to further opportunity to get to know them.
We too are eager to find opportunity to form relationships with those around us. This is most likely to happen through getting to know others in our apartment building, putting on social gatherings, Lydia building relationships at work and also through the open daycare groups, which serve children not enrolled onto formal daycare, and their parents. This has been a great meeting place so far. As we continue to try to get to know people and build genuine relationships, our prayer is for the miraculous to break out. We are asking God for this to happen through anything from just forming some solid relationships in what is an individualistic and suspicious culture, to opening hearts to be receptive to the gospel as we chat to people, or for opportunities to pray with folk and demonstrate the reality and personal nature of our faith in Jesus. As a family here with no actual church as such, we are praying for a miraculous door to be swung open to enable us to grow even by just a few. We do ask you to join with us in this prayer.
We have had a few setbacks to do with our immigration stuff. Lydia has
received a Finnish identity number as she is here with a job and the number is
essential for taxation purposes. But as things stand myself and the children
will have to go through a lengthy process to be regarded as connected to Lydia
and counted as one family unit living together in Finland. This means that we
cannot register with a doctor, begin the process of registering the children
into kindergarten, I cannot be added to our bank account to make it a joint
account. The process will require having our documents [birth certificates,
marriage certificate etc.] certified and legalized in the UK before they will
even look at them. This is an expensive and time-consuming process [which we were not informed of during our recon visits and meetings with immigration staff prior to our permanent arrival]. Once we get
through this and can become residents, we can then get the children registered
into Finnish kindergarten. The priority here is Edith, we really want her to be
in Finnish kindergarten as soon as possible. With a year to go before she
starts in a Finnish school, we had been banking on her having this time to
learn enough language ready for school [apparently nine months to a year is
enough for this to happen]. However, we have learned that after becoming
residents it then normally takes four months to register and start at a
Kindergarten. This is obviously not ideal and we are praying for an unusually
quick route through these obstacles.
That’s the main headlines from us so far.
We do ask you to continue to pray for us and to keep in touch [we are delighted to have resolved our internet connection problems so are back in the contactable realm!] emails, tweets, messages really are a source of encouragement to us and we are so grateful to those who have made contact. We are also grateful to those who have given financially to us. You know who you are and we are so appreciative. It has been an expensive process to get here with many hidden, unexpected costs on top of what we had already budgeted for. But, thanks to God's provision, through the generosity and mission heartedness of his people we have had all of our needs met so far. We really are grateful to Him and to you!Apologies that this is a bit of an epic, there has been so much to include [compounded by over a week without internet], and these are just the headlines.
Prayer points:
- Speedy and miraculous journey through the immigration system [avoidance of unnecessary red tape].
- Edith [and preferably Johan] to be quickly registered into kindergarten.
- Language learning for us all – [it was a long night of working through pages of internet configuration settings with a Finnish-English dictionary!]
- Wisdom and the right path to emerge with a small house church we have been relating to. Ways to support them and informally connect them to RM where useful.
- A clear door to open to birth something, which is more than just our family. A relationship connection, opportunity to share the gospel, someone coming to The Lord, miracles, divine appointments. That sort of stuff to really open a door which, we cannot open based simply on our own efforts (that one is a bit vague, but hopefully you understand what we're getting at!)
Follow on twitter @Kevin_J_Jones
Email: finlandvision@gmail.com