“Sunday Will Come”

A Tongan lady made this dress & tie for us.
Carter standing in Cathedral Cove
Piha beach in the afternoon
Ashton Avenue!!
Sunrise on Takapuna beach

Written by Carter. Faye and I traveled to the Coromandel Peninsula, about 2.5 hours from where we live. There is some stunning scenery there — including Cathedral Cove, from the Windows 10 lock-screen photo. I hiked down to it one day and took some photos. The next day, we saw it from the ocean, when we went on a glass-bottomed boat. It’s beautiful from any angle. The boat tour allowed us to see a lot of fish (especially red snapper) and the rocks and kelp on the sea floor (when it was shallow enough).

While in that area, we met Phil and Joan MacEachen. They are from the US. Joan is a physician who worked in Whiteriver, AZ, several years after we were there. She is retired from her US practice and has worked in NZ for six months of the year for the past seven years. They usually return to the US the other six months…but will stay longer this time because of the pandemic. Another doctor we both knew introduced us. Phil and Joan gave us some tips on where to visit while we were there.

While driving on a gravel road over a small mountain, we saw a pheasant and a beautiful hawk! New Zealand continues to amaze me with its beauty!

I’m “training” to hike Rincon Peak with Ralph and Andy on October 21. Others are welcome to join us, if you’d like. The hike is 16 miles round-trip (or “return,” as they say in NZ), with elevation gain of 4200 feet from Happy Valley. My goal is to walk 1 mile further each week until I have walked 16 miles…on relatively-flat terrain. Once I have the mileage down, I’ll work on increasing the grade of the terrain. Yesterday, I hiked 8 miles along the coast. I figured I’d “drink in” as much of this beautiful scenery as I can…since we will return home in a few weeks. It was a beautiful day for hiking!
This Friday is Ashton’s 29th birthday. A friend reminded me of Ashton’s quiet and subtle sense of humor. If you feel comfortable doing so, can you please share a story (or several) where you saw Ashton’s sense of humor…as a way to remember him on his birthday? And please feel free to spread the word! You can send it to this email address or post it on my Facebook wall.

I’ve enjoyed watching several videos on The Saints app. One is on dealing with death (including suicides of loved ones), reminding me that, even in my darkest moments (like the Friday of Christ’s Crucifixion for His disciples), I can always hold onto the hope that “Sunday will come.” Another reminded me that “…Jesus Christ is real and that, through Him, things can be OK again…and better than [I] ever imagined they could be.” What comfort, peace and healing that thought brings to my broken heart! My favorite word right now is “hope.” Hope in Christ. Another told about a recovering meth addict who prayed and asked God to tell him what he needed to do…and promised that he would do it. At the moment he said those words, he felt light and love and warmth. The thing he felt God wanted him to do was to “keep trying.” What a simple and beautiful thought: that, through Christ, my feeble efforts are enough. He just wants me to keep trying.

Some other beautiful thoughts I’ve heard, read and had this week:

  • My first name is “John,” which means “God is gracious.” He surely is!
  • A man who is dyslexic thought he was “dumb” when he was in school. With time and maturity, he recognized his talents in other areas. God needs me to be the best me I can be. We are all better at some things than others; for that reason, we need each other.
  • “Be of good cheer!” What a beautiful reminder amidst dark and difficult times!
  • When I was praying about a concern I had, I felt like God reminded me, “Wait. I will take care of you.” Another time, I asked (in prayer) if there was anything He wanted me to know or do? The answer: “I love you.” Wow! I knew that…but it was such a treat for Him to remind me of that again! I don’t think I could hear that too much or too often!
  • “[Jesus] is always the answer.” I have found that to be true in my life.

Kia kaha o te mahi o te rongopai.  (Our friend Valda — whose mother was Maori — taught me this phrase. It means, “Be strong in the work of the gospel.”)

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4 thoughts on ““Sunday Will Come”

  1. Enjoyed your comments. I did not know your son but wish I had and am sorry for your loss. I too know that our Savior Jesus Christ loves him and us. Your tie and Fays dress are very attractive and a testament of how much you are loved. ❤

  2. OOOH! Great photos:) I love the matching dress and tie! And how fun to find an Ashton Ave. I am amazed at what a beautiful place you get to serve; you are definitely livin’ the dream!
    The title of your post made me think of a podcast I listened to in the last week or so. It was the story of a woman who joined a church that assigned a “mentor” to each new convert for a month or so, and each morning she’d go over to her mentor’s home and would find her mentor standing at the window looking out, and when she’d turn around her first words were always, “Maybe today”. After a few weeks of that she asked her mentor why she said that every day. This is not a direct quote but her response was that she was looking for the return of the Saviour, and each day she thinks to herself that maybe today is the day that He will return. It was a reminder to live and serve accordingly. I liked that!

    I don’t know if I knew your first name is John!

    • Thanks, Kristy. I love the thought of “maybe today”!
      Yep, I’m named after my four great-grandfathers. Three of them had “John” in their name; the fourth had “Carter.”

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