After a short stay in Scotland to recuperate and repack, we set off to…you thought I was going to say Holland, but no! The natives set us right with kind consistency. It’s not Holland, folks, it’s The Netherlands. Turns out North Holland and South Holland are provinces in The Netherlands that include the major cities of trade, so calling The Netherlands “Holland” is a bit like calling the USA “New England.” Anyway, we set off for The Netherlands and were again in for a huge surprise and blessing. I am afraid I’ll sound repetitive if I tell you how warm the people were, how hungry, how wonderful the community is…all those things are true, and yet the base is so unique and unlike anything we had yet experienced.
First of all, Dutch people are delightful! They are warm and generous. They have definitively Dutch ways, which they will unabashedly describe to you, but without any sense of imposing them on you. You feel free to be different. The base we went to is called Heidebeek, and it’s remote, if anything can be remote in a country that small. It was a couple hours from Amsterdam, created as a place where the young people getting saved in masses in the 70’s could be discipled away from the temptations of the city. As we drove through the country from the airport, I kept having flashbacks of driving through Michigan and parts of Indiana. Large Dutch populations settled around Chicago (where I grew up) and around Lake Michigan, and now I know why. Flat farmland giving way to friendly, leafy, green forests, and expanses between homes. But not too big! Nobody seems to need too much space, just enough.
There wasn’t room for us to stay on the base itself, so we stayed a couple minutes down the road at some base housing, an old stables with thatched roof, restored into housing. The next day, the base gave us our transportation for the week, three sturdy bicycles, two bearing little seats for the kids. The first time we road “home” from a day of ministry on our bikes, I rode behind Pete and OJ. Judah was in a seat nestled on Pete’s handlebars, and Ariel was behind OJ’s seat. The weather was perfect, the kids were squealing, and the surrounding was gorgeous. Our base liason brought us a road map…for bike paths. There are more bike racks than parking spaces, and it is how everybody gets around, even (or maybe especially) the older folks.
Our schedule was intense, especially since Erin had gone back to Tacoma. We were down to one prayer team for the week, and trying to pray for everyone on the base at least once. We had a few chances to teach the staff in the mornings and one evening, and the rest of the days were spent in prayer, rotating OJ, Pete and me through as the team. The hardest part for me to relinquish to the Lord is always the kids, as I have so little control in these weeks over their experience. I have had to trust Him that He’s going before us to prepare good things for them, over which I have no say. And He’s blown my mind with His faithfulness to them. This week in the Netherlands was so filled with sweet experiences and gifts from God to the kids, it overwhelmed me. Heidebeek is nestled on some fields with a centre, a dining hall, and some bungalows for the base’s families. Across from the family bungalows is a playground, big sandbox, and pigpen with two furry fat pigs in it. In the bungalows are a whole community of toddlers and preschoolers who are free to play in the sunshine in front of their homes in total safety. The base also has a preschool with ladies who love kids taking care of them for a few hours every morning. They welcomed Ariel and Judah and allowed them to join the other kids for excursions to the playground, stories, games, etc. By Wednesday Ariel was singing a little song in Dutch. In the afternoons, Judah could nap in the crib in the empty preschool room. I know I’m writing as a Mom right now, but as we have watched the Lord do miracles for person after person in the prayer room, these are the miracles He’s done for me, filling my heart.
Ariel, Judah, and I walked down the lane for a walk one day (walks with a one year old and three year old are best when there’s no destination and you’re willing to lose a race with a snail), when a little buggy behind a dwarf horse came clopping up the road. The kids were thrilled just to see it, when the driver pulled to a stop in front of us and asked, “Are you from the Tacoma team?” I had no idea who she was, but affirmed that we were, and she immediately offered to pull the kids up for ride, right behind the little horse’s rump. It was a huge treat for them, one that we could never have planned for. Their days were filled with things like this, and all my ability to plan out good things for my kids were thoroughly trumped by God’s design for the week. I’ll never forget riding a bicycle with Judah on the handlebars between my elbows, shouting, “Good morning, birdies! Good morning, chickens! Whoa…dat’s a big one, mama! Big one! Whoa, mama…we go fast!”
I’ll put the stories of ministry in another blog, as this is getting so long. One final story of Judah and his interactions with the animals…OJ took him over to look at the pigs in the pen one day, and after glaring at them for a moment, he began to address them with authority. “You go over there, pig! Get away, pig! You go away, pig, right now!” We had a good laugh over that. That Judah…he’s one biblical baby.
June 3rd, 2008 at 3:15 am
I love to hear about it all. But, I am especially thankful that our little darlings are being totally provided for by the Lord. Thank you Jesus for life altering miracles and the little miracles that bless our lives.
Bless you guys!! With lots and lots of love,
The Myhrberg Team
June 4th, 2008 at 5:40 pm
Suz, you had me in tears on this one! Jesus is so good. He will not withhold from our kids or our mama-hearts! Hurray! Go, Jesus, go!
Love you, friend!
Carrie
February 4th, 2010 at 4:13 pm
I loved reading this one!