11 March 2010

Welcome to Sunny Pohang!

Well . . .  that's at least what all the folks around here had told us we would be enjoying by this time in March -- lots of sunshine and increasingly warmer temperatures.  So, it came as quite a surprise last evening when I learned that there was snow in the forecast again.  When we arrived nearly a month ago now, the eastern part of Korea (where we are located) had just been blanketed with about 5 inches of snow -- more than they had received in the last 20 years, we were told.  It never snows like this in Pohang!  It was a fluke, not global climate change.
Right! So, if it should snow again, it would only be a dusting.  You can imagine our reaction, then, when we opened the door to our apartment Wednesday morning and found that nearly 6 inches of snow had fallen in the night and it was still coming down, and I mean coming down like a blizzard!  A second record-setting snow in Pohang.  Sandy was undaunted!  Being the industrious person she is, she immediately said, "If we can't take our walk this morning, then we need to find a shovel!"

So, off I went to the Student Union (that's the building at the end of the street in the photo above).  There's a construction project underway to expand the SU, and just under that big canopy I found a large pile of sand into which was stuck a flat-bladed shovel. I trudged back through the new fallen snow and presented my find. Sandy promptly took the shovel and began clearing a path from our front door all the way along the walkway in front of the Mission House to the point at the end where the walkway meets the street.
In no time at all, Sandy had completed the task of removing several inches of snow from our building's front walk.  But, was she finished? No way! If you even began to think that she was satisfied with only shoveling the walkway, you don't know my wife very well at all.  Having cleared off our neighbors sidewalks, she then proceeded to shovel the stairway that leads to the apartments on the second floor of the Mission House.  Now, did I tell you that we were doing all this shoveling at 6:30 in the morning? 
By 7am, we had completed clearing all the snow in front of the Mission House and on the stairwell!  What a warm welcome we've been experiencing here in Sunny Pohang!  The lack of sunshine, though, hasn't put a damper on Sandy's readiness to get a job done when she sees a need! 
 
And, I'm happy to report, all that snow has nearly melted away in two days.  In fact, I spotted a cherry tree in blossom on my walk over to All Nations Hall this morning!  The sure signs of Spring have begun to show themselves. So, we're looking forward to some soon coming sunny days here in Pohang.

09 March 2010

Lifelong Learning in Balance

Balance is one of the essential keys to living wholly. The Greeks taught moderation in all things -- the golden mean. The Scriptures, too, teach balance -- particularly in the arena of study. On the one hand, Paul exhorts Timothy to "study to show himself approved unto God as servant of the truth who is able to "cut a straight line" with God's Word. (See 2 Timothy 2:15). On the other hand, though, Solomon warns us that "there is no end" to the "making of many books," and "much study is weariness to the flesh." (Ecclesiastes 12:12).

Hence, balance is also the key to study. When, however, you live on a university campus just a short walk from your office and two libraries, not to mention having ready access in both home and office, via the Internet, to a wide array of library collections from institutions of higher learning around the world, you are daily confronted with the temptation to live an unbalanced life -- to engage in "much study" and aspire to the "making of many books." A life lived according to the golden mean easily escapes you.

A life of balance can be an even greater challenge, though, in the face of requests for your assistance with the learning of others. In the past week, I have been approached by three different people asking for my help with the forming and leading of study groups (both a law student group and a faculty group) and the mentoring of other faculty. My first inclination is to offer whatever help I may be able to give. Jesus’ words, “Freely you have received, freely give” come to mind. I want to encourage others in their desire to learn and grow in knowledge as well as in faith.

So what’s a person, who believes they have been called to teach, to do? The Chinese proverb written along the side of this post says: “Study is eternal.” That is, the pursuit of truth, insight and understanding is a lifelong endeavor. Each day we’re on the path of learning. Our progress along the way, though, will be substantially enhanced by keeping our life, as a whole, in balance. Even as we seek to respond to the requests and inquiries of others, we must maintain a balance in our life together of learning.

Bonhoeffer suggests in Life Together that one of the key means of maintaining balance in life is to live each day as both a day with others and as a day alone. Indeed, he emphasizes how these two aspects of life impact each other when he writes, “Let him who cannot be alone fear to be in community; and, let him who cannot be in community, fear to be alone.” In order to respond effectively to others, I must maintain a daily discipline of solitude. So too, study is balanced with work, rest, and prayer.

These are the rhythms to the balance of  a long life of learning.