Call of A Coward: The God of Moses and the Middle-Class Housewife
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About this ebook
Moses never wanted to be a leader. Jonah ran away from his missions call. And when Marcia Moston's husband came home with a call to foreign missions, she was sure God had the wrong number. His call conflicted with her own dreams, demanded credentials she didn't have, and required courage she couldn't seem to find. She promised to follow where God led, but she never thought the road would lead to a Mayan village on a Guatemalan mountainside.
From the trecherous road trip to their new village home, to learning to navigate a new culture, to a stateside mission field in Vermont, Moston's journey reveals that God leads just as clearly today as he did in biblical times. Her candid account tells a story of learning to trust and obey when faithfulness seems foolish.
Written with humor and insight, Call of a Coward is an engaging reminder that with our very real God in control, cowards become courageous and ordinary people find great purpose.
Marcia Moston
Marcia Moston, winner of the Women of Faith 2010 Writing Contest, and honorable mention recipient in the 78th AnnualWriter's Digest Competition, has been a columnist for theGreenville Journal as well as a contributor to several magazines, including Focus on the Family's Thriving Family. Marcia and her husband have five grown children and live with their daughter's scruffy dog.
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Call of A Coward - Marcia Moston
CALL OF A COWARD
The God of Moses and
the Middle-Class Housewife
MARCIA MOSTON
9780849947308_INT_0001_001© 2012 by Marcia Moston
Originally published by Westbow Press
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, scanning, or other—except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, by Thomas Nelson. Thomas Nelson is a registered trademark of Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Thomas Nelson, Inc., titles may be purchased in bulk for educational, business, fund-raising, or sales promotional use. For information, please e-mail [email protected].
Scripture quotations are taken from the NEW AMERICAN STANDARD BIBLE®, Copyright © The Lockman Foundation 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995. Used by permission.
ISBN: 978-1-4497-1996-8 (Westbow SC)
ISBN: 978-1-4497-1998-2 (Westbow HC)
ISBN: 978-1-4497-1997-5 (Westbow e-book)
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Moston, Marcia.
Call of a coward : following faith / Marcia Moston.
p. cm.
ISBN 978-0-8499-4730-8 (trade paper)
1. Moston, Marcia. 2. Missionaries—New Jersey—Biography. 3. Missionaries—Guatemala—Biography. 4. Missions—Guatemala. I. Title.
BV2843.G9M67 2012
266.0092—dc23
[B]
2012000215
Printed in the United States of America
12 13 14 15 16 QG 6 5 4 3 2 1
To Bob
"For where you go, I will go, and where you
lodge, I will lodge. Your people shall be my people,
and your God, my God."
—Ruth 1:16
Contents
Acknowledgments
Part One: Coming
1. Crossing Borders
And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom.
—Anaïs Nin
2. Wrestling What-Ifs
It’s difficult to get your mind around trust. You just have to do it.
3. Lingering in Antigua
Even the dullest of minds, prompted by fear of a new situation or complacency in a familiar one, can produce the most convincing arguments to stop along the journey. But the Lord cuts to the heart of a matter. Ask, and he will put you back on track and direct your way.
4. No Turning Back
Those kicking and screaming death-throes moments when you realize you aren’t and you can’t are God’s opportunities to show you he is and he can.
5. Kingdom Business at the Motor Vehicle Department
God, the author of time, space, and order, seldom punches our clocks or stays in our size-specified boxes. When he wants to engage a heart, renew a mind, and save a soul, anytime, anywhere, anyhow will do.
6. Strangers
An act of kindness doesn’t need an interpreter.
7. Friends
Friendship, I fancy, means one heart between two.
—George Meredith
8. What’s a Woman to Do with All Her Time?
When cultures collide, a shared laugh makes a strong bridge.
9. A Cancer Researcher and a Mayan Named Marco
Never underestimate God.
10. Real Men Don’t Do Dishes
It’s a noble thing to say you would lay down your life for a loved one. It’s quite another if you are called upon unexpectedly to share your last bit of chocolate. Thank God there is no condemnation as we slowly shed our selfish selves and grow in grace.
11. No News, Old News, Good News
The power of God’s Word does not go unnoticed. It stimulates antagonists of fear as well as recipients of faith.
12. Demonic Cows, Ailing Livers, and Ample Provisions
Sometimes it is simply best to be still and know that he is God.
Part Two: Going
13. Leave Your Orphans Behind
Although I say, Of course I believe,
when heaven parts and pins me in the spotlight of the Living One Who Sees Me, I am brought to my knees in awe.
14. The Other Side of the River
When this life doesn’t make sense, it’s good to remember you are just traveling through.
Part Three: Full Circle
15. Dried-Up Dreams
When you’ve lost sight of his tracks, go back to the point last seen and set your marker: this far God has met me.
16. The Fleece
There is no complaint or fear or hidden place in my heart that he is not aware of. By faith, I present my concerns and choose not to fret and stew.
17. A Flatlander and a New England Church
Hope does not disappoint.
18. South of the Border Again
I used to think everything depended on me. What a relief to know God is in control of my life. His plans and purposes are far more marvelous than ones I could ever conjure up myself.
19. A Drunk and a Dream Fulfilled
Nothing, absolutely nothing, is impossible with God.
Epilogue: Five Years Later
Acknowledgments
Once I began thinking about the people I wanted to acknowledge, I realized how many have played important roles in both the living of this story as well as in the telling. Truly no man is an island,
and I am grateful for all those who believed in me, prayed for me, and allowed me the space to make mistakes and continue on.
A special thanks to my former students at the Rutland Area Christian School, who traveled so many elephant trails
with me; to Nancy Zins, who saw the teacher beyond the fledgling; to the people of the Brick Church, who gave of their hearts and homes; to my Monday night critique group for their support and insight; and to our many missionary friends whose selfless labors often go unseen. Thank you Scott, Natalie, Ben, Evan, and Philip for your love and goodwill in spite of the sacrifices along the journey. And thank you, Mom, for reading all those stories to me long before I could myself. Finally, thank you to the staff at Thomas Nelson, who helped to make the process painless.
This story spans more than a decade and intersects many lives. Although the veil of privacy is thin in these times of instant information, for various reasons I have changed several of the names throughout the book.
Part One
Coming
9780849947308_INT_0011_001THE PROBLEM WITH PROMISING GOD YOU’LL FOLLOW him wherever he leads is that you just might have to go. I suspect it would be easier if you were certain of his calling— like stepping out the door and seeing the lilac bush on fire and hearing a voice commanding you. But when it’s your husband who is delivering the message—well, that leaves a little room for wonder.
At least that’s how I felt when my husband rocked my comfortable, middle-class afternoon with his belief that God was calling us to pack up and move to a Mayan village in Guatemala.
1
Crossing Borders
"And the day came when the risk to remain tight in a bud
was more painful than the risk it took to blossom."
—ANAÏS NIN
9780849947308_INT_0015_001Ilowered the sheet from over my head. Slits of daylight squeezed through the gaps in the curtains and tumbled into the room. My eyes swept the walls, probing every corner. The eight-inch lizard that had disappeared behind the curtain the night before was nowhere in sight. Lily, our ten-year-old daughter, slept beside me, a mummified mound under the sheet. My husband, Bob, had tried to block her view as the long-tailed creature scooted across the wall just before we got into bed, but she had noted the look of alarm on his face and turned in time to see it.
I stared at the motel’s whitewashed stucco ceiling spotted with brown bug splats. Today was Sunday, the day we would cross the border into Guatemala, the place we planned to live for the next year, the place we had been traveling thousands of miles from our home in New Jersey to reach.
We felt stronger now, more confident than we did three days ago when we had lingered in the dusty Texas border town of Brownsville and looked southward, reluctant to leave the security of the United States but determined to go. Trepidation gnawed at the edges of our courage as we considered how different that border crossing would be from the previous crossings over state lines. We went to the zoo, and then the bank, and made one more trip to the Laundromat. When we finally ran out of familiar things to do, we gathered our courage and drove across the Rio Grande.
To our immense relief, the actual crossing was relatively uneventful. Although there had been much discussion with our non-English-speaking clerk about how long our car was to be in the country and why there wasn’t a watermark on our registration, in the end, we nodded, smiled, signed the forms, and went on our way.
People warned us about the dangers of driving through Mexico—the tire-eating potholes, the mountainous speed bumps that guarded the entrance to every little town, the banditos, and the perils of night driving. Never, but never, be on the roads after dark, they cautioned. Mexican drivers had some particularly disconcerting habits, such as driving with their headlights off and abandoning their cars in the road. Not to mention the stray animals and tipsy night revelers who traveled the centerline with equal abandon and unconcern about fast-moving vehicles.
More than a thousand miles stretched between us and language school—miles where we would have to buy gas and food and lodging. Neither of us spoke much Spanish. The fact that we were relying on my rudimentary vocabulary resurrected from high school lessons many years earlier wasn’t very reassuring. I didn’t have a good ear. When I had asked the person who answered the phone at the Guatemalan consulate in the States if he could speak English, he responded, I am speaking English.
Although I could ask for directions, I couldn’t understand the rapid, softly slurred responses and often misunderstood whether we had been told to go derecho (as in straight up to the volcano) or derecha (around the right side of it), a rather critical difference.
Bob, with his phrase book and handful of basic expressions, enthusiastically tried to communicate with everyone we encountered. He drew outright smiles from pan-faced gas attendants as he asked them in his thick Brooklyn accent, "Llene mi tanque," but they nodded their understanding and filled the tank.
In one town, a policeman approached us as we pored over a map at the intersection, a confident smile on his face and a long gun hanging from his side. He rapped on Bob’s window and said something that sounded more like a request than an offer of help. When we pretended not to understand, he tipped back his head and held his cupped hand to his mouth, indicating he wanted money for a drink. Condensing the whole thought that we were Christians and didn’t want to pay bribes, Bob blurted out one of the few words he knew well, "Ah, no—Jesucristo." We blinked in amazement as the man threw up his hands in surrender at the mention of this name and retreated to the sidewalk.
Although in the past several days we had covered more than nine hundred miles of Mexican highway without mishap, we were edgy from being in a constant state of alertness. Our emotions raced back and forth between the excitement of adventure and the fear of unknown dangers.
Then, on the third day, unable to find a suitable motel, we were forced to continue late into the night. I kept my eyes glued straight ahead, watching for shadowy specters to rise out of the darkness. Except for an occasional What’s that?
no one spoke. Just when I thought my body could not possibly contain any more adrenaline, two red eyes pierced the blackness ahead of us.
It is doubtful that angels take the form of semitrailer trucks, but we welcomed it as one and hugged its taillights for miles, following it straight to the motel.
9780849947308_INT_0017_001Bob stirred in the twin bed on the other side of the room. He searched