Brazil, Day 7: Immersed in Another Culture

Went running again this morning at about 6:50am. This time I went up to the seminary and ran on the road that encircles it, supposedly measuring a full kilometer in circumference. So I ran three times around, not even a full two miles (1.8) and I was tired. But I think it was more than yesterday, so hopefully I improved a little. For breakfast we had homemade caramel rolls and cinnamon rolls, papaya, and milk. At 10:40 I went to the seminary where Pastor Jim gave an exam to the student in his missions class. After taking some pictures of them, I went around campus to take a few more pictures, and then I spent some time working on some Portuguese words that Pastor Jim printed for me. Lunch consisted green beans, rice with Brazilian green beans and cheese, and manioc root with cheese and sun-dried meat. Oh, that manioc was SO good! I learned how to peel it just last night, and it’s really easy to do, so I liked doing it. But it also tastes great. In the afternoon I read from Acts 5 and worked on memorizing more of Colossians and Hebrews. I was encouraged with the reminder from Acts 5 that when God’s people are doing God’s work, nothing will stop them from accomplishing God’s will. Then in Colossians 1 I was reminded of the great salvation we have from God through Jesus Christ. We went downtown mid-afternoon to do several errands. First we bought some dog food, then we stopped to buy a couple kilograms of cheese, and then we went to the bank. We also got some medicine for the dogs at a pharmacy. In Brazil you can go to a pharmacy without a prescription and just get what you need. As long as you can tell them you need it, you can get it. All of a sudden, stores and shops started closing down and the streets emptied! As we walked along, Pastor Jim said, “Is it a holiday or something? Everything is closed.” He stopped to ask a store owner who was closing down, and he told us that Brazil was playing Mexico in a few minutes. So when Brazil plays futebol, the whole city begins to shut down and everyone goes home to watch the game! The only places that stayed open had TVs. People gathered in those places to watch and cheer on their team. We couldn’t finish half the errands on the list, so we just drove back to the house. When we arrived, we saw students gathered outside on a porch and in the yard to watch the game. It is finals week and they have big tests for which to study, but they had set up a couple TVs and were taking a break to watch the big game. Soon we heard loud cheering in the streets, and Pastor Jim said that Brazil had scored. He said there would be fireworks, and less than 10 seconds after he said that, we heard them. The game was not even in this city (it was in Fortaleza where I flew in), but fireworks went off because Brazil had scored. Mrs. Leonard said that patriotism in Brazil was watching Brazil play soccer. When they won, it was good. When they lost, well, as Pastor Jim said, they weren’t so patriotic. I went out to join some of the students and watch the second half of the game, and fortunately for the country, Brazil won 2-0. While I was out there I was treated to a Brazilian hot dog. It’s just like the ones we eat in America, but they chop the hot dogs into pieces, mix it with a light sauce and maybe a little corn or something else, and then scoop it into a bun. It was really good, and a nice variation on the hot dogs I rarely ever eat anymore back in the US. We went to a Bible study in a nearby village after supper. It is a weekly Bible study with a family- a couple, their two daughters and a husband, and three grandchildren. They are going through the Hope Bible study, the same one that we’ll be doing at the English retreat later this summer.For supper we had a huge lettuce salad, something I haven’t had since coming here. But it was good, and I had a banana for dessert. Last night they used the laminated visuals that I brought down with me, and that was a big help to the Leonard’s and it helped draw in the attention of the children. So it was exciting to see them use the visuals already! This couple was unsaved for many years, but after some hit men came to their home and shot the man in the stomach (trying to kill a man by the same name who lived a couple houses away), they eventually were saved. The man almost died from his wound because the hospital refused to treat him and he was badly infected. But God spared his life, and he decided that God wanted him to be saved. Now they are slowly changing and the sanctifying process can be seen as they rid themselves of worldly things without the Leonard’s even prompting them to do so. They are just learning more and more about the Bible, and as they do, God convicts them of sinful habits and other things that need to be put off. Amazing! When we got back home, I read a few chapters from some books in preparation for Aventura Brasil later this summer. That’s about it for the day! What a great taste of Brazilian culture in both the seminary, the city, the soccer game, and the Bible study.

Brazil, Day 6: Seminario Batista do Cariri

I came to Brasil hoping that I would also find time to exercise and get in shape for my last season of futbol at Faith Baptist Bible College this fall. So I woke up this morning and ran for almost 20 minutes, hating every minute of it. Running is the worst. But I did it, and hopefully I’m in much better shape at the end of the summer than I am now.

Today I also found out that the Leonards just started a diet, so maybe that will work in my favor too since I have gained a little weight since soccer ended last fall. Anyway, that’s how the day began. For breakfast we had homemade granola, papaya, and milk.

At about 9:10 Pastor Jim took me to the campus proper of Seminario Batista do Cariri (the houses are suburbs to the main campus, but on the same property). In English this school is known as Cariri Baptist Seminary. I got a quick tour of the place and the history the property.

The place is SO beautiful! But it’s not because of all the exotic foliage and the mountains in the distance. Yeah, the palm trees and such are beautiful, but take them out, and the place is still a wonderful sight. The buildings are nice too, but what I really love is the stone landscaping.

The seminary is built on a natural incline, and rather than paying to pour concrete for sidewalks and such, they went the cheaper route of buying and laying stone trucked in from 600 kilometers away. So everywhere you look there are terraces of steps leading from one place to another, constructed of huge, rectangular stones.

Most of the rest of the ground is covered in stone with a few flower gardens and some areas of grass here and there. Running down the middle of the campus is a large fountain system that runs during special events, and it runs into an ampitheater that sits in the middle of the campus.

I really don’t know how to explain how pretty I think it all is, and my pictures are too narrow and unrealistic to really communicate the beauty, but they kinda give an idea of what it’s like. Anyway, the layout and design really impressed me.

I met a couple students who knew English fairly well, and one of them, Junior, sat wit me in chapel. He did his best to translate all the Portuguese for me during the service. Chapel started at 10:50am and lasted until about 12:20pm. I was kinda put to shame as I thought about the 40-minute chapels at home and how I often wish the speaker would let us out early.

Chapel started with a congregational song, two songs accompanied by sign language (so I was trying to understand both languages at once!), and a quartet vocal. The message was given by a man who just earned his doctorate degree from Central Baptist Seminary a few weeks ago. He talked about Lamplighter’s Intentional Discipleship method of Bible study.

As we went along, I started to understand more and more of what he was saying, mostly because I could read it on the screen, and I was able to make sense of a lot of the Portuguese writing. Junior also did his best to translate for me and a few times went across the aisle to a friend to ask how to say some words in English.

Pastor Jim’s mom visits every Tuesday, so she came to chapel and then ate lunch with us. We had fettuccine with California mixed vegetables and alfredo sauce with ham on top. For dessert we ate some pina fruit. I learned that you can crush up the papaya seeds and use them as meat tenderizer.

I spent the afternoon sorting through pictures from school the past two years. In the evening I was going to speak to AMEN, the student missionary group at SBC. A rough English translation for the acronym AMEN is the