Showing posts with label new year. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new year. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 January 2018

Jehovah's Blessings Abound: Taiwan Trip 2017 Christmas New Year



Revisiting an alien dimension: There is an increasing sense of alienation as I begin to realise how Australia and Taiwan seem to be two completely different worlds. This was a very condensed trip, with only four days in Taipei. After all, I only had a week of break, heading for the airport on 23Dec right after finishing work, landing back in Sydney on 1Jan evening and working again at 8am 2Jan! But then again, my holidays had always been very short ever since I started working in 2007, and I have always worked as a full-time doctor. The longest period I took off work was 5 weeks for the Mackay Memorial Hospital Family Medicine exchange program, and that was not really a holiday. Otherwise, I never took a break that lasted longer than 3.5 weeks at a time (not even for my father’s funeral or my grandmother’s funeral). So, it was those five weeks in Mackay Memorial Hospital that made me realise what life in Taiwan is like.

A good beginning, with a free upgrade to premium economy China Airlines!
24Dec, 2017 4:30am touchdown in Taiwan! Then I went to a dermatology CPD activity at the familiar NTU medical school lecture hall! My first time doing a medical CPD activity in Taiwan and it was pretty interesting! They served boxes of free nice coffee, which usually cost NT200 per box!


25Dec Ruifang District and Keelung:

Did a day trip on Christmas Day to the Gold Museum, Yingyang Sea, Jiufen and Keelong. It was extremely crowded in Jiufen!




27-29Dec Yilan with maternal relatives:

The worship song “Jehovah’s Blessings Abound” had been on my mind constantly for the last month. It was the first Taiwanese song I learned in church and the opening song for my dad’s funeral video. A month ago, an intercessor friend of mine dreamed of my grandma and my mom with this song as the background music. The song opens with the sentence “the egrets in the farm do not lack anything”. My friend gave me this verse: “The LORD, the God of your fathers, make you a thousand times so many more as ye are, and bless you, as he hath promised you! Deuteronomy 1:11” Two days later a couple living in Brisbane posted the egrets in a lake near their home on social media.

When I got back to Taiwan, I rode in a car where the owner was playing this song. During our maternal family trip to Jiaoxi, there were egrets in the tourist attraction we visited called Longtan Lake, the accommodation we stayed in had a large picture of egrets in the toilet, and there were many egrets in the farms surrounding the accommodation. We celebrated my grandma’s birthday in Jiaoxi.

We then went to the Wuling Farm where we saw beautiful flowers, and went on a trail to the waterfall where we saw a beautiful rainbow at the bottom of the waterfall!











Taipei:

During this trip, I received a lot of help from Dr Eileen Lin, the principal of the Methodist Graduate School of Theology in Taiwan: learned more about her ministry, “Soul Home”, got my retainer adjusted, visited her church and listened to a very good Sunday sermon and coincidentally bumped into a friend whom I knew in Australia, had lunch with Dr Lin’s family, etc.

During New Year’s Eve, Sunny invited the 2015 Israel Marching Prayer Group G to her home for the New Year fireworks! We experienced great fellowship and worship! The group leader Andy shared with us how he felt a deep burden to “be aligned with God” and to “link”. Last year, when he went to serve in Vietnam, he felt “the heartbeat of Jesus”: the love of Jesus for humanity that made him cry very painfully. Ever since his return from the trip to Israel, God started linking him up with people whom he would not have been able link up with under his original circumstances. Sunny shared with us some of her recent studies in “the life of Jesus”, and “healing and deliverance counselling”, which was interesting. At the end of the crossover, caught a taxi home without excessive delays. On 1Jan, whilst reading a book Dr Lin gave me on the plane, a rainbow shone through the window onto the page I was reading (which is quite memorable because this never happened to me when I was reading on the plane before).

During this trip, I sensed that my mom had put a lot of effort in trying to link up the family. As the firstborn of the Lin family, she recruited my maternal family for short trips and meal gatherings. As the widow of the firstborn of the Wang family, she recruited my paternal family for meal gatherings. On the last day of my trip to Taiwan she became very sick but still accompanied me to church. Need to pray her more frequently.

I came to this realization: If I want to develop the spiritual eyes of Martin Luther King Jr and dream with God, I still need to work on the basics of the spiritual disciplines, so I can be better aligned with God, be better spiritually formed, so I can look at family and friends with the mercy of Christ and be able to impact on them more positively.






Friday, 1 January 2016

Round Island trip Taiwan 2015-2016

I had the honour of coming back to Taiwan and taking my grandma for a round island trip. With the presidential election coming up shortly, I also did a marching prayer.

Day 1 December 28 Sun Moon Lake:

Sun Moon Lake, the heart (centre) of Taiwan. A very globalised tour, with people from the US, Australia, NZ, Germany, Norway, Austria, etc!

As we waited to board the boat at the dock, the melodies of “Amazing Grace” floated in the air, played by some street artist. The weather was great.

Got to the highest point in the Sun Moon Lake region. It looks almost as if there is an island floating in the sky, like Laputa!

Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. (Matthew 6:10)

Our hotel room number happened to be 921, which reminds me of the 921 earthquake which shrunk the Lalu Island in the centre of the lake! Today it is sinking to the point where people cannot board the island!






Day 2 December 29 Ji-Ji, Buddhist Memorial Centre, Kaoshiung:

Yesterday my hotel room number at the Sun Moon Lake was 921! Today the tour guide suddenly had a new idea and added something not in the itinerary: go to the very centre of the 921 earthquake disaster region, Ji-Ji, to see a temple destroyed by the quake in 1999! They built a new temple in front of the destroyed temple and coincidentally they were celebrating some sort of temple ceremony and it was very noisy.
There is only one kingdom that cannot be shaken (Hebrews 12:28)!

Then we drove along the Jianan plain (the largest plain in Taiwan, the producers of rice) towards the Fo Guang Shan Buddha Memorial Centre. This place is like a theme park: with Starbucks, 4D movie, foodie map, etc!

We visited three temples today, and there are no more temples on the itinerary: the rest of the trip will be national parks and natural sceneries.

In the evening we arrived in Taiwan’s second largest city, Kaoshiung!



Day 3 December 30 Kenting, Taitong:

Today, the tour guide began talking about the tragic history of Taiwan (from the Aboriginal people to modern day). He mentioned “Orphan of Asia”, a novel written by Zhuoliu Wu, which accurately describes Taiwan’s multilayered identity crisis. There are many countries that helped Taiwan in order to maintain stability in the Asia Pacific region, but tragically, it seems Taiwan can never choose its own fate.

But is fate really in our hands? Can we truly control it by our own power?

Naked I came from my mother’s womb, and naked I will depart. The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised. (Job 1:21)
 

Day 4 December 31 Taitong, Hualien:

The tour guide told us that the East Coast of Taiwan is pretty different from the West Coast, one of the most prominent differences being all the crosses on the tombstones. In the past, the Han Chinese did not dare to cross over the mountain ranges into the East Coast because the Indigenous people do head hunting, and there are many high cliffs that drop directly into the sea. So, who are the people that were not afraid of being beheaded? The western missionaries! So most of the indigenous people are Christians these days.

In life, sometimes it's as if the ghosts of the past keep coming back to haunt us.
Sometimes it appears so real, that we feel as though we are stuck in a vicious cycle endlessly.

This is the history of Taiwan. 400 years ago, the last remnants of the Ming Dynasty escaped from China onto the island, along with other Han Chinese that did not want to be assimilated by the Manchurians. They drove the indigenous people up the mountains, kicked out the Dutch, and ruled the island for approximately 40 years. Then the Ching Dynasty took over Taiwan. Shortly after that, it was given to Japan in a fashion not unlike cutting out an appendix. Having been under the control of various political powers we did not choose, the population is in an acute multilayer identity crisis. History keeps repeating itself, conflicts between the different tribes on the land continues, it is as though the wounds of this land never closes.

In actual fact, all of this has passed. The inhabitants of this land are moving into a new unique identity. May God heal this land.
We cannot change the past. We can only accept it and let it go. Look at today in the eye and move on forward.
How many times have we projected wounds from the past onto future relationships?
Moving on, not just physically in time, but emotionally and spiritually.


Happy 2016
 


Thursday, 1 January 2015

Speed: goodbye 2014, greeting 2015 with the Beatitudes


Ice skating: One of my favourite activities, self-taught when I was living in Hawaii, with no special or fancy techniques.... speed is the key! So my life has been...
Coincidentally, my spiritual time passage today was Ecclesiastes "fleeting, fleeting, life is fleeting", and in the afternoon my mobile phone bible software popped up the scripture "life's brevity" Psalm 90:12
After the skating session, my car couldn't start up... roadside assistance people say this type of car key only had a limited number of usage and stops functioning once it's past that number.
Then, the bodies of the Air Asia QZ8501 passengers started floating up the shores...
2014 has been a rough year around the world.
Condolences... and time to reflect again


The Beatitudes (Matthew 5:3-10)

He said:
“Blessed are the poor in spirit,
    for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
Blessed are those who mourn,
    for they will be comforted.
Blessed are the meek,
    for they will inherit the earth.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
    for they will be filled.
Blessed are the merciful,
    for they will be shown mercy.
Blessed are the pure in heart,
    for they will see God.
Blessed are the peacemakers,
    for they will be called children of God.
10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
    for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.