Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Christmas CD!



We'd like to interrupt our regular posts to bring you a fun offer from the Gassler family.  We have been so privileged to study with a group of extremely talented musicians this year.  As we closed our studies and each of us plans on heading to the overseas mission field, we thought it would be fun to put together some Christmas music on a CD.  We are using all of the proceeds from this to cover some of our setup expenses as we head to the field in the Spring.  Check out these samples:









If you order by 11:00 pm on Thursday, December 13th, we'll have it in the mail in time for Christmas.  We will be traveling from the 14th until the 18th, so order early to assure an arrival before Christmas!

We are asking for a $10 donation for each CD.  You can pay via PayPal below.  All proceeds will be forwarded to Wycliffe Bible Translators to be used for our overseas setup expenses.  If you would like to buy 5 or more to give as gifts, e-mail us at clgassler@yahoo.com and we'll discuss a quantity rate.

Logos Christmas CD

On the CD, you will hear Matt & Laura, who will be heading to South Asia in January.  They have performed for some time as a duo under the name Gentle Revolutions.  They were so kind to invite a few of us to record with them.  Matt was the workhorse on this project, doing most of the recording as well as the editing and mixing.  Matt is an outstanding guitarist and Laura is a fantastic vocalist.  Trevor and Sarah Schuh will be serving in South America beginning this Spring.  Trevor and Sarah are both great pianists and can also be heard doing vocals on the CD.  Several others helped out by contributing their special talents, including our three kids and one of the Schuhs' daughters reading scripture and singing.  I was happy to contribute the percussion and even trombone on a couple of songs.

Track List:
1. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
2. A Child is Born
3. What Child is This
4. Silent Night
5. Christmas Time is Here
6. Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas
7. Grown Up Christmas List
8. Happy Christmas (War is Over)
9. The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting)
10. O come, O come
11. Emmanuel
12. Winter Snow
13. The Christmas Story

We hope the songs on this CD will bring you and your family joy for many Christmas seasons to come as well as being a reminder to pray for all of us as we head abroad to facilitate Bible translation through our ministries in the arts.

Sunday, December 2, 2012

O is for ONLY....

Only....
What a wistful word!

Only 2 weeks left in Dallas,
only 9 days of classes,
only one more time to see my friend.

Only 25% of monthly budget left to raise,
only 4 new prayer partners,
only 2 times to speak about our work this month.

Only one chance to say I love you,
only one first impression,
only one more time at home.

Only ~
What a sweet word.

Only one way to heaven.
Only by faith.
Only by forgiveness.
Only one baptism.
Only one life to give.
Only Love.

Only.

Praying that our "onlys" would glorify God and not man.  Praying that our hearts and minds would not be so caught up in the future that we forget about what is in front of us and living now.  Praying the reality of eternity would guide our steps as we seek God's will.
Please pray with us and for us.

Only in Jesus's name.

Noah, Kristin, and Ben work on their gingerbread house this week.


Sunset over Joe Pool Lake from MK trail near our house.



Sunday, November 25, 2012

N is for Noah

"A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away, there were two Jedi.  Of course these Jedi had a friend - Han Solo and Princess Leia's daughter - Lillian.  Luke Skywalker gets chased by some enemy fighters so Han Solo and Princess Leia deploy some troops.  Princess Leia then finds out that her daughter gets captured.  Darth Veers (the late Darth Vader's secret apprentice) hires a bounty hunter to get Luke Skywalker.  Spaceman Spiff, another of the good guys, has computer problems and is shot down.  Luke then finds out that the bounty hunter that Darth Veers hired is really on Luke's side and Lillian with her droid, R15 Z12, has escaped...," and so it goes.

Our oldest, Noah, is planning Episode 7 of the Star Wars series.  It's just the latest creation from his active imagination.  That imagination has made movies, written books, cured diseases, revolutionized transportation, eliminated all manner of work, streamlined school, made millions of dollars, composed masterpieces, and at times has driven his parents crazy.  But no matter what, as our eldest child, he's been at the center of just about everything in our family - and he's done a great job at being a great kid.

Noah and Chris taking in a Rangers game from the cheap seats.


Noah is a voracious reader and is a very creative guy that doesn't give up easily.  He often comes up with innovative ways to use everyday items, which alternately amazes us or makes us shake our heads in disbelief.  Noah is also bright enough to do just about anything that he decides to put his mind to.  His people skills are atypical for an eleven year old and have led to him having great friendships with some folks that are many times his age.

Playing some djembe at an arts party.

Ben, Kristin, and Noah enjoying the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta.

As we make our transition into new cultural situations, we are curious to see how Noah's God-given creativity and skills will be used.  It is our prayer for Noah that he will draw closer to the Lord and that his personality will reflect the love of Christ to many others.

Noah and Ben in front of Big Tex at the State Fair.

Comforting Ben atop the ferris wheel at the State Fair.

Noah enjoying a root beer at the dining hall with Ben and Kristin.

Sunday, November 4, 2012

M is for Mealtime!

Mealtimes are important to our family.  We eat together all the time.  We talk, go over our day, and share our dreams and troubles.  But this year has been different and really special.  This year we were privileged to share our meals with the students here.

Students come from all over to attend GIAL.  Some live in trailers, some in apartments, or some in the guest house with a communal kitchen.  But they all feel the void of leaving family and friends behind.  We have been blessed this year to share our meals with many students - sharing not just food, but being family too.

We open our doors, squeeze in chairs and maybe a card table, and cook for a few extra.  Some stay and play games or talk.  Some scoot out as soon as the meal is done to work on the long hours of homework necessary here.  Some come for advice.  Some to play with our kids.  Some come to pray.  Some come to talk.  Some are just really hungry.  We have a policy that for the first three visits, you are our guest.  After that, you're family, which means helping cook, clean, read to kids...

What a blessing it is to be able to share our mealtimes!

Sorry for the Betty Rubble face in here, but some of our friends will work in sensitive locations and can't have their faces seen on the internet.
Our children started in public school this year for the first time.  This means we don't get to eat lunch with our kids on weekdays anymore. But God has filled the hole I feel without them.  A few times a week Chris and I go to the dining hall on campus and sit with students, faculty, volunteers, and visitors to the linguistics center.  On Fridays I sit at the French table, where we practice our French, but any other day we sit in the midst of the most bizarre interesting conversations.  If you have never had a discussion with a linguist, you've missed unique humor to say the least!



Every day is an adventure and a gift and we are thankful for MEALTIMES!


Monday, September 17, 2012

L is for Literacy

I [Lori] am studying Literacy this session at the Graduate Institute of Linguistics.  I needed an elective to fill out my semester and thought this would be the best one for me.  I was an elementary school teacher for over ten years and home-schooled my kids for almost seven years.  I thought this class would be fairly straight forward.  But literacy, I've learned, is much more than teaching a kid to read.

How is it different ?

Well, try to imagine living where no one in your community reads.  Your language is not even written down.  If there is a school, it is taught in the national language that you do not speak.

Is literacy recognizing letters?  Making the sounds?  Writing?  Comprehension?

Now imagine coming to a place like this where linguists are learning the language in hopes of translating the Bible so that people can hear and read God's word for the first time ever.  How do you choose what letters should be in an alphabet?  What should they look like?  Should tone be marked?  Should it be the same script as the national language to help transfer the skills to a second language some day?  What if this language uses different sounds than the national language?

How do you choose what lesson to teach first?  Do you need to teach that marks on the paper stand for words - words that will be the same every time they look at them?  Do they need to learn how to hold a pencil?  What method of teaching will work with this group?

How do you train teachers?  What sources of writing are there?  Do books need to be written in this language for new readers?

These are the kinds of things our professor, Dr. Pete Unseth, is teaching us.  He is amazing - one of the best teachers I have ever met.  He worked in Ethiopia until health issues brought him back to the US.  Ethiopia's loss is so many students' gain.  But he is still not well and needs our prayers...


Mock orthography conference, where we dressed in character and worked through selecting an alphabet for a hypothetical language group

Dinner at the Unseths' home.  Pete and our kids are using word magnets to explore language.

We are amazingly blessed with opportunities to learn and grow here!

Thursday, August 16, 2012

K is for Kristin


Having a girl is much different that having boys.  And it is a gift.  Kristin is our soon to be nine-year-old daughter, the middle child in our family.  Actually, her first name isn't really Kristin.  Her full name is Marjorie Kristin Gassler.  Her first name came from Lori's grandmother, Marjorie Rundle.  But we've always called her Kristin.  Or Pookie.  Or Late for Dinner.


One of the things we like most about Kristin is that she has some gifts that are unique in our family.  Kristin has an acute sense of clothing style.  She has the ability to take her old clothing or hand-me-downs from her cousins and create all new outfits full of flair.  She also is much neater than the rest of us!  She makes friends easily and has a lot of artistic ability.  And she loves to make friends with adults that she looks up to.  Kristin is good buds with at least four ladies that are three times her age!  She also likes to care for younger children, showing a very "motherly" instinct.

Kristin with family friend Gabrielle Jones
Kristin, in spite of being a girly-girl, is very determined, competitive, and persevering in most things that she does.  Kristin started with ballet a few years ago.  This past year, we enjoyed seeing Kristin learn to play softball (often wearing a skirt in games and practice) as well as swimming competitively.  Her competitive nature keeps the boys on their toes as she is always trying to outdo them.  She has pushed them both academically and athletically in the past couple of years.




But most of all Kristin is a very loving person.  She has a very caring heart, gives hugs to anyone who needs one, and loves to take care of others.  She is quite generous and enjoys creating arts and crafts as gifts for friends and family.  We're very thankful for nine years of her laughs, hugs, and delightful personality.

Kristin with her cousin Mary

Kristin and her best friend Catherine
Hunting peanuts at the Sutton Family Reunion

Thursday, July 19, 2012

J is for JAARS

Last week, on our way from Virginia to Texas, we stopped off in a rural area southeast of Charlotte, NC to visit our good friend Josh Mills and check out the JAARS Center.  It's peculiar name comes from its former identity as the Jungle Aviation And Radio Service.  JAARS is now much more than aviation and radios, but the goals are the same as they always have been: to provide logistical support to Bible translation and literacy projects across the globe.


Today, JAARS has a very large IT department that does all kinds of things supporting translation, from constructing websites to equipping fieldworkers with the software and hardware that they need.  Also at JAARS is a contingent of people developing solutions for fieldworkers that are in remote situations and need electric power for computers and communication.

Demonstration of compact solar panel for remote locations.  This portable array can power a laptop computer.
Another really interesting endeavor of JAARS is in vernacular media.  Given that many of the language projects that Wycliffe and other translation partners are active in are oral cultures, vernacular media is very important for sharing translated materials such as scripture.  Oral media also has a way of developing interest in literacy, another spoke in the wheel that is Bible translation.

Josh Mills hard at work in the JAARS auto shop.
JAARS also works with field workers in the area of transportation.  The land transportation department, where our friend Josh works, trains field workers in off-road vehicle operation among other things.  There is also maritime operations, and of course aviation.  JAARS pilots and aircraft are in several locations around the world transporting field workers, their families and supplies to some of the most remote locations on earth.  The pilots and mechanics are evaluated and train extensively at the JAARS center.  If you would like to read the blog of friends of ours in JAARS aviation, visit the Brewer Family.  Of particular interest might be the Brewers' entry for July 3, which has some video highlights from Mountain Week, the culmination of training for JAARS pilots.

Ben checking out a Pilatus PC-6 in the JAARS hangar.
The JAARS center is also home to a couple of very cool museums.  One of them is the Museum of the Alphabet, a thorough triptych through the history of written language.  We look forward to visiting the other museum, the Mexico-Cardenas Museum, which contains exhibits detailing the cultures of Mexico and the early years of SIL International's work in translation and literacy in that country.

Noah, Kristin, and Ben operating a small replica of the first printing press.
We had a great time visiting JAARS and would encourage you to visit as well.  It's fun to be around a place where people are working really hard with very diverse gifts for the goal of seeing God glorified through Bible translation.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

I is for Ishq

One of the great pleasures in the midst of a challenging Spring semester was playing music with the group Ishq.  Yes, it's a funny little word with an odd spelling.  It is a word of Arabic origin that means love, such as the love that a creature has for its creator.  It is also the name for a fun global worship ensemble that leads worship frequently around the Dallas/Fort Worth area.

Ishq has a large, dynamic repertoire of songs from dozens of cultures and has led worship at many venues around the DFW metroplex over the past few years.  It has been truly enjoyable to rehearse and perform with this group and to be taught many percussion instruments by Paul Neeley, one of the leaders of the group.  I like to joke that Paul has forgotten more about world percussion than I'll ever know!

Ishq leading worship for GIAL chapel in May, 2012

I look forward to the Fall and playing again with this group and learning to play more instruments and song styles from around the globe.  You can learn more about Ishq at Reverbnation.


Monday, April 23, 2012

H is for...


One of the things that we love most about being with Wycliffe Bible Translators is that our colleagues are a really interesting bunch of people.  And one of the most interesting things about them all is their occupations.  Within Wycliffe, we have made great friends with aviators, IT specialists, musicians, linguists, human resources managers, project managers, graphic artists, teachers, literacy specialists, librarians, theologians, doctors, nurses, anthropologists...even a crazed auto mechanic.

It is such a blast to see folks using their gifts and their passions for something much greater than themselves.  It's also fun to realize that a Bible translation is not just the product of a linguist doing their thing.  There is a host of people doing a myriad of jobs that God uses to make it all happen.  It's a lot like the picture of the Church as one body with many parts that's painted in I Corinthians 12:12-31.  In order to meet the goal of having translations begun in the 2000 remaining languages without scripture by the year 2025, Wycliffe and other organizations need people to fill lots of positions in lots of areas.  Here's a sampling of the positions needing to be filled.

As for ourselves, we are currently at about 66% of the monthly support that our family needs in order to head overseas in 2013.  If partnership is on your mind, see the link to the right.  Thanks!

Monday, April 9, 2012

G is for GIAL

Yes, it has been a very long time since our last post.  I had in mind to do a really neat video for this post, and being the perfectionist that I am on occasion, I kept waiting until I had the time to put it all together as I saw it in my mind.  But, alas, I haven't had the time, so I must plug on, even without the cool video.

This post is about the Graduate Institute of Applied Linguistics, the place of our present matriculation.  GIAL is a place that does not wow with you with location, facilities, huge enrollment, or anything of that sort.  What is amazing about GIAL is the people that are here, both students and faculty.



Among my classmates are people from at least five different mission organizations.  My fellow students are preparing to serve all over the world on every continent.  I'd love to run down a list of where my classmates will be serving, but it turns out that most of them are headed for high-security locations that I shouldn't mention.  Also among my classmates are some people that have had interesting careers before deciding on cross-cultural ministry.  They include a pharmacist, a speech pathologist, an insurance adjuster, some teachers, a music minister, a film-maker, seminary graduates, a few military veterans, and the list could go on.

When it comes to faculty, that's where GIAL is most impressive.  I'm blown away not only by the credentials of these folks, but by what they have accomplished.  They all have served overseas in a long list of locations and have some fantastic stories as well as having been involved in many Bible translations.  One of the faculty spent more than 30 years in Papua-New Guinea and worked to translate the New Testament into four different languages.

And GIAL is now celebrating a new addition to its degree offerings.  A new MA in World Arts has recently been approved.  It is a unique program that has been years in the making and hopefully will be training many Arts Consultants to inspire worship expressions across the globe.

This is a great place to be and we are enjoying it very much.  It will be hard to leave here when the time comes!

Monday, February 6, 2012

F is for Fricatives...

And S is for sibilants, P is for plosives, G is for glottal stops, and B is for bilabial!

All of this jargon is from the phonetics portion of our Language Structures class that we just finished with.  It's pretty interesting stuff, but can be quite difficult to hear the differences in the tons of sounds that are possible in language.  It's also very interesting to note that there are a lot of possibilities of sound and English doesn't use nearly all of them.

So what in the world does phonetics, phonology, morphology, and grammar have to do with we will be doing in the arts?  Sometimes I ask that as well, but it does make sense.  We need to learn these basic linguistic elements so that we can learn a second language more easily and because principles of linguistics will mesh into what we are doing with the arts.  Sometimes we want to be in our artistic bubble, but it's not always that simple.

Check out the video clip of some fun with phonetics.  Thanks Dr. Allen for allowing us to film some your class.

Phonetics Fun!

As a postscript, some folks have asked exactly what a fricative is.  Fricatives are sounds in language in which the airstream is greatly but not completely impeded, creating a hissing or buzzing sound, somewhat like friction, hence the name fricative.  Common examples of a fricative in English are the letters f and v, among others.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

E is for Everything Must Go!

It has been a long time since we last updated the blog.  The best excuse we have is that we were very busy in preparing for our move to Dallas.  We had a lot of things to do around our house, many people to visit with, and among many other things, we had to liquidate most of our belongings.   Separating ourselves from "our stuff" proved very difficult to do.  There was the challenge of selling our things which involved a lot of time on Craig's List and answering a lot of phone calls.  But the hardest part was letting it all go.

"Stuff" causes some interesting reactions.  Sometimes we're sentimental about "stuff."  Sometimes our "stuff" makes us feel secure.  Sometimes our "stuff" makes us feel prepared to take on any situation in life.  But in the last two months, we had some hard lessons to learn about how these responses are rather hollow.  Sentiments fade, security is an illusion, and preparedness is just a facade for the insecurities that reside deep within ourselves.

Simply put, we had to learn that if we are who we say we are, then our security has to be in Christ and nowhere else.  God was certainly exposing our hypocrisy and giving us tough love.  But we got through it and managed to get our family of five reduced to what we could fit along with ourselves in two mini-vans with a small trailer.



We arrived in Dallas on the 31st of December, worn out from the weeks of preparation.  But we're thrilled to have made it through the next step.  Our time in Dallas will be about a year and we look forward to updating you all in the "G" entry about the classes we are taking in preparation for our work in Cameroon.  Until next time, blessings.