My Latest Gig
So I took an Interim job in this far-flung corner of Hawaii. The town of Hana is about as remote as one can get on the island of Maui. Although it is just 50 miles from the International airport of Kahului, that distance takes 2 hours with no stops to negotiate by car. It is a tortuous, narrow road with many one lane bridges and road sections so narrow that one must find a wide enough spot to allow any oncoming cars to pass. Locals (and myself as well) drive it at night as the lights reveal vehicles coming before they are visible by sight.Hana
Hana - some say the word means 'Heavenly' - is a village consisting of just 2 general stores, 1 garage, several churches, and a large vacation hotel. Several other small vacation places are also available. Just south is the grave of aviation legend Charles Lindbergh. Around here Rosanne has a farm and George Harrison also owned a property north of here.So here I am working to help this small congregation in one of the largest buildings with historic significance. Part of the services in Hawai'ian - part of the Call to Worship, the first hymn, the first prayer, a sung Lord's Prayer, and the Queen's Benediction at the end. I'm learning slowly to vocalize the Hawai'ian language, even where I cannot understand. They need my voice to lift their singing. The building helps - even the smallest voice can fill this lively building.
Rain
Each morning I wake to the sounds of Paradise: not birds, nor the laughter of children, nor the quiet lapping of waves on the beach. It's the winter season here and that means rain - not the pitter patter of gentle rain like that in Michigan, my wife's home state. Rain here means heavy deluges swept in from the sea and sweeping across the from the south-east and up into the high mountains. And then the shower passes and it will be fine. This cycle may be repeated several times. Did I mention that the mountain behind me named Haleakalā is 10,000 feet high (and goes another 20,000 feet into the sea!) and is 75% of the island. It makes driving from here to anywhere an arduous chore as you negotiate the mountain slopes.
Wind
All night the wind comes and goes and the gusts blow the trees with quite a force. The noise is almost indistinguishable from that of the heavy rain. It is a constant dull roar in the background, like a low-pitched Tinnitus in the ears. The wind bends the fronds of the coconut trees and pushes its way through the bread fruit trees. As I write it is rustling the leaves of the tallest and the smallest plants. The curtains in the house constantly move as the wind works its way through even our human structures like the blowing of God's Spirit despite our blockages.Waves
The ocean noises here are not the ebb and flow of waves breaking on a long beach or the ripple of an inland lake rippling on the shore. Here the coastline is so convoluted and rocky that there is no chance for the mighty sea to build up a rhythm as it breaks on the shore so the noise of the ocean is a constant unchanging roar in the background. The sea surface is a constant moving spectrum of water moving and sometimes heaving and always rumpled like the sheets on a teenager's bed.Wind, rain, waves - but these are not the sounds of Paradise to which I refer. I am surrounded by several properties with large, flat, very green grassy areas - the Catholic Church, the Big Hotel, and my own Church - large flat areas of carefully maintained lawn. So that may give you a clue to the sounds that start each morning.
Motor Mowers
Yep! The real sounds of Paradise are the noise of motors driving push mowers, whipper snippers, and ride-on mowers.A constant daily routine of cutting the grass to make Paradise look well, like Paradise, greets each sleeper every day. So I rise to these sounds of Paradise. Natural or unnatural they are the sounds that surround me day by day. With no cinema, no other forms of entertainment other than TV, only two shops and those expensive and somewhat limited, and the two even more expensive restaurants (at $15 per hamburger!), mowing may be a substitute for our familiar city activities.
Humans improving upon God's design! I wonder if we get to shape Heaven as much as we do Hana.
More to follow.
Aloha

I love the mountains and think they are Hawaii's best feature! It's very windy in places here on O'ahu too - but I like that - it adds extra energy to the air.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to hearing more about this paradise,
Kris