Churchgoers of a certain age may feel a twinge of PTSD when they see a photo of an old Kodak Carousel slide projector. We remember the guest missionary setting up the screen and projector for the program after the potluck. And we remember our quick prayer, “Please not all three trays.” But all three trays it was.
My apologies for loading the third tray of Brazil trip slides.
The photo in the header was taken in the woodshop of a friend in Brazil. He and his wife live not far from Igreja Presbiteriana and are faithful members of the church. The photo offers just a glimpse of the craftsmanship that emerges from this non-descript shop next to a non-descript house in a non-descript neighborhood.
Becky and I and Pastor Michael visited our friend and his workshop our last full day in Brazil. As we were admiring the beauty of his work, he told us a little bit of his story. His wife is an architect, but prior to the Covid pandemic, he had not yet settled into a satisfying vocation. His job as an Uber driver ended with the pandemic lockdowns. Forced to stay at home, he took up woodworking as a way to spend the time that was suddenly his to spend. Pastime became vocation. His vocation is now a growing business. Here is our friend’s business Instagram page if you would like to see more.
“I felt as if I had discovered who God meant me to be,” he told us.
So, this is not really a mission trip story. It is a story about how God is at work in our world and how he means to be at work in our lives.
Martin Luther famously said, “The maid who sweeps her kitchen is doing the will of God just as much as the monk who prays – not because she may sing a Christian hymn as she sweeps but because God loves clean floors. The Christian shoemaker does his Christian duty not by putting little crosses on the shoes, but by making good shoes, because God is interested in good craftsmanship.”
We may recall the “Chariots of Fire” line of Olympic runner (and missionary!) Eric Liddel, “I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure.” (And if you haven’t watched it in awhile…)
Christian vocation is both finding what God would have us do and finding God’s pleasure in what we do.
Professor and writer Anthony Bradley has recently written about the epidemic of loneliness and despair especially among American men. Bradley writes, “Work isn’t just income; it’s identity, routine, and social connection. When it goes, or when it grinds men down without acknowledgment, so does a lot else.” The epidemic of loneliness and despair may be a crisis of vocation. Godly vocation – what God would have us do and finding pleasure in what we do – tells us who we are and how God is at work in our lives.
Paul encouraged the Corinthians, “. . . whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” (1 Corinthians 10:31)
Not a mission trip story. A story about how God is at work in our world and how he means to be at work in our lives.




Brazil is a highly digitalized country, and we won’t need to use our reais often, but we are going to spend a few days near a small village, and we might want some paper currency in our pockets if we visit one of its shops or restaurants. A dollar may buy five reais, but the shopkeeper or the restaurant owner in Florestal won’t want our dollars and may not have internet access to process a credit card payment.