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By Millie L. Kim

Photo by Mayr

What is the acceptance criteria for Harvard or any Ivy League schools? You can google it and find answers such as an SAT score of 1580+, a GPA of 4.18+ and/or a list of accomplishments and extracurricular activities. Those are outward and visible criteria, but there are also inward and invisible criteria such as your race, status, family, wealth, etc.  If they were to adhere solely and strictly to the outward and visible criteria, there would be many more Asian and brown students at these schools.  

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By Charissa Kim Allen

Photo by Pedro

One of my favorite quotes is by writer and activist, Anne Lamott: “I do not at all understand the mystery of grace — only that it meets us where we are but does not leave us where it found us.” Receiving grace requires acceptance of our present form. While grace eventually leads us to change and transformation, it must first make contact with our untransformed state. 

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By Eunhyey Lok

Photo by Nathalie

Those who look to the LORD are radiant; their faces are never covered with shame. Psalm 34:5 

Many years ago, my InterVarsity staff worker gave me this verse. It was one of the first times I understood that grace and acceptance apart from my effort existed. Hearing it brought me to tears because my own voice was telling me I had so much more to do in order to please God. This verse brought relief in ways I couldn’t quite grasp or articulate at the time.

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Recovery: Equilibrium

By Casey Iwanaga

Photo by Nathalie

Equilibrium

This year has passed fast and slow

At times, I’ve wanted to say “whoa”

My footing has gotten lost

I’ve tried to regain a normalcy at any cost

Mom getting sick, love woes, graduating, faith crisis; recovery seemed out of reach Cynical became my beach

My safe place to sleep

A place I could scream, laugh and weep

This year is coming to an end

A time people make goals, promises and amends

I’m hoping to regain my ground with the new year

Letting go of the fears, tears and holding on to those dear

Placing both feet on the ground

Knowing I’ve support all around

I’ll find my new beach

A place I can heal and be at peace

Casey Iwanaga is a senior at the University of California in Merced. Her father is a retired pastor currently serving as Chairman of the OMS Holiness Churches.

By Sarah D. Park

I recently went on a cross country trip to visit some friends while 16 weeks pregnant. It was a part of a flurry of decisions I made earlier in my pregnancy when I was determined to do and see as much as possible before I physically could not anymore.

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By Diana Kim

Photo by TheWalkingDead CastPictures

There is a difference between recovering and not doing anything. Oftentimes, we think that it is in not doing anything — being a couch potato, lounging around all day — that we recover after a long day or week. While there may be a time and place for such leisure, this will not always be the optimal way to recover.

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By Wendy Choy-Chan

Photo by Nathan LeClair

A friend shared with me an operation that left him with an open wound on purpose. If the doctor had stitched up the wound in this particular situation, the scar would easily lead to another tumor growth. Therefore, the wound was left to be healed by having the body regrow the flesh from below. God’s design of the human body is amazing! I wonder if some emotional wounds need to be healed this way — in that forcing the wound to close up would potentially lead to more turmoil in the future. Thinking back, I have had a similar experience. 

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By Tina Teng-Henson

Who knows whether the present storm

Is something the Lord will quiet with a whisper

Who knows whether He will quell the raging seas 

and the tumult within you both

He knows the stormy paths 

that brought your lives together

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Togetherness: Join Me

By Emi Iwanaga

Photo by Jeff Vincent

““The rich man also died and was buried. 

In Hades, where he was in torment, he looked up 

and saw Abraham far away, with Lazarus by his side. 

So he called to him, ‘Father Abraham, have pity on me

 and send Lazarus to dip the tip of his finger in water 

and cool my tongue, because I am in agony in this fire.’”

…between us and you a great chasm has been set in place,

 so that those who want to go from here to you cannot, 

nor can anyone cross over from there to us.’”

‭‭Luke‬ ‭16:22-26‬ ‭NIV‬‬

JOIN ME

The extreme togetherness

The ultimate togetherness

The final togetherness

One place or the other

One person not the other

One Presence or total absence

Togetherness extreme, ultimate, final.

Reset, adjust, expend

Accordingly

Emi Iwanaga served thirteen years as a missionary in Amazon Valley in Brazil, over 20+ years as a children’s ministry director, women’s ministry director, and pastor’s wife, and is currently a spiritual director.

By Jerrica KF Ching

Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

If I think of the word togetherness, the word that quickly follows would most likely be family.  Then if I think about all the times my family spends together, from childhood until present day as an adult in her early thirties, the clearest memories of togetherness are for Christmas.  Christmas was the one holiday where my parents would invite family from both sides of the family over to our home for a big Christmas dinner.

Growing up in Hawaii, there is never a concern about inclement weather delaying flights or car rides, since my entire family was on the same island.  My mom would say grace for the food while my cousins took turns lighting the advent candles.  My dad would prepare a giant ham for dinner for all of us, and my siblings and I oversaw some type of Christmas game; either we’d have a game where you had to unwrap a present while wearing oven mitts, or a Christmas edition of Family Feud.  This Christmas dinner tradition was always in existence, and even though there were some years where one or two family members couldn’t make it, it was always something that we knew would happen in our home.

Of course, as with most families, COVID-19 changed the way Christmas would look and how we could celebrate togetherness.  Initially the idea of not having a Christmas party felt very strange, however even though some restrictions were lifted this past year in 2021, my parents opted to not have the Christmas party, as it would’ve felt stranger to hold it instead.  Even if we followed all state guidelines for limiting the number of people over at our house, would that be considered responsible?  Would it be safe?  What if someone became sick after the party then how would we feel?

I think the sheer amount of questions regarding health and safety outweighed the desire to be together “like normal” – whatever normal now meant.  What I think my family quickly learned in 2022 however, was that togetherness didn’t have to center around Christmas time.  As we are now in September – three-quarters of the way through another year – I realized how fortunate and blessed my family and I are that we were able to make the most of technology, our airline miles, and time off with one another.

We learned that it doesn’t have to be Christmas to feel that sense of togetherness.  We don’t need a huge party of twenty family members to feel as though we are having family time.  Instead, it can be the five of us — my parents, my brother, my sister, and myself — being very intentional about a family dinner when I’m visiting during an off-season month to Hawaii and playing card games.  Or it can be a zoom call with everyone to catch up on what we’re all doing.  Whether in person, or apart from one another, I think the biggest contribution of togetherness is the intention to have it.  To come together as family or as community, to create memories, relive pastimes, or to simply be with one another.

It was incredibly easy to feel as though something was amiss when plans needed to shift due to a global pandemic.  I think many of us may have even felt “wrong” that we weren’t spending time with people in the same manner that we are used to be it through ministry, fellowship, or stewardship.  Matthew 18:20 says, “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I among them” – a refreshing reminder that regardless if we are with families, friends, or community, and regardless if it is big or small, God is there in togetherness with us.

Jerrica KF Ching grew up on the island of Oahu, Hawaii and currently lives in the beautiful state of Washington, working as a licensed mental health counselor and Asian/Pacific Islander mental health specialist, working with children, teens, and adults within the AAPI community. She graduated with an MA in Marriage, Couple, and Family Counseling from George Fox University, where she is now an adjunct professor and supervisor. Her research on racial colorblindness has been published in The International Journal of Social Science Studies.