Saturday, June 30, 2012

And it begins...



Max and the Base Camp crew.  Photo Credit: Stacie Murray
Greetings from the beautiful Beyond base camp. We are just finishing up our 10-day training period, and things have been chugging along smoothly. We are in the process of building a large extension to our barn that will provide us much more shelter when it rains. We have also constructed a new campsite, built desks for the red house, organized the equipment storage, and done the typical all-camp cleanup tasks to have Beyond looking picture-perfect for campers who come in on Saturday. We have been incredibly blessed with a hardworking team that fits together to form a loving, Christ-centered family. Each staff person and guide brings a joyful uniqueness to the table, expressing characteristics of different walks of life and quite different hometowns. We have our native Canadians, like John—who wears suspenders and a belt over his red flannel shirt (seriously); our southeasterner—including Blythe, Meredith, and myself who are extraordinarily out of our warm element; and we even have our own penguin—Stacie, our phenomenally talented cook who usually spends her summers in Antarctica. But no matter where we come from or what we’re accustomed to, we are all in absolute awe of the beauty of God’s creation in this place. The Spirit is thriving in every nook of the forest and inlet, and is being even more cultivated in the relationships that are already in full bloom here at base camp. We have all been sharing our life stories one by one after meals and doing group devotions every morning; the Lord is preparing each of us for a fruitful, fun, and fantastic summer.
The barn extension. Photo Credit: Stacie Murray

Meanwhile, the guides have been up in the mountains climbing Sun Peak. They spent solid team time getting to know each other, having fellowship, and growing in community just as we did here at base camp. Each of the three teams had great success in the mountains practicing their skills and getting a feel for the trails this year. Please keep all the guides in your prayers this summer- for safety, strength, endurance, energy, and guidance on trips, and that the Lord would be present in content and speak to the heart of every camper during their Beyond experience.

Our beloved sea kayakers are doing wonderfully as well! During their 10-day training they paddled all over the Jervis and Princess Louisa Inlets, stopping at and checking up on campsites along the way. We even had the delight of having them here at base camp one night for dinner and worship. They camped at the Point campsite for the evening and paddled out early the next morning, so we didn’t get to spend a whole lot of time together. Nonetheless, we were ecstatic to see them and to be able to have fellowship and pray over them. They are already out on their first trip, so please keep them in your hearts this week and pray for a very successful journey.

We are all so very excited for campers to begin piling in today (!) and for them to experience the incredible adventure of coming face to face with the Lord. Please keep the hearts of campers in your prayers- that the Lord would do big things during each of the sea kayaking and mountaineering trips. Here at base camp, we would love prayers for energy, provision, health, and a servant’s heart throughout the summer. Also, a few prayers for nice weather would be greatly appreciated by both the base camp staff and all of the guides. 

Beyond- over and out.

Heading out for Ten Day. Photo Credit: Stacie Murray

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Spotted from above


Where were you on July 19th, 2010? Were you climbing Mt. Pearkes with Beyond Malibu?  While using Google Earth to prepare for the 2012 summer, we noticed 3 tents setup at the High Terraces campsite on the Mt. Pearkes route.  Was that you?

July 19th, 2010 was a day 2 of week 4 for us at Beyond.  We've done a bit of looking around for other groups but haven't found any yet.  Maybe you can find some.  With the increased resolution of the satellite imagery, you might just find your group taking a lunch break or setting up camp. 

If you open this file (Beyond Malibu Base Camp) with Google Earth, you'll find our Base Camp.  From there, you're on your own.  We've had a lot of fun exploring the mountains and inlets around Beyond with this program, we hope you will too. 

--If you don't already have Google Earth, its a fun program and can be downloaded free here:  earth.google.com/.

Tuesday, June 5, 2012

Purpose for the Summer

Beyond Malibu Guide Staff 2012

This post is by Cliff DeMastus.  He is a second-year guide this year and a total rock star. This is his take on this summer's mission statment.  Please pray for Cliff and the rest of the staff as they head up the inlet this week to settle in for a summer of service.

In our first training weekend, the ten returning guides compiled a mission statement to serve as a focus for the rest of the summer.  Acquiring and collaborating over ten different visions for how we ought to approach the summer was definitely a tedious process.  In the end we finally agreed on one statement, which had some amazing attributes, many of which we discovered post-compilation.  I hope and pray that our mission statement will be something we return to again and again throughout the summer and that it aligns our hearts to a posture of service, gratitude, and glory for God.  What follows is the mission statement, its outline, and an explanation of the three components.

With God as our strength and song, recognizing we are poor in spirit, we will be stewards of Christ’s light and love.

As one navigates through the mission statement it covers three arenas.  It first speaks to who God is which is our strength and song.  Next it declares who we are which is poor in spirit.  Finally after proclaiming who God is and recognizing our current state, we identify what we will do in response, stewarding the light and love of Christ.

Strength and Song
We are to serve by the strength that God supplies (I Peter 4:11).  We will toil, struggling with all his energy that he powerfully works within us (Colossians 1:29).  He will be our refuge, our rock, our fortress, our salvation as we trust in Him (Psalm 62:5-8).  He is also our song, our source of joy in the highs and lows of the summer (Habakkuk 3:18-19).  We will recognize Him in our and the participants’ "a-ha" moments (Ephesians 1:17-18).  God is the composer of the melody that is the tune of our lives (Exodus 15:1-21).

Poor in Spirit
As the first beatitude shows us (Matthew 5:3), it is important for us to reach a humble state, to acknowledge and accept our need for Jesus because we are human, we are frail, we are imperfect (John 15:5).  We utterly depend upon God.  From the Valley of Vision’s The Broken Heart, “Give me perpetual broken-heartedness, keep me always clinging to thy cross, flood me every moment with descending grace, open to me the springs of divine knowledge, sparkling like crystal, flowing clear and unsullied, through my wilderness of life.”

Light and Love
Stewarding the light and love of Christ speaks to our responsibility to God’s creation, not only in the natural world (Genesis 2:15) but also to each other with the grace found in the Gospel (I Peter 4:10).  We are to use our gifting to bring God glory (I Corinthians 10:31), sharing the Good News that is a light in the darkness and the source of all love.

With God as our strength and song, recognizing we are poor in spirit, we will be stewards of Christ’s light and love.