Category Archives: Karen Shogren

2012 for Karen

In the last newsletter I went into detail on this year’s ministry highlights for me.  So instead of a repetitive repeat, this is what I have to say at the end of 2012:

Thank you, thank you, thank you!  My heart is overflowing with thanks these days!  There are so many people to thank regarding so many blessings in our lives!  This is by no means a complete list or in any kind of order, it’s just my best attempt at conveying our gratitude to God (and you) for what He’s done all around us in the last 12 months.

  • Thank you everyone who has taken the time to read our newsletter, pray for us, call or email  us, visit with us, and host us!
  • Thank you everyone who has supported us financially and therefore made every other one of these thank-you’s possible! Continue reading

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Follow news of Karen’s health

Karen just launched a page at CaringBridge, where you can keep up with all her surgery news. Please visit and sign the Guest Page! Gary

http://www.caringbridge.org/visit/karenshogren

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Why is this girl smiling?

A few days ago we announced that we were looking for a car. Thank the Lord, a missionary was selling his Sentra and our mechanic told us it was a great deal. We bought it on Wednesday.
Thursday, Karen used it for the first time in her ministry: she didn’t have to take 6 buses and travel for 3 hours to lead one of her Bible studies. Instead, she drove about 20 minutes each way!

In the blog below, Special Appeal (click HERE), you can read how you can contribute to its purchase. We went ahead and bought it in faith, and so far about $700 of the $6000 dollars has come in from our friends.

Many blessings! Gary Shogren

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Go right to the Bible!

I offered to teach my hairdresser how to study the Bible. Her counteroffer: every Thursday she’d close up shop and I’d teach her entire staff! “Now, we’re all from different backgrounds,” she said. “But you’re going to teach about us how to study the Bible for ourselves, not promote a specific denomination, right?”

Next Stop: Ady’s Salon Bible Group. It was a perfect set-up for the Holy Spirit – I would just let the Bible speak for itself. And God has worked! Even the stylists who came to snicker started hanging on every word, learning how to navigate around a Bible, asking and answering questions, taking it seriously. The ones who were already Christians finally had the tools to grow. Christians and non-Christians have started confessing their own sinfulness.

What we do has a fancy name: “inductive Bible study”. You can buy books and even an Inductive Study Bible, but you need only a Bible and writing materials. And the basic are simple: 1. OBSERVATION (what does it say?), 2. INTERPRETATION (what does it mean?); and 3. APPLICATION (what does it mean for my life?).

I was bitten by the Inductive Bible Study bug early on. In high school we took a college-level course, and I was amazed at how much could be learned through diligent use of even the most simple processes and resources. In Bible college, we used the great little book The Joy of Discovery. The material was more in-depth when I took Gary’s course at Biblical Seminary, but the message was the same: God’s Word is full of treasure for those willing to look for it.

Also: A Course at ESEPA. The ball first got rolling last year, when they asked me to teach inductive Bible study. My 20 students ranged from college grads to those who had only elementary school. How would I get them hungry to keep studying after the course? I obviously underestimated the Bible’s power to motivate people!

Karen with a few of the ladies at ESEPA

We started by reading a passage in different Spanish translations. Then they started making their own observations, noticing things they had never seen before. Each time they read the passage, they saw new gems. They were hooked! It was hard to stop the class each week. Before my eyes, they quickly developed a new confidence in God’s Word and a hunger to keep learning from it.

And then, a Bible Study Club. The ESEPA students didn’t want to stop meeting, so we started a weekly club.

Los Guido Bible Study. Every Wednesday, I meet with as many as 10 women in the home of a friend. Los Guido is a “precario”, a shanty-town that has developed into a community. I ride an hour on the bus to reach the house and we meet in the small main room. Every week we laugh and remind one another to go back to rule #1 over and over: “But what does the verse actually say?”

Christmas Bible Study. Several months later, a friend asked if I could teach inductive Bible study in the devotional at her neighborhood Christmas party. Women from all backgrounds, and I had only 45 minutes. Seriously? Well, God provided the opportunity, so there had to be a way. I chose a nice, familiar Christmas passage: Mt 1:18-2:23. I brought a copy of the passage for each person, and lots of brightly colored pens and pencils. I asked everybody to read it over and mark with a bright highlighter all the miracles that appeared. They were to call them out as they found them. Everybody did it, and everybody spoke up! We proceeded to mark other interesting observations as they found them. They were fully engaged, and by the end it only took a few sentences of application for God’s Word to speak directly into each of their lives.

And the Next Bible Study Group…? Why am I telling you all this? Because if I can do it, YOU can do it! I know that many of you have had some training in inductive Bible study, yet you don’t teach it to anyone else. But it’s not difficult! There are a few important principles to keep in mind, and the rest is training ourselves to pay attention, look at it carefully, write down what we learn.

If you have ever studied anything about inductive Bible study, go find your notes, or dig out Joy of Discovery, and refresh your memory. If it’s new to you, it’s not very hard to learn. Start using it, maybe with your family or your coworkers at lunch. I’ve found that folks who would not be receptive to a “Bible Study” have been very receptive to “How to study the Bible”: somehow it sounds less threatening. If you are more of a “helper” than a “leader” you too can do some basic preparation and study along with the others.

That’s my challenge to you – you can’t change lives, but the Word of God can.

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What does Spanish matter?

A cabinetmaker needs a professional router.
A programmer needs plenty of RAM.
A chef needs a serious mixer.
A missionary teacher needs a second language. For the missionary, language is the principal tool for doing ministry.

What are we trying to communicate when we use Spanish?

  • that we are here for the long term.
  • that we were serious about working in their culture.
  • that we want to speak about God in their “lengua del corazón” (language of the heart).

In Costa Rica, the central social event is to sit and enjoy a “cafecito” (a bit of coffee) with friends. Continue reading

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The Parable of the Little Toe

Once upon a time there was a church, a body of Christ.

On the platform stood various members. One man led the worship and read a Psalm aloud. A woman was the main singer; she too held a microphone. Two other women and a man were backup singers. There was a guitarist who played the chords; a drummer who provided the rhythm; a man with a trumpet, another with a bass guitar. Each member of one body, each one with his or her special contribution.

But what is this? What’s the hold-up? The worship leader asks that the church sing louder, with more joy and enthusiasm, but the people don’t follow his lead. Are they, as he suggests none too subtly, unspiritual? Well, it’s not their fault: they’d like to sing with more energy, but something is holding them back. They don’t know the words of this song, and the screen is blank!

Because up in a little control-room in back of the church, there’s a member of the body who handles the technology: the projector and the PowerPoint in order to show the lyrics. But he seems to be dreaming and his attention is wandering. He answers his phone, he chats with his girlfriend, he sends a text, he updates his Facebook.

The people want to sing with all their might, but without this one member, the hymn doesn’t fly.

“Just look,” he complains, instead of doing his job. “I can’t sing like her, I can’t play an instrument like they do. No wonder I skip rehearsal, since my part in the ‘show’ hardly matters. I’m not important, my part in this is tiny. In the body of the Lord, I’m just a little toe!”

Now you see the point of my little story: Everybody has their gift, whether they’re an elbow, a hand or an ear. And if one member doesn’t work, the body doesn’t function; when one little toe is missing in action, the whole body ceases to worship.

All these are activated by one and the same Spirit, who allots to each one individually just as the Spirit chooses. For just as the body is one and has many members, and all the members of the body, though many, are one body, so it is with Christ.If the foot would say, “Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body,” that would not make it any less a part of the body. And if the ear would say, “Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body,” that would not make it any less a part of the body. If the whole body were an eye, where would the hearing be? If the whole body were hearing, where would the sense of smell be? But as it is, God arranged the members in the body, each one of them, as he chose. If all were a single member, where would the body be…On the contrary, the members of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable. 1 Cor 12:11-12, 15-19, 22

“The Parable of the Little Toe” was  originally written in Spanish for a Latin American context and is here presented in English. By Gary Shogren, Seminario ESEPA, San José, Costa Rica. For more essays, visit Gary’s blog at justinofnablus.com

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“The just shall live BY FATE?”

[for this and other essays, visit Gary’s blog, justinofnablus.com] I occasionally visit an English-language church in San José, attended by African-Caribbean believers. For me, their English is harder to understand than most Spanish.

A few months ago, a lady behind me was leading us in prayer, and for a heart-stopping 15 seconds I thought she said that we Christians “live according to Fate.” What in the world…? Then I realized that with her accent the “th” sound comes out as “t” – ah, that’s better, she said that we live according to faith. Phew. One the truth, the other not, and just one letter separating them. Continue reading

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Gary’s year, 2011

My ministry is teaching, and that’s how I invest most of my time. My courses require a lot of preparation, so even if I only teach eight hours a week, it’s a full-time job. Most of my students are pastors or in other ministry, and it’s exciting to see them take what we learn in the classroom and immediately apply it to their work. I’m teaching first-year Greek in Spanish for the first time, and so for four hours every Tuesday night I juggle three languages in my head as we learn about participles or nouns. Continue reading

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Karen’s year, 2011

At the end of the year, I love to be able to look back at what God has done, see the progress He’s made in my life! What a year 2011 has been! I feel like my life has taken a giant leap forward, and yet in doing so, has taken a giant leap back (in a good way).

Let’s see: in 2011, I became a teacher at ESEPA, where I offer courses in Bible and counseling at the certificate level. I started a study group in a hairdresser’s salon, where Christian and non-Christian ladies learn methods of studying the Bible. And finally, I still work with Missionary Kids and their parents, helping them adjust to life on a foreign field.

When we returned to Costa Rica October 2010, after spending some months with the family in the US, it was one of the few times in my life when I felt like I was truly starting over. Continue reading

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Karen and her friends

I love it when people ask me what I do as a missionary in Costa Rica! As an unabashed story-teller, I have accrued hundreds of tales of interesting things I have done in the last 13 years, and will happily keep any audience laughing and crying over the joys and heartbreaks of my ministry. The hard part is when I have to come up with the Reader’s Digest version, in order to explain: What precisely DO I do?

In very general terms, I become involved in the lives of the people around me in whichever way I can serve as God’s hands and feet in this imperfect world. I am learning that the emphasis must be on the people around me, not on the tasks. For example, there’s Marta. She ministers in the local women’s prison. She was so energized by my Inductive Bible Study course that she wanted others to hear. And so she called on Wednesday to ask if I would be willing to show her co-workers how to study the Bible properly. And would I be able to start on Saturday morning?

Where I grew up, we learned to focus on our tasks. Continue reading

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