When I first talked with Jim
Frazier about moving to Minden, he told me that he worked with Dan Coker and
Howard Norton in planning the annual Pan American Lectureship Program. Jim works with the Frazier Foundation, which
supports Christian mission projects and Christian education. I told him that I had known Dan and Howard
forever. His response was, “Norman, you’re
not helping yourself.” I later learned
that despite their close friendship, they love to insult one another.
When Ann and I deplaned in
Shreveport in anticipation of our interview in Minden, Jim met us at the
airport. We did not know him prior to
that. When Ann and I interviewed with
the elders and deacons I was asked if I knew Dan and Howard. Jim’s answer was, “Norman knows all the wrong
people.”
Despite that they hired me and the
next year Ann and I attended the Pan American Lectureship in Montevideo,
Uruguay. While I was there, Howard,
Dan, and Jim met with me. They explained
that Reuel Lemmons had started the PAL program as a way of encouraging people
to support Latin American missions. At
the time Dan was living in Montevideo, and they felt they needed another person
in North America to help with the planning.
They asked me to consider serving in that capacity, and I did so for the
next five years.
Ann and I had wonderful opportunities
to rub shoulders with some of the greatest people in the world – foreign missionaries. They are our heroes. There are wonderful stories of sacrifice and
loyalty that inspire us to this day, and we are grateful that we had the
opportunity to work on that project.
During our association with PAL,
the programs were conducted in Uruguay, Ecuador, Mexico, The Dominican
Republic, and Chile. We also had to
opportunity to spend some time in Brazil and Argentina. I made a trip to Honduras and Belize. In Honduras I had the privilege of speaking
to the student body at Baxter Institute, a school that trains native church
workers. I could write several pages
about these experiences, but for now I’ll just say that we had an opportunity to
learn how the Lord’s work goes on in other parts of the world.
In the process we had to adapt to
situations as we saw them. I’ll share
one short anecdote. We were visiting
with a native Honduran worker on a Wednesday.
He spoke no English, but on the way to the church service, I picked up
enough of the conversation to know that he expected me to preach. I thought I could get out of it. I said, “I can’t speak the language, and you
don’t have an interpreter.” He understood
enough to say, “Oh, yes. We’ve got an
interpreter.”
At that point I didn’t know what to
talk about, so I decided that I would use some of the material I had presented
at Baxter. I met a young man who was
eager to translate for me. It sure
seemed to me that I got a lot of blank stares.
Jim, who understands Spanish fairly well, told me that the young man did
a pretty poor job of translating what I had said. After the service, I talked with the young
man. He said, “I watch American movies,
and I understand them fairly well.” I
wondered if I spoke my words the way he thought John Wayne might have said them
in Spanish. Did it come out something like, “You need to repent, pilgrim?”
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