Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Stateside 2021 - July through November Highlights

Celebrating PawPaw's birthday!

On the beach at Maranatha with Amy & kids

Speaking at the Romanian Baptist Church of Chicago
 

Visiting with Grandma, Beth, & Chandler in Chicago

Settling into our mission house in Kingsport, TN, our "home in America"

Tennessee Smokies baseball game with Nana, Papa, Adam, Kendall, & kids

First day of preschool!


10-year anniversary trip to Key Largo!



Learning to write her name!

Downtown Maryville with Nana & Papa

Speaking at the Knoxville International Church

Dollywood with Grandma & PawPaw

Hiking in Townsend with Grandma & PawPaw

Celebrating Sara's 5th birthday!

Sharing at North Wake Church in Wake Forest, NC

Visiting the DeSenos in Hickory, NC

Great to see the Burnhams!

Visiting the Eric & Sarah and speaking at Grace Point Church in Henderson, KY

Picking apples!

Paw Patrol family at Trunk or Treat (in the gym due to rain)

Speaking at The Glade Church in Mt. Juliet, TN

Speaking at Madison Baptist Church in Jackson, TN

Visiting with Bob & Gayle Hill

Visiting with Bob & Tyler and their families

Riding the trolley in Little Rock, AK, with Megan



Speaking at Indian Springs Baptist Church in Laurel, MS, with Richard, Wanda, & Bekah Clark.  Dwayne & Donna Brown came too!

Visiting with Jared, Noelle, & Corban in Atlanta


Friday, July 23, 2021

New Colleagues and Going Stateside

Hello all! We have great news to share: a new family arrived at the end of June to serve with us here in Bucharest! Here's the backstory.

When we first arrived in October 2012, Jessica and I joined a team of five other families in our city (with other IMB colleagues working with Roma scattered around the country). In July 2019, we became the only IMB unit in Romania.

About that time, Drew and Brooke Tucker (and family) were sensing God's call to come to Romania. Drew found my email address and we began Skyping with the Tuckers about coming with IMB to Bucharest. Drew and Brooke's background is business and education, complementing our gifts well. For example, Drew told me yesterday he worked a side job for five years in sales, a job that forced him to become "comfortable" with striking up conversations with strangers and turning conversations towards specific ends. In the three weeks they've been here, I've seen Drew comfortably talk with neighbors and people in the park. 

We believe they will be a strong witness among Romanians. Whereas Jessica and I came after only having been married one year and used to apartment living, the Tuckers sold their house and cars and downsized to an apartment (with their two small children). Thankfully, their apartment is only minutes away from ours through the park. The Tuckers have now begun language study and are well on their way to getting to know our expat friends and friends from our Romanian church, Biserica Agapia.


Please pray for Drew, Brooke, Emerson, and Lydia Tucker. Please pray for quick adjustments, especially for the kids, and for genuine friendships among both expats and Romanians. Please pray for their language learning and for opportunities to use what they are learning. Please pray they would have joy.

In addition, we wanted to ask for prayers for our family. Early Saturday morning, we fly to the United States for five months! Besides visiting family and friends, we will speak at roughly 12 churches including the Romanian Baptist Church of Chicago, where I'll preach in Romanian. Both our kids are enrolled in the preschool program at the church that is hosting us in their mission house in Kingsport, Tennessee. A few months ago, Sara asked me, "You mean even the kids there speak English? Even my teacher?" Every time we fly back to the States, the sensory overload of hearing English everywhere is powerful. This will probably be especially so for Sara and Noah, who are now old enough to reflect and remember things on their own. 



Sunday, June 6, 2021

Introduction to Cameron's New Book

In recent days, Redemption Press published a book I've been working on over the last year. Based on over 30 interviews with family members, I wove together their memories and stories to create a biography of my Grand-Dad. The book can be ordered from the publisher's website here or from Amazon here. In this blog post, I include below my Introduction in order to give people an idea of why I wrote it.


INTRODUCTION

 

 

            The first and last time my daughter met my Grand-Dad was in a hospital room. She was sixteen months old and jet lagged. On February 1, 2018, our plane crossed the Atlantic Ocean and landed in Atlanta. Eleven days later, we boarded another plane bound for Muskegon, Michigan. Since he’d spent months in and out of the hospital, my wife and I knew this could be our only chance for Grand-Dad to meet Sara. We were right.

            As my aunt Veronica and Grandmama ushered us into the hospital room, Grand-Dad was just emerging from surgery. His eyes should have remained distant. Instead they lit up with recognition as Grandmama told him he had visitors. For the next few hours, I introduced Grand-Dad to my daughter, Sara, and he astonished us all by asking questions about our life as missionaries in Romania. But that was not the most extraordinary thing I remember.

            News in the form of a phone call told us that one of my many cousins was hurt and needed prayer. This was nothing new to me, considering I have twenty-five first cousins. What was extraordinary was that Grand-Dad held out his hands for us to hold. Then he prayed. His deep, soothing, “Our heavenly Father . . .” is something I will always hear when I think of my Grand-Dad. From his hospital bed, Grand-Dad prayed. We all verbalized our amens. My daughter silently watched him. Less than two months later, Grand-Dad was gone.

            My voice quivered as I asked Grandmama if I might deliver his memorial sermon, which I did on April 9, 2018. That manuscript is offered as an epilogue at the end of this biography. It was one of the quickest sermons I’ve ever prepared, if not the quickest, probably because I have reams of mental images of Grand-Dad. At least, I thought I did.

            During the week of Valentine’s Day 2020, precisely two years after we visited my Grand-Dad in the hospital, Aunt Veronica interviewed Grandmama for a church event concerning her love story with Grand-Dad. Thankfully, this interview was recorded on Facebook. From my balcony in Bucharest, Romania, I listened as Grandmama shared. I am not ashamed to say I wept. I wept for the legacy of Christ-honoring compassion left for us and then came to a realization. Someone needs to write this down.

            My dad, whom I call by his nickname “Buzzie” in subsequent pages, taught me to use my gifts, accept challenges as they come, and see things through to the end. I suspect he learned that from his dad. So I accepted my own challenge. If someone needs to write this story, maybe it should be me. I then proposed the idea to my parents, who I’m pretty sure thought I was a bit off my rocker, and then to Grandmama, who graciously agreed to work with me.

            This biography is composed of content taken from multiple interviews of family members. Academically speaking, the book could be called an exercise in oral history, since I am mostly weaving together spoken memories into a cohesive story. The rest of the details can be found, amazingly, in the public domain of the internet. When I needed to check facts such as street locations, I simply googled them from my desk in Bucharest. For example, I watched a YouTube video of a car ride through Norwayne, Michigan, where Grand-Dad grew up.

For giving me a chance to interview and gather their memories, which I recorded and transcribed, I’d like to thank my Grand-Dad’s sisters, Clara and Janet; Grand-Dad’s nephew, Chuck; Grandmama Gayle’s brothers, Em and Rich; my grandparents’ children, Calvin (Buzzie), Daran, Valorie, Veronica, and Brooks; my brother, Conner; and my cousins, Brock, April, Amara, Grace, and Brayden. For about six months, nearly every Thursday morning, which is evening in Romania, Grandmama and I spent hours over the phone interviewing, checking, and rechecking each chapter as I drafted them. I cannot thank her enough for her courage to allow this story to be printed, her love for all who of us whose names dot these pages, and her prayers for God to be honored through this book’s success. Thank you to my sister Kendall and Aunt Kelly for their thorough and thoughtful edits. And thanks goes to my lovely wife for valiantly keeping our two active, little children at bay during these times and for always putting up with my writing projects.

            Working primarily from memory presents the danger that negative details will be either left out or altered. As much as possible, I have tried to present Grand-Dad as he was, faults and all, through the eyes of his loved ones. I hope that becomes clear from the start. My prayer from the outset is that the writing of Grand-Dad’s story results in three things. First, I pray that family members like myself who only knew pieces of this story will be proud of the legacy of faith Grand-Dad has left us. Second, I pray that the Christian reader’s faith is strengthened. Third, I pray that readers who are not Christians find themselves drawing nearer to the God of Buzz Armstrong as they read of his transformation.

Grand-Dad’s story is uniquely familiar. It is unique because he lived a unique life. It is familiar because all of us who have encountered Jesus and responded in faith to his call experience transformation. In this sense, Grand-Dad’s story echoes in the story of every Christian believer. May it also be the case for readers of this biography.

 

Soli Deo gloria —To God alone be the glory,

Cameron D. Armstrong

Bucharest, Romania

December 2020