Monday, May 4, 2009
Back Home on the Range
Yesterday, as I touched down in Kansas City and walked out to see my family waiting, I felt like I had just left for my semester abroad. But, here I am typing at our family computer, stomach full of the chocolate chip cookies I just pulled from the oven, and reflecting on the trip and missing my friends. We experienced some unique adventures together, and I am grateful for the chance to get to spend so much time with such wonderful people. I definitly made some life-long friendships on this trip. I have learned so much and have already been fighting the losing battle of forgetfulness. Oh how I want to remember and put into practice what I've seen and heard! Abner reminded us before we left, that we came to IBEX to leave IBEX. We are to go back home to our churches, families, and work places and share what we have learned and live differently because of what we have experienced. And do so with love, for without it we are annoying, clanging cymbals (1 Cor. 13).
Well, my semester of great adventures has come to a close, and consequently this is my last blogpost. Thank you all for praying for me and coming along with me via blog! I appreciate all the encouraging emails I received! Please continue to pray for me that I will be able to incorporate the things I have learned into the way I live. It is so easy to fall back into old patterns and routines when I come home.
"For from Him and through Him and to Him are all things. To Him be the glory forever, Amen!" Romans 11:36
Friday, April 17, 2009
Adventures in Egypt
Most of the people who went to Egypt had a great time, but will tell you they never want to go back. I would probably agree. I had so much fun with my group and don't regret it at all. Although it was hard, roughing it was exciting and created lots of good stories. We saw some amazing sites as well as experienced some bad ones, which makes us very thankful for the country we live in. We are all amazed at God's protection and how smoothly things went compared to how they could have gone. Overall it was lots of fun and I had a great time, and I didn't get the Nile Fever or the Plague or get sold for camels!
Here's just a glimpse of our trip. Enjoy!
Standing in front of the tomb of King Tut. I went into the tombs of three pharoahs but was not able to go into this one.Saturday, April 4, 2009
What sort of people ought we to be?
In just one short week we took in a lot of information. On our last evening there, we had a bonfire on the shore and one of our professors, Abner, challenged us with what we would take back from our Galilee trip. His challenge was from 2 Peter; he reminded us that there is only one thing we can be sure of, and that is the coming Day of the Lord. It is so easy for us to create realities of our own in which we live, or to follow "cleverly devised myths" that the world presents. The "American Dream" has become the myth that many of us seek after, and as college students, most of us expect to graduate, get jobs, get married, and live the American Dream. While having a 9 to 5 job, a house in the suburbs, and 2.5 kids is not sin in and of itself, for many it has become their ultimate pursuit. The American Dream isn't the only cleverly devised myth that people follow...there are any number of them. What Abner challenged us was to remember what is really real...it's not getting married (we don't know if we will ever get married - we could die tomorrow), it's not being successful, it's not "living the good life." What is really real is the coming "judgment and destruction of the ungodly" (2 Pet. 3:7). Verses 8-10 says that the Lord's coming will be like a thief in the night and on that day every deed will be exposed and layed bare. So, what sort of people ought we to be? Peter says we should "live lives of holiness and godliness, waiting for and hastening the coming day of God." In the following verses (14-18), Peter challenges waiting believers to be found guiltless, without blemish or spot, and to not be deceived by lawless people. "But grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ." The fact that Jesus is coming back to judge the world and to fulfill His promises should cause us as believers to hope in what is really real, and to live a life accordingly. Abner's challenge to grow in God's grace and to grow in godliness in light of what is really real was very eye opening for me...it makes me think of what I talked about in my last post..What do I love? What am I living for?
Below are a few pictures from the trip. I hope you enjoy them!
Who will Gideon choose? Some lapped and some knelt - Judges 7. This is Harod Spring, where God set apart 300 men for Gideon.Thursday, March 5, 2009
What do you love?
By now we have had several hikes and trips through the desert, which our professor calls a testing place. A few weeks ago we hiked around En Gedi, which has reached temperatures of 113F on past IBEX trips. We were blessed with cool weather because of a recent rain, but I can imagine what it must be like to hike that terrain in scorching heat. We stopped at a small spring and our professor, Abner read Psalm 63. This Psalm was written by David when he was in the wilderness of Judah, hiding from his enemies. He spent years in the wilderness, hiding in caves and fleeing from King Saul who was seeking his life. You can imagine how hard it would be to live in a place with little water and little protection, and how easy it would be to put your trust and hope in earthly provisions and strongholds. But David says, "O God, you are my God; earnestly I seek for you; my soul thirsts for you; my flesh faints for you, as in a dry and weary land where there is no water...Your steadfast love is better than life, my lips will praise You." David's body and soul were most likely weak and famished when he wrote this, yet instead of longing for water and security, he longs for the Lord! Abner asked us then, What do you love? What do you love more than God - what are you longing for?
I've been asking myself that question since that day, yet have found I am good at avoiding actually answering it. What do I love?
On our trip last week, Bill had us wander in the Wilderness of Paran for 40 minutes, like the Israelites did for 40 years. We read and meditated on Deuteronomy 8, which says that God led the children of Israel in the wilderness for forty years in order to humble them and test them, to see what was in their hearts. Verses 11-20 warn them to not forget all that God did for them and to remember the Lord who is the one who gives them every good thing. To remember is not just to recall, it is more of an action. We remember, and because of that we obey and follow. Verse 19 again made me ask myself, "What do you love?" It says, "if you forget the Lord your God and go after other gods and serve them and worship them, I solemnly warn you today that you shall surely perish." I recommend that if you have not read Idols of the Heart by Elise Fitzpatrick, that you do. We think that today because we do not bow down to little wooden images that we don't have idols. Ohh but we do. Whether it be the praise of man, finanical stability, love, looks, sports, shopping, a spouse, control, stability, or something else, whatever we put in the place of God is our idol. Whatever we think about, talk about, spend our time and money on, whatever we love more than God - that is our idol. How can we forsake the fountain of living waters for broken and empty cisterns that hold no water? I hope that you will be challenged to ask yourself, as I have, "What do you love?" What do you think you need in order to be happy? Although I know I will continue to struggle to love the Lord with all of my heart, soul, and mind - I know that in His presence there is fullness of joy, and at His right hand are pleasures forevermore (Psalm 16:11).

Here is photo of the wilderness. Imagine wandering around here for forty years..
My roomate Courtney and I in front of a massive canyon, Mactesh Ramon.Wednesday, February 18, 2009
A Whole New World
Here are two videos, one is a short clip of the Muslim call to prayer in Jerusalem. The second is from Bethlehem which is predominently Arab.
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
The Land and the Bible

Here, Tiffany is drinking from the same spring that the prophet Elisha purified near Jericho.
Below is another example of how we can look at the Bible and then look at the land and they match! Here are the two "rocky crags" mentioned in 1 Samuel 14. The one to the North (left) was Bozez and the one to the East (right) was Seneh. This pass goes between the villages of Michmash and Geba which are still standing today. This is where Jonathan and his armorbearer killed a garrison of Philistines by themselves.

Thursday, January 29, 2009
The Hinge Point of History
So far, our field trips have been based in and around Jerusalem. Earlier this week we visited the base of the Temple Mount and then we saw a model of Jerusalem, including the temple on the Temple Mount. We briefly discussed the need for the temple and for the High Priest and his duty. Yesterday we were able to visit the Temple Mount. It is now run by Muslims who only allow non-muslims on the mount between 8-10 a.m. They have built an impressive building, the Dome of the Rock, right over the spot thought to be where the Holy of Holies used to be. As upsetting as it is to see a Muslim building over the very spot where God's glory use to rest, I know that there is no longer any need for a temple, a high priest, or a Holy of Holies. Christ fulfilled all these things - He is our forerunner, our High Priest forever (Heb. 6:19-20). Because of Christ's life, death, and resurrection, we can now come before God boldy, because of His grace. The Muslim's might be able to defile the site where the temple use to be, where sin was atoned for by the High Priest in the Holy of Holies, but they can do nothing about what has been accomplished "once for all", that is, Christ dying for our sins, bringing us to God, and making us alive with His Spirit (1 Peter 3:18)!
Sunday, January 25, 2009
Hezekiah's Tunnel


Some other sites we saw: the pool of Siloam, the base of the Temple Mount, Hezekiah's wall, the "upper room", and a tomb that is possibly the Tomb of the Kings of Judah. We also saw the grave of Oskar Schindler, the German who saved 1200 Jews during WWII.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Jerusalem - The Old City

Inside the church of the Holy Sepulchre.
Some fellow IBEXers walking on top of the North wall of the Old City.
The Mount of Olives, viewed from on top of the Eastern Wall. Here we read Zecheriah 14.

This is part of one of the Pools of Bethesda found in John 5. It was huge! And deep! And this was only part of it - much of it has been filled in or built over.

We walked down some of the streets in the Christian and Muslim quarter. Shops line both sides and it is very crowded. We weren't able to stop and buy soveneirs today, but there will be plenty of opportunities to do that - Lord willing of course!
Monday, January 19, 2009
Brought Near By the Blood of Christ
After my eight hour layover in Newark, I joined up with the rest of the students and we boarded the plane headed for Tel Aviv, Israel. The huge plane was full; I think we were about the only non-Jewish people on the plane other than the flight attendants. Most of the men wore the Jewish cap, a few had on a top hat and grew their hair so that they had the curly frontals by their ears, and two or three even wore the full out traditional looking robe with the headress. When I was waiting in line for the bathroom and taking a much needed break from sitting, I saw three men standing beside the emergency exit door. All were dressed in the robes. One had what we would call a phalactery on his forehead and another had a black band wrapped all the way around his forearm. I had never seen anything like that before so I looked it up just now as we just got internet. The Jews call these things Tefillin. They take Deut 6:8 very literally, binding God's word on their arm and keeping it in front of them always. The third man was facing the exit door and rocking back and forth, I presumed in prayer. I felt such a sense of sadness as I walked back to my seat. They hold on so tightly to these man made traditions and they still pray for the messiah that they think is coming. But He has already come! I was sitting by one of my roomates and we talked about how these Jewish people were God's chosen people, and yet they don't believe in Christ. And we - we're gentiles, yet we "who once were far off have been brought near by the blood of Christ." Col. 2:13.
After landing, one of our professors was reminding us just how blessed we are, as gentiles, to be saved by the grace of God. He told us about Peter going to Cornelius, a gentile, and this was the beginning of the gospel reaching the gentiles.
So, the experience on the flight and then what our professor said both really made me grateful for what Jesus did, not just for Jews but also for me. For in Christ, "there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave or free: but Christ is all and in all." Col. 3:11. Praise the Lord!
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Bound for Israel
As many of you know, I have the wonderful priveledge of joining 39 other students for a nearly four month study program in Israel. Each semester, up to 40 students from the Master's College are allowed to go to IBEX (Israel Bible Extension) in Israel. The school has a small campus and dormitories where we will live and take classes. Our classes are such that we get to travel around the country and see many biblical and historical sights that relate to what we are learning.
I am very excited about this opportunity and am so thankful that God has allowed me to go to TMC and be apart of this group. I am also thankful for my parents and all that they have done to make it possible.
I head for Israel on January 17, 2009 and will try to update this blog whenever possible. My purpose in creating this blog is so that my parents, friends, and family who wish to see what I am up to over there will get a chance to see some pictures and find out what I am learning.
Please pray for me and the rest of the group! And keep in touch by email: danaewernli@gmail.com or facebook. I won't be able to talk on the phone (it's very expensive and I'm not even taking my cell phone). If you want to write me letters, that would be fantastic! A letter requires an $.84 stamp and a postcard $.75 stamp. My address will be:
Danae Wernli - IBEX Box #5
Moshav Yad HaShmonah
D.N. Harei Yehudah
90895 Israel
Well, Lord willing, the next time I post will be from my temporary abode in Israel!
Danae














We hiked Masada at 5:30 am in order to catch this sunrise over the Dead Sea. I was sick; it was worth it. 
Jews worshipping and praying outside the Western Wall of the Temple Mount.
A square in the Old City.


