Getting Missionary Positioned

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HAWAIIAN WORD OF THE DAY – Mikinale: Missionary

HAWAIIAN PROVERB OF THE DAY – “The missionaries came to Hawaii to do good, and ended up doing very, very well.” (Maui saying)

Kawaiaha‘o Church

September 15, 1821 - In Honolulu, the Kingdom of Hawaii’s first Christian house of worship opens its doors on what is now the site of the present Kawaiaha’o Church. It was fast work. Just two years earlier, the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions prepared the brig Thaddeus, complete with missionaries, bibles, and diseases unknown to the Hawaiians, and very deadly.

According to the Star Bulletin, Dr. Samuel Worchester, secretary of the commissioners, told the missionaries,”You are to aim at nothing short of covering those islands with fruitful fields and pleasant dwellings, and schools and churches; of raising up the people to an elevated state of Christian civilization.” By 1867, When Mark Twain visited Hawaii, Worchester’s nightmare had come true. “The 3,000 whites in the islands handle all the money and carry on all the commerce and agriculture – and superintend the religion,” Twain wrote.

Maui was just a bit behind the curve. The local chiefs tried to prevent the missions from gaining much of a stronghold with the native population. But just ten years after the first house of worship opened in Hawaii, 1831, Lahainaluna Mission Seminary was founded.

Dennis Kucinich: “We must end war as an instrument of policy by the U.S. government.” (9/14/07, MCC Maui)

SUPERFERRY - Maui Circuit Judge Joseph Cardoza issues a preliminary injunction, extending the ban on the Superferry’s use of Kahului Harbor. Read more

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9/11 Omen

Raphael O'Suna No Comments

What was striking about the rubble at the feet of the collapsed twin towers, was the small amount of debris. Two gigantic structures, each more than one hundred stories high, had come down, and yet there was only a few stories of rubble. In fact, there was very little concrete, and not a great deal of steel either. I realize that there were tons and thousands of truckloads of debris, but the collapsed structures did not provide what an intelligent person would have expected in terms of wreckage. What one might have expected to find in terms of overwhelming presence, was found in dust, not haulable wreckage.

This observation reminded me of something someone said to me, as we huddled in a storeway many years ago. The twin towers were under construction, and from high above, boards of lumber were being blown down on this New York City street. Everyone was running for cover and the police had stopped all traffic. The explosions of the crashing wood on the pavement, at unpredictable intervals, as well as the sounds of immense boards smashing into parked cars, was riveting. In the storeway with me was an unknown older gentleman. After I commented that the scene before us was not a good omen for a construction project, he said: “The buildings are mostly air.” After the towers had collapsed, I understood what he meant. More than thirty years ago, he was saying that these buildings were not being built properly. That they were being built for maximum rental space, not for safety, permanence, beauty or strength. And so, the wreckage which remained was small in volume.