Thanks for following our blog! Started in 2002, our blog shares the story of God's leading two people on a great and adventurous Air Force journey around the world to include the USA, Europe, and Asia. Now, God has lead us to fly over the blue seas of the Pacific and serve as missionaries with Pacific Mission Aviation! We hope you enjoy following along as God continues to lead us!
Thursday, April 30, 2015
PMA Presentation @ The Hangar
After three weeks in Bavaria, we drove back to the base to wrap up some final things before departing for Michigan on May 1st. On one particular Sunday evening, Ed and Joy Bissonnette gave us the opportunity to share our story again with The Hangar community. The Hangar is a Wednesday night Bible study run by Ed and Joy who are Cadence International missionaries to the military at Spangdahlem.
The evening was a blessing to all involved and each time we share we're encouraged by those who tell us they were encouraged to hear what God has been doing in our lives. We ended the evening with a prayerful and teary eyed send off - what better way to depart Germany!
Tuesday, April 28, 2015
Terminal Leave In Bavaria
A few days after my last flight in the F-16, we were started what the Air Force calls terminal leave. We had about six weeks of holiday time left over that we hadn't used and chose the option of using it the rather than "selling" it back for money.
We spent the first week in Munich with Lana's mom and had the privilege to share our PMA story with Lana's former church. We were completely surprised by the 60 or so people who came out on a Friday for our presentation. It was a great mutual encouragement.
After a week, we drove to Chieming where Lana's grandparents are from. No matter how many times we visit this are of Bavaria it is just breath taking and you can help but stand in awe of God's creation. On one particular day, we drove about an hour south down near Berchtesgaden in the southeastern part of Germany and went for an amazing hike. The pictures below of the mountains were the view we had - amazing! Having so much family time has been amazing and we're enjoying every minute of it.
Tuesday, March 31, 2015
Last Flight In The Mighty Viper
March 30th, 2015 marked the end of my Air Force flying career after 10 years of flying the F-16 (12 years total). Here's the base recap of where we've been assigned:
Maxwell AFB, AL - Officer's Training School
Columbus AFB, MS - Pilot Training
Moody AFB, GA - Intro to Fighter Fundamentals
Luke AFB, AZ - F-16 flying training
Aviano AB, Italy - 510 Fighter Squadron
Kunsan AB, S. Korea - 35 Fighter Squadron
Shaw AFB, SC - 77 Fighter Squadron
Nellis AFB, NV - 16 Weapons Squadron
Spangdahlem AB, Germany - 480 Fighter Squadron
When I woke that morning in the base temporary lodging facility, the heavy rain was "falling" sideways and I had the stomach bug our family had been passing around the house the past few days. I prayed silently, "Jesus, please clear the weather today and calm this sickness." Upon the day's conclusion Lana, the family, and I would close a major chapter of our lives in preparation for the next.
I was feeling the emotions of excitement and sadness mixed together as the much anticipated day had arrived -- one of many lasts. The last flight brief I would give, the last time I would strap on my g-suit, the last time I would organize mission materials on my flying knee board, the last ride out to and back from the jet in the pilot bus, the last takeoff, the last "kick" of the afterburner, the last castle tour along the Rhine and Mosel Rivers, the last of seeing the green German countryside from the air, the last time I'd lead my 4-ship up initial, the last landing, the last time I'd be welcomed by my fellow pilots and family back in my parking spot before being wrestled to the ground, duck taped, and sprayed with water in awesome fighter pilot fashion. God answered our prayers and cleared the sky almost completely that afternoon and my stomach felt fine for the duration of the flight; He cares even about the small things in our lives!
I wasn't sure how the last flight would phase me emotionally (manly fighter pilot tears as Lana calls them), but it was more a day of excitement and looking forward at what is to come. It may hit me later and I will miss flying the F-16, but knowing God has clearly led us to Pacific Mission Aviation made this day of lasts much easier to handle.
Maxwell AFB, AL - Officer's Training School
Columbus AFB, MS - Pilot Training
Moody AFB, GA - Intro to Fighter Fundamentals
Luke AFB, AZ - F-16 flying training
Aviano AB, Italy - 510 Fighter Squadron
Kunsan AB, S. Korea - 35 Fighter Squadron
Shaw AFB, SC - 77 Fighter Squadron
Nellis AFB, NV - 16 Weapons Squadron
Spangdahlem AB, Germany - 480 Fighter Squadron
When I woke that morning in the base temporary lodging facility, the heavy rain was "falling" sideways and I had the stomach bug our family had been passing around the house the past few days. I prayed silently, "Jesus, please clear the weather today and calm this sickness." Upon the day's conclusion Lana, the family, and I would close a major chapter of our lives in preparation for the next.
I was feeling the emotions of excitement and sadness mixed together as the much anticipated day had arrived -- one of many lasts. The last flight brief I would give, the last time I would strap on my g-suit, the last time I would organize mission materials on my flying knee board, the last ride out to and back from the jet in the pilot bus, the last takeoff, the last "kick" of the afterburner, the last castle tour along the Rhine and Mosel Rivers, the last of seeing the green German countryside from the air, the last time I'd lead my 4-ship up initial, the last landing, the last time I'd be welcomed by my fellow pilots and family back in my parking spot before being wrestled to the ground, duck taped, and sprayed with water in awesome fighter pilot fashion. God answered our prayers and cleared the sky almost completely that afternoon and my stomach felt fine for the duration of the flight; He cares even about the small things in our lives!
I wasn't sure how the last flight would phase me emotionally (manly fighter pilot tears as Lana calls them), but it was more a day of excitement and looking forward at what is to come. It may hit me later and I will miss flying the F-16, but knowing God has clearly led us to Pacific Mission Aviation made this day of lasts much easier to handle.
Saturday, March 14, 2015
Life Is Short. Eternity Is Long. Live Like It.
In two weeks I will have my last F-16 flight after flying the jet for 10 years straight. It's a little sentimental each time I fly realizing there are many "lasts" happening each sortie. A couple weeks ago I shot the gun and dropped training bombs for the last time, and this coming week I'll flying some Suppression of Enemy Air Defenses (SEAD) flights for the last time. I sound a little like a broken record sometimes with the following phrase, but life is flying by (no pun intended). A great phrase from John Piper states the way Lana and I feel and are striving to live out, "Life Is Short. Eternity Is Long. Live Like It.
As we close the door of the Air Force chapter and start the next in missions, one thing I've learned is so many things in life are a matter of the heart - and only God truly knows a man's heart. Money, success, retirement, missions, how we treat and see people, etc. I pray God keeps us from "prideful missions" or feeling like we're "really living for God" by leaving the Air Force. Proverbs 16:2 says, "All the ways of a man are pure in his own eyes, but the LORD weighs the spirit."
Where God is leading us now and where He leads us in the future is His plan, not ours, and we have no room for pride. Our missions team that is coming together is His working, not ours. The talents and abilities God has given us by His grace are not something we've created or built up on our own, He gave them to us. 1 Corinthians 4:7, "For who sees anything different in you? What do you have that you did not receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if you did not receive it?" Our earthly possessions are ultimately His and we're stewards of them; God help us to live with open hands and allow you to give and take as you like!
Jesus stated we the we'd have to lose our life to find it and I pray for a heart that continues to care less and less about the temporal, earthly things and more about eternal things. Luke 12: 33b-24, "Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also."
Augustine - "They, then, who are destined to die, need not be careful to inquire what death they are to die, but into what place death will usher them."
As we close the door of the Air Force chapter and start the next in missions, one thing I've learned is so many things in life are a matter of the heart - and only God truly knows a man's heart. Money, success, retirement, missions, how we treat and see people, etc. I pray God keeps us from "prideful missions" or feeling like we're "really living for God" by leaving the Air Force. Proverbs 16:2 says, "All the ways of a man are pure in his own eyes, but the LORD weighs the spirit."
Where God is leading us now and where He leads us in the future is His plan, not ours, and we have no room for pride. Our missions team that is coming together is His working, not ours. The talents and abilities God has given us by His grace are not something we've created or built up on our own, He gave them to us. 1 Corinthians 4:7, "For who sees anything different in you? What do you have that you did not receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if you did not receive it?" Our earthly possessions are ultimately His and we're stewards of them; God help us to live with open hands and allow you to give and take as you like!
Jesus stated we the we'd have to lose our life to find it and I pray for a heart that continues to care less and less about the temporal, earthly things and more about eternal things. Luke 12: 33b-24, "Provide yourselves with moneybags that do not grow old, with a treasure in the heavens that does not fail, where no thief approaches and no moth destroys. For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also."
Augustine - "They, then, who are destined to die, need not be careful to inquire what death they are to die, but into what place death will usher them."
Monday, March 9, 2015
The Ferguson Flyer - Last Weeks In Germany

THE FERGUSON FLYER
MARCH 2015
MARCH 2015
Pressing Forward,
Lance, Lana, Liam, Lilli, & Luis

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