A strange photo to begin the blog, and a strange day to begin a trip.

Getting to today was a ten year journey. Our first trip to Ghana was in 2011. Emily and Paul joined us, and we stayed in the south, in Accra, helping Ray Mensah and learning about the beautiful and colorful culture of the west African nation. That first Ghana blog brings back such sweet and beautiful memories! Our job has always been simple — help Ray, a local pastor in Ghana, as he ministers to the tribes of Northern Ghana.
Over the last 10 years we have helped record material across the country, in six different languages: Komba, Mampruli, Dagbani, Bimoba, Fulfulde, and Gonja. Each culture is unique, from Muslim nomads of the Sahel to the smaller, marginalized tribes sandwiched between the more powerful. The curious can look back on our previous trips. The materials we recorded and assembled help local pastors bring joyful singing of African choirs, locally told Bible Stories, and community health information to the most remote villages.
COVID 19 delayed our normal dry season trip in January. So we replanned for October, the end of wet season, with hopes the roads will be passable in a 4×4 truck. We packed and prepped furiously over the last couple of weeks. We also had a chance to host Emily and Ian’s kitty, Osa, who visited for a few days. Her only help was to occasionally stroll across keyboards and chew on ziplock bags.

Beth has perfected the art of planning and complex logistics. Emily, Paul, and I joke that her secret super power is planning. I’ve wondered what kind of lycra supersuit a planning superhero wears. Hmmm. During the summer, Beth’s dad helped unpackage hundreds of the solar-powered BiblePlus+ units. Beth’s friend Kelly, who has been an instructor at Ray’s school of missions in Ghana, volunteered her father Don and friend Lorrie to perform final assembly.


The devices are loaded and ready to play the audio Beth and I recorded on previous trips. We are traveling with 400 solar units, 980 microSD cards for mobile phones, and a load of other gear – 320lbs in 6 suitcases. We have the essentials, but also some fun.

The crescendo of activity for a trip begins quietly, months before the trip, and usually ends with an exhausting grand finale at 2am the night before we leave. But this year, it was different. On Tuesday we had beer with friends and went to bed early. As we turned off all the lights Beth explained that sometimes, when she looks in a certain direction, she can see bright white sparkles in her sore eye. What! Two days prior, Beth was weighing one of the 50lb suitcases when the scale broke. The metal pin attaching the luggage strap to the scale handle sheered right off. The bag dropped harmlessly, but Beth’s hand, still holding the scale, recoiled upward and she gave herself a 50lb smack to the eye. While painful and bloodshot, within a day everything seemed fine. Suddenly, we were grabbing our phones and double checking our eye injury suspicions on the Web. Our friend Denise was going to stop by at 10am to drive us to the airport. In an instant, the entire trip seemed impossible. We agreed that in the morning, Beth would visit an eye doctor.
Beth drove my car to a 9:00am opening appointment at DuPage Medical Immediate Care, while I participated in one last 8:00am telecon. Before I knew it, Beth was explaining that Immediate Care had no ophthalmologists available until the afternoon. Beth started driving west and I phoned the first search engine result after typing “emergency eye surgery.” Wheaton Eye Clinic listened to my rapid and pleading explanation of Beth’s situation. The young receptionist said she would immediately call the triage team, and call Beth as she sped toward downtown Wheaton.
Beth soon called back… they had a 10:50 appointment for her. Our flight was not until 1:45. Beth had asked Denise to come at 10:00 because we had 6 large suitcases, at least one of which was a dangerous scale breaker. I started playing the hopeful scenarios in my head… A quick visit, the doctor tells Beth it was a minor issue, and we could make our flight to Africa. But what if it was not so quick? Or Beth couldn’t fly? I wandered in my thoughts a while before snapping back to my own triage planning mode.
I called Denise. I would pack the Honda Pilot now, Denise could arrive, and we could head to the Eye Clinic in Wheaton. It was 20 minutes closer to O’hare, and we would have to leave my car in the parking lot. I put on a TobyMac song that seemed apropos. Beth called… she had been doing her own triage planning. “You should quickly repack a few bags and go to Africa by yourself.” I told her we could talk after she saw the doctor, but there was no way I would leave my honey behind.
I keep learning, over and over, that situations are often outside of our control. We must plan, but God has made his plans, and our wants are never as good as His plans — even the painful ones. We texted some friends and family to pray. Zooming around the house, I snapped off lights, tossed items from the “packing table” into bags, and tossed heavy bags in our SUV. In Ghana, we have encountered a cracked truck engine block, flat tires, nighttime border crossing excitement, and a dust storm that grounded all flights. Bonked eye? Hmmm.
With a great big smile Denise pulled into the driveway and we sped off to the clinic. As we pulled in, Beth called. The doctor had dilated her eyes and found a tear in her left eye. The ophthalmologist was direct – do a laser repair now, or there is a 50% chance the retina would detach. With the surgery, the chance the tear would grow was less than 5%. Easy choice!
I walked into the clinic. I paced the waiting room. I looked at Doctor Anderson’s picture on the wall. I sighed deeply and looked around more. A wonderful wall hanging caught my eye.

Beth emerged looking dazed (or rather lazed), and unable to focus her newly laser zapped and dilated eye. In retrospect, I should have hugged her, and told her how much I loved her. Instead, I grabbed her hand, and we walked briskly out the door and into the car. I got behind the wheel and we rocketed out of the parking lot. Beth explained that she had asked the doctor several times, “Ok, is it foolish to try and go to Africa after this procedure?” The doctor told her no, so Beth asked again, and the doctor told her “I already gave you an answer”. :-)
At O’hare, we thanked Denise for her help, quickly hugged, and got our 320 lbs of checked bags to the ticket counter. Beth was not allowed to lift bags, so I took the two carry-on bags and did my TSE Precheck thing. Once through security, we walked to the gate, put down our bags, and thanked God and texted our friends. Within moments we were boarding. Wow. I just checked, and our luggage was ticketed at 12:38, loaded on the flight at 1:18, and we departed at 1:45. Whoohoo.
While I’m not certain the remainder of the trip will be easy or uneventful, we can be certain the plan will be perfect – suspenseful to us, but without real drama.
Wow, what a start to your trip and so thankful that the Lord paved the way for you to have the eye surgery before you left! Praying for healing to be rapid. Can’t wait to see the work that God accomplishes on this trip. Please give Ray and Cynthia a big hug from us.
Love you guys!
Kim
Thanks! And you get the prize for earliest riser commenter :-)
Thank You Lord for preparing the way for a fruitful trip- and for the entire Bible plus ministry. Let it continue to grow and prosper for years to come!
Thanks! Joshua and Enoch are learning the ropes, so we hope they can help advance the work.
It’s so wonderful how you, Beth, and Denise were able to work through this and still make the flight. I hope the rest of the trip goes well, you arrive safely, and Beth’s eye isn’t too painful. Looking forward to following along through the blog, thank you for setting it up. Love you both!
Thanks! We will plan for a nice dinner together when we return to celebrate. Beth’s eye is recovering, which means I’ll have to stop begging to operate the laser if she needs anything adjusted when we return.
Oh my word! What a way to start your African adventure! Praying Beth’s eye heals quickly and the Lord refreshes your spirit with His peace and strength while on this journey! What a blessed reassurance it was reading this sign in Dr. Andersons office…so cool when God gives us “signs” like that! God bless you both and thanks for keeping us updated on your trip!
Thanks, Gina! Yes, The Wheaton Eye Clinic was a God-send indeed!! So thankful!!
Oh Lord you do keep it interesting for us. Thank you that Beth’s eye is okay now. Thank you that your plan got executed just in “your time” not ours. Thank you for my brother and sister and their commitment to seeing names added to the Lamb’s book of life. Would you bless them inside and out on this trip as they work and ask in the matchless name of Jesus Christ!
So grateful that you’re on your way! Awesome to see how God has put the right people in the right places at the right time. This means we can be confident that the same thing will happen on the other side of the ocean. We will be praying for you both and your entire trip. Please tell the Mensahs, Odoba, Hannah, and the OWA that we send our biggest hugs!
You are such a good storyteller, Pete. Hopefully, tough beginning means smooth sailing for the rest of the trip. You two are troopers, that’s for sure. Always love the photos, too. God keep you both and this trip in the palm of His hands.
Wow what a start . our prayers which started several weeks ago for this trip were not in vain. We specifically prayed for safety. God answered ln such a mighty way!
The adventures of the dynamic Beckman duo never ceases to inspire and encourage! Love and admire how God has wired you two and how you two love and honor Him.
A word comes to mind. Unstoppable. No eye injury requiring emergency laser surgery is gonna stop you, PTL!
A verse also comes to mind, “But none of these things move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might finish my course with joy, and the ministry, which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel of the grace of God.” Acts? ?20:24? ?
AMEN! 10 years later & you’re still going forth and keeping onward cause He’s equipped you to be unmovable. PTL! May Joy be in abundance always.
After reading, I can’t help but praise the Lord!!!
You are in our prayers. ??
Amazing story, Pete!!! Praise God you were able to do the surgery, get to the airport on time, and (presumably) arrive safely. I winked at you the moment you were over DC! Blessings on the remainder of the trip.
Fred