Saturday, April 28, 2012
The Shower and God's gifts
Friday, April 27, 2012
Field Trips and Aging
I guess I am thinking about growing older right now--and I'm thankful to still be here, albeit aging rapidly, and praying that God uses all my years to grow in "wisdom and stature and favor with God and man." (Luke 2:52) This all reminded me of something I read the other day by Howard Hendricks. "Older people can be excellent learners, but frequently they are conditioned against learning. Somewhere along the line they were infected with the idea that you can't teach an old dog new tricks--which is true, if you're teaching dogs, and if you're teaching tricks."
Amen! We are not dogs, and while we still have breath in us, we can still be learning and growing in Christ! I'm confessing right here that I have the memory of a flea... on a really good day (that is on my good day, not the flea's). But I so long to memorize God's Word and hide it deep within my heart and marrow so that when jostled by life's blows, it is His Word which spills out and not my own selfishness. He's given us brains; He's given us His Holy Spirit; He's given us His resurrection power; He's given us His grace; He's given us His divine wisdom. So with all that He's given us, I think it's about time we start putting what we've got to work! Start living out what we believe. Start memorizing His eternal Word. Start learning and changing and growing in whatever ways we sense His leading.
Howard Hendricks writes of a dear friend, an 86 year old woman who just went home to be with the Lord. "The last time I saw her on planet earth was at one of those aseptic Christian parties. We were sitting there on eggshells, looking pious, when she walked in and said, 'Well, Hendricks, I haven't seen you for a long time. What are the five best books you've read in the past year?'... She was 83 on her last trip to the Holy Land. She went there with a group of NFL football players. One of my most vivid memories of her is seeing her out front yelling back to them, 'Come on men, get on with it!'"
She died in her sleep at her daughter's home. Her daughter told Hendricks that just before her mother died, she had written out her goals for the next 10 years! You just gotta love that spunk and that attitude to keep pushing, keep growing!
Moses began his true life's calling after the age of 80! Abraham and Sarah were older than dirt when they had Isaac. There are so many examples of men and women God has used mightily in their older, wiser years. George Herbert wrote so many years ago, "And now in age, I bud again." Might we bud again and again as we grow older and closer in Him. And now, time to get some ice cream for my little guy... and in age bud in love and faith again. To God be the glory.
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Graves into Glory
You see, a number of these dear, godly women are traveling along hard, rocky paths right now. Prodigal children or suffering loved ones. I'm sure the sorrows differ from yours, but the pain does not--that pain that seems to reside deep down in the marrow of your life. Don't we all struggle? Don't we all face the reality that somehow this is not quite the way our lives--or the lives of those we love--should be going? That this disappointment, or betrayal, or illness, or limitation, or failure could not possibly be for the best... and for God's best. Somehow, someway, we or our loved one has missed out on that best, that beautiful, perfect plan God should have had in store for His beloved children.
But I saw the reality that nothing more powerfully and perfectly displays the glory of God than the beauty of belief in the face of bitter disappointment or bruising sorrow. It reminds me of a phrase I heard long ago that described some heartbreak as a "bruising of a blessing." The pain of sorrow that dogged belief transforms into standing strong and firm upon the promises and presence of Almighty God. Standing firm based upon faith in His Word rather than faltering upon our feelings. It's not fun, but, boy, there is just no stronger, deeper testimony to a watching world.
The Bible is full of one such testimony after another--testimonies of man's pain and God's power, man's sorrow and God's sovereign faithfulness, man's disappointments and God's divine transformations. Like a sparkling diamond set off against the backdrop of blackest cloth, it seems He uses our struggles to most clearly and compellingly reveal His glory and grace and greatness. Remember the disciples passing the man born blind from birth and asking Jesus, "'Rabbi, who sinned, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?'" Jesus answered, 'It was not that this man sinned, or his parents, but that the works of God might be displayed in him.'" (John 9:2-3) And when Jesus healed the man, God was glorified, and the man believed in Christ, gave powerful testimony, and worshipped.
Or how about the time the disciples were unable to heal the little boy who suffered from crippling seizures? The desperate father brings his young son to Jesus with a plaintive cry: "But if you can do anything have compassion on us and help us." (Mark 9:22) Jesus immediately responds, "If you can! All things are possible for one who believes." And in what is surely one of the most moving verses in the Bible, the distraught father cries out, "I believe; help my unbelief!" (Mk 9:24) Can't you relate? That is me! I am that father--believing, trying, but so often failing and falling short.
Yet how our Savior loves such words for it is when we are out of options, out of strength, out of self-devised schemes, out of all save our faith, faltering though it may be, that the Lord Jesus loves to move and heal and transform and enable and empower. He makes all things--ALL things, even that ugly disappointment or sorrow--beautiful in His time. And so the work of God is mightily displayed in this young boy when Jesus heals him and restores him to his family.
Just one more example--and surely one of my favorites in all of scripture--when Jesus raises Lazarus from the dead. Do you recall how Lazarus' desperate sisters send for Jesus, telling Him: "Lord, he whom You love is ill." (John 11:3) Lord, we cry out, my child whom You love is sick and lost and alone. Lord, he or she whom You love is.... you fill in the blank: unemployed, severely depressed, barren, bereft, confused, discouraged. Surely, the sisters thought, Jesus would come quickly.
But He did not. He waits four long days before going to Bethany. What on earth? The one whom He loved was dying. He could have stopped his suffering and prevented his death, but He doesn't. Instead, Jesus tells the disciples: "Lazarus has died, and for your sake I am glad that I was not there, so that you may believe." (John 11:14) When Jesus arrives at the weeping, mourning gravesite, He tells the grieving sisters--and us--"I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die. Do you believe this?"(John 11:25-26)
Jesus tells them to remove the stone from the grave of a man dead and decaying for four days. Martha responds exactly as we would--No way, it will smell horrible. In essence she's bitterly saying, "It's too late. Jesus, You blew it. You could have done something. You could have prevented this tragedy, but You didn't and now all hope is gone. Forget it." But, once again, we see those words that reveal how God always uses and transforms our pain and sorrow into something beautiful and powerful. "Jesus said to her, 'Did I not tell you that if you believed you would see the glory of God?'" (John 11:40) There it is again--belief that leads to glory, belief that results in seeing God work and move in impossible situations.
The stone is rolled away, and the Word, who was with God in the beginning and through Whom all things are made, speaks a word to a dead and decaying body and commands him "Lazarus, come out."
And a dead man walks out of a grave, alive by the power of God--the glorious, resurrection power of Almighty God. The same power that is available to you and to me as we face whatever sorrows and strains and struggles God has allowed into our lives. The same power that restores sight to the blind, heals the sick, and raises the dead--that is the power at work in our lives, transforming, redeeming, restoring, and ultimately glorifying the Savior who died and rose again for us.
O Lord, we believe! Help our unbelief! And He will. And He does. Every. Single. Time--if we call out to Him by faith, He will always always always prove faithful and powerful and glorious beyond all we can imagine or even hope (Ephesians 3:20!) He is the God of hope. He is the God of healing. He is the God of resurrection. He is the God who transforms our graves into glory. To our Healer, our Hope, our Heavenly Helper, our Resurrected Lord, be all the glory.
Monday, April 23, 2012
Charles Colson
But that is the man he once was. That was the man he was before he met Christ. Before he went to prison. Before he was changed completely and eternally. Before he began his life's work of ministering in prisons and to prisoners and their families.
The man he became was a man of honor and conviction who loved God and loved the poorest and least of the least--the downtrodden and imprisoned and wretched. Again, the newspaper put it succinctly: "But Charles "Chuck" Colson spent the next 35 years steadfast in his efforts to evangelize to a part of society scorned just as he was. And he became known perhaps just as much for his efforts to minister to prison inmates as for his infamy with Watergate."
How well I remember going to hear Charles Colson speak many years ago at First Presbyterian Church in Greensboro. My parents took me--it was not terribly long after he had written his wonderful book, Born Again. Many of us were still a bit skeptical (well, maybe a lot skeptical!)--was this Christianity stuff for real? Could a leopard truly change his spots? Could Christ truly change a man that profoundly?
And the answer I learned that night was yes. For in the Lord Jesus, Colson truly was a new man and his faith was for real. You simply cannot argue with a changed life and with a testimony of what Christ can do with a broken, ugly life. Isn't it always in the broken places in our own lives that He can most powerfully bring transformation and healing and ultimately hope? Sure, it's painful. But it's so beautiful to behold. And there simply is nothing more powerful.
Many years later, I heard Colson himself say that nothing he did in the first 41 years of his life, even with his office next to the president, could compare to what God did with his brokenness. Look at the ministry of Prison Fellowship--who would have thought! God takes the broken places in your life, like failure and prison, and uses them in ways you could never imagine. "Laying on the rotten floor of a cell, you know it's not prosperity or pleasure that's important, but the maturing of the soul."
"At your lowest depths," Colson declared, "God may be preparing you for the greatest thing you'll ever do." But it will invariably arise out of the broken, scarred, imperfect places in your life, for when we are weak, then in Christ we are strong. It has been said that God cannot use a man greatly until He has hurt him deeply. Pain and failure and sorrow deepen us, season us, grow us, ennoble us. It's not fun. It's not pretty. But it's true and ultimately, He makes all things beautiful in His time... His time, not our time.
Colson had his critics, his doubters, to be sure. But look at his life since his conversion--a changed life speaks for itself. I read that the Boston Globe wrote facetiously in 1973 "If Mr. Colson can repent of his sins, there just has to be hope for everyone." When I saw those words, I whispered, "Yes! But that's just it--you got it! There is hope for ALL of us--from the liar to the murderer to the selfish to the greedy to the swindler to the worst of the worst. From the likes of Charles Colson to the likes of me. That is what Christ can do!"
So thank You Lord for the life of this good man. An imperfect man--just as we all are--but a truly great man used mightily by You. A man who in giving his life away, truly found it again. And now, he is truly Living--with a capital "L." Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound that saved a wretch like me. I once was lost, but now am found. Was blind but now I see. To the God of all grace who saves wretches like you and me, and who changes hearts and lives and destinies, be all the glory.
Saturday, April 21, 2012
Time... and Mint
This might qualify as the 8th wonder of the world--I was able to download my 2nd picture onto this blog! (Okay, confession time--my oldest daughter is here and helped me. I never would have figured it out or remembered it from the first time. Of course, I still can't figure out how to properly indent for a new paragraph on this thing. Sigh)
I read something yesterday that really resonated with me--or, I should say, convicted me. Like so many of us, I am always in a hurry. So much to do, never enough time. I constantly feel under-the-gun and frustrated that at the end of each day, I have failed once again to get everything accomplished I really needed or wanted to do. Thus, once again today I mark through my lengthy to do list and move all the items to the next day. For surely, I must subconsciously reason, tomorrow will be a far longer day comprised of more hours, less distractions, more efficiency, and nearly infinite achievements. The clutter (in the entire house, mind you) will all be cleaned and removed, the laundry will all be folded and put away, the Bible study will be profoundly experienced and put into practice, the gourmet meals will be cooked (Ha!), the books will be read, highlighted and remembered (double Ha!), the meaningful family activities will be enjoyed by everyone, the errands will all be run (with joy), the copious amounts of detritus will all be swept or vacuumed away, the phone calls and emails will all be returned (including all the ones I saved two weeks ago and then forgot about), the homework will all be finished and learned with excellence (might need a triple Ha here!), all the people in our family will feel loved and affirmed by their mama... and on and on and on. Surely I could get all that done in 24 hours, right?
If only I could be a little more efficient, I think. If only I could eliminate all those copious time wasters in my life, I bet somehow, someway I could get it all done. If only everyone would leave me alone for... um, about 2 years, I bet I could finish it all. Isn't it funny how selfish we can become when we want to get things done?
Why on earth does the Lord put up with me--all my rushing and drivenness and frenetic hurrying... and somehow missing His glory and grace and goodness in my relentless quest to get it all done?
And so yesterday I read these words by Ann Voskamp:
"A well known pastor, he was once asked what was his most profound regret in life? 'Being in a hurry.' That is what he said. 'Getting to the next thing without fully entering the thing in front of me. I cannot think of a single advantage I've ever gained from being in a hurry. But a thousand broken and missed things, tens of thousands, lie in the wake of all the rushing... Through all that haste I thought I was making up time. It turns out I was throwing it away.'" Voskamp goes on to write "In our rushing, bulls in china shops, we break our own lives. Haste makes waste. The hurry makes us hurt.... I think often of another woman seeking: 'On every level of life, from housework to heights of prayer, in all judgment and efforts to get things done, hurry and impatience are sure marks of the amateur.' [Ouch--I am an amateur, Lord] Is this the secret that all the life experts know? That in Christ, urgent means slow. That in Christ, the most urgent necessitates a slow and steady reverence. That in Christ, time is not running out. This day is not a sieve, losing time. In Christ, we fill--gaining time. We stand on the brink of eternity. So there is enough time. Time to breathe deep and time to see real. Time to laugh long, time to give God glory and rest deep and sing joy. And just enough time in a day not to feel hounded, pressed, driven, or wild to get it all done. There is time to grab the jacket off the hook and time to go out to all air and sky and green. And time to read and wonder and laugh with all them in this light. All this time refracting in prism. All this time that could refract in praise."
After I read her words, I whispered: forgive me Father. You are the Author of time. You are the Sustainer of all our days and minutes and seconds, and You have given us enough time every single day to do all You have ordained, all that is needful and necessary and nourishing. Forgive my haste. Forgive my hurry. Forgive my hustling that results in deeds done but souls suffering. I want to love You and love people first and foremost. That is why You placed me on this spinning planet. And there is always enough time for those joyful priorities. And all the other stuff? Well, I'm trusting the Creator of time and space that You will accomplish Your purposes and enable me to do what You've called me to without grumpy frenzy and worried rushing.
This picture I downloaded? A little glimpse of the voluminous mint in our garden. One tiny little mint plant from my wonderful Aunt Janie's garden transplanted over 12 years ago has yielded an abundant--even overflowing--harvest of mint every year. We do nothing to encourage this hardy little herb. And every winter the mint always looks like it's finished for good. Yet, come spring, here it bursts forth again--verdant, lush, sweet smelling. And every time, I remember sweet Janie and thank the Lord for the gift of her life and her love of God's garden.
So yesterday, after reading Ann Voskamp's words, I slowed to truly see and appreciate and photograph our mint--the gift that keeps on giving and keeps reminding me of past blessings. And then I put aside my to do list and went to walk along with my son and husband and watch them play golf on a beautiful spring day. Because I will not always have an 11 year old. And I may not always have the strength to walk or the eyes to see or the mind to remember and appreciate. But I do today, and so I slow and savor.
And that to do list? Well, it still sits on kitchen counter, and I've noticed the world didn't stop spinning when I ceased rushing about to accomplish everything. But my son smiled and chatted, and my husband and I enjoyed being together, walking and talking and seeing the beauty of God's stunning creation.
Yes, I think there is "time to breathe deep and time to see real." And there is time to love, and time to remember with gratitude, and time to praise. To our great and good and generous and grace-overflowing God, be all the glory forever and ever and ever... and out into all of timeless infinity.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
The Trapped Bird
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Thank You for Dogs
Monday, April 16, 2012
Thankful in the simple
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Rebuilding the Wall
When Nehemiah arrives in Jerusalem, the beleaguered little group of returning exiles begins rebuilding the wall--surely a massive and overwhelming undertaking. Without walls, however, the city was vulnerable to every enemy, and so these weak and paltry exiles had to begin the daunting task. Thus when Nehemiah challenges them, “...they said, ‘Let us rise up and build.’ So they strengthened their hands for the good work.” (Neh. 2:18)
Everybody has a part to play, and they all start working! Chapter 3 is a litany of verses like “The sons of Hassenaah built the Fish Gate. They laid its beams and set its door, its bolts, and its bars. And next to them Meremoth the son of Uriah, son of Hakkoz repaired. And next to them Meshullam the son of Berechiah, son of Meshezabel repaired. And next to them Zadok the son of Baana repaired...” (Neh.3:3-4) Priests, district rulers, goldsmiths, perfumers all worked side by side and repaired portions of the wall or the gates. What a group effort--and it took everyone doing their part and pitching in!
But here’s the part I really loved. Opposition came. Doesn’t it always?! Isn’t it so true that just when we get a real head of steam going and things seem to be chugging along, opposition slams right into us? Our child gets sick. Our schedule gets out of control. Our energy flags. Our confidence and faith wanes. And discouragement and despair overwhelm us.
I don’t know about you, but discouragement always proves to be some of the enemy’s most fertile and successful hunting ground in my life. I grow discouraged with some setback or failure or criticism, and then the enemy whispers “You can’t do this. Your prayers are no good. Who do you think you are? This will never succeed. You are too weak or unfaithful or undisciplined or disorganized or... (you fill in the blank) to ever do this or finish this or obey God’s Word in this.”
I’m preaching to myself here: IT IS A LIE FROM THE PIT OF HELL!! We need to preach ourselves the Word of God! “I can do all things through Him who strengthens me.” (Phil. 4:13) or “I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.” (Gal. 2:20) or “Let us not grow weary while doing good, for in due season we shall reap if we do not lose heart.” (Gal. 6:9) or “Be of good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart, all you who hope in the Lord.” (Ps.31:24) There are so many! We must go to His wonderful, rejuvenating, supernatural Word in these moments of despair and defeat and call on His Name and His might and His strength!
And that’s exactly what Nehemiah did! For you see, chapters 4 and 5 of Nehemiah recount the inevitable opposition that came as the wall slowly started to rise. Sanballat the Hornonite and Tobiah the Ammonite and Geshem the Arab got all worked up and did everything they could think of to discourage the people, deter the workers, and defeat any rebuilding efforts. Seriously, you need to read about it--they used sarcastic comments like “what they are rebuilding--if a fox goes up on it he will break down their stone wall!” (4:3) This fearsome threesome issued threats, plotted evil, started ugly rumors, appealed to the Persian king to stop the rebuilding and on and on.
But the people kept working and the rebuilding continued. Do you know why? Listen to God’s Word: “And we prayed to our God and set a guard as a protection against them day and night.” (4:9)--Prayer and diligent, prayerful preparation. Nehemiah stationed people with swords and bows in various places--especially in vulnerable areas where there were open places still remaining in the walls.
And he exhorted them “Do not be afraid of them. Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons, your daughters, your wives, and your homes.” (4:14) I love that! God is calling us to fight for our children, our parents, our spouses, our friends, our neighbors, our culture! I can be so fearful, so terribly inadequate and weak. But it’s not about me! It’s about “the Lord, who is great and awesome!” It’s time to stop worrying about what I can do and focus on what He can and will do! It’s time to, in Paul’s words, forget “what lies behind” and start “straining forward to what lies ahead.” (Phil.3:13)
'Cause I can tell you right now: I will fail and falter and faint. I will disappoint and grow distracted and discouraged. But my Almighty God will not! Not now, not ever! And this is His work, not yours or mine. So we need to remember our great and awesome God, call upon Him constantly in prayer and in His Word, and then get to work doing whatever He has called us to do!
Let’s emulate Nehemiah and the wall builders and workers: “Those who carried burdens were loaded in such a way that each labored on the work with one hand and held his weapon with the other. And each of the builders had his sword strapped at his side while he built.” (4:17-18) We need to strap on the weapons of prayer and faith and God’s Word and work! And trust, just as the people of Nehemiah’s day did that “ Our God will fight for us.” (4:20)
Strap on those weapons and get ready to build in whatever areas God is calling you. In your home. In your neighborhood. In your church. In your business. Fight for our families, for our friends, for our church families, for our city, for our culture! We will do it on our knees, in His Word and in the power of His Holy Spirit. All to His glory, all by His grace! And to God be the glory!