Saturday, August 10, 2013

Dogs, babies, chocolate...and other graces!

                                A little food for weekend thought:

     One of my favorite pictures of Moses--with precious Huntley (dressed up for trick-or-treatin'!) the son of dear, dear friends, Jessica and Hunt:
     Thank You Lord, again, for sweet, old Moses.  Moses--another example of one of the common gifts of God's grace in our lives.  Not a day--well, probably not an hour--goes by that we don't think of Moses and miss him.  But there are waaaaay more smiles now rather than tears.  Another reason for thanks to the Lord.  Grace.
     And then, just today, sweet Jessica and Huntley came by for a visit.  Huntley--grace, grace, grace!  What a joy an almost two year old is!  (And dear friends like Jessica?--grace squared!).  But our visitors came by with, as Jessica put it, "Some chocolate therapy."  O yes, more grace!  I put that fine therapy (I'm feeling better already) on the counter.  I realized after their visit that our chocolate therapy sat right in front of one of our favorite platters sitting on our kitchen counter--

"Be kind and compassionate to one another..." (Eph.4:32)
Pretty appropriate, huh?  Thank You, Lord, for the grace gifts of friendship, kindness, and compassion.  Thank You for friends who love us and care for us--even when we don't deserve it.  But that's the essence of grace isn't it?--God's undeserved, unearned favor showered upon us.  
     And thank You, Lord, that You allow us to share abroad to others that kindness and compassion which You poured out upon us so extravagantly in Jesus Christ.  
So in light of such amazing grace, a quote from Bob Goff that Janie just shared with me:
"Love dissipates fear; hope patches the holes in our dreams; grace won't fix our mistakes, it just won't memorize them."  
And one of my very favorites from G.K. Chesterton: 
“You say grace before meals. All right.  But I say grace before the concert and the opera.  And grace before the play and pantomime.  And grace before I open a book. And grace before sketching, painting, swimming fencing, boxing, walking, playing, dancing.  and grace before I dip the pen in the ink.”  G.K.Chesterton
O Lord, help us to live by grace.  "For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--not by works, so that no one can boast." (Eph.2:8-9)
It's all by grace and through grace--whether friendship or beloved pets or chocolate cake or good books...or "swimming, fencing, boxing, walking, playing, dancing."  
So we simply say, thank You, Father.  To God--the God of all grace--be the glory. 

Friday, August 9, 2013

Savoring...but making war!

     Okay, in light of my picture from yesterday of what is undoubtedly some of the world's finest chocolate cake,  I'm a wee bit convicted after just reading Philippians 3:17-21.  In particular, verse 19 describes those who are "enemies of the cross" in this way: "their god is their belly [O mercy!], and they glory in their shame, with minds set on earthly things."  Now, praise God I'm not glorying in my shame, and the Lord knows I'm not an enemy of of the cross of Christ.  But still, I do love me some chocolate...and, well, food in general.  I may be a crummy cook, but I enjoy cooking...and especially eating.
     So this phrase worried me until I looked it up in the NIV where it's translated "their god is their appetite."  Meaning all kinds of appetites--our appetites for sex or food or money or status or success or appearance or whatever we place before our hunger and appetite for God.  God created food and drink and sex and dogs and nature.  These are wonderful gifts from our Creator and Giver of all good gifts.
     But when we mistakenly...no, when we sinfully give over the ultimate precedence and preoccupation of our lives to the gifts--rather than the Giver--the gifts become distorted and destructive and twisted.  And, boy, how easy is it to give in to our appetites--because we're sinners!
     John Piper says that "preferring anything over Jesus is the essence of sin and we must fight it."  And so we must wage war!  He goes on to say "I hear so many Christians murmuring about their imperfections and their failures and their addictions and their short-comings, and I see so little war!...Why am I this way?  Make WAR!"
     On this sun-drenched August morning, I'm still savoring the memory of an anniversary dinner with my husband.  I still give all my thanks and praise to the Savior who graciously gave me this husband and that dinner...and that chocolate cake!  I rejoice in the gifts and say thank You thank You thank You Father!
     But at the same time, I humbly ask God to enable me to ruthlessly make WAR against my selfishness and my desire to have things my way.  And I wage war against those appetites that threaten to diminish my love for my Savior and my savoring of His beauty, His grace, His all-sufficiency.   Only the Lord can truly and ultimately satisfy our souls and fill those empty holes of longing that humanity has, since the fall, looked to fill with the infinitely lesser and empty things of this world.  Yet, all the while,  the infinitely Greater and more Glorious Creator is ready and waiting to fill and fill and fill to overflowing abundance all those empty God-shaped holes with Himself. With His perfect, all-satisfying, all-sufficient, all-glorious I Am.
     Help us, Father, to make war against our appetites when they threaten to steal our love and devotion for You.  Keep us continually grateful for the gifts...but devoted to the Giver.  Help us to savor the gifts but direct all the praise and thanksgiving to the Savior.  To God be the glory.

   

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Marriage...and chocolate cake

     Sometimes there's just nothing quite like chocolate cake.
     Mt. Airy Chocolate Souflee cake from Crooks Corner in Chapel Hill, to be exact.  With fresh whipped cream.  O my, O my.  Surely God said, after He created chocolate, "And it was extraordinarily good!"
     Richard and I are here in good old Chapel Hill, celebrating our 26th wedding anniversary.  Hard to believe--26 years ago this very day.  Thank You, Father, the Giver of all good gifts.  Thank You for the gift of marriage and of children and of walking with You every single day in this crazy, challenging adventure of life.  Thank You for the good times and the hard times and the stretching times and the exasperating times and the joyous times...and all the times in between.  And thank You for the gift of friends and family to encourage us in, and along, this journey of life together.
     I love the words of Scotty Smith: "Oh, that more of us would live as partners in the gospel, as cosabaoteurs of the kingdom of darkness, rather than frittering our years away on less noble pursuits and passions.  There are so many different story lines clamoring for our marriages--so many distractions and seductions.  A marriage, just like singleness, is too precious a gift to spend on pettiness and non intentional living.  Bring more gospel sanity to our marriages, Jesus.  Rescue us, resuscitate us, refresh us."
     Lord, make our marriages count.  Make our relationships count.  Make our lives count for eternity.  And that requires refusing to live only for ourselves and instead living for You.  Not indulging our selfish desires, but seeking first and foremost to love and serve You and those You have graciously put in our lives.  "Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves.  Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others. Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus." (Phil.2:3-5)   Whew, I have a long way to go in this department...but praise God I have a Savior who will go with me as long as it takes to become like Jesus and love unconditionally and unselfishly and graciously.
     So here's to 26 years of marriage...with my husband and with my Savior.  O Lord, thank You for forgiveness and grace, the fertilizers of love.  And, of course, thank You for Mt.Airy Chocolate Souflee Cake.  God is so so good.
    To God be the glory.
   

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Peace in the darkness

      Another friend has lost a beloved child.  Tears seem inadequate.  Sorrow seems too pale a word to describe what her family must surely be feeling right now...what we are all feeling.  No parent should ever, ever have to bury their child.  I've gone to bed praying and awakened in the morning praying for this family and other dear families who have lost loved ones in recent months.  In light of this, I hope you'll forgive me for sharing some recent thoughts on the subject of facing life's storms.  Sorry it's a bit long:


        I love this definition of peace: “Peace is the calm assurance that whatever God is doing is best.”  In other words, supernatural peace is knowing that the Lord is not only in complete control but that whatever  He is doing is the ultimate best, even if at that moment we cannot possibly see how.
And so we pray and pray for our heart’s desire, but then we have to be willing to trust God with the results, because sometimes the miraculous healing or intervention comes.  But sometimes it doesn’t.  Sometimes God’s perfect plan is to allow someone we love to go on home to heaven. Sometimes His plan is to allow what from our perspective seems like a crushing disappointment or an utterly unfair outcome or even a tragedy.  At those hard, perplexing places in our lives, we want to cry out, “Why, God?  Don’t you care?  Don’t you love me?  Don’t you hear our prayers?” 
But He does.  He always does.  The difference is we don’t have all the facts...God does.  We can’t peer into eternity and see how whatever we are enduring will ultimately be used for far greater good and in far greater ways than we, with our limited vision, can ever begin to imagine.  
I’ll never forget hearing someone who had lost a baby say: “God’s will is what we would always choose if we knew what God knows.”   Peace is knowing and trusting that God’s will is what we’d choose if we knew all the facts.  When we’re chafing against God’s plans and ways, it really means we think we know better than Almighty God what’s best for us or for those we love. And that’s when we forfeit our peace.
I clearly remember one particular drive back from the Greenville hospital with the Andrews. I had one of those moments where I sort of hit a wall. Janie was still unconscious and her prognosis looked grim at best.  Yet we were talking about the extraordinary ways God was using this accident in the lives of so many high schoolers and other folks.  We had heard stories of people giving their lives to Christ as their Savior. Stories of people recommitting their lives to Christ.  All kinds of remarkable stories.
We were incredibly thankful that God was using this to affect so many for eternity.  But suddenly this mama’s heart broke, and I couldn’t help but cry out, “Yes, yes, I am so grateful God is using this so mightily.  But did it have to be our daughter?  Did God have to use our child as the sacrificial lamb?  Why does it have to be Janie who sacrifices her life, her future for all these other people?”  
I’m just being honest here.  I didn’t feel this way often. Much of the time, we trusted in God’s plans and ways--even in this hard place.  We felt a supernatural peace that God was in control and would use this for our ultimate good and His greater glory--even if we couldn’t imagine how. But every now and then, the emotions of sorrow and fear just bubbled up and overwhelmed our hearts.
Later that night, however, as I lay in bed, God gently spoke to my heart.  My daughter wasn’t the sacrificial lamb.  God’s Son was. He was the sacrifice.  He died, that she might live. Truly live.  For God so loved you, God so loved me, God so loved all of us that He gave His only begotten, beloved, sinless Son that any and all who choose to believe in Him by faith might pass from death to life and have eternal, abundant life forever. Jesus cried out on the cross, “My God, my God, why have You forsaken me” so that we need never feel forsaken.
As I contemplated what God had sacrificed for me, for us, it didn’t necessarily make the pain go away, but it put everything back into perspective.  My Heavenly Father reminded me that He knew exactly what it felt like to see a beloved child suffer, and He fully understood our pain.  We have a loving Father who enters with us into our pain, weeping with us, holding us, comforting us, and encouraging us.  
The Lord reassured my anxious heart that everything, absolutely everything, that happens to us in this life first passes through His powerful, sovereign hands.  If our God of perfect love and goodness allowed it, then we can know His purposes spring out of His infinite love for us and His desire to use it for our ultimate blessing. 
We have the unbreakable promise that no matter what we will ever go through, our Savior will never leave us nor forsake us. Even at the darkest, scariest moments in that ICU room--even when one doctor told us that Janie, if she survived, would likely be either in a vegetative state or in a wheelchair and on a feeding tube for the rest of her life--God was clearly there.  We could feel His presence.  We had some very low moments, but our feet were always on solid ground, never on sinking sand.
We experienced firsthand the great truth that Corrie ten Boom’s sister, Betsie, declared as she lay dying in a Nazi concentration camp: “We must tell them what we have learned here.  We must tell them that there is no pit so deep that He is not deeper still.  They will listen to us, Corrie, because we have been here.”  
We’ve recently had several wonderful friends who have lost precious children.  I cannot comprehend such losses.  Such pain.  But God can.  
We don’t have all the answers on this side of heaven.  God saved Daniel from the lion’s den but he allowed Stephen to be stoned to death.  There are countless miraculous stories of God supernaturally delivering His children...but then permitting someone like the great German theologian, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, to be hanged just weeks before the end of WW II.  
I’ve long since given up trying to understand the why’s.  God doesn’t have to tell us why.  It’s enough to know that He is sovereign and that He is both perfectly good and completely powerful.  In those gaps where we don’t understand, He simply calls us to trust Him who loves us infinitely, and in doing so, we experience His perfect peace.
 I loved these words by Melody Green from her book, No Compromise, about the life and death of her husband, Keith Green.  Keith was an amazingly gifted Christian singer who, at the age of 28, was killed in a small plane crash, along with two of his young children.  His wife, Melody, who was pregnant at the time, was left behind along with their youngest one-year old child. 
      This is what Melody Green wrote: "With God's help, we can eventually come out on the other side of the storm.  Then we can become vessels of grace and understanding to others who are in their season of crisis and pain.  Some cuts are deep enough to mark us forever.  But after seasons and times of healing and restoration by God, we don't have to be controlled by our wounds.  Even with healing, we may always be marked by them to the greater good of our souls. Our injuries can be our biggest windows into aspects of God's character we might not have known any other way.  I know my losses deposited something deep into my spirit.  Yes, I would have rather read a book to receive what God gave to me in those darkest of times--but some pearls are only discovered when the field looks like an impossible wasteland.  He is the God of the impossible.  The God who tells us where to dig for the treasure.  The God of great and tender mercies.  And I love Him with all my heart." 
If anyone is reading this who has suffered such an unspeakable loss, please know you are loved, not just by us, your dear friends and family, but by the One who made you and loves you more than you can ever begin to imagine.  I recently read this from Ann Voskamp: “Faith is this unwavering trust in the heart of God in the hurt of here.  Unwavering trust all the time though I don’t understand all the time.”  Amen.  
We cannot understand the tragic loss of an innocent child.  We never will this side of heaven.  But in those mystifying gaps, might we choose, by faith, to trust the heart of God even when we question what His hand might be doing.  It is enough that He knows.  He is still and forever in control.  And He is somehow, someway bringing resurrection life and light even out of the blackest, bleakest darkness in our lives.  
Until then, we weep with those who weep.  So many tears, so much pain, so much sorrow.  O help them, Lord Jesus, as only You can. Might You, the God of all comfort, wrap them in Your tender, strong embrace so that they feel and know Your loving, gracious, healing presence as never before.
And help us, Father, even in the darkness and pain, to choose to rejoice that those whom we love and miss so desperately are at this moment--at this very moment--with You and enjoying wonders and glories and infinite joy that we cannot begin to fathom.  And one day--one glorious day--we will see them again, and we will rejoice together.  In perfection.  In our true home.
     Until that day, we simply say thank You, Father, for the certain hope and joyous promise of heaven.  To God be the glory.

Monday, August 5, 2013

The striving hummingbird

     Sorry, but one more day on my bird kick--this time hummingbirds.  (Can you see them?  One is hovering to the right side of the hummingbird feeder and the other slighter higher and to the left.)
    Our peaceful porch has been transformed into a Blue Ridge mountain Grand Central Station at the moment.  Between constantly chattering baby swallows and their continually swooping in and out parents as well as some rather combative, aggressive hummingbirds, well, there's never a dull moment up here (although my teenaged daughter might disagree).
    But aren't hummingbirds amazing?  I've been reading a bit about them.  Their neon colors are magnificent--Audubon describing them as "a glittering fragment of the rainbow."  And consider how rapidly they beat their wings--the average is 25 times a second, but in fast flight they can beat up to 200 times a second.  What on earth?  I can't even wrap my brain around that!
      Here's the downside to all that activity: Crawford Greenwalt (who literally wrote the book on hummingbirds) said that "Hummingbirds have the highest energy output per unit of weight of any living warm-blooded animal."  If an average 170 pound man consumed 3,500 calories a day, the hummingbird's equivalent would be about 155,000 calories.  Geez, that's a lot of chocolate cake.  And Greenwalt says "the average hummingbird consumes half its weight of sugar daily, an extraordinary intake."  Based on their love of all things sweet and sugary, I'm starting to think there may be a bit of hummingbird way back in my gene pool
     So here's the thing--in order to live, the hummingbird has to quite literally search for, and eat, food all day long (I'd like the eating all day part...the searching for it, not so much).  John Stott, the late great British preacher and a huge bird watcher, put it perfectly: "Food gathering has become their chief occupation.  They have to eat in order to replace lost energy, but they lose more energy in doing so, as they dart restlessly from flower to flower.  They are caught in a vicious circle as through the process of eating they both acquire energy and expend it, and are driven to replace what they have acquired and spent.  Consumption has become the main business of their existence."  No wonder they are such grumpy little birds.
     Boy, is that not a picture of our society...and, sadly, often of ourselves?  Always pushing for more.  Never quite content.  Always thinking we need to be busy and doing, doing, doing...acquiring more and more...or believing we will finally be happy and content when we lose those last 5 pounds, or move into that bigger house, or get rid of all that clutter and get better organized, or acquire that more prestigious job, or see our children accepted into that perfect college, and on and on and on it goes.
     How exhausting. What a hopeless, fruitless rat race!  Like those restless, endlessly flitting little hummingbirds--it's never enough and creates a vicious cycle that robs us of the very joy and peace and settled contentment which we crave.  And all that striving hits us with the double whammy of missing the "precious present."  We forfeit the gift of savoring the never-to-be-repeated present moment in our endless quest for better or bigger or improved or perfected.
     No, only in the One who made us and died to redeem us will we find our true heart's home.  Only when we keep Him and His cross ever before us and live in gratitude and dependence upon Him each day will we find true peace and contentment.  As Paul says, "I have learned in whatever situation I am to be content.  I know how to be brought low, and I know how to abound.  In any and every circumstance, I have learned the secret of facing plenty and hunger, abundance and need.  I can do all things through Him who strengthens me."  (Phil.4:11-13)
     Teach us, Lord Jesus, that You are enough.  You are always more than enough, and through You we will find true soul rest, joy, and contentment.  Teach us from Your hummingbirds--we don't want to be endlessly striving and dissatisfied.  Instead, might we be fixed upon You and fully present and grateful for each moment and each person in our lives.  We truly can do all things through You, our Strengthener, Sustainer, and Redeemer.
     To God be the glory.      

Sunday, August 4, 2013

The birds, our teachers

     Okay, crummy picture--but a sweet sight!  If I could figure out technology a bit better, I'd be able to ascertain how to post the enlarged version of this picture.  But alas, I was clearly born about 20 years too early to understand most things technological.  So here's my best effort.
     Use your imagination to see--in this brown blob on top of a shudder on our porch in the mountains-- a little nest of four baby swallows.  Clearly, this is the worst picture in the history of the world, but if you could see it, they are adorable...and getting too big and fat for their little nest.  It won't be long before they fly the coop--surely in the next day or two.
     As we sit on the porch, the mama and daddy swallow continuously swoop in and out with morsels of food.  About every minute or two, the babies will suddenly start chirping vociferously as one of their parents flies in with a bite to eat.  Within a few seconds, they are off again, looking for the next bit of food for their babies.
     We love watching the mama and daddy swoop and dip and dive in the sky just off our porch and catch all kinds of insects to feed their little guys.  I'm telling you, these parents are a hardworking pair.  Since we've been here, neither mom nor dad rests in the nest more than a few seconds.  I always thought being a bird would be glorious--all that flying and soaring in the wild blue yonder.  But I'm learning that being a bird parent can be a real grind (hmm, sound familiar?!).  These two feed their brood and then dart back out to find their next repast.  Over and over and over again.
     Just this morning, Preyer watched one of the parents swoop in with a beetle...only to see the beetle somehow escape in the handoff to one of the babies.   The undaunted mama, however, immediately rushed off the nest in hot pursuit of that poor beetle.  I don't think it ended well for the beetle.  Man, it's tough being so low on the food chain.
     But it's also relentless work being a mama or daddy bird.  I'm going to stop complaining about having to cook and clean up three meals a day...try not just cooking but capturing a thousand (at least) meals a day.  Boy, I sure hope those babies thank them.  No question about it, it's tough work being a parent.
     But all this reminded me of Jesus' words about birds.  Don't you love that our Lord uses everyday, commonplace objects and events to teach us deep spiritual truths?  As C.S. Lewis once wrote: "God never meant man to be a purely spiritual creature.  That is why He uses material things like bread and wine to put the new life into us.  We may think this rather crude and unspiritual.  God does not.  He invented eating.  He likes matter.  He invented it."  I love that--God created birds and mountains and butterfly bushes and chocolate.  He likes it all and said it was good!  And He wants us to learn from that which He has created.
     Jesus tells us to trust God in all things and not to worry, and I love that He uses the birds as an example:  "Look at the birds in the sky; they do not sow and reap and store in barns, yet your heavenly Father feeds them.  Are you not worth more than the birds?...How little faith you have!" (Matt.6:26,30)
     So simple, but so profound.  Now granted, the birds are working their little tails off, but they are not wringing their little wings in worry and anxiety!  They aren't storing up and saving some beetles for a rainy day.  Nope, they just busily go about their business of providing food for their young ones and all the while their Creator continues to provide a limitless supply of insects and all that they need for each day's sustenance.
     I guess that's something I've learned from the birds today--yes, God calls us to work.  But not to worry.  We work busily with our hands--but at the same time we have rest in our hearts because we place the full weight of our burdens upon our Heavenly Father.
     Will we trust Him or not?  Will we choose to worry, essentially insisting that God is not trustworthy and not capable of meeting our needs?  Or we will choose to trust Him and His plans and His ways?
     One final weekend thought on this from good old Martin Luther: "You see, He is making the birds our schoolmasters and teachers.  It is a great and abiding disgrace to us that in the Gospel a helpless sparrow should become a theologian and a preacher to the wisest of men.  We have as many teacher and preachers as there are birds in the air.  Their living example is an embarrassment to us.  Whenever you listen to a nightingale, therefore, you are listening to an excellent preacher...It is as if he were saying, 'I prefer to be in the Lord's kitchen.  He has made heaven and earth, and He Himself is the cook and the host.  Every day He feeds and nourishes innumerable little birds out of His hand.'"
     Thank You, Lord, for the gift of birds and all that You teach us even through these little, graceful creatures, especially the lesson that we are to work...but not to worry.  Help us to trust You as our cook, our host, our Provider, our Sustainer, our Deliverer, and our Redeemer.  If You've got the sparrows and the swallows (and You do)...You've surely got us.
     To God be the glory.
   

Saturday, August 3, 2013

The Relentless Gift-giver

     Thank You, Lord, for the beauty of these mountains.  "For the Lord is good; His steadfast love endures forever, and His faithfulness to all generations." (Ps.100:5)
     This is the overlook from the very place Matt proposed to Mary Norris just a few months back.  What a glorious weekend that was with all our family up here as well as Matt's parents and a couple of their close friends.  So now I'm savoring it again and remembering God's goodness in the past and trusting that He who is the Giver of all good gifts will continue to give.  Because that is His nature--He gives.  He blesses.  He sustains.  He strengthens.  He creates.  He restores.  He redeems.  And when He removes something or someone from our clasping, sometimes greedy hands, He has further plans for redemption and blessing.
     And here's how I know--I know by faith.  Just this morning I read, "Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen." (Heb.11:1)  I love what John McArthur wrote about this "emphatic statement about the nature of faith.  Faith involves the most solid possible conviction--the God-given present assurance of a future reality.  True faith is not based on empirical evidence but on divine assurance and is a gift of God."
     Paul made that clear--"For by grace you have been saved through faith.  And this is not your own doing, it is the gift of God." (Eph.2:8)
     Aren't you glad we don't have to drum up faith on our own?  I'm so thankful faith is not one more area I need to work on, try harder, push farther in an endless attempt to bulk up my faith.  Not one more reason to strive and strive (which is truly the worst!).
     Nope, it's a gift from our relentlessly gift-giving Father.  Because He gives and gives and gives.  Our job is simply to receive with gratitude and give Him all the glory for whatever He sovereignly chooses to place in our hands or chooses to remove from them.  It's the removal part I tend to struggle with, but that's where faith comes in--does not He who created each of us and loves us infinitely know what is ultimately best in any and every circumstance?  
     So Father, keep us thankful.  Keep us focused upon You, our gracious Gift-giver and not upon the gifts.  Sure, help us daily to notice and then rejoice in each and every gift  You shower upon us.  But then transform our gratitude into worship of the One who gives and takes away all--ALL--out of His redemptive, grace-saturated, endless love for us.
     Just this morning, I'm praising Him for the butterfly bushes blooming just off our porch.  O my.  Every big, splashy bush swarming, alive with butterflies.  A picture cannot begin to do it justice, but still it's worth a try!
     Nope not even close!  But believe me, these bushes tingles and pulse and are electric with masses and masses of flittering butterflies. Wow.
     Sometimes we're so preoccupied with what's being pulled from our grasp that we fail to open our eyes to all that God showers upon us in it's place.  Yesterday, I kept looking at the empty couch on the porch--Moses' favorite resting spot when he sat our here with us--and I cried more tears.  But in my sadness I nearly missed God's glorious butterfly-explosion happening all over our yard!  What on earth!  Open your eyes, old girl, and witness the glory and goodness of the Lord that surrounds you--family both up here and at home, God's creation, ears to hear the symphony of birds, eyes to view the astounding beauty of greens and purples and yellows and blues all around us, friends (O the joys and consolation of friendship!), a good book, Linda's fabulous banana pudding... and on and on.
      Forgive me, Father, for sometimes being so focused upon myself that I miss You.  Thank You for giving gifts to us, Your children, even when we don't deserve them.  Let's face it--we all just love getting gifts!  Open our eyes, Lord, to see not just Your gifts, but to see You, our Gift-giver, in the midst of wherever we are and whatever we might be going through today.  Because You are there...always...and always giving gifts.
     To God be the glory.