Friday, December 09, 2011

Blessing


In reflecting on where David Platt has taken me on the journey through Radical, my thought-they-were-already-enlightened eyes have been opened. What is sticking with me is: "The key is realizing - and believing - that this world is not your home." (p179)

I feel this fact often, as I collide with the fallenness of this world. I live this fact often, as my own fallenness leaks out through my pores and into my actions (and inaction). Yet my survival instinct gains the upper hand, and I build my little nest, made of the comforts available to me. The Lord is my refuge, as Psalm 91 proclaims and He provides solace in the midst of the world's brokenness and blessings sweet enough to tantalize our imaginations of heaven - but to what end?. 

His blessings are to give us strength to live out our created purpose. Instead of huddling in bubbles of escape from the harm suffered by others, He gives us His boldness to go to people that convention has abandoned. Instead of words of violence in defense of institutions whose founder needs none, He gives us His Word of truth, grace, and hope to speak in a world devoid of each. Instead of grasping hands clinging to this world's fading comforts, He gives us His healing hands to extend into a deeply wounded world.

Lord of the universe and of my life, I surrender it once again - not that You might bless me, but that You might use me to bless this world that needs You more than anything.

Friday, December 02, 2011

Response


People today don't (maybe never did) like to receive pointed personal convictions. When we're told what to do or not to do, our natural (fallen) reaction is defiance. This holds true for the people in the church at large, for people in our church, and for me specifically.

For some of us (myself especially), it goes deeper than that. We like our consciences to be "pricked" - even need them to be in a "good sermon" - but follow up with nothing but intellectual assent and good intentions. Books like Radical, by David Platt are great reading for those like us - until we get to chapter 9, that is. It leaves us with the question, "What are we actually going to do about it?" If we've been intellectually assenting throughout the book, the appropriate response is unfortunately all too clear.

If we believe what we've read, if we believe what God reveals in his Word, we will respond - either by action or inaction. The cycle of revelation and response is all  throughout the scripture. It is the story of God working in the lives of his people. It is how God wants to work in us, in me. But in order for him to be able to work in us, to transform us into Christ-like-ness, we must respond. In action.

So what will our response be? What will my response be?

Friday, November 18, 2011

Who Do I Think I Am?

To be honest, I'm not at all comfortable with the idea that a person who does not trust in Jesus Christ as their Lord ends up in hell, regardless of whether they heard about him or not. But that's what he said. I say I believe in him. Do I really believe him? When he says things that make me uncomfortable?

Maybe the real problem is what leaves me comfortable. I'm pretty comfortable living as if those around me, even those I care for, don't really need to hear or be enlightened and transformed by this Truth called Jesus... like I do. I'm comfortable living as if they don't really need to be guided through life's questions, pitfalls, and quagmires by this Way called Jesus... like I do. I'm comfortable living as if they don't really need to be reborn, restored, and renewed into this Life called Jesus... like I do. Who do I think I am?

Lord, You have blessed me beyond my comprehension: you forgave me, you redeemed me, you healed me, you restored me, you gave me hope of new and eternal life. And I am blessed to be a blessing. Lord, please change my heart to love more like yours, my arms to reach out more like yours, and my feet to follow after yours.

Friday, November 11, 2011

How Can I Help?

The problems of poverty, sickness, and injustice present a brokenness that is overwhelmingly widespread, intricately interwoven, and hopelessly complex. If and when we get a glimpse of the whole picture, it's very difficult for us to get ourselves out of the shock-induced paralysis that results, and out of the apathy of learned helplessness.

Maybe we should reconsider how God probably sees these problems. His omniscience is fully aware of the whole picture all of the time, but I suspect he approaches it differently.

First, God takes it personally. He sees not only the mass of billions barely getting by, but also counts the hairs on the head of each forgotten child. In today's culture of global communication, it is easier than ever to get involved an assistance programs at a personal level, whether it involves local service or the support of a special child around the world.

Second, God addresses it locally. God's plan to change the world started with 12 disciples making a different where they were, growing churches that were spread wide, but deeply rooted in their communities. Again, we have unprecedented opportunities today to partner with organizations that have a long-term, sustainable presence in the communities that they serve - whether they're down the street or in another hemisphere.

Third, I think God changes from the inside out. God sacrificed himself, so that we could be reconciled to Him - but that's only the beginning of the story of restoration and transformation that he wants to write on our lives. The rest depends on our own willingness to surrender our own misguided ways and follow His with hope and perseverance. In the same way, we should aid in ways that enable, give hope, and build up others to be deeply involved in their own restoration.

Thursday, November 03, 2011

Giving All You've Got

One of the struggles in stewardship (maybe the biggest hurdle for most) is that it so often seems like an all-or-nothing proposition. Frankly, that situation is even exacerbated by a superficial reading of the story of the rich young man in Mark 10:17-31. A superficial reading would naturally lead us to conclude that unless we live the life of a possession-less missionary, we're not true followers of Christ. And that's a downer that is pretty difficult to get over.

It was only studying this passage just recently that I think I might be starting to get Jesus' point - and it's right in the middle, trying to get our full attention: “With man this is impossible, but not with God; all things are possible with God.” Whether its wealth, or possessions, or family (I'm reading God's command of Abraham to sacrifice Isaac in Genesis 22:1-18 differently now), or land that we're holding on to for our security, we're doomed. God want us to cling to and put our full faith in Him, the source of anything we could possibly need, not the blessings that He so richly gives us and the rest of the world.

God isn't asking us to give up what we need in order to be utterly barren. God is asking us to let go of what we think we need in order that He can fully bless us (to be a blessing) through our faith in Him.

In light of all this, the question I'm pondering is: "What am I holding onto that might be getting in God's way?"

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Stuck On Myself

One thought that has stayed with me through the years is the idea that pride is not always self-elevating. My struggle is with the self-deprecating variety. It is most often evident in how I spend my time in prayer - I'm most often focused on myself: my brokenness, my need for God's transformation in my heart, my need to get my faith out of my head & mind and into my feet, hands, and mouth. These are good things. But all too often, I get no farther. I get "stuck" on myself.

This variety of pride doesn't really believe in God's all-surpassing sufficiency - in my life and in the world around me. This pride doesn't really believe in God's purpose and faithfulness to work in me as I move my life out of its comfortable box and in the direction of his nudging. This pride doesn't really believe that God's power is made perfect (and his glory shown) in my weakness, and that given history, I should expect his provision for me to do his work only after I get moving in his direction.

It's only in that posture of utter dependence that I should expect God to be able to fully bless me, and only for the purpose of being a blessing to others.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

This (Super-)Natural Universe

In thinking about my absolute dependency on God's power, I often focus God as Creator. His power can be made very evident in relationships and in minor and major miracles, but our daily lives are much more affected by the world we live in. While among us we'll probably disagree about the exact mechanics of *how* God created it, bible-believing Christians all agree that he is the Source and Sustainer of this universe we inhabit. And in my better moments, I marvel at the almost literally incredible wonder of it; the natural seems to me supernatural.

I am physically a bundle of 64 billion billion billion sub-atomic particles, spinning around each other, bonding in groups, very precisely arranged, in such a way as to make a living breathing being that can move, think, dream, and act as a vessel of that intangible, immortal, supernatural thing we call a soul. Incredible.

Thursday, October 06, 2011

Power

I don't know about you, but I don't want to come to the end of myself. The idea flies in the face of all conventional wisdom, and against every fiber of my self-protecting and loved-one-protecting nature. Yet, as David Platt puts it: "This is how God works. He puts his people in positions where they are desperate for his power, and then he shows his provision in says that display his greatness." He used God's defeat of Jericho through Joshua as a reference, and he didn't even mention the top-notch military training program God used a preparation: circumcision. Yeah, that sounds like great preparation for an attack on the enemy. God's ways are certainly not our ways - his power loves those who hate and dies to live.

Which leads me to question: Do I really want more of God's power in my life?

Or do I just want God to give me more power?

Friday, September 30, 2011

Surrendering to God



I have a very hard time with surrender. Though I disdain the typical DisneyLand presentation of Christianity (get in line, bow your head, pray after me, and punch your ticket to happily-ever-after), I struggle to translate the idea of self-abandonment to Christ-centered life into my words, will, and actions. I know that part of the problem is my small view of God. I don't realize just how words-can't-describe his love, grace, truth, and justice actually are. And if I have a small view of the object of my faith, how life-forming, adversity-overcoming, and sustainable can my faith really be?

The true gospel is both a revelation of God's character (*very* good news), and a revelation of our utter need for him (whether acknowledged or not). As I continue to learn how amazing God is, surrender seems to me the only reasonable response. And for us Americans, the nuts and bolts of our surrender is in relying on God's power instead of our own. Here are two ways that come to my mind:

1. I need to have eyes to see the many blessings in every moment, every breath, every person, and every landscape created and sustained by the Creator of the universe. It is through God's power in me and all around me that I live, not of my own design.

2. I need to allow myself to be led into situations where my power is inadequate. How many times have I felt that faint hint of a prompting and instead I brushed it off as uncomfortable, inconvenient, or unimportant? I can think of three instances in my last month.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Grandma Psalm




A phone call can change everything...

Tears jump to my eyes as I hear a dear one share news that my last living grandmother suffered a major stroke this morning during her Bible Study group.

I don't even know why I'm upset; I've never lived with her, never shared more than occasional visits with her. My parents moved away before I was born and my life is separate from hers. And Yet...

She is part of me. She is one of the reasons I am here at all.
She was faithful to her Father God when most of her loved ones turned away. She persevered.
She pressed on, passed on her faith. Her daughter continued on that journey with her. And Then...

Her daughter birthed a daughter, far away from the house she grew up in, far away from the heat and the familiarity of Home...and made a New Home with the same center: Jesus.

I know the gift of this Faith Legacy. I know how important it is to watch others work out their salvation; it builds a strong foundation unawares until it's rocked by unexpected storms and holds fast.

I know this Life is fleeting. I know she is drawing nearer to her Father each day. And it still hits hard...

I know she will soon be Free, but waves of shock and sadness wash over because she was not made to go through this Death. She was made to soar - and she will soon enough.

Again, I see the threads of God's handiwork. Before I knew this news, I read Psalm 90 this morning.


 1 Lord, you have been our dwelling place
   throughout all generations.
2 Before the mountains were born
   or you brought forth the whole world,
   from everlasting to everlasting you are God.
 3 You turn people back to dust,
   saying, “Return to dust, you mortals.”
4 A thousand years in your sight
   are like a day that has just gone by,
   or like a watch in the night.
5 Yet you sweep people away in the sleep of death—
   they are like the new grass of the morning:
6 In the morning it springs up new,
   but by evening it is dry and withered. ...

9 All our days pass away under your wrath;
   we finish our years with a moan.
10 Our days may come to seventy years,
   or eighty, if our strength endures;
yet the best of them are but trouble and sorrow,
   for they quickly pass, and we fly away. ...

12 Teach us to number our days,
   that we may gain a heart of wisdom. ...

14 Satisfy us in the morning with your unfailing love,
   that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days. ...


I haven't taken the time to say, Thank You, Grandma; but, I am so grateful for You.

Untether her, Lord, from bondage to a broken, deteriorating body. Fly away, Beloved Dorothy.
I look toward the day when I will sing praises to Our Lord with you.


Friday, August 26, 2011

Frederick Buechner on Love

"The love for equals is a human thing - of friend for friend, brother for brother. It is to love what is loving and lovely. The world smiles. The love for the less fortunate is a beautiful thing - the love for those who suffer, for those who are poor, the sick, the failures, the unlovely. This is compassion, and it touches the heart of the world. The love for the more fortunate is a rare thing - to love those who succeed where we fail, to rejoice without envy with those who rejoice, the love of the poor for the rich, of the black man for the white man. The world is always bewildered by its saints. And then there is the love for the enemy - love for the one who does not love you but mocks, threatens, and inflicts pain. The tortured's love for the torturer. This is God's love. It conquers the world."

Quoted in Francis Chan's Crazy Love

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

The Truth of the Incarnation: Sexuality

It is precisely the men and women who are dedicated to spiritual leadership who are easily subject to very raw carnality. The reason for this is that they do not know how to live the truth of the Incarnation” (Nouwen, In the Name of Jesus)



As a woman who struggles with several aspects of my sexuality, I had to ask:
What is the truth of the Incarnation? How would I live it?

Again, my women's bible study teacher shared this list in her lesson: by John MacArthur, based on Philippians 2: 5-11. By taking on flesh, Jesus:
      1. abandoned sovereign position
      2. became a servant (of God & His will)
      3. became fully human and approached sinful people
      4. adopted a completely selfless posture
      5. ascended as Supreme Prince
This is a list of what I came up with, responding to: How does one live that?
      1. We do not have a sovereign position to abandon. However, because of Messiah's work on the Cross and our acceptance of His covering, we are now co-heirs with Him. We do have a place in His Kingdom. Therefore, we are instructed to bring others into the Kingdom also, not just to revel in our position.
      2. As God's children, we recognize Him as Father, the Guide of our lives. Focus on Serving God, performing His will. Often that will include serving others, but they are not our focus, or boss. We must follow Messiah. Sometimes that will include walking alone with only Him for company.
      3. We cannot hide our humanness, sins, weaknesses, failings. We must find one with whom to be vulnerable, confess, and receive forgiveness from. Let someone be Jesus to you.
          1. We must practice 'No condemnation' toward others. Work to accept, instead of judge, them. Sin is sin to God. There is no hierarchy.
          2. Embrace your humanness (not the sinful nature or flesh, but the fact that you are a creation of the Living God). Lean on the Scriptures that speak of God's love for you and all people, His knowledge of your needs, and His desire to meet them, like a loving parent.
      1. JC left complete Independence and received Dependence. Follow Him. Become Dependent on Him and others in the community of believers. We were created for relationship. Part of relationship is putting yourself aside to help others get ahead (Phi. 2, MSG). JC not only chose to become human, he chose (every moment) to remain human. He could have gone back at any time. Yet, his focus was on the eternal prize – us (Hebrews 12).
      2. Because we believe Him, we will be raised up with Messiah. Because we share in His sufferings, we will also share in His glory (1 Pet. 5:1, Phil.3:10-11, Rom.8:17, 30, 2 Thes. 2:14).
It seems cruel to have to deny ourselves. Yet, so much of what we want is not the Best for us. It may be Good, but it's not the Best. Or, it may not be so good. [How can I really know? I'm not omniscient.] If I believe that God created me as I am, every detail, for a purpose, then I'm justified in being mad about the parts that conflict with His Word and instruction. However, if I believe that He created me but, for now, I am imperfect because I am bound to this fallen world, God wiggles off the hook; He's not the creator of my sinful desires. I have needs. And God knows I do (Mt. 6:8). But, He also said that He is more than enough to meet all my needs (2 Cor. 12:9). Do I believe it? Do I live it?

It's especially easy to become embittered about sexual needs (real and perceived). God has guidelines for a life that will please Him. If we love someone, we strive to please them. When we shift our focus from them to us, we are more likely to act unlovingly. Today's culture resonates our sinful nature, whipping up the idea that we must be gratified right now: I cannot wait. But God encourages patience in everything.

Isa. 30:18
Yet the LORD longs to be gracious to you;
he rises to show you compassion.
For the LORD is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait on him!”

Waiting is not something we like to do. It is hard. It feels pointless. We don't understand why the waiting is necessary. I can see now that if I had married any of the guys I dated before Bryce, it would have been disastrous. I did not know what I wanted, what I needed, or even who I was or wanted to become. After meeting Bryce, I got a clearer picture of the best woman I could be. [Hindsight is a lot closer to God's sight.] He was the first guy who was serious about his faith and who tried to live it, even if it meant putting me off temporarily.

Tit. 2:11-14
For the grace of God that brings salvation has appeared to all men.
12It teaches us to say 'No' to ungodliness and worldly passions,
and to live self-controlled, upright and godly lives in this present age,
13while we wait for the blessed hope – the glorious appearing
of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ,
14who gave himself for us to redeem us
from all wickedness and to purify for himself
a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good.”

He is coming back! Let us eagerly await Him, doing Good in His Name until that day.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Worthy of the Call: Confession

In my women's Bible Study, we are chugging through the book of Philippians. One of the study books, Living the Letters: Philippians, collects excerpts from various books and asks questions to draw out the main point of the text and newly illuminate its topics. This is an excerpt from In the Name of Jesus by Henri Nouwen, for Philippians 2: 1-8 on the topic of 'One Another.'


“The sacrament of Confession has often become a way to keep our own vulnerability hidden from our community ... How can priests or ministers feel really loved and cared for when they have to hide their own sins and failings from the people to whom they minister and run off to a distant stranger to receive a little comfort and consolation? How can people truly care for their shepherds and keep them faithful to their sacred task when they do not know them and so cannot deeply love them? … It is precisely the men and women who are dedicated to spiritual leadership who are easily subject to very raw carnality. The reason for this is that they do not know how to live the truth of the Incarnation.”

Mr. Nouwen's work is always challenging for me read. I wish the I could read context of this excerpt. What are the passages that surround it? How does he recommend resolving the issues he raises?

He takes no time in raising two central issues to the Christian life: Confession and Sexuality. I will divide my thoughts between two posts. [One of the most challenging things about blogging is to condense volumes into one digestible kernel of Truth. These posts will represent only where I am in wrestling with these life-long topics at this very moment. My views are subject to change, if God wills.]

It is very interesting that those who focus on spiritual leadership “do not know how to live the Truth of the Incarnation” and so are “easily subject to very raw carnality.” It rings true. How many pastors and prominent evangelists have fallen to adulterous behaviors? So many that I practically expect it. It seems only a matter of time before another scandal arises – and that is truly sad.

We must pray for and hold our leaders accountable, all the while remembering they are human, too. We must not be tempted to hold them to a higher account than we are willing to submit to ourselves. Clearly we must stop this double-standard pattern and lift our leaders up to the Only Perfect One. We must trust that He is always at work, crafting each of us into a more perfect and new creation. We must allow our leaders to be human, to be real, to struggle, to come to us for help and prayer. Confession is not a popular topic. It is an even less popular practice. But it is essential if the Body of Christ is to function well. The Apostle Paul challenges us in his letter to the Ephesians:

I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received.
2Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love.
3Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace” (4:1-3).

I heard a gifted teacher, Karen Kutz, last Autumn (2010) illuminate this idea. Living a life 'worthy of our calling' is to remember how impossible the calling is, but how amazing that God gives us the ability, in small steps as we follow Him, to start fulfilling that calling. She reminded me how easy it is for anyone to slip down the slope: anyone could be a monster. The only thing that keeps me from it is God's Grace. In humility, we should hold onto that knowledge – God's Grace is the only rescue, the only redemption. And when we choose to follow Christ, to accept the Father's adoption (Eph. 1:5), we must extend the Grace we hold onto out to others, especially our brothers and sisters in Christ, especially our spiritual leaders. Let us not fall for the Lie that some sins are worse than others. [That is another post.]

Yes, we must challenge leaders, ourselves, and everyone, to strive for excellence, but we need to come down more often on the side of Grace rather than Judgment. “For it is by Grace you have been saved...it is a gift from God” (Eph. 2:8-9). We must Practice Grace, leaving the rest to God.

Bryce's Faith Story

I'm finally ready to share the story of my faith as it has wound through my life. I'm going to warn you all up front: it's not pretty. If you don't want to hear me talk about ugliness that most everyone experiences in life, and my struggles with it, then you may not want to click through to the story. I assure you that I'm not sharing anything here that I'm unwilling to discuss with anyone in person.

So without further ado, my story:

Thursday, April 07, 2011

Divine Intervention


The LORD orchestrates my days.

Although it would be easy to discount schedule changes as random, I choose to give God the credit. Before hurtful words were spoken, sending me into an emotional tail-spin, God moved a ministry appointment for me. He cleared my away-from-home tasks and granted me time to heal, to find new perspective, time to Breathe.

When it comes to language and relationship, I am quite literal. I mean what I say and say what I mean. [Of course, I  joke around, but I work to make my insincerity abundantly clear.] I hold fast to the idea that words are powerful, although limited, and I press myself to speak truth at all times. I plumb the depths of my motives, my knowledge, my perspective. I search for words that are clear, precise. [I wish that others would be as careful.]

When new relationships are ambiguous or slow to sink into a solid foundation, building trust is a big challenge for me. If others don't use language to be clear about their thoughts and feelings, how can I know, without a doubt, what they think and feel? [I don't try to be a straight-faced sour-puss all the time; but when forming a new relationship, I need to know the parameters, the boundaries, the truth. From this base I find my equilibrium, my balance in new territory.]

What bothered me most was feeling like I didn't fit in, didn't meet expectations. I felt singled-out, my weakness exposed in screaming yellow, seen as a Fool in front of strangers. But, I most feared being found insufficient in front of my husband – the one person I deeply long to be treasured by. [One of the most amazing things about LOVE is that it Covers – weaknesses, blemishes, imperfections, immaturity. LOVE says, 'I see those things, but I see Beyond them, too. I see the Real you, but also your Grand Potential.'] I feared that he would believe what another woman suggested about me – even if she barely knows me. [I need to trust in him and his love, trust that his knowledge of me is strong enough to withstand petty attacks.]

So I ran, protected myself with quietness. But I worried that her seeds of doubt may take root in my darling's heart. I cast about all day, hugging my accomplishments and abilities to my chest in desperate flailing to be found worthwhile, worthy of love, to salve my wounds. I waited for time to pass, heal. I risked reaching for reassurance. [I am so thankful that I can ask 'stupid' questions of my Lover and he can laugh my fears away, erasing anxiety, pushing those seeds out of my heart dirt and over the rocks where they will dry and die.]

Today, I am more able, willing, to minister to another because my heart is reset, replenished. Yesterday, I thirsted for clear refreshment, for pure love, for being treasured. Today, I am more secure. Thank you, Bryce. Thank you, Jesus.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

A Thankful Heart

"Don't fritter away precious moments by dwelling on hardships - 
moments that become spoiled, spent, or sullied. 
Instead GIVE THANKS in all things,
as that is the will of God. 
Go back over the last few days and think of the things that have happened in your life,
thanking God for them"  (Amish Peace)


1 hearing stories of healing done in Community, by God
2 husband hazel eyes seeing me with Compassion
3 application ready for signing, sending
4 hot showers, hot teas
5 pea and radish seeds sprouting
6 rain that soaks the ground, making weeds easier to pull up
7 crunchy peanut butter, sweet and filling
8 homemade tomato sauce with pasta and squeaky green beans
9 dog cuddled in fleece
10 women who accept me, learning who I am slowly
11 music of Truth, singing along
12 breaks in the rain, riding home
13 money for compost, garden
14 prayers of others that lift me
15 praying for others to lift them
16 public radio stories
17 condo showings
18 knitting 
19 fresh yogurt
20 easy Orientation quiz, allowing me to skip a 4-hour class
21 new herb starts, happy pots full
22 laughter-filled emails
23 finishing a book, 5 more waiting for its place
24 poetry
25 someone else paying the plumber, sink fixed
26 free nights with Beloved
27 check marks on my list
28 dripping forest, freshening the air
29 working body, enabling me to do so many things
30 forgiveness, help, grace, love

Thursday, March 24, 2011

RRS Faith Story

I grew up with Jesus in my house. My father was in his sixth year as an American Baptist Minister when I was born, 1979. We lived in a small farming town in south-central Idaho, Castleford. My parents were providing for three foster boys at the time of my arrival, so the house was full. To see the pictures and slides from that time, you wouldn't suspect how much Dad was working or the stress my mother felt with a houseful of prepubescent boys and a new infant. That craziness only lasted a short time though. The boys' mother came back for them and we moved on to another church home.


I started school and learned how to read. When my parents told me I would have a sibling, I prayed for a baby sister instead of a brother. (One of my friends had a younger brother and he was always doing annoying 'boy' things.) Early in the morning, November 1, 1985, my sister was born. I rejoiced that she shared my gender.


After another move, I made my first best friend, received a 10-speed bike to ride to 3rd grade classes, and memorized the books of the Bible in order at VBS. Mr. Robinson was my first male teacher; he was kind and a very good listener. I remember reading the gospels of John and Matthew with Dad before bed out of my first real Bible, the Good News version with a shepherd on the cover. My parents were so proud when I recited the Bible books in order. I still use this knowledge every time a pastor says, 'turn to the Book of....'Those times set the stage for my love of Scripture and my attitude of looking to God for guidance and comfort.


Mom was always singing and teaching us praise songs, the words and promises from Scripture etching on my heart. To this day, I cannot help but sing those portions that I learned first in songs.


Fourteen months after we started pastoring that church, we were asked to leave. Some very powerful church lay leaders had been communicating all along with a different pastor. He wasn't available when the position opened up, so they accepted my family, but never mentioned that the assignment was temporary in their minds. My father was devastated by the betrayal. It was a large, but final straw – we left the pastorate.


Just before we moved, I asked to be baptized. We talked about it at home and the next time Dad gave an altar call, I went.  Recently, I heard that my parents hadn't decided whether it was the right place for me to show my step of Faith and were surprised that I came forward. But, I think it was God – He knew I would need that seed of Faith for the coming years. If I had not been baptized, years would pass before I had another opportunity. [If I had not been baptized, the turbulent years ahead would circumvent other opportunities. ]


We moved to Washington State, where my parents' first pastorate had been. My mother found a Presbyterian Church close to our home and we started attending, but Dad only came once in awhile for several years after his traumatic exit from ministry.


The next two years were some of my life's hardest. My Dad was shaken to his core and at his weakest when his junior-high girlfriend sauntered back into his life. We were still unpacking the moving van when she waltzed up the driveway and created havoc. Two years later, we started putting life back together. Mom clung to her hope in God, knowing and asserting that God would take care of us. Her ardency embedded seeds of Faith in me and I leaned on my Heavenly Father, the most Faithful One. (God brought great fruit from those hard time and my family's choices; my faith would not be where it is without those painful experiences. Not every wound is healed, but I pray we will continue on the healing path.)

Junior-high and the beginning of high school were traumatic for me in all the normal ways. I continued to attend the youth group at Cascade Presbyterian Church, helping at events, joining the choir, and aiding at summer camps. Although the friendships were not deep, they were constant and predictable. I needed that. I could live with the steady, low-grade animosity from the girls; I got along pretty well with the boys because of my athleticism.

Sophomore year of high school, a friend and I started attending a Bible club after classes where I met the core group of friends I would have until graduation. I experienced another burst of insatiable thirst for God's Word and received my 'adult,' leather-bound Study bible for my 16th birthday.


Some churches are really good at what they do, but eventually you can out grow them. We changed churches again and I was finally ready to move on from the Presbyterian youth group. My relationship with Christ grew steadily but not fast. My academics, music, and sports commitments, as well as my first serious relationship, consumed a lot of my time.


That relationship lasted over two years of high school, although it ceased to be healthy long before that milestone. His insecurities and stubbornness pushed me deeper into myself but also underscored my uncertainty of who I really was becoming. He accused me of being wishy-washy, but he didn't realized that we fought every time I expressed an opinion different than his. I was going with the flow because it was easier at that point. Fortunately, he and the group we spent time with professed Christ, so we didn't get into much real trouble. However, it took me several relationships throughout college to figure out who I was, what I wanted to become. The damage was emotional. Thank God that my family laid the foundations for honesty and intimacy early on. My parents placed a high priority on talking about anything and everything, even if it was uncomfortable. I know that is a rare gift in families and think that it's an important trait to carry forward in my own family.


I continued in the same vein of busyness – college, sports, working on campus. College was a hard time for me – my family changed churches again, in search of a smaller youth group for my teenage sister. I attended with them, but also got wrapped up in the desire to find some independence by moving out and closer to the University. I made some friends, but not any that stuck beyond classroom chat. I started dating a guy from work who was raised Catholic. We spent a lot of time together, but after a year, I was ready to move on again. I think I was more ambitious than he was and certainly more interested in growing spiritually and mentally. He indulged me by going to church, but his faith was juvenile and I needed another growth spurt.


In September 2001, I quit my administrative job to focus on my fifth and final year at college. I transferred to the university, lost credits, fumbled around for a major, finally decided on Geography/GIS and was getting into the swing of it. In November, I took a 12hour-each-way road trip with some high school buddies and their roommates. Through circumstances, I rode in a car with the two guys I didn't know. By the time we returned to Seattle four days later, I'd made two close friends, one of which would become my husband 14 months later.


Bryce attended a small church not far from his house and I eagerly went with him. I met several other college girls right off and started meeting with the college group. Finally, another place where I could be fed by good teaching and good fellowship. Although not everything was smooth-sailing, the next year, I graduated and planned the wedding. A new women's Bible Study started on Monday evenings and life was sweet.


We got married in January 2003, busy at church groups 3-4 nights per week and on the music team most Sundays. We were challenged spiritually and pursued practical applications for what we learned.


In May 2004, we purchased a condo inbetween church and Bryce's office. Gradually, the college group members graduated, moved away, got married, and stopped meeting regularly. A few of us remained, but the other groups at church were established and we didn't have an easy place to transition into. Worship pastors turned over a few time and for all the Senior Pastor's pomp about raising up new leaders, we did not get the leadership training we asked for. We eventually left that dying church. It took us six months to land at a larger-than-desired new community, but the teaching was exceptional and we found a small group that is still part of our lives four years later.


BCC exploded in attendance. We got involved with the music team again, but after 18 months, the group never developed cohesiveness. In the spring, the decision was made for us that we would leave the team – another church wound. Just one of these two very hurtful rubs with church leadership could have convinced some to never come back to the Church. And they darkened my hope and countenance for awhile...but God is a Healer and He is the reason I go back. When His people witness to His mighty acts of compassion and provision in their lives, nothing else is so encouraging to my spirit. I believe deeply that we are made for Relationship with God and with others. I adopt that belief so deeply that I continue to go to church. I have left those hurtful communities, but after another year of searching, we finally found a church home that seems to be growing in the paths God has led us in over the last five years – social justice, compassion, enjoying the moments/details/diversity of life, pursuing Him and others, blessing others with the blessings God has given us.


Since my married life began, I have walked with God in more regular intimacy, finding that writing prayers in journals focuses my heart and gives me tangible evidence of His answers and fingerprints. I started volunteering with a hunger relief organization on a weekly basis in 2007 and continue to go regularly (as of 2011). In addition to a new Bible Study group and two small groups (from different churches), I continue to be a Stephen Minister, since 2008.


Stephen Ministry is the best way God uses me right now. In two years, I have been privileged to come alongside two women, walking with them through deep times of loss, grief, and fear. Many times I was speechless at the heartache they endured and could only pray that they would be sensitive to the Father's presence and great love for them, trusting that His healing would come. And it was amazing to watch its relentless approach.


Along with Stephen Ministry, another deep influence on my spiritual life has been one girlfriend. We have met almost every week for over six years now. We share everything and have experienced highs and lows with each other, other relationships, and with God. We remind each other of the hope we share in Christ and process through the joys and sorrows of this life, struggling to keep an eternal perspective, and encouraging each other. I'm so thankful for such a sister in Christ. I know my growth would have been slower and tougher without her.


Finally, I come to where I am now. Several ideas combined in my mind to bring adoption to the fore-front. First of all, adoption allows me to evade pregnancy. I am deeply afraid of the physical changes pregnancy, and its aftermath, ensue. My genetics predispose me to a food addiction and diabetes and I keep myself on a short-leash. Gaining weight and not being able to lose it is terrifying. It is much easier for me to maintain, to stay where I am, to resist the uncertainty of change. God has used my husband to heal parts of my flawed body-image, but I am still very much a work in progress. Only recently have I come to a marginal acceptance of a possible pregnancy. I am worried that by the time I'm ready, it might be too late physically.


Second, God embedded His adoption of me into His family down in my spirit's core. He made a way, although deeply painful, to be with me. I wonder why Love always has to involve such pain. But that is what makes it Amazing and awe-inspiring. I believe that He calls every Christ-follower to walk in His steps. Adopting others into the family, treating neighbors as yourself, doing justly by the foreigner – these are all characteristics of God and His calling for His people. If I am to model Christ in compassion and mercy, it makes sense to also follow Him in bestowing grace (something undeserved) onto another. My husband and I both sense that direction for us. Our unity brings increasing certainty of the path.


Thirdly, my family-in-law already includes an nontraditional mix of parentage and marriages. I feel that those children are loved deeply regardless of whether the both biological parents are in the picture or not. My parents-in-law do an excellent job deliberately loving all their grandchildren.


Finally, my spiritual gifting of Compassion brings: sensitivity to the lost, the needy, the broken. My life with God, and Scripture, teaches me that He is the champion of the weak and the vulnerable. Although I cannot save the world, He has and is faithful to work out His salvation. This calling of adopting a child is easier to grasp than pregnancy, but scarier also. It is way too big for me and my husband. We are keenly aware that we cannot do it alone. It's easy to think that biological parenting is all up to you as the parents. It's easy to put all the pressure on yourself; it's your fault and you have to pay the consequences (the hard work of parenting) now. But adoption is a choice – a crazy choice. And I am not a crazy person, except when I think of how crazy-in-love with me God is. And then I get a little more courageous.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

First Response

A group I'm in is struggling through a book, Amish Peace, by Suzanne Woods Fisher. Although there are some 'simple wisdom[s] for a complicated world,' my critical-thinking group has tired of its oversimplification.  However, today, starting the section on Forgiveness, I stumbled on some meat.

The first few chapters tell stories of unfortunate and, some, avoidable tragedies: the West Nickel Mines School shooting in October 2006 and various car v. buggy crashes. The Amish response to these tragedies was opening their arms, accepting all of those who were touched by it, not retreating into themselves or their community. How challenging.

My first response to hurt is to withdraw because of the pain, which may hold the one who hurt me hostage – especially if I never explicitly forgive her. Perhaps the Amish community-oriented lifestyle allows them to reach out because they live in a supported/secure environment. They never doubt the existence of a loving God (p. 153). [That's different.]

Talking with a friend yesterday, I reasserted my belief that we must allow the emotions of Grief to flow out – or else they will stay wedged in our hearts for too long, becoming toxic. Anger, frustration, and sadness can plant seeds of Doubt in the heart. Doubt in the existence of a loving God, doubt in His Truth and provision, doubt in our acceptance/adoption/inheritance as His beloved children.

All that I staunchly believe. But, I know that everyone grieves differently. I know that we are not trained in how to grieve. Our society does not want to acknowledge Grief as a part of Life, and so it ignores it as long, and as much, as it can. So, we must learn how to grieve while we are in grief, which extends the process.

“We just have to keep going on with life” (p. 154). True. Reality will not change, no matter how much we wish it would. Moving on is necessary. But I think moving on in a healthy way requires letting go of those emotions, which means working through them.

The Expectations I put on life are some of the toughest things to let go. I want to believe that I won't experience tragedy. [The reality is that I will.] I want to believe that my needs will be met. [The reality is that I am already Needy.] I want to believe that life will be smooth-sailing. [The reality is that rough seas are ahead.] I must hold to God as my Rock in the calm and in the storm. The whole Testament pounds the reality of His Faithful Pursuit into my heart. Every time Israel failed, God took them back. Every time I fail, He is waiting. Taking all my emotions to my Father helps me struggle through what I feel, what I don't understand, what I don't like.

Do I hold onto the belief that out of tragedy will come blessing? (p. 157).

[Do I Trust Him that much?]



Friday, March 04, 2011

Brunch Bites: Savory Muffin Review

Borrowing a friend's favorite cooking magazine, I had to try this muffin recipe. It was one of the Runners-up in the 2008 contest.

I always make some sort of brunch item for Saturdays and was intrigued by the author's assertion: “These muffins make a meal on their own.” And they are very good, although a bit too greasy [must be the sausage, duh!]. They stored well, and I loved the chewy, hearty texture enhanced by the pepper and onion. One could easily add ¼ c shredded carrot, too.

Country Sausage and Cheddar Muffins
original recipe by: Pamela Shank, WV
Makes 12 Muffins

8oz bulk sausage meat
2 c all-purpose flour
3 Tbsp sugar
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
[1 tsp salt]
[6 Tbps butter, cut to 1/2-inch pieces]
8oz cheddar cheese, cut to 1/2-inch pieces
½ red bell pepper, seeded, finely chopped
½ onion, finely chopped
1 lg egg
¾ c buttermilk

  1. Adjust oven rack to middle position and heat oven to 375 degrees. Grease and flour 12 muffin cups, or tin. Cook sausage over medium heat, breaking up until browned, about 5 minutes. Transfer to paper towel-lined plate and cool.
  2. Pulse flour, sugar, baking powder and soda, cheese, pepper, onion, and cooled sausage in food processor until mixture resembles coarse meal; transfer to bowl. Whisk egg and buttermilk in measuring cup; stir into flour mixture until combined.
  3. Spoon batter into muffin cups/tin and back until toothpick comes out clean, 20-25 minutes. Cool 5 minutes in cups/tin, then transfer to rack. Cool another 10 minutes, if you can wait.

Notes and Modifications:
The original recipe added 1 tsp salt and 6 Tbsp butter into the flour mixture in step 2. While I made the recipe to spec the first time [always a good idea to know where you're starting], Bryce and I wondered why additional fat was necessary when it's a sausage and cheese muffin. So...

  • I would increase the buttermilk another ¼ cup to account for the missing butter. The two main ingredients have enough fat already to moisten the dough. However, if it is too dry, you could incorporate 1 Tbsp olive oil at a time until the consistency is right.
  • I would omit the salt also because the sausage and cheese usually have enough on their own. I saw no need to put it in [less sodium in the diet is always better.]

I just picked up some dried apricots at the store today, so another Runner-up recipe is on tomorrow's menu: Choco-Apricot Muffins by Joyce Hart, MN. Yum!

A Tea Treat Review

Usually I follow recipes closely the first time. Call me pedantic, but I like to know where I'm starting before I let my creative streak run wild. Breads can be finicky and I more often hesitate when modifying their recipes than with general cooking. But, I knew these would work. They are small changes, but possibly cut the fat a bit without cutting the soft pound-cake consistency and flavor. And I got rave reviews, [good enough reason to share them here].

Lemon Tea Bread
original recipe by: America's Test Kitchen, Family Baking Book
[my modifications in brackets or notes at the end]
Makes: one 8-inch loaf

1 ¾ c all-purpose flour
½ tsp baking powder
[½ tsp baking soda]
½ tsp sea salt
8 Tbsp (1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
1 1/3 c sugar [red. By 1/3 c]
2 Tbsp fresh grated lemon zest
3 lg eggs [can sub just whites]
¼ c whole milk [½ c buttermilk instead]
2 tsp fresh lemon juice [increase to taste]

[Glaze (from: Better Homes & Gardens cookbook)
2 Tbsp lemon juice
1 Tbsp sugar
Raw sugar for sprinkling]

  1. Adjust oven rack to the middle position and heat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour a 8 1/2-inch by 4 1/2-inch loaf pan. [I used the standard size, 9-inch by 5-inch; the loaf only rises to half the height.]
  2. Whisk the flour, salt, baking powder and soda in a medium bowl. Beat the butter, sugar, and zest together in a large bowl on medium speed until light and fluffy, 3 – 6 minutes. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, until combined, about 30 seconds each. Beat in the flour mixture, milk and lemon juice until just combined, about 20 seconds (do not over mix).
  3. Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Bake until golden brown and a toothpick comes out with just a few crumbs attached, 65 – 75 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through baking.
  4. Let loaf cool in the pan, 10 minutes. [Brush glaze over the top. Sprinkle raw sugar on for slight crunch.] Turn out onto a wire rack and let cool one hour before serving.

Notes and modifications:
  • Use 3 egg whites instead of whole eggs – this is what I had on hand, leftover from another recipe.
  • Substitute buttermilk for whole milk. Increase to ½ c to compensate for substituting egg whites for whole.
  • Add ½ tsp baking soda to interact with the buttermilk.
  • Increase lemon juice to 4- 6 Tbsp, to taste. I only had 1 Tbsp of zest out of 2 lemons, so I increased the juice to compensate.
  • Cut sugar by 1/3 c because of sugary glaze and topping.

Like most quick breads, this loaf should freeze well, if it sticks around long enough to sneak into the freezer.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Pre-meditation

Two weeks ago, I found a new reason to clean. It started in the garage, next to the furnace. I blocked off a cabinet I knew led deeper into the house. Next, I found droppings behind the washing machine. I tore down cardboard boxes and taped them to the walls, cutting off possible access points. I cleared out, organized, moved dog food and rag piles, stacked items in another room.

Every morning I swept, swept, swept new droppings. Few, tiny, hard, black: I didn't mind too much. I descended into the subterranean area of the crawl-space to check for a nest. No luck – not that I would have known what to do if I had found something. They are in the space in-between the slab and a finished, two-stair platform that suspends the utilities bathroom. How did they get in there? When will they leave?

The visits decreased, no longer every night. I held hope they would disappear, find some other place to go. But it is snowing again and cold outside. Why would they leave? So, I went to the 'household cleaning' aisle this week. I found my options. I swayed from one foot to the other, trap or poison, trap or poison. [Thank God they were only tiny mice and not HUGE rats! Those traps would take my hand off.] At last, I couldn't bring myself to purchase one of those heinous hook-and-bar traps. I grabbed a box of poison. [Apart from garden pests, I have never plotted to kill anything. I'm even switching to non-toxic cleaning supplies. This is traumatic.]

Their visits were unreliable. I waited. Finally I put on gloves – you shouldn't even open the box without them - and put out the bait. The first night nothing. No bait missing. No droppings. I wondered if it would work at all. How much would they eat? But the next morning, I was shocked. The entire bait was gone; most of the droppings were in the paper box where the green pellets had been. They sure were tiny rodents. “Kills in as little as one feeding.” Should I put out another box? Yes. Two nights later, they ate that completely, too! It's just a waiting game now. Box Three is out for tonight. Do they have tummy aches?

Well, now I've killed knowingly. It's a new experience. Certainly I have been complicit in the ignorant killing my species makes a habit (another blog topic). But this is not a sin of ignorance. To plot demise, to put out bait, wait for death, wonder if I will find it [squish it] or if it will die underneath my floorboards...

I don't feel guilty – exactly. Here at the end of this post, I am waiting to name my feelings. Realistic and matter-of-fact. My abode not theirs. A desire to prevent actual damage that would cost.

How does this connect with my recent reading on non-violence? Is violence only violence when committed against another person? Certainly one can commit violence against nature. How does one deter pests, especially once they enter your sphere? Perhaps this jump is too big. Death is a part of Life, part of this Fallen World, my present Reality.

Wednesday, February 09, 2011

Plum-Yum!

Last night, I followed a new recipe: 'Braised Chicken with Prunes and Cream' by Rachael Ray (in Everyday with Rachael Ray, Feb 2011). [Thanks so much to my dear friend who gave me the magazine.]

Trying to describe the taste, Bryce and I could only make yummy noises;
                                                          words failed completely.
It was delectable, delicious,..................................................worthy of moaning.
It pairs flavors - prunes, vinegar, cream -
that aren't supposed to go together (at least the vinegar part).
                                              But, Oh! The final product is amazing!

Just in case you've been convinced to try it:

1/2 c dried pitted prunes (plums)
1/4 c sherry vinegar (I used red wine, since I didn't have this on hand)
1 tsp brown sugar
1 Tbsp oil
4 skin-on, bone-in chicken thighs, trimmed and patted dry
Salt and pepper
1 onion, sliced
1/2 c sliced mushrooms (I thought of this addition while I was eating)
2 c chicken broth
1/3 c heavy cream
splash of sherry (I added this for that great flavor)

I served with:
3 c cooked long-grain (brown Basmati) rice
steamed asparagus spears

*In small bowl, toss the prunes with the vinegar and sugar. Let marinate for at least 10 minutes.

*Meanwhile, season chicken with salt and pepper. In a large skillet or dutch oven, heat oil over med-high heat. Add the chicken and cook, turning once, until browned, about 8 minutes; transfer to plate.

*Discard all but 1 Tbsp of fat and lower heat to medium. Add onion and cook, stirring, until soft and golden, about 5 minutes. [Add mushrooms; saute 1 minute.] Add prune-vinegar mixture, stir, return chicken to pan. Add broth and simmer until the chicken is cooked through and the liquid is reduced by half, about 20 minutes. Stir in cream [and sherry].

*Plate and Enjoy! (Makes only enough for 4 meals unfortunately.)

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

A Plain & Simple Christmas Review

A few months ago, my small group picked up Amish Peace to learn tips for simplicity and community. Last month, I saw A Plain & Simple Christmas by Amy Clipston in the bookstore catalog and decided it would be a quick, easy read.  It was, but surprisingly, a few portions in particular hit my buttons.

I know it is hard to convey conviction and belief without sounding trite. In writing down my faith story this last month for my adoption application I have struggled to find an authentic voice. As deeply as I feel about Jesus as my Savior, reading about Him working in this world on paper sometimes leaves something to be desired. Three-dimensions do not (properly) translate into two-dimensions (without losing the depth).

In this novella, Ms. Clipston tells a heart-wrenching and heart-warming tale of a family experiencing loss of faith, betrayal, community, stubbornness, forgiveness, and reconciliation. While all those elements ring true to life experience, some dialog requires the reader to apply her own emotions for it to feel real. Faith often times sounds trite in plain words. The emotions and actions associated with  faith are what make the words powerful.

The characters in this book speak about God and seek to follow Him in truth, sometimes challenging others along the way, pushing them to grow. I love stories for their simplicity, but the reconciliation in this book happens too quickly and does not acknowledge the hard work of forgiveness. It does show contrite spirits and the choice to move toward others that have wronged you, but my experience shows the Road of Forgiveness is not a short path; it is a long journey. At points I even move away from forgiveness as I struggle to let go and move on. Perhaps a book with that kind of realism would not be fun to read. We like stories that are clean-cut and fulfilling. Life is neither. Therefore, this novella functions more as escape or distraction - fine - just call it like it is.

The marriages portrayed are one-dimensional and simplistic. The emotions and disagreements represented as each partner struggles through his/her personal perspectives are realistic. One marriage shows unselfish love and concern, but the other two are more set in their ways. While I believe women are more geared toward relationship, and in turn reconciliation, the portrayal of all three women being completely in the right and their husbands having to come over to their wives' perspectives is contrived. Rarely is it not a compromise in the middle.

Finally, one comment assigned from a husband to a wife elicited a strong response from me. "She squeezed his hand. 'You always seem to read my mind.' He lifted her hand to his lips and kissed it. 'That's my job, dear.'" This interaction underscores a fantasy that women tend toward. I need no help in hoping my husband will read my mind. However, it sets him up for failure and me for disappointment. Of all the imperfections in this simple book, this one I cannot let pass. I fully acknowledge that a realistic book would not be as fun to read; however, reinforcing fantasy in a book that portrays deep subjects like God, faith, and forgiveness has no business inserting wishful thinking.

It has good points: pursuing God even when it's hard, making peace, challenging the status quo. This novella is an easy read with a fulfilling resolution but does not show any of life's hard work. Perhaps I placed a higher expectation on it because of its inclusion of God, a subject I take seriously. I certainly didn't expect to have such a strong reaction to it...but expectations make all the difference.