Wednesday, July 17, 2013

A Simple Faith

Why in the crazy of life, and frantic schedules, do we lose the simplicity of faith?
We hold our heads high basking in our wisdom of big words and elaborate explanations. We lose the simple knowledge of faith from a child's heart.
 God is good is only a phrase at the beginning of our meal, losing the power. And Jesus loves me is a song we've heard one too many times. We're ready for more.
But God is good, and this is something that needs to be understood and held onto. Sometimes trying to make a child understand who God is, helps you see more clearly. We get blinded by the names we assign to God, and we fail to see who He really is. We tell the children he is mighty, and he created the stars and the universe. We tell them, he takes a dirty heart and washes it white as snow. We say that He has the power to bring fire to logs that are soaked, not flammable. We tell them of a man named Zaccheaus who longed to see Jesus, but he was already seen. We tell the story of a broken, sinful woman who was forgiven of her sins. But do we understand the AWEsome power in these stories? Do we realize that with one word, one thought, one breath, God really did create every light in the sky, every planet miles about our heads? Do we understand that Jesus stepped into our putrid, sinful world, and instead of being rightfully disgusted, he turned to us with eyes of compassion? Do we comprehend that after he offered this compassion, he allowed the men He came to save drive nails into his hands, and beat Him until his bones were showing, and there was barely any blood pulsing through his broken body? Do we understand that this blood was drained to make us clean forever? Do we get the fact that our God is so incredibly awesome and powerful that he sent fire from heaven to prove Him God? To prove to the people that He had revealed himself again and again that He was still God? That their worthless idols could care less about the sacrifices they offered? Do we realize that Jesus looked at a hungry, sinful man, hated and despised, and ate dinner with Him? He saw what the crowd didn't, He loved who the crowd loathed. He forgave the unforgivable. He saved the dead. Do we understand that Jesus knows everything about us, our darkest secrets, and still he offers us the Living Water to make us whole again?
I don't think we understand this. Because if we did, we would forever live in debt. We wouldn't struggle with jealousy. We wouldn't hopelessly try and figure out our 'calling,' because we would know that all we were ever meant to do was love as Jesus would. We would know that God's will for our life is to be a light in a very dark place. To shine so bright that people would know that we belong to Him. If we understood this, if we really wrapped our tiny brains around this endless truth, I think our world would be a far different place.
I caught a glimpse of that place in Cherokee, North Carolina, when these were the lessons we taught the kids, and God taught us that He is good in their response and their playful games, and that He is good when we feared the death of one we loved and too many tears fell one Thursday evening after service. God is good in our tears and in our joys. God is good in our love and in our failures. God is good, despite the brokenness of the homes and of the children of Cherokee. Because our God is a God who can move mountains, but instead He's moving the people in the Cherokee mountains. He's moving the mountains of hurt in their hearts, so they can feel his love. We serve an awesome God. We serve a good God. God taught me that He loves his children so much. So much more than I could ever love them, that separation is hard, but God loves them so much more and they are in His hands and I need not worry.
I wonder if I fully understood this truth if everyday would be filled with as much love and passion as a missions trip is. I wonder if we could bring back the unity that was shared, if we could pray together more often, if each face with came into contact with was just as special as the ones in North Carolina. I wonder if we took the advice of an old Cherokee man to heart, just how different we would be. He said "Sometimes the best prayer you can say is 'Thank you.' And mean it. Because we have the moments. We only have the moments." If we took advantage of each of those moments, our world might see so much more Jesus. I want to live with the simplicity of the message of God is good and Jesus loves me, and I want the world to taste and I want the world to see that He is good. All the time.

Friday, July 5, 2013

Restless

So restless. Because I do and never stop. So restless. Because when I stop my heart is still racing the speed of light. So restless. Because rest is just too hard. So restless. Because I want what I've done to be seen. I am restless until I rest in Him..;

Luke 10:28-42 "As Jesus and his disciples were on their way, he came to a village where a woman named Martha opened her home to him. She had a sister called Mary, who sat at the Lord's feet listening to what he said. But Martha was distracted by all the preparations that had to be made. She came to him and asked, "Lord, don't you care that my sister has left me to do the work by myself? Tell her to help me!"
"Martha, Martha," the Lord answered, "you are worried and upset about many things, but only one thing is needed. Mary has chosen what is better, and it will not be taken away from her."

Mary has chosen what is better. Mary has chosen rest. Mary has chosen to bask in the wisdom, in the love, in the presence of God himself. Mary has chosen grace. I want to be Mary.
But I run so much, I love the feel of the wind on my face as I constantly do. I work so hard, I build such a facade, I wear such a stiff mask. I am Mary. I am distracted by everything that must be done, everything I want to do in the short span of 24 hours in a day. I thank God for the gifts he's given me. For friendship, for love, for a house, for my faith. But I fail to ask him for the greatest gift he can offer me. I fail to thank him and bask in that gift. Luke 11:13 says "how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!" The greatest gift he has offered me is Himself, and I go so long without asking for it. I make it so far without holding this gift close to my heart. But He is the greatest gift. Mary had understood this, Mary basked in this, and Mary had faith.
Lord, help me be like Mary. Give me more of you.


Audrey Assad could not have said this any better..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ive-zxmqk3Q

Sunday, June 23, 2013

Thankfulness for the Lack

Sometimes the things Jesus says are baffling. Jesus had just been preaching to a city that didn't respond. A city that didn't care. A city he condemned to Hell. And here comes the crazy part. After this frustration of non responsiveness. After watching the tragedy of people He came to save turn away when He offered himself, he prayed. But he didn't say, "God, why?" He said this: "I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and understanding...yes, Father, this was your precious will." What? Thank you that these people didn't accept my love, Thank you that all the work I just did went by the wayside.
That right there, is a hard prayer.
Coming off a week of camp where I didn't get much response, this passage is hurting my head. Because it broke my heart to see no hunger in my campers for the word of God, it was frustrating when they talked and giggled their way through my devotion that I spent time and thoughts on. And that's what Jesus had to feel. He watched the people he loved on, the people he spent time with, the people he dedicated his ministry to, he watched them turn away. He knew his message was the only one to save, yet he watched them turn away, and he let them. Because he loved them. Wrap your head around that one. I was given these girls for the course of one week, to serve, to love on, and to disciple. And this week, service was hard, love wasn't returned and I watched them build walls against the discipleship I offered. And if I want to be like Jesus. I need to offer thanksgiving in the lack, because I can't see the completion of the promise offered, just as Abraham didn't see his nation. Maybe, the Spirit used my words to plant seeds, or they will be remembered in the years to come. Maybe it was just a carrying out of the summer theme verse. "I will boast in my weaknesses so that Christ's power my rest on me." Because as always, I tried to be strong in my power, yet through that, Christ worked in my weakness of a desire for control. Whatever the reason, it was for the glory of God. And maybe there was so much more than met the eye.
So I will aim to be like Jesus and thank him for the lack. Even if it is a hard prayer, even if it hurts to let go of the control.
God's faithfulness is fantastic, because through the crazy week, I didn't take much time to step back and reflect. It's a go, go, go experience. We've got to be here, I've got to change my devotional for tonight, the one I planned doesn't apply, I've got to do, and most importantly I've got to sleep. But now, at home, stepping back, I've realized what God was trying to teach me. The campers were never mine. It was never my role to save them, or change them. That is something God does in His awesome power. I also think he was trying to teach me the importance of rest. Friday morning I got sick so I was counselor down for the count, and I took 3 much needed naps, had time to breathe and fellowship with fellow staff. It was sad, not being about to interact with my campers for a few hours, but I think he was continually showing me these girls were His, not mine, he loved them, and he had plans for them and he didn't need me in order to fulfill them. And he loved me, and he knew I needed rest, so he gave me that gift through my surrender of them to Him.
This morning in Sunday School we learned about building alters of thanks wherever we go. The teacher had us take a rock and build an alter after where we've seen God actively working recently. I realized that even though throughout the camp week, I didn't see God's hand in many things, I see it now. I'm thankful for the week he's given me, I'm thankful for the things I've learned and most importantly I'm thankful for the lack.
And I can sing the words of the hymn this morning in church honestly:

Great is thy faithfulness,
Great is thy faithfulness,
Great is thy faithfulness,
morning by morning new mercies I see.
All I have needed,
Thy hand hath provided.
Great is thy faithfulness.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Empty My Hands

Oh, how quickly I've forgotten.
Oh, how I've grown so restless and unsatisfied.
How often have I made it to the alter, ready to surrender my entire life and laid it down before you?
Yet all too rashly, snatching my favorite parts back because I love the feel of their touch to my thirsting heart and I fear I will never see them again. I love the joy they bring to my soul, the relief they bring to my life. And I take them back once again, so stealthily that I barely realize I've done it.
You look at my hands, overflowing with the gifts You've given to me, the gifts I've hoarded selfishly, the gifts I've forgotten to share and entrust back to the Giver. The things I hold all too tightly overflow and God, I've given you no room to hold my hand or my heart. You shake your head whispering "You've done it again, my precious child..." And like Hosea, you buy back your unfaithful bride you "allure me and bring me into the wilderness, you speak tenderly to me. You will remove the names of the [idols] from my mouth."
In love and utter faithfulness you allure me to you with the dissatisfaction of the meaninglessness of the daily, you put the unquenchable thirst in my soul, that can only be satisfied by You. I am the woman at the well, searching for meaning and acceptance and you tell me that You are the only Water that can satisfy, my idols will never suffice. The items I've built alters for, the people I've placed on pedestals, were blessings given from You. But I've loved them into idols, I've worshiped their existence in my life instead of the Savior who has given.
If only I would let go of the things I hold so dear, you could hold my hand and use these gifts to lead my back to your glory. My hands are full and it has emptied my heart. So, Lord, open my hands because I hold so tight, let me "taste and see that you are good." Because once I've tasted, I'm sure my hunger will be set ablaze again. I will be always searching, always wanting more of you. Let me have gratitude for the things you've done. Let me not be like the 9 lepers you healed, who turned their face without a simple 'thank you.' Let me be the remaining leper, who turned to praise you at my healing, and received an even deeper healing: salvation. Lord, I don't want to be just healed, I want to be saved. Lord, I don't want be be just saved, I want to be sanctified.
In gratitude, I remember what you have done, I thank for what you have given. In gratitude, I'm awed by the many times you've bought me back, the many times you've had to quench my spiritually dehydrated soul because again I've run, again I've searched for meaning in other things, again I've taken back my life.  In gratitude, I am the 10th leper who turned, knowing what you've done for me, asking for more than just healing, asking for You for forever. In gratitude, I will ask for more of You. Only You can satisfy.
The words of Tenth Avenue North could not have captured it better: "Oh, empty my hands, fill up my heart. Capture my mind with you."
Empty my hands.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Reflections

 The Spontaneity I've embarked on, it's like my fingertips brushed against the face of God. The friends I've loved, harder than ever before, held my hand, guiding me through life with their laughter and smiles. The joy I've felt, was born deep inside of me, but set on the flame of the Spirit, bubbles higher than ever before. And I hope if a heart were to look at mine, they'd see love, they'd feel joy, they'd meet Jesus.
Time has flown by, developed sonic speed, laughing in my face as it escapades past in a rush of love and memories. Leaves me breathless, with a lack of words, remembering not the moments I sat idly, but the moments I forgot to stop moving, leaving my house in a whirlwind, stopping only long enough to catch a breath of fresh air.
Because the memories I hold encapsulate the photoshoot in the rain, buying outrageously expensive umbrellas. Just to remember. Lying underneath the stars on a cold May evening, on a playground labeled "No Trespassing." Freezing huddled under a blanket not quite long enough to stretch over the three of us. Laughing until I fear I've broken a rib, as tears stream down my face. Thunderstorms at work inspire us to dance in the rain, pouring around us, in an empty parking lot. Driving way too fast on back roads, country music blasting out our windows, smiles dancing in our eyes. Eating ice cream at least once a week as it hurts my sensitive teeth, promising me it is not a dream, I'm still alive. Staying awake until 3am, whispering secrets and lives, reflecting on who we are, where we've been, what we have become. I've not regretted sitting in a library for hours searching for books that my alter my world, if only a little, might broaden my horizons, if only a lot.
It feels only yesterday a little girl stood at my door asking to be best friends on my first day of first grade. The new girl in the neighborhood, I was. It feels only yesterday that same girl and I made hairbands out of flowers, and I cried when she found new friends. It feels only yesterday that playing in the schoolyard was my entire world, tragedy painted when a friend didn't show up for school. We loved, we lived. And then middle school came, and still it feels like a heartbeat ago, I thought I was in love, and I had my first dance. Only minutes ago, when I fell hard into reality. A boy we loved acted in the moment, feeling instead our hate, killing his pain. In the process, leaving children to mourn something we couldn't yet understand. Cancer personified into something, not just a story I'd read in my library books. But an enemy taken residence in a loved one. The moment I had to be a best friend for real, and comfort tragedy acted in a cold anger, in thoughtless actions. Bitter to touch, the kind we were certain would never strike our fears, our lives. Yesterday, when I lay upside down on a bed staring at the ceiling with three of the most beautiful girls in the world and we lamented the fact that high school was endless. When could we move on? When could we dream? A second ago, when I had to breathe the words goodbye through tears and clenched fists for the first time, to my mother, my other half. A moment ago, when God asked for my heart again and it became His, as He painfully tore idols down, broke my heart, and built it back again. Auntie Annes and popcorn. Trees with babies and mugs for a dime. Broken necklaces and 13 hour car rides.  These memories that dance in my head with time. Yet again, time has been a reckless thief. He has broken so many hearts, and shattered so many dreams. But I'll step in and take the lead because these thoughts are mine, these memories were are gift to me from God above, as he wanted me to see who I was and how He made me who I am. Time continues to run, faster than I'm okay with, but I love and I dream. I want to be the old woman we visited in a nursing home. Remembering wasn't a painful affair, she loved, she lived, she traveled and acted on her dreams. She can look back and smile. She doesn't need to whisper, "God, why didn't I do that...?" I want to be like that woman. I want to say I loved and was loved. My dreams are big, they don't have much of a direction quite yet, but I believe that is something God will lead me to, but until then, I dream, I live, I love. I breathe.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Poems from a Broken Writer's Block

Friendship
Mingling of souls,
as I realize this is what I was created for.
An understanding of commonality,
a basis for trust,
for love.
When the catharsis comes,
no judgement
just acceptance as tears fall down a face.
As the testimony is formed,
it binds us together,
it makes us one.
Who we were and who we have become,
weaving us together as a flawless bride.
Laughter,
a diaphragm contracts,
a joyful kind of pain,
the hilarity of nothing,
yet the alleviation of something.
A felicity that takes all the doubts away.
Together we are.
These meaningless words,
fail to define a friendship,
flounder under the meaning,
waste away under the love.
Little had they known,
this friendship provided a balm,
a healing,
for a wounded heart.
When a satisfied slumber falls over our eyes,
and silence is whispered in our ears,
we feel what it means to be called a friend.
The weight of such a calling,
is light, 
yet heavy.
The capacity of such a love,
is unrelenting.
Yet all just an obscure mirror reflection,
of Love himself.
A hazy image of the godly friendship
of the Trinity.



Time
Time is a thief.
Stealing away these precious moments,
eroding away at my sacred memories.
It does not stop for the eyes that need 
just one more smile to encapsulate a broken heart
with joy.
It tears through space,
every dreadfully long second,
forcing you to whisper,
"how long?" 
into the expanse.
Yet the mind is strong,
there is this sanctuary that it has locked those memories into.
Granting access only to the beholder herself,
not to time,
or the ocean waves that torment the shores of her heart.
Every so often,
she's lost the key. 
She cannot find where she kept it,
she's convinced time has stolen it away.
She cries because she cannot remember the face,
her heart refuses to search.
The key though,
is her heart.
She understands that she is but a blink away from 
opening her sanctuary,
her safe haven,
her heart.
To behold these memories,
that bring pain and felicity,
joy and sorrow,
but most importantly love.
So open your heart,
that is a key and
sanctuary itself,
and breathe
because time has not stolen the memories,
it has stolen only itself.

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

A Dangerous Prayer

I want Jesus to wreck my world. I want Him to come and ruin my soul. Ruin my soul according to His desires for my life. I want Him to come and burn down every idol I've placed high on a pedestal above Him. I want Him to bring destruction to my selfish heart. I want Him to tear down my walls, the ones that keep me safe inside of this dangerously comfortable life. I want to be tested with provocative questions that convict my soul and leave me barren and open. I want my wounds to be cleansed with something far deeper than antiseptics. I want Him to cleanse away the sin that pushed me to this broken place. Once again. I want my future to frighten me, so I'm sure it's out of my hands.
I don't want to be worshiping idols when Jesus died on a cross and saved my life. Revived my soul. I don't want a selfish, conceited heart. I don't ever want to be so worried about my own life, so caught up in my ridiculous problems, that I miss caring for an orphaned child, a broken spirit and a homeless heart. I don't want to live comfortably. When I fall asleep at night in my warm bed, I want to remember the children that are sleeping under the stars.  I don't want these wounds to fester when the Healer tells me to just surrender. I don't want to be the one that weaves a tapestry of my future. I don't want to want when I have all I could ever need in my salvation.
I want my desires to reflect the One who created me. I want to love the least of these.
With absolutely no idea where God's plan for my life is, I'm jumping in blinded. I will walk by faith and not by sight. I will trust his wonderful, miraculous plan for my life. Wherever it may be. 
I want to pray this dangerous prayer. A prayer that will take me far from my comfort zone. A prayer that will move mountains of complacency in my life. A prayer that asks to be taken apart but never asks to be put back together again because He tells me "My Grace is sufficient for you." I want the words that slip from my mouth, the words that flow from my pen onto my paper to be genuine. I want to pray a dangerous prayer and mean it with my everything.

Jesus, 
come and wreck my life. 
Tear it to pieces so that I can be used by you.
And only you. 
Give me the strength to do radical things.
Not for me, and my glory.
But so that you can be glorified.
Above All.