Friday, January 13, 2012
In The Desert
Monday, December 5, 2011
What Are We Waiting For?
On this, the cusp of my 36th birthday, I woke up with a Trans-Siberian Orchestra song in my head.
Now, if you know me well at all, you will know that my musical tastes are all over the map, that I can rarely distinguish an artist or a song title, and that quite often I can’t even tell you that I own a particular song or album, just that it’s ‘what’s his face’ or you know, ‘that band.’
So the fact that I had the lyric ‘on this night, on this very Christmas night’ running through my head AND that I knew it was Trans-Siberian Orchestra was a huge WIN for me this morning.
With the help of Google and iTunes, I now own the song and have the lyrics to “Christmas Canon.”
This night we pray our lives will show
This dream we had each child still knows
We are waiting
We have not forgotten
On this night
On this night
On this very Christmas night
If you’re looking for an interesting alternative to your standard Christmas music this season, I recommend downloading a few of their songs – perhaps this one in particular.
As I reflect on this past year of life, the goals that have been accomplished, the dreams realized, I’m somewhat painfully aware that there are a few things I’m still waiting for. And just for the record, they may be pretty selfish things.
Thank you Jesus for reminding me today (again) of what’s worth waiting for.
In this advent season, on this night, on this very Christmas night, we are waiting… we are waiting for a savior, for the Christ-child to be born, for the impossible to be real, for the angel’s proclamation to be echoed throughout our lives.
What are we waiting for? Emmanuel, God with us.
Waiting for justice, waiting for wrongs to be righted, waiting for…
One of our retired volunteers out here at camp has a little girl in her life without half her face. She has doctors attempting to get the cancer out of her body by cutting off her nose and cheek. She’s waiting for healing or at the very least an extra year or two on her young life.
There are little kids, little babies, right here in our neighbourhoods, waiting for foster homes and adoption, whose parents waiting for help and relief and hope.
There are countries and communities waiting for peace, for cease-fire, for the absence of anger, strife and fear.
I know of families waiting for reconciliation, for new beginnings and a second chance.
I hear of grieving spouses waiting for the pain of loss to lessen, wondering if it ever will, and if it does, what does that mean.
I hang out with young friends; discerning career and family decisions, waiting for the right time for making changes, uncertain about their choices - how far to risk, how big to dream.
We’re all waiting for something I suppose, even if we have a hard time articulating it?
Today I hold the tension between the already and the not yet. We are waiting, we have not forgotten…and we will keep waiting – and I do pray that our lives will show that this waiting has not been in vain.
The people walking in darkness have seen a great light; on those living in the land of the shadow of death a light has dawned….for to us a child is born, to us a son is given…and he will be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. (Isaiah 9)
Come Lord Jesus come. We are waiting. We have not forgotten!
Monday, July 11, 2011
Sabbath; a verb
The River’s Edge four pillars:
(as listed on our name tags)
Serve Graciously, Labour Tirelessly, Fight Courageously, Honor Passionately.
I’d like to propose a fifth….Sabbath Faithfully.
Busy days of family camp, transition to the hosting of a wedding weekend, and 1 day of rest in the making….ahhh.
To sabbath faithfully – as in regularly and intentionally. This is my struggle and my goal.
The Lord really knew what he was doing – that’s my observation. I need time, humanity needs time, creation needs time – to rest, recover, worship, recognize, observe, contemplate, restore.
What does sabbathing faithfully look like when you’re in a busy season? Or when you’re a parent, or a boss, or a student with crunch time?
Reading through Isaiah 40 again a bunch this week.
“Do you not know? Have you not heard?
The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth.
He will not grow tired or weary, and his understanding no one can fathom.
He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.
Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall;
but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.
They will soar on wings like eagles,
They will run and not grow weary,
They will walk and not be faint.”
I’m starting to think that Sabbath rest has something to do with this…Hoping in the Lord – sabbathing in the Lord, resting in the Lord, trusting in the Lord, relying in the Lord, desiring in the Lord…
I will keep walking and not be faint, I will soar – I will be renewed – my hope is in the Lord.
Some of my understanding of sabbathing also involves feasting…in the Lord, on the Lord, through the Lord, with the Lord - so –
Here’s a shot of a deliciously fresh and lovely lunch salad for this sabbathing day…
Cause you know – I’m all about the food! Recipe compliments of Emily, the SIL – fresh basil, mozza, cherry tomatoes, black olives, avocado, green onions, s and p! Delicious!
Sunday, June 19, 2011
Catch and Release
At one point in the story – Ron’s wife, Debbie, after they’ve started volunteering at a community shelter, encourages him to start a friendship with this Denver guy and so he reluctantly invites him out for breakfast and asks him to be his friend. After Denver spends a week contemplating this request he meets up with Ron again and asks for clarification on the whole friendship deal… in his words – he’s noticed a practice in fishing called ‘catch and release’ – he wants no part in that kind of a friendship but if Ron is ready for the long haul then Denver is too –“ If you fishing for a friend you just gonn’ catch and release, then I ain’t got no desire to be your friend…but if you is lookin for a real friend, then I’ll be one. Forever.”
I attended a wedding of a friend yesterday, someone who I know through River’s Edge. A beautiful ceremony and celebration…of two young people formalizing their commitment of a lifelong friendship together…that whole 'two becoming one' business. No catch and release clause there either – its right there in the vows, ‘as long as we both shall live.’
What extravagant, ridiculous claims of commitment! I’ve been using the word ‘ridiculous’ a bit lately and it’s been misunderstood by several (unlike my other 50+ catch phrases my staff team has been collecting which have relatively clear meanings and apparently frequent usages).
‘Ridiculous,’ according to Merriam-Webster, is defined as: absurd or preposterous, contrary to reason, nature or common sense, unreasonable, unsound, or incongruous.
One of my favorite quotes by author Madeline L’Engle regarding Mary, mother of Jesus and the nativity event:
This is the irrational season where loves blooms bright and wild,
Had Mary been filled with reason, there’d have been no room for the child.
These bold claims of foreverness, commitment, perseverance….I love them. I honor them. I am challenged by them. I see Jesus in them. And to be honest…I long to partake in them. Somehow. No matter how ridiculous. Time to go fishing?
Monday, May 23, 2011
Trust in Me
DISCLAIMER: what follows is radical self disclosure…be forewarned!
I think its about time I acknowledge something….one of the greatest hindrances to experiencing true community and connectedness for me right now are my desires and insecurities around ‘taking control’ and feeling ultimately responsible for pretty much everything in my life – the tasks and things that legitimately ARE my responsibilities and ALL the things (and people) that aren’t.
This has been brought to light recently through several experiences at work and in my interactions with our staff team. We are often joking around about my ‘control freakness’ or my ‘angry badger face’ - when they all know I am thinking something and want to critique or challenge.
I am currently reading a book called For Women Only, based on a survey of 800 men and their inner lives. I was loitering around a used bookstore in Cochrane on Saturday and discovered this little hardcover; right next to a Sylvia Browne book on communicating with the dead in the ‘inspirational’ section. It was a tough call on which book to choose – went with the men one. I like men. I like communicating with men…living ones.
What started off as an enlightening read and reality check for me on the ways men feel respected and how to truly value them quickly morphed into a reflective journaling session on my life and some of the ways I devalue community and true connectedness with some of my ongoing and repetitive behaviors of control and – here it is – ultimate lack of trust in God and others.
Does anyone else have trouble truly trusting another? EVEN when- for example, I know that other is MORE capable of a task or challenge than I am? EVEN when I know I am the most incompetent one in the room. EVEN when I know I am absolutely POWERLESS – I would still rather be the one making the judgment call, the decision, giving my two cents – even though the exchange rate on those two cents garners it worthless!
Two questions. What compels this behavior? And what could change it? The first question requires ridiculous amounts of psychoanalysis best left for another time and place. First thing that came to mind regarding the second question? Submit to one another out of reverence for Christ (Ephesians 5).
OH – the JOY of submission! I never thought I would write those words! Oh the DISCIPLINE of submission! An act of the will to CHOOSE the way, thought, value, wisdom of another.
I’m not remotely ready to tackle the submission thought in the context of covenantal marriage as Paul continues to write in Ephesians. I need to sit with this ‘submission to one another’ for a bit longer before it’s put into the marriage context – I need to contemplate this ‘reverence’ for Christ. The motivation behind the behaviour.
Why submit to one another? Out of reverence for Christ – ‘whom’ (and here is my latest ongoing 2011 mantra) ‘for the joy set before him, endured the cross, scorning its shame…’ Why? Because of what he’s done? Because of his example? Because of his redemptive purposes that he began whilst here walking in my shoes?
Maybe its because I need a ‘big dog’ to tell me what to do sometimes. Maybe, its because sometimes, I just need to let go. Its like Paul pulled out the ultimatum, put all his cards on the table; why submit? Because of JESUS. The Alpha and the Omega. The beginning and the end. The bright morning star. The Messiah, Savior, Creator. Because the HOLY TRINITY itself IS. Because the very breath you breathe is utterly dependent on another – because my very existence, my past, present and future, is in the hands of another. I am not my own…I have been bought at a price. Because the best place to be is in the scarred hands of the resurrected king of the universe. Not me holding him, rather HIM holding me.
Ok. That’s it. Self disclosure over. 2 cents worth given…again. Grace and mercy. Again.