Saturday, December 5, 2009

Known

I wrote this because of how Psalm 139 helped me realize God's intimate knowledge of and care for me, which in turn helps me to trust Him.

On the beach, at dusk. I hold your thoughts about me in both hands and let them sift through my fingers, the breeze slight and not too cold, people walking over shells and seaweed and soft white, the waves a constant rhythm that breathes over the shore, in, out, in again, a pulse sent to erase footprints and make the packed sand look like the water, rippled.

I cannot get away from you.

Why do you care so much? You know when I stand and brush off your thoughts and you saw when I sat down, you know my own thoughts, ones that will stay as silenced feelings and ones that might form words---healing, hurting words. You sit beside me and you're in the canyons of this ocean and in the farthest lines of sunset, lines that stretch into black and then are exchanged for faded gray, pink, and finally the burning orange of morning, lines like my pre-printed days in your book written before I was brand new, woven in the secret place and hidden until you read aloud the first page, the first day of my life.

Don’t let me let go of you.

Tramp through this heart, cut a path through these ruins, sift through these piles of complicated sand and find that garden you’re looking for.

Sunday, November 15, 2009

Battleground

Tonight I went with a group from Chi Alpha and did a prayer walk around campus in a huge loop, claiming those places and people for Him, breaking strongholds, speaking life over it all. I was convicted. I haven't prayed as much for my school as I'd like to. I've been there almost every weekday for 3 and half years, and I walk everywhere, but I can't say I'm active in praying as I walk. That needs to change. I want His heart for that place. I want to see it as He does, to see the people as He does, to love them like He does...

My Chi Alpha pastor read some scripture before we went out. One part he read was in Ephesians 6, about how we don't wrestle against people, but our fight is with "rulers, authorities, spiritual forces of evil". It goes on to talk about the armor of God, and I realized that because I've heard it a lot, I've let that passage become trite/stale for me. I'll tune it out because I think I know it or, "I've already heard that, don't need to really ponder it, I get it." How prideful and foolish is that attitude? I love it when God takes something you've heard a million times and shows it to you in a new way. As my pastor read it, I just started thinking about it: "What does this really mean, and what does this look like lived out in my life?"

The belt of truth...what is that? Am I letting everything I see and hear go through a filter of truth? Am I testing those things to see if they line up with the Word? What lies have I been believing? Breastplate of righteousness....it's incredible how choosing purity, choosing right over wrong and to walk in God's ways protects your heart as well as affects other people in your interactions with them, for "out of the overflow of the heart, the mouth speaks" (Luke 6:45). I'm not sure about the shoes one, "having put on the readiness given by the gospel of peace". Maybe it means being ready to take the gospel anywhere, into your workplace or classroom, into your group of friends, or being willing to leave your comfort zone for the sake of sharing this life-altering news. The shield of faith is crucial; many things come to sabotage our trust in the Lord and the knowledge that he is good, that he is sovereign. Fiery darts... lies about God's character and heart toward us, other oppression, etc. Along with that, the helmet of salvation and sword of the Spirit (word of God) are to be taken up in all circumstances, as well as prayer and supplication. In all circumstances.

Take one look at the world and it's clear there's a battle going on, a battle for hearts. And if you claim to belong to Christ, I'd dare to say you're even more of a target. And really, what idiot walks onto a battlefield without a weapon? (Even David had a sling and some rocks. But more importantly...he believed that God was with him and greater than his enemy.)

In school I'm required to read a lot, and I get used to skimming and internalizing the main points, making quick notes in the margins. But with scripture it should be different. The Word and prayer are two of our greatest weapons. My Bible could be marked up in every color of highlighter or scribbled all over in pen, but if I haven't allowed God to mark me up with His words, to scribble all over me, to underline the things in me that need transformation, to change me in such a way that I actually think about and then live out what I'm reading, then I might as well have left the book on the shelf.

We are spoken for, covered, claimed. How would our prayers change if we really believed that God answers them? Let's take back what's His and what's ours because of Him. And let's be open to hearing and responding to His timeless truth.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

God's House

The other day my mom asked me what my favorite verse is. Any question beginning with “what’s your favorite” has always been hard for me to answer, maybe because I have yet to get good at decision-making in general.

But this one I knew right away. It resonates with me because I know it speaks about our purpose for living, what we were made for.

It may change, but for now my favorite Bible verse is Psalm 27:4. “One thing have I asked of the LORD, that will I seek after: that I may dwell in the house of the LORD all the days of my life, to gaze upon the beauty of the LORD and to inquire (or meditate) in his temple.”

I love this because it’s single-focused and whole-hearted. “I could ask of God anything but there is just one thing I want, and I choose to seek after it in all that I say and do, in every area of my life…”

That one thing? Being with God. Dwelling in his house. I’m not just here for a long weekend… I’m moving in. I’m moving back in. And there’s no rent to be paid because He’s not my landlord; He’s my Father. He made me His child and now I belong in his house. I have my own key.

At some point we all contemplate what the word “home” means to us. It changes as we get older, as we move around for jobs or school, as family dynamics switch around, or in some cases, when family falls apart. Maybe we have a concrete and secure definition of that concept at the moment, but there’s no guarantee it won’t be different tomorrow.
For me this verse offers a promise of home, one that won’t disintegrate. It’s a place of constant and faithful love, a place with community, where we are no longer orphans but children of God, His Church.

This verse isn’t just talking about heaven, either, or being with God after we die. “All the days of my life…” That’s today. This God-conscious life starts here, now. It’s an every moment thing of following Him, discovering who He is, offering each breath and bit of energy as that which will bring Him glory. I’m convinced God can be found in the mundane, every-day routine as well as those moments we’d consider dots on our timelines, the ones that stick out as significant. “To gaze upon the beauty of the LORD”… that’s everything true about God that elicits praise from us. And “beholding is becoming…” We begin to look like whatever it is we’re looking at.

It’s easy, really, if I can position my heart in the right way. Am I breathing? Yes. Then I can praise Him. Is He worthy of it? Yes. And I will choose to walk through the open door into His house.


Wednesday, September 23, 2009

What's in Your Hand?

Tonight I stood in my pantry and stared at the shelves. Stared in my fridge and freezer, too, really hungry. I went through a mental list of every bit of food to my name, trying different combinations in my head and wondering what on earth to make for dinner. Everything I could think of needed an extra ingredient that I didn’t have. Fight traffic and go to the store? Or improvise? I wasn’t in the mood for traffic, so I crushed some Ritz crackers, grabbed eggs, spices, and my frozen chicken, along with fresh green beans and some penne pasta, garlic, olive oil… Nothing super fancy, just your standard breaded chicken, obligatory vegetable, and the carbs… but I was pretty proud of myself at the end. I spent no extra money and used what I had to create something good.

That ordeal reminded me of Scrabble, which I’ve been playing lately. Us Scrabble nerds understand the “do what you can with what you have” idea. (I swear there’s this phenomenon where whoever gets the Q won’t see a U for the whole game. And I can't count how many times I’ve been stuck with all three evils...Q, X, and Z. Awesome if you can use them on a triple letter, but if it’s down to the end and that’s all you’ve got left…)
Anyway. Just seven letters to work with, and if you’re playing on a certain site online, you’re only given two minutes to make a word. The computer won’t listen to your whines (“I have a Q but no U!”); it’ll just skip you. You have to do what you can with what you have.

I think this applies to life as well. Maybe God is asking us to do something, and we’ll make excuses… “She’s the one with that gift, God. I can’t do that…” “I’ll give money/time when I actually have some to spare.” Such a wrong view of thinking!

Besides that, it’s tempting, and maybe natural to our humanness, to compare ourselves to other people. It’s been a constant prayer of mine that I would be freed from that. I really think it grieves God’s heart, first of all. Whether my comparison is in my favor or in the other person’s (putting them down or putting myself down), my evaluation of His handiwork is faulty. And His dream for my life, His vision of how I fit into His plan for the world, is not the same as the one he has for someone else. Whatever gifts, talents, abilities, and responsibilities he’s given to others is none of my concern. I’m called to be a faithful steward of what He’s given me…not compare and complain. Think about the three servants in Matthew 25, each given a certain amount of money. The master commends the first two, saying, “You have been faithful over a little; I will set you over much.” But the third one acts in fear, not knowing the true heart of his master, and what he has is taken away. And what about that second guy? He didn't freak out, "Hey, you gave the first guy ten talents and you only gave me five?" He did what he could with what he had and was blessed.

Perhaps if we stop lamenting that we're not adequate, maybe we'll actually be able to hear God ask us like he asked Moses, "What's that in your hand?" ("What's that in your pantry/fridge/freezer?" "What letters do you have?") It's when we dare to do what we can with what we have that the mishmash of ingredients turns into an actual meal and that random group of letters becomes a brilliant, never-saw-that-coming word. It's then that our "little" becomes "much", and things start to happen. Big things, too, like teenage shepherds killing giants with a stone or nations being set free.

This isn't a call to put confidence in self. It's a call to trust that God knows what He's doing, to take responsibility for what He's given us or placed in our hearts to do, and then do it.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Rocks

Recent discussions with friends have challenged me to think about stories like Job's. After he loses his livelihood, all ten of his children, his health, and then gets to hear his wife's bitter demand that he should just curse God and die, Job gives the most astounding and mature answer: "Shall we receive good from God, and shall we not receive disaster?" He seemed to understand something about God that everyone else around him missed, something that even Satan figured Job didn't grasp: the nature and character of God do not change as our circumstances do. Whether we're walking in a daydream or living in a nightmare, the reality is that He is a constant we can cling to, a foundation to build on, a refuge. It seems like Job is saying, "Since this is who God is, we actually have a chance of surviving the hard times."

Along with that is Job's trust in His sovereignty, which, if you read the end of the story, definitely grows once God has spoken his piece. Job's words go from "Where are you, God?" to "Who am I?" and "Great are You!" Job didn't just sit quietly and internalize his anguish (he certainly let God hear it), but his eyes are opened to the greatness and wisdom of the Creator of all things, and he could truly believe that God's way is the best way. In that moment, he was drastically humbled. "I had heard of you by the hearing of the ear, but now my eye sees you..."

I read in a book the other day that we should take all of the rocks --- all of the hard things --- in our lives and build an altar to the Lord with them, offer even those things as worship to God. In essence, this is how Job's story ends. He was able to truly see the Lord as He is and worship Him for it, despite his pain and without any promise that his life would be restored, even doubled, which it was anyway.

So I'm asking myself this question: As I go through the hard times, am I seeing God clearly, in truth of who He is...and am I praising Him for it? Do I demand only good from Him, or do I trust Him to bring me through the bad, since He remains the same on either road?


I can only pray to be brought to that level of living, trusting, and knowing. Still a work in progress....

Saturday, August 29, 2009

The Picture

So, "Healer" by Hillsong came on this morning.


The song emphasizes how God is our healer, that we can trust Him, and that nothing is impossible for Him. He holds our world in His hand. But a few of the lyrics beat some meaning into me: "You're more than enough for me...Jesus, you're all I need."

We hear that all the time, right? At church, in our circles of friends…I probably write it in every entry.

Do we truly mean that?

I mean, what do we want? What do we really want?

You can answer that by looking at how you spend the majority of your free time, what you think about, what you put your life into. Motives, too. Not just what you want, but why do you want it?

I was reminded of a picture I'd had about a year ago. It wasn't a vision really, just a scene in my mind's eye. But it had stopped me from whatever I'd been doing and crashed into my mind. I couldn't scribble it into my journal fast enough.

In the picture I’m sitting on my bed in my room. (My room is like my sanctuary or haven. Even my sister knows not to come into it without knocking and getting permission.) So in the picture, I knew it represented my heart. Suddenly the door opens without a knock, and a bunch of people come in. They’ve got guitars and cameras and all kinds of stuff. They don’t acknowledge me; they just come in and sit in my chair, get on my computer, start playing music and taking pictures, talking and joking around with each other, making themselves at home. Still no one looks at me.

The room is now crowded. At this point I know who they are; I recognize each person as one I’d put my hope in, put in the place where only the Lord should be in my life. I’d looked to them to satisfy me, to meet needs that God alone can fill. It’s an assortment of people, friends, family members, guys…

I sit there watching them, heartbroken at the number of them, still holding onto a few hurts because they’d never been able to fill those places in me. I’m not saying that we don’t need people in our lives; we certainly do. But I’d given importance and priority to them in various areas, places which should’ve only belonged to God.

Then Jesus shows up in the doorway, and he’s looking straight at me. This may sound cheesy or cliché or whatever, but I don’t know how else to describe it… Sitting on my bed and looking at him looking at me, I knew that he was all I wanted. All I’d ever wanted. More than I’d ever wanted, more than I knew I was ever capable of wanting.

He turns to go, but he looks over his shoulder and says quietly, yet I hear it over the noise of the room, “You coming?”

I don’t even think. I jump down from my bed and shove my way through the people and sprint out the door after him. And I don’t look back.

I was thinking about what people want, what we look for. It’s not hard to come up with an answer. Look at people’s lives. Look at the movies that sell. Look at the news.

I want, too. But you know what I want more than those things? I want to be able to say, “The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want,” with absolute honesty. I want to know, truly know, that He’s enough. I want to be ok with being single for the rest of my life, as long as I have the intimacy with God I was made for. I want to be ok with never traveling again, as long as I know he’s got my world in his hands.

I'm not advocating killing our desires; I know God puts certain ones in us for a reason. I'm simply realizing that we have this mindset where we don't trust Jesus to come through, that we don't believe he really can meet our every need.

“You’re more than enough for me.” I want to know what that means, what that looks like lived out. I want it to be true of me.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Up the Sunbeam

Self-pity is a trap, a downward spiral. And it's such a LIE. I've caught myself lately entertaining thoughts that should have no place in my life, thoughts focusing on the negative things going on. And although there's nothing wrong with taking our burdens to the Lord and being honest with Him, it's a problem when it becomes a whining party of complaint and woe-is-me.

So again with my list-making.

For That Which I am Thankful:

relationship with God
family that loves me
friends
health
bed
shelter
clean water
enough food
showers
living in a place where I can freely worship God
use of my senses
ability to walk
breath in my lungs
education and the chance to further it
people's prayers
truth
church
books
opportunities to travel
memories/experiences
ability to speak
my own room

May this list grow every single day of my life.

"Enter his gates with thanksgiving, and his courts with praise." Psalm 100:4

I read this verse and I picture thanksgiving as a literal key that opens His gates. So think about what's at stake here: experiencing the presence and peace of God. We can't enter his presence with an ungrateful attitude or while we're wallowing in self-pity. Is our pity-party worth such a loss?


"Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good; for his steadfast love endures forever." Psalm 118:1

If only we could come to a place where we could sincerely say with gratitude that no matter our circumstances, God has not changed; he is good and he always will be. I'm grateful that the Lord is not corrupt, cruel, egotistical, a liar... He is GOOD.

These blessings God graces our lives with are not just to make us happy. Gratitude is an opportunity to praise God for who He is. In his Letters to Malcolm Chiefly on Prayer, C.S. Lewis wrote, "I have tried...to make every pleasure into a channel of adoration. I don't mean simply by giving thanks for it. One must of course give thanks, but I meant something different... Gratitude exclaims, very properly, 'How good of God to give me this.'  Adoration says, "What must be the quality of that Being whose far-off and momentary coruscations (sudden, striking displays of brilliance) are like this!'  One's mind runs back up the sunbeam to the sun..."


I pray this encourages you to thank God for the blessings you've received and to wonder at the type of Being He is to have created them. Don't fall into the trap of self-pity. Cling to the truth of who God is, and thank him for it.

Saturday, August 8, 2009

Making Plans

Jeremiah 29:11. "For I know the plans I have for you," declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future."

I'm going to be really blunt in this post. I have had the hardest time with that verse for as long as I can remember. I hear it and I have cynical, skeptical thoughts. I criticize the one who quotes it, saying "They're taking it out of context. That verse was written to exiles in Babylon; it was meant for a specific people at a specific time."

I read it last night and those thoughts started again. "It's so overused, it's lost its meaning, and frankly, it doesn't seem true." I was pretty honest with God, telling Him that I just can't believe it. I thought about the hard things I've gone through. I thought about the devastations some of my family and friends have endured. Their loved ones dying at a young age. Incurable cancer. What do those things have to do with a future and a hope? "Plans to prosper you and not to harm you"? Dying seems pretty harmful to me.

So last night I read it with my usual frame of mind, wondering why I was even in Jeremiah 29. (You hear "Jeremiah 29" and automatically think of verse 11, right?) But as I read it, everything changed. I LOVE how God speaks through His word.

I heard His thoughts in my own: "This verse isn't about you, you're right. But it's not about the exiles either."

He stopped there, but it hit me so hard. That verse is about Him and his character. He showed me that even if those words weren't directed at me specifically, that is what He is like. He is a God who makes plans for His people. That verse is not about the exiles and their futures, their hope...it's about the kind of God who plans and dreams and wants what's best for His people, who sends a message to them in their exile, when they're furthest away from any type of normalcy or safety or comfort. It's about the kind of God who wants us to seek Him and find Him, the kind of God who promises He will hear when we cry out.

Yeah, so that passage doesn't have a "Dear Shannon" in front of it. But He said those words and meant them. That's who He is.

If we could read the Bible while remembering that God is the main character, not us, it would mean what it's supposed to mean. It's all about Him and who He is. Jesus didn't just come to die for us; he says in John 18:37, "For this reason I came into the world, and for this I was born, to testify to the truth..." He came to clear up our notions of God, to show us the truth of who He really is. He showed that with His life.

God said those things about a group of people one time, but He doesn't change. His heart is the same. He's got us in His hands. And we've got to realize that although circumstances may look bleak and hopeless in this fallen world, He can and will use them for good and bring us forth as gold. Even if our hope and future pertains to heaven and not on this earth, that's a hope and future that we don't deserve and is more than enough.

Friday, August 7, 2009

Filled to Be Emptied

I was looking through my old journals and read a post from March of this year. I'd been in Greece a month. It caught my eye because it mentions something I'd been talking about with a friend about half an hour ago. She'd asked me what some of my goals were, what I want to do, and we got to talking about justice issues like abortion and human trafficking and the poverty in the world, both physically and spiritually. We talked about our trips to Russia and India, how things seen there just broke our hearts. I talked about how I don't understand why I am safe in a free country, blessed beyond belief, in an amazing house with a loving family (we have our issues, but who doesn't?). I made it into this world without being aborted. I was never abused. I was never sold to a brothel at age 8. Why me, here, and why them, there, and in those situations?

This is what I'd written in March:

I know you hold the world in your hands and that you have determined the times and places where we should live. I just don't understand why I have this life and they have that one. Why have you blessed me so tremendously? These thoughts are tearing me up. How would you have me spend my time on this earth? I want to help and to bless those who need help. "I know I'm filled to be emptied again / this seed I've received I will sow" -- Desert Song, Hillsong.

The only answer I can think of for why I'm here, with this life, and not there, with that life, is because I'm meant to help in some way, to show the love I've been shown, to give what I've been given. And this doesn't necessarily mean I'm supposed to go to other countries. America is a place of darkness just like the rest of the world, a place desperately in need of the pure and transforming love of God.

My prayer is that I can take every blessing I've received and pour it back out as an offering to the Lord that really counts, that really moves his heart. And people are on his heart. The oppressed and brokenhearted are on his heart.

We have nothing that has not been given to us. I hope this encourages you to take inventory of what you've been blessed with and to seek God's heart on how you can use it to bless someone else.

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Let Justice Roll Down

One of my best friends gave me some verses last night that ripped into me... Isaiah 1:11-17.

"What to me is the multitude of your sacrifices? says the Lord; I have had enough of burnt offerings of rams and the fat of well-fed beasts; I do not delight in the blood of bulls, or of lambs, or of goats. When you come to appear before me, who has required of you this trampling of my courts? Bring no more vain offerings; incense is an abomination to me. New moon and Sabbath and the calling of convocations- I cannot endure iniquity and solemn assembly. Your new moons and your appointed feasts my soul hates; they have become a burden to me; I am wear of bearing them. When you spread out your hands, I will hide my eyes from you; even though you make many prayers, I will not listen; your hands are full of blood. Wash yourseslves; make yourselves clean; remove the evil of your deeds from before my eyes; cease to do evil, learn to do good; seek justice, correct oppression; bring justice to the fatherless, plead the widow's cause."

I'm not sure what I'll be doing later in life. One thing I know I will not do: get comfortable in a half-hearted, tepid walk labeled "Christianity", where I do just enough to get by or to appease my conscience. The church needs more than tradition and ceremony, more than a shallow "hey, how are you?". The world needs more than "here's a tract and some spare change." Not that those things are wrong, but if the heart behind it is not sincere, if it's not done out of love, then it's trash, less than nothing, like Paul says in 1 Corinthians.

Another passage I love: Micah 6:6-8.

"With what shall I come before the LORD,
and bow myself before God on high?
Shall I come before him with burnt offerings,
with calves a year old?
Will the LORD be pleased with thousands of rams,
with ten thousands of rivers of oil?
Shall I give my firstborn for my transgression,
the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?"
He has told you, O man, what is good;
and what does the LORD require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God?

In every action and thought and word, my heart has got to have pure motives. I wanna be genuine. What's worse than turning your back on someone who needs help? I'd venture to say, helping them in pretense or just to look good in front of other people. Pour yourself out for others in sincerity, or don't pour yourself out at all.

People see what we do; God sees why we do it.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Living Water

"If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world." - C.S. Lewis

On Thursday nights I attend/help my mom out with a high school girls Bible study for my sister and her friends. We're doing Beth Moore's Breaking Free, one that I'd done a few years ago. There's "homework" every day, and then during our meeting we discuss what we've learned and then watch a teaching by Beth. It's a really good study, focusing on issues like actually knowing and enjoying God, finding satisfaction in Him, having our broken hearts healed, and breaking off generational sins and letting those idols stop with us. It applies Scripture to everything.

Last Thursday, Beth's teaching was about the Samaritan woman at the well --- a familiar story, but she spoke about it in a way that I'd never thought of before. She points out how Jesus always gave his name in context of the need. When the people were hungry, he fed the 5,000 and then said, "I am the bread of life." When Lazarus was dead and he was comforting the sisters, he said, "I am the resurrection and the life." And when the woman at the well came to draw water, he explained how if she knew who he was, she could've asked him for "living water" and never thirst again.

Beth found it interesting that he uses water as his metaphor. In the video she did an illustration with two vases: one she filled with things like Cheetos, toy cars, money, a picture, a little scarf, all to represent the things we try to stuff into our lives to satisfy us and make us happy. When it's all said and done, though, as she held up the vase, it's obvious that there are still empty spaces.

The second vase she simply fills with water. She points out how water is the only substance that will fill every crevice and space, how it reaches to the farthest place and can get into the tiniest hole. In the context of the Samaritan woman, broken as she was with five failed marriages, always searching to have her heart filled, Jesus was showing her exactly what she needed: Himself.

This lesson struck me so hard. How many times do I search for things other than Jesus to satisfy me? Jeremiah 2 gives God's lament about how we His people "have committed two sins: They have forsaken me, the spring of living water, and have dug their own cisterns, broken cisterns that cannot hold water."

What am I stuffing into the vase of my soul? What are you trying to shove into yours?

Entertainment?
A relationship?
Money, material things?
Your reputation?
Pornography?
A job?
Food?

What would it look like to forsake those broken cisterns and return to the Lord wholeheartedly? How many other lives would be changed in the process?

I pray that we all will have the courage to smash our idols and go back to the River of life, because He is the water that is truly alive and truly able to sastify our thirst. We can try everything else on this earth, but I know at my core that we were made for Jesus Christ and Him alone. I'm grateful that nothing else satisfies.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Dear You

Dear boy,
I hope you live your life like one. I hope you love adventure and love to get dirty, to make things explode and to take the more dangerous road, to explore, to risk and learn from failure, to risk and taste success. Let your heart be colored by discovery.

Dear girl,
I hope you live your life like one. I hope you get dressed up and all pretty-fied sometimes, and other times you'll take that dangerous, dirt-covered road with the boys. I hope you realize your own worth and recognize that simply because you're a woman, you are truly beautiful. Don't be afraid to be you. Let your heart be colored by a genuine radiance.

Dear warrior,
I hope you live your life like one. I hope you fight for those you love, persist despite the weariness, and don’t take your times of rest for granted. I hope you hate injustice. I hope you carry yourself with honor and yet know the meaning of true humility, realizing that meekness does not equal weakness, but rather a strength unknown to most. Let your heart be colored by courage.

Dear sinner,
I hope you live your life like one forgiven. I hope you extend grace to others, knowing that you don’t deserve the grace they extend to you. I hope you can let go of your pride and see yourself through the Lord’s eyes – as one worth nothing and yet as one worth dying for. I hope you find the secret of living life on your knees. Let your heart be colored by truth and second chances.

Dear friend,
I hope you live your life like one. I hope you know the value of honesty and trust. I hope your laughter outweighs your arguments or petty issues, and that you have open eyes and an open heart to other people’s pain. I hope you pick up your phone in the middle of the night. I hope you listen more than you talk and give more than you take. Let your heart be colored by the test of time and shared memories.

Dear lover,
I hope you live your life like one. I hope you share your deepest fears and biggest dreams without fear of being betrayed or not being good enough. I hope you give all of you and leave your hesitations behind. I hope you can trust, let go of hurt, and can start new each day. Let your heart be colored by forgiveness.

Dear you,
I hope you live your life.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

A Little Q and A

For the past few nights, my sister has come into my room right when I'm about to go to bed. She flings herself on my bed, takes up all of the room, and then drinks my water from the cup that sits on my nightstand. As I'm typing this, she found a letter on my floor, pulled it out of the envelope, and started reading it. I stared at her and said, "Um, yeah, what are you doing? You don't just read people's mail."

So tonight I decided to write an entry interviewing her. This is dedicated to little sisters everywhere.

Q and A with Caylie:

Me: What do you like about being the little sister?
Cay: I guess you could say I get attention. And for some weird reason, I like how Brandon (older brother) manipulates me, because I'm smaller than him.

Me: What do you dislike?
Cay: You get blamed for everything, and you're the only one at home, so you have to do everyone else's chores, because everyone else is working and they have a car.

Me: What is one of your best memories with your older brother or sister?
Cay: When me and Brandon were walking through the woods and he started making this nasty bird call, and I got it on tape, and it was hilarious. Also, when I'm in your room rolling on the floor laughing uncontrollably for no reason while you're trying to go to bed.

Me: What is some advice you would give to older brothers and sisters concerning how they relate to their younger siblings?
Cay: We look up to you more than you think we do. We're bothering you because we want your approval. Maybe our actions are obnoxious or annoying, but it's really because we want to be around you and be like you (depending on the age difference, of course.) So, have patience with us and realize that we watch everything you do.

Me: If you had a little sister 7 years younger than you, how would your view of older sisters change, if at all?
Cay: Well, I wouldn't want to be you, because I'm obviously obnoxious. I would have to give her attention, while I'm actually the one needing attention from you. So, no.

Me: No, what?
Cay: Just no. Eww. That's disgusting. That's never happening. I'm not even going to hypothetically picture that happening. No.

Me: What's your earliest memory of your brother/sister?
Cay: I just remember in Virginia, when I would follow you and Brandon and the neighbor kids around, playing on the trampoline and rope swing. Also, sledding down the front yard.

Me: You just got water on my bed. And I'm going to bed now.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

Colors

I'm a list girl, so here's one I'd like to express.

Things That Color My World (in no particular order):

music, train rides, bus rides through parts of a city I've never seen before, God and his steady love, kids, the logic of kids, postcards, emails, lists, lists from friends, reading rock-your-world verses that change you from that moment on, making adventures out of the mundane, traveling, going home, honest talks, meeting new people who turn out to be amazing, cold milk, experimental cooking, the harmony part, innocence, getting under warm blankets when the room is freezing, learning from mistakes, watermelon in the summer, finishing projects, reading a book so captivating that you lose track of time, taking pictures of random and beautiful things/people/places, tackling my sister, riding a bike, being spared from disaster and finding out about it later, wearing jackets in autumn, playing with people's hair, learning about other cultures, Nutella, falling asleep listening to rain and/or thunder, acoustic guitars, dreaming about those I miss, the second day of school, swing sets, brand new notebooks, truth, driving on the back roads, Disney princess blankets, lit fireplaces in the winter, people-watching, going out on the river/lake/bay/ocean, changing seasons, foreign languages, how every sunset and snowflake is different, free samples, standing right where the waves can just reach my toes, balconies, pineapple juice, the smell of new books/new shoes, words like posh and savvy, non-verbal communication, mercy, cats that sit on you, pretty names, laughing, good lyrics, field trips, mountains, having a part in changing the world, spaghetti, Hillsong, cutting words and pictures out of magazines to make your friend's birthday card, flowers and rain and the green of spring, a favorite worn-out pair of jeans, that moment right before you fall asleep, hoodies, lying on the ground looking at the stars, Text Twist, sledding, finding someone with common interests, Pixar movies, forests, every tree in the whole world actually,
bookstores and libraries, singing in the shower, ping pong, snacks, sitting barefoot on a dock, Francine Rivers, writing that poem that says just what it needs to say, symphonies, hunting for incredible graffiti, waterfalls, full journals, BBC's Planet Earth, sincerity, finding an ordinary thing sacred, Reese's peanut butter cups, having a family that loves you, clothes right out of the dryer, rolling the windows down when you drive on a bridge, obeying the Lord, starting a new book, turning to the book's last page, closing the book and sitting lost in thought about it, ugly brown comfortable chairs, teaching 6 year-olds to play chess, answered prayers, Swedish fish, C.S. Lewis, pomegranates, ticket stubs, knowing that others are praying for you, and crayons, because I'm literal.


Thursday, July 9, 2009

Honestly

Lately I've been thinking about what it means to speak the truth in love. I don't think that means to point out other people's shortcomings in a sweet tone of voice. Maybe someone asks my opinion and I actually give it instead of sugar-coating it or telling them what I think they wanted to hear. (Some of us give our opinions way too easily, even when they weren't asked for:) Or maybe I need to confront someone with a problem I have with them. I'm not the most confrontational type, but I'm getting better at speaking up when things need to be said. Still, I think it's easier to confront someone with truth than to have someone confront me with it.

The truth can hurt.

Ok, understatement.

The truth can shatter your whole world, take you from walking safe up on your palace walls to sitting among its rubble and covered in its dust, handfuls of it in your fists. But sitting there brings the realization that it can be rebuilt, that it's meant to be raised up again on the right foundation, Jesus Christ, who is the Truth himself. Like the difference between the houses built on rock and sand. Maybe that house built on sand needed to come down under winds of truth so it could be built again, this time on the rock.

So yeah, truth can hurt, but I love its freedom. Truth can expose, but it makes the darkness become light. Truth is never meant to cruelly humiliate but has love at its heart, desiring something better for us --- sincerity and purity, transparency and a free, true life, the way we were meant to live. Truth desires that we grow up, be set apart, and walk in righteousness before our God. Truth cleanses.

Oh that we would have the humility and maturity to hear truth when it's spoken to us...that we would have the courage to implement it into our lives and apply it to how we live. That's where growth happens and chains fall off. That's where lies are silenced and we learn what it means to walk as He walked. Then love can happen, because there can be no intimacy without honesty.

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Glow Stick

When I was a little kid I went roller-skating at a skating rink, and I came home with one of those glow sticks that doesn't light up until you snap it. It lasts for a few hours, but after a while it loses its neon glow.

I didn't know this before I cracked it. So I'm in my living room with my lit-up glow stick, and my mom sees it. "Oh that's cool, Shan. Those last for a few hours, right?"

I freaked out. I seriously started crying (I'm laughing as I type this because it's so ridiculous) and lay on the couch, upset that the light wouldn't last. My mom tried to point out the logic of playing with the glow stick now before it stopped glowing, but my logic was, Why play with it if it's not going to last?

This wrong way of thinking isn't unique to the minds of kids. Yesterday I had the day off of work, the remnant of the Independence Day weekend. But it went by too fast, and I sat there thinking about how I seemed to be wasting my day off instead of enjoying it, focusing on how it was disappearing instead of actually living it out. All the things I wanted to do that day --- make a smoothie, go read my book in my favorite bookstore downtown, walk the bridge, walk the beach, drive somewhere, anywhere --- I only got to do one of them because I wasted a lot of time lamenting my lack of time.

That's when I remembered the glow stick. The ridiculousness is the same. Why do we do this? Miss out on now because we're consumed with how now becomes then? Life slips away when you try to cling to it. A life is made up of years, consisting of months, made up of weeks, made up of days, made up of hours....minutes....seconds....a moment. What would it look like to walk out that sadly cliched phrase, "Live life to the fullest?" What does that even mean?

For me, I think it means letting my yes be yes and my no be no. To be decisive, to quit analyzing every little thing and just go DO it. To actually finish the things I start. To trade worry, which is basically saying, "God, I don't trust you" for a confidence in Him, knowing that it's not by might, nor by power, but by His spirit. And to have the perspective that this moment is the only one of its kind, never to be repeated, and that I'm allowed to enjoy it, or learn from it, or plod through it with His guidance. Of course that moment won't last. This life isn't meant to! But it's certainly meant to be lived.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Change of Heart

There's a verse in Ecclesiastes 3 that says, "For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven..." and one of them states, "A time to keep silence, and a time to speak."

For me, it's time to speak.

Writing is a form of catharsis for me...it's how I process thoughts, feelings, life. I generally tend to be private with my words, though, mostly because I don't like to write fluff --- I have to write the truth, and I never really learned how to write truth without making it too personal or sharing too much.

I don't like to be the center of attention. Sometimes compliments make me uncomfortable. My point here is, for so long I would have something important to say but I'd hesitate to say it or write it because I didn't want feedback, positive or negative. I've cared for so long what people think; I've worried what kind of opinion of me my writing will form in other people's minds. I didn't want to be seen as immature, foolish, arrogant, attention-seeking, too spiritual, self-righteous...whatever else. So now I ask myself, is that what I think of others when they share something God is doing or saying in their lives? If not, why would I assume that's what others will think of me?

I know there's a balance here; some things are not meant to be shared.

But some are. And I've wrestled with excuses for a long time. Today I couldn't get this out of my head, probably because I watched a movie yesterday ("Akeelah and the Bee") and was struck by a quote in it by Marianne Williamson: "Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same."

Who am I to hide the gifts God has given me? Those gifts were never meant to bring glory to myself. They've always been for His sake.

So here begins my obedience, and there goes the fear. I will write heedless of what others deem true of me, because this has never been about me. I will write for the fame and glory of Jesus Christ, to be obedient when he wants me to share something, and perhaps to bring a little light, life, or love to other people.

Lord, give me wisdom on when to keep silent and when to speak.