Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Rubble

www.arosetta.blogspot.com/

God must be doing a lot of behind-the-scenes work in my life even tho I question the day-to-day outcomes. Sometime wonder if I should "straighten out" some people (NOT) , then realize the best choice is waiting. UGH!

But I see God working in other people's lives. The link at the beginning is a young friend I've watched grow from girl to woman. I've seen her make choices, build on them, trust the people, and the God, with whom she has entrusted her heart. I've seen her follow opportunities, prioritize her family and their best interests, and let go of selfish inclinations to compare achievements or accumulation. In other words, she is not holding tightly to this world. She's responding to yearnings the One who made her is feeding.

I also know another woman who is experiencing other bumps and bruises of life that I don't want. She is battling fear and anxiety, reaching for the "protruding root" that will help her climb back up the banks of the dark river into which she has fallen. She has reached several times and found what she thought was a sturdy grasp was instead one more fledgling branch. I ache for her but know she is watching One who walks along the river, trying to point her to a secure path. Just yesterday she showed me more of her growth and faith. I can't pull her up -- she must find the path herself. But not alone.

Several friends are tending to aging parents. One just experienced the last family gathering they expect to have with "dad" while here on earth. Another is traveling 7-8 hours out of a two day trip to be with an ailing parent. The loss of a parent during our adult years is an ominous experience. Not wierd in the supernatural sense, but wierd like "how will I learn to walk through what you've experienced? how will I survive?" Yes, we're left dazed. It again becomes about our own deeply wretching sorrow.

Another friend is experiencing extreme stress in his professional world. That stress colors his judgment, which makes his entire perspective rock. Since we all interact with one another, our stress affects those close to us, despite our efforts to protect them. I pray for him.

And two more friends have found each other again after many years apart, and want to rush into each other's arms without wise counsel and careful preparation for dealing with issues that initially separated them. I care for them.

These and many other cares affect my faith in God. I look at the ones who are seeking him, and the ones who want to seek him, and then think about the ones who don't know that He is WHO they seek. Either God is all-knowing and -loving and -powerful as He says....... Either He created all I see and all I can't imagine that is beyond and keeps it running as long as He sees fit...... Either He cares about the most common birds that visit my back-yard seed pot..... or he is nothing. He can't be both.

I believe He cares. I believe He is in charge. I believe He is growing me and all who want to grow, daily, as He sees we're able to handle the challenges. I believe He is gently opening the eyes of our hearts, wiping away the crusty tears of disappointment, forgiving our fearful kicking and screaming as we realize we can't control much of what happens.

I believe this is love at its finest. Sitting with us in the rubble of our lives, holding us as we scream, rest, hope, and trust. It's a cycle that repeats itself despite good intentions. We're so human, so weak. God is so patient, so merciful.

Rest in his arms, in his care. Believe in his trust. It's our only hope in the devastation of reality.

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Kids WILL Surprise You

http://jeremy-amuse.blogspot.com/

Last Sunday in KidZone was very challenging! A 35-yr teaching veteran had the lead and I was present to be the "go-for" or extra hand for anything else needed. Turned out there were several things needed.

Our kids worked on their Christmas musical from September to December. Sunday morning KidZone became a time of jumping and giggling rather than sitting and listening. After the performance we had a couple Sundays of regular KidZone, but we thought little of the antsy disruptions because it was Christmastime. Now it's January -- things should have been back to normal.

But they weren't. Our kids pulled on each other, laid on the floor, leaned, whispered, challenged the teacher(s). The idea that "NO" means no seemed completely forgotten. We had to persist but find new tactics. Frustrating! but we got through.

Then yesterday I found the above blog, totally identified with the frustrations of a dad who is thinking "why can't these people just let my kid have a room to play in -- so I can listen?" And I remembered why we take little people to adult church.

I remember taking our kids into services when we'd usually have to take one out for a talk. I remember flushing as one of them yelled "don't 'pank me! don't 'pank me!" as I passed the 10 seats between us and the door. I remember getting very little out of those services. I was serving rather being served.

But I also got little out of the meals I fixed during those years. They were either cold or everyone was done when I got to my food. Through one period I was often nursing one baby and spoon feeding the other at meal time. Bad choice, I know now, but my best solution then. But I was serving, not being served.

The little ones are learning. The bigger kids are learning. They are learning from our behavior and attitudes. They are learning from what is being said.

And, as the blog parent points out, we will learn from them.

Monday, January 11, 2010

How Big!

Lora and Andrew stopped by last night for supper prior to leaving for Portland this morning. We ate subs in front of the TV. Viewing was science, a natural fascination for them, but subject matter on which I focus, am wowed! for about two minutes, and am back to my book.

But the program was a PBS episode on what is happening beyond the heavens that we can see. They detailed system after system that is outside and beyond the Milky Way galaxy. The narrators also described a little of what they think is happening in these systems, how they are each a part of bigger systems, and how long it takes to see from one end to the other of these systems.....

All that detail hardly makes it to my head. It definitely passes out as quickly as it goes in.

What stuck with me is how big -- how endless! -- this "creation" is! I don't know if they would even call it a creation -- that isn't my point.

Whether we'll be in line to be imploded, exploded, vaporized, or baked is more than I can mentally deal with. I can't live with the fear those possibilities might create. I'm better off not hearing about them. Like it or not, THAT's THE WAY GOD MADE ME!

But the fact that each flower is unique shows it was individually created. Each snow crystal is unlike any other. A Designer made each of them. He knows each unique human life, born and unborn, and knows each hair on each head. To have likewise created each of these star systems -- of which we are minute particles in only one, and of course, the snowflakes so miniscule compared to one of us -- and to plan such detail with the smallest indescribable parts, speaks of some kind of interest, care, empathy. To have created us with emotion, logic, and a part that is above and beyond emotion or logic -- the soul -- speaks of DEEP care, deep love, and explains that such a sacrifice as the birth and death of a God-man might have occurred. But WHY is beyond our abilities to feel or reason! It is INFINITELY beyond!

Getting away from our ability to understand and reason! My point, exactly!

Worrying about my future is something not meant for me. If my Designer could orchestrate just the right survival temperatures to sustain life on our earth for just the right amounts of time, and my body to function with all the balances required in this environment, for just the time I need to get to know HIM, the Designer -- I know I'm safe. Safe in the Designer's plan, safe in the relationship I feel with Him, safe in the infinity of my ignorance.

A confirmation of how smart I don't have to be!

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Rough Day

It seems like the desert of the last year still extends ahead of me. I feel so dry and empty emotionally. New and unexpected challenges pop up, and I want to run and hide -- but no where to go! Yet in 50+ years, I've learned that sitting around crying only wastes energy.

Yesterday I was cooking and sniffling, and praying that God would provide an opening if he wanted me to deal with an issue. Not an issue I want to deal with, but one I felt important. Within the hour I got a call, and the opening to deal with it. Did it go well? Nope, it didn't. Did I expect it to go well? Not necessarily. But I was just glad to hear from God, a sign that he still knows I'm here and needing him........

I just read the blog of a young 30-something that is about to undertake a life-turn that doesn't make sense to most peers, even to most 50+ ers. Our culture is about gaining, acquiring, achieving. Ha! Making plans to sacrifice and suffer (not talking literal martyrdom here, but emotional letting go and knowing it won't be easy) is not the popular trend, surely not common. But it's clearly what God calls his people to do. Doing what we know we must do at the cost of what we want to do. WOW, unpleasant. Not what I want to choose.

I admire this young person, but I also thank God for the inspiration of one other "God-follower" who is admitting anguish, yet forging ahead, fully intent on continuing commitment. She will have deserts, and then oases, as do I. My oases often seem very farrrrrrr apart. I just need to see them -- and know God is still aware of me.

She made one statement, not a verbatim quote: "...we don't have to understand God." That sums up a lot. It isn't as simple as a first glance might suggest. Of course, we'll never understand God! you might say flippantly. But I want to understand why he is allowing my desert to go so long. I want to understand why there aren't more companions to be found at my oases.

I'm re-reading a book that has taken me back through the life of King David, writer of the Psalms, killer of the lion and the bear and the giant, warrior who established the city of Jerusalem and the lineage into which Jesus was born. David was "the man" of his time, but he made some serious blunders, then returned to right living -- and did the cycle several times over. I like the story because it demonstrates how God wants to forgive us, disrespectful of who we are or what we've done. He just wants to forgive.

What jumped out to me from this recent study is how un-lucky David was in love. He married the girl of his dreams, lost her when her father stole her away and sent her off to another man. He then married other women (never a smart move, but more understandable both in the culture and considering he thought she was lost). He retrieved his first love when he became king, but by then she was too hurt and angry to love him again, and David eventually banished her. His many wives bickered, plotted for and against their sons. But it seems to me that none of these were sole mates to David. He was left alone. Just David and God.

That is a desert that must have lasted a lifetime. I have my moments with Larry but I'm SO glad to have him, his faithful, gentle, and compassionate love. David wasn't so lucky. I share my anguish with Larry, and together we go to God.

Rough day or night, God is with me. Dark clouds or sun, he sees me. I'm thankful for times he sends encouragement, but I still wonder why life has to be so tough.

But I know, he is God.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Reflections

Wow! It's been such a busy time! First was the rush of wrapping, baking, and washing. Then once we arrived with the grandkids there was play, play, play! I have empathy constantly for the mothering my daughters now do.

Libby is a magical blessing! WOW! A girl for Joy and I to play dolls with! The boys love her -- wonderously! -- but they still play the loud, blustery boy-play! She'll find her own ways of keeping up -- watch out, brothers!!!

We miss Jenny and Jon, and Paul and Emily. I'd love to see Paul and Emily around a Christmas tree. Lora and Andrew are with us now, enjoying their time when everyone else is back to the grind. The good side to a belated holiday!

Now I sit back and survey tasks I need to tackle, and feel I still need to cherish the quiet glory of the season. I am realizing God's quiet sufficiency. Today I have been wondering if I've really been reaching for the strength He has promised to give if we ask -- expecting an answer!

It's a wonderful snowy day outside! Heavy snowfall! Big flakes! Beauty! Magic! Calm.....

I think I need to enjoy the mysteries around me, and trust the Maker of the Snow for the things I can't understand.

And see what other mysteries are present that I've overlooked!

Man, I love to watch a snowfall! Feel like a six-year-old kid -- till I start shoveling the driveway.....