Friday, 21 August 2015
Unworthy of Rescue
So, I read this story from Destiny Rescue about a girl who - in fear and despair - contacted rescue agents begging for a rescue. By the time they got there, the girl had been raped and her spirit broken. And it absolutely shattered my heart to read how she now refused rescue. Her understanding of herself and her own worthiness had been so damaged and besmirched that she no longer considered herself worthy of rescue. She saw herself as worthless - good for only continuing in the life she had just been forced into.
And my heart didn't just break for her in that moment. It broke for all the girls like her. All the boys like her. In truth, it broke for all of us. Because - in all honesty - I think there's a little bit of her in all of us. I know there is in me.
Just over an hour before I read her story, I was composing an article for my university Christian group's newsletter. As I wrote it, I was reflecting on the horrific reality of the Cross and the extraordinary price that was paid for my rescue - my rescue from sin. And I had to honestly confess that there are times when I see it all and I just want to run away. I just want to reject it.
Because I'm not worth that.
All I'm good for is to go on living my life of sin and then taking my punishment at the end. I am not worth the rescue. Especially not when the rescue comes at that price.
And yet.... and yet...
The continual invitation of the Cross, the continual message of the Cross, is that I am worth it. Not because of anything that I've ever done or accomplished. Because I haven't done or accomplished anything - I've only ever accepted God's gifts and, far more frequently that I care to acknowledge - abused those same gifts. No, I am worth it, the Cross declares, because God has declared that I am worth it. And - as Paul puts it so bluntly in Romans 8 - who can argue with God?
There's a saying in the Middle East: what God has written can not be unwritten.
What God has written can not be unwritten.
And what has God written, written in His own blood, can never be unwritten, can never be erased, can never be changed. And what has God written?
He has written that I am worth it. He has written that I am rescued. He has written that I am justified. He has written that I am adopted. He has written that I am His and that can never be changed. He has written that I am not defined by what I have and haven't done - but by what He has done and what He has given to me.
And that message, it's not just for me alone. It's for you. It's for your next door neighbor. It's for the murderer in gaol. It's for the child with HIV in Africa. It's for the refugee on a boat on the ocean. It's for this girl who could not see past what was done to her to she her intrinsic, God given worth.
Because it's true. That girl was of no less worth the second day after she was raped than on the first day while she was still untouched. The actions of humans, her own actions, none of it could change the fact that she was created by God, in the image of God, for the glory of God and who later died for her. Every part of her worth and who she is was wrapped up in God - but the Devil had clouded her understanding. Had convinced her that she was what she did and what other people did to her. And so she passed over the chance of rescue. She turned away from the chance to know the truth.
And how many of us do this on a daily basis? Maybe on a smaller scale with less obvious consequences, but do this never the less. Maybe it's when you berate yourself as a failure for not getting that grade (guilty). Maybe it's when you remember the bullying you went through in school (guilty). Maybe it's when you yell at your mother and can't bring yourself to apologise (guilty). Maybe it's when you through yourself into preparing a fantastic Sunday school lesson, but forget to pray (guilty). Maybe it's when you start looking for ways to serve because you want to pay God back (guilty). Whatever it is, I'm sure it's there.
But the really wonderful news of the Cross? The really wonderful message of the Cross? Is that, until the day we die, the offer is still on the table. The offer to step into God's presence and to view ourselves and the world through His eyes is still being held out to us - and God is wanting us to take it. Each and every day.
Thank you, Lord.
Thursday, 30 July 2015
Tetelestai
Tetelestai. Verb. Perfect tense. Meaning it is finished. Perfectly. Completely. Irrevocably. No take-backsies.
It was used at the end of bills to indicate that they were paid in full. It was used by Jesus as almost His last word (John 19:30).
Almost His last word, after a life time of obedient submission to His Father and His Father's will. After a life time of being sinless, spotless so that He would be eligible to be the Perfect Sacrifice. The Sacrifice that could pay for man's sins, because He was man. The Sacrifice that could pay for all man, because He was God and His blood was precious.
Tetelestai. Centuries of animal sacrifices, curtained off Holy Places, punishment, forgiveness, failure, all leading up to this one moment, this one word. Tetelestai. When the perfect, sinless, God-Man Sacrifice would suffer. Would suffer not just physical pain, not just mortal rejection, but the Wrath of God and the unholy horror of sin.
Tetelestai. It is finished. He has done it. He has paid our bill in full. One need only read Leviticus and Hebrews to realize the full, overwhelming, extraordinary implications of that.
It means there is nothing more to do. It means that there is nothing missing. There is nothing undone. The only thing for me to do - the only thing I can do - is to bend my knee, to look to Christ, and know that it is finished.
God is Lord. Into His presence, I may know enter. In His service, I may now work. And in His family I may now be.
Tetelestai.
I almost want to get it tattooed onto my wrist. I want to write it on my walls. I want that word to be where I can see it and remember. Remember why.
Because there's been a little bit of apathy creeping into my life and my heart. Ok, maybe more than a little - a lot. The kind of apathy that sucks passion dry - even while the head stills knows the truth.
And yes, tetelestai, it means there is nothing more I can do. Nothing more I can offer God. Because it is finished, it is complete, and I've got nothing anyway. And yet... and yet... it also means than simple mental recognition of God's kingship is required. It means more than just being willing to go where God takes you. It means actively bending your will - my will - to God's. It means actively seeking His glory and His path. It means surrendering my all - heart, soul and mind.
So when did this apathy start creeping in? When did my heart stop leaping for joy at the thought of spending time with Him? When did it start feeling like enough to try to figure out how God wants me to live and then to do things? When did I stop being in God's presence?
When did I stop loving God and start thinking that just obeying would be enough?
And yeah, obeying is important. Crazy important. But so is loving. So is being grateful.
And why is this so damn hard for me to write? To admit to myself? Perhaps because it's uncomfortable. Because surrendering will and love to God would mean going places I don't want to go. Having to do things I don't want to do.
But that's what the truth of "tetelestai" - it is finished - demands. For Christ has finished it. He has made me a part of a Kingdom of Priests, a Holy Nation, God's Treasured Possession. And God never wanted lip homage - He enslaved and exiled and redeemed the entire nation of Israel to prove it. He wanted loving obedience that encompasses everything. Absolutely everything.
And that - that's just a bit too big for my comfort. And yeah, I guess here I'm meant to talk about inspiring, uplifting, stuff. I'm meant to be that God Christian kid. But that's not the truth. The truth is - it terrifies me. It excites me - it really does. But it also terrifies me. It strikes me to the core and sometimes (often) I'm so damn scared of all I'm being asked to do that I can't bring myself to pray. I can't bring myself to lift my eyes to God.
And I'm like the Israelites at the base of Mount Sinai. Cowering away from the terrifying glory of God, wishing, begging that someone else could go forth and do it for me. That someone could do the hard yards, while I reap the benefits.
And, you know what, that's also what "tetelestai" means. Someone else did do the hard yards. Someone else did live the perfect life of loving obedience. And that someone enabled me to live the benefits. It means that I can fall down and fall down and be terrified and not have the strength to lift my eyes to God myself - and yet still, always, completely and utterly, be held in the palm of His hand. Be clasped to His heart as His treasured possession, His precious daughter. And my, how that makes me glad - how my heart sings.
But still... still there is that terror. That sense of overwhelming inadequacy. That fear of failure.
So the fear, the terror, the relief, the gratitude, they're why I want that word where I can see it everyday. Because that word is - quite literally - God's honest Truth. It is finished. It is done. It is complete. And forgetting that Truth, forgetting those feelings, well it's dangerous. Because forgetting leads to being comfortable. And comfortable leads to being apathetic. And apathetic... well... is apathy. And that's a sin.
Who needs comfortable anyway?
It's time for me to refocus my heart and mind on God. To fall in love with Him again, and not just obey Him out of duty.
Tetelestai - and everything that it means.
It was used at the end of bills to indicate that they were paid in full. It was used by Jesus as almost His last word (John 19:30).
Almost His last word, after a life time of obedient submission to His Father and His Father's will. After a life time of being sinless, spotless so that He would be eligible to be the Perfect Sacrifice. The Sacrifice that could pay for man's sins, because He was man. The Sacrifice that could pay for all man, because He was God and His blood was precious.
Tetelestai. Centuries of animal sacrifices, curtained off Holy Places, punishment, forgiveness, failure, all leading up to this one moment, this one word. Tetelestai. When the perfect, sinless, God-Man Sacrifice would suffer. Would suffer not just physical pain, not just mortal rejection, but the Wrath of God and the unholy horror of sin.
Tetelestai. It is finished. He has done it. He has paid our bill in full. One need only read Leviticus and Hebrews to realize the full, overwhelming, extraordinary implications of that.
It means there is nothing more to do. It means that there is nothing missing. There is nothing undone. The only thing for me to do - the only thing I can do - is to bend my knee, to look to Christ, and know that it is finished.
God is Lord. Into His presence, I may know enter. In His service, I may now work. And in His family I may now be.
Tetelestai.
I almost want to get it tattooed onto my wrist. I want to write it on my walls. I want that word to be where I can see it and remember. Remember why.
Because there's been a little bit of apathy creeping into my life and my heart. Ok, maybe more than a little - a lot. The kind of apathy that sucks passion dry - even while the head stills knows the truth.
And yes, tetelestai, it means there is nothing more I can do. Nothing more I can offer God. Because it is finished, it is complete, and I've got nothing anyway. And yet... and yet... it also means than simple mental recognition of God's kingship is required. It means more than just being willing to go where God takes you. It means actively bending your will - my will - to God's. It means actively seeking His glory and His path. It means surrendering my all - heart, soul and mind.
So when did this apathy start creeping in? When did my heart stop leaping for joy at the thought of spending time with Him? When did it start feeling like enough to try to figure out how God wants me to live and then to do things? When did I stop being in God's presence?
When did I stop loving God and start thinking that just obeying would be enough?
And yeah, obeying is important. Crazy important. But so is loving. So is being grateful.
And why is this so damn hard for me to write? To admit to myself? Perhaps because it's uncomfortable. Because surrendering will and love to God would mean going places I don't want to go. Having to do things I don't want to do.
But that's what the truth of "tetelestai" - it is finished - demands. For Christ has finished it. He has made me a part of a Kingdom of Priests, a Holy Nation, God's Treasured Possession. And God never wanted lip homage - He enslaved and exiled and redeemed the entire nation of Israel to prove it. He wanted loving obedience that encompasses everything. Absolutely everything.
And that - that's just a bit too big for my comfort. And yeah, I guess here I'm meant to talk about inspiring, uplifting, stuff. I'm meant to be that God Christian kid. But that's not the truth. The truth is - it terrifies me. It excites me - it really does. But it also terrifies me. It strikes me to the core and sometimes (often) I'm so damn scared of all I'm being asked to do that I can't bring myself to pray. I can't bring myself to lift my eyes to God.
And I'm like the Israelites at the base of Mount Sinai. Cowering away from the terrifying glory of God, wishing, begging that someone else could go forth and do it for me. That someone could do the hard yards, while I reap the benefits.
And, you know what, that's also what "tetelestai" means. Someone else did do the hard yards. Someone else did live the perfect life of loving obedience. And that someone enabled me to live the benefits. It means that I can fall down and fall down and be terrified and not have the strength to lift my eyes to God myself - and yet still, always, completely and utterly, be held in the palm of His hand. Be clasped to His heart as His treasured possession, His precious daughter. And my, how that makes me glad - how my heart sings.
But still... still there is that terror. That sense of overwhelming inadequacy. That fear of failure.
So the fear, the terror, the relief, the gratitude, they're why I want that word where I can see it everyday. Because that word is - quite literally - God's honest Truth. It is finished. It is done. It is complete. And forgetting that Truth, forgetting those feelings, well it's dangerous. Because forgetting leads to being comfortable. And comfortable leads to being apathetic. And apathetic... well... is apathy. And that's a sin.
Who needs comfortable anyway?
It's time for me to refocus my heart and mind on God. To fall in love with Him again, and not just obey Him out of duty.
Tetelestai - and everything that it means.
Sunday, 10 May 2015
Dear Mum (on open letter and tribute to the most important woman in my life)
So, yeah, I can't have been the easiest child to raise. I take after you a bit too much for that (usually for better, these days, though it has been for worse what with that tendency to the melancholic and volcanic temper). I'm sure there must have been times you threw up your hands in despair and wondered what in the world you were doing.
Especially as I was your first, and you were thousands of miles away from your family in a world without emails and barely any telephone access. And I was the baby who refused to sleep during the day and gave you a million and one health scares in the first few years of my life. (You getting the picture, everyone? My mother is one brave lady!) And I was the girl who wouldn't talk and kept secrets you might have preferred I'd shared so much sooner than I did. And the teenager who exploded at you whenever stuff was hard, or just didn't share. Yeah, I really can't have been easy to deal with.
Thanks for sticking to it. Thanks for not giving up. Thanks for trusting God and praying hard.
Thanks for teaching me to read and introducing me the beauty of worlds built on the page and in our minds.
Thanks for thousands of times you got up in the night to feed me, to medicate me, to soothe me as I vomited.
Thanks for all the cakes you've baked; meals you've cooked; clothes you've cleaned; cuts you've bandaged; books you've read; assignments you've reviewed; and frantic texts you've answered.
Thanks for reading the Bible to us; praying with us; teaching Sunday school; and living out what it means to be a child of God in the way you loved us and loved the people who came into your life.
Thank you for being someone I know I can depend on - not just because you were my mum and if you can't depend on your mum who can you depend on? But because that's the kind of woman you are, a woman that people can depend on to be there. To pray for you. To point you to God.
Thank you for being so patient with me. And for living with an attitude - a heart - of grace. For giving me another chance to get things right. For giving yourself another chance to get things right.
But most of all, thank you for being a woman who turns to God in the midst of everything - good and bad. Thanks for being a woman who rests in God's love and pursues a deep and intimate relationship with Him. Because of that you're not just the woman who gave birth to me - you're my role model, my teacher and, increasingly as I get older, my friend.
A bunch of flowers, a card and these words seem like a poor return for your years of service and love to me, my sisters and everyone else you've ever mothered. But then, I suppose, they aren't really the return, just tokens of gratitude. The real return is in the woman I am, the women my sisters are becoming. Because so much of who I am is because of who you are.
So I give thanks to God for giving you to me as my mother. I pray that He will bless your efforts in my life and my sister's lives and that you will reap a harvest a hundred-fold what you sowed.
Happy Mothers' Day, my beloved, wonderful mother.
Saturday, 4 April 2015
A Costly Grace
This came up on Pinterest as I was scrolling through it late last night after a day of celebrating Good Friday. As I looked at it I was reminded of the Easter sermon from one of the chaplains at uni on Wednesday. I was reminded by how he started it saying that he could forgive a stranger to Christianity for thinking Jesus must have been the worst man to have ever lived because He was crucified - a death reserved for the worst of criminals. More than that, His crucifixion is a point of celebration for people even after a couple of thousand years.
And there's that question that my parents' church asks every Good Friday, the theme of the day every year:
What is so good about Good Friday?And the answer, every year, is it's because Jesus took our punishment. So that we could receive grace. Which is true - oh, so very true. But reflecting on all of this, I realize it barely scratches the surface.
And perhaps the goodness of Good Friday lies in the ugliness of Good Friday, but just because the ugliness is good - for us - is no excuse to forget that it is in fact ugly.
It is ugly. It is horrible. It the quotation above, Auden is absolutely right to compare it to Auschwitz. With crucifixion - with the entirety of Jesus's Good Friday ordeal - we're not talking a stop the heart injection. We're not even talking hung, drawn and quartered.
We're talking betrayed by a friend. We're talking falsely accused by people who hated and feared Him because of His goodness. We're talking whipped within an inch of His life. We're talking mocked by what must have felt like everyone. We're talking abandoned by His friends. We're talking crown of thorns pressed on His head, into His temples, drops of blood dripping down His head and congealing in his hair, on his cheeks. We're talking hypovolemic shock - His body starting to shut down because of blood loss. We're talking staggering along a road, body trembling, starting to give weigh under a wooden beam that must have felt like it weighed a ton - weighed the weight of the world's sin and rejection and censure. We're talking nails driven through his hands and feet, crushing the major nerves setting fire to His senses. We're talking dislocated shoulders. We're talking slow asphyxiation. We're talking heart attack.
We're talking a sinless, innocent, pure man taking on Himself the guilt of humanity's rebellion - the guilt of murder, lying, stealing, cheating, betraying, hurting, idolizing, teasing and envying. The guilt of rejecting God's rule and authority. Taking it all on Himself and the punishment with it. No, more than just a sinless, innocent, pure man - God Himself. God taking upon Himself all that He couldn't approach for His own Holiness could not permit it. There are just so many crazy, crazy implications here that my brain just can't fathom it. Can't express it.
But what we're talking about here is ugly. And yes, this is exactly God's grace and God's mercy being enacted. And yes, for us, that is a wondrous gift. Because God is paying a debt that is ours to pay, a debt that is impossible for us to pay. What a wonderful gift. But let's never make the mistake of thinking that it was free. It was costly. No gift has ever cost so much in all of history.
So yeah, rejecting it leads to Hell. After all, that punishment was intended for you. God did not go easy on Himself. And all that is what is waiting for anyone who says "you know what, I'm not going to accept your grace. I want to pay for my own sins."
So, this Easter, let's not take God's grace for granted. Let's not devalue what God has done for us. Let's be convicted of the full ugliness and horror of what happened that first Good Friday - because only then can we truly embrace the wonder and miracle of the grace and mercy God was making available.
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Thursday, 2 April 2015
A Meal, a Promise and a Rescue
Tonight, many hundreds of years ago, a carpenter from Nazareth sat in an upper room surrounded by his closest friends and family eating a meal of yeast free bread, roast lamb and bitter herbs. A couple of thousands years before that, an entire nation sat, huddled in houses, dressed in travelling gear, eating a meal of bread, roast lamb and bitter herbs. Many thousands of years of history, and yet, both events so intimately connected to each other. And to me, in my bedroom, sipping some wine, listening to music and needing to get uni work down.
And so much focus over the next few days will be on the crazy, significant events of Jesus' death and his resurrection. But tonight, tonight my thoughts go to that supper in the upper room of a house in Jerusalem. And from there to the Israelites in Egypt. My thoughts go to the Lord's supper - the very first Lord's supper. And to the Passover, to the very first Passover.
And sometimes, sometimes we make it just that - a supper, a meal. But it was so much more, wasn't it?
There was more to the Passover than some nicely roasted lamb, weird bread and bitter herbs. It was more than just a meal. It was a promise. A promise of rescue from slavery. A promise of relief from suffering. A promise that God was in control. A promise that God was about to act.
And it was a promise that was fulfilled. That very night, God rescued the Israelites from the slavery in Egypt. He gave them relief from the suffering that comes from captivity. He proved He was in control - Pharaoh let them go. The Red Sea parted! God did act!
And it was that - that promise and that fulfillment that Jesus and his disciples were commemorating at the Last Supper. Jesus didn't just decide he was going to randomly interrupt a meal to start babbling on about blood spilled and broken body. He chose the Passover meal. He chose the meal where blood was spilled and body was broken to protect God's chosen people - go read the Exodus account! There is such a richness, such a wealth of detail, that I can't even begin to put it into words.
But Jesus chose a meal so riddled with cultural and religious significance to make His point. In choosing this meal to talk about his "body, which is given for you" (Luke 22: 19) and his "blood, which is poured out as a sacrifice for you" (Luke 22: 20), Jesus is saying more than "I'm about to sacrifice myself for you".
He is saying that He is about to make a very particular sacrifice, with a very particular purpose. And here, right here, this is His promise:
He will rescue us from slavery.
He will bring us relief from suffering.
God is in control.
God is about to act.
And the disciples, they probably thought about that conquering king who was going to knock down the Roman empire and restore Israel as a nation. Their minds were focused on the things of this world.
But Jesus meant something bigger. Jesus was promising rescue from the slavery of sin. The suffering of sin. And He was promising that He would give His own life to achieve it. And my mind can barely contain it.
That meal was more than just a meal. It was a promise. A promise of a rescue. Over the next three days, Jesus enacted that rescue. That meal was a promise that was fulfilled.
A promise made not only to the Israelites in Egypt, not only to the friends in that room, but to all of God's chosen people - past, present and future. A promise made to me. A promise made to you. And the Israelites spent forty years in the wilderness before entering the Promised Land. And I think we're in the wilderness now. But just like the rescue that Jesus promised and brought about blows away the rescue promised and brought about at the first Passover - the Promised Land we're moving towards will absolutely blow away the Israelites' Promised Land.
And so I'm going to stop. I'm going to remember that meal. That promise. That Rescue. And I'm going to thank God for it for as long as He allows it.
Because I've been saved, I've been changed, I have been set free.
And so much focus over the next few days will be on the crazy, significant events of Jesus' death and his resurrection. But tonight, tonight my thoughts go to that supper in the upper room of a house in Jerusalem. And from there to the Israelites in Egypt. My thoughts go to the Lord's supper - the very first Lord's supper. And to the Passover, to the very first Passover.
And sometimes, sometimes we make it just that - a supper, a meal. But it was so much more, wasn't it?
There was more to the Passover than some nicely roasted lamb, weird bread and bitter herbs. It was more than just a meal. It was a promise. A promise of rescue from slavery. A promise of relief from suffering. A promise that God was in control. A promise that God was about to act.
And it was a promise that was fulfilled. That very night, God rescued the Israelites from the slavery in Egypt. He gave them relief from the suffering that comes from captivity. He proved He was in control - Pharaoh let them go. The Red Sea parted! God did act!
And it was that - that promise and that fulfillment that Jesus and his disciples were commemorating at the Last Supper. Jesus didn't just decide he was going to randomly interrupt a meal to start babbling on about blood spilled and broken body. He chose the Passover meal. He chose the meal where blood was spilled and body was broken to protect God's chosen people - go read the Exodus account! There is such a richness, such a wealth of detail, that I can't even begin to put it into words.
But Jesus chose a meal so riddled with cultural and religious significance to make His point. In choosing this meal to talk about his "body, which is given for you" (Luke 22: 19) and his "blood, which is poured out as a sacrifice for you" (Luke 22: 20), Jesus is saying more than "I'm about to sacrifice myself for you".
He is saying that He is about to make a very particular sacrifice, with a very particular purpose. And here, right here, this is His promise:
He will rescue us from slavery.
He will bring us relief from suffering.
God is in control.
God is about to act.
And the disciples, they probably thought about that conquering king who was going to knock down the Roman empire and restore Israel as a nation. Their minds were focused on the things of this world.
But Jesus meant something bigger. Jesus was promising rescue from the slavery of sin. The suffering of sin. And He was promising that He would give His own life to achieve it. And my mind can barely contain it.
That meal was more than just a meal. It was a promise. A promise of a rescue. Over the next three days, Jesus enacted that rescue. That meal was a promise that was fulfilled.
A promise made not only to the Israelites in Egypt, not only to the friends in that room, but to all of God's chosen people - past, present and future. A promise made to me. A promise made to you. And the Israelites spent forty years in the wilderness before entering the Promised Land. And I think we're in the wilderness now. But just like the rescue that Jesus promised and brought about blows away the rescue promised and brought about at the first Passover - the Promised Land we're moving towards will absolutely blow away the Israelites' Promised Land.
And so I'm going to stop. I'm going to remember that meal. That promise. That Rescue. And I'm going to thank God for it for as long as He allows it.
Because I've been saved, I've been changed, I have been set free.
Monday, 9 March 2015
What Elijah Taught Me Today
You know, sometimes the instruction to "be perfect as your father is perfect" in the Sermon on the Mount can feel like a millstone around my neck. Sometimes the expectation (from myself and from others) to be loving, to be ready to talk and give and listen and give some more no matter what the circumstances can feel like a chain around my throat.
Sometimes, I just feel like throwing up my hands in despair and quitting life (a comfy bed in a cave somewhere with nothing but TV shows, movies and books would be wonderful on these days). And sure, I know that we're not meant to be able to do these things on our own strength, but sometimes it feels a lot like even with depending on God it's all just too much. And that's surely a little sacrilegious, because, you know - He's God. His strength never fails.
But there are still those days, aren't there? Days of curling into a ball, crying, and being like "That's it, God, I've had enough! I want out."
And then feeling absolutely awful, because God has given me life, given me freedom, given me hope, given me love, given me - well - everything! Surely He deserves more in return than "you're asking too much of me!"
You're getting the picture, right? I'm not the only one who sometimes gets days like this, right?
And then, the other day, I was reading in 1 Kings. And Israel is in a bad place. Their kinds are increasingly awful, their religious practices are increasingly insulting to God, their attitude is increasingly that of the world. And into this steps Elijah.
And he prays for a drought and it happens - but he gets fed by a raven. And God provides for him, a widow and a young boy from the scrapings of a jar of olive oil and a sack of flour for nearly 3 years. And God sends down fire from heaven that burns up a soaking wet sacrifice and Elijah punishes the hundreds of false prophets. And he's run faster than a horse pulled chariot. And my word, is this man on fire for God's mission!
And then...
Elijah doesn't listen to me, lies down and goes to sleep. And then God sends along an angel with a message:
God responds not with whiplash and judgment, but with care and consideration. He understands. And I love it.
And I think it's important to note that Elijah's "had enough moment" doesn't seem to have come from a place of rebellion, but a place of discouragement. It hasn't come from a place of "I deserve better", but a place of "I'm not enough". God does not respond to rebellion with sympathy, but He does respond that way to genuine weakness.
And it's just so encouraging to see. Because I can be that person who gives myself a tongue lashing when I'm exhausted, or when I'm overwhelmed, or when I'm sick. What am I thinking? Just rely on God, He'll give me the strength. Clearly something is wrong with me. And yet this passage, this incident, shows me that actually, God understands that I will be exhausted, that I will be overwhelmed, that I will be sick - and He doesn't hold it against me. Quite the contrary, He wants to care for me through it.
And as I reflect on this passage, I wonder, if that voice that attacks me and pushes me onwards when I am physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually exhausted is really the Devil's voice. The Devil's voice trying to distract me from the soft voice of God that says "Get up and eat... get up and eat some more, or the journey ahead will be too much for you."
Sometimes, I just feel like throwing up my hands in despair and quitting life (a comfy bed in a cave somewhere with nothing but TV shows, movies and books would be wonderful on these days). And sure, I know that we're not meant to be able to do these things on our own strength, but sometimes it feels a lot like even with depending on God it's all just too much. And that's surely a little sacrilegious, because, you know - He's God. His strength never fails.
But there are still those days, aren't there? Days of curling into a ball, crying, and being like "That's it, God, I've had enough! I want out."
And then feeling absolutely awful, because God has given me life, given me freedom, given me hope, given me love, given me - well - everything! Surely He deserves more in return than "you're asking too much of me!"
You're getting the picture, right? I'm not the only one who sometimes gets days like this, right?
And then, the other day, I was reading in 1 Kings. And Israel is in a bad place. Their kinds are increasingly awful, their religious practices are increasingly insulting to God, their attitude is increasingly that of the world. And into this steps Elijah.
And he prays for a drought and it happens - but he gets fed by a raven. And God provides for him, a widow and a young boy from the scrapings of a jar of olive oil and a sack of flour for nearly 3 years. And God sends down fire from heaven that burns up a soaking wet sacrifice and Elijah punishes the hundreds of false prophets. And he's run faster than a horse pulled chariot. And my word, is this man on fire for God's mission!
And then...
"I have had enough, Lord," he said. "Take my life, for I am no better than my ancestors who are dead." 1 Kings 19:4What even?? Come on, Elijah, you have just seen crazy awesome miracles. Like, God is working so powerfully in your life and through your life? How could you possibly be discouraged just because Jezebel wants you dead? What is she compared to God? What can she do, compared to what God has done? Stop feeling so discouraged, get up, and let God do His thing! (Response is slightly exaggerated, but if I was Elijah, this is how I would have reacted to myself).
Elijah doesn't listen to me, lies down and goes to sleep. And then God sends along an angel with a message:
"Get up and eat" [Elijah] looked around and there by his head was some bread baked on hot stones and a jar of water. So he ate and drank and lay down again. Then the angel of the Lord came again and touched him and said, "Get up and eat some more, or the journey ahead will be too much for you." So he got up and ate and drank.And I love it. How can I not? God's response to Elijah's human weakness is not frustration and anger. It's understanding. He recognizes that Elijah is human, and weak and just needs some time to recover his strength. So He lets him sleep, He provides him with food. He doesn't hurry him along, he doesn't stand around tapping his foot saying "come on Elijah, I just burned up an entire offering and the alter and all the water you poured on it, get with the program. What do you need a break for?"
God responds not with whiplash and judgment, but with care and consideration. He understands. And I love it.
And I think it's important to note that Elijah's "had enough moment" doesn't seem to have come from a place of rebellion, but a place of discouragement. It hasn't come from a place of "I deserve better", but a place of "I'm not enough". God does not respond to rebellion with sympathy, but He does respond that way to genuine weakness.
And it's just so encouraging to see. Because I can be that person who gives myself a tongue lashing when I'm exhausted, or when I'm overwhelmed, or when I'm sick. What am I thinking? Just rely on God, He'll give me the strength. Clearly something is wrong with me. And yet this passage, this incident, shows me that actually, God understands that I will be exhausted, that I will be overwhelmed, that I will be sick - and He doesn't hold it against me. Quite the contrary, He wants to care for me through it.
And as I reflect on this passage, I wonder, if that voice that attacks me and pushes me onwards when I am physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually exhausted is really the Devil's voice. The Devil's voice trying to distract me from the soft voice of God that says "Get up and eat... get up and eat some more, or the journey ahead will be too much for you."
Tuesday, 3 March 2015
Do You Ever Wonder?
Do you ever wonder what you're life would be like if you hadn't met that one person? If that one thing hadn't happened? Do you ever wonder who you would be if that thing that comes to mind right now had never happened?
I think, sometimes, life is littered with moments like those. Moments we don't necessarily realize changed the entire course of our life until we look back years later. Or moments we know will change our lives - but we can't see why they should until we realize that we wouldn't have anything done differently. Sometimes they're big things. Sometimes they're small things. Sometimes they're events, sometimes they're people.
Every time, they shape us more than we can ever really know.
I've been thinking about some of those moments lately. Thinking about them, and trying to make sense of it all.
That girl who made my primary school life a misery. And whose actions have haunted me for years.
That boy who came running to give me a hug after the first summer holidays in high school and who was there to calm me down when I was panicking on my first day of university. He's the biggest surprise. An outsider would never know how much of an impact he's had on my life. He probably doesn't even know.
That young man who was there for me when I just wanted everything to be over.
That moment when I danced in the rain with some girls as an eleven year old - the craziest, silliest thing I had done in years - and was applauded for it.
That girl who betrayed me, and all the people who stood by me when she did.
The move that ripped me from the only home I'd ever known - and placed me in a new one.
The girls and boys who cried and hugged me the first time I ever admitted to the wounds I'd carried for years.
The man who helped me hide myself - and took me to the road that led me to stand tall and brave, unashamed.
That toy dog I played Monopoly with as a child suffocated by pain and loneliness - and who still sits on my beanbag.
The pyjamas I only threw out last year because they were a gift from the first girl I knew was truly my friend.
The anchor necklace around my neck reminding me of the woman I cried with over shared pain and wounds.
The school where I spent my high school years.
The sisters who always believed in me, the parents who never gave up on me.
The woman who has taught me the most about being true to myself and true to God, and the woman who held onto me with all her might because she loved me too much to see me slip away.
The chaplain and his wife who've supported me, encouraged me, and pointed me to God in those times I just couldn't.
That perfect rainbow the morning after I'd cried myself to sleep because I felt abandoned by God.
The man who died on a cross.
Yeah... there have been a lot of those moments. A lot of those events. A lot of those people. Some of them tore me down, others of them saved. And all of them shaped me to be the woman I am today. A strong woman. A brave woman. A woman who depends entirely on God, because He is the one who orchestrated every single one of them. He is the one who saved me.
And when I think about them all, a question comes to mind. Why me? And I wonder. I wonder why me.
Why have I been so blessed? Why have these people been put into my life, why have these events happened? Because I have been so blessed, so very, very blessed. Through them God has saved me from a life of depression, anxiety, guilt, shame and possibly even suicide. I am not even exaggerating. I'm a psychology student. I know what I'm talking about.
And I also know that God has protected me. More than that, He has raised me up, strengthened me. I'm not finished, but I can confidently say that God is turning me into a masterpiece. Not because of excellence I've achieved, but because of what God has already done with me, and because of what He promises to do (in the long term, remembering that with God long term means eternal) for all who trust in Him.
And I have to sit down and wonder why. Why? Why? Why?
And I realize - and constantly need to remember, because otherwise it just doesn't make sense - that it isn't for me. Scratch that, it is for me. It's a blessing, a gift, from a good and kind Father.
But it isn't just for me. It's for others who are walking, have walked, will walk, the road of guilt, shame, depression, anxiety, hopelessness. It's for everyone out there who has been hurt, who has cried themselves to sleep at night, who has wished it would all end. It's for everyone out there who wonders why this has happened to them. Because everyone is broken - through my brokenness, I can embrace them as brothers and sisters. And, thanks to the constant process of healing, I can point them to God.
Because, most of all, it's not for me. It's not for others. It's for God's glory.
So I'll embrace all those moments. The ones that have shaped who I am. And the ones that will shape who I become. I'll embrace them - with thankfulness - for what they are: a gift, a mission, and a call on my heart that I can not ignore.
I think, sometimes, life is littered with moments like those. Moments we don't necessarily realize changed the entire course of our life until we look back years later. Or moments we know will change our lives - but we can't see why they should until we realize that we wouldn't have anything done differently. Sometimes they're big things. Sometimes they're small things. Sometimes they're events, sometimes they're people.
Every time, they shape us more than we can ever really know.
I've been thinking about some of those moments lately. Thinking about them, and trying to make sense of it all.
That girl who made my primary school life a misery. And whose actions have haunted me for years.
That boy who came running to give me a hug after the first summer holidays in high school and who was there to calm me down when I was panicking on my first day of university. He's the biggest surprise. An outsider would never know how much of an impact he's had on my life. He probably doesn't even know.
That young man who was there for me when I just wanted everything to be over.
That moment when I danced in the rain with some girls as an eleven year old - the craziest, silliest thing I had done in years - and was applauded for it.
That girl who betrayed me, and all the people who stood by me when she did.
The move that ripped me from the only home I'd ever known - and placed me in a new one.
The girls and boys who cried and hugged me the first time I ever admitted to the wounds I'd carried for years.
The man who helped me hide myself - and took me to the road that led me to stand tall and brave, unashamed.
That toy dog I played Monopoly with as a child suffocated by pain and loneliness - and who still sits on my beanbag.
The pyjamas I only threw out last year because they were a gift from the first girl I knew was truly my friend.
The anchor necklace around my neck reminding me of the woman I cried with over shared pain and wounds.
The school where I spent my high school years.
The sisters who always believed in me, the parents who never gave up on me.
The woman who has taught me the most about being true to myself and true to God, and the woman who held onto me with all her might because she loved me too much to see me slip away.
The chaplain and his wife who've supported me, encouraged me, and pointed me to God in those times I just couldn't.
That perfect rainbow the morning after I'd cried myself to sleep because I felt abandoned by God.
The man who died on a cross.
Yeah... there have been a lot of those moments. A lot of those events. A lot of those people. Some of them tore me down, others of them saved. And all of them shaped me to be the woman I am today. A strong woman. A brave woman. A woman who depends entirely on God, because He is the one who orchestrated every single one of them. He is the one who saved me.
And when I think about them all, a question comes to mind. Why me? And I wonder. I wonder why me.
Why have I been so blessed? Why have these people been put into my life, why have these events happened? Because I have been so blessed, so very, very blessed. Through them God has saved me from a life of depression, anxiety, guilt, shame and possibly even suicide. I am not even exaggerating. I'm a psychology student. I know what I'm talking about.
And I also know that God has protected me. More than that, He has raised me up, strengthened me. I'm not finished, but I can confidently say that God is turning me into a masterpiece. Not because of excellence I've achieved, but because of what God has already done with me, and because of what He promises to do (in the long term, remembering that with God long term means eternal) for all who trust in Him.
And I have to sit down and wonder why. Why? Why? Why?
And I realize - and constantly need to remember, because otherwise it just doesn't make sense - that it isn't for me. Scratch that, it is for me. It's a blessing, a gift, from a good and kind Father.
But it isn't just for me. It's for others who are walking, have walked, will walk, the road of guilt, shame, depression, anxiety, hopelessness. It's for everyone out there who has been hurt, who has cried themselves to sleep at night, who has wished it would all end. It's for everyone out there who wonders why this has happened to them. Because everyone is broken - through my brokenness, I can embrace them as brothers and sisters. And, thanks to the constant process of healing, I can point them to God.
Because, most of all, it's not for me. It's not for others. It's for God's glory.
So I'll embrace all those moments. The ones that have shaped who I am. And the ones that will shape who I become. I'll embrace them - with thankfulness - for what they are: a gift, a mission, and a call on my heart that I can not ignore.
Sunday, 15 February 2015
Dependence and Independence
So, I moved out of home yesterday. Moved to the next city south for university. It's funny how natural it actually is. How natural it is to think that I'm only going home for holidays now. That this room in this house in this city between the cliffs and the sea is now my home. Yeah, surprisingly, that's not the hard part.
The hard part was waking up this morning and realizing I'd need to go grocery shopping before I could eat breakfast. Or any meal really. It was in the sitting down to figure out what exactly I could afford to get and how I could make the most out of it meals-wise. Who knew honey was so expensive?
The hard part was realizing that at this point, I may as well wait till lunchtime to eat, because by the time I'd gotten ready to go out and buy the food, it would be nearly lunchtime.
The hard part was in getting sidetracked from my preparations to get the groceries when I realized I hadn't set up the fortnightly payments of my rent. And realizing that the funds in my account would not last for the years rent, not unless I got a job. And the hard part was seeing the reminder pop up that uni fees also needed to be paid at some point.
So yeah, the hard part is most definitely not the geography, it's the finances. It's having it in my head that I need to get a job and trying to figure out how to make what I've got last.
And as I sat at my computer flicking through uni sites and my bank accounts and Coles shopping catalogues, my eyes fell on my little flip-o-thingy of encouragements to breathe. And yesterday's page had a reminder to breathe while doing the simple tasks, while steeping tea, because it's the small things that help the mind relax.
So I went and made myself a tea (and was asked if I was the one doing the load of laundry responsible for the slight overflow in water, right near some electrical appliances - no, I wasn't, but breathe...). And I came back, sat down again and flipped to today's page.
And we never really stop being dependent. We really shouldn't. Total independence really is just an illusion, fools gold polished and presented as really gold. It is something used to distract from dependence on God. It is used to make foolish people think they are wise. It is used to make blind people think they can give everybody else directions.
Independence is not something I want to strive for. Dependence is. Dependence on God for my next breath, for my next meal, for my rent, for a job. And I don't mean sitting back and hoping things just fly at me, I just mean the realization that without God's provision, I would have absolutely nothing.
And as long as I stay focused on the Cross, on Jesus, on His life, on His Sacrifice, on Him as Mediator and High Priest, the matters of this world become dim. It's not that they cease to matter, it's just that they no longer seem matter more than they really do. Because they are temporary. They will come and go with time, with situation. There's nothing really that can happen to change them. Nothing that can be done to control them. They come and go like the mist, fleeting, unimportant in the grand scheme of things.
What matters, what really truly matters, is where I stand with God. Do I depend on Him to provide for me as a father provides for His children? Do I depend on Him to care for me as a counsellor cares for her patients? Do I depend on Him to Rule my life as a good King? Do I serve Him as one who acknowledges that He is Creator, Ruler, King of Kings?
The answers to those questions, acted out in my behaviours regarding my finances, my friends, my enemies, my studies, my possessions, my very life, are what really matters in the long term.
Is God my King or just my genie?
The hard part was waking up this morning and realizing I'd need to go grocery shopping before I could eat breakfast. Or any meal really. It was in the sitting down to figure out what exactly I could afford to get and how I could make the most out of it meals-wise. Who knew honey was so expensive?
The hard part was realizing that at this point, I may as well wait till lunchtime to eat, because by the time I'd gotten ready to go out and buy the food, it would be nearly lunchtime.
The hard part was in getting sidetracked from my preparations to get the groceries when I realized I hadn't set up the fortnightly payments of my rent. And realizing that the funds in my account would not last for the years rent, not unless I got a job. And the hard part was seeing the reminder pop up that uni fees also needed to be paid at some point.
So yeah, the hard part is most definitely not the geography, it's the finances. It's having it in my head that I need to get a job and trying to figure out how to make what I've got last.
And as I sat at my computer flicking through uni sites and my bank accounts and Coles shopping catalogues, my eyes fell on my little flip-o-thingy of encouragements to breathe. And yesterday's page had a reminder to breathe while doing the simple tasks, while steeping tea, because it's the small things that help the mind relax.
So I went and made myself a tea (and was asked if I was the one doing the load of laundry responsible for the slight overflow in water, right near some electrical appliances - no, I wasn't, but breathe...). And I came back, sat down again and flipped to today's page.
Thoughts filled with Jesus leave no room for despair.And suddenly, things aren't quite so overwhelming. I can breathe - and be grateful that oxygen is free. I can breathe - and depend on God to provide for my needs. I can breathe - and know that Jesus has dealt with my greatest problem. I can breathe - and know that even if I do go hungry from time to time (unlikely as that actually is), God will use it for good. And by that, I mean for His glory.
And we never really stop being dependent. We really shouldn't. Total independence really is just an illusion, fools gold polished and presented as really gold. It is something used to distract from dependence on God. It is used to make foolish people think they are wise. It is used to make blind people think they can give everybody else directions.
Independence is not something I want to strive for. Dependence is. Dependence on God for my next breath, for my next meal, for my rent, for a job. And I don't mean sitting back and hoping things just fly at me, I just mean the realization that without God's provision, I would have absolutely nothing.
And as long as I stay focused on the Cross, on Jesus, on His life, on His Sacrifice, on Him as Mediator and High Priest, the matters of this world become dim. It's not that they cease to matter, it's just that they no longer seem matter more than they really do. Because they are temporary. They will come and go with time, with situation. There's nothing really that can happen to change them. Nothing that can be done to control them. They come and go like the mist, fleeting, unimportant in the grand scheme of things.
What matters, what really truly matters, is where I stand with God. Do I depend on Him to provide for me as a father provides for His children? Do I depend on Him to care for me as a counsellor cares for her patients? Do I depend on Him to Rule my life as a good King? Do I serve Him as one who acknowledges that He is Creator, Ruler, King of Kings?
The answers to those questions, acted out in my behaviours regarding my finances, my friends, my enemies, my studies, my possessions, my very life, are what really matters in the long term.
Is God my King or just my genie?
Tuesday, 3 February 2015
What I have Learnt So Far - and Humbly Pass on to You
So my sister - the middle one - she's started her last year of school. She's started it, though in some ways, her last year hadn't really stopped. She's started it and she's got assignments and exams and hours of work pouring out of her ears and working its way into her eyes, her mind and her heart. She and her friends.
And I've spent a fair bit of time with them over this past month - seen them as they've made the most of these holidays before their final year at school. Seen them as they've consolidated and re-affirmed their friendship, determined not to let the threatening tide of grades and performances and ranks wear away at their hearts and their friendships. And It
Each and every one of them is God-fearing. Is loving. Is strong. Is brave. They are wonderful and intelligent, and I have said this before and I will say it again: I am so proud of my beautiful sister, and I thank God for the friends He has put in her life.
And here is a little message from my heart to theirs, and anyone else in a similar position.
Dear brothers and sisters - for such a relationship I can claim through Christ,
The World will try to conform you to their standards. It will seek to tell you that how you perform is all that matters, that what you do is who you are. It will push you to achieve, and achieve regardless of the cost to yourself and to those you love. It will want you to put your trust in your grades - because when your trust is in something so changeable, then you are off balance, unfocused and easy prey for the Enemy that threatens everyone, but especially those who are God's children.
And into this the World will come. The World will what you to act a certain way, to do a certain thing. It may try making you wear a mask, conceal the Truth of your heart and your mind and your soul, because the truth of those three is a powerful light, a candle burning bright. And if you're trust is in the Lord, then it is burning bright with a Truth the World does not wish to face. It burns with the Truth that we have fallen short of the Glory of our Creator. It burns with the Truth that we are imperfect. And this the world has no desire to hear, no desire to see. So it seeks to snuff it out, to hide it. And the World knows that the surest way to snuff out a candle is to smother it. And so it seeks to smother the Truth of your heart and your mind and your soul before it has seen the Whole Truth burning there.
The World seeks to smother the Truth burning in your because it is too afraid of the bad news there to look long enough to see the good news. The Gospel. It does not see - and sadly often does not wish to see - the Truth that our Creator God stepped into our fallen, broken, imperfect lives and became the God-Man. The Truth that Grace is on offer and that all who chose to accept it are raised up to Glory of our Creator, are made perfect. But, for all the World does not wish to see this, the World needs to see this.
My friends, you know the Truth. I see it in the way you treat each other, in the activities you choose to be involved with, in the topics that bring your eyes to life. It is my prayer, my earnest prayer, that you will resist the schemes of the World. That you will always know that it is not what you do and how you perform that matters, but who you are and into what you place your life. Recognise the mask the world wants you to wear for what they are: a basket with which to cover the Truth burning within you.
And as I have spent time with you all this past month, I have been saddened that I am moving away, for I have felt a pull on my heart towards each of you. I pull that tells me to love and serve you as I can to make this year, if not easier, then pleasanter for all of you. And I know that my location will limit my ability to do this. I know that there are many people in your lives who are loving you and praying for you and who you can turn to for aid in times of stress, but I want you to know that you are always welcome to shoot me a message, by Facebook or phone, or that I am always ready to put on the kettle (should you happen to come to my door), whether you have need to pour your heart out or simply to sit a moment and just be.
And that bring me to one last thing I wish to say. I'm sure you've heard this all before, but I'll say it hear too: do make sure you sit a moment and simply be. Take time to close your eyes, breathe in, appreciate the fact that you are alive and breathe out a prayer of thankfulness to our God, our Provider. Take time to admire sunsets and praise the Great Artist. Take time to sip delicious drinks or savour tasty foods. Take time to laugh. Take time to cry. And with each moment, turn to God as our Comforter and our Father. You'll find that time slips through your fingers as sand does, but don't forget to stop for a moment each day to appreciate the Creation around you and the friends that are with you. This is so, so important. Because as long as you make time to enjoy Creation and speak with God, then you'll find the World can not steal enjoyment and your relationship with God from you.
I am young yet, I know. I am not much further along in life than you, I know. But I do hope and pray this is of some help, some encouragement, some blessing in your life for you. And with that, I shall conclude. May God bless you all richly, may this year be a joy (though it brings with it pain), and may you always know that you are loved not for what you do, but who you are.
With love,
Laura
And I've spent a fair bit of time with them over this past month - seen them as they've made the most of these holidays before their final year at school. Seen them as they've consolidated and re-affirmed their friendship, determined not to let the threatening tide of grades and performances and ranks wear away at their hearts and their friendships. And It
Each and every one of them is God-fearing. Is loving. Is strong. Is brave. They are wonderful and intelligent, and I have said this before and I will say it again: I am so proud of my beautiful sister, and I thank God for the friends He has put in her life.
And here is a little message from my heart to theirs, and anyone else in a similar position.
Dear brothers and sisters - for such a relationship I can claim through Christ,
The World will try to conform you to their standards. It will seek to tell you that how you perform is all that matters, that what you do is who you are. It will push you to achieve, and achieve regardless of the cost to yourself and to those you love. It will want you to put your trust in your grades - because when your trust is in something so changeable, then you are off balance, unfocused and easy prey for the Enemy that threatens everyone, but especially those who are God's children.
And into this the World will come. The World will what you to act a certain way, to do a certain thing. It may try making you wear a mask, conceal the Truth of your heart and your mind and your soul, because the truth of those three is a powerful light, a candle burning bright. And if you're trust is in the Lord, then it is burning bright with a Truth the World does not wish to face. It burns with the Truth that we have fallen short of the Glory of our Creator. It burns with the Truth that we are imperfect. And this the world has no desire to hear, no desire to see. So it seeks to snuff it out, to hide it. And the World knows that the surest way to snuff out a candle is to smother it. And so it seeks to smother the Truth of your heart and your mind and your soul before it has seen the Whole Truth burning there.
The World seeks to smother the Truth burning in your because it is too afraid of the bad news there to look long enough to see the good news. The Gospel. It does not see - and sadly often does not wish to see - the Truth that our Creator God stepped into our fallen, broken, imperfect lives and became the God-Man. The Truth that Grace is on offer and that all who chose to accept it are raised up to Glory of our Creator, are made perfect. But, for all the World does not wish to see this, the World needs to see this.
My friends, you know the Truth. I see it in the way you treat each other, in the activities you choose to be involved with, in the topics that bring your eyes to life. It is my prayer, my earnest prayer, that you will resist the schemes of the World. That you will always know that it is not what you do and how you perform that matters, but who you are and into what you place your life. Recognise the mask the world wants you to wear for what they are: a basket with which to cover the Truth burning within you.
And as I have spent time with you all this past month, I have been saddened that I am moving away, for I have felt a pull on my heart towards each of you. I pull that tells me to love and serve you as I can to make this year, if not easier, then pleasanter for all of you. And I know that my location will limit my ability to do this. I know that there are many people in your lives who are loving you and praying for you and who you can turn to for aid in times of stress, but I want you to know that you are always welcome to shoot me a message, by Facebook or phone, or that I am always ready to put on the kettle (should you happen to come to my door), whether you have need to pour your heart out or simply to sit a moment and just be.
And that bring me to one last thing I wish to say. I'm sure you've heard this all before, but I'll say it hear too: do make sure you sit a moment and simply be. Take time to close your eyes, breathe in, appreciate the fact that you are alive and breathe out a prayer of thankfulness to our God, our Provider. Take time to admire sunsets and praise the Great Artist. Take time to sip delicious drinks or savour tasty foods. Take time to laugh. Take time to cry. And with each moment, turn to God as our Comforter and our Father. You'll find that time slips through your fingers as sand does, but don't forget to stop for a moment each day to appreciate the Creation around you and the friends that are with you. This is so, so important. Because as long as you make time to enjoy Creation and speak with God, then you'll find the World can not steal enjoyment and your relationship with God from you.
I am young yet, I know. I am not much further along in life than you, I know. But I do hope and pray this is of some help, some encouragement, some blessing in your life for you. And with that, I shall conclude. May God bless you all richly, may this year be a joy (though it brings with it pain), and may you always know that you are loved not for what you do, but who you are.
With love,
Laura
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Thursday, 29 January 2015
When Words Fail...
It has been some time now since I have sat down with pen and paper (or keyboard and screen, as is currently the case) to put in words the finer, deeper emotions and thoughts of the past year. Every time I have tried, be it personal reflections in my journal, letters to beloved friends or post to be shared with the world, I have found myself staring at blank pages - or pages full of words that are all wrong, wrong, WRONG! I have found, for the first time in life, that the written word has failed me utterly.
But the truth is, how do you put into words the love, the gratitude, the delight, the heartache, the - the - oh! I don't have the words for it! Perhaps it is best expressed as the fellowship that I have experienced this past year. Yes, I think that might be it.
I have grown up some this past year. I am still growing, I know it well! But I have grown up some, this year. And I think, perhaps, it is because of just that fellowship (for lack of a better word) that is so hard for me to put into words.
I know that I have loved more deeply, more freely, more openly, than I have ever loved before. And have felt myself to be deeply loved in return. Oh, I'm doing this so, so badly!
To that girl from Austria; those newly-weds I wrote to over a year ago and have since been brother and sister to me; to those sisters I prayed with, laughed with, cried with every week at college; to those men who are brothers; to all those who have mentored me, prayed for me, led me closer to God through your example; to those at church, at beach mission, from school, and - of course - from college:
Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Thank you for being men and women of God. Thank you for pursuing Him with all your hearts. Thank you for hearing that part of me I have been too ashamed to show the world and accepting me with open arms still. Thank you for sharing your heartaches, your wounds, your scars, your tears. Thank you for sharing your joys, your triumphs, your laughter. Thank you for being open, honest and safe. Thank you for being people who are willing to let God work through you.
I thank God for each and every one of you, for I really, truly have none like you. Each turning page of my life has brought greater joys (and, sometimes, greater sorrows), than the preceding year. Because of you, last year was the sweetest page of my story so far. And because of you, I look to the coming pages with optimism and complete confidence in all the Lord has in store for me.
I know that many of you had a page (or even a chapter) stained with tears this last year. I know that others of you have chapters ringing with laughter. Happy or sad, I know all you - all of us - had pages written perfectly by the hand of the Master Author. And I know that - whilst we may wish things written differently know - each line serves to forward to story of our lives as God's children and ambassadors in this world. I encourage you, my beloved friends, to trust in God's goodness, grace and justice. Trust that our stories, our pages of pain, and our pages of comfort, all have a place in the great Narrative of the universe.
I wish... I really, really wish, that I could put into words just what you mean to me. Just how encouraged I have been by each and every one of you, and just how much I hope to be - or to have been - as much of an encouragement to you. Perhaps a better master of writing than me - or perhaps just one more diligent about practicing the art of writing - could do it, but I can not.
And so you'll just have to trust that you have shaped me and influenced me in my life. You'll have to accept those small things I have been able to do, and will do as often as I can, as proof of a deeper love and gratitude than I am capable of expressing. And I hope that, come Judgment day, when all is made plain before mankind, that you will understand then and give glory to our Father for it.
May God bless you and keep you. May He guide you through life. May His grace be the anthem of your days and His justice your comfort. May His love uphold you and His light brighten the darkest of days. May His mission inspire you and His Spirit embolden you. May you lay down your lives in thankful unceasing worship of Him every day that you draw breath. And may His Death on the Cross, His Resurrection from the Gave and His Ascension into Heaven give you strength, comfort and hope when all else seems lost.
With all my love, prayers and hopes to catch up soon,
Laura
But the truth is, how do you put into words the love, the gratitude, the delight, the heartache, the - the - oh! I don't have the words for it! Perhaps it is best expressed as the fellowship that I have experienced this past year. Yes, I think that might be it.
I have grown up some this past year. I am still growing, I know it well! But I have grown up some, this year. And I think, perhaps, it is because of just that fellowship (for lack of a better word) that is so hard for me to put into words.
I know that I have loved more deeply, more freely, more openly, than I have ever loved before. And have felt myself to be deeply loved in return. Oh, I'm doing this so, so badly!
To that girl from Austria; those newly-weds I wrote to over a year ago and have since been brother and sister to me; to those sisters I prayed with, laughed with, cried with every week at college; to those men who are brothers; to all those who have mentored me, prayed for me, led me closer to God through your example; to those at church, at beach mission, from school, and - of course - from college:
Thank you. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Thank you for being men and women of God. Thank you for pursuing Him with all your hearts. Thank you for hearing that part of me I have been too ashamed to show the world and accepting me with open arms still. Thank you for sharing your heartaches, your wounds, your scars, your tears. Thank you for sharing your joys, your triumphs, your laughter. Thank you for being open, honest and safe. Thank you for being people who are willing to let God work through you.
I thank God for each and every one of you, for I really, truly have none like you. Each turning page of my life has brought greater joys (and, sometimes, greater sorrows), than the preceding year. Because of you, last year was the sweetest page of my story so far. And because of you, I look to the coming pages with optimism and complete confidence in all the Lord has in store for me.
I know that many of you had a page (or even a chapter) stained with tears this last year. I know that others of you have chapters ringing with laughter. Happy or sad, I know all you - all of us - had pages written perfectly by the hand of the Master Author. And I know that - whilst we may wish things written differently know - each line serves to forward to story of our lives as God's children and ambassadors in this world. I encourage you, my beloved friends, to trust in God's goodness, grace and justice. Trust that our stories, our pages of pain, and our pages of comfort, all have a place in the great Narrative of the universe.
I wish... I really, really wish, that I could put into words just what you mean to me. Just how encouraged I have been by each and every one of you, and just how much I hope to be - or to have been - as much of an encouragement to you. Perhaps a better master of writing than me - or perhaps just one more diligent about practicing the art of writing - could do it, but I can not.
And so you'll just have to trust that you have shaped me and influenced me in my life. You'll have to accept those small things I have been able to do, and will do as often as I can, as proof of a deeper love and gratitude than I am capable of expressing. And I hope that, come Judgment day, when all is made plain before mankind, that you will understand then and give glory to our Father for it.
May God bless you and keep you. May He guide you through life. May His grace be the anthem of your days and His justice your comfort. May His love uphold you and His light brighten the darkest of days. May His mission inspire you and His Spirit embolden you. May you lay down your lives in thankful unceasing worship of Him every day that you draw breath. And may His Death on the Cross, His Resurrection from the Gave and His Ascension into Heaven give you strength, comfort and hope when all else seems lost.
With all my love, prayers and hopes to catch up soon,
Laura
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