Welcome to life in the Wilderness

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Slowing to a stop at the light, I attempted to register the words that my daughter was saying.  She was sharing about her day.  Something about lunch and who sat where.  Honestly, it’s not that I didn’t care about what is going on, it’s that an avalanche of thoughts and feelings had been taking over my brain.  Questions about God, his kindness and his justness.  Questions about church, both big C church and little c church.  In that moment I realized that it was time to take a good look at all of it instead of pushing everything to the back burner.  It was in this moment that I embraced my wilderness.

What’s is the wilderness?  It’s a season in life marked by feeling un-tethered.  What once felt like solid ground, feels more like sinking sand.  Beliefs, traditions that once meant so much lose their luster.  Perhaps you’ve experienced this.  Faith feels uninspired, or you doubt things you once thought truth.  Attending church feels like going through the motions.  You’ve given up prayer because you’re not sure that it works. Well my friend, you may have entered a new season in your faith journey.

The wilderness is also known as The Wall or the Dark Night of the Soul. I’ve even heard of Trough of Sorrow.  That last one is my personal favorite.   Whatever you want to call it, this season can feel discouraging. What once felt like solid ground has given way.  The very things that brought you comfort, now causes anxiety.  I don’t blame you for being anxious.  This season is no joke.  

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My journey to the wilderness began years ago with grief.  About the same time that our family left a church, a friend suddenly died.  In the next twelve months two more friends would be taken.  Women that I loved and who had been mentors. A year or two later, grief was followed up by disillusionment.  I encountered church leaders who looked more like bouncers and less like love.  The final leg of my journey was caused by unmet expectations. Expectations of what the church should look like.  I wanted one thing but  experienced something else.   And so my attachment to Church began to unravel.

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What I’m learning is that there are so many of us here.  Folks who are discontent with glossing over Bible stories, or tired of church cultures that create cliques instead of banquet tables.  Some of us were driven here by grief.  Others wandered in slowly. Some were tossed here by churches that hold tightly to the words contained in the Bible but who forgot to live out Jesus’ teaching to love God and others above all else.  Everyone here has a story.

Are you a fellow sojourner in this wilderness?  First, welcome.  I wish I could sit across the table from you so that I could hear yours story.  I imagine that there is heartbreak involved.  I am so sorry.

Yes, this season is scary.  The unmooring of our faith is a scary thing.  If feels easier to follow a faith that we can understand and box up, than to trust a God who is mysterious and unknowable. But here’s a secret: If you let it, this season will become a major turning point in your life; one that strengthens your relationship with God. It may not seem like it right now, but I believe this to be true. It helps to have friends with you as you navigate.  I hope that I can be a friend for you.  I know that I won’t have all of the answers, but perhaps together we can make the wilderness a little less scary and we can journey together into the new land that God has promised.

I’ve learned a few things along the way and I’m actually starting to appreciate my wilderness experience (though not totally enjoying it).

Top three things that I’ve learned:

1. Your story is important.  God made each of us uniquely. Every single story of faith and doubt and how those two things intersect is unique too.  It’s important that we listen to one another and to hold space for the story.  Lean in.  Examine the doubts; where they came from.  Parts of your faith may fall away and that’s okay.  What remains will be more real than what you had before.  Yes, it’s scary, but what is on the other side is greater than you can imagine.

2. It’s important to hold space AND our tongues.  Telling people the answer to their faith doubts isn’t loving.  It’s crushing.  Instead, make space to hear the story.  Love others in the midst of it and then TRUST that God will meet them. Dismissing doubts and struggles-others or our own doesn’t fix anything.  In fact, dismissing them only increases the feelings of doubt and fear.

3. God is found in the wilderness.

I stumbled on something the other day and it feels important.  Searching through scripture to read more about the life of Jesus, I ended up in Matthew 3:3.  For some context, we’re encountering John the Baptist, Jesus cousin.  John was reportedly sent to prepare the way for Jesus.  He lived a unique life, spending a lot of his time in the wilderness of Judea.  Matthew referred back to an Old Testament book where John was prophesied about.  This is how Matthew 3:3 records it

The voice of one crying in the wilderness,

Make ready the way of the Lord,

Make his paths straight!”

Don’t ask me what led me to look that verse up in Isaiah.  Let’s just say I can be a bit of a Bible nerd sometimes.  Regardless of why, I read the same words in Isaiah…but there was something that was different.

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A voice is calling,

Clear the way for the LORD in the wilderness;

Make smooth in the desert a highway for our God.

Did you catch it?  One verse reads that the VOICE is calling from the wilderness to make a way for the LORD.  The other reads that we need to clear a way for the LORD IN the wilderness.

Now, I don’t actually know which version is right.  The original text doesn’t have punctuation, so where that comma is supposed to be just isn’t clear.

What I do know is that I’ve experienced God in tangible ways as I settled into this wilderness place.  I’ve cried into his shoulder, and I’ve felt his gentle nudge.  He’s reminded me of his love, challenged me to step into his truth and cleared up some lies that I’ve believed about him.  So while my day to day isn’t filled with feeling fulfilled with my purpose, it has been filled with his presence.

I’ve begun to realize that I prefer his presence.

 

Book Recs for the journey:

Inspired: Slaying Giants, Walking on Water and Loving the Bible Again by Rachel Held Evans

Out of Sorts: Making Peace with an Evolving Faith by Sarah Bessey

The Critical Journey: Stages in the Life of Faith by Janet O. Hagberg & Robert A. Guelich

Emotionally Healthy Spirituality by Peter Scazzero

Podcasts:

Stay Curious September 14, 2019 Critical Journey with Janet Hagberg

Lead Stories: October 22, 2019 Bonus Lead Voices Episode: Sarah Bessey #wewontgohome

The Liturgists Podcast Season 4, Episode 16 Christian (Part 1)

 

 

A Seat at the Table

Hunched over my phone I scrolled through a handful of Instagram comments.  The post was by a woman in leadership and her question had been “Why do women (or you personally) shrink back and make ourselves small?”

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Many comments resonated with me.  Reading story after story that echoed my own struggle felt like an injection of courage.  Two seconds of courage resulted in me opening up my blogging platform. Two more seconds of courage and I’d opened this post.

In this life God has offered me an incredible opportunity to hear stories.  Stories from church staff, mission staff, or women who simply attend church.  The stories are infused with discouragement, and frustration. Instead of being a place that values all people, the Church can sometimes be a place that squashes down, belittles, critiques and limits half of the people that God created.

I’ve heard stories from women who were asked to check feelings at the door, or who felt uncomfortable sharing negative feedback for fear of being labeled “bitchy.” Women overlooked because they didn’t fit a specific mold, or whose weaknesses were highlighted causing a battle to maintain confidence.  Does this sound like what God intended for the Church?

One woman vulnerably shared a recent experience in a public forum.  She’d taken off her mask and shared the good and bad story of the church.  Upon reflection a male leader had said very little to her about the risk, the experience, the vulnerability.  He didn’t ask how this had impacted her.  He did offer a critique of one small piece of what she’d shared.  How does this reflect Jesus?

The absolute WORST is the friendly fire.  When there are few women in leadership and they’ve been given a seat at the table, yet they cut down other women.  I imagine it’s done out of insecurity.  The crazy notion of scarcity; that there is only so little room at the table and that we all need to battle for our spot.

It’s utter crap.

We are ALL invited.  God wants each and every one of us there.

I don’t want to debate theology on this.  I know the verses used as weapons to limit the voices of women.  I’ve worked through it and I don’t subscribe.  If you disagree, I’m okay with that.  I don’t want to fight with you.  Because you know what?  There is a seat at the table for you too.  Even if we disagree.

When I read the gospels I read about a Jesus who entrusted the news of his resurrection to women.

1After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb.

2There was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. 3His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes were white as snow. 4The guards were so afraid of him that they shook and became like dead men.

5The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid, for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. 6He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. Come and see the place where he lay. 7Then go quickly and tell his disciples: ‘He has risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see him.’ Now I have told you.”

8So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. 9Suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. 10Then Jesus said to them, “Do not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.” Matthew 28:1-10

If Jesus can entrust women with such important news, I am confident that he has other work for us to do.  Jesus has given us a seat at the table.  Will you?

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If you’re a leader I’d like to offer you some suggestions.  You may already be doing some of these, some may be new.  It’s going to take work to ensure that females grow and thrive on a team.

1) Make time to listen.  We may not think the same way you do.  We certainly don’t see the world and/or scripture through the same lens.  So please don’t expect women to take a seat and conform to your way of seeing and doing. We need more women at the table because they bring new thoughts, new ideas and new perspective!  Be open to our voice.

2) Spend less time picking apart and more time building up.  This will involve taking risks.  We may not do things right the first time.  Who does?  Make room for mistakes from everyone, male and female.  We are all better when people are given a chance to learn and grow.

3) Don’t wait for the perfect female leader to show up at your door.  Despite what you may believe, great leaders aren’t born.  Great leaders have the initial ingredients to be a leader but it takes time, encouragement, resources, and experience to develop a great leaders.  Look around.  Who do you know that has potential?  Are you willing to invest in her as a leader?

4) Above all else, look at Jesus.  Read through the gospels and pay specific attention to the times that Jesus interacts with women.  He doesn’t negate their voice, he doesn’t demean them, objectify them or criticize them.  Instead he honors them, elevates them and loves them.

Leaders of the church, you have been given a high calling.  God has placed you in authority, entrusted you with all kinds of soon-to-be leaders.  So what are you going to do?  Are you going to encourage them, equip them and point them to Jesus?  Or will you spend more time thinking about yourself and how this impacts you?

Let’s help the Church become a place where women have a legitimate seat at the table.

 

 

 

Broken AND Beloved

Are you a big believer in coincidence or are you someone who is willing to acknowledge circumstances as God’s presence in your life?  Can you sit in wonder or does life always make logical sense to you?  Have you ever walked away from a moment that felt truly holy and do you think those only exist in scripture?

Let me tell you a story and you can decide where you land.  No judgement…just an exercise in getting to know one another.

I’m the only one who drinks coffee at my house, so I’m the one who makes it.  On a recent Saturday morning I finished my habitual glass of water and set about filling the carafe and pouring water into the machine.  I folded a filter to nestle in the basket, measured the exact amount of coffee, and dumped in the scoops.  I pushed the whole mess beneath the drop spout and flipped the switch. As I waited for my morning wake-me-up, I found my journal and pulled out a mug.

A few mugs in my collection mean something to me.  Though I love the sweet mug I instinctively grabbed, on this morning another mug tugged at my heart.  I could see it in the cupboard with it’s creamy sides and wide base.  I thought of the friend who gifted it to me and decided the second mug felt more appropriate for my day, so I swapped it out.

I savored the words on the side, “Fearfully and wonderfully made.”  I remembered the day it was given to me.  It had been a hard day and the mug brought me joy.

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My coffee machined breathed and gurgled to signify that it had completed the brewing process.  I poured some of my favorite beverage into my mug and added in sweet creamer making everything a light blonde.  I plunked myself down in a chair and flipped open my devotional.  I read the prescribed scripture: 

13 For you created my inmost being;
you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
14 I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
your works are wonderful,
I know that full well.
15 My frame was not hidden from you
when I was made in the secret place,
when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.

Psalm 139:13-15

Huh.  Goosebumps rippled onto the back of my neck and a chill ran down my spine.

That got my attention.  I sat up straight.

I proceeded with my reading, moving into the written devotional.

“David seems to have maintained the tension of two complementary truths taught in scripture.  We are sinners who desperately need forgiveness and a savior.  At the same time, God created us in his image, knit each of us together in our mothers womb with enormous care, and chose us for a special purpose on earth.”

 

My jaw dropped and I slowly sat back in my chair.  The moment felt holy.  I didn’t want to take it for granted.

Now I’m sure that this reading doesn’t strike you as particularly holy.  It could seem like just a normal reading to accompany Psalm 139.  I don’t blame you for thinking that.  Rightly so.  You’re missing one piece of information that might cause the necessary impact.

Less than 24 hours prior to this devotional reading I’d walked in to a legitimate establishment called “The Smokey Banana” and gotten my first tattoo.  Well, two tattoos actually.  One on each wrist.

The one on my left wrist reads “Broken”. Like “I’m a sinner who desperately needs forgiveness and a savior,” kind of broken.

My right wrist reads “Beloved”.  Meaning, “I’m created by God in his image, knit together in my mothers womb with enormous care and chosen for a special purpose on earth.” THAT kind of beloved.

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It is entirely possible that everything that happened during my morning devotional up is merely a coincidence.  I don’t blame you if that’s where you land.  And honestly, I KNOW that you could read this and have big problems with the idea that a Christian woman scarred her body with a permanent tattoo.  I’m fine with that.  I’ll pray through it.

I can understand all of the possible reactions.  I used to feel the same way.

But I am stepping into something new and different and that is why I permanently inked up my body.

I got my tattoos because I needed to mark a period in my life.  The last 12 months have been hard.  I walked the line between believing I was broken and desperately wanting to hear that I was also beloved.  I struggled to let people in to the mess.  This period has helped me to draw in some long time friends and recognize new friends.  I am learning what makes a great community and how to discern who to trust.  Counseling has helped and so have wise people in my life.

And my time with God each morning has been the lifeline that carried me through.  Some days I could hear him loudly.  Though the ground beneath me felt unsure, I knew I could trust him.  There were also days where God felt far away, even as I believed that he was nearby.  Our relationship has changed as I’ve grown in this season. The kind of growth that makes me feel gratitude for what has passed.

Now as the yearly season turns to fall, I feel like I’m stepping into spring.  I see new growth in my life and fresh starts.  I am learning to accept that I am broken and that in my brokenness comes connection to those around me.  God continually reminds me that I am also beloved…not in spite of my brokenness.  It’s not a broken BUT beloved.  It’s broken AND beloved.  They exist as two COMPLIMENTARY truths.  As my relationship with God grows, I’m learning to lean into this truth more and more.

Which means I’m paying attention to the moments that could be coincidence but that feel more like God showing me he is near.  I don’t want to miss a holy moment.

I don’t want to step on your toes here, but I don’t want you to miss holy moments either.  I believe God is as alive and active today as he was during both of the Old and New Testament times.  To see and hear him requires that we slow down and listen.  It means that we stop chalking things up to coincidence and acknowledge his presence in our life.  It’s worth it, you know.  Leaning in to these moments and acknowledging him.

Because beloved isn’t a position that is held by only one.  We all get to be beloved.  And that’s the very best news of all.

 

 

 

Connection through Brokenness

What do you do when you realize that you are broken and you can’t fix yourself?  What do you do when life feels frenetic and the world doesn’t make sense? When prayer and exercise, acupuncture and vitamins don’t work…

Find a counselor, that’s what.

For my whole life I’ve avoided counseling.  Don’t ask me why.  Something about shame and believing I was REALLY broken if I needed someone else to help me figure things out; that only truly crazy people sought help.

As there is a history of mental illness on my paternal side, I may also have been afraid of what might come of seeing a professional.  If someone else got a look inside my thoughts they might see that I was actually crazy and lock me up for good.

Fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on what part you focus on) I finally reached a point in my life where I had no choice but to seek counseling.  And I discovered that I’d been really wrong about the shame and the getting locked up part.  Or at least my counselor hasn’t suggested that I be locked up YET.

Now there is a LARGE part of me that would like it noted that what sent me to counseling was not entirely my fault.  This is the part of me that embodies my overdeveloped sense of justice.  But I’m not going to tell you the whole story.  I only want to note that a big part of what happened in the last twelve months was that I believed that if I could just be better, that I could succeed.  And that just isn’t true.  There was so much more happening that I didn’t control. 

Back to that counseling bit…I asked for referrals, made a bunch of phone calls, answered a handful of questions… all which led me to a small office in Boulder on a very hot Thursday afternoon for my very first counseling session.

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To start, I appreciated that my new counselor immediately told me where she would sit.  It was clear that my space would be on the couch. Which side of the couch to choose felt like an important decision, one that she was allowing me to make.  If I sat too far away from her was I communicating that I was closed off?  I suppose I could have picked the chair right next to her, but that felt strange; over-familiar.

So I picked a spot directly across from her.  I gently placed my phone and my keys on the couch spot to my left.  I folded my hands in my lap and gazed at this new person in my life.

She began by asking me what was going on; what had brought me to see her.  Instinctively I knew the story began in August of 2018.  Starting a new job coincided with the onset of my unraveling.

I detailed all of the events of the last twelve months.  My friend’s diagnosis, it’s relationship to another friend’s death three years prior, as well as my new job.  We spoke of faith, family history and the ways in which beliefs and behaviors are formed early in life.  I laughed at myself and the irony that my siblings and I all work in church settings.  That has got to be a therapists delight.

She asked insightful questions.  She tried to keep everyone’s names straight as she reflected back to me what she was hearing.  She showed compassion when I spoke of the things that were painful, surprise at events that were slightly shocking and at the end of it all she asked me to do a few things in the days ahead.

She taught me about self compassion.  Truth is, she taught me about self compassion right around the very same time that I recognized that sharing my weaknesses brought me closer to some of the coolest people.  Instead of creating distance, my humanity brought me nearer to those around me.  As I shed layers of the mask that I have it all together, people near me were able to connect in ways we hadn’t connected before.

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My counselor has helped examine the things that need to be examined in a safe space.  She’s given me permission to feel hurt and sad and shocked.  I’ve learned to see my bad habits as coping mechanisms while uncovering what causes me to need them in the first place.

But my counselor is not a miracle worker.  She’s just a person. I’m still broken and will be for the rest of my life.   But I’m also experiencing more moments of feeling seen, heard and loved in the midst of it.  Both by God and by really great people around me.

I’m grateful.

And if you’re one of those people who has put off counseling, maybe this is the encouragement you need to make an appointment.  Because it’s okay to ask for help unravelling things that don’t make sense, or to ask for a different perspective on bad coping habits that have plagued you for years.

Don’t do it to fit in, and don’t do it for someone else.  Do it because the world needs the best version of you.

 

Broken

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I remember the patch of road where I took the phone call.  I’d received a text the night before asking to talk because a friend had “yucky medical news.”  As she shared what was happening in her life, my heart sunk.  Her diagnosis was still unknown, but she asked me to pray.

One week later I sat in her hospital room, knowing her diagnosis and that God had said “no” to my prayers.

A few days later while listening to an audible version of Annie F. Downs book “Remember God” I wept at the words “I’m afraid this story is going to break my heart. And you’re going to see it.”  I looked at the year ahead and envisioned challenge after challenge for my friend and I questioned how a good God could prescribe this path.   I was afraid that God was going to break my heart through my friend’s illness.

All of that happened one year ago.

In that year my friend suffered horrible medical treatments to beat a terrible disease.  She had awful days…and she came out the other side.  By all accounts, she has won.  That part of the story is thrilling!

Yet I’ve been blindsided by my actual broken heart at seemingly trivial events.  In the midst of walking my friend through the awful disease, I began to unravel. Not because of what was happening in her life but because of what was happening in my own.  Things I thought I wanted turned into out different than I’d expected.  A place where I’d hoped to find solid ground brought insecurity and anxiety and self-doubt.

Where I am today is not where I thought I would be. My heart has been broken in this last year…just not for the reasons that I imagined it could be.

I explained this feeling to a friend recently…that I felt broken.  That I can’t seem to fix myself; to will away the insecurities and anxiety.  My friend corrected me.  Reminded me that words matter and that I’m not broken.  I nodded with her because I agree that words do matter.  And yet…

I do feel broken.

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The parts of me that I thought would always be present are no longer there.  God has pulled back layer upon layer of hurt and nudged it into the light.  The exposure is painful.

I have fought this broken feeling every single step of the way.  I’ve read books, listened to podcasts, tried supplements and acupuncture.  I’ve seen a doctor.  It appears that God has brought me to a place where I am faced with my brokenness and my toolkit is inadequate. I’m finally forced to admit my need.

Maybe this is what God intended all the while.  Is it possible that this pain means something?  That my broken feeling is intended for my good?  I’m beginning to think so.

Now I’m trying to engage in the pain instead of boxing it up and pretending it isn’t happening.  I’m finally ready to say that I’m struggling.  And I know that there isn’t a simple answer to fix what’s happening.  There is no quick fix here.

I do know that it’s going to take hard work on my part.  Time examining my habits and behaviors and understanding why I react the way that I do.  Unlearning patterns that have served me over time and then learning new habits to fill the void.

There is also something healing in the midst of what is broken.  I’m unable to piece myself back together but I am also unbelievably sure that God is near to me in the midst of it.  I can feel his presence.  He isn’t removing my hurt, but he is whispering his love for me in the middle of it. I’m finally seeing that I have no choice but to unfurl my fingers from their grip on my life and turn my palms upward once again.  To trust God for the outcome.  And I do trust him.  More than anyone else in my life, he has ALWAYS been faithful.

And I feel hope that in this broken, I can be stronger.

 

 

Perspective

It was still and hot as we packed up.  It took four of us to lift and push our camping box into the back of the Pilot.  My daughter and I counted together as we hoisted the car top carrier onto the roof. Sweat dripped down my back as I stuffed one more sleeping bag into the carrier .  I was excited about the potential for cooler air.  In fact we were all excited for the weekend ahead: time away, together and outside.  Sunshine, stillness, s’mores and our regular camping treats highly anticipated. The kids and I were leaving on a Thursday and my husband would join us the following afternoon.

The drive was perfect, winding along a creek for miles on end. The kids and I arrived at the campsite while it was still daylight, which gave me plenty of time to start a fire.  Which is GREAT because it actually took me over an hour (in my defense damp firewood didn’t help.) What now know is that it was a perfect precursor for an IMperfect weekend.

Missing tent stakes, shivering dogs AND people, and so.much.rain. meant that our planned long weekend away turned into a two night trip. We finally called it when the hubby opened the tent door to see that all of our shoes had been drenched and so had his entire bag of clothes.  We swiftly packed up as the rain poured down, stuffing the tent into the back of the car.  As we drove away from the site, the smell of wet dog permeated the backseat.  Which about summed up the weekend.

Later that night as I sat on our covered porch I couldn’t help but think that our camping trip reflected the current state of my life.

This last year, one that I anticipated would be sweet and fulfilling has felt more challenging and difficult than I ever imagined.  What I’d envisioned in my future was not reality at all. My confidence has been tested.  I have felt less like myself.  All of the good that I had dreamed has turned into muddy water with an uncertain future.

My life today is NOTHING like I thought it would be a year ago.  I’ve had more bumps, more bruises and more rainstorms than I’d like.  I have never felt less like myself or more confused about my reactions that I have this past year.  I second guess myself more, my confidence has been tested.  So I question if this is what Jesus designed for my life.

But like my camping trip, I have a choice.  I can think of only the expectations that I’ve lost OR I can relish the pieces of good.  On our camping trip I can remember the multitude of stars on our first night and the laughter around the fire; the moments of laughter in the tent and a shared goal of keeping the dog warm; quiet conversations in the car; the adventure of tracking down a moose to capture the perfect photo (little did we know he’d find us the next morning and be camera ready.)

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Photo credit: Brian Boonstra

There ARE pieces of good in my work that I can see when I stop and allow myself to be still.   I rely more on God’s voice than I have in a very long while.  God has used challenges to help me shed some unhealthy habits.  I practice sabbath more because I so desperately need it.  God has also given me some amazing chances to connect with new people, to share what God has done in my life and reflect the things I see that He’s doing in theirs.

God keeps asking me to trust him in the midst of the hard.  I can choose to focus only on the things that were unexpected or that make me uncomfortable or I can let go of my expectations and trust him. I can listen for his voice and lean in to what he’s doing.

Clearly I’m having trouble letting go of my expectation of happily-ever-after.  God is asking me to live out the things I’ve already said about him.  I hate it when he does this.  I know that he is good and that I can trust him…but some days that’s harder to remember.  Obviously I’m a work still in progress.

Tonight I see the clouds.  Not only the darkness of the clouds but see the beauty in their formation.  Perhaps I’ve seen this before…the shades of grey, the shapes, the contrast between the clouds and the fading orange sky.  But tonight I noticed and appreciated it.

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Maybe life is less about the big lessons and the “aha” moments and more about daily practicing the things we say we know.

I’m in a season of things that feel hard.  Can I daily practice actively looking to God in the midst of the struggle?  Can I choose to look at my struggles through his lens?  Can I trust him?

Stay tuned.

 

 

 

 

 

How to scare me in one easy step

I slipped off my shoes, and got comfortable on the couch.  I had a few moments to spare so I fluffed some pillows, pulled out my book and started to read.  As the minutes ticked by, I relished the sunshine and the low buzz of church happening all around me.

There was music in the background, a mumble of voices all around.  Older folks smiled and hugged one another as they said hello.  Kids rushed to classrooms.  Middle school students stood awkwardly waiting for parents to get coffee.  I smiled at a few of the people I recognized.  Some came and said “hello.”

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I saw a woman who had been given a cancer diagnosis, and a couple who had recently gotten engaged. I saw a family that had lost a child and another carrying a one month old baby.  I saw joy and grief, life and death.

Best of all I saw community.

In a moment a wave of gratitude washed over me.  THIS is church.  I knew it in my core.

There are many more days when I’m so proud of our church leaders that I could burst.  It’s a church that holds tight to the teachings of Jesus.  We value our community and the people in it.  And we want others to see the real Jesus, the one who sacrificed everything for them.

At this church I’ve been reprimanded by cranky people and encouraged by cheerful ones.  I’ve experienced moments of heartbreak and others of pure joy.  I’ve laughed so hard I cried.  I’ve also just plain cried.  For better or for worse, this is what I’ve got and I’m grateful.

But as I reflect on this gift, I also recognize my instinct to hold this community at a distance.  My go-to mechanism is self preservation and I see so much risk involved in opening up.  I’m afraid to let others close.  Afraid that if I let them in, they have the ability to hurt me.

When Jesus began his ministry, he invited people along.  He began by inviting a few fishermen to become fishers of men.

As Jesus was walking beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon called Peter and his brother Andrew. They were casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. 19 “Come, follow me,” Jesus said, “and I will send you out to fish for people.” 20 At once they left their nets and followed him.

21 Going on from there, he saw two other brothers, James son of Zebedee and his brother John. They were in a boat with their father Zebedee, preparing their nets. Jesus called them, 22 and immediately they left the boat and their father and followed him. 

Whenever I read this story in Mathew 4 or in Mark 1, there are TWO things that amaze me.  The first is that the men immediately stop what they’re doing and follow Jesus.  I assure you, I probably would have asked a few more detailed questions before dropping everything.  But not the disciples.  Pretty amazing.

Something else that I wonder but that isn’t super relevant to this particular topic…do you think that Jesus invited more than the ones that are listed but the others DIDN’T accept and so they didn’t make the story?  That’s both a TERRIBLE thing to consider and ALSO…really reflective of real life.   These are just the things that run through my brain when I read the Bible.   

I’m also amazed at the men Jesus picked to be his people.  I’ve read a bunch of this story before so I know some of what happens.  SPOILER ALERT: The men let Jesus down.

One of the first people Jesus invites along is Peter.  The same Peter who is a bit of a hot head, cuts a guy’s ear off and then denies Jesus three times right before Jesus is crucified.   He has other amazing qualities.  I mean he did start the church…but he wasn’t exactly “friend of the year.”

I always wonder how much Jesus knew about his friends.  I’m sure he knew the character of Peter…but, at the beginning of his ministry, did he know that Peter would deny him three times?   When he invited Judas in, did he recognize that Judas would be the one to betray him?

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Photo by Kat Jayne on Pexels.com

Jesus, the very son of God, had friends who betrayed him and hurt him.  He had the capacity to avoid it and he didn’t.

It’s convicting when I think about it.  It’s incredibly easy stay in my seat on the couch as church continues to happen all around me.  My feelings don’t get hurt.  I don’t risk anything by showing up, caring for those who are hurting…but never really letting people in. It’s unlikely that I’ll get my heart broken if I stay seated.

OR I can take a page from Jesus book and invite people into my story…knowing that it won’t always be a happily ever after; knowing that the people that I let in have the capacity to hurt me.

The prospect is terrifying.

I’d love to end this with a tidy bow; tell you the three step process to how I overcame my fear…but honestly, I’m a work in progress.  It’s a daily debate for me to open up with people I don’t know that I can trust.

I have to end with an incomplete ending because I don’t believe the story is over.

 

 

 

 

 

Going to Be Okay

The moment I became a mother my capacity to worry multiplied.  When my babies were little I would sneak into their rooms at night and lay my hand on their backs to feel the rise and fall of their chests.  It was always comfort for me to breathe slowly along with them.

You might expect that by the time the third came around I’d have settled into an experienced calm, but my anxiety just seemed to amplify .  Each night, as I carried my drowsy baby to his room, my mind would create terrible scenarios of SIDS.  I would pray over him as he dozed off to sleep knowing that later that evening I’d check on his breathing.  Often multiple times.

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Over the years I’ve worried about all sorts things for each of my kids.  Milestones, friends, futures and always about their teeth.  I have this weird thing with teeth.  Probably because my third child had teeth trauma at age one.  I think I may still have PTSD.

Worry seemed to be my default setting.

It was almost as if there was a trophy that I wanted…”Parent with the Most Worry”

I worried and protected and interfered, all in the name of protecting my kids.

But as my children grew, I grew as a mother and also as a follower of Jesus.  And I learned that the words “do not be afraid” turn up a lot in the Bible.  I started to dig into what that meant.  Mary saw an angel and the angel told her not to be afraid. The angel was about to disrupt Mary’s perfectly ordered life…and he instructed her not to be afraid.  And she listened.

I also learned about the lives of the men who were closest to Jesus when he was here on earth.  Turns out they didn’t exactly experience happily-ever-after here on earth. So if Jesus tells us not to worry BUT ALSO combines that with his followers leading difficult lives, doesn’t that mean I need to trust him, even when things don’t feel okay?

These days I feel this never ending challenge to trust him. A challenge to trust God with my kids and my future.  To choose trust over worry, even if it means that I won’t get my imagined happy ending.

It’s hard to write that because there is an underlying message that dominates the news and our social media feeds…we all need to be worried. We should be worried about our country, our schools and DEFINITELY worried for the future of our children.  The message is underscored with the idea that we all deserve the happily-ever-after that we imagine.

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Do I want my children to be safe-absolutely!  Can I guarantee that nothing bad will ever happen to them?  No.  Do I want them to get the happily-ever-after that I imagine?  Sort of?

Sort of, because in the midst of some pretty hard “nos” in my life I’ve grown far more than I ever did in the happily-ever-after. Thus far, God’s plan for my life appears to be far riskier than I imagined.  There are some dark parts along the way that I wish had happy endings but don’t.  Abuse, a broken heart, people dying…  But my relationship with God is far deeper and more real than I thought was possible.

So the question is, which will I choose for my kids?  Will I chose the happily-ever-after with no dark areas, or do I trust that God will do his thing?

And the thought that I even have a choice in the matter is absurd. My choice is really, “What do I want to model for my kids?”

If I claim that God is good and loving and always present but I live my life pulling my hair out in constant worry, what are my kids to believe?

Will they grow up to believe that God is good and trustworthy?  Or will they fear unwanted outcomes?

I remember the day my middle was diagnosed with celiac disease at age nine. The morning of the results appointment I’d taken him to Starbucks.  I bought him a piece of lemon pound cake…just in case.

We’d be dreading the results for weeks.  I’d worried about what life would look like; the things that we’d have to give up, the changes we would need to make. As we sat and waited for the doctor, I went over all of the things he’d said to us after the biopsy.

He’d told us that G’s intestines didn’t look unhealthy.  The doctor felt good about what he’d seen.  He was leaning towards a food allergy and not celiac disease.

I had friends praying for his result to be clear.  I truly believed God would give us a happy ending.

The moment the Dr. walked in the room, I knew the diagnosis.  The way his face conveyed pity was a dead giveaway.

I don’t remember the words he used but I can remember the feeling of sitting in the room and trying not to cry.  I didn’t want my son to know how much this devastated me.  God has said “no” and I didn’t know what to do with it.

We finished the appointment and I drove G the 30 minutes back to school.  Still too young to sit in the front seat of the car, he sat by himself in the back while I drove in silence. Each of us was too afraid to talk.

The second I dropped him off I texted a friend.  It was one word that conveyed the diagnosis and my devastation.   It conveyed everything.  The thing that I’d been fearing for weeks had just come true.

And then I cried.  I cried for him.  He admitted that he hated being different and this was  one way that he would stand out. I cried for all the things he would have to give up to stay healthy.

I cried for me; for the new recipes I’d have to learn, the changes we’d have to make.  I cried because this was unexpected and hard and not what I’d envisioned.  I cried for the loss of my happily-ever-after.

But here’s the thing, it turns out that we’re actually okay.

For starters I’ve learned new recipes and found staples for him to eat.  I’ve also learned what it’s like to have a child who can’t always eat what’s being served.  It’s made me more empathetic to other parents and kids with food allergies.

But more importantly, in his diagnosis I learned that God can say no; bad things CAN happen and God is still good.  And I discovered that always being worried robbed me of some amazing moments in my life.

For so many years I was missing the good things because I spent so much time focusing on the POSSIBILITY of bad things.  I missed enjoying trips to the pond near our house because I was worried someone would fall and break an arm.  I missed cheering for “feats of bravery” because I was so concerned that someone would fall and knock out a tooth.  (I’m telling you, my fear of teeth trauma IS.A.THING)

Living in the possibility of “what ifs”  I was missing all of the amazing things that were happening right in front of me.  And it turns out my worry didn’t actually affect the outcome after all.

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And that kid who has celiac disease?  He’s AMAZING.  A few weeks ago as I guided my car away from his basketball practice, he shared about practice that night.  There had been a few new kids that had joined the team.  He recalled what it felt like to be new, so he made sure to give one of the boys a high five.

I suddenly felt a wave of gratitude.  I hadn’t missed this one.  I’d remained present in the moment.  I hadn’t worried about what the news kids on the team might mean for him.  I was simply present and listening to what was actually happening before me.

I want my kids to see a mom who is present and who trusts in a God who is good and loving and kind.  Even when He says no.

That night instead of a future wrought with negative experiences, I saw a strong man with a good heart who cared about those around him.

I cannot guarantee that he won’t ever get sick.  And I can’t guarantee that he’ll never suffer heartbreak or failure.  In fact, I CAN guarantee that he WILL suffer both of those things.  He’ll survive and both will make him a stronger human being.

The fact that he does have celiac disease IS NOT a happy ending.  There are still days where the disease just sucks.  Days when the adults in his life forget or accidentally give him gluten and he throws up for three hours.  Or the times where he can’t have what the other kids are having because no one thought to have something gluten free.  He has days that he feels sorry for himself and that hurts my heart.

But he has a kind heart and he’s funny and smart. He’s healthy and normal and awesome.  And I wouldn’t change a single thing about him.

I cannot control what happens in his future.  But I know that he is going to be okay.  We’re going to be okay.  Even when bad things happen.

Why?  Because God IS good.  He is present.  He will carry us through it.  And he’s asking us not to live afraid.

Feeling Forgotten

I’m an Enneagram 8, which is really the worst of the Enneagrams. People have told me they were frightened of me when we first met.  Or that I was intimidating.   Enneagram 8s are often seen as TOO MUCH.  We have big personalities, big opinions and sometimes we have big egos.

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People are afraid of 8s.  We’re seen as aggressive and unkind.  As bulldozers.  Sometimes those things are true.  I’ve worked for an unhealthy 8.  It didn’t go well.

In the Road Back to You, Ian Morgan Cron suggests that Enneagram 8s developed their protection mechanisms because something happened in their childhood that caused them to grow up quickly and develop self preservation habits.

This is very true of me.

It would seem that I have a thing about feeling forgotten.  Overlooked.  Unwanted.

Lest you think I had a terrible childhood, it really wasn’t.  My parents love me.  They did their best as they were raising me.  But things happen.  In my case, I was forgotten or overlooked in three instances that are seared in my memory.

When I was three years old, my oldest brother swung a bat that connected with the head of my middle brother.  They both came racing home with blood trailing behind them.  It was determined that my middle brother required stitches.  The babysitter rushed them both to the hospital.  She only forgot one thing.  Three year old me.  I don’t know what I did home alone.  Probably played with dolls.  But it left an impression.

A few years later when my aunt and uncle came to visit there was a miscommunication between the families on the way home from church that Sunday.  My parents thought I was in the other car and my aunt and uncle assumed I’d gone home with my parents.  I was left at church with our very kind pastor and his wife.  I recall eating cookies and drinking tea in their living room.  This too left an impression.

The final story isn’t from my childhood.  In my late 20s, early 30s, my parents were still married and both serving in various capacities in the larger church ministry.  My two brothers had chosen to become pastors.   Our family had been noticed by our larger extended family.  Relatives circulated a newsletter to all of the descendants from a family tree connecting back to the Netherlands.   The editor had decided to write a story about this amazing ministry family.  Unfortunately for me, I was a stay at home mom and didn’t fit the narrative. There was no mention that my parents had a daughter.

I can still remember the feeling that washed over me as I read that newsletter. My heart raced. I could hear it beating in my temples.  I was awash in hurt, shame and embarrassment.  And then anger and the desire to never let this happen again.

These days, as soon as something happens that remotely makes me feel overlooked, this feeling resurfaces and I go into full self protection mode.  It isn’t pretty.

I don’t tell you this story to drum up pity for poor 3 year old, or 6 year old Sarah.  Though 30 year old Sarah could probably use a hug…

No, I tell you this story because I know this is the mantra that cycles through my head when I am unhealthy.  I look for ways that I’ve been forgotten and overlooked in my current life.  I nurse my wounds. And it starts to get in the way of my real life.

I draw painful experiences in close to my heart, and let them take over all of the other feelings.  I give small things a megaphone to pronounce lies over how the world sees me, how my co-workers see me, how my friends see me.

Because of the old wounds, I give the lies power.

I build walls around my heart to keep out anything that could possibly hurt me.  The isolation is lonely and can feel pretty dark.  One feeling can spiral into more hurt feelings and pretty quickly I have a view of myself that is so far from the truth.

I’m tired of this cycle.  Of listening to the lies.  Of creating little worlds of isolation.

The best way that I know to combat these feelings is to bring the lies into the light.  To identify the things that I’ve given power and label them for what they are.  To humbly raise my hands in surrender to God.  Turn over the hurt to him; let go of my grip of self protection and allow myself to be vulnerable to being hurt again KNOWING that he has promised to protect me.

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Doing this is a constant cycle of surrender.  I acknowledge my feelings to God, turn them over to him and listen to his words of affirmation.

I am a child of God, chosen and dearly loved.  Never forgotten or overlooked.  Precious.  

It involves risk.  Risking that I can be hurt again.  Sadly, when something new happens, the cycle begins again.

I’m getting quicker at recognizing when I’m in an unhealthy place.  At flailing for help from those closest to me.  I just wish I could fall on my face a little more gracefully and a little less like a train-wreck.

If I never fully let go of the old wounds, I’ll never fully be able to deal with my present life without seeing it through a lens of pain.  I just don’t want that anymore.

I can’t forget what happened to me years ago.  But I can choose how much it determines my present reactions.  My hope is that by writing this down, making it a part of my public story, it will sink in that I can’t protect myself from ever being hurt again.

This is me, making an effort to trust God with the pain and allowing him to transform it into something healthy. I’m holding myself accountable for listening to the lies.

How about you?  What patterns are in your life where you’d like to transform the narrative?  When you are at your most unhealthy, what story from your past is just beneath the surface?

 

 

 

 

 

Repost-Unforced Rhythms of Grace

This post was originally featured on the women’s blog for Flatirons Church in Lafayette Colorado.  I was the author of the piece. 
Have you ever attended a party where the music was SO loud you could barely hear the person right next to you talk?  Or perhaps, like me, your house is periodically filled with loud and rambunctious teenagers all yelling louder than the other to be heard. 
Some days I feel like my life is like one of those parties. Life with three kids is loud and chaotic and I love it. Yet, I keep adding other things in an effort to prove my value to God, my family, and my friends. I keep adding stuff until the noise in my life becomes too great. Until the rhythm in our family is racing at such a pace that it becomes unsustainable. I long for less, for a slower pace.
Maybe some days you feel like that too. 
In 1 Kings 19:12 God shows up in a gentle whisper, not an earthquake or a fire. What if, in all the busyness of our lives, we’ve made it so loud that we can’t hear Him over the noise of our lives, even when we sit down right next to him?
For over a year, God has been pruning activities and commitments from my everyday. He has been quieting my life so I might actually hear him. 

Day by day God is inviting me to sit, listen, and, hear how he loves me.  

“Unforced rhythms of grace” – these words continue to pop into this season of my life. Jennie Allen spoke of them when she came to speak at Flatirons and the same phrase has appeared repeatedly in the books I’m reading.
But what does it even mean to live in the “unforced rhythms of grace”?  Because I am a word nerd I decided to define each word to create more manageable pieces. 
Unforced: not produced by effort; natural
Rhythm: a regularly recurring sequence of events, actions or processes
Grace: the free unmerited favor of God.
Living a life of “unforced rhythms of grace” would be to naturally, without effort, regularly live in the unmerited favor of God.
Is this really what Jesus was offering in Matthew 1:28-30?
“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”
I desire a deeper relationship with God and the contentment he promises. I also long to hear him and know I’m in his will.

I want to sit, knowing I have God’s favor, not because of what I do, but because I’m His.

 
I let go of many of the activities I did to fill my days, the things I thought made me valuable; attending school board meetings, running staff appreciation for our local school and trying to be a savior when any of my family or friends experienced life challenges. I exchanged them for small everyday tasks like watering flowers, walking my dog and actually folding the laundry as I wash it. I still support those I love who have troubles, but I no longer feel the need to jump in and be a savior. I realized I’m just not qualified. This role change and the everyday tasks have forced me to accept that I am small. 
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Accepting this smallness initially bruised my pride. I want to matter, be needed and feel important. But acknowledging I am small and my value is not determined by the work I do is a bit of relief, eventually. Instead of earning God’s favor, I’m learning to accept His unmerited grace. This means I can stop trying so hard. 
The fine line between being confident in God’s love and accepting that I am small is a difficult line to walk. It requires me to keep my eyes on Jesus in each new moment, rather than on myself. It also allows me to be fully present in the tasks that are before me right now. I’m learning to accept this gift of quiet and smallness and enjoy it. Being small and present has brought more joy in my every day than the hustling for acceptance ever did.  
In her book Simply Tuesday, Emily P. Freeman states “There is a daily-ness to my work, a small-moment perspective that whispers for me to connect with the work in my right-now hands, not because it’s going to become something Big and Important, but because Someone who is Big and Important is here, with me, in me, today.
This new rhythm in my life is one that is quiet and slow. It may be just for now or it may be forever. I’m not sure. My job, currently, is simply to keep my eyes on Jesus and keep the unnecessary noise out of my life.