Showing posts with label living it out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label living it out. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Thank God for the Locked Doors


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Thank God for the locked doors,

closed opportunities,

unexpected blockades,

detours,

that unanticipated pink slip,

axle-breaking pothole,

dead end,

the traffic jam that made us too late,

closed road,

one point short of winning,

that missed call,

misunderstandings,

wrong answers, 

stumbling,

the one that got away, 

coming in last place,

an untied shoe,

failing grade,

wrong number,

the job that didn't fit,

late for the bus,

flat tire,

dog-eaten homework,

obstacle course,

______(fill in the blank.)

It is not just what happens, but how we respond that impacts not just our lives, but people for generations, some of whom we don't even know yet.  Not seeing these glitches as problems, but as divine appointments, sacred encounters, and the rendezvous of the holy, that literally alters the trajectory of our lives.

If that particular thing had not taken place, what difference did it make?  What did God make possible through it?  God does not intend for us to be swallowed up by regrets, but know that He redeems.  Not seeing these things as an excuse for our behavior or define our future, but as something to contemplate and be instructed by it.  As my late grandmother used to tell me as a little girl, "Sometimes we just have to trust the Lord about that."  And she would know.

No barrier too high, but sometimes it is, not to defeat us, but to turn us in a different direction, open another door, or enlarge what is right below our feet.  

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

But we tend to skip the second part of that passage:  Then you will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will hear you.  You will seek Me and find Me, when you seek Me with all your heart.  I will be found by you, declares the LORD.  Jeremiah 29. 12-14 

When we seek the Lord and trust Him right in the midst of the mess, God empowers us to not just see these things differently, but how to respond to them with a fresh heart and renewed mind.  How to approach, navigate, and .... sometimes wait.

For still the vision awaits its appointed time;  it hastens to the end -- it will not lie.  If it seems slow, wait for it;  it will surely come;  it will not delay.  Habakkuk 2. 3   

The path, the outcome, the way through may not be ready yet.   Nor us.

There are no glitches in God's economy.  His faithfulness prevails past, present and future tense.

God redeems the hard stuff, the wounds, the pain, the aches, and wipes away every tear, because sadness always has another reclaimed, renewed, restored side to it.

God brings His victory to it, perhaps not quite in the packaging we expect. But far better than we could ever ask or imagine, even in our difficulties and struggles.  Not analyzing where we went wrong, or despairing of our shortcomings, but someday astounded by what God did with it. 

Our story is about to take a hopeful turn. 

Oh wow, God.  I didn't see that coming. 

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

A Is For Antidote

In cases of emergency, whether a venomous snake bite or exposure to a hazardous substance, an antidote is given to counteract, neutralize, and relieve the effects of the poison, toxins or harmful elements.  

In cases of anxiety, we already have an antidote for that.  No prescription needed. But in light of the devastating effects of anxiety, being thankful sounds as effective as putting a cute Snoopy band-aid on a broken leg.  But gratefulness to God has great power in its effects.  Being thankful does not just push back the stress, worry, and despair.  It initiates healing, because it is not just applied to the surface like sunscreen.  It comes from the heart.

Anxiety shouts that there is no time for thankfulness, it is just word-play, fantasy and a waste of time, you don't really believe it, and it doesn't make a real difference anyway. But worry does?

Being thankful does not just invoke a warm fuzzy feeling, nor look through the ever-cheerful Spamalot bright side of life. But gratitude is our first defense against anguish, misery and gloom.  Yet, are we really thankful, or do we just want the easiest, fastest, and most convenient way of relief?  We often behave like preschoolers prodded by our moms, "Just play nice and say thank you to the nice lady and she'll give you a cookie." Saying thanks to God is not just reciting a memorized litany so we can ask for something else.  "Ok, thanks, God, but I really want this other thing."

For what am I thankful?  To whom am I thankful?  Are we praying to our own desires?  Or to God? Am I just thankful? Or thankful to God Himself?

To increase my vocabulary in this foreign language of gratitude, I began with the alphabet, thinking of one word or phrase starting with each letter in order.  It was not unlike the alphabet game our girls once played when we were traveling, spotting words on billboards with each consecutive letter.

I began this morning at the gym, instead of just thinking about all I needed to do or worry about today.

Not just conjuring up "Thankful for....."  but Thank You for.....  

I struggled with some letters, but then a second time through, words of thankfulness to God were lining up for their turn.  One word triggered the next.

Thank You for Your abiding.

Thank You for Your blessings.

Thank You for creation in all its splendor.

Thank You for divine appointments. 

Thank You for Your excellence in all things.

Thank You for Your faithfulness.

Thank You for Your goodness.

Thank You for the hard stuff You use to strengthen us.

Thank You for intricate details only You can bring about.

Thank You for Jesus.

Thank You for Your Kingdom come.

Thank You for the invention of laughter.

Thank You for making every moment holy.

Thank You for nature that proclaims Your glory.

Thank You for the ordinary.

Thank You for Your provision in unlikely places.

Thank You for Your quietness in the midst of chaos.

Thank You for Your redeeming, restoring, and renewing.

Thank You for our salvation.

Thank You for trees and the testimonies of the faithful.

Thank You for the blessings of the unexpected. 

Thank You for violet skies at dawn.

Thank You for walking with us through.

Thank You for Your extraordinary love.

Thank You for YOU.

Thank You for the zany stuff that makes us smile.

As I completed the alphabet, so many other things, specific incidents, names of people, and blessings were already standing in a crowd, waiting their turn.  Some things I knew I was thankful for, some I hadn't yet acknowledged, some things I had just never said, "thank You, God."

I've only scratched the surface.  Throughout the rest of the day, another letter, another word, another thankfulness emerged.  I saw things differently.  Not "how can I be thankful for that?" But being thankful to God for obvious joys, and even for what I do not yet understand.  Trust Me in this.

God is not just enlarging my vocabulary of thankfulness, but softening my heart, changing my mind, and sharpening my vision to everything around me and being more attentive to things eternal.  I am strengthened by this exercise.  God empowers me to go forth differently into my day, engraved with 26 letters of thanksgiving.  What does that change?  Everything. 

Do not be anxious about anything,

but in every situation, by prayer and petition,

                   with thanksgiving

present your requests to God.

And the peace of God,

which surpasses all understanding,

will guard your hearts and your minds

            in Christ Jesus.

                              Philippians 4. 6 

 

 

 

 


 

Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Layer Upon Layer And A New Way Around It

 

When my husband and I were first married, we moved into an 88-year-old house that radiated with charm, dutifully disguising a mile-long list of unending projects.  We never even made it past the crisis items --such as the 1933 toilet that stopped functioning the week we brought our first baby home from the hospital. And then, a hole in the roof caused a cascade of water in the front room every time it rained. Oh, and an enormous tree that fell in a thunder storm. You get the picture.

As our excitement of renovating this old house began to wane, we also realized that the kitchen windows were painted shut.  When my husband removed the frames to strip the paint, he discovered ten layers of paint in a variety of colors, one layer upon another that did not peel off easily, nor scrape off with sheer determination, elbow grease, and a heat gun. 

We made slow progress into this miry bog of frustration. Layers of paint adhered fiercely to the layers beneath them.  The sight of the frame-less windows cheerfully greeted us every morning, “Still here!” as if mocking and reminding us “You're doing nothing at all.”  No difference was apparent except for the obvious mess.

In the past couple weeks "giving up" fear and anxiety for Lent, I found they had taken up residency in my heart, built up in layers over time, not so easily evicted.  Worry, stress, despair and panic come in a variety of colors, textures and finishes, some slathering on more than one coat of paint, each falsely promising to cover up a mess but only getting thicker.

I have found not just solace in the Psalms, but God's strength in the words of David.  When he was writing down these words, did David realize that thousands of years and in a world he could not possibly comprehend, God would use his writings to comfort and cheer us on? 

The "foes and enemies" mentioned in the Psalms are whatever we fear, both real and imagined. 

David was not just talking himself out of being afraid.  He was running for his life in very real ways. But through many a danger, toil and snare, David learned the secret of meeting his fears head on. He did not just lay down and let fear steamroll over him.   

The word praise appears 211 times in the book of Psalms.  We need not just cower before these foes, fears, or beastly situations.  God does not show up. God shows us the way through.  I am learning, ever so slowly, to not pray out of fear but from a platform of trusting God.  And that starts with praise and thanksgiving. 

Praise is not limited to situations when life goes nicely.  It is not plastering a smiley face on our hard stuff, or mustering up "happy thoughts," or putting on a one-size-fits-all disguise to cover up our despair.  Praise is not acquiring a new attitude, but a strength from God Himself to find a new way to approach it and a new way to pray about it.  

There is a lot more at stake than waking in the night just to tremble.  Push back the darkness. We have options. Worrying or praying?  Listening to fear or reciting scripture?  God gives us His Word on that.

I rise before dawn and cry for help. I hope in Your words. My eyes are awake before the watches of the night, that I may meditate on Your promise.  Psalm 119. 148

When I pray that way, praising God and thanking Him, gratitude allows me to both think and pray differently about what is in front of me.  Praying is not an attempt to manipulate God, or point out that He has forgotten something, or try to force a particular favored answer. That is not praying to God.  There is always so much more that God can do than we can imagine. Because God is God, and we are not.

Practicing His Presence allows us to realize the Almighty is already here, already at work, and waiting for us to realize He is sitting right here next to us.

In praising and thanking God for this situation, for that person, for His redeeming, God releases us not only into His embrace but opens our eyes and hearts to a thousand galaxies bursting into view.  We've been missing a lot.

My mouth will praise You with joyful lips, when I remember You upon my bed, and meditate on You in the watches of the night, for You have been my help; and in the shadow of Your wings I will sing for joy.  My soul clings to You, Your right hand upholds me.   Psalm 63. 5-8

God dissolves our fears, layer upon layer, as we come to trust Him more.  What He reveals is Himself.

Help us, Lord, to live differently these days of Lent, that we may live differently far beyond these 40 days. Turn our fears, worries and anxiety into something glorifying to You instead. 

Thursday, February 19, 2026

40 Days of WHAT?

When our third daughter was in kindergarten, her friends often would get off the bus with her at noon and have lunch at our house.  One spring day when our five-year-old neighbor Grant joined her for his favorite peanut butter sandwich, the two of them asked me to read them a story.  The Beginner’s Bible was sitting on the couch, so I began to read them the Easter story. 

At one point, Grant jumped up and exclaimed, “I had NO idea Jesus had anything to do with Easter!”

Lent precedes Easter as advent precedes the Nativity, a time of getting ready for what is coming, not just to decorate with bunnies and chocolate eggs, but preparing our hearts.  Lent is the fast before the feast. And empowers us to show up differently to the Easter celebration.  Not going through religious motions, but moving spiritually toward a deeper understanding of who Jesus is and what He has done. 

The question perhaps is not what are you giving up for Lent?  But what is God forming in me through this?

Lent is commonly known as a season of abstaining, when indeed it is the opposite. It enriches.

“Christians have always looked to suffering not only as a place of pain, but as a place of meeting God.  Suffering does not merely happen to us.  It works in us,” states Tish Harrison Warren in her book Prayer In The Night.

What if for Lent we fast or give up, not something we like or dislike, but something that has a strong hold on us?  What if for 40 days we gave up anxiety and fear?  What if we obeyed God’s most repeated commandment, Fear not. I am with you. Be anxious for nothing. What if I fast from those things?

Oh, I can come up with a long list of excuses not to.  But I need to realize that anxiety and fear are not my friends.  They are not welcome here.  And they keep me from trusting God.

Ann Voskamp writes in her book The Broken Way,  I don’t know how to smooth out angst or stress or worry, but I know you either leave your worries with God … or your worries will make you leave God.”

But if I decide to refrain/give up/relinquish anxiety and fear for Lent, what do I replace it with?  That dynamic duo is firmly lodged in my practices and won’t easily let go.

I know, because Ash Wednesday night – the beginning of Lent --, I didn’t sleep well at all.  I woke up in the middle of the night and whoa! Name the fear or anxiety as they opened the door for a wild party and invited the whole gang. It was a raucous family reunion.

But if anxiety and fear are surgically removed with great intention on our part, the vacuum it creates, the gaping space as it leaves, just invites in more of their cousins.  If we do not choose to trust God in our circumstances, other little-g gods gladly rush in to take God’s rightful place.

Lent is the perfect opportunity to change our defaults.  God enters in. And helps us to not just think with another perspective, but be changed by it.

Is it anxiety – or just urgency to pray? If I didn’t worry, would I pray as much? Or would I pray differently?

What have we attached ourselves to instead of trusting God?  He whispers to us another way through our difficulties and concerns, “Try this instead.”

And as the fog gradually lifts, we can discern perhaps the first vestiges of healing and the 2 x 4’s of restoration beginning to be revealed.

If we ignore the season of Lent, does Easter just become another weekend or an excuse to get together for a meal with friends and family and eat chocolate?  Worship is often just a side dish, if time for it at all.

In the church liturgical calendar, Lent lies outside “ordinary time.”  We come before Him at Lent not that God would remember us, see us, listen to us, or that we would somehow pay for or make up for our sin, but that we would remember Him, see Him in the ordinary and extraordinary, respond to Him, and believe in Him beyond a reasonable doubt.  In our pain, we cry out, “O God, do something supernatural.” And God replies, “I am!”

In Lent, we are not giving up anything, but giving and receiving.   It is a kind of worship that changes us. We are not paying for our sin in preparation for Easter.  Jesus already did that. But we remember His sacrifice for us.  Because without Good Friday, there is no Easter.

We drag our sins to the altar, and realize Jesus is already there.  That is why He came. Lent helps us remember that, like climbing a steep hill and discovering that we can see into eternity as a result. The hardship we did not expect turns into a surprising blessing we would never turn away.

What does Lent make possible?  If we don’t try, we will never know.

Saturday, January 31, 2026

Where Resolutions Go To Die

Two years ago, I made no resolutions.  I had no intention of adding to an already endless catalog of what I needed to do in the next twelve months. But instead I sought to focus on being, how to go forth, not encumbered by a well-meaning, check-it-off to-do list, but how I wanted to be.  Not making it to the third week of January where resolutions go to die, but being changed in increments all the way through the year.

What is God forming in me through this?

Instead of resolutions, I wrote down ten directives to focus my eyes and my heart.  I attached a scripture verse to each one just to keep me in the right lane and bring the name of Jesus in how to live, breathe, and have my being. Acts 17. 28   Degree by degree, it began changing how I responded, my thoughts, prayers, pursuits, and my entire year – and then spilled over into the next.  And made me a little bit different than the year before, and sometimes even the day before. I have a long way to go. 

In all of us, gradually and surprisingly, God weaves His transformation into the very fabric of our being and radically alters those things we do.  We are able to approach, respond and navigate the swamps and boulder fields differently because we have focused on Him.  Being precedes the doing, not the other way around.

Doing something may emerge out of all of this.  But there is a distinct difference by focusing on who we are becoming and how we are growing.  May we be at the end of this year – or even the mere closing of this day -- more like Jesus.  And that exceeds everything else.

Because transformation doesn’t just land on our doorstep like a two-hour Amazon order, even a singular act of obedience leads us ever deeper into the slow work of God on our souls.

He opened a door previously unimaginable, wrote Jean Fleming in her book Pursue The Intentional Life.  Following God will do that to us, seeing portals and paths and opportunities we have never realized before. And meeting Him there.

These on-going reminders are taped to a cabinet in my closet – in plain view.  Because I’m still working on them.  And God is still working on me.  He’s not done with me yet. 

 

·       Pay attention.  …to have the mind of Christ.  1 Corinthians 2. 16

·       Write something, read something, run something every day.  Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might.  Ecclesiastes 9. 10

·       Weave kindness in my words.  …that I may show the kindness of God to him. 2 Samuel 9.3

·       Don’t interrupt.  slow to speak. James 1. 19

·       Do small things well.  Do not despise the day of small things. Zechariah 4. 10

·       Listen.  Really listen to others and to God.  ….listen to Me.  Blessed are those who keep My ways.  Proverbs 8. 32

·       Be present.  Therefore encourage one another and build one another up, just as you are doing.  1 Thessalonians 5. 11

·       Reinvent.  Reinvest.  Recreate.  Redeem.  Do not withhold good from those to whom it is due when it is in your power to do it.  Proverbs 3. 27

·       Ask questions.  Lots of questions. …Jesus spoke to him first, saying, “What do you think?”  Matthew 17. 25

·       Be gentle.  Let your gentleness be evident to all.  Philippians 4. 5  A soft answer turns away wrath.  Proverbs 15. 1

 

My list will not resemble yours.

But our dissimilar intentions are rooted in the same Love that draws, a Voice that calls, as T. S. Eliot penned in his poem Four Quartets.

It is not about being a “better person” by the end of the year, but being a radically different one, living out what we really believe and welcoming the Holy Spirit to rearrange the furniture and build something new in us.

Throughout time, people have wondered and even been obsessed by, “What should I do?

What if we instead asked who do I want to be?  Not recognized by what we do, but known by Him and known as His, seeking to live a faithful life, every sacred step on this holy ground of our lives.

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Certainly Not What We Expected

This year unfolded not as I anticipated, but I was assured that God was there every step.  Even in the struggles, I could hear my grandmother's words from when I was a little girl, "Sometimes we just have to trust the Lord in that." Many experiences emerged seemingly out of nowhere, ambushes along the way, but also joys woven in unexpected places.  I just needed to walk with Him all the way through.

And still walking through.

God reminds me that while we calculate according to a twelve-month calendar, He exceeds time in a way we cannot comprehend.  And nothing takes Him by surprise.  God is not a variable.  He is the constant in the equation of our lives.

In His sight, this year is not over.  It is not yet complete.  He whispers to us, "Not done yet." It takes eternity for that. A lot more is yet to come. 

As Oswald Chambers says in his devotional My Utmost for His Highest, "All our fret and worry is caused by calculating without God."

We can go forth into the new year, but differently.  In all our experiences, even the difficult ones, God has been equipping and preparing us through the twelve months that we have just emerged from. What has God been trying to make me aware of?  What was God forming in me through this?  We are all different today than a year ago.  We see circumstances differently-- even what is yet to come, even what we do not anticipate --because we see God differently.  We have changed in so many ways from where we stood and the terrain we traveled through this past year.  

It is not just the turning of a new year, but facing each new day, filled with the unexpected.  Even more so, we recognize our need to walk with Him both in the joy and strength of His Presence.

Behold, the dwelling place of God is with them.  He will dwell with them, and they will be His people, and God himself with be with them as their God......"Behold, I am making all things new."  Revelation 21. 3-5. 

We go forth not fearfully stumbling into the unknown, but dwelling with Him.

And that makes all the difference. We are not impervious to circumstances, but fully responsive within them.  And never alone.  Do not fear.  I am with you.  His faithfulness covers us.

What does this make possible?  

"Often, when we observe from a distance, we misinterpret.  Look up at the night sky and you will see much darkness.  But train a telescope on the blackest patch, and a million galaxies explode into view." (Rebecca McLaughlin, Confronting Christianity

God says, "Now watch this." 

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Chaos of Christmas Past

There was no Santa.  

My three brothers and I knew that he was upstairs snoring.  Dad had spent the night furiously putting toys  together, and well, he didn't consider the left-over parts a big deal.  He was a PhD scientist.  Why would he need directions? And those eight random screws were probably just extras.  For years, Dad suffered fitting together gadgets and widgets, until he realized assembling the toy was my little brother's favorite part of the gift.

When we asked mom if there really was a Santa, she remarked just once, "If you don't believe, you don't get anything from him."  We never brought up the subject again.

The sweetheart of our family's Christmas decorations was a large silver revolving aluminum tree in our front window with matching pink glass ornaments, reflecting two blazing pink spotlights.  This spectacular display appeared more suitable for Fifth Avenue in New York City than a quiet Chicago suburb, but the tree strategically blocked the entire living room window, dare a prowler look in and steal the non-existent presents.  

Mom basked in its glory, but we hated that tree.  Everyone in the world back then purchased freshly cut evergreen trees, strapped to the top of station wagons, parading through town.  With Christmas songs playing in the background, they were decorated with handmade ornaments, popcorn garlands, strands of tinsel, and bubble lights.  It was a wonder to my mom that the entire neighborhood did not explode in flames.  And then after Christmas, every family within a four block area was invited to an enormous bonfire in a neighbor's back yard to incinerate the trees, a glorious start to the new year.  And it was my mom's worst nightmare.  We were banished from the festivities. And we had nothing to add. 

As a professional violinist, Christmas was mom's equivalent of March Madness. She careened from one concert or recital to another, including church services and Christmas parties. Without even glancing at a calendar, we always knew when December 1 arrived.  Handel's Messiah filled the sound waves of our house on continual repeat for 25 days, from sunrise to the last moments of the day.  

My grandmother, who lived with us, hummed along with that soundtrack, ever present in our kitchen. In all the hustle and bustle, she quietly held us together, an arthritic powerhouse, no matter the season. She was always there.

Every year, Mom organized a neighborhood Christmas "concert" in our living room.  She invited all the neighbors, cajoling them to dig out and dust off their old trombones or clarinets from high school, and even provided them with sheet music for their particular instrument. For some, she painted white-out on certain notes to make it easier to play.  The little children shook jingle bells. Everyone sang along from Up On The Housetop to Joy to the World, one song blending into the next.  The living room was packed with neighbors from every church around or none of all.  And the name of Jesus was sung out loud.  

Mom so wanted us, her own little prodigies, to excel in music. Every December, she took us down to a music studio to cut a record of us squawking miserably on our instruments to send to our other grandmother in New York whom we saw only a handful of times and barely knew. I'm not sure she ever listened to them. 

Our household didn't follow the traditions of the season like other families we knew. We did not expect Santa to carefully arrange beautifully wrapped presents around the tree.  On Christmas morning, when we sneaked down the stairs, ours were scattered in small piles on the floor, never wrapped, and some with fluorescent clearance price tags still stuck to the packaging. We never knew what Santa would literally dump in our living room, seemingly his last stop for the night. We once each received rickety plastic skis with roller skates glued to the bottoms. I don't remember them lasting the afternoon. 

We never had Christmas stockings that I can remember.  But every year, in front of the fireplace, there was a "book" of lifesavers candy for each of us, ten rolls of different flavors. Three of us consumed ours before Christmas break was over. Another brother carefully rationed his, finishing off his very last pieces sometime before Halloween, which at that point were sticky enough to pull out fillings.


 



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At some point every Christmas Eve afternoon, it suddenly occurred to mom and dad that the next day was Christmas (shocker), and there were no presents, under the tree or hidden in the attic. Without warning, they piled all four of us into our sky blue station wagon and drove into the city, lurching into the snow-plowed parking lot of Bargain Town USA, the original ancestor of Toys R Us.  It was Christmas Eve.  The store was about to close. Perfect timing in their perspective. And not a moment to spare. They left us in that frigid parked car and ran into the store, searching for marked down toys.  Fifteen minutes later, they emerged with several large bags that they stuffed in the back of the car, threatening us to not even think about looking in the back.  

That night, long after our regular bedtimes, we put on our boots and heavy winter coats to go to our church's annual Christmas Eve candlelight service at 11 pm. My brothers, of course, wore their Santa Claus bow ties. I scooched next to my grandmother, holding her wrinkled hand, smelling Chiclets that she had in her pockets. and feeling the radiant warmth and scratchiness of her heavy black wool coat. Somehow even in the coldest places, she always still felt warm to me. 

I loved that big stone sanctuary (the same church, by the way, that appeared decades later in the movie Home Alone). We squashed together as a family on a hard wooden pew amidst the crowds. The organ covered us in the glory of God. The choir made familiar carols sound like a chorus, their angel wings I supposed hidden under their robes.

For unto us a child is born, for to us a son in given... Isaiah 9. 6 

And then, not able to outdo the words of Scripture, the minister simply read in his strong steady voice chapter two of the book of Luke, verse by incredible verse, the sacred chronicle of the surprised shepherds, Mary and Joseph, no room in the inn, and baby Jesus, the hope of the world.  At the stroke of midnight, the church bells pealed throughout the community, and we sang Silent Night, carefully holding candles that lit up the darkness.  

You never know what sticks so closely. Despite the rushing about and the chaos of the season, even as a little girl so very long ago, I vividly remember those crowded late night church services. I would not have been surprised at the time if the ceiling of the sanctuary had burst open for the joy of it all, revealing the star of Bethlehem and choirs of angels covering the skies singing Glory to God in the Highest, not the end of a story, but the most exciting part that brings all of us into His story.

It's so easy to dwell on our parents' shortcomings.  They weren't perfect, but then again, neither are we.  But despite what my mom and dad did -- and didn't do-- they left our crazy family with something dear.  The excitement wasn't all about Santa coming, but that Jesus already came.  Theirs was not an emphasis on perfectly chosen and wrapped presents, but the gift of God's Son who came like light into this dark and broken world.  They didn't worship the season, but the long-expected Jesus. They didn't ignore Santa like a pair of scrooges.  He just wasn't the main event.

Many remember the huge Christmas light displays in the neighborhoods back then, stores competing with each other with elaborately decorated windows, pictures with Santa at the department store, and children hoping beyond hope for that long list of toys from the Sears catalog and Santa's workshop.   

But year after year, people left that church on those Chicago nights so cold it took our breath away, scurrying home to bed, the children anticipating Santa's big delivery, and parents hoping they would sleep a little later.  But we didn't have to wait until morning, nor for Santa. 

Jesus already met us there.

 


Friday, December 12, 2025

Strength Training at the Y

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I thought it was supposed to get easier. 

My husband and I are taking strength training at the YMCA.   Every student in the class starts with their own base weight, no matter how scant or heavy, lifting it over and over. But our instructor reminds us that these are progressive exercises.  Add a little more weight, a few more repetitions, strength upon strength.   One set of exercises, and then yet again.

Blessed are those whose strength is in You, in whose heart are the highways to Zion....They go from strength to strength.  Psalm 84. 5, 7  

But just when I feel like I am getting a handle on an exercise, feeling a little more confident, the routine changes up.  And it gets harder still. 

What if I'm wasting my time by doing this?  But what if I'm not?  One of our adversary's most powerful weapons is shouting at us, "It doesn't matter."  Just when it always does.

For the moment all discipline seems painful rather than pleasant, but later it yields the peaceful fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it.  Hebrews 12. 11 

In strength training, running, hiking, and other pursuits, I have discovered over and over that the physical is always seamlessly woven with spiritual truth. "Look out for the Holy," said author and pastor Eugene Peterson. 

We don't just exercise our bodies, but our souls.  Discipline in any form extends over everything we do. When we can see discipline in light of eternity, we begin to do things differently,  In each repeated set of experiences, we learn how to stay faithful on repeat in giving hard grace to others, how to help with impossible and inconvenient tasks, or simply to find joy not in having to do something, but getting to.  And ultimately we realize that Jesus is the ultimate heavy-lifter of our souls.  

Strength training is not about us becoming stronger, but training us to go forth in His strength. Seek Me in in this. That's the kind of muscle we need to exercise.

Sometimes it is just plain hard to finish a repetition.  "Almost done," I repeat to myself. "Almost done.  Just one more."  A little more effort.  And that is how we get there.  God enlarges His strength in us, even when we don't yet realize it.  It resides in the daily rhythms and grows steadily in the everyday repetitions.  And gradually, oh so gradually, we find that we can do a little bit more.  As a writer friend told me this week, "I know there's redemption in this somehow." 

God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble.  Psalm 46. 1  

The difficulties we face are rare and holy opportunities to seize, grow, and learn to respond differently.  God skillfully weaves the deep and glorious in what we are going through.  What we read in Scripture rewires us.  What we pray -- even for others-- forms something new in us. God's strength allows us to respond differently when the road gets tough and the barbells of life even heavier.  Not pridefully claiming "I can do this," but realizing He does.

Progressively harder.  Progressively longer.  Progressively stronger.  Repetitive exercises are not random,  but get us ready not just for tomorrow, but what is right now before us.  far beyond what we can imagine. We have no idea what is coming. My friend Elizabeth reminds me "Everything is always layered with more meaning than I can know."

There is a grace in that.  There is His strength for that

For precept upon precept, precept upon precept, line upon line, line upon line, here a little, and there a little.  Isaiah 28. 10

And before we know it, we are not there yet, but getting there. 

Our help is in the LORD our God who made heaven and earth.  Psalm 124. 8  That is what strength training does. Realizing that truth.

 

 

Friday, November 21, 2025

Flashing Lights, Blaring Music, And A Cosmic Queue


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It was a gym class like I've never seen before.  The fourth graders were learning how to bowl in the elementary school's gymnasium. Along one wall, pins were lined up in triangles.  The designated bowlers stood on the other side of the gym in line with the bowling pins.  Without any equipment other than heavy rubber balls, bowling alleys were imagined.  There were about 12 "alleys" differentiated only by the four or five children assigned to each.  

 It was not just bowling class, but Cosmic Bowling. To make it more fun, the cold harsh florescent lights of the gym were dimmed, colorful blinking lights were strung up along each side, and the music was upbeat and loud, just like nine and ten year olds would clamor for.

That many children, flashing lights, and blasting music sounds like chaos.  But it wasn't.  The kids were not just learning how to bowl, but about place.  I saw no squabbling.  No shouts of "My turn.  Me first." No shaming for balls rolled astray. No division between the cool kids and not.  

Because each child had an assignment and a spot to take care of. They all had a job to do. They moved from one role to the next in a pattern.  One at a time, they took a turn as the bowler.  The next child was the ball returner, standing on the sideline to return the ball to the starting line. One or two kids at the end of the alley were the pin setters, removing and setting the bowling pins in order and ready for the next roll.  When one bowler was finished, they moved to the next spot in the lineup.  And continued to switch places throughout the class. A place for everyone. Everyone in their place.

The last station was perhaps the most important place of all.  The waiter stood opposite the returner on the side of the alley. That kid watched what was going on and cheered for the bowler when multiple pins were knocked down.  It was not the waiter's turn yet.  But he was still a significant part of the action.  He or she did not just wait with a bad attitude, complain, or push someone out of the way. The waiters balanced out the rotation.  As long as everyone did their part, bowling in the dark with 60 kids was fun for everyone.

And then, it was time for the waiter to bowl.

Waiting is not a passive verb.  It is not just a weary place of transition, grumbling about others, but doing the waiting well. Things may not yet be ready.  And indeed, we may not yet be ready for what we need to do or for what is next. But we can cheer on those who get a proverbial strike and encourage those with wayward curve balls to try again.

And quite frankly in life, it may be someone else's turn to bowl.  Someday may seem a long time coming.  But waiting prepares and equips us. It's part of the practice. We can wait, or we can waste. We may actually learn something in the waiting room.  Imagine that! We have work to do too, or we can waste a whole lot of time whining about it. Selfish claims in a loud voice, Mine!  Selfless sees other people in the picture.  Selfish demands it now!  Selfless has all of eternity. 

This half-hour gym activity on a rainy Friday morning encompassed a whole lot more than having fun and learning to bowl, but also seeing how all the people and places work together. Not commiserating that I am just a waiter, nor a waster of time.  But realizing it's just not my turn yet. 

Maybe I'm meant to be a waiter right now.  Maybe because I need to.  Or because someone else needs me to be.    This is my place right now to support and encourage and to occupy this time and space and circumstances.  To be a waiter. And that changes the game for everyone. 

Waiting knows its place and is confident that the right time is coming.  And realizing God knows what He is doing.  That's what faithfulness does.  

Blessed is the one who listens to Me, watching daily at My gates, waiting beside My doors. Proverbs 8. 34 

Ready to roll. 

 

 

 

Thursday, November 6, 2025

The multiplying effect

Several years ago when one of our granddaughters was learning her multiplication tables, she initially just memorized the facts.  She could rattle off the answers without even thinking about it. But then one day while working out a story problem, a proverbial galaxy exploded into view.  I saw it in her eyes.  She was sitting at our kitchen table, completing her homework.  Ohhhh, she exclaimed.  She no longer looked at a theoretical one-dimensional 7x4 scribbled on her worksheet, but seven groups of four.  She suddenly saw friends sitting in rows in her classroom and spoonfuls of cookie dough lined up on the baking sheet.  Seven groups of four.

Math made sense in real life, imagine that.  And it opened up to her a whole new world of possibilities.  Not just applicable to that particular story problem, but learning what multiplication really means. It is not just a faster way to add, a tool that enlarges, but it connects us to something much bigger.  Math is not just based on homework equations, but the way the universe works.  Not a list of numbers, but a solid thread. And she hasn't even gotten to God's AP calculus or applied physics yet.  

Like kids reciting the multiplication tables, we often approach big spiritual concepts --like grace, love and prayer --with the same limited understanding as a kid in grade school, nice in theory, and we can rattle off scripted answers by rote we heard or read somewhere. We possess a vague and rather limited view. 

And then, because we don't really comprehend, we act like scrooges, as if what is precious --like kindness, grace, and love-- will run out.  Or even that praying is restricted to limited dosages. Someone said to me a couple weeks ago, "God's tired of hearing from me."  Never true. 

Too many of us are stuck in first grade addition.  But in practicing these things, seeing them differently, and being generous with them, God multiplies.

We learn to see grace, love and prayer not as theological constructs, but how they work out in actual life with tangible situations and real people. Obeying, following, responding to God's calling, even in this particular day, form something in us -- in ways we are not even aware. We have only to be faithful even in simple tasks that are never insignificant. One act of grace, one nudge to pray, or to be kind in this moment builds upon the next, multiplied beyond our comprehension into eternity.  

We don't run out.  We find God gives us even more. Learn to lavish the grace of God on others ...and His blessing will come through you all the time. (Oswald Chambers)

Our response to God's nudging equips and trains us for the next equation and every good endeavor.

And God is able to make all grace abound to you,

so that having all sufficiency in all things at all times,

you may abound in every good work....

He who supplies seed to the sower and bread for food

will supply and multiply your seed for sowing

and increase the harvest of your righteousness.

You will be enriched in every way

      to be generous in every way.....

                          2 Corinthians 9. 8-11

The key words here are supply and multiply. 

His mercies never come to an end. Lamentations 3.22  Flowing into us, flowing through us, no drought here, no expiration date, in short supply or limited availability.

This is no ordinary day --really none of them are-- but an opportunity to practice and allow grace to multiply in our lives.  We see God differently. And as a result, we see others differently. We are not given a brand new pair of eyeglasses, but a new heart and deeper vision for how we can respond.

For from His fullness we have all received,

                 grace upon grace.

                                      John 1. 16

How much more would we be loving, gracious, prayerful,

             if we knew we would never run out,

           and if indeed it would be multiplied,

                                    not diminished in any way?

God does not just add.  God multiplies.


Tuesday, October 28, 2025

A Liturgy For Those Who Are Wandering

We all know someone in this season of life who is wandering away from the faith, or roaming within it, distracted by other loves, struggling with circumstances, encumbered by baggage, or well you know, just too busy to bother with God anymore.  But this is not the time for us to abandon ship. We need not stand by the ship's railings helpless without a life preserver to throw out to them. We can care for them as best as we are able. And we can pray for them all we can, even when we feel like we cannot breathe.  

Praying something far deeper than, "O God, be with them."  

The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working.  James 5. 16  

Praying that every verse of Scripture they've ever read or memorized will come to mind.  From every worship service ever attended, even boring sermons they've endured, the indelible hope of Jesus is even now engraved in their souls.  Let every song, lyric and tune they've sung or hummed burst out of the shadowy silence, replaying in a continual loop over and over, the notes, rhythm and words, stirring their emotions, as only music can do, always there just below the surface, never forgotten, no hearing loss here, but an audible presence.

Praying that God stirs up every testimony heard even decades ago of lives transformed by the gospel.  May every missionary slide show still be recalled in vivid color, reminding them of God's faithfulness around the world. Praying that they remember all those times when the Spirit woke them in the middle of the night and sat with them in their desperate situations. May they yet taste the fellowship of every potluck tuna noodle casserole and jello salad in church basements with shiny linoleum floors and stacked folding chairs. Let every spiritual conversation around the table resound, casual words in the car, on a walk, or shopping in Walmart, remembered forever. They may forget our words, but let them hear the voice of the Almighty.

Praying they are continually surrounded by every prayer earnestly prayed for them, a parent, sibling, friend or grandparent faithfully on their knees pushing back the darkness.  That every Scripture verse claimed for them holds them firmly in the power of God's Word, their names inscribed in the margins with indelible ink.  May we ourselves never underestimate the power of God's Word which is neither bound nor forgettable. 

Praying they are incredibly aware of the love and words of Sunday School teachers who loved them, youth leaders who guided them, nursery workers faithfully rocking, church friends coming alongside, cabin mates at camp sharing stories, even strangers generous with kind words.  Let even a glimpse of a spectacular sunset stir up awe in their hearts for the Creator. May their thoughts be permanently glued with the stickiness of God's Word and their hearts covered by the thickness of His steadfast love.
 
And then, over the always-present struggles, hearts broken by flawed people, even injuries inflicted by those who should have known better, the festering of deep wounds, the bleeding out for decades, may God pour His grace and forgiveness over transgressions and heal their spirits without a limp, scar or recurring sorrow.  Redemption doesn't act like nothing ever happened but creates something new, not a band-aid stretched over it, but a resurrection all the way through.    

We can pray continually that these things, and even more, rising and emerging out of the hard soil and barren ground, coming up, embracing, and drawing them back to Him.

Praying until these things are no longer a memory but an insatiable yearning for God. 

Pray like anything is possible.  And know that God exceeds any predetermined thing we can ask for. He calls us all to Himself.   

God has left a witness in their hearts, ingrained deeply, calling to them, renewed every morning and resounding in the darkness of night, cutting through the noise with His still small voice. We cannot fix, rewind or restore.  But God has the power and compassion to rescue, resurrect the dead, and redeem the past, present and future.

We realize His glory there.

O God, You don't have to become real to them.  Because You already are. Let them find You ever before them. May Your invisible chariots surround them. May Your tangible love be irresistible. Bind them to You. Tie them to Your mast. Heal, shield, glue and renew the broken parts. Breathe into them. Sing choruses over them. And bring them back Home again. 

Help them to remember how much they are loved by You.  Help us to remember too. For we too -- all of us-- are red-handed rebels in need of Jesus.

"Fear not, for I have redeemed you.

I have called you by name.  You are Mine...

Because you are precious in My eyes,

and honored,

and I love you."

              Isaiah 43. 1, 4 

Rewrite their story, Almighty One.