Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts

Sunday, May 27, 2012

learning.

my summer break, thankfully, allows for rest, recovery, and learning. i can take off my metaphorical teacher hat and do some learning all my own.

i spent time reading this morning, before my husband woke up, a book by mark batterson. this book, the circle maker: praying circles around your biggest dreams and greatest fears, has been and is the perfect way to start my summer. shane and i both believe that this summer is going to be one of great changes, and we are trusting that God is present in the dreams and fears we are working to tackle this summer and beyond.

i want to encourage you to read the book, and i want to share with you some things i've gleaned from the early chapters.

batterson encourages readers to "intercede until God intervenes." isn't that good? prayer, he says, has the power to change things, the power to save a generation, and even affect the course of history. 

intercede until God intervenes.

prayer has the "power to resurrect dead dreams and give them new life." i know there are dreams you've given up on. because you've pursued a dream and failed, even multiple times, does not mean that prayer can't revive that dream. resurrection, says batterson, is central to the christian faith. God is the father of resurrection. why couldn't he breathe new life into your once-forgotten dream?

do not settle for small dreams that don't require divine intervention. don't go after dreams that don't require prayer.

ephesians 3:20-21
"now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work within us, to Him be the glory..."

Monday, May 11, 2009

symmetry is nice.

a reoccurring anything typically means you should take notice, and lately i've been pondering the idea behind the jars of clay song two hands. the chorus echos the heart of so many believers:

i use one hand to pull You closer
the other to push You away

the lyrics question what life would be like "if i had two hands doing the same thing/lifted high." i read and reread these lyrics last night wondering how my life would be different if i wasn't a "house that is divided" like the song says. my actions, so often, are self-motivated. and though i know my purpose is solely to glorify my God, i consistently find myself pursuing my heart's desires rather than His.

after earnestly examining my motives and thinking about the lyrics to the song last night, i found myself singing a different song with the same message in my car today. the song freedom by a band called run kid run almost brought me to tears as i sat there listening, knowing that this reoccurring idea is anything but coincidence.

the song begins:

all my chains i can't disengage
and i don't believe that i want to
one hand sings Your praise
the other brings me shame
i have selfishness to blame

so today, after hearing that song, i made the journey back to school after spending mother's day at home. as i drove, i thought about human nature and our double-minded selves. i thought about the number two of all things.

we've been given two hands, two eyes, two feet. symmetry is nice, but it seem as if, because we have two of each, we've somehow made it okay in our heads to offer God only half of our whole selves.

i know this, though. the half i've been trying to control is missing out.

james 4:8
Come near to God and He will come near to you. Wash your hands, you sinners, and purify your hearts, you double-minded.

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

penguins.

in february of this year i learned to love penguins. more than that, i became fascinated with these tuxedo-clad beings. i went to the theater with a friend (maybe amy or abby or bethany -- i think it was abby, but i digress) to watch a movie called definitely, maybe. penguins, i learned from the feature presentation, are life long mates (so says abigail breslin). even if circumstances prevent the pair from being together, upon being reunited the penguins will recognize their lost love (yes, penguins experience love -- don't ruin my story).

the next day i went shopping with my mama and found, hidden behind random decor and stationary of all things, a two-foot tall silver penguin marked down to five dollars. whether it was coincidence or fate, that penguin was calling my name. i promptly bought it, and it currently resides on my bookshelf next to a two-foot tall bronze owl... i don't yet have a story about the owl, but it'll come.

fast forward ten months to me in my bed reading a book called blue like jazz: nonreligious thoughts on christian spirituality. i started this book late last night; yet, i'm already on chapter six because it's just that good.

chapter five is entitled "faith: penguin sex." now don't get your panties in a wad; there is indeed spiritual application. and though the title is a bit perplexing, i smiled upon seeing it and thought for a brief moment about my experience back in february.

here's the good stuff -- miller's words, not my own:
i felt silly trying to explain it [why i believed in God], even though tony is a christian. i felt as if i were saying i believed in peter pan or the tooth fairy, and yet i don't believe in peter pan or the tooth fairy. i believe in God, and as i said before it feels so much more like something is causing me to believe than that i am stirring up belief. in fact, i would even say that when i started in faith i didn't want to believe; my intellect wanted to disbelieve, but my soul, that deeper instinct, could no more stop believing in God than tony could, on a dime, stop being in love with his wife. there are things you choose to believe, and beliefs that choose you. this was one of the ones that chose me.
"you know what really helped me understand why i believe in Jesus, tony?"
"what's that?"
"penguins," i told him.
"penguins?"
"penguins," i clarified. "do you know very much about penguins?"
"nope." tony smiled. "tell me about penguins."
"i watched a nature show on OPB the other night about penguins. they travel in enormous groups, perhaps five hundred of them, and they swim north in the coldest of winter, so far north they hit ice. they look like cartoons, like something out of the movie Fantasia. all five hundred of them swim till they hit ice then they jump out of the water, one by one, and start sliding on their bellies. they sort of create ruts as they slide, and they follow each other in a line. they do this for days, i think."
"they slide on their bellies for days?" tony asked.
"days," i told him.
"why?"
"i don't know," i confessed. "but after a while they stop sliding, and they get around in a big circle and start making noises. and what they are doing is looking for a mate. it's crazy. it's like a penguin nightclub or something -- like a disco. they waddle around on the dance floor till they find a mate." a life long mate, mind you.
"then what?" tony asked, sort of laughing.
"penguin sex," i said.
"penguin sex?"
"yes. penguin sex. right there on television. i felt like i was watching animal porn."
"what was it like?" he asked.
"less than exciting," i told him. "sort of a letdown."
"so what does penguins having sex have to do with belief in God?" tony asked.
"well, i am getting to that. but let me tell you what else they do. first, the females lay eggs. they do that standing up. the eggs fall down between their legs, which are about an inch or something long, and the females rest the eggs on their feet. then, the males go over to the females and the females give the males the eggs. then, and this is the cool part, the females leave. they travel for days back to the ocean and jump in and go fishing."
"the females just take off and leave the men with the eggs?" tony asked.
"yes. the males take care of the eggs. they sit on them. they have this little pocket between their legs where the egg goes. they gather around in an enormous circle to keep each other warm. the penguins on the inside of the circle very slowly move to the outside, and then back to the inside. they do this to take turns on the outside of the circle because it is really cold. they do this for an entire month."
"a month!"
"yes. the males sit out there on the eggs for a month. they don't even eat. they just watch the eggs. then the females come back, and right when they do, almost to the day, the eggs are hatched. the females somehow know, even though they have never had babies before, the exact day to go back to the males. and that is how baby penguins are made."
"very interesting." tony clapped for me. "so what is the analogy here?"
"i don't know, really. it's just that i identified with them. i know it sounds crazy, but as i watched i felt like i was one of those penguins. they have this radar inside them that told them when and where to go and none of it made any sense, but they show up on the very day their babies are being born, and the radar always turns out to be right. i have a radar inside me that says to believe in Jesus. somehow, penguin radar leads them perfectly well. maybe it isn't foolish that i follow the radar that is inside me."

so there you go. another penguin story to add to my collection. but more than that, i like what millers says. belief in God isn't really scientific. a lot of it doesn't make sense, and though at times it all seems quite silly, it's as if this particular belief chooses us -- something internal positions us at the foot of the cross where we see our failures and know a love that is unfathomable. my Jesus doesn't always make sense, but my penguin-esque radar says to press on.

i love those little waddlers, and i love the Creator who so intricately designed them. my prayer for you in the new year is that your radar will direct you to the One who makes all things new. Jesus has chosen you... and He wants to be your life-long love.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

true love.

my friend laura once said that coldplay writes the songs that her heart sings. kind of poetic, huh? i love coldplay as much as the next girl, but phil wickham is my heart's writer. "divine romance" is my ultimate wickham favorite, but most recently i find myself drawn to the powerful lyrics in the song "true love." Jesus is teaching me daily about walls built up in my life. in joshua 6 we see a wall around the city of jericho, an obstacle for the people of God. these people had submitted to God's Will yet found themselves up against a wall. we learn in joshua 6 and throughout scripture that we are to view obstacles differently than non-believers. additionally, you can't experience a miracle without first encountering an obstacle, a wall of some sort.
"come close/listen to the story/about a love more faithful than the morning."

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

the same power that conquered the grave lives in me. -- hillsong

Thursday, July 24, 2008

i've got your back.

this morning i watched a series on lifechurch.tv concerning spiritual warfare and the supernatural. i scrawled notes on several pages of my journal; however, there is one thing in particular that i want to pass along.

at the core of spiritual warfare we see Satan, our enemy, and the Holy Spirit, our protector. and, although we are in the world, we do not wage war as the world does (2 Corinthians 10:3). if you grew up in church, you probably remember marching methodically while singing a little ditty about the Lord's army, and you've more than likely heard countless sermons about the armor of God (Ephesians 6:10-18). still, something i heard today was new, an idea i've never really considered.

craig groeschel, senior pastor at lifechurch, made mention of the fact that although we are well prepared with valuable tools, our backs are left uncovered -- we're equipped with a helmet, a breastplate, a shield, a belt, sandals, and finally a sword. obviously we're talking metaphorically, but there is a lot of truth to groeschel's idea. he pointed out that the armor of God seems to be made complete only when the rest of the "army" is concerned. this "army" consists of other believers, those who will pray for you, encourage you, and hold you accountable. essentially, we need an "army" who will watch our backs.

this idea really made sense to me and further emphasized what God's Word makes mention of several times: the importance of fellowship. so, onward christian soldiers... i've got your back.

Saturday, June 21, 2008

worth fighting for.

my previous post was an alphabetic rendition of my life, something that one might forward in an email and politely demand that the next person fill out. i posted it for lack of a better filler, but today, i'm deleting it. it's ugly and quite boring, and i wouldn't forward it in an email so why should i post it here. but, if you're dying to know if i'm A-ttached or single or if you want to know who my B-est friend is, or whether i like C-ake or pie (you get the picture), i guess you can ask (or simply read old posts seeing as the A, B, and C of my life have already been disclosed -- yep, even the cake or pie conundrum).

the letter R on the previously mentioned alphabetic rendition preceded -eason to smile, to which i responded, love. this brings us to today's post:
scripture makes mention of three types of love: agape, phileo, and eros. i would recommend that you do your research on all three; however, in a broader sense of the word, it seems that there are two distinct types. there's romantic love that often incorporates the somehow daunting, baby-of-a-word "in," displayed in the all too popular phrase, "i'm in love with you." and there's platonic love that is unbiased where gender and attraction are concerned. if you haven't been in love, you've probably at least imagined what it's like. and platonically speaking, i would venture to assume that everyone has loved someone, somehow, in this life. i would also venture to assume that we all love for different reasons.
love within a family is almost a given, something you're born with. it's a love you can't really shake, and why would you want to? it's also a love that i believe you grow into. toddlers say "i love you" simply because it is a conditioned response. then, somewhere along the way, the individual learns what it means to love and be loved, and typically those elements of love hold true within the confines of a family. platonic love.
romantic love is quite different. rather than a given, it is a choice -- we choose who we will love, and we choose to continue loving them once we've discovered their faults. romantic love is difficult because the almost euphoric high many people feel early on in a romantic relationship fades at some point. it is at this point that many people choose to claim they've fallen out of love, when in fact i would argue that the ease with which we interchange the words "in" and "out" negates real love in the first place.
within the last six months i've seen a married couple renew their romantic love for one another because they both chose to put the effort forth, i've seen divorce between the most unlikely of people, i've hurt with a friend over a love lost, and rejoiced with another friend because of a love found. romantic love takes a lot of effort, but i believe with all that i am that it is something worth fighting for.

Love is not a place
to come and go as we please
It's a house we enter in
then commit to never leave

So lock the door behind you
Throw away the key
Work it out together
Let it bring us to our knees

Love is a shelter
in a raging storm
Love is peace
in the middle of a war
If we try to leave
May God send angels to guard the door
No, Love is not a fight
but it's something worth fighting for

To some love is a word
that they can fall into.
But when they're falling out
keeping that word is hard to do

Love is a shelter
in a raging storm
Love is peace
in the middle of a war
If we try to leave
May God send angels to guard the door
No, Love is not a fight
but it's something worth fighting for

Love will come to save us
If we'll only call
He will ask nothing from us
but demand we give our all

Love is a shelter
in a raging storm
Love is peace
in the middle of a war
If we try to leave
May God send angels to guard the door
No, Love is not a fight
but it's something worth fighting for
-- warren barfield, "love is not a fight"

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

reliant on relient k.

i have a tendency of zoning out while i drive. good music will do that to a person.

my sister sydney and i were in the car earlier today, and we literally went a good half hour without talking. we were singing along to the music on the radio, just taking in our surroundings.

when we got to the chorus of chris tomlin's Your Grace is Enough, i laughed when i realized that sydney and i were both methodically drumming along to the beat -- i on the steering wheel and she on the dashboard. in that moment we connected (as it is sometimes hard for siblings with ten years between them to do), and a conversation about grace ensued.

i shared with sydney how i had just recently come to really understand grace. it seems that the word is often times used interchangeably with other words such as mercy and love. she gave me her 14-year-old definition of grace, one that really could be categorized as either mercy or love.

i wanted so much to emphasize the importance of grace, to show her that really it is an attribute that is so set apart -- not greater than mercy or love, but different. as we talked, i struggled to find an example that she could relate to, something that would really make sense. after a few failed attempts, i shared with her a line from a relient k song, lyrics that had really made me think and finally understand the true meaning of grace.

from the song Be My Escape:
"the beauty of grace is that it makes life not fair."

then, almost instantly she got it. and to be quite honest, in three years of teaching high school, this "light bulb experience" that i witnessed with sydney was greater than any i had in the classroom.

Romans 6:23
"For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."

how awesome is the grace of our God who forgives our failures and overlooks our inadequacies. we deserve death, yet He in all of His grace and unfairness (thank you relient k) gives us life eternal.