I woke up this morning to the familiar sound of footsteps, usually scurrying to my side of the bed, cuddling up right next to me. Lo and behold, when I opened my eyes, I saw two tiny, leftover pigtails hurrying past me and around to the other side of the bed. My little girl almost never chooses her daddy over me, so I shut my eyes, pretending to be asleep so that he could experience those sweet morning snuggles.
A moment later, I couldn't resist peeking at them. There she was, lying perfectly across his chest, her head nestled right next to his heart. His arm held her there, and the two of them were still and quiet, just enjoying being close. My heart was so very full before I even stepped a foot out of bed. There is just nothing like the arms of your daddy surrounding you before you start your day.
I started thinking about when I was little. My dad would play a little game with me that we fondly named "Teddy Bear." He would come home from work and need to snuggle me, his teddy bear, to get to sleep. After he fell asleep, I would sneak away until he called out for me, and then I would return to his arms. Clever guy, huh? What a great way to sneak in a little shut eye after work! But to me, I looked forward to being wanted, in his arms. My dad's arms were affectionate and familiar. They were strong and full of protection. Even playing these childish games and running away, the best part of the game, the only point of it all, was returning to that safe place.
That's where my daughter chose to run to this morning. The safe place of her daddy's arms. I started to think about how we intensely need our dads arms. See, my hands are constantly busy at home. I'm cooking, cleaning, changing, bathing, teaching, hugging, kissing, holding, feeding. But my husband's arms are just as important, if not more so. He is working, providing, protecting, loving, carrying. He does what I cannot do. He lifts the kids out of danger when they are stuck. He carries them when they're tired or hurt. He fixes things. And he uses those strong arms to wrap around these little ones when they run to him, without question. It comes so naturally to him. Without batting an eye, his arms scoop up his beloved ones, place them on his chest, and welcomes them in.
Moms are great, but fathers are essential. And the greatest gift that we have been given is a heavenly father whose love and protection far surpass anything we can see or experience here on this earth. His arms are strong, carrying us through whatever life brings us. He picks us up when we are weary. He carries us when our wounds are fresh. He lifts us out of danger and He repairs all the problems that we create. Without batting an eye, those loving arms scoop us up and hold us close. And there is no better place to be, then safely resting in Him, feeling His heart beat, and knowing we are safe and loved.

Sunday, July 6, 2014
Wednesday, March 19, 2014
Saying Thank You While Waiting for A Whisper
Church is not a building.
It’s a beautiful body of believers that stand together in circumstances,
both good and bad. It’s a commitment to
loving one another the way Christ loved us.
It’s sacrifice. It’s
compassion. It’s the most amazing and
beautiful thing I’ve ever experienced.
And from the deepest place of my heart, I say a big thank you for all of
you who have reached out to us and showed us what love looks like. Love is practical. Sometimes it’s tangible. And being on the receiving end is
humbling.
As many of you know, we had a major sewage backup last
Friday that filled our entire basement with inches of sewage water. But the storm that we’re in actually started
before then. I’m not exactly sure when
it officially changed from sunny to stormy, but I know it’s been awhile. I’m not exaggerating when I say we have
experienced one immensely stressful situation after another for months. There are a few things that I don’t feel
comfortable sharing publicly. But know
that they have challenged every ounce of what we believe and hope for. And after being challenged over and over and
over in every way I can imagine, I was proud to say that we were walking
through these storms hand in hand, trusting God…that was until last Friday.
I have never really cared about having “stuff.” I think we might be the last people on earth
without smart phones or a tablet of some sort.
We do not have flat screen televisions.
All of our clothes come from resale.
And most of our furniture and things are hand me downs. We rather fill our home with children who
laugh (and cry), grow (and eat), and play (and break things). There are those moments of intense jealousy
when I’m at someone’s house that is beautifully decorated, spacious, and
seemingly perfect. Just keeping it
real. But truly, I am content most of
the time.
That is why last Friday came as a surprise. All of a sudden, losing my children’s
playroom, my home office, my home schooling storage and library, my laundry
room area, and a lot of our things in storage, really shook me. And then I felt so much shame. It’s just stuff, after all. But that wasn’t all. It wasn’t just the stuff. It was the immense amount of work ahead of
us. We already feel like time is
short. We already have 2 major house
projects, one of which is a result of another home fiasco. We had 1200 square feet of living space to
start with in this home, plus that precious basement, and now we’re reduced to
no basement, and one bedroom off limits, plus 4 active kids with one on the way
in 20 weeks. The salvageable items line
our walls in every free space in our home.
Our kids have the living room and a small area in their bedroom to
play. This is what is shaking me. My house is completely a wreck, and it’s
overwhelming.And just when we think we are making progress, there is a
setback.
We’re looking at weeks and weeks of clean up and repair
before we can even start putting our home back together. If this were all we had to deal with right
now, it’d be enough. But it’s not. It’s just the latest. Somehow I think we’ve evolved to deal with
and expect stress. But it’s not easy.
End rant.
Life is hard, but God is good. So cliché, right? I literally chanted that this weekend. But in that chanting, here’s what I
learned. He is good, which means He is
not bad. And if He is not bad, then all
the bad we live through isn’t Him. It’s
not. Let me tell you, from the time I
was a little girl, I’ve lived through a heck of a lot of bad. I’ve never been one to shake my fist at
God. Even in the fall, when we lost our
precious baby #5, I was hurt, upset, angry…but not with God. This was the first time in a long time,
possibly ever, where I literally said out loud “What did I do wrong? Where did we miss you? Why are you not rescuing us?” But He was.
He is. It is true He allows us to
walk through bad things, but He does not cause them. He has no place in them. He only desires our good, not our bad. Why?
Because He is good. He works all
things together for the good of those who love Him. And if this is so, He doesn’t work the bad
in. How counterproductive, then, is it
for us to shake our fists, yell up at heaven, or separate ourselves? He wants to partner with us always, in every
moment.
Now, to be clear, despite this fabulous epiphany that I’m
sure you all have had and I’m just late to class, I have had some VERY human
moments in the last week. I’ve cried, I’ve
snapped at my kiddos, and I’ve doubted so very much. I’ve literally had to overcome despair on a
daily, if not hourly, basis. And I don’t
use the word despair lightly. It’s hard to be knocked down by wave after
ominous wave and not feel alone, even betrayed.
And those feelings pull out some very human moments and reactions.
I was driving to the store to buy even more garbage bags on
Saturday, and all of the sudden the story of Elijah on the mountain popped in
my head. As soon as I had a moment, I
quickly re-read it. It’s found in I
Kings 19 and worth a re-read. Elijah
ended up running away, fearing for his life, and hiding in a cave. He just wanted the Lord to take his
life. He literally uttered “I have had
enough, Lord,” in verse 4, the very thing I was uttering when this story
invaded my conscious thought. If you’re
familiar with the story you know that God told Elijah to go out and stand on
the mountain because He was about to pass by.
In verses 11-13, we find this well-known part of the story:
“Then a great and powerful wind tore the
mountains apart and shattered the rocks before the Lord,
but the Lord was not in the wind. After the wind there
was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the
earthquake. After the earthquake came a fire, but the Lord
was not in the fire. And after the fire came a gentle whisper. When Elijah
heard it, he pulled his cloak over his face and went out and stood at the mouth
of the cave.
Then a voice said to him, “What are you
doing here, Elijah?”
I always took this passage to mean that God’s voice doesn’t have
to be mighty and powerful, but we are to be quiet before Him to hear that
gentle whisper. I always took it to be a
lesson to be still before the Lord. I’m
reading it differently now. One thing
Elijah had going for him was familiarity with His maker and His ways. You see, Elijah was done. He was throwing in the towel. He had retreated and given up. But God wasn’t done with Him. Calling Him out to the mountain, God was
waiting for Him to respond to His voice.
But Elijah’s response required him to drown out all the noise. The wind that shattered the solid rock before
Him was just a distraction. God was not in the wind. The earthquake that
literally shook Elijah as he firmly stood waiting for the Lord was not mistaken
as a punishment or a redirection or an answer to a prayer to end his life. And no, God was not in the fire that raged
after the other waves of destruction had invaded Elijah’s territory. How long was he standing there I wonder? Does it matter? After having been called out on a mountaintop
with a promise to hear the voice of God, only to experience the elements betraying
everything you can see around you, I don’t think it would take long to get
discouraged and feel betrayed. But
Elijah waited, knowing God isn’t bad. He
is good. And He wouldn’t call us to the
mountaintop to leave us disappointed.
Elijah had to wait through the wind, through the earth shaking,
through the blazing heat of a fire to hear a whisper.
So, here we are, standing on our mountaintop. We’ve been blown by the wind. We’ve been
shaken by the earth. We’re feeling the
fire. And we’re waiting for the
whisper.
And in waiting for
that whisper, we have seen an amazing outpouring of love and support by so many
around us. In just a few days, we have
received enough financially to clean and repair our basement. We have been well fed, which is great because
all the air movers in our basement literally have rendered our kitchen
appliances useless, causing a blown fuse with even use of our toaster! We have people donating toys to my kids who
have lost their playroom full of toys.
Old friends, new friends, and many I don’t even know are reaching out to
us. And though it’s “just” a basement
flood, to us, it’s a mountaintop moment.
We’ve been standing up here awhile and are growing weary. And the sacrifice and kindness of so many
people who love the Lord and are being obedient to His whispers are sustaining
us.
Thank you to everyone who have sustained us. We do not take
one meal, one toy, one dollar lightly, knowing how much sacrifice each one
is. Though we are weary, our hearts our
full of encouragement. This is the
church. It’s beautiful.
Monday, October 21, 2013
Trading My Ashes for His Beauty
“I’m beginning to
believe that you won’t leave me here, God.
Just help me to trust all the words you say. And I’m learning to surrender, I’m learning
to forgive. I’m learning to receive all
the love, all the love you have for me.” –lyrics from Isa Couvertier
By sheer mechanical habit, my kids are getting dressed and
fed and schooled. Through the kindness
of friends, we haven’t been forced to solely rely on cereal as our only means
of nutrition. My husband has been
amazing. He’s so quiet, but I know just
how much more of a load he’s carrying because I know what I’m not doing, and how much is still getting
done. But still, he’s grieving too. And as I’ve watched him moving about the days
in strength, I’ve watched his eyes fill with tears at night. I’ve never been more thankful for his arms
around me.
But in the midst of all the tears and the difficulty just
making it through the day, there’s a beautiful, mysterious peace that I’ve
found. It doesn’t take away the
sorrow. It doesn’t take away the
process, but it’s made me reexamine who God is.
And let me tell you, He is amazing.
“My lover is radiant and ruddy, outstanding
among ten thousand…His mouth is sweetness itself; he is altogether lovely. This is my lover, this is my friend…” (SOS 5:
10, 16)
I’ve had so many friends tell me it was o.k. to be angry
with God. To those friends, I say thank
you for loving me and letting me grieve, but I came to a point very early in
this process when I knew I was angry, but it seemed like a waste of energy to aim
that anger at God. If it was God who
caused this, then everything that I know of Him, all that I believe, would be
null and void. It would lead to a crisis
of faith. But I know His word is true,
so I knew that the target of my anger could be explained in a better way.
John 10:10 says “The thief comes only to steal and kill and
destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” I have an enemy who is very real. I forget this when I get wrapped up in
life. I blame him when something goes
wrong with our finances, or our hard days with the kids….and that’s not
displaced blame. But I forget that he is
much more harsh, more cunning, more destructive than I tend to remember. And just because I have a relationship with
the Lord does not immunize me from his hatred.
I would argue that it makes that hatred all the more real. And that is what happened. I had to see and experience death last
week. It was gruesome and cruel. It was heartbreaking and horrifying. And it was nothing new. This has been happening since the serpent
came to Eve in the garden and whispered “Did God really say…?” And that same whisper invaded my ears last
week. “Oh, God is good? Really?
Then why is this happening? Did
God really say…?”
Yes, yes, God did say that He came that we may live and live
full, abundant lives. Yes, God said that
Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life.
Yes, God said that He will go before us and hem us in behind and
before. He said that He is a refuge to
us and that He is near to the brokenhearted.
He said that He would work all things
according to His purpose for the good of those who love Him. He said he would never leave us or forsake us.
And He hasn’t left me.
He is so near and so good. Though
there is death and sadness, this was not His intended, created order. And He doesn’t just throw His hands up in the
air and say “Oh well…you sinned and this is what you get!” No, our God is so good that He gave His son,
which I realize more now how amazingly sacrificial that was, so that my little
baby who never got to be held or kissed by me, can live forever in the arms of
a loving God, never knowing sickness or sadness or sin. And in the midst of my grief, He is taking
what the enemy of my soul has intended to destroy me, and He’s turning it into
something He can use to work something deep into my heart.
I have a choice. I
can stay angry, closed up, and distract myself into numbness. Or, I can grieve, cry, and trade these ashes
for His beauty. It seems like the
obvious choice, but it’s not simple.
I want to be alone right now, and in my loneliness, I want
to feel sorry for myself. I want to turn
on the tv and get lost in whatever is on, no matter if I like it or not. I want stay daydreaming about my baby and
what we would have been like a year from now, a family of 7 instead of 6. I want to tantrum sometimes like a little kid
who didn’t get her way. But God is
drawing me to something better.
He allows us to grieve and ask why. In the garden of Gethsemane ,
Jesus said “My soul is overwhelmed with sorrow to the point of death…My Father,
if it is possible, may this cup be taken from me.” But in the midst of that overwhelming sorrow
and grief, in His very next breath he uttered, “Yet not as I will, but as you
will.” God did not create death. But he chose to use it through His son to
work something deep into the hearts of men for ages to come, so that we might
be spared and spend eternity with Him.
What a good and loving Father. And
I personally am thankful that He overcame the grave! Now I don’t have to wonder where my little
one is. I know.
So though you might see me with tear stained cheeks, tired and
overcome with grief and sorrow, I can say God is good. He has been working deep things in my
heart. He sits enthroned in the heavens,
and my little one gets to see Him face to face.
There is no greater gift I could have given my child but Him. And for eternity that little one gets to rest
in His perfect arms of love because we allowed her life into our lives, even
for a short time.
“Blessed are those
whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage. As they pass through the Valley of Baca
[tears], they make it a place of springs; the autumn rains also cover it with
pools. They go from strength to
strength, till each appears before God in Zion .”
Psalm 84: 5-7
This verse has been prayed over me many times during my
life, but never did I receive it with such clarity as I do now. My heart is forever set on a pilgrimage and
my very life’s goal is to draw closer to the heart of God, always sojourning
until the day I see Him face to face.
But in this journey, there will be tears. Jesus warned us that in this life, there are
many troubles. But we are blessed when
we make this journey through hardships and allow Him to turn our tears into a
place of springs…life! But here’s my new
favorite part: “the autumn rains also
cover it with pools [blessings].”
You see, I learned of my baby’s passing two days before my
birthday. My actual birthday and the
days surrounding this year were filled with so much pain, physically,
emotionally, and psychologically. Three years
ago, during the same week, my cousin suddenly passed away. When I was younger,
my grandfather also left this earth around the time of my birthday. A few other hard things have happened during
the very same week. So, my initial
reaction to the timing of all this was “What in the world are you trying to say
to me about the week I was brought
into the world!?!”
And in the Lord’s kindness, He revealed a little more about
this passage. It’s these autumn (some
versions say early, but mine actually says autumn) rains that bring blessings. And with each terrible hardship, each year, I’ve
walked away with immeasurable blessings.
Not in an outward sense, no not at all.
In fact, it seems each autumn (or close to it) brings loss. But it’s in this loss that God chooses to
draw me closer than ever before and give me a glimpse of His eternal
glory. I’d rather have that than a
birthday cake any day.
This year, my blessing has been a renewed commitment to
maintain possession of nothing on this earth.
I own nothing, and I am nothing apart from Him. He alone sits enthroned in my heart. But I found how easily it is that I allow
things that He has blessed me with, good things, to take His place. How quickly my family became so important to
me that it threatened to take that place of most importance. And like Abraham who was asked to offer up
His only son, my Father has challenged me with whether I’d be willing to give
up these good and perfect little blessings if He asked me to. Unlike Abraham who had unwavering faith, I
was quite a bit more hesitant. But His
kindness led me to a place where I realize that if I truly want to possess all
of Him, to know Him in His fullness, than I must possess nothing else. And though Abraham was rich and owned many
things, he possessed nothing. That is
the cry of my heart as I continue to walk through the Valley of Baca . That I might come out receiving His blessings
that these autumn rains are bringing, but still possessing nothing.
But whatever
former things I had that might have been gains to me, I have come to consider
as [one combined] loss for Christ’s sake.
Yes, furthermore, I count everything as loss compared to the
possession of the priceless privilege (the overwhelming preciousness, the
surpassing worth, and supreme advantage) of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord and
of progressively becoming more deeply and intimately acquainted with Him
[of perceiving and recognizing and understanding Him more fully and clearly].
For His sake I have lost everything and consider it all to be mere rubbish
(refuse, dregs), in order that I may win (gain) Christ (the Anointed One),
And that I may [actually] be found and known as in
Him, not having any [self-achieved] righteousness that can be called my own,
based on my obedience to the Law’s demands (ritualistic uprightness and
supposed right standing with God thus acquired), but possessing that [genuine
righteousness] which comes through faith in Christ (the Anointed One), the [truly]
right standing with God, which comes from God by [saving] faith.
[For my determined purpose is] that I may know Him [that I
may progressively become more deeply and intimately acquainted with Him,
perceiving and recognizing and understanding the wonders of His Person more
strongly and more clearly], and that I may in that same way come to know the
power outflowing from His resurrection [which it exerts over believers], and
that I may so share His sufferings as to be continually transformed [in spirit
into His likeness even] to His death, [in the hope]
That if possible I may attain to the [spiritual and moral]
resurrection [that lifts me] out from among the dead [even while in the body].
Philippians
3: 7-11, Amplified
Thank you for praying for us. Though this post is long, there is so much
more to say! So many victories and
kindnesses and lessons. All of us have
been walking through this with a heart to see God’s purpose in our pain. We ask for continued prayer. I personally ask that you pray against fear
that is so quick to enter my mind. And
also for energy to accomplish the day to day tasks of this family that I am so
blessed to be a part of for as long as He lets me. For my husband to be blessed, because I do
not exaggerate when I say that he has been the most excellent husband and
father I could have imagined, while all the while his heart has broken as
well. Finally for my kids…it was my
oldest’s first reaction to pray for a miracle when he heard the news. I love that I got a glimpse of his
faith. I ask for prayers for them, that
their faith is increased beyond measure and that in their sadness, they find
comfort.
If you’ve read to this point, I thank you for letting me
pour out my heart to you. I pray that He
blesses you and that you walk with a deeper understanding of how near He is to
us always.
Many tears are still being cried, and each and every day is
difficult, but He is good. He is good.
Wednesday, October 9, 2013
My Deep Sorrow
I feel like I’m having an out of body experience, and yet I feel every bit of pain, both real and emotional, that hits me like unrelenting waves. I think this is just a really, long, bad dream, but there’s no waking up. There’s no going to sleep either. Where I once felt life, I feel hollow. Where there was joy, there is so much sorrow. So much.
And yet…
My heart has never been as broken as it is right now. I cannot comprehend how to move on in this moment. But He is good. And He will gently lead me. I’m so sad, and I’m angry, and I’m confused. But He is good. And He still holds my heart.
Selfishly, I want to hold and kiss something that I cannot. I feel robbed. I feel violated. I feel empty.
And yet…
He is near. So near. My soul is downcast, but I will praise Him yet. Because without Him, without His love, I could not have possibly loved another precious, tiny one whom I have never met this much. My love for this life lost is supernatural and inexplicable. It comes from something much greater, much wiser, more powerful than I. It’s in those tender arms of perfect love that I imagine my little one right now, separated from me, but forever in His presence.
Oh, my soul is weary. I am nothing apart from Him. I am sad, and angry, and confused. But I will trust in that unfailing love that I had the privilege to experience and that I will never forget.
Thursday, August 8, 2013
What Extravagant Love Looks Like
Tomorrow is going to be a great day. But before you start wondering what’s on our
agenda, I’ll just stop you there. It’s
not going to be great because of something we have planned. It’s not going to be great because of
something we’ve done.
Tomorrow is going to be great because there’s a woman who
lives far away from us that is going to endure one of the most selfless acts I
have heard of, and there will be much rejoicing because of her actions flowing
out of such a beautiful heart.
Tomorrow, a wife, a mom, a sister, a friend is checking
herself into a hospital, and giving away a part of herself so that another
young man, whom she never knew, could live.
Tomorrow, this woman is setting aside her agenda, her social
life, her expectations, and her body so that another person could have the
opportunity to have an agenda, a social life, expectations, and live in his
body.
Tomorrow, three children, one very young, will watch their
momma walk out Scripture in a way that so many of us only talk about. Tomorrow a man is loving others in such a
sacrificial way that he is giving his wife up for a period of time so that they
can together fulfill a call on all of our hearts: to love each other as Christ
has loved us. Tomorrow, family and
friends will wait and watch a beautiful act of selfless love enter this
world.
Tomorrow is going to be a great day.
A very good friend of mine’s sister-in-law heard about a young boy who desperately needed a kidney to save his life. Not knowing whether she was a match, she boldly and courageously asked the question, Why not me? She didn’t use her busyness as an excuse. She didn’t use the odds of matching this need as a reason to stay away. She was moved in her heart to help another, like so many of us are moved. The difference is that she went way beyond being moved, and instead moved herself into action.
I don’t know this woman personally, but I’d love to meet
her. She’s a hero, although I’m sure she’d
never consider herself as such. She’s an
example, although the motivation of her heart was not to lead, but to love. We talk a lot about how much we love the
Lord, but eventually this love should overflow into life changing encounters
with others. Her intense love for her
Maker inspires me, and draws me to a place where I desire to extravagantly
love.
Tomorrow, she is giving life to a child, but she is giving
glory to God. Matthew 25: 31-46 says
this:
31 “When the Son of Man
comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, he will sit on his glorious
throne. 32 All the
nations will be gathered before him, and he will separate the people one from
another as a shepherd separates the sheep from the goats. 33 He will put the sheep on his
right and the goats on his left.
34 “Then
the King will say to those on his right, ‘Come, you who are blessed by my
Father; take your inheritance, the kingdom prepared for you since the creation
of the world. 35 For
I was hungry and you gave me something to eat, I was thirsty and you gave me
something to drink, I was a stranger and you invited me in, 36 I needed clothes and you clothed
me, I was sick and you looked after me, I was in prison and you came to visit
me.’
37 “Then
the righteous will answer him, ‘Lord, when did we see you hungry and feed you,
or thirsty and give you something to drink? 38 When did we see you a stranger
and invite you in, or needing clothes and clothe you? 39 When did we see you sick or in
prison and go to visit you?’
40 “The
King will reply, ‘Truly I tell you, whatever you did for one of the least of these
brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me.’
Her name is Kim. Pray for her and her family tomorrow as she does this amazing act of love for a boy who needs extravagant love, but ultimately for her King.
Tomorrow, let’s love others extravagantly right alongside of her, however you feel led.
Tomorrow is going to be a great day!
Tuesday, July 30, 2013
When We Lose Confidence
When is it, exactly, in our lifetime when we start to lose
our self confidence? When is it that we
start to feel self conscious? When is it
that we start to lose sight of what makes us come alive, and rather choose to
act in a way that we feel “safe” in the eyes of those around us?
Just a few weeks ago, I realized that my oldest child, a
mere 6 ½ years old, is starting to feel less than adequate in some areas. And my heart broke in a whole new way.
Twice a week, we try to quick clean the whole house. It’s amazing how quickly things around here
can clutter up and get grimy! To make it
fun, we play some upbeat tunes, set a timer, and see if we can finish cleaning
the room in the allotted time. It’s
become our favorite way to get our chores done, and I’m often asked on
non-cleaning days if we could “just do timer cleaning on just one room,
pleeeeaaaase!”
Once the timer is set, and our playlist is queued up, dust
rags, vacuums and mops join the chorus of many voices singing, little fists
pumping in the air. Yes, cleaning day
over here is wild and loud, but we don’t mind getting our chores done!
Just a few weeks ago, as I sprayed everyone’s dust rags
during one of our favorite cleaning songs, I noticed one less voice joining our
chorus. There stood my oldest, cleaning,
but clearly feeling awkward,
restraining himself from joining in our family fun.
I took him aside to see what the matter was, thinking he
wasn’t feeling well or that perhaps he had something else on his mind. I didn’t expect him to say, “Mom, it’s just that
I don’t sing as well as you or Noah, so I thought I wouldn’t be a bother and
not sing at all.” Of course, my first
response was, “Honey, of course you’re as good as us! You should
still sing!” His little brother was
listening and also rushed into the scene, attempting to encourage big brother
and tell him he sings beautifully.
Later that day, my dear son said he wanted to talk. “I know
I’m not as good as you are at singing. I
also know that I am good at other
things. I just don’t want to do the
things I’m not good at anymore.”
Time to be honest: as
much as I absolutely, beyond a shadow of a doubt, LOVE to hear my son sing, it’s true that he’s not going to be
recording a Billboard hit in his future.
But my heart was to encourage him not to quit. Singing is praising, and the Lord only
requires us to make a joyful noise, not a perfectly harmonic noise. Besides, who is to say who is good and who is
better? And furthermore, who says that
you can’t improve if you just keep trying?
These are all the things that were whirling through my head,
but all that came out of my mouth was “for now let me pray about this and we’ll
talk later.” Thank you Lord for teaching me a little restraint! The more I thought about it, the more I
realized, our choice to restrain ourselves, sometimes resulting in fear, comes
from our inability to realize who we
were created to be. The truth is, we
were each designed specifically by the Creator of the Universe, who chose to
place stars in the sky, give me my curly hair, and give my son the voice He
gave him (which by the way is one of the sweetest sounds I have ever heard in
my life).
I realized that I am just now entering into a season of
knowing who I am, and not in the
sense of what I want to be or do with my life.
No, in being who I am unapologetically. In knowing that my sense of humor is a gift,
and that my intelligence is not a bad thing.
In feeling comfortable in my own skin and with my own voice. In
passionately following things He placed in my heart with no excuses, no
restraint. I will not be the best at
anything I do. There is always going to
be someone more creative, more proficient, smarter, more organized. And I have let that silly truth stop me in my
tracks so many times. But my Creator has
made me exactly who I am, and has
told me in 2 Timothy 1:7 that I have not been given a spirit of fear, but of
power, love, and a sound mind.
And the more I prayed about what to tell my son, I realized
that I would be supportive no matter what he chooses, as long as he walks along
in the confidence that God intended for him.
There are other ways to praise, and he is my one who reads and loves the
Word. He speaks truth over each one of
us. I know that he desires a
relationship with the living God, rather than religion. But still, he is 6. He has a lot to learn, develop, and
practice. So we sat down and examined
some Scripture together to figure this one out.
Here’s a sampling of what we discussed:
1 Peter 2:9 says “But
you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging
to God, that you may declare the praises
of Him who called you out of darkness in to his wonderful light.” (emphasis added)
Psalm 139:13-16
“For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. 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, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.”
“For you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother's womb. I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well. 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, your eyes saw my unformed body. All the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.”
1 Samuel 16:7
“But the LORD said to Samuel, ‘Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.’”
Matthew 5:13-14“But the LORD said to Samuel, ‘Do not consider his appearance or his height, for I have rejected him. The LORD does not look at the things man looks at. Man looks at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.’”
"You are the salt of the earth. But if the salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled by men. You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden.”
1 Peter 2:5
“You also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.”
“You also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.”
I looked at his little face and told him how precious he was
not just to me and our family, but to His King who made him just the way he
is. As his smile spread across his face,
it seemed like a light bulb came on. He
apologized for not singing…indeed, he wants to sing…and dance…and play
instruments…this boy was a fountain once we tapped into him! I reminded him he doesn’t sing for us, but for His King…I think he gets
it now. He’s been singing louder and
longer ever since, even writing some of his own songs. I cannot help but ask myself what if we never talked this one
through? What would have happened to
this passion that I see in him now?
When do we lose our confidence? When is it that we abandon what is in our
hearts for something that is seemingly acceptable?
When we lose sight of who we are living and breathing
for. When we choose to please the
created rather than the Creator. When we
have enough self awareness to finally learn what sacrifice might be. But in sacrificing what others think of us,
we rest in a place of true joy, walking in confidence, and becoming the person
we were destined to become.
Here are some of my boy’s latest worship lyrics:
God, you
are my King,
The best
King,The only King.
You are more powerful than anything.
You are my King.
You are my King.
Friday, July 12, 2013
Permission to Be Beautiful
“Beauty is in the eye
of the beholder and it may be necessary from time to time to give a stupid or
misinformed beholder a black eye.”
– Miss Piggy, The Muppets
When I’m rushing to
get everyone out the door, making sure the boys have taken that last fateful
trip to the bathroom, counting the number of diapers I have packed, and making
sure I remember to look in the mirror myself, she’s waiting patiently to get her hair
done. She sits up straight and still,
and always wants to look in the mirror when her styling is complete.
My husband and I
laugh. If you know me, you know how
simple I am when it comes to my “routine.”
My hair is usually in a pony tail, and I have minimal makeup on, if any
at all. My only piece of jewelry that I
sport 99% of the time is my wedding band.
So my pretty princess did not get her desire for all things pretty and
shiny from me at all.
Her innate desire
to be beautiful has caused me to sit back and wonder what God has written on
her heart. This was a deeper ponder than
I wanted to have pondered.
Before my daughter
entered into my life, I would have told you that beauty wasn’t important to
me. But now I can say that that would
have been an ignorant, quickly dismissive statement. Logically speaking, who doesn’t love to look
at something beautiful? Who doesn’t want
to feel like they live in a beautiful place, or to vacation somewhere that they
consider beautiful? Who doesn’t
appreciate the beauty of nature? Who
doesn’t notice a handsome man or a beautiful woman as they walk by? We, by
nature, appreciate beauty.
Who doesn’t love a
compliment? Even in my hard-hearted
days, a compliment made me feel alive inside, whether or not it showed
outwardly. And though we should not give
other people’s opinions power over us, our emotions and our thinking, their
words of encouragement tend to give us joy.
Logically speaking,
then, beauty is important to me. I like
beautiful things, and I love receiving an unexpected compliment. Why then have I flippantly dismissed beauty
for such a long time?
Well, my pondering
has brought up many reasons. And much
(but not all) has to do with the way I grew up.
I didn’t have the mom figure telling me I was beautiful or guiding me
through what I call “the awkward years.”
No one taught me how to dress for my figure, or do my hair and make
up. But arguably, many women, even with mothers,
have that same absence in their lives.
Some women take it
upon themselves to learn, because they are honest with themselves that they
desire to be beautiful. No, not me. I hid from it. I saved all the insecurity of my awkward
years in a box, right next to my 3 makeup items and hair appliances I rarely
use. And when I walk into the bathroom
on a quest to look how I want to feel, instead of reaching for my mascara, I
take out that box, sort through it while looking into the mirror, and walk out
resigned to never be beautiful.
Now, I’m being
totally honest here. I have gone to
enough teachings, enough small groups, and read enough books on what beauty
is. And I’m a firm believer that beauty
does not define you. It does not give
you confidence. It does not give you
joy. You know what it gives you? Beauty.
It is, of itself, something to behold.
It is something created to celebrate.
And we are something created to celebrate.
I watch my daughter
adorn herself in the morning, and look at me with such joy. I watch her older brothers finding her so
adorable for acting so feminine. And I
wonder when and why I decided to not allow that freedom and that joy in my own
life.
I hid behind my
intellect, reasoning that God looks at the heart, not the hair. And that’s true! Don’t get me wrong. But my heart was not right. Because instead of seeing myself as He sees
me, I saw something different…something undesirable…something that wasn’t worth
investing in. And I hid behind the lies
of busyness, and priorities, and excuses in order to not deal with my heart
issues.
I hesitate to write
all of this because it is difficult, especially for Christian women, to invest
in themselves without feeling vain. We
don’t want to be that fleeting beauty, but we want that Proverbs 31
character. While the Word says that God
looks at the heart, He also looked at the beauty of His creation and saw that
it was good.
I think of all the
times when my husband has paid me a compliment, and I’ve struggled so much
because internally I’m thrilled but externally I roll my eyes and play it
off. I think of times when I get
together with a friend and they tell me I look great and I begrudgingly say, Oh geeze, thanks, but
I don’t feel great, completely
not receiving that compliment. And then
I think of God looking at me, a created woman, and as He gazes on my, dare I
say, beauty, He says that it is good.
Man, am I convicted.
My beauty that He
created is good. I see that every time I
watch my daughter twirl in a pretty dress, with her pigtails and
necklaces. She is beautiful and not
vain. She is beautiful and not
proud. She is beautiful and knows it,
but does not chase after it. I pray that
she stays humble and confident, chasing after the eternal, but always knowing
how precious and gorgeous she was made.
So I decided to
confide in a friend a few weeks ago about my quest for beauty. And when I say friend, I mean the kind where
you know that before you were born God just knew you were going to be friends forever
kind of friend. I confided in her
because she has known me most of my life, knows all my secrets and insecurities
as well as my strengths and confidences.
She is beautiful on the inside and out and knows how to make women feel
the way they were created to feel.
We had a great
conversation about how beauty is something that God made, and that is o.k. to
want that. I want my daughter to feel
beautiful, but I think my heavenly Father probably wants that for me too. I confided that I feared trying to look nice
because I was afraid of what others would think…Oh, this is you trying to actually look nice?! But through our conversation, I realized
that I was perpetuating the same perversion of beauty that I logically tried to
avoid. I was placing my beauty in the
context of other people and not my own.
Here’s when the Miss Piggy quote comes in…I am beautiful. And if others don’t agree, they probably just
need a perspective adjustment. I can
list for you the things I don’t like
about myself, but the power of life and death is in the tongue, and I want to
appreciate who God made me inside and out.
While I know He looks at the heart, the way we perceive and fall out of
gratitude for who He made us on the outside can start to make our hearts grow
sick. I am on a journey of health and wellness,
and it includes healing my heart from years of insecurity and denial and
embracing the way He knit me together uniquely and divinely.
The Epilogue:
Here’s the fun part!
My very beautiful friend, who I confided in, asked me to
meet her at her house last night for a surprise. She’s a make up artist, and I had asked her
to give me a few tips to update my look.
She did such an amazing job of accenting all the beauty in my face,
teaching me little tips and tricks along the way. After our make up session, she whisked me off
to a beautiful salon to get a new cut and some styling tips from a really great
hair stylist. I felt as if there should
have been cameras following us along on our journey! I was living a real life make over totally
steered solely by my very own friend.
She went out of her way to schedule time with me, which is no small task
for a busy mom of three little boys! She
set everything up ahead of time, even sending my picture to the salon so that
they could be ready with some ideas. And
when I walked out feeling fresh and new, we went out and laughed and had some
great conversation. It was a night I
will never forget!
I woke up this morning with my newly styled hair and makeup
tips and took only about 10-15 minutes to put myself together. Hmm, it’s not that difficult after all. And I made myself a promise. My friend thought I was beautiful and wanted
to invest in me, and I want to steward that investment. Instead of looking at my flaws, I’m going to
enjoy the beauty God has given me. So without further adieu, I proudly present you with an updated me...and it feels great!
I want my daughter to see the world through His eyes. In a culture obsessed with looks, trends, and perfection, I know it will be a challenge to keep her eyes focused on what matters most at times. But I want her to see herself the way God sees her…the way her dad and I see her. She is absolutely stunning. She is amazing. I treasure her beauty, and she has inspired me to treasure my own.
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