Showing posts with label #LiveFreeThursday Suzie Eller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #LiveFreeThursday Suzie Eller. Show all posts

Thursday, October 5, 2017

Shade for our Souls


The hot tropical sun baked every pore of my exposed skin. How thankful I was to my Vietnamese daughter-in-law's family for their insistence that I wear some kind of long sleeves.  

Six years ago I was in Vietnam, riding past the rice paddies on my first motorbike excursion. The young nephew who had been assigned to drive while I held on (not too tightly, I hoped) behind him, was very gracious to this American Grandma.































How much hotter could it get, I wondered? The day already felt like I was in a sauna, and I had thought the breeze of the driving might be refreshing. Obviously I had never experienced this kind of baking sun, exposed in the open landscape! I longed for some kind of relief from the fiery heat, as we rode.  And it was then that the verse from my morning's reading became more real to me than it had ever been:


"The Lord watches over you—
    the Lord is your shade at your right hand;
the sun will not harm you by day,
    nor the moon by night."
Psalm 121:5-6 



I spoke the verse again and again, until I felt the very Presence of God covering me with His safety, speaking to my burning soul that He would be my true shade.




Is there a place of safety from the burning heat, from the searing of our souls,
that we are meant to share?




We find our friend, Jayber Crow, in such a place for this week's portion over at Michele Morin's site

Living Our Days,

where she has invited us to join in an online book study of Jayber Crow, by Wendell Berry.


Jayber, the "bachelor barber," has begun to see himself as a true member of the community, when World War 2 sets in. Having been denied a place of service himself, because of a medical difficulty, he yet found himself saying:


"I was learning what I had meant when I decided that I would share the fate of Port William. I had not gone off to war, but the wounds and deaths of Port William boys were happening in Port William. They were happening to me. I was involved; I was being changed."

Berry, Wendell. Jayber Crow: A Novel (Port William) (p. 147). Counterpoint. Kindle Edition. 




Jayber had begun to experience what a true community feels like: what one person walks through does overflow onto the others within that community. 





As Jayber became more comfortable in his own shop, there were many nights after business was completed, that he lingered in his own barber chair (how cozy that must have been, in the days before our nice "Lazy-Boy" recliners!) finding it a comfortable spot for reading and relaxing. Often times if another lone soul was out wandering the streets, they might find themselves drawn to the cozy feeling of the empty barbershop themselves, knowing that a listening ear was waiting for them there.


In those awful years of the War, when the searing hot pain of grief became overwhelming, one father wandered in and just sat quietly. From within that peaceful setting, he shared about a dream of his lost son that had awakened a fresh pouring of grief:


 "He told me this in a voice as steady and even as if it were only another day’s news, and then he said, 'All I could do was hug him and cry.' And then I could no longer sit in that tall chair. I had to come down. I came down and went over and sat beside Mat. If he had cried, I would have. We both could have, but we didn’t. We sat together for a long time and said not a word. After a while, though the grief did not go away from us, it grew quiet. What had seemed a storm wailing through the entire darkness seemed to come in at last and lie down."

Berry, Wendell. Jayber Crow: A Novel (Port William) (pp. 149-150). Counterpoint. Kindle Edition.





And the tears that could not be shed by them, were shed by me. This "Shade of God's Presence" is the one constant thing we can offer to those who dwell in community with us. We may not always have a wise word. We might not even be able to serve or help in the way that we wish we could.


But our Lord
Who offers us the True Shade
Of His Presence

Asks us to extend that Shade
To invite others in
Who are burning
in pain and grief.

We can sit with each other
And know
That our restless souls
Only find rest in HIM.











I have found such shade and safety
with ones who have
sat with me.

If there is a burning in your soul,
please let me pray with you,
and join you 
in your own place of pain.

The Community of our Lord,
The Body of Christ,
has a beautiful shade
that is meant to be shared.


 

 Jayber Crow, by Wendell Berry, can be found at Amazon,
by clicking here.



I am linking today with:
Suzie Eller, #LiveFreeThursday 
Barbie Swihart, #Glimpses 






Thursday, April 13, 2017

Stillness at the Cross








  "Jesus answered, 'I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.'"
John 14:6 NIV
  








The way of life is a mystery to me. 
How is it that something long lost 
is suddenly revived and found beating again?
How is it that the dead brown leaves
make way for growth after the winter?


Oh, I know the scientific answers. But the heart of it all is still a mystery to me.  This morning I watched a Mama Robin in her nest building cycle. She was certain that the fluffy landscape netting, left-over from last year's patch of lawn seeding, would make fine nesting material. She tugged and pulled, and hopped and yanked, but the more she worked, the more tangled the strings became. Finally, after more patience than I would have shown, she gave up and left the knot lying in the yard.

I've faced those same kinds of knots. Have you? Those kinds that leave my weary mind reeling. Those kinds that stay knotted and twisted for years, even, as a situation refuses to be unraveled, and peace remains elusive.


During these last few weeks of journeying into a Lenten Stillness, as my heart has been leaning into a new kind of resting in Jesus, I've heard Him speak of a different way of unraveling.  He has come to bring us HIS life, but in so doing, He has entered into our very places of knotting pain. If you are part of the Faith Practice that observes the Stations of the Cross during Holy Week, then you will be very familiar with this Scripture Passage. I grew up in a Church that did not practice many of the old traditions, so these are new thoughts to me.  But my Online Bible Study Group has been reading through the book of Luke, and right there in my chapter for the day was the same verse that a friend had just spoken about from her Stations of the Cross journey:

Jesus turned and said to them, “Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me; weep for yourselves and for your children.


And my own heart wept. Jesus took upon himself all of my pain, and all of the pain of my children. He took all of your pain also.  Those knots that twist away in the muscles of your heart, leaving you gasping for air? He is right there, waiting to show you His love.  The problem is that we look away. 


We somehow grasp that 
He came to bring us Salvation from 
 OUR SINS.
But our pain
and our problems?
Well those 
must be unknotted
and solved 
by our own wits.


And just like Mama Robin,
we walk away
when the knots
are too strong,
and the web can't be
unwoven
by any effort of our own.


But Jesus came to help us face 
the pain,
to acknowledge the grieving,
and to finally find HIM here
loving us still
and 
rising again
with LIFE for us all.




These words were whispered into my heart, as I looked at the pain and the knots that remained in my own life this week. May they speak God's Love to you, as they spoke to me:


At the Cross

My daughter sit with me
here
grieve and wail
for the injustice
and pain
that my people
must bear.

My Body
was broken
for you, for them.
My heart
was torn open
as I carried
the cross.

But my people
can't see
how I've never
stopped loving
never stopped
giving
never stopped
seeing.

I see the wounds
they bear
I see the grief
they carry

I see the pain
you feel
I see the wounds
you bear.

The cross
Your cross
My cross
I swallowed up death
and I swallowed the pain
in the Love that I gave
for you
for them.

Sit with me here
Taste my mercy
and know
There is nothing
between us now.

                   --BG


May this song be a place of rest with Jesus for you:

 




I am linking this week with:






 

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Stillness and the Slow Word

Did you write out Goals for yourself at the start of the New Year? Or did you, like many of us who have a hard time looking ahead at a sea of possibilities, choose a #OneWord for your theme this year? How are you doing with the practice of that word?

It's hard to imagine, but it's already the beginning of the 2nd quarter of this year! Many bloggers are doing a check-in about now, to evaluate their progress in how that One Word has affected their days this year.






 My heart has been resting,
and my mind has stopped
spinning so fast,
as I've begun 
the journey
to center
my 
heart
with Jesus.









If you chose a word for your focus, have you seen that word popping up everywhere?

Or perhaps you are finding many variations on your word that help to expand its meaning?


I began the process of slowing down several years ago. 
But there is a difference between moving slowly,
and being still of heart and soul.  

A slow life can just as easily be a
hard-hearted life

And believe me,
I have had enough of those 
hard-hearted moments
to last a life-time!   


God's Presence
and God's Word
have a way of seeping into the 
crevices and cracks of my heart
when I make the choice
to find stillness
and 
softness of heart. 

 
 

One of the ways that God began to stir my heart to see the difference between "slow" and "still" came as I followed a sweet blogger in her leading of a type of Scripture Reading called Lectio Divina.  I popped in at her Youtube channel several times last year, and always came away so refreshed.  When two other friends, from different sources, also joined in with the Lectio Divina, or "Slow Word-Divine Word" type of study, then I knew God was asking me to pay attention.

Lectio Divina is a type of Scripture listening, often read aloud.  This type of pausing and being quiet with the Scriptures is one more way to let the Word of Christ dwell in us richly.


But it was this particular passage, led by Summer Gross, for one of her Lectio Divina, that confirmed the direction in my Stillness Journey early this year:


 "Is there anyplace I can go to avoid your Spirit?
    to be out of your sight?
If I climb to the sky, you’re there!
    If I go underground, you’re there!
If I flew on morning’s wings
    to the far western horizon,
You’d find me in a minute—
    you’re already there waiting!
Then I said to myself, “Oh, he even sees me in the dark!
    At night I’m immersed in the light!”
It’s a fact: darkness isn’t dark to you;
    night and day, darkness and light, they’re all the same to you."


As the words of Scripture were read, and listened to, and I waited to hear what God would emphasize to me,
these words jumped out at me:
"you're already there waiting."

He had been waiting and speaking 
these same thoughts to me
for over a year:
"Come inside with me. I'm already here,
I'm not offended by any pain or shame you feel. 
I'm waiting for fellowship with you."


Only in softness can our hearts 
respond
when the invitation of God 
is given. 

Only in stillness can our minds
hear His call
when the Lord of Creation
speaks our name.


I have found a sweet rest in a quiet slow-word
Lectio Divina
type of hearing the Word of God.


During these final days of Lent,
as we wait for those moments
when we will pause and remember
the Cross that Jesus
carried,
are you ready to still
and to hear
HIS WORD
for you?

  




If you have a stirring in your heart to pursue more of this Slow Word movement, you can find a good description of Lectio Divina at the BibleGateway site
here.

And if you would like to hear a beautiful reading by Summer Joy Gross, please allow yourself a few moments to rest with God's Word here:

  




I am linking this week with: 






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