Obedience, Part 1 – Turning

Obedience. Another word that has a long “cringing” history with me. The Oxford Dictionary online defines cringing as “bent in fear or apprehension”; a perfect description of my response to mandates for Biblical and godly obedience. Along with a nice helping of guilt because I know I should want to be obedient and I should be obedient. Either because God is right, or because He loves me, or something like that. This year God has been calling me to obedience, so we have been conversing about what that means. I would like to share these conversations with you, in the form of five posts, of which this is the first.
Obedience, Part 1 – Turning
Obedience, Part 2 – Agreeing or Trusting?
Obedience, Part 3 – What Precedes Obedience
Obedience, Part 4 – What Follows Obedience
Obedience, Part 5 – Disobedience

The Light Burden

I don’t know about you, but at face value obeying God sounds to me like an incredibly heavy burden. There are hundreds of rules, mandates, and lists of good things to do in the Bible. Unlike the Pharisees, I have not memorized these and made it a practice to implement them perfectly in my life. Even if I distill them all into the famous “love God and love each other” principle, I’m no closer to being successful in obedience. But maybe obedience isn’t about doing all the good things all the time.

In Matthew chapter 11, Jesus says, “‘Come to me, all of you who are weary and carry heavy burdens, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you. Let me teach you, because I am humble and gentle at heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.” In a heart-raw talk by Phil Vischer (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVuinkWIolo), he submits the idea that the “light burden” or “yoke” Jesus describes is obedience. Maybe He’s only asking me to do one thing. I don’t have to know all the things and do all the things. Maybe this light burden of obedience is simply turning toward Him in this moment.

For This Moment

I have a tendency to over-commit. Call it loyal, call it controlling, call it dependable, or call it desperate – and you’re probably right. In any case, I thought God needed me to promise unending obedience to Him. That right now I need to be ready for all the eventualities. I have this crazy idea He’s going to ask me to do something crazy. And if I agree to obey Him, I have to agree to all the possible outcomes up front. I have to promise obedience at every juncture for the rest of my life. I must surrender my will once and for all.

The truth is, I exercise my will a hundred times a day. Sometimes in obedience and sometimes in self serving. The truth is, it would be presumptuous to promise obedience when I am riddled with sin and selfishness. The truth is, God is inviting me to obedience and surrender as He interacts with me throughout every day – each moment, each reminder of His kingdom, each time I see my brokenness and His offer of rest and provision. The truth is, I am a sinner saved by grace. Not, I was a sinner. I am a sinner, and I am simultaneously saved by grace. Saving is God’s work, and my part is to respond to Him in this moment. He wants today with me. Thank You Lord for the hundred invitations every day to turn toward You and accept Your transforming presence with us.

Turning Toward

In the bestselling book “The Seven Principles for Making Marriage Work” by John Gottman and Nan Silver, chapter five is devoted to the principle “Turn toward Each Other Instead of Away.” It begins by describing a common scene in the Love Lab, a fabricated apartment in Seattle, WA that serves as a marriage research facility:

None of the footage taped in our Love Lab would win anybody an Oscar. Our archives are filled with scenes in which the husband looks out the picture window and says, “Wow, look at that boat,” and the wife peers over her magazine and says, “Yeah, it looks like that big schooner we saw last summer, remember?” and the husband grunts.

You might think I’d find viewing hour after hour of such scenes unbearably boring. On the contrary: When couples engage in lots of chitchat like this, I can be pretty sure that they will stay happily married. What’s really happening in these brief exchanges is that the husband and wife are connecting – they are turning toward each other. In couples who go on to divorce or live together unhappily, such small moments of connection are rare. More often the wife doesn’t even look up from her magazine – and if she does, her husband doesn’t acknowledge what she says.

Gottman goes on to describe how people make “bids” for their partner’s attention: sharing their feelings, making a joke, scooting closer on the couch. “People either turn toward one another after these bids or they turn away. Turning toward is the basis of emotional connection…”

This is what God wants with us. He wants to be together, to chat. He is making bids for our attention, constantly seeking intimacy with us. Obedience is a turning. It is a “yes” to intimacy with God. Emmanuel: God with us. This is a totally unequal relationship in a way that is wholly in our favor. Someone who is lovely, emotionally safe, strong, wise, eager to provide for you and having the power to do so – this Someone desires intimacy with you, with me. 

I like the simple message of this song. Could it be that God desires you? 

Savior and Lord

Two months ago I wrote in my prayer journal, “I don’t have to save myself. I don’t have to provide for myself. I don’t have to know what I’m doing.” I have permission from the King of kings to breathe, to rest. He is doing the saving, the providing, the knowing.

Today I wrote this: “If God is my Savior and I don’t have to save myself, is it also true that if God is my Lord I don’t have to be lord over myself?” I have tried to master myself with little success. Still bitterness and resentment, fear, selfishness, domineering, judgement, and anger spill out all over the place. Proverbs 26:11 describes me well: “As a dog returns to his vomit, so a fool repeats his foolishness.”

I have shied away from calling Jesus my Lord because it sounds so… authoritarian. But I have been upside down, standing on my head, and God is offering to put me on my feet. Jesus as my Lord is not more expectations and demands on my performance. It is an offering of His performance over mine. He says, let Me be Lord. Here is My power to master selfishness. His lordship is a gift.

Oh Lord, I repent. I have misunderstood You. I have feared Your beautiful gift. Thank You for continuing to extend it until I am ready to reach out, to kneel down, to bow in humble gratitude for Your offer to be my Lord. I accept.

Peace and Discomfort

Years ago I was blessed in an unnerving way by a small group Bible study that required identifying personal idols. Of course I had heard about “modern idols” all my good Christian life, but the concept had never broken into my heart’s reality. This time it pressed in until I began to be aware of some personal idols. One of the first idols I identified was comfort, or being comfortable. I do not like being uncomfortable – physically, mentally, emotionally, and everything in between. No discomfort please. Have I “given” this idol to God? Not really. I operate more on the “misery loves company” principle, and make sure everyone around me knows when I am uncomfortable. I try to fix things, and I get mad when it doesn’t work. I would say I still have comfort on a pedestal. But that doesn’t stop God from giving me something to think about.

Earlier this week as I was sitting with God in the early morning quiet, I was feeling uncomfortable. My spirit was not at peace and I wanted to escape the discomfort. As I sat with God in my discomfort, He suggested that perhaps peace and discomfort go hand in hand. His peace settled in my heart, and I felt both peaceful and uncomfortable at the same time. This has happened before, but I had not previously stopped to name it. Could peace and discomfort be two sides of the same coin in our existence on broken earth as Jesus followers? Is this a common experience among believers?

Peace with everything comfortable would hardly merit the title “peace that passes understanding” (Philippians 4:7). And being comfortable seems an unlikely description for a life lived in spiritual warfare, or being part of an upside down kingdom, or being in the process of transformation from having a heart of stone to a heart of flesh (Ezekiel 36:26). I don’t want to admit that life is uncomfortable, but the truth is that my uncomfortable moments outnumber my comfortable moments.

So if I go ahead and admit that life (even – or especially – a Christian life) is uncomfortable, discomfort suddenly has purpose. It’s like a constant whisper in my soul, “remember Jesus.” Every time I notice my cold feet, or replay a conversation that didn’t go well, or feel rejected, it’s a whisper, “remember Jesus.” I cannot forget, because I cannot make my life go well and stay comfortable. Every time I feel the discomfort, it’s an invitation to “peace that passes understanding.” An invitation to remember that the One who provides stands ready to give me peace. Only in feeling the discomfort do I know the desire for peace, and turn toward Him to receive it.

In her book “Searching for Sunday,” Rachel Held Evans says, “Imagine if every church became a place where everyone is safe, but no one is comfortable.” I love this because it rings true with the way I experience God. He is the ultimate safe Being, and in His presence I flail, I curse, I cry and shout, I sit in silent misery, I question, I complain, and always He is present. There is no person I have ever known that even came close to this level of emotional safety. And yet I am not comfortable. I don’t come before God to feel good about myself or to get things fixed. His work in me is often uncomfortable. Safe, but not comfortable. Peaceful, but not comfortable. Maybe someday I will get used to this.

Emmanuel Mystery

On school picture day I was at the private Christian school my girls attend, waiting with my youngest daughter to get her school picture taken. Friday chapel happened to be at that time, so I sat in on it. The guest speaker told the story of a family committed to Sabbath-keeping who was experiencing a plague of grasshoppers that would devour their fields. They stood to lose tens of thousands of dollars because the company spraying for grasshoppers refused to spray their field when asked to work around Sabbath hours. Amazingly, the power lines the length of their property were covered with solid rows of birds Sabbath morning, which descended and ate all the grasshoppers, saving their fields and fortunes.

Stories like this trouble me. Especially when we share them with elementary school children. What exactly are we trying to say? That if we trust God He will make sure everything works out in our favor? That we can pray and expect Him to take care of things in a way that preserves us? What about all the things that don’t work out? And why would God save a field of grain but not save little girls from brothels, or a wife from her husband’s affair, or a Christian from torture and death?

Often my reaction to my inability to see and understand the ways of God is to reduce God’s provision to a cosmic “everything will be alright in the end” platitude. Clearly He’s not making everything alright now, so He must mean that His care and protection are for the race as a whole over the arc of history, and not really for individuals. He must mean that my soul is safe – not my body, or my possessions, or my relationships. He has redeemed me and I trust in Him for my eternal provision, so at least if I am tortured to death, I know my soul is safe with Him. (Unfortunately, I happen to like my body and my life, and I don’t like the idea of being a pawn in a cosmic game.)

But this really feels like a cop-out to me. How can I possibly enjoy an intimate relationship with a Being who I believe doesn’t care for my well-being today? And how do I explain my own experience, that He does care for things as minute as my to-do list and whether I have time to take a shower? How do I explain the times He has provided perfectly the intimacy I was missing in my marriage, or the words to connect with my distraught child? The longer I respond to Him, the more I am convinced that He desires to be present in every moment of my day, every cell of my being, every thought, every need. But while He does provide for me often, He seems more interested in being with me than in fixing everything. This is puzzling to me, because I place high value on things being fixed. In fact, God and I have had some serious altercations about why He has not made me good yet.

So where does this leave me? Certainly I have not answered the questions that millions have been asking for thousands of years. Truthfully, I think God is beyond understanding. His goodness is beyond understanding and I’m certain He is a little crazy for loving me. And when I think about all the badness that is beyond understanding, I just don’t get it. I explain to my kids the story of Satan’s fall, our own fall, and the importance of humans having the power of choice even though it hurts us. But still the evil in the world is unsettling.

For me, in this season, there are two beliefs that comfort me when I think about pain. The first I have already touched on, and that is God’s desire – and His promise – to be with us. I want to be crystal clear that pain is real, and sometimes so deep and raw it threatens to destroy us. It cannot be spoken away, “faithed” away, hidden away. It is part of our experience, and we will feel it, and we will know that we cannot escape it. Sitting in pain, the most comforting, affirming, burden-lightening experience is to have someone sit in it with us. Most of us have a friend or friends who are quick to offer advice, solutions, and fixes for everything in our lives, and we quickly learn not to share struggles and pain with those people. The times I have felt the most safe in my own emotional skin are the times when I was allowed to be in pain, when my experience was affirmed and I knew someone was with me. This is a rare gift.

God is Emmanuel: God with us. He has an incredible capacity for feeling, and He enters into our feelings as an intimate friend. One of my favorite authors, Ty Gibson, calls Him omnipassionate. He is able to feel deeply with each of us. He is present in our pain. There is no pain outside of His desire to be in it with us. He sits with us in deep sorrows, and He is present in the passion of misplacing my phone for the seventh time today. I’m starting to wonder if this is actually better than Him fixing everything. It irritates me just a little to even say that, but my spirit says yes to a God who is with me just to be with me. A God who holds my pain with tenderness and affirmation, and holy presence. A God who is not immune to my pain, but actually feels it with me because He is one with me by His grace. A God who became human so He actually knows what it is like to feel pain as a human.

The second belief that comforts me is that God can somehow undo our pain in the future. If believing God’s presence in pain is hard for me to grasp, trying to understand His ability to work backwards and “undo” pain is even more of a mystery. In the book “The Great Divorce” by C.S. Lewis, one of the characters says, “That is what mortals misunderstand. They say of some temporal suffering, ‘No future bliss can make up for it,’ not knowing that Heaven, once attained, will work backwards and turn even that agony into a glory.” I believe that God’s redemption is for all time. His sacrifice on the cross saved the first humans who breathed, just as it saves us. And if the cross can reach backwards and forwards, maybe heaven can, too.

Consider this passage from Ephesians: “Even before he made the world, God loved us and chose us in Christ to be holy and without fault in his eyes. God decided in advance to adopt us into his own family by bringing us to himself through Jesus Christ. This is what he wanted to do, and it gave him great pleasure. So we praise God for the glorious grace he has poured out on us who belong to his dear Son. He is so rich in kindness and grace that he purchased our freedom with the blood of his Son and forgave our sins. He has showered his kindness on us, along with all wisdom and understanding. God has now revealed to us his mysterious will regarding Christ—which is to fulfill his own good plan. And this is the plan: At the right time he will bring everything together under the authority of Christ—everything in heaven and on earth. Furthermore, because we are united with Christ, we have received an inheritance from God, for he chose us in advance, and he makes everything work out according to his plan.” (Eph. 1:4-11, NLT) 

I am ignorant, sinful, selfish and blind, observing an infinite God through a finite lens. My understanding is weak, but I am drawn by Holy Mystery – a God who is here right now, desiring the intimacy of knowing my own feelings as they emerge naked and timid from my heart; a God who desires to extend His love and grace, passion and power to us in order to bring all things and all times under the healing power of His love. We are not left empty handed, holding only a promise, and neither are we held in the moment with no anticipation of future healing. It’s just like Him to offer comfort right now, and hope for the future. 

Maybe I feel unsettled about the farmer and the grasshopper-eating birds because I’m focused on the wheat. I assume God is placing value on the wheat and the money, when in fact He is placing value on His child. He is present in the experience of the farmer. His presence could be birds, peace, wisdom, money. It doesn’t really matter how He shows up. It matters that He shows up. Because He loves you. Emmanuel Mystery.

Give and Receive

I am guarded with God. As much as I don’t want to admit it, it becomes painfully clear in those moments when I try to trust Him and end up exploding in anger. I’m still not sure He’s safe. Perhaps I am in a lifetime of recovery. Just as alcoholics are forever recovering, perhaps so are sinners.

I keep thinking God is expecting something from me – a life of service perhaps – and He keeps saying, “Let Me provide.” Why am I so convinced He wants to take, when all He has done is give? (And how presumptuous to think that I have anything of objective value to offer the God who made me.)

Always He is present. Always He is safe. Always He wants to be with me and love me, even though it makes no sense. “He who did not spare His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all, how shall He not also with Him freely give us all things?” (Romans 8:32)

Perhaps this giving is an invitation to me to receive. Receiving is different than taking. God is not a shelf from which I can select whatever I need and take it. He is a lover, pursuing me with gifts – blessings – and each time I receive I am entering into intimate relationship with Him. God bless this holy mystery.

Memories

This year I lost three people who are dear to me. I was not especially intimate with any of them, but each had an impact on my life, and I find myself thinking on that impact frequently in the weeks and months after their passing. In the stillness of their absence, there is something sweet about remembering how their lives intertwined with mine, and allowing them to become larger-than-life. I am grateful for each of them, and wish to honor them by remembering in writing a bit of the fullness they brought to my life. [Disclaimer: I do not believe my memory to be wholly accurate, and I am certain those people closer to these individuals will find errors in my recollections.]

My mom’s mom passed away in January. I always called her Grandma Sawyer, but when I had kids she suggested they call her “Grandma Caroline,” using her first name. She always lived in the same house, from before I was born almost until the end. I didn’t get to visit her in the care facility she was in at the end, so all my memories of her are in that house. She rented out rooms, so I remember having to be quiet when we were in the hallway next to those rooms, and we were not allowed to use the restroom the renters used. We were, however, invited to play in her back yard, which was full of the wonderful fruit trees that grow further south: lemons, oranges, mandarins, kumquats, avocados, and more. There were also a variety of flowers, and a shed that contained board games among other things. My sister and I played out in the yard, making concoctions of plant materials, and skipping about on the stepping stones. We made fresh orange juice in her kitchen, watched shows on her tiny television in the dining room, and always went home with avocados and mandarins to enjoy long after our visit.

Grandma always wore her hair the same way, and I imagine there must be a name for the style, but I don’t know what it is. Just that there was a large curl at the bottom, near chin level, and the rest was smooth but thick. My complete lack of fashion knowledge also makes it impossible to describe her wardrobe with any accuracy, but I remember she always wore the same style of flat comfy shoes, and she often wore blouses. She nearly always had a boyfriend, so when our family descended on her house, she would spend her nights at her boyfriend’s house. My sister and I slept in her room (where my sister got flea bites sleeping on the floor), and my parents would sleep in the family room. We took over the kitchen, making our own meals, as my grandma would not have cooked for us even if she had been there. She ate very simply and basically did not cook or wash dishes, a fact which my mother says was true even when she was raising five children. We often found spoiled food in her fridge, and more than once we found a can of orange juice concentrate in the freezer which had been partially used and left to turn a very dark brown shade of orange. One redeeming feature of her kitchen was the drawer containing dates and nuts. And she always had toasted wheat germ, which I thought was a treat.

Grandma Sawyer liked cats, and for many years she would have one or more cats, but they were usually scarce when we came to visit. I don’t remember her having any toys, but she she lived not far from the ocean, so between that and her back yard we had plenty of fun things to do. There was a bin on her coffee table with scissors and tape and other handy supplies, and her combined living/dining room also held her desk, and a book shelf full of interesting titles like “Eat Right For Your Type.” She was something of a health (read “supplements”) enthusiast, and I remember one drawer in her bathroom contained cups of pills portioned out for each day. I don’t think she was on any prescription, so those large handfuls of pills were all supplements resulting from her own research. She could swallow a whole dose at once, which I found very impressive. She enjoyed travel and learning, and I remember on one visit she told me about the country of Burkina Faso with it’s capitol city of Ouagadougou – I think the primary reason was the joy of those funny sounding words. She didn’t give a lot of gifts, but she did always send a birthday card with money, and I still have a mug she painted with my name on it. She was skilled at beautiful, delicate china painting. She also played the piano, but I don’t think I ever heard her play or saw her paint.

Her memorial was a picnic lunch at a park near the beach, and I think I knew more about her after the brief fifteen minutes of sharing among family members than I did in all my years of knowing her. I enjoyed the descriptions of other family members to round out my memories of grandma: able to converse on any topic; curious; positive, cheerful, joyous, and didn’t speak negatively (or positively) about anyone; loved all kinds of arts; always ended with a chuckle; a feminist; wonderful mother-in-law; original and witty; good mother who was proud of all her kids and grandkids; knew a lot about the natural world, including the names of many plants. I do remember her showing me a gingko tree once when we were on a walk. I think the reason it stuck in my memory is that she told me gingko trees had been around for millions of years, and being from a family of young-earth creationists, I remember thinking she was wrong but keeping silent on the subject. The thing I secretly wished to emulate about my grandma was her ability to dance. She loved to dance, and although I never got to see her dance in public, she did teach me a dance step once, and I’m proud to say I can still do it. She took time to do the things she loved, and although she had strong opinions, she always ended with a chuckle and a twinkle in her eye. I am grateful I got to be her granddaughter.

Not long after my grandma passed away, a neighbor from my childhood also passed away. Her name was Sandra Smith, but we called her Sandy. She and her husband Billy had a surprise daughter later in life who was about my age, named Suzanne. They lived a few miles up the hill from us, where there was no electricity or phone lines, and every so often we would hear their old diesel Mercedes pulling in our driveway so they could make phone calls (we were the last house on that road connected to the phone lines). As far back as I can remember they invited us over for Thanksgiving and/or Christmas dinner every year. Sandy made the entire meal on a wood burning cook stove, and everything was cooked to perfection and served hot. Since my health-conscious family made tofu quiche and vegan pies for holidays, Sandy’s table laden with real turkey, cranberry sauce, mashed potatoes (that undoubtedly had butter in them), pistachio salad, yams (which surely had sugar and butter on them), and every other dish you could wish for at a northwest holiday dinner was a highlight every year. After homemade hard ice cream, fresh whipped cream, and too many pies to sample, we would relocate to the living room where we played the old player piano for hours, talked about Billy’s countercultural ideas, and enjoyed the warmth of the wood stove.

The Smiths were a family living in older times. Billy logged and mined gold to make money off his extensive property. He was proud that he didn’t pay Social Security, held strong views about politics, had a moderate collection of firearms, and enjoyed quack medicine like pycnogenol and frequency-generating “zappers.” It was an odd friendship between our families, mainly consisting of those annual feasts together and their visits to use our phone. I think Sandy was the grounding presence in the family. She was practical, intelligent, calm, and her eyes often sparkled. She wore her gray hair pulled up in up a decorative leather piece with a wooden pin through it. She was always kind. When I moved away from home, she extended an invitation to make a turkey dinner for me when I visited home, even if it wasn’t at the holidays. Her generous offer surprised and touched me. I don’t think I ever took her up on it, but I did get to take my husband to dinner at her house at least once, and I’m grateful I was able to share that part of my childhood with him. Sandy passed away rather suddenly, and I miss her kind presence on this earth.

In an expected turn of events a person who had largely shaped my career (if you can call it that at my age) became ill and died, bringing him sharply back into my awareness. I quit work a month shy of seven years ago to become a stay-at-home mom, and soon after my boss, Jerry Mason, retired. We were both in our own new worlds, adjusting to life at home after the workplace, and didn’t keep in touch. But this parting of ways in no way lessens the impact Jerry had on my life during my college and post-college years.

I entered college with a job at the Grounds department, mostly because I got hired over the phone and it was an easy in. At that time the department was undergoing some changes, and Jerry had a vision for student leadership that was emerging at that time. I found myself co-managing the department with a few other students a month after I began working in Grounds. Jerry had a way of entrusting me with responsibility with so much confidence in me that I hardly had the chance to stop and think about whether I could do the job or not. His trust, mentoring, enthusiastic support, and hands-off style gave me the incredible opportunity of managing the Grounds department all four years of college (and being awarded the Washington State Student Employee of the Year award in 2007). By the middle of my sophomore year I was studying for a business degree with a concentration in management, so there was a happy marrying of what I was studying to what I was doing at work. I wrote handbooks, wrote interviews, hired, fired, created schedules, purchased equipment, conducted training, and did everything else the job required with the zest and energy only a college student has. All the while, Jerry proudly cheered on us student leaders, paid us a little more than made sense, stood in our defense when problems arose, challenged us when we were heading the wrong direction, and continued steadfastly in his confidence in my abilities.

After I graduated I worked one year in a clerical position, and then Jerry was standing there in front of my desk handing me a proposal regarding bringing the custodial function of the university back in house. In other words, creating and managing a new department that would be under his direction as Plant Services Manager. Again he was handing me much more than I was qualified for, just as confident as could be, eager to give me the opportunity. And as I took the job and went to work for him again he continued to support me in the same generous ways that he had when I was a student.

Jerry was private and shy and had a strong aversion to parties and most social events. He was a straight shooter and didn’t take excuses; short in stature but still slightly intimidating because after all he did have the power to end my employment. But never once was I worried about calling him or walking into his office. He was always kind, friendly, honest, and the best superior a person could ask for. Over the years, he went out of his way to recognize my work and support me – nominating me for student employee of the year, taking me and other managers out for dinner, providing cell phones when they were still relatively rare, procuring a set of two monitors for me to make desk work easier, encouraging and supporting me in attending Leadership Walla Walla, and no doubt instrumental in my recognition as Rising Staff Member of the Year in 2010. I always felt valued, and knew someone was standing behind me.

After I quit work I asked Jerry for a reference letter, as I knew I would be a stay-at-home mom for a while and I wanted to have something to use as a reference when it became time to return to the work force. He never wrote one, but he did give me his email address when he retired, and we conversed briefly about my desire for a reference letter. His reply in part said, “I am working outdoors a ton this summer. Have an old couple across the street I am keeping their yard up. Fun and it keeps me busy.” I was a little peeved that he couldn’t find the time to write one letter amidst all his yard work, but looking back it really was just like him. He always hated writing reference letters, and I also think he was just ready to be done with work. I chuckle over it now. And besides, he did give me a wonderful reference in the form of those two jobs that shaped my skill set, and the opportunity to work with many wonderful people (who would probably be happy to write me a reference letter).

I cannot think about my college experience or my career without thinking of Jerry. He was human, but the best sort of human you can find, and a person who so quietly had an incredibly large impact on my life. I am grateful for all the ways he believed in me.

As I think about these three people, what stands out is how simple their influence was. None of them gave me advice. None of them spent any great amount of time with me. They just gave to me in their own unassuming way. There is power in simply living your life – the moments you believe in someone else, or invite someone over for a meal, or impart curiosity and cheerfulness by living it out yourself – perhaps those are the moments that someone else will be recalling when you are called Home.

Still

“Be still in the presence of the Lord, and wait patiently for him to act.” Psalm 37:7a

Stillness and I do not have a good relationship. I am a girl who does. While this has benefited me in the workplace, church volunteer positions, and even friend groups, it can be a real thorn in the side of my relationship with God.

I grew up in a home where hard work, productivity, and efficiency were highly valued. Our family rhythms were built largely around work, with rest and play languishing on the sidelines. More than fifteen years after moving out, I am less a slave to productivity, but still a product of my upbringing. As I sit here writing on the porch swing, a hot cup of tea beside me, I can feel the tension of the un-done things, but I also know the pleasure of taking this time to breathe the fresh air, feel the keys beneath my fingers, and enjoy writing and sipping tea (actually, I tend to let my tea cool and then chug since that is more efficient).

Over the last couple of years I have courageously cleared my schedule and said no to many things I would have said yes to before. I have come to enjoy a day with nothing on the calendar (this was previously terrifying). While I am tremendously grateful for this journey away from doing for the sake of doing, sometimes I am not sure what I am moving toward. Often I feel even the unscheduled days rush by without me in them. I have created space, but I don’t know how to live in it. I don’t know how to be still.

As I wrestled this past week with my monthly allotment of female hormones – which often send me back to the comfort of being productive – God invited me to be still. The word “invited” is intentional, because for do-ers like me, advice or requests ruin intimacy. I will run off to perform and miss the opportunity to connect. Jesus knows me, and He speaks words of invitation to my trembling, ready-to-please soul, that allow me to be still: “Let Me be your provider. My grace is sufficient for you, for my strength is made perfect in weakness. (2 Cor. 12:9) You don’t need your kids and husband and other people around you to keep you happy, or your performance to be your reward. Bring everything to Me. Let Me be your provider. Be still. Wait on Me. Give thanks. Hold fast. Find contentment in watching me provide.”

There is something about believing God will provide that frees me to be present. If He is providing, then I don’t have to get everything right. If He is providing, worrying and planning can step down from their positions as chairman and CEO in my brain. If He is providing, I can be still. Stillness is still a discovery for me. Sometimes it is sitting in the quiet of the morning, in front of an open window, listening to the leaves rustling and the birds chirping. Sometimes it is recognizing my brokenness and talking to Jesus about it. Sometimes it is singing “He’s got the whole world in His hands,” and replacing “whole world” with whatever it is that is worrying me. Often is remembering that He loves me. For no good reason, really. And He even likes me. There is something restful about being loved and liked.

Maybe faith is letting God be God. He loves me crazy. He owns the cattle on a thousand hills. (Psalm 50:10) What makes me think I need to exercise or manipulate Him? My part is to thank Him, praise Him, worship Him, watch Him, and be still. Still so I can feel the wind of His Spirit whisper against my heart. Still so I can hear His voice. Still so I can watch my children playing. Still so I can sit beside my husband and not be doing something. Still so the intensity of God’s love for me rises above the intensity of the unrelenting problem-solving and rabbit-trailing and ugly-worrying going on in my head. Still so I will know when He begins to move. Still because it is the strongest stand I can take against wearing the rags I have earned by my own righteousness. (Isaiah 64:6) Still because sometimes the Lord wants me to have a front-row seat as He fights the battle for me. Still because I don’t need to catch up with God. He is right here. Still because if God isn’t using both hands to hold me strong from my flailing performance of doing and striving, maybe He can do something else for me. Still because running ahead is lonely. Still because squirming and fighting is getting tiresome. Still because He is God and I am not, and what a relief!

Stillness may be the antidote to my perfectionism. Even the voices that scold me for not being present in the spaces in my life must be silenced by stillness. Stillness allows me to feel, but not to be overwhelmed by my feelings. It allows me a measure of comfort in the tension of living life in a broken body in a broken world. It invites me to hope in the good things my Provider has spread before me. It allows me to be as I am. Stillness in the presence of God is safe and holy and intimate.

Today I Can Breathe

Today I can breathe deep because when tonight comes God will not love me any more or less than He does this morning.

“God loves people because of who God is, not because of who we are.”

-Philip Yancey, in his book “What’s So Amazing About Grace?”

Today I can breathe deep because God is in charge and I am not.

“He’s got the whole world in His hands. He’s got the whole world in His hands…”

-traditional American spiritual

Today I can breathe deep because God is bigger.

“…Just a whisper of your voice can tame the seas
So who am I to try to take the lead
Still I run ahead and think I’m strong enough
When you’re the one who made me from the dust

When did I forget that you’ve always been the king of the world?
I try to take life back right out of the hands of the king of the world
How could I make you so small
When you’re the one who holds it all
When did I forget that you’ve always been the king of the world…”

-from the song “King of the World” sung by Natalie Grant

Today I can breathe deep because I am already victorious and righteous in Christ.

“The Spirit of God, who raised Jesus from the dead, lives in you. And just as God raised Christ Jesus from the dead, he will give life to your mortal bodies by this same Spirit living within you.”

-Romans 8:11, Holy Bible, New Living Translation

Today I can breathe deep because it’s not about me. Even if I get everything wrong today, I am still loved and God is still at work.

“The faithful love of the Lord never ends!
His mercies never cease.
Great is his faithfulness;
his mercies begin afresh each morning.
I say to myself, “The Lord is my inheritance;
therefore, I will hope in him!”

The Lord is good to those who depend on him,
to those who search for him.
So it is good to wait quietly
for salvation from the Lord.”

-Lamentations 3:22-26, Holy Bible, New Living Translation

Today I can breathe deep because grace multiplies.

“The struggling of fleshly efforts won’t deliver anyone, but God’s grace never fails. If you have big problems, remember that His grace is always sufficient to meet every weakness (2 Cor. 12:9). God does not just offer us grace, but He offers us grace, grace, and more grace. His supply is bountiful; no matter how much we use there is always plenty more.”

Joyce Meyer, in her book ” If Not for the Grace of God”

Today I can breathe deep because I am enough.

“No matter how much I get done, or is left undone, at the end of the day I am enough.”

-Brené Brown

Today I can breathe deep because God will never leave me or forsake me (Deut. 31:6). I will never at any moment be alone.

“I’ve heard a thousand stories of what they think you’re like
But I’ve heard the tender whispers of love in the dead of night
And you tell me that you’re pleased
And that I’m never alone.
You’re a good good father
It’s who you are, it’s who you are, it’s who you are
And I’m loved by you
It’s who I am, it’s who I am, it’s who I am…”
      -from the song “Good Good Father” sung by Chris Tomlin

Fear of Parenting, Part 2

As I explored in my previous post – Fear of Parenting, Part 1 – parenting has undone me in many ways. The truth is, I was already selfish and overwhelmed and angry, I just didn’t see it until I became a parent. This wide revelation of my inner self often leaves me feeling naked and ashamed. Yet I am confident this is not where God intends me to remain, because He says things like “So now there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” (Romans 8:1)

When I state in plain words the things I am thinking and believing (the lies listed in my previous post), it gets really clear how far my head and heart are from the truth. This provides the opportunity to explore with the Holy Spirit what the truth is. As I have done that, these truths have emerged:

  • There is not one right answer. Perfect parenting is not the goal. It’s ok. Jesus is here with us.
  • God’s power to redeem is much greater than my power to destroy.
  • Enough faith to come to Jesus is enough faith to be healed by Jesus.
  • I CAN change. But where I’m going is God’s work in me. I am neither a slave to bad behavior or good behavior. I am free in grace.
  • The only thing that recommends me to Jesus is my great need.
  • Mistakes are not preventable. They are normal. They are evidence of showing up and living life.
  • The goal of parenting is to love my children (imperfectly) and model trusting Jesus (also imperfectly).
  • God gave me the full range of emotions. None of them are bad. He experiences them all too. I am made in His image.
  • I am exactly where I need to be. I can rest now (NOT after I become a “better” parent). Jesus’ fullness is the perfect match for my emptiness.
  • I don’t have to be ashamed. His mercies are new every morning. There is grace, grace, and more grace.
  • I can give myself permission to be calm and centered after a difficult day or experience (i.e. parenting fail). I don’t have to wallow in the bad (God has no desire to punish me). I can move on, grateful for grace and the newness of the moment.
  • There will always be problems and unresolved issues in parenting. I can welcome them, knowing 1) they are normal, 2) there is not one right answer, and 3) Jesus is walking me through them.
  • My children are not disrespecting me and acting like brainless wild creatures on purpose. They are weak, desiring my love and guidance.

Isn’t it nice that Jesus doesn’t think I’m acting like a brainless wild creature on purpose, but instead moves closer to me to love and guide me? Every now and then he reminds me not to take myself too seriously. Perfectionism has a way of turning every moment of life into an opportunity to be “right.” That much pressure is bound to make even the best of us into the worst versions of ourselves. When I feel overwhelmed, it helps to imagine my Savior smiling at me and reminding me, “Don’t take yourself too seriously.” No condemnation.

I still struggle with feeling that I am ruining my children. I joke that we have a therapy fund for the hours of therapy they will one day need in order to recover from growing up in our home. But somehow softening the edges of my struggle is the truth that it’s not about me, and it’s not about perfection. Someone Bigger is in charge, and He is God, which means I don’t have to be. He is Big and I am small. He is Creator, I am created. He is Redeemer, I am redeemed. He is Perfect, I am flawed. He is Potter, I am clay. And He is all this to my children as well. I cannot mess anything up so badly that He cannot redeem it. This is truth, this is freedom.

 

Fear of Parenting, Part 1

I find none of life’s daily challenges as terrifying as parenting. And I’m terrified of being terrified, knowing that as I white-knuckle my way through each day I am teaching my children white-knuckling instead of grace. As a parent I feel inadequate, exposed, undone. I have so many layers of guilt and shame I don’t know where to begin, so I stand helplessly and watch myself flailing in the discomfort of inadequacy. My decisions are often motivated by paralyzing fear, anger, and trying to control all the things that are making me uncomfortable: noises, messes, big emotions, sibling rivalry. I see my imperfections and find myself powerless to correct them as I fumble through each day blindly groping for something that will make me feel acceptable.

In February of this year I wrote in my prayer journal, “I really believe deep inside that I’m going to get it wrong most of the time and there’s nothing I can do about it; and I am extremely fearful and uncomfortable about that. I also think the truth is going to be just as depressing and difficult as the lies. I don’t have much hope to be set free.”

My older daughter will turn seven this fall. This discomfort with parenting has been developing for a significant portion of my life. It has brought about major changes in my spiritual journey and my marriage, and for the most part I view that positively. For some reason, I find it most difficult to face the changes it is precipitating in me personally. I grieve the successful, confident, accomplished person I believed myself to be before I had children. With Paul I say, “Oh, what a miserable person I am! Who will free me from this life that is dominated by sin and death?” (Romans 7:24)

Then Paul says, “Thank God! The answer is in Jesus Christ our Lord” (Romans 7:25a). Is it really that simple? Is Jesus really enough for this? After following Him my whole life, I have just expressed that I don’t have much hope to be set free from this parenting mess. I feel trapped: I fear the lies. I fear the truth. I am afraid of the mess that I am, and also afraid of Jesus.

My counselor says to identify what I am thinking. As uncomfortable as it is to wallow in my feelings, it is even more unnerving to enter into my thoughts. However, it is also very revealing, because in my thoughts I find the lies that are feeding my shame and fear. Over time and through a couple of different processes, I have identified over forty of my toxic thoughts about parenting.  They seem to fall into three categories: 


  • HOW THINGS SHOULD BE

  • Most – if not all – of my parenting interactions should be positive and turn out well.
  • Calm, clean and quiet are signs of a good home.
  • The goal of parenting – both in individual interactions and as a whole – is good behavior and happy outcomes.
  • Parenting is the most important thing in life to get right. It’s terrible not to be emotionally safe, empathetic, consistent, good at being present, a fun playmate, etc.
  • Crying is bad. Yelling is bad. Anger is bad.
  • I will have less problems if I get it “right.” There won’t be scary situations or loose ends. Someday I’ll have it all figured out.
  • It is important to feel bad, guilty, and ashamed when I make a mistake or when my kids behave in a way that reflects my unhealthy patterns.

  • I AM DOING IT WRONG

  • I have ruined the identity of my children by giving them so many wrong messages at a young age. I have done a lot of irreversible damage.
  • I get it wrong most of the time, and that is going to have long term (perhaps eternal) consequences.
  • I don’t have the emotional bandwidth to be there for my children.   
  • Interactions with my children are scary. I want to get them “right” but I don’t know how.
  • All the ways my children “misbehave” means something is wrong with me or them and I need to fix it.

  • I CAN’T CHANGE

  • I won’t ever be free or healthy. People don’t change. I’m trapped in bad parenting and its consequences.
  • My success is based on my own merit and abilities – the outlook is dim.
  • Outcomes are the most important thing, and they depend on my being a “good” parent, which I currently am not.

It is these thoughts that leave me feeling deflated, helpless, and less-than. If these are not true, then what is? Is there really hope in Jesus? Can I actually change, or is that just a carrot dangled by religious zealots who want me to follow their God? Is a God who allows me to ruin my children worth believing in?

I’m not sure I have the answers to all those questions, but I have two experiences to share in closing. First, on Mother’s Day this year, when someone told me I was a good mom I didn’t inwardly cringe. For the first time since my daughter was born, I was able to take the compliment, believing it to be true. This to me is evidence of the power of Jesus against all the lies. Second, through a month-long process of combatting lies with truths, I reached this conclusion, not just in my thoughts, but also – on most days – in my feelings: I am able to do this job God has given me. I don’t have to hide behind productivity and to-do lists. I don’t have to be ashamed or overwhelmed. I can give myself permission to be all in. There is something beautiful about having permission to be all in. And maybe if I keep giving myself permission to be all in, my children will learn to come out of hiding too.

[In “Fear of Parenting, Part 2” I’ll discuss some of the truths that are setting me free. To understand more of my journey regarding whether Jesus changes us, and whether hope in Him is well-founded, see pretty much all of my other blog posts! In a nutshell, He’s not really that worried about my good behavior, and the freedom He offers does not consist in me becoming a perfect parent.]