Tag Archives: blessing

Suspended Together

Suspended Together

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for loss of relationship—
emptiness that remind me
I was full,
sting that affirms I am still tender,
able to feel.

Blessed are You
for relationships suspended,
dangling in midair,
reminding me that You
are in the waiting too.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for grace to stay open
when fear would snap me shut,
and courage to hold space—to wait—
though self-protection insists
an open heart is dangerous.

Blessed are You
for Your presence in me,
affirming me—
I am treasured,
whether frozen solid
and cold as ice,
or warm and soft
as a fresh-baked cookie.

Vote of Confidence

Vote of Confidence

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for courage
and determination
and bravery.

Blessed are You
for creating a world that carries on—
despite the rise and fall of kingdoms
and oceans,
despite racism and genocide,
shifting tectonic plates
and standards of justice.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for a world that falls
and gets back up again
every day.

Blessed are You
for blessing us with life
when anyone else might have
called it off millennia ago.
This carrying on is like quiet voice
speaking, “You’ve got this.”

Holding Hands

Holding Hands

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for Your gigantic hands,
capable of holding
next weekend’s to-do list,
a relationship on pause,
the unknown—
everything I spin and squeeze
in my tense mind and muscles.

Blessed are You
for holding me,
tiny though I may be,
in the safest and most intimate corner
of Your largeness,
where Your attention is entirely mine.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for this awareness—
I am Your favorite.
I have Your serenade,
Your favor,
Your secrets whispered in my ear,
my small hand in Your expansive one.

Photo by TranStudios Photography & Video: https://www.pexels.com/photo/people-holding-hands-3153823/

Seeing Me

Seeing Me

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for deciding my worth
without consulting me,
and for creating me
without weighing Your options.

Blessed are You
for seeing me
in a way no one else can,
and inviting me into Your seeing.

I was born in extravagance,
created out of abundance,
celebrated from conception,
even until now,
seen in the purest
and deepest sense
of who I am.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for burning the cardboard cutouts
and tattered layers of labels,
revealing the me carved in marble.

Thank you for leading me to myself—
through the ashes of paper tigers,
to the masterpiece.

Photo by Jose Aragones: https://www.pexels.com/photo/photo-of-islamic-window-3254036/

Degrees of Comfort

Degrees of Comfort

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for cold,
without which I would not know
the comfort of warmth.

Blessed are You
for frosty eyelashes,
toes numbing,
breath visible;
for gloved hand cupping heat against my nose,
tingle of warmed water on cold lips.

Blessed are You
for autumn, crisp apples and air,
for quiet of winter snow,
rushing, melting spring,
giving way to still, hot summer.

Blessed are You
for burning sun,
my skin hot to touch,
breeze over sweat,
the relief of shade,
comfort of cool grass on bare feet.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for heat,
without which I would not know
the comfort of cool.

Holiness in Poop, Fire, and Child

First, poop.

I have a developing curiosity about Jewish blessings, but as of yet, I am not at all educated about them. Intrigued by Barbara Brown Taylor’s words about blessings in An Altar in the World, I took to the internet with my curiosity. I found Jewish blessings for special occasions, and blessings for a host of daily experiences, such as waking up and eating. To my delight, one of my first discoveries was a blessing for going to the bathroom. This may be a common fascination among blessing newbies, as it was within the small sampling of blessings on more than one website. I wonder how many practicing Jews say it after each visit to the restroom. One site suggested it as the perfect blessing for changing a child’s diaper. Each version is a little different, and since I don’t read Hebrew I am looking only at English translations. Here’s how Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg quotes it:

Blessed are You, God our deity, sovereign of the universe, who formed humans with wisdom and created within them many openings and many hollows. It is obvious in the presence of Your glorious throne that if one of them were ruptured, or if one of them were blocked, it would be impossible to exist and stand in Your presence. Blessed are You, God, who heals all flesh and performs wonders.

Ruttenberg goes on to say,

Even if the God language in this text doesn’t resonate with you, there’s something really important here. This blessing encourages us to experience awe in the face of the human body’s complexity, and an awareness of the myriad of things that have to go right in order for us to continue drawing our next breath—and the breath after that. The fact that we’re able to eliminate waste as we’re meant to is a wonder in its own right, a miracle worthy of our respect and gratitude. The simple fact of being embodied is worthy of our spiritual engagement.1

What if I engaged spiritually with more bodily functions? In addition to pooping and peeing, passing gas, sneezing, burping, crying, even vomiting could be worthy of awe. What about sex? Sweating? Swallowing? As JJ Heller sings, “Everything is sacred when you take time to notice.”2

Second, fire.

One night late last December I woke up to my husband’s snoring. After “gently” shoving him with my arm, squashing my head down in my feather pillow so both ears were covered, and trying the finger-in-the-ear method, I gave up and padded to the guest bed in my office. Shortly thereafter, my daughter Kayt woke me up and, after semi-successfully getting her back to bed, anxiety kicked in. Kayt had awoken me the night before, so surely this was a sign of new sleep patterns, wakeful nights spreading quite possibly to eternity. Then I had visions of everything that could go wrong on our upcoming Florida vacation. I pictured the four of us shivering on a cold beach; my husband and I experiencing buyers remorse at Legoland; an alligator grabbing my tiny seven-year-old; and a long drive to the state park I had visited as a child, only to find out their canoe rental was closed.

I felt panicky and gloomy. I tried to think of people to pray for. And then I thought of Anne Lamott’s words from my evening’s reading in Dusk, Night, Dawn: “Even now we aren’t in charge of much, and it is exhausting to believe or pretend we are … Watching the ways we try to be in charge can help us get our sense of humor back, and laughter is a holy and subversive battery charge.” I could not think of anything comical about my mental state, so I sat down with Jesus in His room in my heart and asked Him where the humor was. To my surprise, He went Pixar on me and personified Anger, from Inside Out, the scene where he ignites, flames coming out of his head, and Disgust uses him as a blowtorch. So I grabbed Jesus/Anger like a blowtorch and we kind of incinerated His room, and I smiled in the darkness. My chest expanded and I breathed. Holy comic relief. And more evidence for my theory that God is crazy. He ricocheted around His room in my heart like a fireball on top of a balloon releasing air, and I giggled.

Eventually I slept, fitfully. Whenever I was awake enough to be aware, I remembered Jesus with flames coming out His head and it centered me. Holy and subversive, indeed.

Third, child.

A couple days after the Inside Out incident, I asked God if I was being too irreverent—you know, with the flaming head, and God’s butt (another gem from Anne Lamott). What is holiness, and are there rules for how to behave in the presence of a holy God? I don’t have an answer, but God gave me a picture:

Holiness is a sleeping child. Its beauty captures our attention without us quite realizing it. We gaze at soft eyelids, rumpled hair, smooth skin, a trace of jam—and our own faces soften into a smile, almost unexpectedly.

Apparently holiness looks more like a sleeping child than perfection or pomp. Grandeur, yes—the grandeur I see in the face of a sleeping child, recognize in the faithfulness of my own body, and know in a 3am giggle that releases me back to rest.

Endnotes:
1 https://www.huffpost.com/entry/poop-and-gratitude_b_3684747
2 https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/jjheller/biglovesmallmoments.html

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake

Pineapple Upside-Down Cake

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for being upside down.

We layer things up
and You overturn them,
like a pineapple upside-down cake.

Blessed are You
for teaching us
to stand on our heads,
to see what we did not see before:
the poor are favored,
enemies are beloved,
forgiveness predates repentance,
trials are joy,
lost lives are saved lives.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for inviting us
to grab a fork
and try a bite,
and for chuckling
at our look of surprise.

Seeing God

Seeing God

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for dragonfly wings
and broken things,
fire and wind,
storms and dewdrops.

Blessed are You
in brimming eyes,
sparkling eyes,
vacant eyes;
in friend and foe;
in the mirror.

Blessed are You
for revealing Yourself
in ancient words,
or present vision,
a thousand ways,
ten thousand places.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for seeing us,
and for letting us
see You.

Receiving Joy

“Expect suffering. I want to receive this teaching,” I wrote in my prayer journal. Five days later I came down with the worst cold I’d had in years. Perhaps God in His great grace had prepared me by putting suffering on my mind beforehand. Whatever the case, He blessed me with a spirit of acceptance. I had one angry tantrum (in my head and on my face) for a couple of hours, followed by a good cry, some pats on the cheek from my seven-year-old, and a slightly scared inquiry from my husband as to whether I needed anything.

It’s frustrating being sick and knowing no one else is going to cook or clean or help the kids with piano practice and pet care and chores. It’s frustrating to cancel the play date and the sleepover and the dinner with friends and the meal delivery to other friends.

But it’s also nice to rest in bed, to watch my children try some new things I usually do for them, to have more time for prayer, and to practice gratitude.

By God’s grace I had an attitude of receiving instead of fighting, and somehow—honestly, I find it rather mysterious—the sickness was a blessing. And it was followed by the biggest surprise of all. On the fourth day I woke up full of joy. As I drifted between sleep and wakefulness I felt that both were bliss. When I looked outside, the world seemed more beautiful. My energy was coming back, and where usually I would feel a sense of guilty relief—I can finally catch up on days of neglected tasks—I felt alive, vibrant. It all seemed very silly, like an overreaction. But there it was, that intangible we call joy.

Suffering (which admittedly is a strong word to describe a cold) has a tremendous capacity to grow me, to introduce me to my mature and whole self. This post-cold joy was a treasured moment in which I caught a glimpse of Spirit-fruit in my life. I was awed. I was grateful.

Papa God, I have opened my hands (literally, daily) and I have received Your abundance. There is a sweet moment of contentment here, releasing the past and not knowing the future, tasting the pleasure of this moment, that I have received a blessing from You.

Pocket-size Love

Pocket-size Love

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for pocket-size love—
3am conversations,
fuzzy blankets,
quiet mornings,
little faces.

Blessed are You
for dessert and coffee,
anything that warms my feet,
the delight of creating,
and a sigh of acceptance
as I nightly surrender to my pillow.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for honest friends
affirming my humanity
by baring theirs,
and for soul sisters
whose healing gently nudges forward
my own slow and brave recovery.