Tag Archives: love

The Evolution of Good News

The Evolution of Good News

Reflections – week 1

I’m a small-group junkie. I recently started three new small groups, which brings my current participation to a total of six small groups. Some meet monthly, others weekly. Some are ongoing, while others cover specific content and will dissolve when that is completed. In one of these groups, we are studying Father’s House: The Path That Leads Home. This is my second time through this eight-session study, and I will be writing a post relating to the study for eight weeks, beginning today. I am also reading The Whole Language with a small group of ladies, and finding connections with the content of Father’s House. The following reflections are inspired by these two small groups, and in some cases I directly quote the resources.

I’m finding joy here, and I’m pleased you’re with me on this journey.

A Gospel That Speaks

“If it feels too good to be true, you’re on the right track.” This is my favorite descriptive phrase about the gospel of Jesus Christ. Each time I hear it I pause for a moment as my spirit affirms what I hear. Yes. What better way to describe the news of an extravagant God.

I’ve always had a tenuous relationship with the sinners-prayer gospel: I am a sinner deserving of death, God sent His Son to take my penalty for sin, and when I repent I receive Him into my life. I’ve given myself permission to move outward from this version of the gospel. I am curious, open to discovery.

Perhaps the gospel is personal. We call it “good news,” and news may well fit the descriptor “one man’s tea is another man’s poison.” What is pleasant, joyful, or affirming to me may be offensive to someone else. So, at the risk of veering off the beaten path and getting lost in the weeds, I’m on the outlook for a gospel that speaks to me. And I begin to find it—in books, podcasts, quiet time.

Good News

God has returned me to myself, unharmed. I was a house divided against myself, that could not stand. Now I am discovering wholeness and unity, within me and around me.

God did not send His Son into the world—into me—to condemn me, but to rescue me, heal me, and make me whole.

I am perfectly created to relate to God. My heart is wired to connect with Him. My ears are designed to hear His voice. I am made to experience His glory and His extravagant love for me.1

God is not fixing me. He is showing me that I am alive, that what I longed for was not far off, but right here.

I am right where I am supposed to be. I’m not behind. I am open to receive from the fullness of God’s grace.2 His Spirit touches mine and affirms who I really am: His daughter.

It is finished. Jesus completed all the heavy lifting. I begin where He left off, victorious, resurrected, glorious. There is nothing left to do but live together in this finished space They created.

Expanding

I expect my gospel collection to grow and change over the course of my life, as I listen for news that is too good to be true.

My understanding of gospel will be a lifetime hobby, and may well continue into the hereafter. Gregory Boyle repeatedly describes this pursuit in the first chapter of his book The Whole Language:

“At one time or another, we all had a version of God that was rigid. But the depth of our own experience tells us that our idea of God wants to be fluid and evolving. As we grow, we learn to steer clear of the wrong God.”

“We search always to find the deeper current that can finally change our innermost way of seeing.”

“It is our lifelong task, then, to refine our view of God.”

Unlearning

Equally as exciting as the learning, is the unlearning. I unlearn an exacting God, a vindictive, displeased, embarrassed God, tripping over Himself to save me so He can save face.

As Mirabai Starr said, “Once you know the God of Love, you fire all the other gods.”3

Endnotes:
1See Father’s House, page 23
2See Father’s House, pages 14, 22
3As quoted in The Whole Language, page 7

Fearless Curiosity

Fearless Curiosity

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for invitations,
offers,
questions.

Blessed are You
for openings that invite curiosity
about myself
and about the opportunity in front of me.
I hold the two up together,
see if they match—
like socks in the laundry.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for valuing me categorically,
which allows me to be interested
rather than fearful,
curious instead of compelled.
Whatever is in front of me
will neither shackle me
nor set me free,
for only You hold the keys
to love and belonging.

Home and Healing

I get confused about Healing and Home, in a chicken-or-egg sort of way.

By Healing, I mean what Christians often call sanctification—the sacred pathway of becoming.

By Home I mean, “It is finished.” (see John 19:30) Christ accomplished all, and all is mine and His, and we are one. (The Christian ideas of justification and glorification may both be included here).

Which comes first, Healing or Home? Home leads to Healing because it tells me the truth about who I am, but Healing brings me Home because it enables me to believe the truth about who I am.

Wondering which one follows the other may be a distraction from the miracle that both are forever true. Home stands complete, perfect, sure and strong as granite. Healing takes the journey, bearing witness to growth and death and life—transformation on repeat. Healing leads me Home … but Home permits me to Heal.

The Bible—which at this time is an enigma to me—says much about Home and Healing. It speaks about what we have now, and what we are moving toward; about how things are, were, and will be. It’s all mixed up together. Take the first chapter of Ephesians, for example.

I pray that your hearts will be flooded with light so that you can understand the confident hope He has given to those He called—His holy people who are His rich and glorious inheritance. I also pray that you will understand the incredible greatness of God’s power for us who believe Him. This is the same mighty power that raised Christ from the dead and seated him in the place of honor at God’s right hand in the heavenly realms. Now He is far above any ruler or authority or power or leader or anything else—not only in this world but also in the world to come. God has put all things under the authority of Christ and has made Him head over all things for the benefit of the church. And the church is His body; it is made full and complete by Christ, who fills all things everywhere with Himself.

Ephesians 1:18-23 NLT

I feel a bit woozy after I read this passage. Past, present, future—it’s all there. And what a lineup of shocking statements. I am part of God’s inheritance (why does He have an inheritance?). God’s power for me is the power that resurrected Jesus. Jesus has authority over all authorities, “not only in this world, but also in the world to come.” The church is Christ’s body (say what?). “All things everywhere” are filled with Christ (really? All and everywhere are VERY inclusive words).

But I’m gonna roll with it. God my Father placed Christ above all things, and He placed me in Christ. He is “far above” because He is bigger and more alive than power and dominion and rules and authority.

I am in Him. By His stripes I am healed from control, because He is above control, and I am in Him. (see Isaiah 53:5) His authority supersedes the illusion of human control (the illusion that I can control myself or another person, or that I can be controlled by another person).

Even the apostle Paul seems astonished by (yet very confident about) this craziness.

What shall we say about such wonderful things as these? If God is for us, who can ever be against us? Since He did not spare even His own Son but gave Him up for us all, won’t He also give us everything else? Who dares accuse us whom God has chosen for His own? No one—for God Himself has given us right standing with Himself. Who then will condemn us? No one—for Christ Jesus died for us and was raised to life for us, and He is sitting in the place of honor at God’s right hand, pleading for us. Can anything ever separate us from Christ’s love? Does it mean He no longer loves us if we have trouble or calamity, or are persecuted, or hungry, or destitute, or in danger, or threatened with death? No, despite all these things, overwhelming victory is ours through Christ, who loved us. And I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love. Neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither our fears for today nor our worries about tomorrow—not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love. No power in the sky above or in the earth below—indeed, nothing in all creation will ever be able to separate us from the love of God that is revealed in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Romans 8:31-35, 37-39 NLT

As I consider what little I can grasp from this shocking passage, I am surprised by this comfort: I belong. This is a relief.

I belong in (inside) Christ. I don’t need to worry, because I’m Home. I have arrived.

Sometimes I may feel lost—as if trying to read a map through tears. Or frozen still, breathing shallow, as shape-shifting shadows approach.

Yet nothing can separate me from the love of Jesus. I am always Home. I am always in His heart, His thoughts, His body. Whether I am thriving or dying, grieving or joyful, begging or praising, suffering or sitting pretty, married or divorced, addicted or sober, giving or taking …

I am Home, which is an invitation to Healing.

I am Healing, which is my invitation Home. The door is always open.

Risky, Radical, Radiant

“Quack if you’re buckled,” I said, as I neared the end of our driveway. Two “quacks” sounded from the back seat where my daughters situated their backpacks and coats, ready for another day at school. It was a Friday in early December, a half-day of school. As I glanced left before turning right out of our driveway, I noticed flashing lights on Wallula Road, a block and a half north of us. I wondered aloud if there was an accident.

Half an hour later, as I returned home from dropping the girls at school, I noticed there were still lights flashing down the street. In fact, there seemed to be emergency vehicles stretching along most of the block. Curious, I drove past my house and continued toward the flashing lights. When I got near, I saw a car bumper in the front lawn of the corner house. I pulled to the side of the road and stopped. Across the street was a power pole that had snapped like a toothpick. A giant “splinter” over ten feet tall stuck out to the side, and the base of the pole was a bouquet of splinters, looking like a bristly patch of tall grass. I could see one damaged vehicle—a red SUV. I didn’t want to impose too much so I turned around and drove home.

Four hours later, as the girls and I returned from school pick-up, we decided to drive down and see the accident, but found that all the roads had been blocked off a full block away from the intersection, where emergency lights still flashed. We parked at home and decided to walk down as a family, so the four of us set off on foot to investigate.

As we neared the flashing lights, we saw utility trucks at work, preparing to replace the broken power pole. One large truck held the broken pole with a giant gripper, presumably so its weight wasn’t continuing to hang on the wires. A man with a chain saw trimmed part of the broken pole, while other men in bucket trucks hovered nearby. The damaged red SUV was still there, and further down the road we saw what looked like a white car, totally mangled, loaded on a flatbed truck. A section of chain-link fence beyond the telephone pole was decimated. Emergency responders were still cleaning up pieces of wood, metal and glass from the collision. Our kids watched in wonder as two men moved a windshield—shattered, but still in tact.

Like us, other neighbors surveyed the scene and checked their phones for news articles. We discussed the likelihood of someone dying. My husband was optimistic about modern cars preserving life, while our older daughter concluded someone must have died. We watched for a while, then walked home for lunch.

At 2:41 that afternoon a friend texted: “Please pray for Rudy Scott and his family.” Attached was a link to a news article announcing that Martin Scott, age 73, had died at the scene of the crash that morning. Martin was a professor at Walla Walla University, where my husband and I both received our Bachelor’s degrees. Martin’s son, Rudy, hired my husband after college, giving him his first full time job as a software engineer. These were people we knew, who—although we weren’t close to them—were a strong thread in the weaving that is our community. To have that thread suddenly snapped sent a shock through the whole fabric, leaving it visibly weakened.

I thought of all the times I have made the same right-hand turn on Wallula that Martin was making when an oncoming car going way too fast crushed his vehicle and his life. I wonder what it is that compels me to take my life in my hands every day as I drive? What made it so important to humans to get places fast instead of walking, as our ancestors did for thousands of years? On the mornings following the accident, as I drive my kids to school, I look around at all the cars on the highway and think, Why do we do this?

Freshly aware of life’s fragility, I perused a CBS News article1 listing the 59 leading causes of death in the United States (data from the year 2017). Of the top twenty, 17 are health-related, including various cancers, heart disease, and Alzheimer’s. Only three are “accidental” in nature: number seven was accidental poisoning (which included drug overdoses), number 14 was motor vehicle accidents, and number 15 was accidental falls. As I continued down the list, cancer figured prominently among an ongoing list of other health issues, including pneumonia, birth defects, and obesity, to name a few. The outliers in the 21st-50th leading causes of death were suicide, homicide, and accidental suffocation.

It’s funny how my friends and I avoid risk by not swimming during thunderstorms, locking our doors, and killing spiders, but we keep driving, taking pharmaceutical drugs, and—apparently—falling. More often than we’d like to admit, we take sides around the unknowns of life, choosing opposite courses of action to avoid risk. Several of my friends signed up to volunteer for vaccination clinics so they would be among the first to receive the Covid vaccine, while an unvaccinated family member continued giving me newspaper clippings about the Covid vaccine causing death, even after I was vaccinated. As far as I could tell, both were going for the same outcome—avoiding risk.

I have always been low on the risk-taking scale. I rarely break rules, avoid risky social or health habits, and I married a stable and risk-averse man. Together we avoid risk by over-discussing every decision, keeping tight control on our time, money, and emotions—hoping somehow to keep our world spinning in the right direction. And we manage to keep enough control to sustain the illusion that we can avoid risk. Our carefulness seems to be working. This is a dangerous position to be in. Having not been overtaken by disease or loss of a loved one or financial hardship, we continue on our merry way, thinking we can manage our little world by making the “right” decisions.

I am sobered by Martin Scott’s death. My reading and wondering—rather than giving me comfort—resoundingly confirm that I have little control over when and how I die. Pain and suffering are also an unmapped course, appearing in my story at random, mostly unrelated to how I live my life. I realize that I spend time every day avoiding risk—from the amount of sleep I get and the things I eat, to how fast I drive and whether I remember my cell phone when I’m going out. But what am I gaining? How often do the benefits of risk-avoidance outweigh the heaviness of the fear and worry that drives so many of those behaviors?

I’m not the first to wonder if I’m avoiding living by trying to avoid dying. Risk-avoidance serves as a nice distraction from being gracious to myself, loving the person in front of me, petting the neighbor’s dog, or visiting a sick friend. When I leave a tool in the rain to rust, I am much more grieved by the ruin of the tool than by the cruel way in which I treat myself for this mistake. Somewhere inside I know that love is more important than stuff, but that synapse seems disconnected from the synapses making all my decisions. And what if love is even more important than life?

When Air Florida Flight 90 crashed into the Potomac River in January 1982, passenger Arland Williams—who was in the water with a handful of other initial survivors—handed the rescue line to others in the water rather than be rescued himself, and in the end disappeared under the water and lost his own life. Shortly after, Roger Roosenblatt wrote these words in an essay published in Time magazine: “So the man in the water had his own natural powers. He could not make ice storms, or freeze the water until it froze the blood. But he could hand life over to a stranger, and that is a power of nature too. The man in the water pitted himself against an implacable, impersonal enemy; he fought it with charity; and he held it to a standoff. He was the best we can do.”2

Would I, too, be willing to give up the fight against my own circumstances and take up the real fight for the life of the person next to me? Could I let go the distraction of apparent safety and hold fast to the only narrative that lasts—the living out of love and redemption?

As wild as this loving sounds, perhaps the hardest thing of all is not to love, but to be loved. I used to think being loved was easy. I like kind words and gifts and hugs—all the “love languages.” What’s not to love? But meeting a God who insists on love in the most unlikely spaces—adultery, death, arrogance—I am forced to consider receiving a love that leans into my most shameful moments, unforgivable selfishness, and spiteful diatribes. This is an uncomfortable love. It brings roses to war, and gives trophies to losers. It does things all wrong, and insists on being present at the most inconvenient times. I would like to receive Love in a pretty dress at the front door, but it insists that if we are going to be in relationship, the bathroom floor is also included (those nights you embrace the toilet bowl while the flu has it’s way with your digestive system). This Love is as fiercely present in a divorce courtroom as in a wedding ceremony, in an AIDS victim as in a marathon runner, and in a gun-holder as in the man bleeding on the ground.

This Love does not pick and choose, and I’m not at all sure I want to give it my allegiance. Yet I realize Love has wooed me sufficiently that I am already involved. I have moved into the risk zone. Several years ago I wrote, “How can I love my life and hate it at the same time?” I was miserable in my own self, yet it was obvious that I had an objectively good life—faithful husband, healthy children, flexible schedule, nice home, good friends, lots of family nearby. I guess that was the moment it became painfully clear that circumstances do not buy happiness. This realization was followed by a period of mourning, which included all the stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance. Those were some difficult times. A death necessary to precede new life.

I’m learning to love life—not just mine, but my husband’s life and my daughters’ lives, the life in trees and birds and rivers, the wonders entering my awareness all day through my five senses. I am daring to be alive, knowing it is more risky than being half dead, and choosing it just the same. As Superchick’s song, “Cross the Line,” says: “Play it safe, play by the rules / Or don’t play at all—what if you lose? / That’s not the secret, but I know what is: / Everybody dies but not everyone lives.”3

What does it look like for me to “cross the line” into living? It looks like sleeping in (that’s not productive!), drinking coffee (stimulants are bad for you!), writing when the sink is full of dishes (pleasure before work?!), accepting unexpected conversations, and weather, and sickness. It looks like spending a little more than I normally would, and planning Christmas without a spreadsheet. It looks like rearranging the living room furniture so it’s all facing the fireplace, and wrapping an unfinished Christmas gift without feeling guilty at all that the right time to finish it will be after Christmas. It looks like letting things fall in place every day, retiring the sledgehammer I previously employed to fit everything in the “right” place.

Another song from my high school years comes to mind, and I quietly sing: “Living might mean taking chances / But they’re worth taking. Loving might be a mistake / But it’s worth making … And if you get the choice / To sit it out or dance / I hope you dance.”4

God has been watching me sitting at the edge of the dance hall, hiding behind a glass of punch. He has sat beside me and listened to every excuse in the book: I’m tired. I’m afraid of what I’ll do or not do out there on the floor. When the song ends, I won’t know what to do next, and standing on the dance floor without a glass in my hands is too vulnerable. Everybody else knows what to do, and as long as I’m sitting here they may think I know what to do. But the moment I stand up, the thinking will be over, and the doing is too much. Being seen is terrifying.

God never stops sitting with me to dance, yet He never stops dancing to sit with me. He is always doing both. This gives me courage. I can move from sitting to dancing, without losing myself. Where He is, there I am also. This strengthens me to set my glass down and watch without hiding, to feel the desire to dance emerge from beneath the excuses.

Once I allow myself to want to dance, the want becomes an ache, a longing, until finally I stand, half-wistful, half-determined, and God and I take the floor together.

When the song ends, it is a little scary. I don’t know if anyone else could see God, so it may have looked like I was just dancing by myself. What do I do next?

My husband comes to me, takes my hand, and leads me further out on the dance floor. As the music carries us, I realize with astonishment that my husband is an excellent dancer. I am surprised. I didn’t know that either of us were dancers. But here I am, and I can dance too!

Now I’m getting excited. Maybe I could dance with my daughters, and with my friends. Maybe I’ll dance with beautiful skies and beautiful music, and with heartache and questions and strangers. Perhaps I was made to dance through life. Should the unthinkable happen, and the dance floor open over a swimming pool—as in the classic Christmas movie “It’s a Wonderful Life”—maybe I will keep dancing, wet and surprised and delightfully free.

Endnotes:
1 https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/death-index-top-50-ways-americans-die/56/
2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arland_D._Williams_Jr.
3 https://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/superchick/crosstheline.html
4 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RV-Z1YwaOiw&ab_channel=LeeAnnWomackVEVO

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/

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.

Blessed Bodies

Blessed Bodies

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for human love,
made in the image of divine love,
inviting us to receive ourselves
as we are received into the arms of another.

Blessed are You
for warm hugs,
eyes that see a hurting heart,
not looking away,
but wrapping with compassion
the raw insides,
too much to hold alone.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for interlaced fingers,
a shoulder soaking up tears,
and the surprise of surplus:
freely you have received, freely give.

Picking

There are few daily joys more pleasurable than picking my nose. If I don’t have a pinky fingernail long enough to pick the boogers from my nose, that takes some of the fun out of it. (Maybe this is the real reason I have always preferred to keep my nails long.) If a booger comes out dry I usually drop it wherever I am or flick it across the room so I don’t have to be responsible for its unknown landing place. But when the dry part comes out trailing some not-so-dry stuff, I have a real dilemma. If I’m sitting down it’s out of the question to rise from my chair simply to get a tissue. But neither do I want to stick this rubber cement from my nose on the furniture. Sometimes what I’m wearing has a perfect hem to fold the booger in, where it can reside unnoticed until it is washed away in the washing machine. When I’m outdoors the options open up quite a bit. I can hide a booger in grass, camouflage it on a tree trunk, or stick it on the bottom of a picnic table.

For the first few years of my marriage, all boogers I picked in the car were stuck on the side of the upholstered seat, down near the lever that moves the seat forward and back. My husband protested loudly enough about this crusty collection that I now keep a napkin in the center console for booger-collecting purposes. If for some reason the napkin isn’t there, I can usually find a straw wrapper or a receipt. I may have stuck a juicy booger on a coin once, when that was all that was available. Some people I know eat their boogers, which removes all the trouble of having to find a place for them, but booger-eating has not been one of my secret pleasures.

In addition to picking my nose, I also enjoy picking a guitar. Growing up with a guitar-picking father—who played his classical guitar most of the day and often far into the night—picking was the soundtrack to my life, long before I owned my first guitar at age fifteen. Not long after I learned to strum a few chords I learned different picking patterns. In high school I played around with song-writing, and my dad recorded an album of me singing and playing my songs, titled “Searching.”

My childhood was also chock-full of picking fruit. In addition to the 45 fruit trees, three grape arbors, and bursting vegetable garden, we grew and harvested many kinds of berries: red and black currants, gooseberries, josta berries, raspberries, blackberries, boysenberries, strawberries. I picked everything from green beans (somewhat tedious) to zucchini (a little poky) to asparagus (quick and easy). I picked weeds from rows of corn; grapes from their stems, for juicing or freezing. I picked flowers from our wild flower garden, and from my own little flower plot. Nasturtiums were my favorite, and I gave special attention a miniature rose bush I received for my birthday one year.

I also picked up sticks—hundreds of sticks—every year after my father painstakingly pruned those 45 fruit trees and three grape arbors. Grape prunings were the worst. They twined into a tangled mass under the grape arbor and my sister and I would wrestle them in flailing, unmanageable, rolling piles, to the burn heap. When the sun went down and we were cozy inside by the wood stove, we often pulled out pick-up sticks. I spent hours on the floor in the living room playing games of pick-up sticks with my sister or mom.

There are at least two things I haven’t picked: a lock or a pocket. I’m also not big on picking my teeth. I have occasionally picked someone’s brain, but my passionately curious husband far outdoes me on this one. He is interested in everything from bee keeping to philosophy and enjoys picking brains about almost anything. He is also better than me at picking up his feet, and placing them. I have fallen down three different flights of stairs at our house and my spacial awareness is below average.

I have picked at my food, picked over tables of used books for sale, picked off ticks, picked at lint on my shirt, picked on my children for making messes, and picked up the pieces of broken plates and cups. I have picked my way through the mess on my daughters’ bedroom floor in the middle of the night, and I have picked a bone with my husband over the proper use of a Sunday. Too many times I have been the pick of the bunch—valedictorian, Washington State student employee of the year, rising staff member of the year. I’m sure someone told me this is how it works: being excessively responsible results in a life that is excessively easy. I am disappointed and angry that this has not been the case, and have picked to pieces the concept of responsibility.

I have never picked a fist fight, and I’m not quick to pick a verbal fight, but I have certainly picked at a lot of things that ought to be left alone—hang nails, broken things, people I don’t know well enough to criticize, dried-on gum, sunburns, people I love. I have also picked apart my self until I am riddled with holes, and I have picked apart the human beings closest to me. I have looked down on them, or refused to look at all, forgetting that dignity is not earned, it just is.

I have been free to take my pick, of schools, boyfriends, produce at the grocery store. I have wondered whether this freedom to pick and choose is a really a freedom, or if it’s more like a train wreck. I watch myself choose what feels good in the moment (but not five minutes later), choose to hurt someone else so I can feel better, choose to point out what’s wrong instead of what’s right, choose to leave when staying would be true loving. Who decided it was a good idea to leave the picking up to me?

I have picked a hole in my own heart and then wondered why I find it hard to fully love. I have led an untroubled life in regards to upbringing and circumstances, but I have created trouble by looking on myself and others with judgement, and ruminating in the ensuing shame. I have been slow to pick up on this, not realizing that a life well-lived is lived not in good behavior but in a safe heart. Abundance happens when I let my own heart be a safe place for me to reside, and when I offer my heart as a safe place for those around me to enter in. When I am good company for myself I become good company for others. Love is big enough for all my yuck. I don’t have to pick myself clean. I will be messy, and I will be surrounded by messy people, and I will still pick me, and I will pick the person in front of me.

Photo by Joaquín M: https://www.pexels.com/photo/a-close-up-on-a-hand-picking-a-daisy-9815822/

Living Loved

I have the Hawk Nelson song, “Live Like You’re Loved” stuck in my head this morning, so I’m asking God: what does it look like to “live like you’re loved”?

It is deeply settling to know I am loved. It voids all the questions of whether I’m doing enough and whether I have value. It means knowing that Someone’s thoughts and affections are always with me.

When you know you’re loved, you live generously, because you know you will never run out of the one thing that’s most important. There is no scarcity; you don’t have to hold on so tightly.

Knowing I am loved means I can stop measuring and judging everything in my life.

If I look at Jesus, living loved means irritating people with grace and generosity and abundance. And it means being able to go ahead with what seems like an impossible sacrifice.

It means strength that is not my own, and life that is so bursting full that death on this earth is only a temporary setback.

Photo by Gustavo Fring from Pexels

Love Is Fragile

Do you know that love is fragile? You probably do. I’m a bit slow when it comes to love. When I got married I thought love was synonymous with commitment (thank you conservative Christianity). Sometime in the first year it became very clear to me that there was more to marriage than staying together – i.e. not getting divorced (just like there is more to healthy pre-marriage physical boundaries than a penis not going in a vagina – who knew!). Ok, so maybe I feel a little bit lied to. Maybe it seemed simple, and I’m annoyed that it ended up being complex.

Over the years my husband, Michael, and I have enjoyed reading books aloud together – a motley collection, including Tom Sawyer, The Hobbit, and a variety of marriage books. One of our favorite reads was a book titled A Severe Mercy, by Sheldon Vanauken. Sheldon writes about his courtship with Davy, and how they speak of a Shining Barrier – their way of protecting their love. “But why does love need to be guarded?” Sheldon writes. “Against what enemies? We looked about us and saw…a world where love did not endure. The smile of inloveness seemed to promise for ever, but friends who had been in love last year were parting this year… It must be that, whatever its promise, love does not by itself endure. But why? What was the failure behind the failure of love?

On a day in early spring we thought we saw the answer. The killer of love is creeping separateness… Taking love for granted… Ceasing to do things together. Finding separate interests. ‘We’ turning into ‘I’. Self. Self-regard: what I want to do… This was the way of creeping separateness. And in the modern world, everything favoured it… The failure of love might seem to be caused by hate or boredom or unfaithfulness with a lover; but those were results. First came the creeping separateness: the failure behind the failure.” Michael and I incorporated “creeping separateness” into our vocabulary, and over the years when our pulse was not strong, we have made choices to reverse the creeping separateness. Because love is fragile.

We joke that we avoided the “seven year itch” by having a baby a few weeks after our seventh wedding anniversary. We were too busy and tired to be dissatisfied with our relationship. But when we emerged from sleep deprivation, we realized that some creeping separateness had taken place. My self was eclipsed by needy children, his self absorbed at work and stressed at home. Year ten was especially difficult, and we spent year twelve going to counseling every two weeks. From counseling we learned how to stop conversations when we get emotionally flooded, and how to repair after fights or misunderstandings. Our relationship became noticeably healthier and we felt safer and more content with each other. But several months later one seemingly innocuous conversation caused probably the most painful rift we’ve experienced to date. We withdrew from each other, and it took a lot of talking and listening to repair. Love is fragile.

In the 1997 movie Jungle 2 Jungle, father Michael Cromwell gets acquainted with his teenage son for the first time when he brings him for a visit to New York. The boy, Mimi Siku, spent his first 13 years living a tribal life with his mother in South America, and is trying to understand why his father only chooses one wife.

Mimi Siku: Many females in your village, Baboon. (Baboon is the boy’s tribal name for his father).
Michael: Mm-hmm.
Mimi Siku: Why you pick only one?
Michael: Well, when you pick one to love, it’s very different. It’s like there’s a big picture of her in front of your face at all times. And the picture’s so big you can’t see any other females.


My romantic side loves that imagery. My cynical side says it’s not true. I’ve noticed other men since I’ve been married. My heart rate has quickened when a certain coworker entered the room. Love is fragile.

Perhaps the best teacher of love is the dance of intimacy. As much as I want to be a “good” wife, always available to my husband, I have choked myself with guilt and shame over all the times I am not available. Rather than growing love, my attempts to do the “right” thing have caused pain and built barriers. I have not given myself permission to be overwhelmed or grumpy or tired, and every time my own state interferes with us as a couple, trying harder is like putting out a fire with more fuel. Trying to be sexy when I feel like crying, or trying to have a difficult conversation when I feel out of control, or trying to have a fun date night when I feel alone even in the company of my husband… these are the hard lessons that have taught me love cannot be forced. I can be honest, or I can hide. But I cannot make myself something I am not. It’s hard to own my bad moods, to admit the part I played in a conversation that didn’t go well, to share how I’m feeling when I am just as confused as my husband about what’s going on inside me. But when I am honest, my actual self is there in front of Michael, and he has the option of responding with his actual self. When I am in hiding, intimacy is impossible. And so I have learned ever so slowly how to show up, and to risk being fragile, because love is fragile.

Love is less about working hard and more about letting go. Less about putting my best foot forward, and more about trusting God and my husband when my worst foot trips us up. Less about one long-term commitment, and more about one thousand in-this-moment choices. Less about getting things right, and more about apologizing. Less about avoiding conflict, and more about learning how to repair after a fight. Less about agreeing, and more about learning how to disagree. Less about holding it all together, and more about letting my heart be seen when it all falls apart. Love is fragile.

This Friday, September 18, Michael and I will celebrate 15 years of marriage. Fifteen years of marriage is so far from being something I accomplished. It is a gift. After fifteen years I feel more humble and less proud, more tentative and less certain, more like I’m witnessing a miracle and less like I’m reaching a goal. Love cannot be forced, performed, achieved. It is only by God’s grace I have turned toward Michael when I felt like turning away, I have chosen kind thoughts instead of the poison of self pity, I have talked about things I would rather not talk about, I have forgiven when I wanted to protect myself instead. Promising another 15 years seems awfully presumptuous. I don’t know the future. Don’t get me wrong – I do plan to protect our marriage and I have no intention of doing otherwise. But for me, I love better when I stop trying so hard. I can’t tell you what will happen tomorrow, but today I can choose to show up, to see Michael and to let him see me, because love is fragile.

I am so humbled and grateful that I have been granted the gift of a life partner who chooses me over and over, who seeks God alongside me, and who also shows up in his brokenness. Thank you Michael, for forgivingness, for faithfulness, for friendship; for running out to the mailbox for me in your boxers; for doing chores you don’t like, because you like me; for fighting and repairing; for making me laugh; for getting to me know me deeply and still liking me; for hugs; for honesty; for random movie quotes. Life with you is hard and wonderful, scary and safe, and I would love nothing more than to spend the next million moments – one at a time – being fragile with you.