Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Hugs.


Hugs. One of the most beautiful inventions of mankind.
I've heard more than a few adults comment on how "huggy" our generation is. And it's true. It seems that people now, more than ever are desperate for love. We look for it everywhere but where we can fulfill it. We look for comfort everywhere and time after time it seems we fail. 
When you get a hug from someone, is it not one of the most comforting things in the world? Like in that moment, you are absolutely loved. Absolutely. The feeling is fantastic.
I always wonder what it would be like if God physically hugged me. When I pray I sometimes ask Him for that. I want to crawl into my Daddy's lap and have him embrace me. I think a lot of times, we discount God as some being who is up in the clouds, but He says he walks with us, He talks with us, He wants to hug us too. He can fulfill us. He dearly loves us. He delights in our laughter, our smiles. His arms are open. He wants to pick us up in an embrace. But we have to open our arms first.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The Weight Around My Neck


An essay I wrote for an English Class.
Thought I would share.
The first weight I ever remember receiving was my first day of pre-school. It was a horrible affair; the smells, the sounds, the movements of that strange place hit me like waves as I walked with my mother through the wrought iron gate painted a miserable shade of green. I wondered to myself why any place would need such contraptions. At closer inspection my hands, new to this world three short years before, ran over the gate’s rough green coating. Pieces of the horrid color splintered and peeled off to reveal an equally hideous color of burnt red that caked on my fingers and refused to be removed. My mother touched my back and encouraged me through the horrible gates. We walked down a concrete pathway towards my prospective classroom. There were lots of children playing along the yard bordering the cold, unfriendly path. Occasionally I could perceive a shriek or shout as I walked in my red sundress. That morning I had insisted I could get ready myself and proceeded to pick out my wardrobe, completely unaware of what I would be taking home later that day, As my small hands fumbled with the blue glossy buttons of my boldly patterned dress earlier that morning, I was completely unaware that that would be the day I would be given a weight that I would keep for more than a decade. As I walked down the concrete cold walkway, I looked at the socks I had picked out earlier that morning; they were folded perfectly and the small, colorful beads surrounding the edges of the white cotton moved and swayed with my miniature, white keds. My mother walked me to a large wooden door with a small window I was not nearly tall enough to be able to gaze through. She opened it and we walked into a classroom that smelled of stale goldfish crackers and lemon scented Lysol. The sun burst through the blinds in millions of horizontal lines across the multi-colored square floor. Everything was decorated with an absurd amount of apples and leaves. This surely was not the same welcome as the soft pink, even lines of floral wall coverings that my room at home greeted me with. The majority of the day passed and I was unscathed. Nearing the end of the day, after our naptime, a ridiculous invention in and of itself, my floral sundress, beaded socks, and white keds, marched ourselves over to the arts and crafts table to try our hand at construction paper. As I pulled out the miniature navy blue chair at the glitter and paint stained table, a small black haired girl with two braids and large pink bows at each end skipped by and happened to trip over one of the cold silver legs. I was immediately put in a horrific time period of time out. My tears and cries for understanding were answered with commands to toughen up and rub my useless tears away. “Toughen up. Be strong” my teacher and her harsh brown bob told me. I went home that autumn day with my red floral dress, shiny keds, beaded socks, and an additional weight around my neck imperceptible to everyone around me.  I was to be strong.

Four years later I sat in my grandmother’s doddering living room. Yellowing, outdated wallpaper was the backdrop of unfriendly black and white photographs of relatives who had died years before I was even thought of. Light blue crushed velvet sofas lined the walls. My grandmother’s orange tabby cat sat glaring at my tiny frame. My grandmother had named the cat “Bob” after finding out it was a female; the cat must have taken this personally for every time my elementary aged self attempted at playing with the cat, it hissed me into submission. My long, blonde hair adorned with a small satin bow reflected in the grandfather clock I was seated in front of. The mysterious workings of the clock mystified me. There was something eerie and sinister in the clock. Every color in the room seemed to silently struggle with one another. Even the popcorn ceiling seemed to be involved in the argument. Two blue rocking chairs sat in the corner facing a very small television set with antennas that sprouted out like oversized ears.  The chair on the right was my grandfather’s. It was less cushioned and much stiffer than my grandmother’s soft chair to its left. A delicate lace sheet rested on the crown on the chair.  I had never seen the chair so desolate looking. Everyone was gone in the next room. The sound of the constant breathing machine ceased. Silence came rushing in like tidal waves. My grandmother, along with the rest of my family, came in the room with faces cold as stone. “You won’t be able to play with your grandpa anymore, you’ll have to be strong now.” My streams of sorrow soaked into the stiff blue chair I ran to for cover from the weights. I could not avoid them.  Sure enough I felt another tug. The bristles in the thick rope became more undeniable, more harsh, more unforgiving. The orange tabby cat hissed. I was to be strong.

 Seven years later and the weights still hung, heavier with each year, the world oblivious to their existence. As my family turned the corner of Joel Road, lines of burning red fire trucks blocked any sort of traffic. My father parked the dilapidating gold pickup truck around the corner and took off for a run towards our street. Streams of water flowed down, black pieces of ash swirling into the gutter as if some sort of dark artist was washing his brushes after a horrid piece of artwork. The black asphalt on our small cul-de-sac showed its cracks and imperfections as my worn out purple vans hurried along the road towards the place I was so accustomed to calling home.  The neighborhood had looked out of their windows as if fulfilling a perfectly horrific scene in a movie. The trees in the front yard told brutal lies as they stood and swayed their long, heavy branches in the breeze. The weights around my neck swung as I made my way towards the burning mess. Flames whipped like a long scourge in the harsh air. The fireman led us through “standard procedures” although I do not understand how any atrocity like that could have a standard.  The man in a dirtied yellow fire department coat kneeled down and told me I had to be strong throughout all this.  Tears streamed down my dirt face unnoticed. I stepped over the door, shattered by the frantic axes of the men who attempted to save our home.  My purple vans turned a dark grey and my blank expression turned to looks of disbelief as I investigated the house further. The nails in the walls had become so hot they shot out like pistols through the wall itself. Though the curtains had been seared away, no light dared shine through the spaces where the windows had been. My once familiar house had been replaced with a horror from an Edgar Allan Poe work. What was left of the house roared with dreadful silence. Plastic picture frames had melted into the burned furniture and warped around the memories they once held.  The high ceilings of my house reached into a dreadful black unknown. The three months following my family was homeless. We ran from motel to motel where mice ran across the floors as I feigned sleep. The sheets smelled stale and every room was unwelcoming. No one talked much and most every meal seemed to be potatoes and gravy. I was to be strong.

 More and more weights were tied around my neck long after I outgrew my beaded socks, long after my face reflected in the grandfather’s clock, and long after my material world turned to ash.  Weights family had placed around my neck, weights broken relationships had placed. I was to be strong. Weights were added in between and after these events, weights I could not begin to take off alone. The string of weights dug like barbed wire into my slender neck. The burdens hung like iron weights.  Every movement forward became harder and harder.  I looked for help of ridding myself of these weights and ever ceased to be let down and disappointed. At each disappointment and failure the world told me to be strong. My world became focused on ridding myself of the weights. Little did I know my efforts to rid myself of the arduous burdens were the very things that were weighing my oppressed soul down.  I was always told to be strong and thus built up the strength that I thought was necessary to hold up my life. One day, a voice whispered, “be weak.” Be weak?  I was to be strong. Weakness had no place. “My yoke is easy and my burden is light.” Excuse me. That is an anomaly. And I can handle my weights myself. I always have. “Look where that has gotten you. Let go of your weights. I have taken them. Be weak” You have? Is that so? Why do I feel nailed to the ground? “You haven’t let me remove them. Be weak.” And with that it was done. Tears fell like rain. So did mercy. Every weight was taken off, the rough, bitter rope around my neck was untied and the weights fell of like candy from the children’s sweet necklaces. I still wear the symbol of my weights around my neck. It does not dig or scorn, it encourages me to be weak because someone else was strong for me.  I am not to be strong. I am to be weak because in my weakness, I am given strength. As I slip on my dark green shoes this morning, my blonde hair hangs in my face and my delicate silver cross rests around my neck. I am called to be weak.

Friday, September 11, 2009

Community.


First off, I would like to apologize in advance if my thoughts seem a little scattered. I have recently gotten so excited about this particular topic and I waited so long to post because I wanted to do it justice. I have come to the conclusion that I simply cannot shine it in the light it deserves. But I will try. Here it goes.

I am afraid what is so important about church a lot of church-goers don't know. We go to church on Sunday mornings, some of us even midweek as well, but have we ever really seen the "church" as it was meant to be seen? How many churches stand as just a building where people go for services and then go straight home? Too many I fear. 

I see people who truly believe in Christ go to church regularly looking for that hope and love promised in the scriptures. These people go and leave empty handed. They hear about how loving Jesus was, but they see no testament of it in their own lives, or in believers, or in the church. 

It is up to the people who comprise the church to show this love of the scriptures. It is when people do not experience this love they desperately were looking for that they walk away from the church and everything associated with it. They let go of God's hand. I fear the modern church focuses solely on what we might know as a "personal relationship with God." This is essential to salvation, to being a Christian. But there is also something of importance, something key, I am afraid a lot of Christians don't even know exists. Community. Ever heard the phrase "the church isn't the building it's the people"? Community and fellowship is one of the greatest things a church can offer. Salvation can make someone come to church, but what keeps them? What encourages them? Believers can learn so much about the reality of the kingdom when together in a community.

I was talking with my mother last night, and she explained how different my life has been since I started attending the church I currently go to. Most of my childhood I would go through the doors, attempt to find genuine relationship not only with God, but with others, and was, time after time, let down. I walked away from that building after 16 years with not a single person with whom I could talk about my Christian walk or what was going on in my life and very little trust in the love of God. I left looking for somewhere that could finally offer that community, and I found it. Now I can easily call the people I know through church a family, and since knowing them and being part of their lives and them of mine, I have grown incredible amounts in understanding what it means to be an actual follower of Jesus. I heard scripture about Jesus' love for us from a very young age but I never was able to experience it without a community to help me grow in wisdom.

People see the love of Christ through the love of believers. A person should not be able to walk into a church and see that it "has everything to do with how an individual relates to God and absolutely nothing to do with how people relate to one another" The words "Personal relationship with Christ" never are mentioned in the Bible. Not once. But Titus 3:6 says "Christ our Savior," John 4:42 says Jesus is the "Savior of the world " and 21 more times is Savior used in conjunction with people. It's God's design for us. We are meant for community with one another. It's important to have a one-on-one relationship with God, I am not denying that, but we are missing out if we don't utilize all God has given us. 


Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Truth.


Truth.

One of those words, every time I come across stops me dead in my tracks. I am so desperate to find the truth in life. In everything. Aren't all humans? Are we not all attracted to this idea of absolutes, of perfect truths that make total sense from all angles? Thoreau writes "Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth." Everyone in the world is searching for truth. This is why religion stirs up possibly more controversy than any other subject. Because people come to it in search of truth, and of a worldview from which they can base their entire existence off of. All because of the innate need for truth. It's ingrained in us. We want to know the reality of things. 

And then, as Christians, Truth is taken to a whole new level. We are told the Jesus is "the truth and the life." See that? Truth and Life. Right next to each other. They go hand in hand. Fully realizing the truth of Christ means fully having life. And only when we see the truth of Christ can we see the world through the lenses of God. Only when we see through the lenses of God, does all truth in the world become available to us. 

That is why I am so discontented with the belief that Christianity shrouds its believers in a cloud of delusion. Because that isn't what Christianity should be doing. I fear it often does. It scares me that often time believers blindly believe what the church, their fellow believers, and the nice little comfy Christian world we often surround ourselves with believes. 

That's not how it should be. 
I want to struggle with it.
I want to wrestle with it, think about it, question it.
Because I believe that is the only way to really find the reality of the Kingdom of God. Only when we question does God give us the answers. 

We absolutely cannot freeze our faith because, as Christians, we are really called to continue to find and seek truth and meaning. Rob Bell writes that we should "search for God, and experience God and try to get a handle on what the Christian faith looks like." 

I don't want to blindly accept anything. I owe it to Christ to search for the absolute truths of His Kingdom. I will not allow my faith to become stagnant. I want to actively pursue truth. 

Truth.

Countless thoughts for one five letter word. And countless more questions and answers to go along with it. Good. I hope I never stop asking questions. 

Thursday, September 3, 2009

Mercy.


A new purpose is stirring in me. I feel like I have the freedom to truly go and be a disciple in a much different way than God has ever used me before. He is preparing me for something far greater than I can even begin to imagine. He is preparing us all for something even greater than we can fathom. It's a matter of actually trusting in Him. Not throwing our plans, desires, and hopes away but instead giving them to Him so he can mold them and refine them.

Make them new. Make us new. Breathe life into us. Put precious purpose into our lives.

So often, so so often, I hear people say they wish they could rest and be content with God working in their lives. One of my best friends recently told me she "wanted to rest in that fact but its so hard, I can only do it for five minutes before I have to breathe again." And that is so so true. We all grasp so tightly to the things we have control over in our lives. We are like infants clinging to our comfort blankets. Real Christianity isn't comfortable. Alot of the times its going to hard. Downright hard. 

I think resting in God is hard to think about, hard to fathom. But once we actually give it all and take that step to fall and let Him catch us, life becomes simple. We also have to continue to try to make that fall to let God catch us every day. Some days its easier, some days it's harder. But no matter if it's easier at times or harder during others, its continous. We are continually called to pick up our crosses and follow Him. Not just once. But continually. 

As humans living in a sinful world, all we have ever been taught is that we will be let down. That throughout our entire lives, we will fail and more specifically that others will fail us. This plays over in our mind over and over. and over and over... and over and over. It's what stops us from relying on God. 

Luckily, there's this wonderful thing called Mercy. A few months back, I was going through a tough time even seeing the remotest glimmer of God's hand in my life. All I saw was the world that had let me down. And then a friend told me to simply pray "God have mercy on -fill in the blank situation-." And I said "That's it? That's all you're going to say?" The truth is, thats really all it takes. No fancy prayers, just an earnest plea for God's hand. Asking God for His Mercy on a situation is like asking Him to come scoop us up.

Mercy is such an amazing attribute of God. How He loves us so. The world will continue to let us down but it is by his mercy that we are loved dearly.

He is our Father. 
He is our Papa.
He is our Daddy.

All we need to do is let him catch us. All we have to do is simply jump. Like a little kid jumping to his parents, the more you jump and are caught, the easier it is to trust in Him. His Mercy for us is endless. He calls us into that by asking us to jump towards him continuously. 

 

God's mercy is ever present, ever growing, our God's love and devotion to us is unwavering, and as we get older and everything else seems to waiver, his love and compassion for us becomes more clear. But only if we let Him. Only if we ask Him. 


This is so incredible to me. As everything else around me becomes more hazed and blurry, God's mercy and love become ever more clear.
I've only been a senior for a few short days and I have already hear countless remarks like "this is it. I can see the light at the end of the tunnel. We're almost done." While I see where they are coming from, I can't help but think I'm not seeing the light at the end of the tunnel. Im finally seeing the tunnel that teachers,loved ones,and family friends have been preparing me to enter for years. Now, as I try my hardest to give it all to God I can finally say I'm crossing through that tunnel. Finally entering into something unplanned, new, completely open for come what may. And you know what the best part of that is? God can fill all that up with his plans, his appointments, his provision, his light, and his love. This tunnel I'm about to travel through is completely foreign to me. I'll  have to rely in him more than ever before. I'll have to ask for his renewed mercies daily. And something tells me more than ever before, God is going to shine through brilliantly.