Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Saturday, March 26, 2011
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Mercy for Japan, Mercy for Us
Father in heaven, you are the absolute Sovereign over the shaking of the earth, the rising of the sea, and the raging of the waves. We tremble at your power and bow before your unsearchable judgments and inscrutable ways. We cover our faces and kiss your omnipotent hand. We fall helpless to the floor in prayer and feel how fragile the very ground is beneath our knees.
O God, we humble ourselves under your holy majesty and repent. In a moment-in the twinkling of an eye-we too could be swept away. We are not more deserving of firm ground than our fellowmen in Japan. We too are flesh. We have bodies and homes and cars and family and precious places. We know that if we were treated according to our sins, who could stand? All of it would be gone in a moment. So in this dark hour we turn against our sins, not against you.
And we cry for mercy for Japan. Mercy, Father. Not for what they or we deserve. But mercy.
Have you not encouraged us in this? Have we not heard a hundred times in your Word the riches of your kindness, forbearance, and patience? Do you not a thousand times withhold your judgments, leading your rebellious world toward repentance? Yes, Lord. For your ways are not our ways, and your thoughts are not our thoughts.
Grant, O God, that the wicked will forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts. Grant us, your sinful creatures, to return to you, that you may have compassion. For surely you will abundantly pardon. Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord Jesus, your beloved Son, will be saved.
May every heart-breaking loss-millions upon millions of losses-be healed by the wounded hands of the risen Christ. You are not unacquainted with your creatures' pain. You did not spare your own Son, but gave him up for us all.
In Jesus you tasted loss. In Jesus you shared the overwhelming flood of our sorrows and suffering. In Jesus you are a sympathetic Priest in the midst of our pain.
Deal tenderly now, Father, with this fragile people. Woo them. Win them. Save them.
And may the floods they so much dread make blessings break upon their head.
O let them not judge you with feeble sense, but trust you for your grace. And so behind this providence, soon find a smiling face.
In Jesus' merciful name, Amen.
-- John Piper
O God, we humble ourselves under your holy majesty and repent. In a moment-in the twinkling of an eye-we too could be swept away. We are not more deserving of firm ground than our fellowmen in Japan. We too are flesh. We have bodies and homes and cars and family and precious places. We know that if we were treated according to our sins, who could stand? All of it would be gone in a moment. So in this dark hour we turn against our sins, not against you.
And we cry for mercy for Japan. Mercy, Father. Not for what they or we deserve. But mercy.
Have you not encouraged us in this? Have we not heard a hundred times in your Word the riches of your kindness, forbearance, and patience? Do you not a thousand times withhold your judgments, leading your rebellious world toward repentance? Yes, Lord. For your ways are not our ways, and your thoughts are not our thoughts.
Grant, O God, that the wicked will forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts. Grant us, your sinful creatures, to return to you, that you may have compassion. For surely you will abundantly pardon. Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord Jesus, your beloved Son, will be saved.
May every heart-breaking loss-millions upon millions of losses-be healed by the wounded hands of the risen Christ. You are not unacquainted with your creatures' pain. You did not spare your own Son, but gave him up for us all.
In Jesus you tasted loss. In Jesus you shared the overwhelming flood of our sorrows and suffering. In Jesus you are a sympathetic Priest in the midst of our pain.
Deal tenderly now, Father, with this fragile people. Woo them. Win them. Save them.
And may the floods they so much dread make blessings break upon their head.
O let them not judge you with feeble sense, but trust you for your grace. And so behind this providence, soon find a smiling face.
In Jesus' merciful name, Amen.
-- John Piper
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Thursday, March 10, 2011
Human Beings / Spiritual Beings

Wednesday, March 09, 2011
Forgiveness
What a marvel it is to ask for and grant forgiveness. Did you notice how difficult it is to NOT grant forgiveness when it is sought? It is like offering a response as light as air, really easy to do...almost natural. Too bad we are often convinced that asking for forgiveness is something hard and heavy. Makes me wonder who is telling us that lie. God certainly doesn't seem to be saying that, nearly always offering us forgiveness if we will just ask for it.
Tuesday, March 08, 2011
Monday, March 07, 2011
Go Out Into Darkness
And I said to the man
who stood at the gate of the year:
"Give me a light,
that I may tread safely into the unknown!"
And he replied, "Go out into the darkness
and put your hand into the Hand of God.
That shall be to you better than light
and safer than a known way."
So I went forth,
And finding the hand of God,
Trod gladly into the night.
He led me towards the hills
And the breaking of day in the lone east.
So heart be still!
What need our human life to know
If God hath comprehension?
In all the dizzy strife of things,
Both high and low,
God hideth his intention.
God knows. His will
Is best. The stretch of years
Which wind ahead, so dim
To our imperfect vision,
Are clear to God. Our fears
Are premature. In Him
All time hath full provision.
Then rest; until
God moves to lift the veil
From our impatient eyes,
When, as the sweeter features
Of life's stern face we hail,
Fair beyond all surmise,
God's thought around His creatures
Our minds shall fill.
-- Marie Louise Haskins 1876 - 1957
who stood at the gate of the year:
"Give me a light,
that I may tread safely into the unknown!"
And he replied, "Go out into the darkness
and put your hand into the Hand of God.
That shall be to you better than light
and safer than a known way."
So I went forth,
And finding the hand of God,
Trod gladly into the night.
He led me towards the hills
And the breaking of day in the lone east.
So heart be still!
What need our human life to know
If God hath comprehension?
In all the dizzy strife of things,
Both high and low,
God hideth his intention.
God knows. His will
Is best. The stretch of years
Which wind ahead, so dim
To our imperfect vision,
Are clear to God. Our fears
Are premature. In Him
All time hath full provision.
Then rest; until
God moves to lift the veil
From our impatient eyes,
When, as the sweeter features
Of life's stern face we hail,
Fair beyond all surmise,
God's thought around His creatures
Our minds shall fill.
-- Marie Louise Haskins 1876 - 1957
Saturday, March 05, 2011
Do you?
Do you ever wonder, at times, if something and what is happening to you...as you tumble on, sometimes lazily and sometimes in nearly catapulting form, into simply the next series of things that overtake your time and energy? While busy with next obvious steps that are always in front of you, do you ever wonder where things are actually going, where they are taking you? What it all is about? Does it ever feel like just a dream of all things normal, yet strangely something else?
Yes, I do wonder such things. And, today is one of those days...where it seems more like just the next thing happening for some inexplicable reason. ...where all things big, and planned, and deeper, and purposeful about life are slightly and unattainably out-of-view and out-of-reach.
Perhaps, I noticed this sense of things today, because of this morning's slow, methodical late-winter dripping going on outside.
Yes, I do wonder such things. And, today is one of those days...where it seems more like just the next thing happening for some inexplicable reason. ...where all things big, and planned, and deeper, and purposeful about life are slightly and unattainably out-of-view and out-of-reach.
Perhaps, I noticed this sense of things today, because of this morning's slow, methodical late-winter dripping going on outside.
Thursday, March 03, 2011
Aging & People
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Progress is Overrated
We have become so focused on progress, as if everything can be overcome. We can get perpetually better, more able to solve problems...more able to win, with the benefits of progress. Until we realize somewhere along this path, that progress isn't really what we thought it was. It really doesn't overcome everything, or solve or change everything afterall. We find that there are things that we just have to live with, learn to live with.
Perhaps, we should trade in our infatuation for progress for the things we learn along the way that help us to cope with what is not getting better; for the things that help us lean more into what is beside or within us than what is behind us. Perhaps the good habits of life that instruct us how to be alive with what is are more helpful to us than getting beyond our problems and inconveniences. Perhaps they lead us to the understanding of Who is with us in an ever-changing, unchanging world.
I think the saying goes, 'the more things change, the more they stay the same'.
Progress is illusive...and over-rated.
Perhaps, we should trade in our infatuation for progress for the things we learn along the way that help us to cope with what is not getting better; for the things that help us lean more into what is beside or within us than what is behind us. Perhaps the good habits of life that instruct us how to be alive with what is are more helpful to us than getting beyond our problems and inconveniences. Perhaps they lead us to the understanding of Who is with us in an ever-changing, unchanging world.
I think the saying goes, 'the more things change, the more they stay the same'.
Progress is illusive...and over-rated.
Friday, February 25, 2011
The Deadening of Flat
It seems to me that one of the great risks of the electronic age is that it flattens our world, our deeper sense of things. Notice things like the emotion you feel when you move from the flat screens of our lives to the world of nature; sight, sound, smell, feeling -- things like coolness, wind, moisture, etc. You can almost taste the difference and we often feel a deep yearning for more of it.
...like the dawning of the morning sun over a ridge, the warmth and the perking up it creates for everything in its splash.
...like the sound of a waterfall that makes you 'have' to go find it.
...like fallen leaves crunching under your feet against the earth as you hike.
...like the brilliant white of a new blanket of snow, especially when the sun turns it's flakes to diamonds.
Something about an electronic life seems to deaden something within us that wants to be alive.
...like the dawning of the morning sun over a ridge, the warmth and the perking up it creates for everything in its splash.
...like the sound of a waterfall that makes you 'have' to go find it.
...like fallen leaves crunching under your feet against the earth as you hike.
...like the brilliant white of a new blanket of snow, especially when the sun turns it's flakes to diamonds.
Something about an electronic life seems to deaden something within us that wants to be alive.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Satisfaction
Find satisfaction in Him who made you, and only then find satisfaction in yourself as a part of His creation.
-- St. Augustine
-- St. Augustine
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Gratitudes: Reflections on 25 Years of Marriage
As I reflect on a journey of 25 years now with my wife, a few things seem to stand out a bit from the fabric of it all. I am grateful for the deepenings that these many gifts have brought:
Things about love / marriage:
Things about love / marriage:
- I had notions of marriage which were unrealistic, but they were tied to things that were important for me to recognize.
- I really had no real idea of what it means to love someone, in deeply sacrificial ways.
- I discovered that I wanted marriage (Tami, actually) to fill things inside of me, to take care of things inside of me that only God could take care of.
- I cannot maintain an image of myself (for myself or for my wife) that will engender (or require) love. Love can only be offered, without requirement.
- My ability to love is not contingent upon my understanding of the love I receive.
- Being loved is not contingent upon my being viewed as right.
- I can love at nearly any cost and therefore I don't need to defend myself (in order to preserve my notion of the love I want or think I deserve).
- Most of a life of love is facing a common direction and walking towards it together, not towards each other (though that, too, is allowed at times).
- Sex is what the 'knowers' said it was, a by-product of something else, and only occasionally a path towards it. And, that it is not what those-who-don't-know say it is.
- Joining each other in the simplest of things send some of the most powerful messages to each other -- presence (as some have called it).
- There had to be space for things to go on that had nothing to do with me...things that Tami was working through, that I was threatened by, things that threatened my sense of the ideals I was seeking.
- There are few things more powerful than forgiveness.
- Things take time, in order to be seen clearly.
- We have only just begun to live, even as the things that seemed like 'life' wither away.
- Many of my needs / desires were highly cloaked (mostly from myself, but also from others).
- I really needed Tami to come through for me when in fact she really didn't.
- Not nearly as much was about me as I assumed (and therefore that I am in even less control of anything than I realized, less able to make anything good happen than I suspected).
- I am by nature completely consumed with myself. That to be unconsumed requires kinds of death to myself.
- It took a desperation of myself to free my grip on my expectations of my wife.
- Desire cannot be suppressed or managed.
- Anger is an important signal of something. That it calls me towards something.
- I never thought I was good enough and that I, in fact, am not, but that is more OK than I thought it was.
- 'No' is OK, and so is the disappointment of others.
- I must accept my design, not try to design myself.
- Pursuing God and how and what He has made me for (strength) frees up my wife to allow God to pursue her -- she doesn't have to operate from the pressure to take care of me...which will lead to a natural and healthy way of contributing to my care.
- Willingness for exposure to community was (is) a critical path towards life for me
- What deep and spiritual friendship is -- that words are really important and that presence is even more important
- Feeling abandoned and being abandoned are two different things -- I have never been abandoned
- Staying with community has been a life-line to learning these things about my marriage, myself, Tami, God, etc.
- I am deeply loved by my wife, in the ways that she is capable of loving me. That to require something different, to require different ways of loving me is a violation of something within her.
- Genuine wonder about my wife really frees me up from evaluating my relationship based on what I get out of it.
- Tami has a deep and profound beauty that is uniquely constructed for her and for her to offer to her world
- I have come to love the way she gives herself away
- I can join that beauty and seek ways to breath life into it
- She is courageous to look at herself as the Spirit prompts her
- I am deeply grateful for Tami's integrity and the desire within her to follow God
- I can trust God (especially over longer periods of time that I would have guessed) to allow her, to teach her how to love me the way I need to be loved (as opposed to the way I want to be loved). -- we often fought about this early on
- I can fully trust what God is up to in my wife, even when I don't recognize what it is.
- It took the likely destruction of normal and good things in life to help me see past my expectations out of life.
- Whatever I thought I was losing, I was gaining far more
- I must fight with God more than I fight with my wife. And, when I am fighting with her more than Him, something is wrong.
- Grieving needs to be among my greater muscles.
- Being willing to grieve was more important than trying to resolve something.
- God is very firm, gentle (even when harsh), but very firm and that this is a good thing, something that I can rely on, relax in.
- I can wait for God, in me, in my wife, in my kids.
- As my notions of Him got sorted out, He was way ahead of me and that I need to trust Him almost all the time with almost everything.
- God uses an awful lot of the normal experiences of life to teach us what we really need to know.
- I have no idea how much goodness God has ready for me and that, therefore, it is rather silly to try to broker for it. That the world has no idea about this kind of goodness.
Saturday, February 19, 2011
Voice Can Come From Pain
"The first time I heard Karin's voice, I knew there was something special there. I loved the fact that her voice came from the place where her pain lived."
-- Linford Detweiler, Interview with host Melissa Block, "All Things Considered"
-- Linford Detweiler, Interview with host Melissa Block, "All Things Considered"
Friday, February 18, 2011
Glorious New Creation
The Glorious New Creation
For I am about to create new heavens and a new earth; the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind. But be glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating; for...read more (it gets even better!).
-- Isaiah 65:17-25
For I am about to create new heavens and a new earth; the former things shall not be remembered or come to mind. But be glad and rejoice forever in what I am creating; for...read more (it gets even better!).
-- Isaiah 65:17-25
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Truth is Bigger
I live with the understanding that truth is bigger than any religion and the world is Gods and everything in it....
-- Rob Bell
-- Rob Bell
Friday, February 11, 2011
Over the Rhine: The Long Surrender
Like every Over the Rhine album, the lyrics plumb the mysteries of love, divine and human, not so much blurring the boundaries as acknowledging that they are inseparable and integrally related. “Undamned” finds Bergquist trading lines with alt-country legend Williams, the verses a confessional catalogue of misplaced passion and rueful regret, but suffused with the knowledge that there is still time to fall back on a love that endures.
Read the rest of the review here...
-- Andy Whitman
Read the rest of the review here...
-- Andy Whitman
Wednesday, February 09, 2011
Growth and Suffering
I once was part of a survey on spiritual formation. Thousands of people were asked when they grew most spiritually, and what contributed to their growth. The number one contributor to spiritual growth was not transformational teaching. It was not being in a small group. It was not reading deep books. It was not energetic worship experiences. It was not finding meaningful ways to serve. It was suffering. People said they grew more during seasons of loss, pain, and crisis than they did at any other time.
-- John Ortberg
-- John Ortberg
Tuesday, February 08, 2011
Slow
I've noticed that I'm running a lot. Not the fitness kind (though I am doing a bit of that still, too), but the kind where I move quickly from point A to point B on a regular basis. For example, on my way home from work yesterday, I noticed I was running home. Why was I running? I thought to myself that I just need to walk, but I had to force myself to do it. Just walk, to go...slow.
Something is a-foot in the sense of urgency I regularly feel. Something that I suspect isn't good. I wonder if I feel too important to something, like I 'need' to get to the next place...like I'm needed at the next place. How could I even be that important, much less think that I am?
I'm guessing I am being reminded of the value of 'slow', of pausing, of waiting, of not hurrying to the next thing that needs to be done. I think I'm missing something important in the surprising habit of mine that I've stumbled upon.
Something is a-foot in the sense of urgency I regularly feel. Something that I suspect isn't good. I wonder if I feel too important to something, like I 'need' to get to the next place...like I'm needed at the next place. How could I even be that important, much less think that I am?
I'm guessing I am being reminded of the value of 'slow', of pausing, of waiting, of not hurrying to the next thing that needs to be done. I think I'm missing something important in the surprising habit of mine that I've stumbled upon.
Monday, February 07, 2011
Roll Away Your Stone - Mumford & Sons
Roll away your stone I will roll away mine
Together we can see what we will find
Don't leave me alone at this time
For I'm afraid of what I will discover inside
You told me that I would find a home
Within the fragile substance of my soul
And I have filled this void with things unreal
And all the while my character it steals
-- "Roll Away Your Stone", Mumford & Sons
Together we can see what we will find
Don't leave me alone at this time
For I'm afraid of what I will discover inside
You told me that I would find a home
Within the fragile substance of my soul
And I have filled this void with things unreal
And all the while my character it steals
-- "Roll Away Your Stone", Mumford & Sons
Sunday, February 06, 2011
Will of God
The will of God is never exactly what you expect it to be. It may seem to be much worse, but in the end it's going to be a lot better and a lot bigger.
-- Elisabeth Elliot
-- Elisabeth Elliot
Saturday, February 05, 2011
Friday, February 04, 2011
History
History is indeed little more than the register of the crimes, follies and misfortunes of mankind.
-- Edward Gibbon
This certainly seems to be the case; from the human eye, a seemingly quite accurate indictment. And, the human eye is often not well-trained in seeing beyond itself. I think, while all of this is going on, that there is another, deeper back-story. How about you?
-- Edward Gibbon
This certainly seems to be the case; from the human eye, a seemingly quite accurate indictment. And, the human eye is often not well-trained in seeing beyond itself. I think, while all of this is going on, that there is another, deeper back-story. How about you?
Thursday, February 03, 2011
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
Tuesday, February 01, 2011
Humbled
Everyone will be humbled sooner or later. Better sooner than later.
...nobody gets away with everything for long.
...nobody gets away with everything for long.
Monday, January 31, 2011
The Way We Look At Struggle
God never promises to remove us from our struggles. He does promise, however, to change the way we look at them.
-- Max Lucado
Notice where Job got to and where he ended up. Suffering changed his point-of-view at least twice...like it does to us. I'm glad for where we, too, will end up.
-- Max Lucado
Notice where Job got to and where he ended up. Suffering changed his point-of-view at least twice...like it does to us. I'm glad for where we, too, will end up.
Sunday, January 30, 2011
The King's Speech
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Men Grow Silent - Cont.
Not exclusive to men, we all want to speak (which explains why this kind of silence is so unnatural...and so conspicuous). I suspect we all want to speak because we all want to be heard. And, we all want to be heard because we all want to be known.
...because we all question our worth and want others to validate it. Which takes us back to the first half of the story.
So, if even a decently accurate description of the 'way things are', the obvious thing to lean towards is the asking of what can be done about this. What is the answer to this 'unnatural and conspicuous' destination?
...because we all question our worth and want others to validate it. Which takes us back to the first half of the story.
So, if even a decently accurate description of the 'way things are', the obvious thing to lean towards is the asking of what can be done about this. What is the answer to this 'unnatural and conspicuous' destination?
Friday, January 28, 2011
Men Grow Silent
It is often reported that men grow silent. For example, among other times, men have the reputation of going silent when they're mad. I suppose this cannot be disputed from even casual observation.
Does anyone ever ask why? ...the reason I ask is, in fact, one of the reasons. Men often feel they don't want to be heard, based on responses to their efforts to 'speak' (is that why they aren't often asked, 'Why?'). So it becomes quite natural to simply 'be quiet'.
I think it worth considering why men often feel like they don't want to be heard. I have sensed this within myself at times. Often it is accompanied by an anger...at the notion of not being worth being heard. Of course, it would be wise not to reach this conclusion. But, nonetheless, the feedback, intended or not, seems to be quite tempting along the lines of, "I don't want to hear your side of the story, just listen to mine...and shut up."
Hmmm, I wonder why men grow silent....
(And, for any female readers out there, I'm not putting this all at the feet of the women in mens' lives...though men may feel it there, I think men feel this in a lot of places in their relationships).
...more to follow on this one; it seems wrong to leave it only here...as this is only half the story. The sad thing is, both halves (of the story) seem too often to be skipped.
Does anyone ever ask why? ...the reason I ask is, in fact, one of the reasons. Men often feel they don't want to be heard, based on responses to their efforts to 'speak' (is that why they aren't often asked, 'Why?'). So it becomes quite natural to simply 'be quiet'.
I think it worth considering why men often feel like they don't want to be heard. I have sensed this within myself at times. Often it is accompanied by an anger...at the notion of not being worth being heard. Of course, it would be wise not to reach this conclusion. But, nonetheless, the feedback, intended or not, seems to be quite tempting along the lines of, "I don't want to hear your side of the story, just listen to mine...and shut up."
Hmmm, I wonder why men grow silent....
(And, for any female readers out there, I'm not putting this all at the feet of the women in mens' lives...though men may feel it there, I think men feel this in a lot of places in their relationships).
...more to follow on this one; it seems wrong to leave it only here...as this is only half the story. The sad thing is, both halves (of the story) seem too often to be skipped.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Iron & Wine's New Album - Kiss Each Other Clean
Some of you may appreciate this review of Iron & Wine's new album.
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
Flowering Hearts
I read them slow, pondering both the meaning and the medium. What a joy to peek into another person's heart when it blossoms like a flower! I feel like a kid with a flashlight under the covers, turning each page with anticipation.
They are freshly passed to me from a dear friend for review. It makes me wonder who else's pages I'm rushing past.
They are freshly passed to me from a dear friend for review. It makes me wonder who else's pages I'm rushing past.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
When and How - Cont.
So why does it seem to work this way? Why does it take suffering for us to be drawn to God? I’ve said to myself (more than once), that “It’s not personal, until it’s personal.” Another way to say it, might be, “He’s not personal until He’s become ‘personal’ with us, to us.”
Perhaps we just don't need Him, until we see that we need something more than ourselves. ...perhaps suffering, more than anything else, gets us to see...our need.
Perhaps we just don't need Him, until we see that we need something more than ourselves. ...perhaps suffering, more than anything else, gets us to see...our need.
Monday, January 24, 2011
When and How
We rarely know when and how God will draw someone to Himself. But what we do know is that many times (more often than not?), he seems to do this work through the suffering in our lives.
Sunday, January 23, 2011
Wrong Conclusion
We are almost always headed towards a wrong conclusion when we are not living community. ...not just in community, but living in communion with others.
In other words, isolation more often than not leads us away from the truth.
In other words, isolation more often than not leads us away from the truth.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Dreams
"...just talking about our dreams starts to move us towards them. He noticed that employees were being transformed before his very eyes. They still had all the problems they'd had just a few short months ago, but now they had hope."
-- The Dream Manager, pg 60
How does hope work in your life? ...what have you noticed about yourself when you have it and when you don't? In the long run? In the short run?
-- The Dream Manager, pg 60
How does hope work in your life? ...what have you noticed about yourself when you have it and when you don't? In the long run? In the short run?
Friday, January 21, 2011
Losing & Gaining
The soul renounced shall abide in the boundlessness of God's life. This is liberty, this is prosperity. The more we lose, the more we gain.
-- Watchman Nee
I love the terminology of 'other' times. It helps me refine my thinking behind our current terminology. It also exposes different eras of emphasis, which I find very valuable as I test what is emphasized in 'my' time.
We've been talking about freedom in high-school Sunday School class...as part of our on-going discussion on the under-pinnings of our Creed. Distinguishing things is an important exercise. For example, distinguishing the working definition of freedom in our culture versus how freedom is described in the scriptures. So Nee's observation that renouncing the soul is liberty, gives me good opportunity for pause and contemplation. His follow-up with losing and gaining is helpful candle-light to what he is getting at...regarding true freedom and true prosperity.
-- Watchman Nee
I love the terminology of 'other' times. It helps me refine my thinking behind our current terminology. It also exposes different eras of emphasis, which I find very valuable as I test what is emphasized in 'my' time.
We've been talking about freedom in high-school Sunday School class...as part of our on-going discussion on the under-pinnings of our Creed. Distinguishing things is an important exercise. For example, distinguishing the working definition of freedom in our culture versus how freedom is described in the scriptures. So Nee's observation that renouncing the soul is liberty, gives me good opportunity for pause and contemplation. His follow-up with losing and gaining is helpful candle-light to what he is getting at...regarding true freedom and true prosperity.
Thursday, January 20, 2011
The Company
Contrary to unwritten management theory and popular practice, people do not exist for the company. The company exists for the people. When a company forgets that it exists for people, it quickly goes out of business. Our employees are our first customers, and our most influential customers.
-- Matthew Kelly, The Dream Manager
-- Matthew Kelly, The Dream Manager
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Be Yourself - Not an excuse, an aspiration
I thought this one was interesting, particularly as a counter-point to the often-used dumb-downer of excusing everything in our lives. Perhaps being ourselves is a greater aspiration than we have allowed ourselves to imagine.
So, we can stop trying to be like someone else and just be...who we are.
So, we can stop trying to be like someone else and just be...who we are.
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Creatures of Habit - Cont.
Why would this be? Why do we stay so close to our routines?
I suspect we are highly oriented to the familiar. Things that are familiar to us are just easier to stick with. They appeal to many of our sensibilities as human beings.
I suspect we are highly oriented to the familiar. Things that are familiar to us are just easier to stick with. They appeal to many of our sensibilities as human beings.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Creatures of Habit
Perhaps this late discovery simply underscores the point -- that human-beings seem to be highly-tuned creatures of habit. Whether intentionally or not, we work long and hard at the habits we develop. No wonder change is rarely quick.
Sunday, January 16, 2011
Money - Revisited
Regarding the post on money below, I suspect I may be floating back through this topic from time to time.
Today, for example, I noticed that the 'distance' I referred to there may stem more from what I can do with money when I have it. For example, when I don't have it, my sense of my need remains un-medicated. I am more aware of it. And, when I am more aware of my need, my sense of dependence on God heightens.
I wonder if, actually it might be better to say 'how', I use money to medicate (dare I say, anethesize?) my sense of need. I often don't even recognize that this is what I am doing (note the video referenced in this post, especially at about 15.25) for the substantial ways I join my culture in doing this. So perhaps the distance I feel is really a result of the opportunity offered to me by money to get away from the feeling my 'need' creates in me. Therefore, my turn to God in my need lessens. ...no wonder my observation that often when I have money, I feel more distance with God.
Today, for example, I noticed that the 'distance' I referred to there may stem more from what I can do with money when I have it. For example, when I don't have it, my sense of my need remains un-medicated. I am more aware of it. And, when I am more aware of my need, my sense of dependence on God heightens.
I wonder if, actually it might be better to say 'how', I use money to medicate (dare I say, anethesize?) my sense of need. I often don't even recognize that this is what I am doing (note the video referenced in this post, especially at about 15.25) for the substantial ways I join my culture in doing this. So perhaps the distance I feel is really a result of the opportunity offered to me by money to get away from the feeling my 'need' creates in me. Therefore, my turn to God in my need lessens. ...no wonder my observation that often when I have money, I feel more distance with God.
Saturday, January 15, 2011
The Power of Vulnerability
Watch this powerful video on 'vulnerability'. I think vulnerability leads us to a place unknown to us...one where the outcome feels too unpredictable and is why, therefore, we avoid it. As Brene Brown so candidly demonstrates, letting ourselves be seen deeply is simply terrifying; we only need to look around to see the many ways we are committed to avoiding this unfamiliar place.
She talks earlier about our worth. I think she is trying to get at something related to value -- something like, we are valuable. She ends, unfortunately in my view, with the notion that we just need to believe that we are enough and that will take care of it. But something is lacking:
It is impossible for a person not to be puffed up by his good works unless he has first been deflated and destroyed by suffering and evil to the point that he knows that he is worthless and that his works are not his but Gods.
-- Martin Luther
I think we know we are not enough, but the problem is that we are quite active about not acknowledging this. Perhaps, doing so -- being vulnerable -- is the surprising, wonderful path to the One who is enough for us...more than enough...and to the One who helps us identify our truth worth (versus the one Luther is talking about above). By avoiding our vulnerability, however, we are endlessly avoiding Him.
Not necessarily related (but not necessarily not-related either):
"To be whole, let yourself break.
To be straight, let yourself bend.
To be full, let yourself be empty.
To be new, let yourself wear out.
To have everything, give everything up.
Knowing others is a kind of knowledge;
knowing yourself is wisdom.
Conquering others requires strength;
conquering yourself is true power.
To realize that you have enough is true wealth.
Pushing ahead may succeed,
but staying put brings endurance.
Die without perishing, and find the eternal.
To know that you do not know is strength.
Not knowing that you do not know is a sickness.
The cure begins with the recognition of the sickness.
Knowing what is permanent: enlightenment.
Not knowing what is permanent: disaster.
Knowing what is permanent opens the mind.
Open mind, open heart.
Open heart, magnanimity."
-- Tao Teh Ching
She talks earlier about our worth. I think she is trying to get at something related to value -- something like, we are valuable. She ends, unfortunately in my view, with the notion that we just need to believe that we are enough and that will take care of it. But something is lacking:
It is impossible for a person not to be puffed up by his good works unless he has first been deflated and destroyed by suffering and evil to the point that he knows that he is worthless and that his works are not his but Gods.
-- Martin Luther
I think we know we are not enough, but the problem is that we are quite active about not acknowledging this. Perhaps, doing so -- being vulnerable -- is the surprising, wonderful path to the One who is enough for us...more than enough...and to the One who helps us identify our truth worth (versus the one Luther is talking about above). By avoiding our vulnerability, however, we are endlessly avoiding Him.
Not necessarily related (but not necessarily not-related either):
"To be whole, let yourself break.
To be straight, let yourself bend.
To be full, let yourself be empty.
To be new, let yourself wear out.
To have everything, give everything up.
Knowing others is a kind of knowledge;
knowing yourself is wisdom.
Conquering others requires strength;
conquering yourself is true power.
To realize that you have enough is true wealth.
Pushing ahead may succeed,
but staying put brings endurance.
Die without perishing, and find the eternal.
To know that you do not know is strength.
Not knowing that you do not know is a sickness.
The cure begins with the recognition of the sickness.
Knowing what is permanent: enlightenment.
Not knowing what is permanent: disaster.
Knowing what is permanent opens the mind.
Open mind, open heart.
Open heart, magnanimity."
-- Tao Teh Ching
Friday, January 14, 2011
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Compassion
Compassion means that if I see my friend and my enemy in equal need, I shall help both equally
-- Mechtild of Magdeburg
-- Mechtild of Magdeburg
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
Money
I have noticed over time that the more money I have, the more distance I feel with God. Or, from the opposite angle, the less I have of it, the closer I feel to God.
Monday, January 10, 2011
What Can We Assume
We can safely assume that our 'problem' is often not what we think it is (or, what we feel it is).
And, we should assume that the 'problem' we think (or feel) it is ... is often the doorway to some place really important to go (whether it turns out to be a 'problem' or not). So, we should walk towards it...especially together.
And, we should assume that the 'problem' we think (or feel) it is ... is often the doorway to some place really important to go (whether it turns out to be a 'problem' or not). So, we should walk towards it...especially together.
Sunday, January 09, 2011
Gulp of Sadness
Sometimes we gulp when we get more in our mouth than we expected. I had a gulp of sadness today...with my daughter heading back to college.
-- Dad
-- Dad
Saturday, January 08, 2011
Father, I want right now what is coming to me.
'Father, I want right now what's coming to me.'
-- Luke 15:12
As our pastor spoke on this passage recently, I found myself staring at these words from The Message. What a powerful translation of the more commonly read version, ‘Father, give me my share of the estate.’
'I want right now what is coming to me.' A couple of things struck me as my mind meandered over what I was reading. I want stuff, AND I want it right now. This is happening less and less for me, but I still recognize a strong legacy of it from earlier days in my life. It is interesting that when we are younger, we have our whole life ahead of us ... and yet we still want things 'right now'. We don't want to wait. As we age, we have much less yet ahead of us ... and we seem, perhaps in some form of maturity, to recognize more of our need to wait. How does that work? What is going on in us when we are younger? What is going on in us as we age (and, hopefully, mature)? It is that we come to realize that most of what we really want won't really come now? Is it that things we think we want (which do come 'now') don't typically satisfy us? Perhaps it takes a 'few round-and-round we go' in life to start to see this truth. The difference between what we want and what we need. And perhaps the hidden (and greater) truth is that we discover the things that can truly satisfy us are not in the things we thought they were and that they are largely 'coming', but often not yet here. So a life-long transfer is underway, one which we don't often recognize until we are well through it. A transfer of a demand for satisfaction now to a longing for a different kind of satisfaction, that we somehow become more willing to wait for.
The other thing that surprisingly stuck out to me is that the younger brother used the words, 'I want ... what is coming to me'. He had an innate sense that something would be given to him, even as he asked for it in the moment. The older brother knew what 'was coming' as well and apparently, at least at the time, chose to stay where we was in order to get it. He, too, knew something of 'what was coming' to him. I have never noticed these words of the younger brother, perhaps because of the often translated terms like estate or inheritance and the physicality of those descriptions. What struck me in this interpretation of the phrasing was that something much broader than the inheritance of physical things was revealed. He wanted 'what was coming'. He thought he knew something of what that was, largely due I suspect to his immaturity. But in one sense, what he really wanted was to 'own the farm'. He knew, in fact, that he would someday. So why did he want it now, if he already knew he would be getting it?
Because, from time to time I recognize this spirit within myself, I think he wanted the privileges of this ownership and he didn't want to have to wait for it. This likely reveals that he thought he knew what such privileges (and the power to have them) would provide for him ... rather than what such privileges are really there for. He wanted the rights and benefits of his perception of the power and wealth that ownership would provide. We all want this don't we? I have wanted it. At times, I still do. But what I often have not realized is that such aspirations were quite self-serving and rarely designed for the good of anyone else but me. This is often terribly difficult to decipher in the moment. But it is striking how clear it can become in retrospect.
The father is way ahead of his sons on this, just as God is way ahead of us on what is good for us when we are young and as we get older. When I'm younger, I'm not trusting my father that much. I'm eager to prove myself and to get whatever benefits I might achieve from it. When I'm older, I'm less impressed with my own potential, and much more aware of what all I need to be protected from, what all I need to learn, how dependent I am on so many things outside of myself, how much of anything I ever am able to enjoy is really provided to me, not unlike an estate. And the inheritance I am receiving as I learn to wait for the deeper things will allow me to truly be in a position to function as an owner, one who provides goodness to others ... most largely through the goodness I have learned to recognize, that I have received from my Father.
I want to live more out of what is coming to me ... and to learn to wait for it and to stop asking for it now, knowing that the natural order of things is being used by God to make me able truly understand what power and privileges are really about ... the opportunity to serve others, in God's good name.
In other words, I want my version of Luke 15:12 to be something like:
'Father, I want what's coming to me. Whatever that ends up being. I am willing to wait for it, by trusting you in the work you have given me to do today.'
-- Luke 15:12
As our pastor spoke on this passage recently, I found myself staring at these words from The Message. What a powerful translation of the more commonly read version, ‘Father, give me my share of the estate.’
'I want right now what is coming to me.' A couple of things struck me as my mind meandered over what I was reading. I want stuff, AND I want it right now. This is happening less and less for me, but I still recognize a strong legacy of it from earlier days in my life. It is interesting that when we are younger, we have our whole life ahead of us ... and yet we still want things 'right now'. We don't want to wait. As we age, we have much less yet ahead of us ... and we seem, perhaps in some form of maturity, to recognize more of our need to wait. How does that work? What is going on in us when we are younger? What is going on in us as we age (and, hopefully, mature)? It is that we come to realize that most of what we really want won't really come now? Is it that things we think we want (which do come 'now') don't typically satisfy us? Perhaps it takes a 'few round-and-round we go' in life to start to see this truth. The difference between what we want and what we need. And perhaps the hidden (and greater) truth is that we discover the things that can truly satisfy us are not in the things we thought they were and that they are largely 'coming', but often not yet here. So a life-long transfer is underway, one which we don't often recognize until we are well through it. A transfer of a demand for satisfaction now to a longing for a different kind of satisfaction, that we somehow become more willing to wait for.
The other thing that surprisingly stuck out to me is that the younger brother used the words, 'I want ... what is coming to me'. He had an innate sense that something would be given to him, even as he asked for it in the moment. The older brother knew what 'was coming' as well and apparently, at least at the time, chose to stay where we was in order to get it. He, too, knew something of 'what was coming' to him. I have never noticed these words of the younger brother, perhaps because of the often translated terms like estate or inheritance and the physicality of those descriptions. What struck me in this interpretation of the phrasing was that something much broader than the inheritance of physical things was revealed. He wanted 'what was coming'. He thought he knew something of what that was, largely due I suspect to his immaturity. But in one sense, what he really wanted was to 'own the farm'. He knew, in fact, that he would someday. So why did he want it now, if he already knew he would be getting it?
Because, from time to time I recognize this spirit within myself, I think he wanted the privileges of this ownership and he didn't want to have to wait for it. This likely reveals that he thought he knew what such privileges (and the power to have them) would provide for him ... rather than what such privileges are really there for. He wanted the rights and benefits of his perception of the power and wealth that ownership would provide. We all want this don't we? I have wanted it. At times, I still do. But what I often have not realized is that such aspirations were quite self-serving and rarely designed for the good of anyone else but me. This is often terribly difficult to decipher in the moment. But it is striking how clear it can become in retrospect.
The father is way ahead of his sons on this, just as God is way ahead of us on what is good for us when we are young and as we get older. When I'm younger, I'm not trusting my father that much. I'm eager to prove myself and to get whatever benefits I might achieve from it. When I'm older, I'm less impressed with my own potential, and much more aware of what all I need to be protected from, what all I need to learn, how dependent I am on so many things outside of myself, how much of anything I ever am able to enjoy is really provided to me, not unlike an estate. And the inheritance I am receiving as I learn to wait for the deeper things will allow me to truly be in a position to function as an owner, one who provides goodness to others ... most largely through the goodness I have learned to recognize, that I have received from my Father.
I want to live more out of what is coming to me ... and to learn to wait for it and to stop asking for it now, knowing that the natural order of things is being used by God to make me able truly understand what power and privileges are really about ... the opportunity to serve others, in God's good name.
In other words, I want my version of Luke 15:12 to be something like:
'Father, I want what's coming to me. Whatever that ends up being. I am willing to wait for it, by trusting you in the work you have given me to do today.'
Friday, January 07, 2011
Pain's Instruction
Pain is a faithful instructor. Or, from the other end of things, I seem to learn more from him (pain) than I do from other things.
Thursday, January 06, 2011
Wednesday, January 05, 2011
Should God be Understood?
If God were small enough to be understood, He would not be big enough to be worshiped.
-- Evelyn Underhill
-- Evelyn Underhill
Monday, January 03, 2011
The Humblest Way We Know How
"Heavenly Father, we come before thee, knee bent and body bowed, in the humblest way that we know how."
-- Denzel Washington's favorite prayer
-- Denzel Washington's favorite prayer
Sunday, January 02, 2011
2011 - Desires
Once you start a list like this, it's hard to stop...our desire is so much, for so many things.
Among those at the top of my list (at least today) are:
Among those at the top of my list (at least today) are:
- Less of me, More of Him ... in particular, less self-preservation and more freedom to move out of He is doing
- To move deeper into relationships with others, my wife, my kids, my friends, the kids at church
- To pray more for others, to judge them less
- To become fascinated with one more thing about this world and the Creator of it
- And, yes, to see Michigan get back on track in football
Saturday, January 01, 2011
Do Not Be Anxious
Therefore do not be anxious, saying, 'What shall we eat?' or 'What shall we drink?' or 'What shall we wear?' For the Gentiles seek all these things; and your heavenly Father knows that you need them all.
-- Matthew 6:31-34
-- Matthew 6:31-34
Saturday, December 18, 2010
Father's Good Pleasure to Give
Fear not, little flock, for it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the kingdom.
-- Luke 12:32
A question might be, what is the kingdom? ...that He wants to give versus the one that we would like to have.
Read more...
-- Luke 12:32
A question might be, what is the kingdom? ...that He wants to give versus the one that we would like to have.
Read more...
Thursday, December 16, 2010
Scientific Revolutions
The most important scientific revolutions all include, as their only common feature, the dethronement of human arrogance from one pedestal after another of previous convictions about our centrality in the cosmos.
-- Stephen Jay Gould
-- Stephen Jay Gould
Monday, December 13, 2010
Christmas Prayer
Almighty God, who came to us long ago in the birth of Jesus, come again.
Be born in us anew, O Savior and Light of the World. By the power of your Holy Spirit, break through the darkness of our worlds, the darkness of our own hearts, to frighten and free us.
Rouse us. Stir up our hearts this Christmas season. Let heaven intrude
upon our earthly affairs to rip our attention from the darkness of this world
to your Light of Life. Amen.
-- Various sources
Be born in us anew, O Savior and Light of the World. By the power of your Holy Spirit, break through the darkness of our worlds, the darkness of our own hearts, to frighten and free us.
Rouse us. Stir up our hearts this Christmas season. Let heaven intrude
upon our earthly affairs to rip our attention from the darkness of this world
to your Light of Life. Amen.
-- Various sources
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Friday, December 10, 2010
Wednesday, December 08, 2010
Humility of Life
Among other things, life is designed to humble us. It repeatedly offers us this opportunity. It seems to be more of a matter of how long we choose to resist these opportunities. But God is patient and seems willing to let life do this work in us. And, many times it does its work…it humbles us, sooner or later. Of course, we can choose to fight these things (Him) all the way to the end, whether we know it is Him we are resisting or not.
I am grateful for news of someone that appears to have yielded to this reality by letting go of her stubbornness and choosing to release some of her pain and to stop using life to make a point about how she has been wronged. In her mid-50s, the opportunity for humility seems to have prevailed and, at least in part, it appears she has chosen it. God is not worried about time, about how long such choices seem to take, and perhaps we should be less so as well…in others lives and in our own.
God simply offers us life, each day. And, each day, we have the opportunity to simply choose Him, to not resist Him, to turn to Him with all that we know and with all that we don’t know. It seems this is true in almost every area of our lives; we have the opportunity each day to simply choose to start, repentantly, to begin again. Whether this be with our relationships, our job, our family, our choices in eating, exercise, leisure, worship, etc. we simply have the opportunity to choose each day…to carry all of our reasons not to do something, not to trust, to hold grudges, to complain to justify, or to choose to submit, to be humble, to let go, to turn to God, to repent of what we need to, to ask for help and wait for his provision. It takes us a while to see how really simple this is, but when we do…we are profoundly relieved and free…to love the way we want to, in the way God wants us to.
Perhaps this is why Jesus instructed us to simply pray each day, that God would provide us what we need to live. Perhaps this is why it is repeated throughout the scriptures that we always have TODAY…to not harden our hearts and turn to the God, who loves us. Perhaps it is in this simple, daily, humble living through which God is making all things new.http://familywilliamson.blogspot.com/2010/01/love-ispatient.html
I am grateful for news of someone that appears to have yielded to this reality by letting go of her stubbornness and choosing to release some of her pain and to stop using life to make a point about how she has been wronged. In her mid-50s, the opportunity for humility seems to have prevailed and, at least in part, it appears she has chosen it. God is not worried about time, about how long such choices seem to take, and perhaps we should be less so as well…in others lives and in our own.
God simply offers us life, each day. And, each day, we have the opportunity to simply choose Him, to not resist Him, to turn to Him with all that we know and with all that we don’t know. It seems this is true in almost every area of our lives; we have the opportunity each day to simply choose to start, repentantly, to begin again. Whether this be with our relationships, our job, our family, our choices in eating, exercise, leisure, worship, etc. we simply have the opportunity to choose each day…to carry all of our reasons not to do something, not to trust, to hold grudges, to complain to justify, or to choose to submit, to be humble, to let go, to turn to God, to repent of what we need to, to ask for help and wait for his provision. It takes us a while to see how really simple this is, but when we do…we are profoundly relieved and free…to love the way we want to, in the way God wants us to.
Perhaps this is why Jesus instructed us to simply pray each day, that God would provide us what we need to live. Perhaps this is why it is repeated throughout the scriptures that we always have TODAY…to not harden our hearts and turn to the God, who loves us. Perhaps it is in this simple, daily, humble living through which God is making all things new.http://familywilliamson.blogspot.com/2010/01/love-ispatient.html
Monday, December 06, 2010
Sunday, December 05, 2010
Saturday, December 04, 2010
Extremism
A few nights ago, twelve friends and I attended the lighting of the Portland Christmas tree in Pioneer Square. My friends had all flown in for Thanksgiving, and we decided to join ten-thousand others who walked from all over downtown for the event. What we didn’t know is the spot where we squeezed into the crowd was 25 feet from a van filled with what a young man believed were six, fifty-gallon barrels of explosive material. Read on...
Christian extremism is willing to die for people, not demonize them to validate their belittlement and oppression.
-- Donald Miller
This Miller post caught my eye. I think Miller's discussion is helpful and worth considering, especially in light of the media-soup we swim in these days.
I find myself wondering, though, about the 'enemy' as he describes it. I wonder if extremism is still a front for something else, something closer to the real enemy. What do you think the enemy is?
I suspect it is something inside of us (inside me), rather than something out there. ...something like a worship of self, an indulgence of self, a protection of self, a determined defense of our comfort, of our egos, a carelessness about our relationships with others...often reflected in how we think (talk?) about 'others'. In other words, something is fuel for extremism. What do you think the enemy is?
Christian extremism is willing to die for people, not demonize them to validate their belittlement and oppression.
-- Donald Miller
This Miller post caught my eye. I think Miller's discussion is helpful and worth considering, especially in light of the media-soup we swim in these days.
I find myself wondering, though, about the 'enemy' as he describes it. I wonder if extremism is still a front for something else, something closer to the real enemy. What do you think the enemy is?
I suspect it is something inside of us (inside me), rather than something out there. ...something like a worship of self, an indulgence of self, a protection of self, a determined defense of our comfort, of our egos, a carelessness about our relationships with others...often reflected in how we think (talk?) about 'others'. In other words, something is fuel for extremism. What do you think the enemy is?
Friday, December 03, 2010
Unexpected Friendliness
An unexpected friendliness, creates space for wonder. Like the wonder of 'has something changed for that person?' or 'have I missed something somewhere along the way?'
Funny how 'wondering' can often lead to a kind of joy, if we let it do its work.
Funny how 'wondering' can often lead to a kind of joy, if we let it do its work.
Wednesday, December 01, 2010
First December Snow
I felt the sound of jingle today, as our first December snow glinted across my face. It warmed me from the inside, even as my chilled skin stiffened its resistance.
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