Why I’m Not Giving Up and Neither Should You

Take a lesson from the fig tree. From the moment you notice its buds form, the merest hint of green, you know summer’s just around the corner. So it is with you: When you see all these things, you’ll know he’s at the door.

Matthew 24:32-33, MSG

My black t-shirt hangs on me soaked, looks as if I’ve jumped into the pool fully clothed. Stray bits of dirt, pruned leaves, and pine needles stick to it like a message tacked to cork board.

I shake a pile of needles over blankets of shed, decaying leaves and think about how the path between here and the Kingdom is messy and costly and hard.

Drops of sweat hang from my son’s forehead, eyebrows furrow when he asks, “Can I stop pulling weeds now, its so hot.”

“You just have to push through,” I tell him, “I’m hot too.”

Sometimes avoiding the uncomfortable, means missing the kingdom coming in its fullness.

God’s rule and reign are always preceded by an upheaval. Before beauty, ugliness. Before peace, war. Before order, chaos. When God’s kingdom breaks in, whether in the heavens or in the nations or in one person’s life, it arrives by way of disruption. ~Mark Buchanan, Spiritual Seasons

Is God disrupting your life; making things feel messy, complicated, hard, and uncomfortable?

Maybe instead of asking to go back inside where the seats are cozy and the air feels cool, we can ask for strength to endure the heat. Because redemption is right around the bend on the road called perserverance, and we don’t want to miss it. (Luke 21:28)

Wherever you weekend wanderings take you, may you find strength for the journey friends.

What Are You Waiting For?

Muscles ache from working hand to shovel to rake to trowel and I remember that I am dust. That my days number the way he counts them on my head, from beginning to end. Birds build nests, squirrels bury acorns, trees sprawl green leafy canopy in summer’s sun to fulfill created purpose. So what keeps me from fulfilling mine. Are you fulfilling yours?

Do birds bury acorns, squirrels lay eggs?

May we live, you and I, wisdom-full in the counting of days. Let’s satifsy our spot in the world  as written wet ink in the book of life. He’s turned the page to start the next chapter. So what are we waiting for?

Linking with these friends too: Scripture & Snapshot and Fresh Brewed Sunday.

What It Means to Live a Good Story

“If I’m boring you, just flake off,” Patrick says to the crowd following him along the grassy terrace for a garden tour. We giggle over his blunt honesty.  Not a single person turns around and walks away from the 90-year old man with the handmade scarf around his neck, cane in his hand.  The mischievous man that changes his name to Pennington for his wife, moves into Muncaster Castle, gives up a career to cultivate the beauty that envelopes us in a time warp.

He trudges up the pathway, points to the towering rhododendron on the right side of a ravine, says it’s been there since 1866. My mouth drops open in the wonder, like I’m covered in fairy dust.  He stops to touch one of the blooms on another one, tells us the vibrant pink color reminds him of the “psychedelic tidily winks his mother-in-law wore on her ears when she was alive.”

Patrick talks about how he abhors politics and writes poetry to deal with authorities. He stops walking, turns around and recites a poem to the branches overhead. The disparaging rhymes about a troublesome politician raises a few eyebrows.  

And because I ask him to sign his book of poetry beforehand, tell him I am a writer too, he looks at me through the maze of heads throughout the tour, directs remarks toward me about writing as if we know each other long. Then he asks H if he might be interested in taking the pastor’s position at the church on the grounds.

I’ve just met Patrick. Somehow we’re related.  I’ve traveled over the seas to walk the grounds of Muncaster Castle in Ravenglass, England – where I’ve traced my ancestry back to the Pennington’s more than 1,000 years ago.

I wouldn’t miss this garden tour by the man who knows every crevice, branch and bloom on this loamy expanse of beauty that whisper the secrets of life for anything. He’s telling me how to live a good story with every step.

Be Honest

With every joke, innuendo, eyebrow arched comment he reminds me that blunt honesty spoken in love removes the mirage of the perfected life. It helps to define the landscape for all its panoramic scars and imperfections, to remind us of who we are in the deep underground of the soul.

Surpass Your Circumstances

His slow, confident, methodic steps pressed firmly into ancient soil remind that age and circumstance are mutually exclusive to calling. That to live a good story means understanding who wrote it. That there will be hills and valleys along the way, but they don’t change the course written in the book of life with our name on the spine. Even when taking a detour from time to time.

Give Generously

As people parade through his home, see his clothes cloaked over a radiator in the bedroom; interrupt his bowl of pea soup on the picnic table of the public, he responds to each one with dignity and broad smile. To sacrifice time, reputation and privacy for the sake of something greater than yourself is the kind of story that sticks to your skin like honey. It tastes sweet, leaves you longing for more.

Be Confidently You

When I look out the window, over the wide expanse of planted history waving her branches of welcome, I can hardly breathe. Because when I think about those early years of wondering tearful in the bedroom of safety, just outside the smoky room of depravity and empty cans of sorrow, I didn’t know this. That His arm would extend across the seas to show me how to live a good story.  That I have been living one all along.

How do you live a good story? I’m joining the group of writers at Prodigal Magazine to find out how. You can share your story too.

Linking with  God Bumps, Imperfect Prose, WLWW, Life in Bloom, Thought Provoking Thursday

Seeing Through the Cracks

II Corinthians 4:7, The Message

I dig my fingers into dark chocolate earth, scoop out a hole for the pungent leafy basil, cover roots and press stems firmly in its new place in the garden. And remember I am made of this earth, fired by the unforseen circumstances of life, shaped by the hands of God to hold the beauty He breathes for such a time as this.

Remembering that adorned pots of fired life -along sidewalks, pushing carts down aisles, seated in pews, behind the counter - they hold treasure within. The promise of eternal life. Happy Sunday!

Also linking with Scripture & Snapshot and Fresh Brewed Sunday

Getting Perspective

 As for man, his days are like grass;
  he flourishes like a flower of the field;
 for the wind passes over it, and it is gone,
  and its place knows it no more.
 But the steadfast love of the LORD is from everlasting to everlasting on those who fear him,
  and his righteousness to children’s children,
 to those who keep his covenant
  and remember to do his commandments.
 The LORD has established his throne in the heavens,
  and his kingdom rules over all.
Psalm 103:15-19 ESV

 

I clipped and cut a mangle of overgrown branches in my yard today. Pulling the heavy load through a grass pathway, I piled them high. And I thought about those crowds laying the branches and cloaks down in front of Jesus, riding on peace.

May we, His people, carpet a heart path for the triumphal entry of the Prince of Peace, wherever life takes us today.  Wave our hearts thankful for His everlasting love. 

Bowing my head and heart with you as we journey through this holiest of weeks. Praying that we, you and I, won’t be the same when we meet here again next Sunday.

Happy Palm Sunday my friends.

 

When Spring Arrives and Winter {Soul}stice Remains

 

“It’s a chorus of bees,” I say to him from the stoop, next to the lavender plants flanking the concrete pathway to the front door.  Their humming, like monks chanting deep soul verses, crescendo as more join in the swooping harmony surrounding the violet crowd.

A buzzing melody of the heart seasons swarm around us.  Winter’s lonely soul places giving way to springs expectancy.

He wipes sweat drips from his forehead with one hand, holds the shovel in the other.  Spring warms early and dirt sticks to his legs like a magnetic fuzzy face board.  We exchange turns digging out the pencil holly in front of the bay window. The bay window where early morning sun streams her tiny golden fingers over his bed, tickles awake.

Insects invade on branches rooted more than five years now; shiny, petite leaves flocked on upright stems transform brittle brown in winter.  “Do we have to take it out Mom,” he asks, “the bottom part of the plant is still green.”

We grieve the end of good things, when time waves her hand goodbye.

Winter bankrupts beauty.

When the heart lays long in the living death of winters grasp, beauty gathers in the cesspool of meaningless, blinds to light rising on the horizon, falls deaf to spring’s knock at the back door of communion.

Spring’s hope of resurrection pulses the heart awake again to beauty.

I take blade to a grey withered branch, a wallflower next to stems flush in green and clareet leaves, preparing for clusters of rose buds.  Dig a hole for the new rose on the block, the one that will fill in the empty space.

He is doing this to me too, cutting off the barren places of overdone commitments and worn out schedules, to make room for new things.  Meeting the girl I only know by name, this week, to start a mentoring relationship. Watering the soil of youth with the experience of life, trusting in Him for the growth.

Pruning is painful.  Winter is bleak.  Sometimes both are a necessary companion to spring’s gift of grace, to recognize the arrival of His goodness anew, hear the bees hum songs of spring.

 If the LORD had not been my help,   my soul would soon have lived in the land of silence.  When I thought, “My foot slips,”   your steadfast love, O LORD, held me up.  When the cares of my heart are many,   your consolations cheer my soul. Psalm 94:17-19 ESV

What heart season are you in? Are you in winter? I would love to encourage your resurrection into springtime through the power of prayer.  Leave your requests in the comments, or email me here: shelly@redemptionsbeauty.com.

Sharing the gifts for Multitudes on Mondays:

For warm weather that renews a love for gardening.

Red geraniums sitting cheery in pots to welcome visitors at the front door.

No make-up and hats to cover dirty hair on lazy Saturdays.

For an expected window of time with H, without kids or agendas.

Courage in my girl, the way she wants to run for student council.

Her responsible character, to do a last minute testimony in front of a crowd that makes her heart flutter.

For the opportunity to hear Ann speak in person this weekend.

Painted toes and sandals.

Sweaty boys that smile after a weekend away with friends.

The lamb stew for St. Patty’s Day, the best we remember.

Friends around the table to celebrate.

Linking with Playdates with God, On Your Heart Tuesday, Soli Deo Gloria, Just Write.

An Invitation to Beauty

My husband recently traced my ancestry to England, among Dukes and Lords in the early 1400’s.  It gives me a gavel to pound on my passion for gardening. Why I dream of voluminous gardens walled thick alongside mossy stone; their ancient tales whistling in the wind between the eaves.

My heart races to the penned words of Austen, and the circular tales of family and servants living in the hallowed halls of Downton Abbey. Though I long to be one of those ladies strolling along canopied pathways in crinoline and lace - jeans with holes in the knees and faded t-shirts covered in mulch, that is my reality.

As the crocus and daffodils pop their heads above ground for a look around, it reminds me of walks hand in hand with my Grandpa around his gardens in springtime. 

How he squats low to point out lilies of the valley and dollar plant along the foundation, reaches overhead to pull off puffy pink flowers atop flat branches of a sprawling mimosa tree.

Our knees spot muddy when we crouch down to inspect fat cheeked tomatoes weighing down spiked vines later in summer.  And after morning coffee, the ritual:  scattering the grounds around profuse rose bushes, cutting off blooms the size of small cabbages to bring the beauty inside.

And even though I witness lime green leaves unfolding new on sticks every spring as the sun warms the soil from winters chill, I wonder new in the awe of creation.  This continual reminder of redemption in chameleon leafed tapestries. 

The same kind of awe I experienced one year during Lent.

A few years ago, along with fasting, I added a discipline.  I intentionally conveyed the nice things I think about people instead of letting those thoughts drift around aimless in my cerebral hemisphere.  In emails, cards, Facebook messages and yes, looking into their eyes, I expressed words of encouragement. 

The following year God returned what I did, like a flock of birds carrying love letters to my house on their way home.  A surprise bouquet of kind words delivered to my soul all on the same day.

When my husband came home from work, he found me sitting overwhelmed in front of my computer with tears streaming down my cheeks, drenched in subterranean beauty.  Just like those plants poking through winter soil to make their grand entrance, grace is an invitation to be beautiful amidst the hardness of life.

And each of us, we all hold the inivitation to beauty for someone.

Have you experienced adding a discipline during Lent? I would love to hear about it.

Our Lord has written the promise of the resurrection, not in books alone, but in every leaf in spring-time. Martin Luther