Surrendering to Sabbath – Week 11

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I’m starting to believe that the walls and interruptions of life are where Jesus anchors us, where He hides the surprise.  And I’m leaning on a few, catching my breath, and waiting.

Because I don’t want to hide the eggs first, plan for new birth and miss the wonder of resurrection.

Every moment is a gift, even when it’s disguised as an interruption.

As I walk these last days of Lent, I’m scaling the wall at a slant, stepping away from my normal schedule of posting. Praying I’ll see the world a bit larger when I come back. Because right now, it feels like a wool sweater that accidentally got mixed in with the pile of whites.

May your Palm Sunday mark a season of expectancy that fits just right. And enjoy your Sabbath.

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Some favorites I read this week:

Delays, Disruptions, and History by Mark Buchanan

The Morning After by Kelli Woodford

What to Do When Your Story Scares You by Jeremy Statton at Prodigal Magazine

After Steubenville: 25 Things Our Sons Need to Know About Manhood by Ann Voskamp

Naked And . . . Well . . . Naked by Deidra Riggs

Elizabeth Gilbert: Your Elusive Creative Genius

And from a Sabbath sister Cheryl Smith:  It’s Time to Do Something About My Social Media Addiction 

If you would like to join me in studying Wonderstruck by Margaret Feinberg, I’m co-hosting a book club  with Duane Scott beginning April 3. We’re taking two chapters at a time, engaging in discussion on my Redemptions Beauty Book Club page and offering an opportunity for bloggers to link their posts on discovering the wonder of God.

While You’re Waiting . . .

O Sacred Head, Sore Wounded

O sacred head, sore wounded, defiled and put to scorn; O kingly head, surrounded with mocking crown of thorn:  what sorrow mars thy grandeur? Can death thy bloom deflower? O countenance whose splendor the hosts of heaven adore!

Thy beauty, long-desired, hath vanished from our sight; thy power is all expired , and quenched the light of light. Ah me! for whom thou diest, hide not so far thy grace:  show me, O Love most highest, the brightness of thy face.

In thy most bitter passion my heart to share doth cry, with thee for my salvation upon the cross to die.  Ah, keep my heart thus moved to stand thy cross beneath, to mourn thee, well-beloved, yet thank thee for thy death.

I stand next to my husband amid the wooden pews, our voices joining the saints to declare these words written in the 11th century. And in timeless words, the Spirit breathes me undone. 
We’re waiting in expectation here for resurrection, preparing for the Easter celebration tomorrow.  And I’m thinking of you, how much I want to share this song with you to ponder together: Can death thy bloom deflower? Happy Saturday friends.

Trading Heaviness for Light

I had to stop reading blogs yesterday.  All the stories about doing for Lent, they dumped a truckload of guilt on my heart. I wore the shoulds around like wet clothes dripping tears of regret.

And didn’t I just write about that word earlier this week?

Jump in the waters of accusation fully clothed when I got the phone call asking why I didn’t make the hair appointment I was looking forward to and had wrong in my calendar. Because after all, your calendar isn’t really that full and you’ve just messed up the schedule of the person who makes you look good.

Then soaked again after another phone call, with the doctor about my son who lays sick on the couch for six days now. Her questions that reveal my oversight.  After all, a mother holds the wand of perfection, doesn’t she?

Then when I can’t remember the last name of the girl I mentor as I check in at the high school, holding the lunch from Sonic I’m not even sure she will like. Because you should know more about her after meeting that one time for forty-five minutes in the library of pizza and conversation.

I drip condemnation onto the wooden chair and the dirty blue carpet, surrounded by ancient monitors and dusty classroom projects under dim fluorescent, waiting for the girl and wondering.  In my ineptness, what  do I have to give this girl with the sandy shores of need?

A cacophony of voices shout melodies of accusation and I finally lay it all out on the bed in a dark room as thunder cracks open, adding its eery to my heavy sighs. Watch rain spit on window and birds huddle under leafy branches like crouching in the basement under sirens warning.

As the rain falls in sheets that sheer the view on Maundy Thursday, I duck under eaves, run into church, to remember His sacrifice. Remember His last meal before the day of betrayal, accusation, pain, suffering and death.

And as I take His body broken for me, dip it in the cup of His blood, I chew on the conviction that I am not measured by what I do, but the grace I accept.

That living in the light of faith, is discovered by wrestling in the dark.

And my soggy heart of sin will never outweigh his love for me.

That knowledge is the sweet harmony misting over me today.  I see it, the light peeking through on the horizon.  Sunday is coming in all her illuminated light glory.

Ring the bells that still can ring.
Forget your perfect offering.
There is a crack in everything.
That’s how the light get in.
~Leonard Cohen

What are you carrying today that you can lay at his feet and trade for grace?

Linking with Lisa-Jo for Five Minute Friday and a bit more today with the one word prompt: Light . Because on this Good Friday, there is bit more to ponder.

When Regret Slaps You in the Face

Light illuminates leaves like fireflies on sticks behind sheets in morning light and my eyes fall in love with this glow. The breeze filters through my window screen, wraps her hands around my shoulders while I sit at my desk.  

An early gift of spring, it warms up the empty spaces in the house. We turn on the air when the brow sweats. Discover that what usually blows on us comfortable, dies under  blanket of winter.

When the man with the white beard and shiny head asks how to get to the attic, he walks through the door cautious, asks if any pets lurk behind doors, around corners. I tell him no, not since January. He stops, turns around and a drain unplugs to pooling thoughts lying stagnant in his mind since last week. They flow in a steady stream all over the space in my webby garage.

He explains that while his wife walks on cobblestones in England, he stays behind with their new puppy. How fifteen years earlier their dog dies in a heap on his leg, on vacation in another state, and they wait all this time to get another.

He pulls on the string to extract the ladder from the attic and says, “Well maybe I shouldn’t burden you with this story.”

 I tell him to go on.

“The puppy likes to play with the broom,” he says, “and I let him out, take the opportunity to sweep the floors because I want to keep things nice for my wife while she is gone. When I look up from the floor, through the open front door, I see him run into the road and collide with a car.”

He hasn’t told his wife. Doesn’t want to ruin her trip. But the grief, it hangs on him like sweat he can’t wash off.

The words tell the story he writes script in his head for days now. He’s memorized his part, the lines he will say to her when he picks her up at the airport on Monday.

“It’s not your fault you know,” I tell him. “I can tell you have been replaying what you saw like it might change something.”

And I think about Winston, the way he stopped breathing two months ago. How I twirled the hair on his ear between my fingers while I talked teary to the doctor, long after he passed. I can’t stop thinking about how we left him lying on a cold metal table in a smelly room that morning and went on living.

 “If I would have looked up just ten seconds earlier,” he regrets.

Maybe we think time is our servant with whom we give orders. If we could change the menu of time, life might wrap her arm around us on the couch instead of slapping us in the face with regret.

That if we hit the replay button enough times in our mind, she will magically conform to our image of the way she should serve us.

Like the way Mary watched her son’s hands and feet bleed from the nails driven into His flesh, so you and I, we don’t have to be shackled prisoner to sin. I imagine, she might have replayed those moments and asked time to serve her differently too.

How altered our lives would be, if time granted her request.

And just like spring showing up with all her resurrected glory before we put the blankets away, sometimes we can’t understand the holiness of time’s story. The way she does her work, speaks in a language only known to the one who created her.

 He was foreknown before the foundation of the world but was made manifest in the last times for the sake of you
1 Peter 1:20 ESV

 

May I whisper a surprise ending here? I just got a call from the workman and he shut his office door to tell me this: After all the prayers and worries about how he would share this news with his wife, the first thing she asked him, after she got off the airplane was, “Is the puppy dead.” Her spirit already knew what he was so worried to tell her. Amazing grace my friends, amazing grace.

Linking with these friends on Holy Wednesday and Maundy Thursday.

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.

 

Finding Your Voice

My hands shake slightly as I sit down in front of his desk; scan the family photos, medical awards and certificates of degrees lining the walls behind the wingback chair. I pull the voice recorder from my computer bag. It is one of my first interviews as a feature writer with the Anglican Mission.

Even though I serve on a missions board with John, share meals around his kitchen table, laugh with his wife over birthday lunches and carry my sick children into the waiting room at his pediatric clinic, I still want to get things right. To honor a man who serves his community like Jesus walking barefoot to my house.

We talk for an hour.

He speaks passionate vision about saving lives in Rwanda, by distributing mosquito nets one house at a time. The same way he saves the lost and least in his own back yard, pushing his stethoscope on the chests of the sick in silent prayer, one child at a time.

The interview follows a discussion about how his body responds to the medicine he takes for the cancer. The way he enjoys this window of time with his wife, how he is putting things in order for her, if the worst happens.

He died a few months later.  The whole town held their breath.

The week he passes, H and I look out of the plate glass window on the twenty-something floor of a hotel hundreds of miles from grief at a conference.  A conference where I plan to conduct several interviews like the one I had with John.  In preparation, I clear my voice recorder. Then I remember. My heart sinks when I realize I just erased the voice of the dead.

A few weeks later, my hips slide onto the couch in John’s living room.  I sit across from his wife and the cat over a steamy cup of tea.  She remarks how she misses talking to John. How she wishes she had thought to record his voice before he died.

I’m not sure if I have ever regretted doing something more than the moment I pushed erase on that recorder.

It still haunts me.

Sometimes it feels as though someone pushed the erase button on my voice. Among the shuffle of piled laundry, grocery lists and the whisper of guilt over time that slips like sand through my fingers to write, the voice disappears. It floats in empty boat adrift on rocking waves of to-do lists from last week.

Then it returns like an unexpected visitor, over the swirl of spatula through eggs and cheese in the early morning hours, among the plastic baggies of potato chips and peanut butter sandwiches. When no one can hear over the noise of the electric toothbrush and Matt Lauer, and time spills like a leaky faucet.

And I stand cupping silver challis, repeat holy words to the least and lost.  The ones that look like me, in their best Sunday high heels and lipstick.  This is the blood of Christ shed for you, the blood of Christ shed for you.  And the more I say it, the more I let go of having a voice at all.

My phone reminds flashing green dot, of voice mails held long. Three voices that stay recorded on my phone permanently for years now to remember in John’s honor. That life is fleeting and voice is a gift and when it escapes mute like a prisoner held captive by fear, it returns in the remembering. Of heads bowed low, hearts flayed open, and words whispered true, the blood of Christ shed for you.

Joining Ann to declare His faithfulness in a list of thanks:

For last minute dinner and conversation with a friend far away from home.

Meeting a blogger friend in real life, and a little picture to remember.

A wrapped around tight hug from Ann Voskamp and the way she remembered me and my words.

Standing next to my husband to serve communion together for the first time.

Late night movies and sleep overs, for them.

Extra early morning hours the day after the late night, for me.

A beautiful sunny day on the beach and a little sun kiss on the skin – in March!

Linking with Playdates with God, Hear it on Sunday, Use it on Monday, Miscellany Monday, Just Write, On Your Heart Tuesday, Soli Deo Gloria

When Lent is Messy

Suitcases lie on the bedroom floor, clothes drape over the zipper edges like prisoners trying to escape. An open hanging bag pilfered for the jacket he thought we left behind covers the chaise lounge. I move things from one surface to the next trying to find the shoes I need to wear.

In the family room, clean laundry from this week and the folded towels from last week, they stack neatly around the edges of the couch among the cords, headsets, and controllers.

I decide to call the crew.  Tell them that they can’t come and clean today because sometimes you have to clean up the mess you made before the real cleaning can take place. And that can take a while.

Living Lent recognizes the messiness of life, so He can do the deep soul cleaning.

The red chested finch, he swings on the empty feeder, bobbing his head sharp like robot pecking steel for food.  He pauses in the direction of my writing window and I wonder how long he will continue to make the journey back to an empty storehouse. How long it will take him to recognize when it is full again. How long it will take me to stop procrastinating.

Living Lent reminds me that my choices have consequences for others.

Because my storehouses can run tired empty in a parking lot conversation with a friend when opinions differ, when my child interrupts my thoughts for the third time in the same paragraph, when time runs a sprint and I am doing a marathon.

Grace extends like a scarf blowing long in breeze of wind when the heart is full of what feeds life.

I extract the brown crunchy flowers among the endurance runners in the vase.  A fragrant bouquet I held in wet paper towel under the glow of the dashboard last week. Because they were travelling the next day and why don’t you enjoy them for us they said, after serving us a dinner for kings.

Living Lent separates the dry and brittle places that winter the soul; exposes the vibrant summer, dancing barefoot in the rain places.  

The light fixture over my vanity holds four different glass shades. Each one is distinctly different in color, shape and design. We’re trying to decide. One falls off without warning, lands into the sink, shatters into tiny shards on the counter and around my feet.  One breaks, now all have to be replaced.

Living Lent reveals the broken places in preparation for renewal.

And when someone asks me how I hear God, what I do to observe Lent, I think about the pull of choices that determine how love and grace reveal themselves in the everyday. In the laundry and cleaning up, over random conversation and fixing  what is broken.

In the messy of the mundane, He reminds me of my own frailty, how much I need Him. How grateful I am that resurrection is coming.

Just whispering here - I filled the bird feeder and they are enjoying the riches.

 

How are you experiencing Lent? What are some of the ways you are seeing differently during this season of preparation? Join us here in community as we ponder the scriptures together  through daily readings. And if you haven’t done so already, add your email address to Follow Redemptions Beauty and “Like” my Facebook page (both in the right hand column).

 

 Linking with God Bumps & God Incidences, Painting ProseWord Filled Wednesday, Thought Provoking Thursday40 Days of Seeking Him.