Why Summer Sabbath Isn’t the Same – Week 23

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Sand spits on the back of my legs; shells pulverize beneath my tread as I keep up with her pace. Sweat drips down my back and seeps into the white Monet t-shirt I bought as a souvenir from the National Gallery of Canada before I had kids. Did I mention they are teenagers?

We’re two girlfriends meeting on a week day at the beach, before tourists monopolize the public parking spaces and the heat smothers. Before showers and makeup, cups of tea and checking off the to-do list, we walk briskly along the shore in tandem watching the golden orb lift her sleepy head to welcome the day.

We share ideas about navigating summer schedules with teens through shallow breaths. Years of complaining about kids not sleeping converts to worry about them sleeping too much. Asking questions I never dreamt I would hear from my own mouth. Is it okay to let them sleep until noon? And how late is too late when it comes to bedtime?

If I’m totally honest, there is a part of me that wants them to keep sleeping. I like having quiet mornings all to myself. And it means fewer hours of guilt about having zero plans for them. Did I mention they are teenagers?

Sometimes summer is seamless and swift, like one big siesta you don’t want to end. But it’s not that way for everyone.

While summer is a season to make confetti of schedules and justify indulgences, it can also be a time of dreaded isolation. A whole lot of rest from routine means a wide berth for loneliness to fill in the empty edges. Edges normally crowded with responsibilities and casual conversation on the sidelines.

And Sabbath can start to feel like one more day, just like all the others.

How do we maintain the sweetness of Sabbath when routine isn’t routine? I asked Mark Buchanan.

 First, I try to cultivate a Sabbath heart – an attentiveness to, thankfulness toward, and trust in God. This allows me to practice the presence of God regardless of where I am. Second, I try to schedule mini-Sabbaths – an hour here, two there, maybe half a day – simply to enjoy the creation and its creator. ~Mark Buchanan, Author of The Rest of God: Restoring Your Soul by Restoring Sabbath

Perhaps these two practices are the prescription for summertime sadness of the soul, with a caveat. Admit you are lonely to a friend.

Do you ever feel isolated in the summer?

May your Sabbath begin and end with the knowledge that isolation may lead to loneliness but it doesn’t mean you are alone. That God may be silent, but he is never still. Remember that your vulnerability isn’t a sign of weakness; it’s a confirmation of courage, a whisper of welcome to a world waiting for a sign of hope.

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Links around the web this week on the themes of Rest and Sabbath (maybe its becoming hip to rest):

Don’t Just Do Something by Mark Buchanan

Sandcastles on the Same Side of the Ocean at Unexpected – “Our family is a process, always in process.  I’m never sure how many chairs on the beach we’ll need the next year.”

Being a Closet Radical at Every Bitter Thing is Sweet – “To choose true rest is to believe that beauty often happens outside of what I create with my own two hands.”

What It Looks Like to Have a Cyber Sabbath by Holley Gerth for {In}Courage – “Yes, I need the actual rest on my Cyber Sabbath. But I need the lesson it teaches me about the other six days even more.”

The Value in Catching Your Breath by Deidra Riggs – “We — as is our custom — have tainted the idea of sabbatical. We’ve made it a break from one type of work, in order to attend to another type of work.”

A Life Full of Sabbaths by Lore Ferguson – “But at its core and its very marrow, the work of salvation is rest, Sabbath. It is to say, again and again and again, I rest in You, Lord of Rest. I find my Sabbath in you, Lord of the Sabbath.”

 

Because Timing Is Everything

How swift the summer goes,

Forget-me-not, pink, rose.

The young grass when I started

And now the hay is carted,

And now my song is ended.

And all the summer splendid;

The blackbird’s second brood

Routs beech leaves in the wood;

The pink and rose have speeded.

Forget-me-not has seeded.

Only the winds that blew,

The rain that makes things new,

The earth that hides things old.

And blessings manifold.

 Excerpt from The Everlasting Mercy, John Masefield (1878-1967)

Sometimes we expose our roots just above the water line when the season of the soul shifts in the middle of stacking clean dishes. We’re all showy and colorful on the outside, bare knuckling hope down underneath, until someone trades a bouquet of  forget-me-nots for your dish towel. And you smell the rain coming through the screens and watch the leaves shift cameleon.

Welcome to Fall friends. May our hearts rejoice in the hope that change carries.

There’s an opportune time to do things, a right time for everything on the earth. ~Ecclesiastes 3:1, MSG

When You Aren’t Ready to Answer . . . Love Waits

Squawking from a tribe of geese gliding over the lake surface startles me awake from sleep. When I roll over, I hear Him say, “This is a lesson in letting go.” But He’s not talking about the geese.

Over the past twenty-four hours, we’ve been dumping buckets of lake water into toilets for flushing, cooking eggs on the barbecue and catching mice that scurry among the dirty dishes lining the counter in wait.

We’re a few too many days without a shower.

We scoop bowls of chili by the light of two red pillar candles; wash our hands with wet wipes. When we need milk from the refrigerator we make sure not to leave the door open so long the food will get warm inside.

It’s our vacation.

It makes sense to me now, why I felt so strongly about buying that battery powered lantern at Costco before we left home. When the cashier asked me how I was going to use it, I had no idea it would be our main source of light in the aftermath of a storm.

On our second day at the family cottage in Ontario Canada, I answer the phone hanging on the wall with a towel around me to soak up water droplets cascading from my swimsuit.  It’s my uncle, warning us about the storm headed our way in just an hour, in case we were planning to be out in the boat.

Through the kitchen window, I watch kids swim in the lake, a canoe family paddle by, boats pulling tubes of laughing kids in the distance. It’s hard to believe this sunny sky would deceive me.

But the earth’s been holding her breathe so long here, she finally exhales a fury of wind and rain a few hours later. Gales so strong they snap trees like matchsticks, push anchored boats around like toys in a bathtub.  The ground becomes a battlefield of sticks raining from branches.

I couldn’t feel more helpless watching it unfold from my spot at that same window.

And I hear him ask me again, “What do you want me to do for you?” the same way he asked me on the dusty road the day before.  He shows me through the strength of a storm, the smallness of my eternal expectancy.

Because we can pray for rain, anticipating a drink to satisfy thirsty soil, and forget He holds water in the heavens like a balloon waiting to pop. We can ask for a juicy ribeye to satisfy a craving like the Israelites and get a storm of 105 million quail on the front lawn. (Numbers 11:18-20)

He holds our dreams in the palm of his hand outstretched like this too. Do we dare think our dreams, our prayers, larger than his hands? Or too insignificant to utter?

Hours before the storm, I walked along the Bonnechere River, stood on the shore of mirrored trees and said how good it is to be here, surrounded by what looms larger than me.  Remembering that God’s dreams for me, and you, they stand taller than our perspective. And fear keeps life stuck small.

I cannot control the yelp of a flock of geese before the sun sets golden, how fast the wind blows or where it chooses to snap a tree. I don’t determine how or when rain falls, the way sunlight makes a leaf glow. How succulent an ear of corn grows on the stalk or how sweet berries taste on the vine.

A cool breeze kisses my cheeks, head sinks back into the pillow and I do the only thing I can control: pray specific prayers. And while I wait and listen to the silence of letting go, I’m praying that the truth of His words back to me will stick to my feet like yellow pollen falling in spring, leaving an imprint of His glory wherever I go.

 “It’s a frightening thing to open oneself to this strange and dark side of the divine; it means letting go of our sane self-control, that control which gives us the illusion of safety. But safety is only an illusion, and letting it go is part of listening to the silence, and to the Spirit.” Madeline L’Engle, Walking on Water

This post is a continuation from Monday’s post, inspired by The Circle Maker written by Mark Batterson.

Also linking with God Bumps and God Incidences, WLWW, Walk With Him Wednesday.

What Cannot Be Explained

We’re taking grains of sand into our palms and turning them into pearls of remembrance.

The way a bluejay flies from branch to branch beside the road where I take morning walks. As if he is the tour guide leading the way, whistling about the sights.

The way a rabbit hops from hidden brush, turns around to look at me, and skips along as if he picks up the nature tour where the bird leaves off.

The way a flock of Canadian geese fly perfectly spaced over the surface of the lake, as if someone held up a ruler.

The way my son leaves air between the wake and kneeboard while smiling joy, when he used to fall asleep in my arms as a toddler fearful of the boats rumble.

The way a chipmunk scuttles up to our shoes when we stop to look closer at a crowd of lily pads.

The way clams create a spiral sand masterpiece on the bottom of a glassy lake of still water.

The way blueberry pancakes taste better in Canada than they do at home.

When we accept what we cannot explain or understand, we’ve entered the way of faith, each moment  a brushstroke of miracle in the mural of life.

And in the very same way the Spirit long ago became manifest in the Body of Christ, the first cabbage rose began to materialize on my (cross stitched) tablecloth. From there I could envision the whole garden. ~The Poisonwood Bible, Barbara Kingsolver

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.

Because Words Satisfy the Soul

Stacks of books lay on the edges of the coffee table around the X-box controllers and remotes. I’m sitting on my legs in front of the bookcase pulling books off the shelves, adding to the piles. My kids want to know what I’m doing. The last time I did something like this I gave away all their Donut Man videos and they’ve never forgiven me. They get nervous when they see me making piles.

Sarah Bessey’s lists inspire me last week. I spend an hour among the air-conditioned shelves of used paperbacks in a day of stifling heat. Walk out with a stack of five for the price of one and wonder why I haven’t been to this store in four years. I’m going back.

“I’m taking these to the used bookstore to get credit for more books, but I want you both to look through the ones I’m pulling out before I take them,” I assure their discontent.

Murielle thinks it’s ironic that I’m getting rid of books just when we’re re-arranging our family room, adding more bookshelves. I remind her about boxes of books in the attic we don’t have room for on the already full shelves. “Oh,” she remembers, “that makes sense.”

She’s reading Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde for a school reading assignment, while Harrison turns the pages of To Kill a Mockingbird to complete his. And my heart beats faster knowing they hold the classics in their hands now. I know the way a well-written phrase can open a whole new landscape of perspective, transform rooms of tired thinking.

My first introduction to the classics came in a well-worn hardback of Jane Eyre I found at the small library in the town where we lived while H attended seminary. I lay that book on my lap during a road trip as newlyweds. The car remaining mostly silent as I give myself over to story.

That book gives me an appetite for words that lead me to the other Bronte sister and then Jane Austen. The special edition of Anne of Green Gables with a cover that looks like a piece of art I receive for my birthday that year, it’s my favorite gift. Smitten by the power of words.

And perhaps reading fulfills that part of me that hungers to know the attributes of God expressed in a way that makes me think beyond the grocery lists and doctor visits.

I haul the cardboard crate of books into the store lined with rows of well read paperbacks. The lady behind the counter with the messy ponytail and smudged eyeliner takes stacks in one hand while navigating the calculator with the other. “We don’t take self-help books,” she looks up at me. “They don’t sell very well.”

And I wonder why. Are Christian inspirational books irrelevant or do people keep them like found treasure re-visited? Maybe it’s because showing someone how to live through the power of story is more transformative than telling someone how to do it in five easy steps.

Words satisfy the soul as food satisfies the stomach; the right words on a person’s lips bring satisfaction. ~Proverbs 18:20

“You have twenty-seven dollars of credit,” she says with a smile. “Do you want to spend it now?”

“I’ll be back,” I tell her. “I forgot my Sarah Bessey  list lying on my desk.”

I pick up the box of “self-help” books, push the glass door open with my back and wonder if I can fill this box again from the shelves in the bedrooms.

If you’re looking for some inspiration for summer reading, I’ve updated my What I Read page, just click on the tab at the top of the page. And will you share what you’re reading this summer here in the comments? Perhaps a classic that you go back and re-read regularly?

If you haven’t already done so, will you like my Facebook page on the sidebar too?

I’m joining Michelle today for Graceful Summer, embracing the quiet, carefree summer days.

 

Gathering At The Altar

I long, yes, I faint with longing

to enter the courts of the Lord.

With my whole being, body and soul,

I will shout joyfully to the living God.

Even the sparrow finds a home,

and the swallow builds her nest and raises her young

at a place near your altar,

O Lord of Heaven’s Armies, my King and my God!

Psalms 84:2-3

 This week, a gift of quiet listening while gazing out my cathedral window at the bird community flitting around their afternoon snack. A circular pew of doves gather at the altar, stilled among the pine needles and shed leaves. Their dusky feathers feign silver under light shower peeking through crooked branches. I’m awed by their reverent hush, the bowing of  heads despite marketplace activity. I’m following their lead into the courts of the Lord.

Want to join me there?