Tuesday, December 22, 2009
The Most Extravagant Gift
Extravagance.
That's what it was, purely and simply. My gifts for my family this year were the ultimate display of my affection for them. I could hardly wait to pack them into my car and head out of the city on this snowy Christmas morning. This day was going to be great. I could almost see the look of shock on my dad's face when he opened his new blackberry or my mom's protests of the expense. when she took out that candy apple red mixer. My younger brother would love his new Wii, and my neices and nephews would bounce the walls when they opened...
What was that sound? My apartment was usually dead quiet in the morning. I had paid enough for it that it better be. Sniffing?
I chalked it up to my imagination and returned my thoughts to the day to come. I guessed the fun wouldn't start until I got my lazy self out of bed. Coffee. I needed coffee.
You need more than that. A familiar, yet unwelcome voice spoken within my head. You've got the designer clothes, the apartment to envy, the dream job, the convertible. You've got friends in high places and friends in higher places. You've got all the connections and beauty and prestige a person could dream of, and still you haven't managed to figure out a way to peace. You haven't figured out how to make my voice go away. I'm always going to be here, reminding you of all the horrible things you've ever done, about the eventual payback that is most certainly coming your way...
"Enough!" I jumped from beneath the covers and quickly went to shower and dress. When I came out of the bathroom, I heard it again.
Sniff. Sniff.
Now more than a little convinced that someone had broken into my apartment - someone with a cold, apparently, I pulled on my clothes and ran down the spiral staircase into my spacious great room flooded with light from the oversized windows. The Christmas tree that I had trimmed to perfection graced the room with a commanding presence, and all the presents I had left beneath it were still there. Everything seemed in order. I turned toward the kitchen, then heard the sound again.
I walked into the room, and immediately noticed the small present that lay beneath the tree, the top removed. I knew I hadn't put it there. The wrapping paper was brown and plain. I peeked inside but it was empty. Empty and dirty, I noted with distaste. Who had given me such an ugly gift?
It was then that I noticed I was not alone. I jumped back in shock as I saw her - just a teenaged girl, her clothes worn and her hair in need of a good brushing. She was crying pitifully.
"How did you get in here?" I demanded. As I spoke, she whirled around to look at me with wide, scared eyes. She quickly knelt and placed something into the box, covering it with the lid and bravely wiping away the tears that streamed down her face.
"What is that?" I motioned toward the shabby box. She looked hard at it, as if she wished she could grab it and run.
"I was told to give it to you." she said softly, her voice breaking with emotion. "He said I should give it to you."
With that, she was gone, wrapping her arms around herself in a forlorn gesture as she hurried out the door.
I stared back at the box. It moved slightly. I reached over and unwillingly pulled the top away to see inside.
I could never had been prepared for what lay beneath the packaging. He squirmed beneath his crude swaddling, releasing a soft baby sigh as he settled back to sleep.
"What in the world?" I said, my heart thumping as I stared at him. I had never spent much time around newborns, but the absolute softness of his hair and skin, the defenselessness, the sweet smell that hovered around him was enough to make me pick him up. There was a card laying on his tiny chest.
"For my beloved, I give you my only son. He is what you are missing. He is your answer.He will give his life to redeem yours."
I stared hard at the tiny one. Only son? The answer? Give his life?
I felt tears wash over me with the realization. In this tiny, nondescript package, hidden among my fancily wrapped, costly gifts, rested the most extravagant gift of all.
Given to me.
Could I accept it? Could I accept him, poor and unlikely soul that he was?
Could I love him?
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Why Christmas Matters
Christmas – the most uncontaminated form of wholesomeness that mankind is capable of… in the purest form of divinity that Almighty God simply is.
There are always those that downplay Christmas, that say the birth of Jesus is not as important as His death and resurrection, but how can one be separated from the other? His birth was heralded by celestial beings, honored by kings, and predicted by prophets for centuries. Of course the ultimate goal was the act of paying for the sins of mankind, but the miracle that sprung from a quiet night in an animal stable set in motion the amazing God-conspired plan that was intended from the moment of creation.
This Christmas, may we pause in our business, in our shopping, in our visiting. As we watch our loved ones open presents and see their faces shine, may we remember the ultimately extravagant gift we were presented with on that silent, holy night. Who are we that we should be worth the life of His Son? But yet it remains that the baby's cry that shattered the silence in a Bethlehem stable that night is the voice of an immense and incredible Savior who was, is, and is to come. And yet who loves the lowest, the vilest, the most broken among us. Who came for them. Who died for them.
Who lives... for you.
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
All the Ways He Says He Loves Me
I know It's been a long time since I've blogged. A very long time. There's a wonderful reason for that fact.
But let me start at the beginning of my story. I ask you to refer back to June, when I had written about the scary surgery and possibility of my (then) three year old son having lymphoma, and the wonderful answer to prayer when it was revealed that he simply had some excessively overactive lymph nodes and was pronounced healthy.
Since that traumatic experience, I have entered into a deeper level of relationship with my Savior. I didn't notice it at first, but as the days and weeks passed, I started to notice a trend whenever something tempted me to worry over my children or anything else. When some trial thought to get the best of my emotions or will. God was speaking. Not a booming voice from the heavens shouting "thees" and "thous," but a loving, tender voice whispering from the pages of my Bible. I suppose the voice has always spoken to me. But it takes the scary moments of life when you are desperate to hear it to help you learn to recognize it.
God directed me to the Psalms at the beginning of the summer and has wisely kept me there until I finished it two days ago. From Psalm 56 the Lord gave me precious truth for my little boy to memorize and repeat as he headed into surgery: "When I am afraid I will trust in You, in God whose Word I praise. In God I trust; I will not be afraid." Little did he know his mommy was silently repeating it with tears streaming down her face as he was wheeled away.
The day before I received the greatest relief of my life - the results of Noah's biopsy, God said from Psalm 41: The Lord will sustain him on his sickbed, and restore him from his bed of illness." I knew then. I knew that everything was going to be alright. I felt as if I'd crossed a mountain, but I knew that the journey was drawing to a conclusion.
But God wasn't finished with us yet. He continued to speak words of love and hope to my heart through the Psalms throughout the next month. And quite unexpectedly, a familiar thought occured to me. It's occured to me three other times in my life. God was letting me know that he was giving us a blessing. I think of it almost as a "reward" for allowing him to show his faithfulness to us by entrusting him with the life of our son. God was planning to send us another child.
Well, I promptly told my husband the good news. He was less than convinced. But neither of us were in any sort of hurry to work it out - getting pregnant is something that's required a lot of time and prayer to accomplish for me.
God didn't wait this time.
On the morning of August 20, I woke early, planning to take a test because of the suspicious symptoms and telltale feeling I was having. I read Psalms 103:
Praise the Lord Oh my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits - who forgives all your sins, and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit, and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle's.... The Lord is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love... he does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities. For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is his love for those who fear him."
I didn't really need to take the test to know that it would be positive.
All this to say, that every time I look into the healthy, vibrant blue eyes of my four year old son, and next spring when I lay eyes on this little miracle God is forming within me, I will remember the summer that God drew close to me, and showed me his nature, and let me feel his love.
Some use scientific research, some use theological apologetics to herald the existence of the Creator God. I don't need it. I know he's not only real, but exactly who he says he is. You can know too, for absolute certainty. Step out on faith. Trust him regardless of what the circumstance or your feelings tell you. Persevere, and he will begin to reveal himself to you. He will remind you of a sacrifice on a cross, an empty grave, your sins atoned for, and then point to every time in your life that he reached his larger-than-the-universe hands toward you, and whispered so gently in your ear....
I love you. You are mine. I will always take care of you.
Wednesday, August 5, 2009
Being Still and Knowing - A Journey
Sometimes when my babies are fast asleep I sneak into their rooms and watch them. See their chests rise and fall in steady syncopation. Their hand thrown unknowingly upon the pillow, their hair damp and sticking to their flushed little face. It gives me peace. Not just to know that at the moment I am not required to break up fights, motivate obedience, quell whining or dole out punishments but I am free to soak in all the wonder of who that little person God created really has the potential to be.
Lately I've been thinking about this world in which we are living right now in this country of prosperity and ridiculous wealth, recession or not. We have or can easily obtain everything we could possibly need and most of our reasonable desires as well. But sometimes I wonder what the trade has become. Our way of life requires our constant attention. Jobs to which we must drive to every day, where we give our strength and our creative energy into a company that may only be lingering on the precipice of ruin. We work harder to gain a glimmer of assurance that we might still have that job in the morning. Children are handed over to specialized care in order that they might be prepared for life, and at the same time are robbed of any extended period of time where they might simply play on their own and be a child. They are robbed of precious time with the only people on the planet that can show them how to relate to and learn to live in this life.
We have the relief of knowing there are doctors to care for us any time of day or night; within minutes in case of emergency they can be at our side. But to this blessing is added the stress of medical bills to pay, research and second opinions to find, decisions to be made about life and death that I'm not sure we were created to know how to make.
We have strong, beautiful homes to live in, that even if built to the least standard of requirement are safe enough to shelter us for years and years to come. But with this goodness we find that we are constantly required to maintain and give attention to the most minute of details in order to cause the building to continue to meet that standard. As soon as the paint dries there is a scuff. As soon as the filter is changed it is full. As soon as the dishwasher is installed it starts to deteriorate. The grass never ceases to grow, the landscaping never takes a break from over growing and taking over the yard.
And then after the endless, mindless bills are sent off and the calls are returned and the list of businesses asking for our money are silenced and the pets are cared for and the medicines are taken and the bottomless pile of laundry is somehow clean and dishes are not only washed but put away... when no one is in need of a meal for at least a few hours and toys have been picked up and correspondence has been cared for and somehow we have even found a moment to sweep the cobwebs from the ceiling and wash the windows and have the carpets cleaned... then there are the truly important things that are still left undone.
There are children to teach the way of the Lord. They must have life experiences, they must be taught about their world as it relates to their God. They must have time to spend with their parents playing in the backyard or riding bikes or sharing a game. They must have their talents developed with lessons or play sports on a team. They must know their relatives, they must have friends to spend time with. A husband and wife need to have time to spend with each other lest they become strangers living side by side. And then there is our church family, whom we need to be connected with as much as they need to be connected to us. We must learn to be a part of the body of Christ. We must learn to love others. And we must learn to love our neighbors and coworkers and take the time to know them and pray for them and tell them about the love Jesus has for them.
When all of this is done, there is still the most important part of our lives that has gone uncared for. Our own relationship with our Savior. We must be in His presence, hear His voice through His Word and bring our crazy, busy life before Him to ask Him for strength and wisdom.
Is it any wonder that He said we should "be still, and know He is God?"
This list of responsibilities is in no way exhaustive. All of us could add another blog entry full of things we are responsible to care for. How do we do it? How do we live in this culture and not drown in our concerns?
God gave us just the right amount of hours in the day, days in the week, weeks in the month, and months in the year. He didn't make a mistake. So if we are unable to accomplish everything in the time He has given us, we are the ones that are doing something wrong.
Do I know what it is? No. For me, a method of coping is not fighting the onslaught of commitments. It is in escaping to my imagination by writing or reading of other times and other places, of ideas. It is in letting go the things I didn't get done today that will truthfully not matter in a week or a month or a year. It is in being vigilant about the things that will still be important on my deathbed.
It is somehow fighting the storm of life, pushing against the wind, declaring to everyone vying for my attention, and reciting from the depths of my heart: As the deer pants for streams of water so my soul pants for you, O God. My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?
It is in being still and knowing... Him.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
No Going Back - The War of Ideas
I have blood on my hands. There's no going back now. - Saul of Tarsus (from the movie "Paul the Apostle")
There have been many of them since the day Jesus poured his Spirit on the early church, soon after His return to the Father. All of them, in some way or another, that have had to fight the war of ideas here on this battlefield called Earth.
Though history has always been interesting to me, it has become more of a passion to me in recent years. I consume great quantities of historical literature and media. The history during the past 2000+ years has become a particular obsession. The history of the church.
I'm watching an excellent movie right now while I work away on my elliptical machine in the afternoons during naptime. It's called "Paul the Apostle," and I'm delighted because it's acting and sets, while they aren't going to win any oscars, are enough that they don't distract from the message. And oh, what a message! The sweet words of the New Testament as the story of Saul who killed Christians and Paul who made them. Blanks filled in seamlessly.
Thoughts have been forming in my mind that I must write down before they waft away on the breeze that is the life of a wife and mother of young ones. Many things have occurred since Paul preached Christ across the reaches of the known world. Times have come and gone, many kings, leaders, churches and teachers have lived and died. And yet, it was obvious to me as I watched the story of Paul unfold: Nothing has changed. The war of ideas continues, and it is always the same string of ideas that ignite the passions of sinners and saints alike.
In the time of Paul, the problems were fairly straightforward. Christians had seen Christ die, seen Him rise again and could do nothing but believe that He was the Son of God. This inflamed the keepers of the law, both religious and governments, because it could not coexist with their ideas. A high priest in the temple could not continue to preach that God expected their sacrifices and could no longer do his appointed job to pardon sins and be the mediator between God and man if the Messiah had come and rendered his position obsolete. So what was his only choice if he rejected the idea of following the Messiah? To try to push down the new idea, even if it was true. If the government sensed a power that could defeat their reigning power, unless they were willing to be destroyed, they would stamp out the "rebellion" where it began.
And so the religious leaders and the Roman government became unlikely partners in the attempt to wipe out the sect of people who were called Christians. Like children who respond in frustration to push down other children who say things they don't like or agree with, those leaders pushed and shoved and fumed and stomped. And when they thought they had cut down the resistance, they looked around and saw the numbers had doubled. Tripled. Quadrupled. Not one fighting back, accept in their God-given ability to reproduce.
This continued outside Jewish city walls and in Roman arenas. Three hundred years later, with a wake of destruction behind them, the powers that be suddenly stopped resisting. Constantine, the Roman Emperor, became a Christian.
You might think this should be the end of the story. But you know it isn't. Constantine may have had a genuine heart of faith, but he misunderstood one thing: You can't make people believe in Jesus. God has never forced one soul to accept His Son and find forgiveness and eternal life. God would never ask His people to badger anyone into Christianity either. But Constantine thought it would be a good idea to use his vast power to force people into the Kingdom. And as a result, a very disjointed path of the church was born. Not healthy from it's beginning, because God's simple Word had not been respected in its inception. But when something is spiritually unhealthy it can become an extremely powerful tool of evil.
And before you knew it, this church had become "white-washed walls" on the outside, and darkness within. When Martin Luther stepped forward and complained, saying that what was happening was against God, the ones that were supposed to bear God's Word and reach the lost with love for Christ, got angry. THEIR words had become their Bible. THEIR traditions were too important to correct, even if they were unbiblical in every respect.
And so the bloodthirst began. And once one martyr had been placed on the stake and burned to their death, there was no going back. There was no admitting that error had occurred. It was a pact sealed with blood. And so the body count rose, higher and higher, as the faithful few were silenced and the masses were warned to conform or die. Some chose to conform. Some chose to die. But no matter how hard the powers fought to contain the resistance, it grew. And grew. And grew.
You may say "But that isn't happening now." Not here, in America. Not yet. But there are powers in this world who would silence Christianity forever. There are forces in places in many parts of the world that are dragging Christians from their homes and slaying them in the street, even mothers and fathers, while their children watch in horror. Pastors that are imprisoned, beaten. Churches and homes routinely set on fire. For the offense of believing and teaching that Jesus is our Savior, that people can have eternal life in His name, and forgiveness of sins.
The war of ideas is occurring - so far in a bloodless battle - within God's church as well. I grew up in a setting where I was taught to respect the boundaries of denominations, and be grateful that we could separate ourselves into different parts of God's church and coexist without destroying each other. But the older I am, the more I doubt that our segregation pleases our Savior. I keep hearing His prayer in the garden, for US, when He pleaded with God to help us to be one as They are one. There are many today who are throwing off the weight of denominational distinctions, and painstakingly removing traditions and ideas that are unbiblical in nature. There are those who are angered by this. Those who condemn and denounce the ones who thoughtfully step out in faith and follow the Spirit. The ideas of men, the traditions of our ancestors mean more to them than the spirit of unity that Christ would have us all know.
This should not be. History and current events have already shown us that once ideas become more important than Scripture, the bloodshed soon follows. None of us are immune from the effects of sin once we decide something is important enough to kill in the name of. Once one child of God is pushed down in the name of ideas, it is easier to push down another.
So it is with this concern that I remained always more and more skeptical of the good of any denomination created by man's ideas. Of calling one's self anything but a child of God through Christ. I used to be comfortable referring to myself as a Baptist. I am not anymore.
Does this mean I believe that we should all leave our Baptist churches and our Pentecostal churches and Presbyterian, our reformed traditions or any other type of body in the people that are part of the Body of Christ? NO. That is a strong and emphatic "absolutely not." As destructive as denominations can become, there is an equally devastating problem in God's people at this point in history. Apathy. More simply said: LAZINESS. When we don't agree with someone, instead of turning to the Word and resolving our differences, we leave. When we get angry at other people for not doing their jobs or not volunteering for ministries or speaking against something we think is a good idea, we don't try to pray and work it out in Jesus powerful name, we just leave. And we miss the blessing of learning to become one in Him. We cripple the Body of Christ that Jesus loved enough to die for.
Ideally, we should all do a spring cleaning of our heart and wash off anything that doesn't belong by God's Word. But since we are still sinners and this isn't likely to happen, we should stay where God has us, as long as the Gospel is being preached and the Word upheld as the only source of life and truth and we should learn to get along. Learn to love. Learn step by step, day by day, difficulty by difficulty, argument by argument, how to look another follower of Christ in the eye and say "I love you, and I am your brother and sister, no matter how our many worthless thoughts may differ."
Not an easy task. But if we are to heal from the many wounds that have been inflicted in the past and the many fiery arrows the evil forces are sending our way at this very moment, we must work together. We must focus our energies on our unity. It is essential.
So to my little section of the Body, I plead: Let us love one another. Let us get along. Let us respect each other and defer to each other. Let's not fight about things that don't matter.
Until He comes back. I'm for you, you be for me. We'll get to the finish line together. After all, we aren't racing against each other. There's no easy way to get to that line where He stands with open arms unless we help one another.
May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. John 17:23
DISCLAIMER: After I wrote this blog I continued to watch "Paul the Apostle" and discovered some objectionable material. It is a secular miniseries and does contain some elements that are definitely not for children, and some that aren't for adults either. There is brief nudity and violence. The questionable aspects have nothing to do with the message, which was still excellent.
There have been many of them since the day Jesus poured his Spirit on the early church, soon after His return to the Father. All of them, in some way or another, that have had to fight the war of ideas here on this battlefield called Earth.
Though history has always been interesting to me, it has become more of a passion to me in recent years. I consume great quantities of historical literature and media. The history during the past 2000+ years has become a particular obsession. The history of the church.
I'm watching an excellent movie right now while I work away on my elliptical machine in the afternoons during naptime. It's called "Paul the Apostle," and I'm delighted because it's acting and sets, while they aren't going to win any oscars, are enough that they don't distract from the message. And oh, what a message! The sweet words of the New Testament as the story of Saul who killed Christians and Paul who made them. Blanks filled in seamlessly.
Thoughts have been forming in my mind that I must write down before they waft away on the breeze that is the life of a wife and mother of young ones. Many things have occurred since Paul preached Christ across the reaches of the known world. Times have come and gone, many kings, leaders, churches and teachers have lived and died. And yet, it was obvious to me as I watched the story of Paul unfold: Nothing has changed. The war of ideas continues, and it is always the same string of ideas that ignite the passions of sinners and saints alike.
In the time of Paul, the problems were fairly straightforward. Christians had seen Christ die, seen Him rise again and could do nothing but believe that He was the Son of God. This inflamed the keepers of the law, both religious and governments, because it could not coexist with their ideas. A high priest in the temple could not continue to preach that God expected their sacrifices and could no longer do his appointed job to pardon sins and be the mediator between God and man if the Messiah had come and rendered his position obsolete. So what was his only choice if he rejected the idea of following the Messiah? To try to push down the new idea, even if it was true. If the government sensed a power that could defeat their reigning power, unless they were willing to be destroyed, they would stamp out the "rebellion" where it began.
And so the religious leaders and the Roman government became unlikely partners in the attempt to wipe out the sect of people who were called Christians. Like children who respond in frustration to push down other children who say things they don't like or agree with, those leaders pushed and shoved and fumed and stomped. And when they thought they had cut down the resistance, they looked around and saw the numbers had doubled. Tripled. Quadrupled. Not one fighting back, accept in their God-given ability to reproduce.
This continued outside Jewish city walls and in Roman arenas. Three hundred years later, with a wake of destruction behind them, the powers that be suddenly stopped resisting. Constantine, the Roman Emperor, became a Christian.
You might think this should be the end of the story. But you know it isn't. Constantine may have had a genuine heart of faith, but he misunderstood one thing: You can't make people believe in Jesus. God has never forced one soul to accept His Son and find forgiveness and eternal life. God would never ask His people to badger anyone into Christianity either. But Constantine thought it would be a good idea to use his vast power to force people into the Kingdom. And as a result, a very disjointed path of the church was born. Not healthy from it's beginning, because God's simple Word had not been respected in its inception. But when something is spiritually unhealthy it can become an extremely powerful tool of evil.
And before you knew it, this church had become "white-washed walls" on the outside, and darkness within. When Martin Luther stepped forward and complained, saying that what was happening was against God, the ones that were supposed to bear God's Word and reach the lost with love for Christ, got angry. THEIR words had become their Bible. THEIR traditions were too important to correct, even if they were unbiblical in every respect.
And so the bloodthirst began. And once one martyr had been placed on the stake and burned to their death, there was no going back. There was no admitting that error had occurred. It was a pact sealed with blood. And so the body count rose, higher and higher, as the faithful few were silenced and the masses were warned to conform or die. Some chose to conform. Some chose to die. But no matter how hard the powers fought to contain the resistance, it grew. And grew. And grew.
You may say "But that isn't happening now." Not here, in America. Not yet. But there are powers in this world who would silence Christianity forever. There are forces in places in many parts of the world that are dragging Christians from their homes and slaying them in the street, even mothers and fathers, while their children watch in horror. Pastors that are imprisoned, beaten. Churches and homes routinely set on fire. For the offense of believing and teaching that Jesus is our Savior, that people can have eternal life in His name, and forgiveness of sins.
The war of ideas is occurring - so far in a bloodless battle - within God's church as well. I grew up in a setting where I was taught to respect the boundaries of denominations, and be grateful that we could separate ourselves into different parts of God's church and coexist without destroying each other. But the older I am, the more I doubt that our segregation pleases our Savior. I keep hearing His prayer in the garden, for US, when He pleaded with God to help us to be one as They are one. There are many today who are throwing off the weight of denominational distinctions, and painstakingly removing traditions and ideas that are unbiblical in nature. There are those who are angered by this. Those who condemn and denounce the ones who thoughtfully step out in faith and follow the Spirit. The ideas of men, the traditions of our ancestors mean more to them than the spirit of unity that Christ would have us all know.
This should not be. History and current events have already shown us that once ideas become more important than Scripture, the bloodshed soon follows. None of us are immune from the effects of sin once we decide something is important enough to kill in the name of. Once one child of God is pushed down in the name of ideas, it is easier to push down another.
So it is with this concern that I remained always more and more skeptical of the good of any denomination created by man's ideas. Of calling one's self anything but a child of God through Christ. I used to be comfortable referring to myself as a Baptist. I am not anymore.
Does this mean I believe that we should all leave our Baptist churches and our Pentecostal churches and Presbyterian, our reformed traditions or any other type of body in the people that are part of the Body of Christ? NO. That is a strong and emphatic "absolutely not." As destructive as denominations can become, there is an equally devastating problem in God's people at this point in history. Apathy. More simply said: LAZINESS. When we don't agree with someone, instead of turning to the Word and resolving our differences, we leave. When we get angry at other people for not doing their jobs or not volunteering for ministries or speaking against something we think is a good idea, we don't try to pray and work it out in Jesus powerful name, we just leave. And we miss the blessing of learning to become one in Him. We cripple the Body of Christ that Jesus loved enough to die for.
Ideally, we should all do a spring cleaning of our heart and wash off anything that doesn't belong by God's Word. But since we are still sinners and this isn't likely to happen, we should stay where God has us, as long as the Gospel is being preached and the Word upheld as the only source of life and truth and we should learn to get along. Learn to love. Learn step by step, day by day, difficulty by difficulty, argument by argument, how to look another follower of Christ in the eye and say "I love you, and I am your brother and sister, no matter how our many worthless thoughts may differ."
Not an easy task. But if we are to heal from the many wounds that have been inflicted in the past and the many fiery arrows the evil forces are sending our way at this very moment, we must work together. We must focus our energies on our unity. It is essential.
So to my little section of the Body, I plead: Let us love one another. Let us get along. Let us respect each other and defer to each other. Let's not fight about things that don't matter.
Until He comes back. I'm for you, you be for me. We'll get to the finish line together. After all, we aren't racing against each other. There's no easy way to get to that line where He stands with open arms unless we help one another.
May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me. John 17:23
DISCLAIMER: After I wrote this blog I continued to watch "Paul the Apostle" and discovered some objectionable material. It is a secular miniseries and does contain some elements that are definitely not for children, and some that aren't for adults either. There is brief nudity and violence. The questionable aspects have nothing to do with the message, which was still excellent.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
The Heritage
So this is my Great-Great Grandma Gilbert, pictured with her husband, Joseph McGregor.
I know, she's not much to look at. This sturdy pioneer woman helped raise my grandfather after his father was killed in an accident saving his children's lives. She died from an accidental self-induced carbolic acid poisoning. And she is descended from kings all the way back to the tenth century.
As you can tell, I've been doing some genealogy research. My Dad started it on ancestry.com, and I've been researching some of the fascinating characters that grace the pages of my family tree.
Some of my relations include Emily Dickinson, the nineteenth century poet, who is a great aunt of sorts on both sides of my paternal grandparents. I suppose that isn't too surprising, considering the level of interest in writing in my family. Maybe it's my all-too-overactive imagination, but I can see my sister Kathy's face in her portrait, and I can hear my Grandma's provoking rhyme in her wandering, thoughtful poetry.
Others, such as the Cables of Cade's Cove, and Christopher Martin, whose name appears with 40 others on the Mayflower Compact, have left their mark on history. My Scottish ancestors heralded from the McGregor, McDonald and Robertson clans during the middle ages, and I have many many ancestors from the Netherlands back into the 1500's.
It's been Grandma Georgianna Gilbert's pedigree that has been the most surprising and interesting. Through the Gilbert family, I found myself back in fourteenth century England, during the reign of King Henry VIII, visiting castles and palaces, rubbing arms with royalty, walking the halls of Cambridge and Oxford with my British ancestors. I found that the Holland family, some of my relatives during this time period, are quite possibly descended to the Plantagenet line of English kings, and I was able to trace those through historical records through Norman and Viking kings all the way back to a "Fulk, King of Jerusalem" in the tenth century. I am not so proud of his crusading exploits, or his title "Fulk, the Rude," but I am fascinated that this body that sits here this night in 2009 has a connection to such a past. The distant, unreachable, unfathomable past so many grandmothers and grandfathers ago... and yet there is a link.
Also through the Gilberts I found some more commendable fathers. A brother to my own great-times-a-few grandfather was Sir Henry Adams, who left a legacy of service and charity and also a "stone" of some sort that killed him and is now kept at a laboratory somewhere inside Cambridge University. His effigy is pictured here.
My extremely distant relative through the Benedict family of Nottinghamshire and Norfolk, was Benedict, brother of King Canute IV of Denmark in the mid-eleventh century. He apparently gave his life along with his brother as a martyr, and so his family named lived on through the centuries.
I realize that many people are descended from interesting historical figures. The further back history takes us on the path of our relatives, the more related we all become. But I am completely intrigued by history to the point of obsession, and to have some sort of link with the dark pages of the past - to me - is not unlike uncovering a treasure that has been buried away for years.
There's a place that the Spirit always seems to redirect me when I am lost in the ocean of people and places from history. Though these people handed down their DNA in some form to combine with others and eventually form the person I am, it is the spiritual link that is more sure, more tangible, and more unbending and unquestionable than even my own family tree. Jesus came. Jesus did an amazing thing at Calvary and then burst from a sealed tomb to change the world. His Spirit left turned the hearts of fearful, fleeing disciples into strong hearted apostles that set their faces toward the far corners of the world and went with a joyful message of love and peace. Their legacy, though tried by crosses, by fire, by beheadings, by tortures, by ridicule and false doctrine and every sort of attempt by darkness to uproot it and leave it lost in the hidden corners of history's documentations... their legacy only grew stronger. The fires of trial and persecution only refined that strength into a deeper and more unrelenting passion that lives on today. And that fire lives on in me.
The fire that joined my heart to Christ's 26 years ago is my true lineage, my most amazing connection to history. And I have no shame to be called a child of God, though I can find reasons to be ashamed of my ancestors. So I will not boast in kings and princes that ruled earthly realms, but instead I will boast in my Savior Jesus Christ.
And you can too. Acceptance into this amazing heritage of a family is guaranteed and irrevocable.
All you have to do is ask.
Friday, June 26, 2009
Noah's Rainbow
This morning a very dear lady who suffers from some serious diseases arose early and couldn't go back to sleep. So she got up, went to her chair to pray, and ended up praying for Noah's results to be okay today.
A few minutes later she felt prompted by the Spirit to go look out the window. Not the window she usually looks out. The other window. When she pulled back the curtains, a huge rainbow graced the sky. No rain. Just a beautiful, clear rainbow.
Noah's rainbow.
She knew to expect the call she got a few minutes later from my mom. She knew that Noah would be okay.
And he is! Praise the Lord, God has spared our son from cancer, and he is a healthy little boy with some overactive lymph nodes! The peace that God has provided the whole way through this trial has been in part from all the wonderful people who have prayed for us with compassion and love. We are so thankful for the grace of the Lord in giving us so many people who love our son. We are most thankful for the dear Lord who loves him more than we do. We know he will always be safe in our Father's hands.
And last night at dinner Noah prayed for the special lady that has been praying for him. We will never forget how important prayer is, and how much we need to pray for those who are suffering. Prayer changes things. I am now more convinced of this than ever.
And we will never forget about Noah's rainbow. This one, nor the one that the original Noah saw as he stepped out of the ark onto waterlogged, but dry ground. Noah will hear both stories, and he will learn to trust the Lord, and to trust His faithful promises.
The Lord is not slow in keeping his promises. 2 Peter 3:9
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
Chaos... Yet Peace
And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus. - Philippians 4:7
I am at a place I never expected to be. It's one of those things that you worry constantly as a mother will happen, but you never truly anticipate your worst fears becoming a reality.
For anyone who is a mother, you can appreciate my fears for my children. It seems especially during these years of pregnancy and hormonal ups and downs that it's so easy to be anxious over every sniffle and fever.
The ironic thing is now that I am facing a very real unknown, though I am definitely worried and anxious for the results that we will get Friday, I am experiencing a completely ridiculous, even inappropriate peace. Those are strange words to use, I know, but it is the only way I can think to describe my emotional state right now.
For those who don't know what I'm talking about, my three-year-old son had surgery yesterday to remove three huge lymph nodes that are at this moment being biopsied to check for lymphoma. This alone, I know, is not a huge cause for concern, since the statistics are excellent (almost 90%) for them to come back benign. Yet when the doctor removed them, he told us with concern that they were "suspicious." I suppose that moves us down in the percentage a few categories.
It's a mystery to me how I can get myself so worked up into the "what ifs" and "please, Lord, no" of this life when nothing is wrong, and then when God does allow a stressful week of waiting to know whether we are about to embark on a scary road of childhood cancer or if we will be set free from this trial... well, there's just so much peace.
Don't get me wrong. I feel a great weight almost crushing my chest, stealing my breath. It's kind of like running a marathon - pushing past that pain to persevere and finish this race. It's burning, it hurts, it's the furthest thing from comfortable. But I'm okay with being here.
What? Okay with the possibility of your son having cancer? Of course, the answer is a resounding NO! The thought of it is the scariest thing I have ever seriously considered. But I'm okay with God allowing something really painful. I'd compare it to when Peter jumped out of that boat and started walking on that water toward Jesus. As long as his eyes were pinned on Jesus, he did fine. It was only when he started looking around at where he was that he started to sink and be afraid. So at this moment my eyes are GLUED to Christ. I get senses of the scary storm around me, but all I see is Him. And I am definitely okay with that. I would say I can see His face more clearly right now. And I have to admit, He's beautiful.
So all this to say, don't waste your joyful times worrying about the battles to come. God doesn't give His perfect peace that passes understanding to us when we don't need it. But don't mistake it - it's there in abundance, overflowing - when we do.
And please pray for my little boy if you think of it. Please pray that God will spare him the hard road of cancer. Please pray that we will get a good report of benign lymph nodes later this week.
But pray most of all that God will do His perfect will. Because He really does know best, whatever the circumstances are. I can say that with more assurance than I ever have before.
"It feels like chaos, but somehow there's peace." - Sanctus Real
Sunday, June 21, 2009
My Only Son
You will keep in perfect peace him whose mind is steadfast, because he trusts in you... Isaiah 26:3
My most precious possession... my only son
With trembling hands, I lay him at Your feet
I give up control of his life, his health, his future
For I know it was never mine.
I trade my questions, my fears, my moments of doubt and bewilderment
I give them up to you, knowing that in return You promise...
Perfect peace. Beyond my capacity to understand.
A peace that doesn't make sense. A peace that surprises me, surprises those who watch me step into this trial where my son will be placed on Your altar. They know I should be wild with fear. They know I should be weeping, not praising.
And yet I praise. I praise You for being so good for an eternity past that my mind has no rational reason not to let you hold him. I praise You because You have always been a healer, compassionate to the frailty of our lowly bodies wracked with sin. Were I to turn my son over to a human being, to take him and try to heal him with shaking human weakness, I would despair. It is only because a sparrow can't fall without You watching and caring. It is only because of the droves of people that brought their children to You in order to have your holy, gentle hands heal their diseases. You have given so much hope to so many parents, that I cannot help but trust You.
My only son, yet he is yours. You deserve to have his tender heart within your capable hands that hold the universe. For You gave me Your son. Willingly. Without compulsion. I give you mine because I have no choice. He is only safe with you. You gave me yours to die in my place. You offered him on the altar for my sake that there might be some hope of my life glorifying you instead of being a waste.
My only son, because of your only Son.
Take him in Your arms. Heal him. Set him right and set him on his feet again. May he grow, and learn more about You, and follow You to places You have planned for him to journey. May he love you unreservedly, with complete trust and hope that translates into simple faith. May his life glorify Your name.
May You start a work in his heart as he walks through this trial, hand in hand with his mom and dad. May all of this be a tool used for Your kingdom, to bring honor to Your name.
For that is what I pray my only son's life will accomplish.
And I'm thankful for the peace that passes all understanding, and keeps our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus. Lord, You are good.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Two Purposes for Life
"Did God die on the cross?"
This was the abrupt question from my three-year-old son recently, as I sat at the breakfast table with my children. Pleasantly surprised by the question, I took a minute to thank the Lord, since I have been eagerly waiting for Noah to show some interest in the cross and salvation. In my pause, my five-year-old Hannah beat me in answering.
"Yes, Jesus died on the cross for our sins."
I took a breath, about to pick up where she had left off...
"And because of that, we can have our sins forgiven and go to heaven someday. Do you have sins, Noah?"
I looked back at Noah, who was soaking up his sister's words. I was impressed. I'm not commonly sure that Noah hears a word I say.
"No, I don't have any sins." he replied, looking a little confused, as if he wasn't sure this was correct, but rather that he thought it was the right answer. He knew he SHOULDN'T have sins, even though he was pretty sure he did.
"Oh, yes, you do!" Hannah said in a cheerful tone, the excitement of her year-and-a-half as a follower of Christ spilling over in her expression.
"Oh." Noah smiled, glad that Hannah had answered for him.
I waited, wondering if the moment was over and we had lost dear Noah to thoughts of airplanes or the pool or the bug crawling on the wall. But Hannah wasn't finished with him yet.
"Would you like to ask God to forgive your sins so you can go to heaven?" she invited. I almost expected her to break forth in a rousing rendition of "I Have Decided to Follow Jesus."
"Yeah." Noah said. "And I like to fly the airplane in the backyard."
I saw Hannah's face fall a little bit, and she returned to eating her breakfast, sensing that she had lost her brother's attention.
"He's still little." I reminded her. "You're doing a good job telling others about Jesus, just like the Bible tells us."
"Yeah." she agreed. "But mom, I feel sad for the people who don't believe in Jesus when they die."
I nod, sighing. "Me too."
What I would give for such an uncomplicated version of a heart dedicated to the Great Commission. There are no obstacles for her that I let come into my heart, like "Now isn't the right time" or "I don't know what to say" or "When they ask I'll know it's time to say something." She just speaks from a heart overflowing with love for her Savior.
I know there have been and will always be times when the Spirit speaks through me and uses me to share His wonderful story. But my daughter's simple attitude convicts me that those times should come more often. That I should worry less about the mechanics of sharing the major points of theology and just live and breathe the One I love, the One who is coming, the One who is the answer to any problem this life will inevitably bring around.
After all, I'm here for a reason, and it isn't to have a nice house and fill it with nice things and have all my needs and wants met. God wouldn't have left us here for this time if there weren't a specific purpose in all the hard times we face throughout our earthly sojourning. There are two, and only two, ultimate purposes for life.
ACCEPT CHRIST.
TELL OTHERS.
Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Amendment
It's a rather basic rule for writers. At least for this culture. Don't preach to your audience. As strongly as I feel about any subject, it is not helpful to shake my finger in people's faces and tell them what's what.
So I amend my post from yesterday. Modification is in order. While I stand by every point I made, I left out the part where I give some practical applications to how I am going to endeavor to change my heart in the matter of being a member of the Laodicean church. (see previous post)
So, how in the world can I go from where I am to the place God has for me? How can I be earnest, repent, and invite Jesus into my heart's home to fellowship with him in this busy, busy society and time?
Well, I haven't figured it all out yet. But I've got some ideas. Obviously, the answer is in the Bible. Tonight in our family devotions we read Deuteronomy 30. A verse has been stuck in my mind ever since.
See, I set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction. For I command you today to love the LORD your God, to walk in his ways, and to keep his commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase, and the LORD your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess.
The key is loving God. When we love him, it makes us desire what he desires, and the result will be that we walk in his ways. When we do that, we find peace despite our circumstances. But this key is hard to grasp hold of in a time that is so against God in so many ways. Loving God cannot happen if we don't know him. The more time we spend with him, the easier this will come to us.
So if I can focus my energy and effort on loving God more, I will see him start to work in my life toward earnestness, toward repentance, and toward fellowship with him. It's what he wants. If the Creator of this universe desires to fellowhip with me, what kind of life am I missing out on if I choose my own way?
Just my thoughts on this Wednesday evening. I pray we all figure out what God wants for the church in this time in history. He loves us. He wants us. Let's move back toward him. Let's purpose to do things his way, even if it requires more effort than we think we possess.
It's suprising what you possess when you surrender to such an amazing Source of life and peace.
So I amend my post from yesterday. Modification is in order. While I stand by every point I made, I left out the part where I give some practical applications to how I am going to endeavor to change my heart in the matter of being a member of the Laodicean church. (see previous post)
So, how in the world can I go from where I am to the place God has for me? How can I be earnest, repent, and invite Jesus into my heart's home to fellowship with him in this busy, busy society and time?
Well, I haven't figured it all out yet. But I've got some ideas. Obviously, the answer is in the Bible. Tonight in our family devotions we read Deuteronomy 30. A verse has been stuck in my mind ever since.
See, I set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction. For I command you today to love the LORD your God, to walk in his ways, and to keep his commands, decrees and laws; then you will live and increase, and the LORD your God will bless you in the land you are entering to possess.
The key is loving God. When we love him, it makes us desire what he desires, and the result will be that we walk in his ways. When we do that, we find peace despite our circumstances. But this key is hard to grasp hold of in a time that is so against God in so many ways. Loving God cannot happen if we don't know him. The more time we spend with him, the easier this will come to us.
So if I can focus my energy and effort on loving God more, I will see him start to work in my life toward earnestness, toward repentance, and toward fellowship with him. It's what he wants. If the Creator of this universe desires to fellowhip with me, what kind of life am I missing out on if I choose my own way?
Just my thoughts on this Wednesday evening. I pray we all figure out what God wants for the church in this time in history. He loves us. He wants us. Let's move back toward him. Let's purpose to do things his way, even if it requires more effort than we think we possess.
It's suprising what you possess when you surrender to such an amazing Source of life and peace.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
The Bible Stands
I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth. You say, 'I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.' But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see. Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest, and repent. Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me. To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne.
What do you think when you are driving on the highway, and some driver comes along, disregarding every traffic law in the book right beside your car? Driving on the wrong side of the road, speeding or going below the speed limit, passing in no passing zones, not wearing seatbelts... or my personal pet peeve - parents who do not have young children in car seats, but rather allow them to move about the car freely and unrestrained?
Of course, it bothers all that are safe and conscientious drivers. We don't like to see people disobey the law, especially when it is we who suffer the consequences.
Consider this. Say you are driving and doing everything you should be, when a cop pulls you over, saunters up to your window, and something like this comes out of his mouth:
"A ways back you passed a car that was moving more slowly."
"I didn't exceed the speed limit." you say, a bit confused.
"Yeah, but I've decided that passing is against the law today. You just never know when passing is going to turn into speeding, and I'm not allowing it anymore."
Sounds kind of ridiculous, doesn't it? Of course this is counterproductive and not helpful to the general state of the roadways. What is concerning is that we as a church increasingly are doing everything we can to sabotage our own growth and productivity in Christ, the work He has us on this earth to do. Some of the ways we do this we don't even think about.
God made it clear from these verses from Revelation 3 to the Laodicean church (which I believe is most likely a representation of the final part of the church age)that being neither hot nor cold is unacceptable to Him. There are so many ways that we as a body of Christ make ourselves lukewarm, but all of them can be traced back to one major problem in the church today - and that is failure to yield to the authority of the Scripture.
This manifests in many different ways. Some go ahead and write new Scripture to add to the Bible. The problem arises when their words contradict the Bible. It seems people generally choose their own ideas in these cases.
Some hold on to traditions as the same as Scripture. This can be much more deceiving for believers who consider themselves to truly be saved by Christ, and may very well be. They have been taught a certain way of believing, which is very close to the Word, but still not quite right. When challenged, they cling to the traditions and teaching they have been handed down rather than cling to God's Words and let all else fall away.
It is interesting to think about some of the preconceived notions we have as a church that are not necessarily rooted in the Bible. An example of this is our ideas about Satan. I'm sure he is very relieved that the church believes he is so all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-seeing. I'm sure he's glad we think he can be everywhere, and attack each and every one of us. We've made him into a sort of "anti-God" when in reality he is only an angel. A fallen angel at that. And though he has a third of the angels that God created on his side, his abilities are so inferior to God's magnificent power that he isn't worth fearing or giving more credit than he is due. (When we are living in the strength of Christ, that is, for there is no question that he and his legions are still more powerful than us as human beings.)
We also tend to make heroes out of people, especially those who live in the past and whom we have never known personally. We have a very skewed picture of those who have gone before in Christ's name. Examples are the crusaders, whom for some reason I was taught to respect for their zeal in the name of Christ. When you take a good hard look at history, though, a great many of them actually went out and murdered God's people in Christ's name. Repercussions of these horrific acts of violence still ripple through the world today. Another example is the Puritans. They were certainly Puritans who truly loved Christ and lived for him. But a great amount of legalism existed in the Puritan life, and many people lost their freedom, their families, even their lives in honor of the rigid and impossibly stifling rules and demands Puritan leaders placed on their followers. Rules God never intended.
We tend to think that going overboard in our "righteous acts" would cause us to be "hotter" in God's eyes. In fact, it has the exact effect that God says makes him sick to his stomach. We mix our own version of righteousness, which is cold and dead, with His version, which is on fire with life and truth, and the result is a stale, disgusting, unappetizing lukewarm, like a drink that's been sitting in a hot car all afternoon.
I know this entry is long and more complex than I usually write. But if you don't read anything else, read this. God isn't interested in our brand of Christianity. It isn't good for us, it doesn't help us love or relate or win the lost he died to save. It's something that makes God sick.
That should be enough for all of us to get over what we think and just stick to what he says.
I don't mean just believing it. I mean first of all knowing it, which we are so lazy about. We are so busy and so distracted by our things and our money and our hobbies that we don't have time to study and know and love our Lord through his awesome and life-changing Book. That's why we don't know the truth, we don't understand his doctrines, and why we feel comfortable adding so much to it.
After we know what it says, we will learn to love God the way we are supposed to. The way that gives us life, and peace, and strength, and joy. He says that we should buy from him "gold refined by fire." That's not an easy thing to seek. It means we are going to have to suffer as He molds us and burns off all that doesn't belong. We would rather be happy. Healthy. Relaxed. Safe. And although the Lord promises in the passage that he does love us and wants these things for us, now is not the time. They are for later. Now we are to welcome that which seems hard.
He has two strong petitions for us: Be Earnest, (not lazy, selfish, apathetic, or proud but rather hard-working, others-focused, zealous and humble,) and then he urges us to repent. We have such a comfortable relationship with sin. We don't mind breaking God's rules as long as we don't break our own. Sin is sin, and for us to truly have a relationship with God, sin must be cared for. Whether ultimately in the saving power of Christ's gift, or day-to-day so that we can know him on a deeper level.
It's a challenge that's hard to write, because I know that I tend toward warm just as much as any other Christian in this time and place. But I want more. I want to be hot. I want God's people to be hot. We are so spoiled. It's time for us all to wake up and get it together.
I don't know if these words will mean anything, or if anyone is still reading. But I pray that we can get our temperature up in this culture and society. He's going to return, and none of us are going to be paying attention. None of us are going to be ready to leave.
Time to get ready.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
But for the Grace Go I
At the risk of adding to the problem, I have to say a few things about Jon and Kate Gosselin, the unlikely focus of the scrutiny of the world.
I've been bothered by the sick fascination of the media in what might be the demise of their home and marriage. Why, when there are plenty of hollywood stars who don't mind and even expect to have their pictures plastered across every tabloid in America, are two unfortunate parents taking their place?
Everyone is a judge. This blogger subscribes to a different attitude, and I believe it might serve us all to consider this perspective.
What would happen to me, if I were the parent of sextuplets and twins? If I hadn't asked for such a monumental task, hadn't done anything to cause such an unusual twist to my life, but found myself in the midst of the unthinkable with the person I had pledged my life to?
Only a handful of people can claim to know what it's like to be Jon and Kate. And what do we do? Berate them for their choices, slam them for their faults, and kick them when they are down, wagging our fingers at their shameful fall from grace. I can't take that position. Who are we to judge another's life, another's actions, another's sins or mistakes?
They took us into their homes. They allowed us to see them as they are, not hiding anything behind a mask of secrecy. We know Kate is rather uptight and controlling. She's never tried to deny that. She has admitted time and time again that it is something God is working on her to improve. And she HAS improved over the years. She's trying. We know that Jon doesn't like the spotlight. That he feels like he hasn't been able to make his own choices since stardom took over. And who among us would really like to be followed by cameras wherever they go? Isn't rebelling against that a likely response, whether right or wrong? And hasn't he apologized several times for his actions?
They have paid their debt to society and more. What happens now is between Jon Gosselin, Kate Gosselin, their Lord, and their children. It is not my business, it is not your business. We are not owed a peek into their privacy to see how they must resolve their relationship and the remnants of their dignity.
Put yourself in their position. Imagine the heartache of something that is crumbling around you that you thought would last for the rest of your life. Imagine trying to put that back together, piece by agonizing piece, while everyone around you watches and criticizes. Imagine it, and tell them that it is all their fault. We entered a trust with them when we allowed their family to be our entertainment. We have wronged them too. We've contributed, by eating up the frenzy of ridiculous media attention that they never gave permission for. By being entertained by their painful reality. By thinking that any one of us are above them because we could have done it better.
Jesus once told a mob ready to stone a woman who was caught in sin "He who is without sin may cast the first stone." I know that I'm not. There's no way I'm picking up a stone. I have fights with my husband, I have trouble remembering not to take control in our marriage, I don't always make the righteous choice. I'm sure those tendencies would be magnified a hundred fold if I were put in the situation they have been cast into. I only walk this road but for the grace of God. I only stay out of those waters by His grace.
So for Jon and Kate and their beautiful family, I will pray. Because I know that if they were standing here in this room with me, and I asked them what I could do, that's what they would ask for. They certainly wouldn't ask for my opinion, my curiosity, my judgment or my scrutiny.
Pray for them. Don't stop. And don't feed the media attention. Give this family some privacy.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
All I Really Need
The words I write tonight do not flow willingly or easily as usual. I like to write about things I've already learned. Things I already know about. Ways I've already seen God work for good.
There's a formidable and unrelenting grip that holds the heart of a mother. God put that tie there on purpose, so that we could protect our little ones. But when anything threatens that child, it can tear a mommy's heart in two.
About a month ago, Noah got a cold. A few days later he got a sore throat and fever. A trip to urgent care revealed he did not have strep. He was sent home "with a virus" that would resolve itself in a few days.
Well, over four weeks later, three excessively enlarged lymph nodes remain. Last week, wanting to get to the bottom of why my little boy can hardly breathe, eat or sleep because of these swollen glands, I took him to the pediatrician's office. The doctor who examined him (not his own doctor) was convinced he had mono. She sent him for a blood test to confirm. The blood test did not confirm. I took him back to see his regular doctor, and to my surprise some words began to come out of her mouth that struck terror into my heart. "I'm going to be very honest with you.... ordering more tests... Atypical lymphocytes... lymphoma... cancer."
Taking a deep breath, I asked if she was just being cautious or if she had reason to suspect the unthinkable. She assured me she was being cautious, but that sometimes lymphoma can present in this manner. She sent us for more blood work and x-rays.
As I held my baby boy in my arms as they tried unsuccessfully to find a vein that would relinquish the needed blood, and as I felt his little body stiffen and heard his cries of pain, I felt a new definition of pain that I have seldom experienced.
When Noah was born, the nurses that assisted raved about how big and strong he was. How they had never seen such a healthy heartbeat, and they cheered as they weighed and measured him. I never expected to face the possibility of him being ill.
Noah's bloodwork and tests all came back negative. I'm not exactly sure what that means. He saw an ENT who called his lymph nodes "impressive" and put him on steroids and antibiotics to try to shrink them down. In two weeks, the verdict will be made on whether a biopsy will be needed.
And so a mother waits. Sometimes scared. Sometimes at peace. During the day, able to put it to the back of her mind as she goes about the busy tasks of a mommy. Here, in the stillness of the midnight hour, shedding tears of concern for her son. And yet I know that in the darkest hours of life, Jesus is able to shine even brighter. In the weakest moments of a parent's journey, there is a strength in knowing that no matter what happens, a child is loved beyond all measure by a Creator.
And so a mother rests on the faith of a love that went the distance. On a Savior who loved enough to die. Who will bear the scars of His devotion for eternity. Surely He is able to hold my Noah in those strong and gentle hands. And though my tears may fall often in the next few days of waiting, I am ever convinced of the love of God. Of His power to overcome the sinful darkness of this world.
Jesus, You are all we really need. Thank you.
In the darkest hour I must face
I’m counting on Your grace to give me all I need
Sunless days and cheerless nights will pass
And work their work at last to form Your joy in me
For when I am weak
I find that You are strong, and
All I really need is Your grace
All I need to know is You are near me
All I need is You
All I really need is Your grace
All I need to know is You are for me
All I need is You
All I need is You
Some may place their hope in feeble men
I can’t do that again, for only You are strong
I will pray to God who lifts my head
To You who came and shed
Your blood for all my wrongs
For when I am weak
I find that You are strong, and
Lord, I know You hear my every sigh
You hear the raven’s cry and give the sparrow food
How much more will You provide in love
For those You bought with blood
and work all things for good
And when I am weak
I find that You are strong, and
Words and music by Mark Altrogge
© 2006 Sovereign Grace Praise
You can download this song for free at http://www.sovereigngracestore.com/ProductInfo.aspx?productid=M4205-00-21
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
Dear Noah
Dear Noah,
It is safe to say that life changed forever as of September 15, 2005. My little man was born.
I didn't have any proof that you were a boy until 8:36 p.m. when you finally exited the premises and graced the world with your presence. I knew in my heart you would be a boy before you were even conceived. And though I never gave any thought to the name prior to the months before your birth, I knew your name was Noah. Daddy was hesitant, because Daddy likes common names that could not possibly be ridiculed. (Little did he know "Noah" would be in the top 15 of popular names 3 years later!)God had to do some convincing, but Daddy ended up sure that Noah you must be.
Noah means "rest." It seemed appropriate when you spent the first two weeks of your life doing little but sleeping. But now that you are three and 48 pounds of boundless unrelenting energy, it seems a little incongruous.
It's true, you give your mommy little "rest" these days, but still there is something, beneath all those layers of over sized preschooler hyperactivity, in spite of the frequent uncalled for screeches out of nowhere at the dinner table, regardless of the complete absence of volume discretion when you use your voice... that speaks peace to me. Who would think that such a crazy little boy is actually thoughtful, observant, perceptive to the feelings of others, and empathetic beyond his years?
God knew what He was doing when He gently insisted that you be named Noah. And God has a plan for your life. I'm so excited to see what He will do through you to affect the world around you for His glory. I'm so glad that the sleepy 9 1/2 pound, red-headed baby boy I held in my arms one quiet Thursday night 3 1/2 years ago has become the tall, solid red-headed little boy I spend my days with now. I'm glad that you love your sisters. I'm glad that you walk in your Daddy's shadow. I'm glad for your jokes and your deafening belly laugh and your monster sounds and your aptitude for figuring out a problem.
Noah, you bring rest to my soul.
Love,
Mommy
Monday, April 27, 2009
Happy Endings
Some women like dinner in a fine restaurant. Some like a picnic in the park. Some like a darkened theater and a tub of popcorn.
I also like these things when my husband and I get a few cherished hours to ourselves. I've had many a good date with my love doing all of the above.
But if he really wants to impress me, he knows to take me to a haunted house and cemetery, as he did this past Saturday afternoon.
If you've read more than a post or two from this blog, you probably aren't a bit surprised to hear of my affection for the morbid fantastical. It's not really morbid in my mind. I like old houses full of history and stories, so the Thurber House in downtown Columbus caught my attention and provided me with an afternoon of reveling in the quiet halls of the past. I like cemeteries, especially very old, very creepy cemeteries like Greenlawn in Columbus for sort of the same reason: history. My mind goes into blissful overload as I imagine who Cornelia August Weller was and why she died at the age of 21 in 1842. It just sweetens the experience when I read in fascination that "Those who knew her best loved her most." Was she lost to a cholera epidemic? Did she catch pneumonia? Did she give her life in vain to bring a stillborn child into the world?.
And what of Georgie Bowland who lived for only two short days in dismal February in the year 1852? What anguish did his parents experience as they laid their little son below the snow?
As we wandered on, we came upon the imposing stone mausoleum of the Hayden family that was built in 1904. Beautiful copper green with age elegantly lined the roof, and ornate metal covered the antiquated wooden doors. Chilled air blew between the dark opening and met our skin in a shocking difference to the 85 degrees of the air outside. I peeked in, and broken down stones and lonely oppressive atmosphere was my only greeting from the floor of broken tiles to the moss covered stain glass in the ceiling.
My husband and I began to talk about our own eventual mortality, should Jesus not return in our lifetime. Since I sincerely believe He will, I don't take death as seriously as my engineer minded husband. I told him in all truthfulness that I would like the eeriest looking statue that could be found to be placed atop my tombstone, so that in two or three hundred years I could creep out every visitor that came near. Since he would be sharing a stone with me, he was going to have to come to terms with that idea. He said that was fine. He asked me what I wanted written on my tombstone.
I thought of Cornelia, who was loved best by those that knew her most. I thought of Georgie, whose parents love lives on even after their own demise. I carefully mulled over the idea and finally said. "With Jesus." I decided. "Or maybe 'Finally.'"
No matter whether Jesus hasn't returned in hundreds of years. Whether I meet him in a cloud in the air, or I cross the darkness and enter His welcoming light through the shades of death, either way I will be with Him. Forever.
I guess that's why I like happy endings. No matter how sad the story is, no matter how fraught with trouble and heartache, if there's a happy ending, then it's all been worth it.
For every moment will be worth it all - when I set eyes on my Savior.
The first picture at the top is the haunted stairwell of the Thurber House on Jefferson Avenue in Columbus, Ohio. Well substantiated experiences of people including James Thurber himself report pacing in the dining room followed by the sound of someone running very quickly up the stairs. The rest of the pictures are from Greenlawn Cemetery in Columbus, which was opened in 1848.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
Reflections of a Daughter of Jerusalem
In observance of the Easter holiday, I'm posting some excerpts from my first novel, "Daughter of Jerusalem," which I wrote in 2004. The story is from the perspective of Mary Magdelene, and we are joining her as she stands before the cross. I hope you enjoy!
The next few hours seemed to move in slow motion. I felt as if I were drifting under water, so powerless and weak I was. I stood helplessly as the one who had given me my life back gave up his life. He did this without a word of protest or indignation. The soldiers crucified the criminals and then turned their full attention on Yeshua. They stripped him of his clothes, and mounted him on the wooden frame. Carelessly they strapped his arms down and one of them brought forth large metal spikes.
Yeshua cried out in agony as the soldier steadied the spike at his wrist and gave it a swift bang with the hammer. I cried with him, standing as near as the soldiers would allow. The others remained quiet, watching in sorrow as our dearest friend and son was nailed to that Roman cross, and then raised and dropped into the hole that had been dug. As the cross fell rigidly into position, his body shuddered in unimaginable suffering. Yet his words caused the soldiers to stop in their tracks and look at him.
“Father, forgive them. They don't know what they are doing.” he prayed.
“I knew this day would come. Somehow, I've always known.” I heard his mother whisper circumspectly.
The crowd began to disperse as the soldiers finished their motley duty and sat down in a huddle to play games in the dirt, casting lots over who should win the garment that Yeshua had worn. I saw Mary’s tears fall anew as she beheld the clothing.
“I made that tunic for him, when he left home.” She explained with great sorrow.
I saw the centurion in charge turn slightly as she spoke. He stole a glance at her, and I thought I saw some sort of emotion on his face. We made our way closer, and stood underneath the cross as a thick darkness settled over the city, like the darkness before a storm.
Yeshua suddenly became aware of our presence. He looked upon his mother, who lifted sad eyes to watch her firstborn die.
“Dear woman,” he said to her between heaving gasps for air. “Behold your son.”
She looked at John, who stood beside her.
“Here is your mother.” Yeshua managed to say to John before he began to cough and struggle for air. His eyes fell on me as well, and though he said nothing, I could read his heart.
“Trust me, Mary. Trust me even when everything seems to be lost.”
He had a short conversation with the other criminals, and then his expression turned anxious. He lifted his eyes to the sky and searched back and forth in great agitation.
“Eloi, Eloi lama sabachthani!“ he shouted in a mournful and forsaken tone.
“What did he say?” I asked John in a whisper, unable to discern his words.
“I think he asked God why he had forsaken him.” John replied ruefully.
“I am thirsty.” Yeshua spoke again, his voice raspy as he heaved for breath.
Mary sprung into action, demanding that the soldiers give him a drink. They smiled tolerantly at her and did not move, but a man came and lifted a sponge that was soaked in wine vinegar to Yeshua's mouth. He took a small drink, then moved his head away from it. He lifted his eyes again to the heavens, recognizing something that we did not see or hear.
“It is finished.” He spoke judiciously, great relief seeming to relax him.
“No,” I whispered hopelessly. “Don't give up, Adonai!”
Yeshua bowed his head and spoke one final, slurred sentence.
“Abba, into your hands I commit my spirit.” He prayed, and then he went limp.
Never have I felt such anguish and complete desolation as I did in that moment. I fell to the ground, no tears left to cry, no emotion that could express the depth of the grief that tormented my soul. He was gone. The one we had followed, had trusted, had given everything up for was dead. Broken, defeated, and dead.
Not a split second after he died, the wind began to blow, and the sky went completely black as night. Thunder rumbled and lightning shot across the sky in a display I had never seen before. John futilely tried to herd us to shelter, but it was no use. The rain pelted us and the ground began to shake with a tremulous earthquake. Screams went up everywhere as terrified people ran for cover. We huddled together and waited for the dark despair of the earth and sky, which seemed to lament the loss of its Creator, to once again be calm. It seemed that all of nature protested the crime that had been committed, so that even the hardened Roman centurion who had callously ordered the spike driven into Yeshua's healing hands was the one who summed it all up the most eloquently.
“Surely this man was the Son of God.”
Two days later...
On Sunday morning, before I even saw the first glimpse of sunrise in the eastern sky, I woke the other women. We prepared the spices that Lazarus had gone home to Bethany to bring to us, to take to the tomb. We set off on our terrible duty, silently and reverently making our way out of the city to the garden where Mary and I had returned from a few hours before.
Mary and I arrived first, hurrying ahead of the other women.
“How will we move the stone?” Mary was asking as we turned the corner to ascend the steps to the tomb.
She stopped suddenly, her hand going out to stop me.
“Look!” she whispered in fear. My heart skipped a beat as I turned to behold what she saw. A chill went up my spine as I saw the dark entrance to the tomb, and the huge stone rolled away! Beside the heavy stone were two Roman guards, lying on the ground, looking very much like they were dead!
“They've taken him!” I breathed in reply. “We've got to tell Cephas and John!”
Dropping the spices where they were, I raced back to the place where the disciples were. I passed the other women on the way, and they gave me a strange look.
“Cephas! John!” I practically screamed as we threw open the door and fell into the room. They jumped to their feet.
“What's wrong?” Cephas asked as he punched his arms into his cloak.
“He's gone! He's gone!” was all I could manage at first.
“What?” John replied in disbelief.
“They must have taken him! We don't know where they put him!” I tried to explain breathlessly.
Immediately they brushed past us and ran for the tomb. I took a deep breath and ran after them. I had to know.
John got to the tomb first. He stopped short in front of it, leaning down and peering inside, but suddenly afraid to go any further. Cephas wasn't afraid, however, and hurried past him into the tomb. A few moments later both of them came back to where I stood.
“Is he there?” I suddenly felt the lump in my throat and the tears stinging my eyes. Cephas shook his head and walked on, muttering something to himself. John stared thoughtfully back at the tomb.
“All that is there is the strips of linen he was wrapped in. Just sitting there like he just vanished into thin air.”
He left me and walked down the path after Cephas. I was left alone. I stepped closer to the tomb, and boldly dared to peek within. I was astonished to see two people, shining brightly in white clothes and smiling at me. Only as I looked back on it later would I realize that they were angels. They were sitting where Yeshua's body had been laid.
“Why are you crying?” One of them asked cheerfully, as if crying were an absurd choice on such a happy occasion. I stared at them in complete and utter disbelief.
“They have taken my Adonai away,” I stammered. “And I don't know where they have put him.”
I heard a sound behind me and swung around, seeing the form of a man but unable to make out whom it was because of the tears that were flooding my eyes. I assumed it was the gardener.
“Woman, why are you crying?” he asked in a strangely familiar voice. I was too preoccupied to notice to whom it belonged. “Who are you looking for?”
I sobbed and came closer to him. “Sir, if you have taken him away, tell me where you have put him, and I'll go get him.” I knew the words didn't make sense. But my mind was so confused by the events of the day that I was completely beyond sounding coherent.
There was a long pause, and then I heard the sound that brought every inch of confusion into sudden and complete clarity.
“Mary.”
The same voice that had spoken my name in exactly that way so many times before was unmistakable to my listening ears. It was Yeshua! He was alive!
“Rabboni!” I cried out, falling to my knees before him and reaching for his feet.
“Don't hold on to me, Mary. Instead, go tell my brothers that I have risen and I will come to them!”
I beheld his familiar face, now whole again, free of the blood and the wounds and the bruises. He was simply my Adonai again. With a clean white robe and a light shining from his face that I had never seen before and do not possess the words to explain, he stood before me, smiling affectionately and still chuckling at my astonished joy.
“Go, Mary!” he said again, and I turned and ran as fast as I could to bear the news to the disciples.
Friday, April 10, 2009
Good Friday?
It is a day of remembering. It is a day to step back and really look at what we tend to take for granted, even as the beloved of Christ.
I look at the cross, and I see love. I see the love that came through time and matter and transformed into my own weak likeness for one simple mission. To bring me out of my helpless circumstance. Sin held me captive, forcing me like a slave to do its work. With love as a constant motive, he let weak humans beat him. Spit on him. Mock him. Nail him in shame to a cross for all to jeer at him. He had the restraint not to call down their doom. He had the patience to ask for their forgiveness. He had the love - for me - to stay there on that cross until the very last sin had been atoned. He bore the weight of all the horrific crime that mankind has been capable of in a few thousand years of history. All of that rested on his shoulders. How strong my beloved is!
I look at the cross, and I see peace. This world is a frightening place. There are earthquakes, tornadoes, murder, hatred, warring, cancer, disease, depression and addiction. That's just today's news. But in all of that, the sweet peace of Jesus is a constant balm to troubled souls. His peace exceeds my understanding. I only know it is there, and there is nothing that I should or must fear.
I look at the cross, and I see hope. Hope for those who have been bound too long in sin. Hope because he stands before every one of us, holding out his heart, his life, his love. There is hope that we don't have to stay where we are. That we will be eternally safe by simply reaching out and taking his hand. Hope is real, because we don't have to be clean or right or secure before he will accept us. He takes us as we are, and makes us beautiful by his touch.
What do you see when you look at the cross? Do you see an awful tale of woe? If you do, you don't understand. When you look at the cross, you are looking at your remedy.
Here we are
Here we are
The broken and used
Mistreated, abused
Here we are
Here You are
Here You are
The beautiful one
Who came like a Son
Here You are
So we lift up our voices
We open our hands
To cling to the love
That we can't comprehend
Oh, lift up your voices
And lift up your heads
To sing of the love
That has freed us from sin
He is the one
Who has saved us
He is the one
Who embraced us
He is the one who has come
And is coming again
He's the remedy
Here we are
Here we are
Bandaged and bruised
Awaiting a cure
Here we are
Here You are
Here You are
Our beautiful King
Bringing relief
Here You are with us
So we lift up our voices
And open our hands
Let go of the things
That have kept us from Him
He is the one
Who has saved us
He is the one
Who forgave us
He is the one who has come
And is coming again
He's the remedy
Oh, I can't comprehend
I can't take it all in
Never understand
Such perfect love come
For the broken and beat
For the wounded and weak
Oh, come fall at His feet
He's the remedy
He's the remedy
So sing, sing
You are the one
Who has saved us
You are the one
Who forgave us
You are the one who has come
And is coming again
To make it alright
Oh, to make it alright
You're the remedy
Oh, in us
You're the remedy
-David Crowder Band
Sunday, March 29, 2009
Red Envelope Day
Because a person's a person, no matter how small. - Dr. Seuss
I wanted to make sure that everyone knows about Red Envelope Day, March 31.
Just a quick explanation. As a Christian, I am concerned about the 50 million lives that have been lost through legalized abortion. Although I have strong belief that the war for these precious lives is more successfully won through love and support of both women and babies, I know that God would honor a country that honors life and protects the helpless.
It is with this concern that we are reaching out. It is the goal to send as many red envelopes to President Obama on March 31st as we possibly can, each one empty and representing a life that was not allowed to be lived.
You can get all the information you need at http://www.redenvelopeday.com/index.html - including sending online, where all you have to do is pay for your share and they will send them for you, or you can find out useful info such as how to make red envelopes from paper if you cannot find them in the store (I couldn't.)
So get involved! It's a chance to speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves. One little red envelope would never be noticed at the White House, but if we were able to send millions, perhaps minds would be changed. You never know what can be accomplished when the family of God comes together in unity and faith.
Beloved of God
I mentioned that I'd been reading this past month. That was quite the understatement. For a couple weeks, every spare moment as well as several sleepless nights found me devouring over 2500 pages of books. I did not expect to be so taken in by this series. When I tell you what it was, some of you will raise an eyebrow and maybe think a little less of me. (That's okay.) I was certainly skeptical before I opened the first book. But I don't like judging books by their cover. So I gave it a try.
In an attempt to explain myself so that you might be persuaded not to list me in the "crazy" file in your brain, I have to mention that I am not a casual reader. You may have noticed this if you read my blog on any sort of regular basis. I either can't get past the first ten or twenty pages of a novel, or I obsessively can't stop reading until the very last word of the epilogue and acknowledgments. You already know how this one went.
I will carefully try to explain why I found the "Twilight" series compelling enough to write a blog entry about them - without giving away too much in case you would like to read them yourself. But in case I do not succeed, please be warned before you continue reading this post! And yes - I'm getting to why I called this entry "Beloved of God" and what that possibly has to do with a teenage story about vampires and werewolves. Of course my little disclaimer - there was a bit of language that I don't condone and some problems with theology that of course I can't agree with biblically and I would caution that these are not children's books - there are themes that are for the more mature teenager and adult, as well as violence that would be troubling for a youngster.
"You were very nearly crushed to death in front of my eyes. Later I thought of a perfectly good excuse for why I acted at that moment - because if I hadn't saved you, if your blood had been spilled there in front of me, I don't think I could have stopped myself from exposing us for what we are. But I only thought of that excuse later. At the time all I could think was, 'Not her.'" - Edward to Bella, Twilight
This quote from the first book encompasses the main reason this story resonated in my being. It reminds me of my real, true life love, not my husband (who is wonderful and good and someone I won't mind spending eternity with) but rather Jesus, who saw me about to be crushed to death by sin, and sprang to action, running all the way to the cross to rescue me, all the while whispering under his breath.... "Not her."
I found myself on more than one occasion close to tears as the unlikely vampire hero, Edward, reminded me of Jesus over and over. In his restraint. In his sensitivity to others. In his striking beauty, his power. In his commitment to do right even when pressured to do wrong. But mostly in his love. His love that would rather suffer than let his beloved come to harm. Love that was strong and deep and enduring, even immortal. Love that considered her needs more important than his own. Love that kept watch through the long nights, singing a lullaby to chase away the nightmares.
I can't help but sigh for the thousands of teenage girls that read these books and went away dissatisfied, longing for their Edward that they are sure they will never find, when the truth is they are loved beyond all imagination. Loved more than Edward loved Bella enough to wait for her for a hundred years. Loved so much that there is One who longs to make them His immortal bride. That's the draw for me in these books... not because they are fantasy, but because the most important elements are so amazingly true!
It's something I tend to forget. I know all too well who I am, and I know I don't deserve to be loved this way, just as Bella often felt. I somehow distance myself from the love of my life, I think about Him often as a leader, a father, even, but it's hard for me to think of him as the hero of my love story. It's hard for me to think of myself as the heroine, I should say. Why would he love me enough to make me his own for eternity, knowing that I am weak and human? But he does. For some beautiful, unsearchable reason he does, and when he returns, he's going to make me like him. He's going to make me beautiful and strong and eternal and someone worth living with forever.
Pastor reminded us of this amazing truth this morning in his sermon. No longer destined for destruction, I am saved to be his bride. I am loved. I have nothing to fear, for he is right there beside me in the darkest hours, holding me, singing to me the song his love wrote.
I am sure it sounds something like this poignant song by Tenth Avenue North:
Love of my life
Look deep in my eyes
There you will find what you need
Give me your life
The lust and the lies
And the past you’re afraid I might see
You’ve been running away from me
You’re my beloved lover
I’m yours
Death shall not part us
It’s you I died for
For better or worse
Forever we’ll be
My love it unites us and it binds you to me
It’s a mystery
Love of my life
Look deep in my eyes
There you will find what you need
I'm the giver of life
I’ll clothe you in white
My immaculate bride you will be
Come running home to me
You’re my beloved lover
I’m yours
Death shall not part us
It’s you I died for
For better or worse forever we’ll be
My love it unites us and it binds you to me
It’s a mystery
You’ve been a mistress my wife
Chasing lovers that won’t satisfy
Won’t you let me make you my bride
You will drink of my lips and you’ll taste new life
You’re my beloved lover
I’m yours
Death shall not part us
It’s you I died for
For better or worse forever we’ll be
My love it unites us and it binds you to me
It’s a mystery
Mostly I dream about being with you forever. - Bella to Edward
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