Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Unseen Dangers

“Let us not fear the unseen dangers but let us learn to trust the One who Sees.”

I don’t like mosquitoes or most bugs for that matter.  It doesn’t seem fair that often you can’t see them and yet they can bite you.  That one bite can cause days of discomfort.  So much of life’s dangers are unseen.  The virus, bacteria, and toxins can all go undetected to the naked eye, yet they can have devastating and even deadly effects.  We are at risk of many unseen dangers, not only physically but emotionally as well. You can’t see the toll of grief, fear of the unknown and devastation of unmet longings.  Often we can see their effects, but much like the bite we can’t see it happening to us.  So then what?!  How do we see something that can’t be seen?  While there is nothing I can do to guarantee I never get bit again or sad again I can learn how to care for those things well both before and after.  I can use bug spray when I go in bug infested areas or make sure I’m getting rest and my life has margin so when other turmoil comes I have space to care for it.  I can learn not to see it as a failure on my part but as a part of the journey of life. So while I can’t ever expect to avoid all dangers I can learn to expect that they will come and when they do I can know how to care for those places.  

“But I call to God, and the Lord will save me. Evening and morning and at noon I utter my complaint and moan, and he hears my voice.  He redeems my soul in safety from the battle that I wage, for many are arrayed against me.”
Psalm 55:16-18 ESV


God never promised that battles wouldn’t wage against us.  It is very clear in scripture that we will face difficulties.  Yet what He does promise is that He will be there with us and He will help us through it.  The hard part is that sometimes the ways that God saves me is not the way I want to be saved.  I want Him to save me by making everything easy and removing the struggle.  Instead, He saves us through the struggle, not out of it.  He walks with us, guiding us, teaching us, holding us, but not always removing us from it.  He knows removing us from it doesn’t help us for the next time we face something.  As He walks with me through it I learn to trust Him and I grow the faith I need to walk through it again.  Oh I still ask for that removing but the more I see how He is redeeming me through the struggle the more I want to learn to let Him help me in His ways and not my own.  He hears, He saves, He redeems.  May we trust His ways to see how He will do it. The dangers may feel unseen but God sees us through it all. 

Monday, September 28, 2015

Until I Sit

It’s when I take time to sit that I know how to stand.

Sometimes I find the creativity just flows off the page as I write, but other seasons it seems I feel I have nothing to say.  Yet, there are other times, which I find is most times, that it’s not until I sit down to write that I realize there are words there waiting behind the noise of the day.  I’m reminded in these places how much I’m missing because I’m not sitting.  Well it’s more than the sitting but the stillness that comes when I stop.  If I go too long without sitting I find I can no longer stand.  It’s the sitting that gives me space to realign myself with all that I desire to stand for and the ways I want to live.  I have to find some stillness or I get misdirected by the waves of busyness.  I have to remember what’s important or else it’s decided for me by the demands of the day.  Until I sit I forget how to stand.  

“…Mary, who sat at the Lord's feet and listened to his teaching…but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her.”
Luke 10:39,42 ESV


Luke tells the story of the sisters Mary and Martha.  I love the picture of how Mary sits with Jesus.  I don’t want to get into Mary versus Martha but I want to look at how Jesus affirms Mary’s time sitting with Him.  He says it will not be taken away from her.  Sometimes we can see being still as a waste of time or be more inclined to be doing something that seems more productive.  Yet, in the words of Jesus this time that Mary sat with Him is the good portion.  It’s good to sit with Jesus.  When we take time to sit with Him we can hear His voice teaching us in the way we should go.  Jesus says to Martha in the midst of her troubling about many things that this one thing is necessary.  The one thing is to sit with Him.  How can we stand for Him if we don’t first sit with Him?!  

Monday, September 21, 2015

In the shadows

“Where life brings you shadows remember that means there is light.”

I recently did some off-roading in search of the yellow aspens of Colorado.  As much as I love shade on a hot day I found the shadows to be the hardest roads to navigate because they were the hardest to see what the road conditions were like.  It was those shadowed spots that required slower speeds and lots of trust for the unknown of what the tires might find beneath the shadows.  It’s interesting that something so refreshing in other circumstances can also be the most unsettling and blinding.  So many things in life feel shadowed and unknown.  They require slower speeds and more trust.  While the road I drove was hard to see at spots I had seen other cars coming and going and so I knew that I could trust the road.  Whatever shadows life brings we can trust the road is taking us somewhere for behind every shadow there is light.  Slow down, trust the light, and enjoy the ride.  

“Every good thing given and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shifting shadow.”
James 1:17 NASB

Even in scripture shadows have conflicting representation.  While we can find rest in the shadows it is also the shadows that bring deception and trials.  James is encouraging believers to persevere in trials knowing the goodness of our God.  He is the Father of light, except in His Light there is no shifting shadow.  He won’t deceive us.  He is constant and true in His goodness.  So then no matter what shadows we walk through, no matter how many pot holes lie unseen in the shadows we can trust His goodness to see us through.  We can trust Him to show us the way through every shadowed road knowing He is a good God, giving good gifts to His children.  If you can’t see any gifts remember that behind the shadow there is light, His light there to guide you through every shadow.    

“Now I am hidden, in the safety of Your love
I trust Your heart and Your intentions
Trust You completely, I’m listening intently
You’ll guide me through these many shadows”


Monday, June 22, 2015

What Really Matters

“Sometimes you have to look past the things on top to see what really matters.”

A day after the shooting at Charleston I was watching the news and they were interviewing a state politician about his thoughts on gun laws and flags at half mast.  I just kept thinking, ‘that’s not what really matters right now.’  I’ve been pleased to hear many other stories of people responding with what does really matter.  Stories of forgiveness and standing together remind me of what really matters.  While I agree there is a time and place to discuss many different things, I also find sometimes we miss what really matters.  It’s harder to look past the surface into the heart.  Yet, it is there that lies what really matters.  Many things matter like jobs, finances, health, belongings.  Yet, what really matters are the people.  Don’t miss the people in the midst of all the other things.  Don’t miss your heart in the midst of all that pulls on it.  Don’t miss what really matters in the midst of all the chaos.  

“For I want you to understand what really matters, so that you may live pure and blameless lives until the day of Christ’s return.”
Phil 1:10 NLT

Paul is applauding the people of Philippi for the ways they have shared Christ and praying this would continue to be true.  His prayer is that they would continue to grow in knowledge and understanding, loving well.  He wants them to understand what really matters.  Paul says this while in prison.  Paul is the first to be able to look past his circumstances and see that it’s not his circumstances that really matter.  What really matters is that we know Christ and make Him known and that’s exactly what he is doing from prison.  He wants those who love him to see the same.  I wish I was more like Paul, yet as I struggle to see past my circumstances I cling to this prayer for you and for me.  May we follow the prayers of Paul and understand what really matters, knowing it’s not our circumstances.  It’s not based on a job, relationship, finances or health.  What really matters is loving God and loving people.  May that truly be what really matters in our lives.  

Monday, June 15, 2015

More than Dabble

Change requires a full immersion of who you are and the patience to keep doing it. 

Dabble means to take part casually or partially. It’s fun to dabble and try new things to see what you like.  The problem is that often times I dabble expecting lasting change.  Change isn’t likely to come when we dabble, but rather when we immerse ourselves and give ourselves fully to a direction.  I recently listened to a health practitioner talk about this idea with his patients.  He stated the biggest obstacle to change was this idea of dabbling as opposed to training.  I see this so often when I’m teaching but unfortunately I see it most often in myself.  I complain that something didn’t work realizing that I only tried it a few times.  We want the quick fix but the real change takes time.  What if we gave ourselves fully to the change we want to see?  What if we took that dabbling a step further?  What if instead of partial we gave all of ourselves?  Let’s do more than dabble, let’s immerse ourselves.  

“…being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that you may have great endurance and patience…”
Colossians 1:11


I love this part of Paul’s prayer to the Colossians.  He prays they would have great endurance and patience, but first he prays for the Lord’s might.  It’s the only way we can endure the things of this life.  We want things to happen now.  We want the fast road to change.  Unfortunately most of the lasting change we’re after doesn’t happen like that.  It happens slow.  This requires great patience and endurance on our part, which does not come naturally for us.  So then we too must ask that we would be "strengthened with all power according to his glorious might so that we might have great endurance and patience."  For the change is worth the wait, it just takes time.  What I find as I wait is that I get more of Him, which is the greater change as I wait for change.  

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Love Moves Slow

The journey of the heart is best if you let it move slow.

After my recent trip to Asia I am reminded how real the effects of jet lag are on our bodies.  In the midst of my slow recovery a friend reminded me that we weren’t made to go that far that fast.  I can’t help but think that’s true for more than jet lag, but with our hearts as well.  I often find that I want my heart to move faster than it does.  I want healing faster than it comes.  The journey to freedom has no shortcuts and forgiveness takes longer than I want. So then I must wait.  I must go slow with my heart and let it take as long as it takes.  It’s not a race but a journey.  The journey of the heart is best if you let it move slow.       

“Wait for the Lord; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the Lord!”
Psalm 27:14 ESV

Wait!  You see this command many times throughout scripture.  It seems I’m not alone in my impatience for God to move.  I wanted Him to do things yesterday and yet He is in no hurry.  Sometimes it’s hard to trust that His timing is timely.  Sometimes He seems to move so slow.  Yet when I question His timing I can’t help but be reminded that He made time.  He is the author of time and the overseer of all times.  I’m reminded of all the times before where I saw His timing work out and was even thankful it didn’t happen as quick as I wanted.  He is so patient with me in my frequent slowness to turn to Him.  Yes, let me wait for Him!  Let our hearts take courage and wait for Him.  His timing is worth the wait.  His love moves slow, yet His love is always moving.  May it move you to wait and trust the Lord.  

Check out Audrey Assad’s song, Love Moves Slow…

Monday, April 20, 2015

Room for Hurdles

Make space for hurdles, give room for obstacles. 

As I prepare to leave for Southeast Asia for a month I’ve been thrown off by all of the unexpected obstacles.  (That’s my subtle way of letting you know that you won’t be receiving these emails for a few weeks. You can email me if you would like to be included on my updates) In driving school they advise you to leave distance between you and the car head of you.  This gives you time to react to unexpected stops and objects in the road.  As the road conditions decrease the advised distance increases.  So with rain the advised distance increases and then even more with more severe conditions like ice.  The same principles are needed in our daily lives.  Sometimes I pack my day so full that I leave no space for the unexpected.  Whether it’s a friend that stops by unexpectedly or the appliance that breaks life is full of things we didn’t plan.  When we already have space worked into our day we have room for these surprises.  Then they don’t take quite the same toll on us because we have made space for them.  The tricky part is learning to increase the space needed as conditions change.  If the conditions of your life are requiring more of you then greater space is required.  It doesn’t mean we aren’t capable of handling things it just means the conditions require more of us and that means more space.  Either way, whether it’s clear sailing or stormy we need to keep some space.  

“I’ve told you all this so that trusting me, you will be unshakable and assured, deeply at peace. In this godless world you will continue to experience difficulties. But take heart! I’ve conquered the world.”
John 16:33 The Message

Jesus is preparing His disciples for His departure.  Yet, not only for the actual event but for the years following.  He is also preparing us for that same reality of life.  He says that we will continue to experience difficulties.  So it seems that we should plan for that. This doesn’t mean we do this with a ‘woe is me’ attitude of pessimism but instead with the sober perspective of what is true.  For Jesus doesn’t say to go be upset because of the difficulties but instead to ‘take heart’ because the greater truth is that He has conquered the world.  So everything we are walking through has ultimately been conquered by Him.  Where does that leave us?  It means that yes we can expect life to be hard; Yes, we can anticipate hurdles along the way.  However, it’s also yes that we can be unshaken, assured and at peace when we remember God has conquered the world and everything in it.