Showing posts with label Refiner's Fire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Refiner's Fire. Show all posts

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Brave Strokes

(Revisiting Paris... )

It's only brushstrokes of color, heavy and textured, deliberate and intended, somehow brash and unrefined, and yet I hold my breath, hold this moment of witnessing. For it is that, the witnessing of something noble.

It's a painting. Just of sheets, a window, hooks, a chair or two. Nothing ornate, gilded, plush. Just a homely bedroom of a doleful, sometimes tortured, man, a man skimping by on money sent from his brother to buy food, to rent this humble place for a pillow. Hardly worth esteeming to canvas or the ages.

And yet...


"I had a new idea in my head... this time it's just simply my bedroom, only here color is to do everything and giving, by its simplification, a grander style to things...."



I stand inches from the frame, want to reach out and let fingertips touch this color doing everything, this simple thing doing a grand thing.

Daubs and strokes they are, swaths of oil shades, broad rich lines. Thick, layered color slashes across canvas stretched, like the underscoring of words. Like a statement.



My understanding of his language, his sentiment, is not cerebral but in the parts of me collecting, surging, with emotion, that tender place that speaks in colors, in movement. In that which the heart knows as inexpressible.

But what's burning within isn't so much about the striking, stark beauty of a bedroom in Arles, about that saturation of hues calling one to come lie down and rest. What's spilling me is about the grandest of all. This courage.

This ruthless mettle to forge the road rarely traveled. The fearlessness to tilt head, heart, and see beauty in the mundane. The tenacity to care little what others think but to sing the the song He's composed for you alone.

I lean into the textured white that fills the pillow. This is the work of the anguishing unafraid. A dauntless one who endlessly jousted his own apparitions.
"I went... still accompanied to the village, the mere sight of people and things had an effect on me that I thought I was going to faint and I felt very ill..."
Fear hounded every moment, agoraphobia stalking, and yet he laid himself out.
"The emotions are sometimes so strong that one works without being aware of working..."
He steeled himself, opened oil, and ripped open his chest wall to expose the workings of a fragile spirit. Dipping brush tip, he brandished a sword against self-doubts encroaching army. He listened to the tune well. And sang his solo despite interior cacophony.



It's only colors, a painting of a bedroom, I know. But for me, rooted here before 22 by 29 inches of soul pigment, it's this raw clarion to do what we must do, simply because we must.

Regardless of the naysayers, the loneliness, the giants we think lurk in this land, because He calls, and that is what matters.

Changed by old paint, I wander out of the gallery.
This life canvas stretches and He's asking for brave strokes.


Van Gogh's Prayer, written to his brother:

I want to be bound to Christ with unbreakable bonds and to feel these bonds...

To live in and for Christ, to be one of the poor of His kingdom,

steeped in leaven filled with His spirit, impelled by His love...

To become one who finds repose in Him alone,

who desires nothing but Him on earth.



Lingering with Scripture: Deuteronomy 31:6 Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you."

Lifting voice in response to Scripture: Father, if I desire nothing but You, what is there to really fear? You go with us, calling us to come to sing the song You meant for us, on the canvas You've given.

Living Scripture: Where is God calling me to take courage today?

Photos: Taken at the Orsay Museum in Paris of Vincent van Gogh's The Artist's Room in Arles

Friday, June 13, 2008

All Good


A note that made its way to the inbox....

"Your post "A Bowl of Cherries Bestowed" struck a cord with me.



Without going into all the details, I suffer from gallstone attacks from time-to-time; these are excruciating. Last week, after 2 attacks I was in the hospital again. Once I was home, a dear gentleman from our church prayed over me. He asked God to heal me, whether that be instantly or through the hand of a surgeon. But that it would be soon either way. And his next sentence resonated with me: “Father, we look forward to whatever it is that you will do.”

Wow.

I’ve heard people pray that before, but it’s never struck me like this time. Consider what that means!

Oh that it would be true of my life – that I would welcome whatever God sends my wayyes, even look forward to it.

Anticipate it.

Both the cherries and the pits.

Everything that comes from His hand is good. The gifts are good. The discipline is good. It is all marked with love. How could it possibly not be?


“Endure hardship as discipline;…(my gallstones have certainly been a hardship)…..God is treating you as sons…For what son is not disciplined by his father?...God disciplines us for our good… No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it." Hebrews 12:7a, 10b, 11

A harvest of peace. And a harvest of righteousness. Yet more gifts from Him.

Yes, it is all good isn’t it? Both the cherries and the pits.

May I look forward to whatever it is that He will do!" ~ Chris in Western Canada

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Gratitude in the midst of Pain....



In all created things discern the providence and wisdom of God,

and in all things give Him thanks
.-

~St. Teresa of Avila




Notes from around the Gratitude Community...

"Since I read about the gratitude community, I’ve wanted to be a part, but I hesitated.

Not because I didn’t want to choose to be grateful, but because for so long in my life, I’ve tried to use ‘Gratefulness’ and ‘Perspective’ as a way to avoid feeling the pain of living in a fallen world, and living in a fallen flesh.

I am still learning how to feel. I am still learning how to sit with where I am. But I think that I can be grateful and not be in a place of avoidance.

I hope to continue to learn how to be grateful IN my pain..."






"About a week ago my husband.... John caught his foot in a grain auger. Before he knew what had happened it had sliced off two of his toes. He spent a long weekend in the hospital and is home now, recouperating nicely.

While it may seem odd to pair an accident of this nature with a posting on gratitude; it was, after the initial shock wore off, the first thing I felt.

“And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him and have been called according to his purpose.” (Ro. 8:28)


While we will never know this side of heaven whether this accident was something the Lord afflicted us with to refine us or whether this is something He merely allowed; I can tell you emphatically He wasted no time in working good in our lives out of this situation.

God’s presence was with each of us as we had need. John was calm and peaceful throughout, even when he learned that his toes could not be saved. With God’s help, I was able to remain calm and gave me presence of mind to do what I needed to do...

Gratitude for the gift of life. Things could have been much worse. Farm accidents can be dangerous. Augers are especially dangerous. John could have lost his whole foot or even a limb. It could have been his fingers instead of his toes...

Gratitude’s gift of clearer vision. Prior to the accident I was really struggling with a bad attitude. I knew I needed Father to give me a new heart and a new mind (again). This accident took care of that in an instant..."



The Gratitude Community Blogroll has been happily updated. (If I've missed your link, my apologies. Drop me a line, gracious friend, and I'll get it fixed...) Take a moment and go visiting. God is close, gracious, and good... even in the midst...

Prayerfully consider joining us in thanksgiving -- online or simply in a personal journal...
I am humbled to walk this way with each of you. My thanks.

Photos: little bouquets picked by growing boys...

Monday, June 09, 2008

a bowl of cherries bestowed




He and I, we bring home a cherry tree in the bed of the pickup, roots twelve years old (a year younger than him), fibrous and fragile, leaves slapping in the wind.

And he’s telling me how much he paid for milky moon on buds, raindrops coursing down bark still smooth young, snow falling thick and quiet on branches , sun unwrapping the first early blossoms. True, a more slender tree was cheaper, but he’s telling me how much he decided to pay (with birthday money, his 13th) for time, a cycle of a dozen seasons to be exact, for trunk thicker, limbs longer.

Paying for time. I’d like to buy me some of that. More of that.

June’s heat falls heavy and hot, too close and sticky, and we’re rolling windows right down, and I turn down a back gravel road and let the wind whip our hair cool, relieve us from this tinny oven. Arm out the window, riding high then low on air currents, he’s talking about which end of the orchard to plant it and how to ward off winged thieves, those wily crows scheming to scarf down ruby gems, and wondering how many cherries it would take to make a pie, but did I have any ideas on how to pit what is sure to be a record-breaking crop?

I am still back thinking about time and how to get more of it (but it’s really about just making the most of it) and knowing the hope and loss we’re bringing home in the back of this pick-up.

So I turn, look into the field-tanned face of this boy of mine who’s just left childhood and bought himself a cherry tree and I smile and tell him what little I know of life, and this heaping bowl of cherries bestowed.

We’ll deal with the pits.”

He smiles too and he and I drive home to plant a ball of roots in dirt and wait with open hands for what the seasons bring, time heavy with cherries and pits redeemed, a pie orchard for a someday generation.


Scripture Thought: "Shall we indeed accept good from God and not accept adversity?" (Job 2:10)


Lord, cause me to see, gather, taste, the cherries of each season. And help me deal with the pits: with You, they could be planted for more sweet.

Friday, June 06, 2008

Common Stones

Our shadows stretch us long across this field, us bent low, rock pickers combing earth. This is spring's song. Always has been, as long as I can remember. It’s what I know and what those before knew, what those now coming are coming to know.




The ground moans after winter’s weight, working stones to the surface, and we, all of us, young or worn, come again with spring, pluck this sod, play this song. Fingers pry around hard edges, dislodge rock from soil beds, then haul limestone and granite to trailer. I watch us, silhouettes on dirt, scan, swoop, carry. We are outlined clay.


Here, it is clear. This is what we are, all of us without exception. Peel off the degrees, strip the careers, tear back the status symbols, this is who we are. We are dirt.

And in a moment I am twelve again, heavy with rocks, racing my brother in this same field, arms cradling rocks bigger I hope than his, to trailer heaped. Grandpa, near deaf, slows tractor, clutches, waits, but doesn’t idle back the throttle. Tractor engine screams for us to hurry, press harder.

We did. We do.

And now time’s raced on, returning Grandpa, returning him to the dirt whence we’ve all come, never to know these kids who walk this same soil, this same field, leaving footprints here too. But here in twilight, we somehow meet, dust bending down to touch dust.

The earth is what we all have in common,” writes Wendell Berry.

In common with those in the past. In common with those in the future. In common with those now, all of us walking and living off this dirt beneath our feet. This earth, loamy and rocky, sandy and gritty, it’s where we live these now days, that from which we came, that to which we all return. We all return to our fathers, to what we all are.

“You picked this field, Mom?” Our 13 year-old future man pants the words, his arms too full, his face red with work.





“Every year. This ground’s been picked and picked and picked.” I toss two more rocks onto the trailer’s rising mount and think of the years of gilded harvests before the late autumn rains, the shift of clouds and winds, and white flakes falling, years of warmth returning, and us with it, to work up soil and pick these rocks, rocks, rocks.

“Is there a volcano or something underneath this field, just bubbling them up? Where do all these stones keep coming from?” His brother, sweaty, grimy, weary, hollers from the other side of the trailer. He’s kneeling down, both hands gripped to a stubborn one, thin muscles quaking it back and forth.

I laugh, motion him out of the way, kick at the embedded granite. “When I was your age, my brother, sister and I, we used to fill trailer load after trailer load with rocks and these crazy dreams of some spray we’d invent to disintegrate stones.”

Farmer Husband, wearing this mask of dirt, teeth smiling white, heaves a big one up to the trailer’s edge, rolls it in.

“You too? I thought only my brothers and I had those kind of wild ideas.” I look into those eyes ringed in dirt, and he into mine, and I remember him young, us farm kids, like these kids, us dreaming the same dreams.

Our oldest reaches up behind the tractor seat for the thermos and some cold wet for us all standing here for a moment. “Guess nobody can figure out a spray or anything better than just this, eh?” He grins, a raccoon of grime, then glugs that water down.

“Nope. This is really the only way. Bend down, pick it up, carry it off.” Farmer Husband takes his turn at thermos spout. He swipes away water dripping from chin with dusty, untiring arm.







“Just one rock at a time.”

I smile at the patch of skin he’s washed clean.

Just one rock at a time. Generations of us dirt-ones, bending low, picking up sin-boulders, asking Jesus to carry them off. Each growing season turning up more stony edges, more that needs prying, kicking out. So it goes for us who are dust.

It’s what we all, every one of us everywhere, have in common: this earth. These bodies of dust. This rocky soul soil.


We all must wrestle, wrench out, pray for Him to come do what we can’t do with these sin boulders so we can harvest a crop. Season after season, generation after generation, dirt dealing with dirt and all its stones.

All of us, we’re the same, working with Jesus on our soul fields.

We’re all just picking rocks.

Picking rocks with Him who does what we all only wildly dream of.

Working with Him who rolls the stones away.


Lord, I am just simple dust, dealing with a lot of rocks. Help me. Roll away my stones. And help me see what I have in common with all of us living after the Fall: that we are all just picking rocks, asking for Your hand.

Part two of Common to follow
Photos: us, dealing with stones

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Weed Seeds




Spheres on stilts perforate the lawn, these dandelions propped feasting planets for sun-grazed feathers.


I watch from window, goldfinches flashing gold about the whitened old globes.


And He who choreographs these explosions, soft and soundless, winds time, just until the end, to transform a weed universe, bitter and unwanted orbs, into a galaxy of seeds. Nourishment. A banquet.


Fuel for the soaring ones.



Lord, cause me to trust You. To transform the weeds in my life into seeds for my soul, fuel to soar Home.


Related: Making Dandelion Wine
Video of goldfinch eating dandelion seeds

(More on education later today)
Photo:
jpmatth

Friday, May 30, 2008

Eat the Mystery

Part Three of a series on choosing...

He comes to the back door this week, looking for his brother, looking like his brother, looking like those babies of his we buried in that country cemetery, and I see how it all could have been different.

My brother-in-law, just filling time, he’s talking about soil temperature and weather forecasts and that he’d heard from John van DeGevel who likely heard it at the coffee well on Main that some farmer brought a three inch bean plant into Atwood Farm Supply and nobody knew how a field of beans like that was going to survive the late May frost they’re calling for tonight. I lean up against the doorframe. There’s no saving a field like that on a night when the temperatures dip below freezing, that moon rising higher in a cloudless, cold sky.

“But that’s the way it is,” John shrugs his shoulders, looks out across our wheat field.




“We think we control so much, do so much right to make a crop, and when you are farming, you are faced with it everyday: you control so little. Really, it’s God who decides it all, not us.” He slips his thick, Dutch hands into frayed pockets, smiles easily. “It’s all good.”

I nod, almost fill the space between us with words about Farmer Husband coming home from the hardware store soon and instead of John waiting longer, making small talk with me, if he just wants to drop off that new water tank in the back shed for now. But I catch his eyes, those clear as heaven blue eyes, and I know I have to ask. Ask how he can say that, mean that. If he really believes that.

Tentatively, eyes fixed on his, I step into that place we rarely go.

How do you know that, John? Like deep down, how do you know? That it isn’t all random, that it is really all good. Others who have walked your road haven’t arrived where you have.” His eyes don’t leave mine. I know he’s remembering too.

It had been a New Year’s Day, that day of fresh starts, resolutions, new dreams. And it was all ending. Again. John had called, left a message on our machine, asking us to come, if we wanted. Room 112, second floor, right across from the nurses’ station. The recording of that soft, matter-of-fact voice machine left us stunned, punched in the gut.

I searched my husband’s face. “Already? Today?” He had taken my hand, held it tight all the way there, right to that hospital room lit only by a dim lamp in the corner.

We met John at the door. He nodded, eyes smiling bravely. The singular tear that carved down his cheek chiseled something out of me.

He brushed it away, still clinging to that smile, that Dutch determination. “Tiffany just noticed he started breathing a bit heavier this afternoon. And yeah, when we brought him in, they said his lung had collapsed and it was just a matter of hours. It’s all like it was at the end for Austin.”

I can’t look into that sadness wearing a smile anymore. I look at the floor, polished tiles blurring, running.

Only a year and six months had passed since Austin. And here we were again, with Dietrich. Austin had been hardly four months old on a muggy June afternoon when I had stood in the light of the front window, balloons waving in the gentle hum of the fan, caressing my nephew’s bare little tummy, stroking each little toe, and watching his chest heave less and less with life. How do you keep breathing when the lungs under the skin you touch are slowly atrophying? The doctors said that with spinal muscular atrophy the chances of future children having the same fatal disease were only one in four. Twelve months later, Dietrich was born to hope and prayers and the same diagnosis.

John hands me a Kleenex, and I try to wipe it all away. He tries too, with his words, “But we’re blessed that up until today Dietrich’s had no pain, and we have good memories of a happy Christmas together with him. We had only hoped that with Austin, but it didn’t happen. Tiff got lots and lots of pictures. We got five months with him. It’s all good."

"And you know,” he laughs, that tone he’s teased me with since I was fourteen, that gawky friend of his kid brother, “Austin’s waiting for Dietrich to just hurry up and get there already.”

I shouldn’t have, but I did. I looked up. And saw all this wild grief, this dazed bewilderment in eyes above stoic smile. In that moment I forget the rules of this Dutch family of reserved emotion, of their carefully measured words, and, my world flooded in fluid pain, I grab John by the shoulders, pull him close and this ragged, scratchy voice half-whispers, half-chokes, “If it were up to me, brother, I’d write this story differently.”

I regret them, as soon as the words leave me, wish I could pull them back, comb out their tangled madness, dress them in calm Sunday best. But there they were, released, raw and real, stripped of any theological cliché, my naked, serrated howl to the throne room.

Those are the words I am remembering, standing there on the back step this week, probing more.

“You know,” John turns again towards the waving wheat field. “ Well, even with the boys...” He was remembering too.

“I don’t know why that all happened. But do I have to?” He turns towards me, shrugs again, eyes saying more. I wait.

“Maybe something else would have happened later on. Who knows? I don’t mention often, but sometimes I think of when God gave Hezekiah 15 more years of life because he prayed for it. But if he had died when God first intended, Manasseh would never have been born. Think of all the evil that would have been avoided if Hezekiah had died earlier, before that son was born. I am not saying anything, either way, about anything, really.”

He looks away, off across sea of green rolling in winds, lowers his voice. “Just that maybe you don’t want to change the story, because you don’t know what a different ending holds…”




My raw words from that dying, ending day, echo, pierce. There’s a reason I am not writing the story and He is. He knows how it all works out, where it all leads, what it all means.

I swallow hard, find my voice.

“Some bury a child and can’t accept there is Anyone writing meaning out of it. And others bury two children, and do. Why?”

His eyes linger, see through to my meaning, my ache, and he nods, knowing. “Maybe, I guess, it’s accepting there are things we simply don’t understand. But He does.”

And I think I see. When we find ourselves groping along insufferable desert floors (and we will), we can choose. We can choose to pick up what we don’t understand, what has no meaning to us, what makes no sense, and call it good. Because God sent it. Like Israelites gathering manna. And asking: “What is it?” Forty long years of daily eating that which had no meaning: “What is it?” More than fourteen thousand, six hundred days of taking as their daily bread that which they didn’t comprehend. They embraced the inexplicable.

They ate the mystery.

And they found the mystery to be “like wafers with honey.”

A pick-up drives in the lane and I watch from the window, two brothers, meeting, talking, their hand gestures mirroring each other. And I think of all the mysteries I have refused to let nourish me, the wafers with honey I have wasted, rejected. The sweet I have missed.

And I wonder if the rent in the canvas of our life-backdrop, the losses that puncture our world, those black holes that smatter everywhere we look, are not, somehow, ways to see through the soul holes to God. Thin, open places to see through the mess of this place to the beauty beyond and Him.

If we’ll sup on the mystery.



"When the sons of Israel saw it, they said to one another, "What is it?" For they did not know what it was. And Moses said to them, "It is the bread which the LORD has given you to eat." Ex. 16:15


Lord, cause me today to eat what you've given. To find nourishment in all that is a mystery.

Part of this week's focus on Choice. Part One here. Part Two here.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

How to Drink the Cup of Salvation



Today, I am writing about Thirsting for God in Daily Work over at Laity Lodge's High Calling.

Because it's all about choices.

Will I drink the cup that He gives?

I'd count it a privilege learn from you. I hope you'll share how you choose to drink from His cup.

Thank you, fellow sojourners on The Way... I'll be over there, listening....
All's Grace,

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Soul Holes

Part One Here...

We grew full of bitterness, not grace.

Years later I would sit at one end of that brown-plaid couch, my dad stretched out along its length. Worn from a day driving tractor, sun beating and wind blowing, he’d ask me to stroke his hair. I’d stroke from that cow-lick of his and back, his hair ringed from the line of his cap. And he’d close his eyes and I’d ask the questions I could never ask looking into them.

“Did you ever used to go to church? Like a long time ago, Dad?” The neighboring Williams family took turns with the van Veen family, picking me up Sunday mornings for the drive into town and services.

“Yeah, we went. Your grandmother had us go every Sunday, after milking was done. That was important to her.”

I kept my eyes on his dark strands of hair running through my fingers.

“But it’s not important to you now?” The words, barely whispered, hung.

He pushed up his plaid sleeves, shifted his head, his eyes still closed. “Oh….”

I waited, hands combing, waiting for him to find the words for those feelings that don’t fit neatly into the stiff ties, the starched collars, of sentences.

“No, I guess not anymore. The day Aimee died, I was done with all of that.”




Scenes blast my memoryscape and I reel.

And, if there really is Anybody up there, They sure were asleep at the wheel that day.” I don’t say anything, that lump in my throat a glowing, burning ember. I just stroke hair, soothing pain. He finds more feelings, stuffs them into words.

Why let a beautiful little girl die such a senseless, needless death? And she didn’t just die, like your mother always says. She was killed.”

That word twists his face. His eyes remain closed, but he’s shaking his head now, remembering all there was to say no to that hideous November afternoon that branded our lives.

Dad didn’t need more words. That shake of the head said it all. No. No benevolent Being, no grace, no meaning to it all. He rarely had said all that, only sometimes, when he’d close his eyes and ask me to stroke away the day. But these aren’t things you need to say anyways. Like all beliefs, you simply live them. We did.

No, God. No God.

The air our family breathed, this oxygen of negativity, it wasn’t ours alone. It is our human inheritance, the Garden’s legacy. It’s the bedrock of all sin, this ingratitude of Adam and Eve. The rest of the garden wasn’t enough.

When God said humanity was not to eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, God ripped away what we wanted. He stole what we considered rightly ours. He snatched away what we deemed ultimately necessary for our happiness and wholeness. Don’t we keep reliving the Garden, again and again? No longer did we trust Him. No longer was He good. No longer could we see all of the remaining paradise.

When Eve stood there under that tree’s leafy shade, determining that she needed what God had said no to, she closed herself to the rain of His grace. So began our long drought. Focused on that which she was not to have, she lost all that she did have. Ingratitude throws us out the Garden and into the barren wilderness of despair.

And even long after I personally said yes to God, I still lived no, developing macular holes on the retina of my soul. Blind spots, missing God present and giving.

Funny, my soul’s macular hole seemed to spontaneously heal in church. There God’s obvious, close. Bibles lay open in laps, the sanctuary fills with hymnal worship, reverent and real, and the table, spread with the emblems, that singular cup and loaf, calls us to remember, to see. There, even I could see. But the rest of the week, the days lived in the glaring harshness of the gritty world? There, yes, full-thickness macular holes, complete loss of central vision, a world pocked with scarcity. I could find no water well.

I wasn’t good enough, my children weren’t good enough. Our church needed more of this, our community more of that. Now that we’d finally got this fixed, couldn’t we now tackle that? Sure, the new house down the road was lovely, but when were they going to get the lawn seeded? I appreciated the neighbor’s lively conversation, but when he was going to get busy, lose a bit of weight, find a wife?

My sister’s jarring death had torn a hole into the canvas of my world right at my beginning. Now everywhere I looked, I only saw all that wasn’t. Holes, lack, deficiency.

One life loss can infect all of our life, a rash that wears through the fabric of our days, our seeing, with black voids, shadowy fissures, endless abysses.



It means favor, grace does. From the Latin, gratia. Connotes free readiness. A free and ready favor, that’s what grace is.

I took the grace offered at the Cross, the free favor of forgiveness of my sins. But to live as Ann, "full of grace"? Full of all His favors, His gifts? I didn’t know how to patch that gaping gash up.

And so more tore.



Lord, losses burn holes in the soul retina. Leave us blind to You. And the infection spreads. Heal, Lord. So we can see You, find the well of Your living, spilling waters. And end the drought.

Part of this week's prayerful focus on Choices. Part One here. Part Three here.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Choice

I've been praying and remembering the Chapman family... and remembering how we as a family, living through similar scenes, made our choice. For with each loss, staggering or common, so the choice comes: gratitude or resentment.





This all began at my beginning, when my head filled that tearing ring of fire and that glowing orb filled an August sky.

I seared virgin lungs with air, howled, unfolded from womb’s cavern. Then they named me. Could a name be any shorter? Three letters without even the flourish of an “e.” Ann, a trio of curves and lines, meaning “full of grace.”

I haven’t been.

Most of my life, I haven’t lived up to the christening.

Maybe in those first few years my life curled like cupped hands, a receptacle open to the gifts He freely gives. But I have no memories of then. For they say memory jolts awake with trauma’s electricity. That would be the year I was four. When blood pooled and I snapped shut to grace.

Standing at the side porch window, watching my parents huddled in horror, I wondered if they had held me, their firstborn, in those natal moments of naming, like they now held my sister in death. In sharp fall light, they rocked her in their arms, not with prayers for sleep but with pleas for waking and wholeness, miraculous and dazzling. It did not come, only the police with accident forms while blood seeped through blankets. I see that too, even now. Memory’s blazing surge burned deep.

The memory of her swaddling, the staining, scorches less than the blister of her uncovered. Her body, fragile and small, crushed by a truck’s load, the blood soaking into thirsty, track-beaten earth, that moment the cosmos shifted and shattered any cupping of hands. I still hear my mother’s strangled witnessing-scream, see my father’s eyes shot white in disbelief.

Memory flashes of her exposed, crumpled body bombed my dreams, haunted my days, my childhood. And sometimes, in the fraying place of night and day, I lay quiet while sleep ebbs and flows and we cradle the blanket wrapping of my sister’s wee body, her safely cocooned, and there await her rebirth with papery wings of shimmering life.

But instead earth opened wide and swallowed her up. We stood at grave’s precipice, numbly watching, feet scuffing the dirt and chunks of the firmament falling away. With the closing up of her deathbed, so our lives closed to any notions of grace.



For, really, could there be a good God? A God who graces with good gifts when a crib lay empty through long, stalking nights and bugs burrowed into a coffin of decaying dreams?

We grew full of bitterness, not grace.

Lord, today losses will come. What will I fill with?

To be continued... Part of this week's focus on choices...


Friday, May 23, 2008

Making Dandelion Wine

Notes from around the gratitude community on Making Dandelion Wine




Mama Whitney at Hearts of Gratitude writes:

"The gifts listed here are things I saw as barriers initially but, with the help of the Lord, are now opportunities for me to trust the Lord: Barriers now Opportunities.

105. My hubby's night meetings were a nuissance at first that really tempted me to anger. I now see how kind of the Lord to bestow the gift of a husband who provides for his family in addition to giving me opportunities to accomplish things I would not normally have time to get done. Thank You, Lord, for showing me that I can redeem the time with Your grace!

104. Food limitations due to food allergies is showing me I have a real opportunity to serve my family. This "barrier" is really a gift from the Sovereign Lord to help me grow in putting others first, beginning with my family!

103. Not having a clue of what to do with 25-pounds of brown sweet rice could've been a barrier but instead it has become an opportunity to be creative in my cooking and trusting God to help me in that. ...."

For more listing of how to barriers may be opportunities, making Dandelion Wine, read the rest of her thought-provoking entry here...

~~

And this post at Life is the essence of reframing the world. A breathtaking post that mustn't be missed. Mendelt's wife, Marisa, went home to the Lord in December, after a year long struggle with breast cancer:

"At the end of the day, life is beautiful or ugly. It depends from what angle you look."


His post Looking from Different Angles is achingly powerful.....

:::


Have you considered establishing gratitude as a personal soul fixture? Just grab a scrap of paper lying around and begin counting the blessings, with your own 1000 Endless Gifts:

Why begin your own One Thousand Gift List --(drop me a line if you do, and I'll add you either simply your name or a web link to the "1000 Endless Gifts" blogroll in the sidebar-- we invite you to join the Gratitude Community!)

Read the listing of the endless Gifts


Thursday, May 15, 2008

Dandelion Wine

First light flows across carpet lawn, golden water flooding.

I stand where the kitchen’s two corner windows meet, and watch day rise. Soundlessly she comes across wheat’s emerald glades, sweeps up to island-house, settles in gilded glory.

And I cringe. This day He sends forth, she finds no petal strewn path, no lawns impeccably manicured. No, in this place we fete each new day with dandelions, loud and crass.






We’ve hacked, sprayed, mowed and plucked. Stubbornly, endlessly, they erupt, blazing molten from the earth’s bowels. These volcanoes defy extinguishing.

And a memory sparks too of a long ago walk down a gravel road with spring all gusting in.

My maternal grandmother, elegant, refined, steps jauntily along in her tightly laced shoes, her wide heel clipping over potholes. One long arm swings briskly, the other clutches her sweater flapping in kite-winds.

My sister, double dimples stitching cheeks, piggy-tales flying, skips along beside. Her short legs struggle to keep pace with Granny’s strides. Weary, little sister finally slows, wilts down into waving ditch grasses. There she sits content to lace lion necklaces. Granny will retrieve her on the way home.

It’s this that flashes every spring: Granny’s face contorting with disgust when little sister jumps onto roadside, festooning with a profusion of miniature suns. Lion drool stains her neck and hands. Granny’s voice stiffly declines the invitation to carry the bouquet home.

And when little sister leaves the bunch on the kitchen counter in hopes that Granny will find a vase, I stand in the dining room and watch her open the cupboard under the sink and quietly toss the mass of yellow into garbage can’s dark.

I’ve inherited a strong disdain for dandelions.

But there’s another legacy that could have been mine.

The man in the black-and-white photograph atop a cabinet in the living room would have smiled at this morning regaled on yellow carpet. Or so I’m told. Robert John Morton, my great-grandfather, died before I was born, my younger brother his namesake. It’s not hard to imagine that weathered man in the photograph, his leathery hands holding the reins of two Clydesdales, happily fancying dandelions. The pasture in which R.J. stands flashes with glaring sun-orbs.

My father tells the story every spring when terra firma bursts with fireballs.

“They were Grandpa R.J.’s favorite flower and he wasn’t ashamed to tell anyone that. And here we go waging war against them.” Dad’s work-furrowed hand pulls the peak of his cap lower. “Guess beauty is all in the eye of the beholder.”

Beauty depends on how you frame the world.

Like all other spring mornings that have gone before, I look out my window and frame this dandelion pimpled landscape with Granny’s disdain. It doesn’t have to be that way. I could choose Great-Grandpa R.J.’s frame for this day rising. For the man never saw dandelion weeds. Only regal manes, flowers of grandeur. Kingly blooms.

R.J.’s sun-baked face would have lit with words I overheard of a dandelion-wise girl: “These are not weeds. These are wishing flowers.”




Wishing flowers. Not weeds. But globes of prayer seeds to be caught up in the Spirit, carried where He blows.

Not weeds at all. For isn’t a weed only a weed if we don’t want it there?

I think about my life with its patches of tangle that I deem weeds. The messes I determine need eradication. Staining bunches of life I don’t want to touch, that I think best suits a garbage can.

Maybe I’m wrong.

True, I don’t want some of those tangles there: strong-willed children, chronic pain, lean finances. So I christen them weeds. But maybe God planted each here.

If God allowed it into my life, isn’t it intended for good? To mold this life to be more like His. When I scorn, begrudge, the dandelions in my life, I miss the beauty in what I may have not planned for my life. But God did.

With God, there are no weeds, only gardens. He redeems the weeds that took root in the Garden of Eden with the surrender of the Garden of Gethsemane. Though anguished to the point of pores oozing droplets of salty blood, Jesus took the cup. Gethsemane’s Garden pierced. But for our salvation.

God’s the redemptive Gardner, taking the dastardly meant for evil and using it for good. Petals intended for loveliness.






The eye beholds only beauty when I frame our lives with God. It is He who walk this life-garden, faithfully tending, pruning, planting. And He gives only good.

I see this day pooling gold differently and it calls me to come. I open the front-porch door, step down onto dew-dangled lawn. Indiscriminately, I pick. For aren’t they all dandy?

I’ll fill a jar with water, set them singing in the middle of the table. Doesn’t the wide world beckon to gather former weeds as beauty bouquets, give thanks for the cup that He gives, and drink?

I’ll take dandelion wine.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Of Criticism's Heat and Water Flowing Down

The criticism comes early in the day, burning.

Apparently, I had botched it. Muddled it all. Truth for the speaker, a genuine experience that I needed to hear, attend to. Still, the words singed this heart.

I let the words raze through the layers, smolder for hours, pieces of me blowing away, papery ash. It’s long and painful, this replay of searing words. The words keep reverberating, endlessly stoking the fire.





Yet in His grace, He stirs me too, gives me eyes to see. Yes, the flame of criticism scorches the wooden frame of me, true. I grieve that I am not hard, indestructible stone refusing to be charred.

But if I look closely, touch this wood on fire, I see the grain, still wet, sizzling with water. The heat of the judgment draws out wood’s water.

I cup hands close and the water drips, pools, into the hollow of me. I am soothed with its wet. This, the simple act of taking the blistering words as the cup that He gives. Taking the words as water meant to be collected, brought to lips, drank. I let reproach’s fire wring out water and give thanks with a whispered prayer:

"Thank you. I give thanks too for this criticism, food You give to nourish soul humility.”

If I truly believe myself to be unworthy, should I not also want others to have a realistic perception of who I am too?

Why be wounded, discouraged, when others find the efforts of these hands, this life, to fall short? For it’s true. I do fall short. It’s the essence of who I am. It’s why I cling to wood that won’t burn, wood surging up from the core of the universe, the Wood of Calvary.

“You would be a hypocrite to think lowly of yourself, but then expect others to think highly of you,” wrote the theologian and chaplain Jeremy Taylor over three hundred years ago. “Remember, no one can undervalue you if you know that you are unworthy. Once you know that, no amount of contempt from another person will be able to hurt.”



It does not hurt water to flow to the lowest places. It’s what water does. Always seeking, searching, hunting for ways to go lower, to trickle further downward. We live parched, thirsty. But we will not find drink for our soul on the heights, on the peaks. For the water’s running down, calling us to come too. To take His cup, to be quenched, we too must go lower and lower.

I am learning to live the Eucharist, to give thanks not only for that which delights, but for that which hurts… and finding it joy too.


Lord, the Refiner's Fire burns the water out of this wood. Will I drink the cup You give? O, let me flow low.

Thursday, April 24, 2008

More that Dies....




“As soon as you open the door, it hits you. ‘Ah, spring in the country!’ “ She laughs and offers her tousled red-haired daughter another cookie.

“Well, it’s like I was telling Emily on the way over here. There isn’t a block in the whole county that doesn’t reek today.”

The two friends chuckle and I nod and smile too, us this cluster of community at the back of a country church on a Wednesday night. The children’s club closing program has concluded and the church is all a bustle with happy kids nibbling on treats from the refreshment table, mothers talking of tilling up gardens, the fathers who are there and not on the seats of tractors, making plans for the work bee to reroof the church come Saturday morning. A toddler needs a refilling of pink juice so I take her hand and we weave through the crowd.

In the midst of the milieu of swirling children, I pour juice and revisit a scene, words, from earlier in our day.

On the headland of a dusty two hundred acres, I stood waiting for him. Tractor roars down the field, cultivator working up earth behind him. The wind flaps about skirt hem and the apron I forgot to slip off in my haste to get the meal to the field and his empty stomach. Are fields all over the countryside dotted with waiting farm wives, aprons flying on spring winds, arms full of food for work-worn men? The tractor looms, rumbles to an idling halt. He swings open the cab door. Large rocks he’s gathered from the last few passes across the field line the steps up to the cab. One by one, he tosses them off into a pile in the ditch, and I step close with his lunch basket.

Instead of raising his voice over the engine, he motions to his dirty shirt, my dress, explaining with hands why he thinks it best not to offer a hug. I laugh, him joining too, and he leans in to kiss this forehead. We rest there for a moment, lingering touch on the edge of a wind-blown field on an afternoon in late April.

Another tractor whirling down the gravel road in a cloud of dust, manure spreader behind, interrupts us. He steps back, adjusts his cap. “You know,” I raise my voice, “I was thinking of this on the way to the field. The fragrance of spring’s new life is that of rot and decay.” I nod towards the passing manure spreader.

Farmer Husband presses in close, his soft voice competing with the tractors. “True.” He points towards last year’s corn stalks wrapped around the teeth of the cultivator that he’s been pulling across this field all day. “Manure yes, but the more debris and dying matter from last year’s crop too, the richer the soil bed for this year’s crop.”

I look across the dirt stretching towards the horizon. We've spread manure over this land already, beginning of the week.

“Yes, more that dies, more that lives.”

He takes the lunch basket from my hand, brushes with a kiss again, and hauls back up into that tractor cab and waiting steering wheel.

But his words echo through the rest of my day, revisiting me here tonight in a full country church, us womenfolk talking of hanging out lines of laundry, working up sleepy gardens, and the countryside wafting with the smell of sweet manure.

“More that dies, more that lives.”

Out into the falling dusk, these church folks slowly spill, frogs of the church pond filling the night with their croaky chorus. And we all mingle under the shy stars twinkling, the air pungent with death, and I look at these people, a body of believers, a people called to live new life.

But the daily death comes first. The more that dies.....

The more He lives.



Scripture Drink:

"Could it be any clearer?
Our old way of life was nailed to the cross with Christ,
a decisive end to that sin-miserable life...

What we believe is this:
If we get included in Christ's sin-conquering death,
we also get included in his life-saving resurrection."

Ro 6:6-11 MSG



Lord, my dying today may not smell pretty. But it is necessary for the new life You want to grow in me. Where can I die today? The more I die.... the more You live.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

While the children run ahead, she pauses




to say good bye to

Winter all worn through,

weary and frayed about

her dingy, graying hem,

dissolving everywhere into silver pools

reflecting pewter sky.



White gulls on snow's white fringe,

those tufts on pencil-line stilts

encircle her sterling puddling,

Spring come with water to scrub earth clean,

And there in her threadbare places

Hope pokes through.




Father, use the places where I wear thin as places for Your glory to shine.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Feathers for the Nest

(Thoughts He keeps bringing to mind daily, changing me...)



An excerpt from my column this month at Christian Women Online:

"...When will I learn that down sacrificed settles and soothes? For scraps won’t suffice. Snippets of time, leftover me, a trinket, a diversion, tossed.

Mother ducks don’t line nests with feathers, dirty and trampled, the molted and unnecessary. Why would I?

Nests need feathers fresh, warm with mother’s life...."
(I hope you'll take a moment to pop over)


Art: The original Koester painting, "Moulting Ducks," is part of the collection at the Frye Art Museum in Seattle www.fryemuseum.org

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Essence of Faith




I half, fold, crease the winter stitches

pressing patches down into blanket box darkness,

then shake out Easter quilts bright

as wind shakes panes

and ruffles the feathers of a huddle of sparrows

skittering atop ice crusted knoll

heralding, with calendar page, the first day of Spring,

the day for the changing of the quilts,

the hanging of resurrection hope

while the snow blows hard.



Photo: Easter quilts hanging on ladder in living room by bucket of pussy willows, branches for Easter Tree

Friday, March 14, 2008

Cure for a Soul Drip




It’s 1:48 a.m., from what the clock seems to read in the dark if I dare look, squinting without specs, and I want to, almost do, howl. Night, she’s escaping. Vainly I grab for the hem of her skirt. She runs. How to pin her down, force her to sprinkle me with that sparkling dust, what I need, must have, before that burning sphere of brilliance hurling towards the horizon storms in here. I beg her for sleep. She refuses to anoint with shimmering dreams. She teases. Elusively close, darting away, a flirting mirage I chase through the night.

The bath keeps time. This dance of desperation meted out by the faucet’s long, slow, shattering drip. I throw the pillow over my head. Drip. Plunge fingertips deep into ear drums. Drip. Yank blankets over my head. And lay still, pretending. If I act as if asleep, will Night acquiesce, come close and rock me? I lay feigning, praying. And the thought comes: is it really the slow drip of fears in the deep of me, one by one, gathering, swelling, hanging, suspended, waiting to fall, these that relentlessly prod me through this night running out.

Fears fall. Namelessly eroding away at the foundation of a life. What will the next doctor’s appointment determine? The next batch of bills bring? What will time carry these children to? How am I failing, falling, fumbling through? Drip. Drip. Drip. When the day whirls, and we swirl and the phone rings and the refrigerator hums and conversations crescendo, we don’t even hear the slow leak of a life. But come dark’s still, and Night taunts with sleep, we lay awake, with only the rush of pumping blood filling our ears and that wearing drip carving us down.

Farming Husband, captive audience to my flail and my fling, this dismally poor sleep-acting, slips out from under sheets, prepared to meet the drip. Two towels later, he crawls back in. A loud, echoing silence fills the night’s amphitheater, the house, me. I wait. And wait. And almost hope, and think maybe Night too will lean, bending over to listen, and the dust will trickle from her hand, and whisk me away to slumber.

Sleep, Ann.” he whispers. “It’s quiet.”

Drip saturated, soaked up.

But I lay awake, thinking.

Are there towels to absorb seeping fears?

A way to hush a soul drip?

What saturates pain, quieting all that murmurs and howls within?

“The dominant characteristic of an authentic spiritual life is the gratitude that flows from trust—not only for all the gifts that I receive from God, but gratitude for all the suffering,” writes Brennan Manning. “Because in that purifying experience, suffering has often been the shortest path to intimacy with God.”

Under this dripping heart, I lay two towels down: Trust. In the unfaltering, immutable goodness of God, in a love that I can reach out and lace my fingers through in the middle of the dark. Trust in the Hand that lets suffering gently purify, drawing me in, close to His face. Gratitude. The essence of an authentic spiritual life that lays back into Him. Grateful and thankful for all of what is, because isn’t He in all of it too?

Fears absorbed.... if I don't move the towels.

Soul silence. Still and deep.

Entwined in Him and His peace, I sleep.



Father God, show me how to lay out trust and gratitude under this heart. I long for soul stillness.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Embracing Storm Work




The frozen still
jolts night into morning
waking us to a petrified world,
hushed and soundless,

of dunes,

carved in the howl,
forged in the storm,
sculpted masterpiece,

now shimmering in light.