Showing posts with label Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Work. Show all posts

Thursday, July 03, 2008

How to Write a Life Story

“Not much time left, really.”

My father’s voice on the other end of the line reminds me of my grandfather’s, determined, sure. It’s been nearly ten years since I heard that voice, but here it is again on a Sunday morning, me making beds before church, Dad making his customary Sunday morning call.

“At best, maybe fifteen years. I’m on my last chapter.” He pauses and I let the empty space beckon answers. Grandpa died at eighty. Dad will turn sixty this coming year.

I need a plan. I don’t think I’ve had one.”









I pull the sheets up, smooth out the bed’s coverlet in coming light, then wait, listening to Dad think. I’m hesitant to say anything. Best he find the way. But I’m still, just standing here, knowing that we are moving out into hallowed ground. I wait. Then venture into the space with only a question.

“Well, how do you want that last chapter to read, Dad?”

I want to end happy.”

I sit on the edge of the bed, sunlight warm on my back, and ask slowly, “And what do you think brings happiness?”

He’s probing in the silence, the back corners of being, looking for what lies in unexamined places, and I’m praying.

“More farming.”



“More farming?” I make an effort but I know the words still sound incredulous, disappointed.

“My father farmed his whole life and made nothing.... But he thought someday folks would pay farmers for their work. That might happen in my lifetime. Can’t quit now. And maybe someday the grandkids will talk about how I could grow a crop of corn.”

I can see Dad sitting at his kitchen table, looking out the bay window, watching rows of pride growing up into light.

What about the people? The relationships?” I let the words sit. They do.

And he goes in another direction, approaches it all from the other side.

“Alan Strand called the other day. He was trying to figure out whether to spend the time he’s got left restoring another tractor, buying a new engine for it, or if he should try to track down his daughter. He hasn’t heard from her in ten years. Doesn’t even know where she is.”

“And he decided?” That decision seems obvious, blazing.





“The tractor.”

I grope for meaning and the words dribble out. “He intentionally considered the options, voiced them to you… and then decided the tractor?”

“Yep. He knew how to do that. Little risk. The daughter was all risk. And you know….”

I shake my head. None of this makes any sense. And yet it does.

“Do we give up what makes us really happy --- farming, restoring tractors, writing, study, whatever we are good at it--- a lifetime of happiness—for a few days of happiness at the end? Do we sacrifice what makes us really happy day in and day out, for a few days of happiness with the people at the end? And there’s no guarantees with the people.”

I’m stirred. Before I can think, I rush along, finding what I’m looking for, my rock. I say the words more to myself than to him, words leaving my mouth before I can think. “Jesus said, ‘He who loses his life will gain it.’”

The other end of the line is quiet. Tentatively, I step out a bit further. “Maybe making small sacrifices in personal pursuits – doing less of our own thing in our own spheres .... maybe taking the time to enter into the bubble of the other, in the end we will know a happiness we couldn’t have imagined.”

I circle back, wondering if he’s following. “Maybe this is one way we live out what Jesus us calls us to.” I say the words again, deliberately, for they seem new to me, richer in ways I hadn’t considered. “He who loses his life will find it.”

Dad lets his voice expose where he is. “Yeah. Maybe. But maybe none of us can change really. Great artists, great actors, great politicians, its all the same. They do what makes them happy and that means they don’t have much time for people. Balance is a hard thing. Nearly impossible if we are going to do something well. And we’re wired the way we are. Maybe those around us just come to accept it.”

I hurt inside and Dad says, “I am too old to change. I know farming.”






Then he’s talking about the price you can get for a bushel of corn, the weather forecast for the next few weeks, but I’m thinking about the times I’ve been in my own bubble with my own agendas of accomplishments, drifting away from people and true happiness disguised.

I’m remembering with a strange sadness a woman standing amidst the floral memorials of her mother’s funeral, reflecting on her mother’s far-and-wide reputation for the important stuff of bleach and immaculate housekeeping. And the times I’ve chosen to wash windows, tend a flowerbed, answer an email, instead of playing a game of bananagrams with a trio of loud boys, read an Eloise Wilken story to pleading eyes. My pride was tangled up in the tasks. Why didn’t it matter more to love well? Where did I think I really would find happiness?

And I wonder if it’s the fact that relationships don’t bring us paychecks, rarely accolades. Loving well, stepping over hurt, laying aside self and desires, draws on more of our interior resources than investing in a career, a skill, a personal pursuit. And yet, there are no promotions. No public status. No guarantees.

Relationships grow only in a hot house of of humility, selflessness, open-handedness. Hard things that are inherently risky: for all that, you can’t control the outcome.

Investing in relationships requires courage. It mandates daily fortitude and intentionality to make moment by moment decisions to prioritize relationships while balancing vocational demands.

Do my daily decisions support my belief that relationship is the essence of reality? Or do I merely pay lip service while the use of my hours clearly reveals true priorities?

Dad’s talking about what he’s got to get done this week and I am my Father’s daughter.

“Look at the time." I can see him turning there at the table, looking up at that clock ticking loudly over the kitchen sink. "What am I doing here?” He sounds disgusted. That rural work ethic. “I’ve got so much to do and here I am talking the day away with you.”

I have to smile. Dad’s customary call always ends with this customary adieu.

“Good talking with you, Dad.”

And then he’s gone. Off to write more farming, more of what he’s good at, into that last chapter. And I gather Bibles for church and more of hearing Jesus’ words to come crucify self, words I need to hear again and again.

Monday dawns a week of holidays, days of flag waving and patriotism.

Farmers don’t know holidays. Livestock needs feeding 365 days a year, crop rhythms keep time with the skies not the calendar. But we finish barn chores early, eat dinner, gather lawn chairs to head up to the lake and explosions of hues over water. Something we rarely did as kids, but trying to make memories for this generation of farm kids. Leaving the work and investing in people.

Sun’s sunk deep down into water, only a glow of embers burning along the horizon, when we find a place on shore’s edge. A place beside a man sitting in a lawn chair in the deepening dark. A man with a farmer’s cap silhouetted in night drifting in.

Shalom turns and the man sihouette turns and then she laughs, runs through the shadows. “Grandpa!”

And I smile for time made and the sacrifice written onto this day’s page.

My hand finds the shoulder of that flannel plaid jacket and he finds my hand, pulls me closer, brushes my cheek with that leathery skin.

Ann…” He nods, his voice soft, full of things he can't say.

Dad.” I squeeze his hand, a long, lingering pulse of all I feel.

And then fireworks bloom, mirror images rocking gently on water, two spaces merging and petals of color falling. The children pull up on Grandpa’s lap, lean in close, and I think how children will talk about this yield of time, and how in our dark places, we sacrifice and find faces and light and happiness unexpected.




The skies explode and light rains down and I think of who I am in this story with these people, and what the plan is for this flash of days, and how I am my Father’s daughter.

Tonight we are not too old to take courage, sacrifice the accolades of accomplishments, and linger long with souls on the rim of time, and somewhere in the dark we forget what was lost for the tender wonder of what has been found.





Lord, today how can I die to accomplishments, pride, tasks? To do the better work of Loving well.


Photos:
Two paths in our wheat field
Dad's work clothes flapping in the wind
Dad working on tractors in his shop
Fireworks, family, and small sacrifices


Saturday, June 14, 2008

Visual Homemaking Journal ~ More

A notebook, hand-me down magazines gleaned and collaged, then a scratching down of the days, fragments of grace, scraps of works, bits of hope....










And lately, spending my days with chickens and smiling:

menu notes,

gratitude lists,

verse-for-the-day,

to-do lists,

odds and ends to remember....


More Inspiration:

~Journal made from an old book: (how-to here) and (follow-up here)

~And oldbook variation on a homemaking journal: here

~A Beginner's Guide to make your own DIY Planner

~(I am considering of alternating pages from this print-yourself-planner with visual journal pages as above (blank pages, hole punched, and dressed in scraps of pictures and beauty) and slipping all into created oldbook binder. Practicality meets poetry.)

~The Original Visual Homemaking Journal post, with links to more inspiration

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

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Mixing in Thanks...

"The great painter boasted that he mixed all his colours with brains,

and the great saint may be said to mix all his thoughts with thanks.

All goods look better when they look like gifts."

--G.K. Chesterton, St. Francis of Assisi


And isn't that what it all is? Gifts, good gifts, from His hand. I'm learning to mix my simple life with thanks.


:::

ground beef turnovers, wrapped while steaming, ready for the field

:::

Joshua volunteering to wash up the dishes while I pack meals

:::

farmers eating food on field's hem, resting for a moment from planting food

:::

dirt and kids and fed husband and that warm feeling of being alive

:::

looking at life in the rearview mirror

:::

barren fields ready to swell with seeds, life, yield

:::
cluck of a rooster and hens, children clucking too
:::

speckled feathers, stone-flecked barn


:::

Sunday morning coming down,

Little Girl waiting in light for Daddy, shoes, church

:::

living in Light, shoes on,

pilgrimaging towards Father, Heaven, Home.

:::


In need of joy's elixir? Take a moment and click through the Gratitude Community in the sidebar's blogroll. You'll be blessed. Nothing revives a heart like giving thanks.

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 to the "1000 Endless Gifts" blogroll in the sidebar-- we invite you to join the Gratitude Community!)

Read the listing of the endless Gifts

Friday, February 22, 2008

A life with Weight


Every man feels instinctively
that all the beautiful sentiments in the world weigh less

than a single lovely action.

-James Russell Lowell


Sentiment or action? Thoughts or doing? Words or work? Father, make me choose wisely. DO wisely. Today. So this life has weight.

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

The Sacred Everyday





Deep thoughts for the sacred everyday...

Thoughts for tea time...

Photo: Grandma's teapot waiting

Tuesday, January 01, 2008

2008: Set to Soar




The New Year wears hope like a fragrance. The scent, tender, young, sweet, carries in on the wind, and carries me.

So I watch it come, this first day of the first month of a brand new year, breaking over the horizon, breaking up through our jaded hopelessness. Just on the rim of our clean farm fields of white, a new time, fresh hope, dawns. Do these fields of unspoiled winter await new tracks, like an unfurled year awaiting new ways of being? Pristine and blue in morning light, this snow gives me pause. Before embarking into the pregnant hope of 2008, I think: which way will I step? What will be the path I choose across this stretching expanse of time?


Are you set to SOAR? Set Objectives, Achieve Results--by the Spirit! Continue reading this month's article at CWO

Photo: our Levi set to soar into new ways

Thursday, December 13, 2007

Sacred Rhythms: Motions of Worship




Rhythms of rising sun: 8 bowls, 8 scoopings of still-warm granola, 8 spoons, daily beginnings.

Like lapping waves, sheets pulled tight, pillows straightened, last night smoothed out. Quotidian ways.

Like the soundless heron I search the skies for in the early light of every morning, en route to the river to fill his tummy on fish, so I too prepare our meals, lay out our food. Rhythms and routines… worship in motion.

Heart, do not chaffe… do not stomp… do not resent. Housework is our means to entering into the holy. It is here in the kitchen, in the laundry room, washing the toilets, sweeping the floors, that we practice the presence of God.

"We ought not to grow tired of doing little things for the love of God, who regards not the greatness of the work, but the love with which it is performed."... Brother Lawrence

Like the sun, wind and waves….like all of creation…I am Your servant in motions of worship. Make me perform with love for You, Father.


Lord, let everything that has breath praise You...including...especially me. As the trees of the field clap their hands, let my every movement in this home, be in worship, in love with You.


From the 2006 archives...

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Sacred Rhythms and Everyday Liturgy

Letter in inbox: Hi.....I just found your blog... I'm an Eastern Orthodox (former non-denominational Christian). I've never heard a Non-denominational church use the word "liturgy." We use the word in our Church all the time, but I'm wondering what you're meaning by the word....Please don't be offended...just got my interest [and I'm asking] out of curiosity.

A Homeschool Mom of 4 in CA.




Kind Friend... I am grateful for your note (a curious mind is kin!)... privileged to listen to your story... to share here, too...

Yes, our family attends what may be deemed a "non-liturgical" church... or a "low church," that is to say, in our fellowship we do not make use of developed ritual, ceremony, or worship accouterments like vestments. (Though, even the wordless, waiting worship of our communion service could be considered liturgical, since the waiting itself, until the Holy Spirit moves men to speak, could be considered "the liturgy of silence.")

Yet perhaps even the distinction between "liturgical" and "non-liturgical" churches veils how believers in either tradition live the whole of their lives worshipping in very public, ceremonial ways.

While perhaps not commonly coined in Protestant, evangelical faith communities, when I speak of liturgy, I guess I am speaking of the whole of my life as liturgy. An everyday liturgy.

With its roots in λειτουργία (leitourgia), liturgy means "public work" or "public servant." Thus all that we do, think, say before others... others in our homes, in our places of work, in our communities.... I humbly offer that this is our liturgy, our public service, before people, and before our all encompassing God. In no way is liturgy to mean rote, empty ritual, but rather

...liturgy is a school where through sign and symbol, word and music, our minds and hearts are formed to be in union with the movement of God, with God Himself. ~Fr. M. Basil Pennington


Liturgy is our daily, vibrant dance with God Himself... through the reading, memorization, and meditating on Scripture, the singing of hymns, the lighting of a candle, through the signs of the cup and the bread... Liturgy is our pressing into the heart of God and moving with Him. Days, wild and crazy days of family life, need order, scaffolding, sacred rhythms. If we say God is at the center, so we order the tangle of our days around Him: we commune with Him through the liturgical, sacred everyday rhythms of our public work, our daily service, our vocation. And He untangles us.

As liturgy refers to a public and deliberate, well-defined ceremony, so we are intentional and deliberate in our rhythms, seeking equilibrium amidst all that sets us off kilter:

  • set times of prayer, following the way of Daniel who prayed three times a day facing Jerusalem (Daniel 6:10), the psalmist who speaks of praising God seven times a day (Ps. 119:164) and the early disciples who we find praying at fixed hours: 9 am in the upper room (Acts 2: 1, 15); Peter on roof for his Noon prayers (Acts 10:9); Peter & John on way to temple for 3pm prayers (Acts 3:1), everyday liturgy invites one into knowing God's presence at all times by meeting with Him at certain, set, times.
  • hallowed habits of meditating on His Word, savoring His bread each time we eat physical food
  • regular family gatherings to sing hymns and psalms, worshipping
  • being aware, present, to His abiding Presence, as we work
  • honoring the Sabbath, celebrating the Biblical feasts, making holidays holy
  • as a family, observing Advent and Lent in simple, thoughtful ways
  • opening and closing our days with prayer, fencing our days with blessings...
  • corporate and individual communion throughout the week

Often translated as "minister" or "worship" instead of "liturgy" in English language Bibles ("and in their ministering to the Lord and fasting..." Acts 3:2), so we minister before the Lord, presenting our bodies, all that we do, up to Him as living sacrifices, holy and acceptable to God, which is our spiritual worship (Romans 12:1). As The Message renders Ro. 12:1,

"Take your everyday, ordinary life—your sleeping, eating, going-to-work, and walking-around life—and place it before God as an offering."

So this family humbly, (and bumbling) attempt to live all of life as liturgy.... for I quietly believe that liturgy doesn’t merely happen in church, but rather liturgy happens in hearts. Whenever, wherever, I am in God's service as His servant, so I am living out an everyday liturgy of deliberate worship. Without an everyday liturgy, a quotidian dance of worship, we may grow stiff, spiritually awkward, lukewarm. As the trees of the field perform their praise in the beauty of daily, quotidian rhythms, we too may enter into the quotidian liturgy of sacred rhythms, hallowed habits ... a sacrificed life which is our spiritual act of worship.

So that is all, friend... I simply pray to live a quiet life (that sometimes fizzles into a chaotically loud life) that is a holy experience: listening... laundry... liturgy. Only by His infinite grace...

Father God... remind me again how everyday is sacred, how life is liturgy, how to keep the rhythms of Your grace. I yearn for union---deep, intimate, complete union--- with You. You, here with me, in the holy ordinary.


Related:
Cleaning: My quotidian liturgy
The Problem with Not Experiencing God
Relationship with God in the Midst of Crazy Family Life

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Serving Joy

As I work through the day --sweep out the garage, hang out the laundry, season the pot of soup, pick up legos and scraps of paper-- I have been singing this song:

"This is my song of praise to you..." (to listen to whole song)

These acts of service are joy! worship! songs of praise!




I slept and dreamt that life was joy.

I awoke and saw that life was service.

I acted and behold, service was joy.

- Tagore.


Father, remind me. I have such soul alzheimers. Wake me again: That all I do, these acts of service, this daily work, this is is my worship to You! Praise! Joy! Gratitude!


More:
Glorifying God in Housework
Avodah: The One Act of Work and Worship
Work, Prayer and Dirty Troughs
Thinking Like a Server

Monday, August 27, 2007

Heartily

"Thank God
every morning when you get up,
that you have something to do that day which must be done...
Work
will breed in you temperance and self-control,
diligence and strength of will,
cheerfulness and content,
and a hundred virtues which the idle never know."
~Charles Kingsley


Wendell Berry:

"We lived here by our work. Our life and our work were not the same thing maybe, but they were close. The children would grow up knowing how to work, and would have the satisfaction knowing they were useful....


...But the foremost reason was we needed their help. From the earliest time they were able to help, we gave them little jobs to do. Sometimes when we expected and required them to do it, work was what they thought it was. Sometimes when we were all at work together, they thought they were playing, but even so work was what it was and they were helping."

~Wendell Berry, Hannah Coulter




And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ.

~COLOSSIANS 3:23-24 (NKJV).

Lord, today, always, I serve You. Make me faithful to Your work.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

The Secret to Freedom



"If you set out to seek freedom, then learn above all
discipline of soul and senses, so that your passions
and your limbs might not lead you confusedly hither and yon.

No one discovers the secret of freedom but through self-control."

~Dietrich Bonhoeffer


Lord, we look up to You in these new days, new habits, new paths. What is the secret to freedom? We want to bloom free. Does freedom come through discipline, Father?

Lord? Self-control seems hopeless. Might you make us God-controlled?

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Joy in Chores

It's Saturday. And Saturday morning chores. And living for Him--worshipful, grateful living--changes everything on a Saturday morning. Or any morning.

A letter from the inbox:

"Friend!

Your call to prayerfully focus on Living has touched me so this week.

I have found the sweetest joys in the ugliest chores.

As I clean between the refrigerator and the cupboards, which appear to have never been separated from each other, and I dump out the dirty water time and time again, I am reminded of the little girl who dreamed of a home of her own someday, filled with little ones, a loving husband who serves the Lord. Here I am. I am so happy to be here! Such grace.

Fernando sings behind me while I pack away china that I know not when I will pull out to use again, for it will not fit in our tiny apartment. Box after box of precious books and Willow Tree figurines are tucked away, labeled Storage, and yet I cannot stop smiling.

Sing to Jesus... he sings. I do!

I am so happy to be here, Lord. Had I a trampoline, I would be jumping for joy every spare moment . Instead, I dance with my little one, wrestle with my bigger ones, and return to the chores that once were ugly, but now are purposeful, beautiful.

How marvelous that in turmoil, and strife, and worry, we find such peace in praising Him through it!

Love to you,
A sister in Jesus"

Yes, cherished sister. How radically marvelous.


Further, from the archives: Needful Attitude for Saturday Morning Work

Friday, June 08, 2007

Gone Fishing

You should go, too ...

(or: How to not waste a Saturday. Or a life).

HT: Dear Debi

Lord, tomorrow is Saturday. The smudges on the windows and the weeds in the garden will wait today. You've given me more important things to do.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Christianity: The Real Kind

From our mealtime readings of In His Steps... (text available online)

"There is a great quantity of nominal Christianity to-day.

There is need of more of the real kind. We need revival of the Christianity of Christ. We have, unconsciously, lazily, selfishly, formally, grown into a discipleship that Jesus himself would not acknowledge. He would say to many of us when we cry, 'Lord, Lord,' 'I never knew you.' Are we ready to take up the cross? Is it possible for this church to sing with exact truth,

'Jesus, I my cross have taken,
All to leave and follow Thee?'

If we can sing that truly, then we may claim discipleship. But if our definition of being a Christian is simply to enjoy the privileges of worship, be generous at no expense to ourselves, have a good, easy time surrounded by pleasant friends and by comfortable things, live respectably and at the same time avoid the world's great stress of sin and trouble because it is too much pain to bear it -- if this is our definition of Christianity, surely we are a long way from following the steps of Him who trod the way with groans and tears and sobs of anguish for a lost humanity; who sweat, as it were, great drops of blood, who cried out on the up-reared cross, 'My God! My God! why hast thou forsaken me!'

"Are we ready to make and live a new discipleship? Are we ready to reconsider our definition of a Christian? What is it to be a Christian? It is to imitate Jesus. It is to do as He would do. It is to walk in His steps."

Lord, how much of my life is about the privileges of comfortable worship and avoiding the world's great stress of sin?

How much of my life is about consuming and getting--and not about producing and giving?

Do I touch and love and serve the downtrodden and the outcast, like You did? Does my faith get dirty and sweaty? Or do I stay removed, untouched, from the darkness of this world, disdaining all that is less than pristine?

How much of my Christianity looks like Christ? Would You spend Your days like I do?

Make me a Christian, Father.
The Real Kind.

Friday, May 11, 2007

No Menial Work


"No work is so menial that it cannot be rendered as worship...

What if your work became worship?
What if the work of your hands---was Eucharistic, a sacrament of God's presence that you gave and received?
What if Jesus himself was your boss, the One who watched over you and and you honored with your efforts?" ~Mark Buchanan

Lord, we have worshiped You this week in the fields. We've been dirt-caked, and weary, and pressing hard. It was not menial to You. You've accepted the sacrifice, rendered as worship.

You sent the spring rains during the night, swelling those thousands upon thousands of seeds resting, waiting, in the ground.

The sun shines on the glistening glades this morning, the earth of the fields dark with moisture. Growth will come. In us too. For we work as unto You, the One Who watches over us and is honored with our efforts.
Establish the work of our hands.

Virtue of our Work

May the virtue of our daily work
hallow our nightly prayers.

May our sleep be deep and soft
so our work be fresh and hard.

~Celtic Daily Prayers

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Raising Lovers: Only Work that Matters

Beuchner:

"There is no neutral corner in your human encounters...You either make people feel a little better or leave them a little worse.

You define your faith and moral posture in the ordinary stuff of your daily routine.

The Kingdom belongs to those, as artless as children, who love others simply and directly, without thinking about anything but them.

The inheritors of the Promise are those unsung folks who lend others a hand when they're falling.

That's the only work that matters in the end." ~Frederick Beuchner

Lord, am I striving to raise children who love to read? who love to learn? May I focus on raising children who simply LOVE. For, in the end, that done in love is the only work that matters. Today, may I enlarge people... not diminish them...and keep lending a helping hand. As You did--one with nail scars.

Monday, April 16, 2007

Real Love (Part 2)


A note in my inbox... from a reader who warrants a Thinking Award with the insights she quietly offers...so I share:

"This morning I was looking at this beautiful pot that my sister had bought me as a gift. I was thinking about how much I loved it.

You know how when you’re young and single and moving around a bit—different apartments—and you only hold on to a handful of boxes—just your very favorite things?
I thought—this would be something I would always take with me. It’s not clutter at all—I would even enjoy dusting it and washing it—I love it that much—wiping it down actually brings a smile to my face.

I thought of other things that make me feel that way—a certain pair of pants, my Jewish plates, my red teapot . . . And then of course, I thought of love itself.

Is that what REAL love is—when we love someone so much that we enjoy the work of caring for them—it’s not even work?

If I really loved, would I like the constant cooking, cleaning, bathing, teaching?"


Father... may love--real love---be what compels me to think like a server-- that I love so deeply today, that it all doesn't even seem like work at all.

(Part Three of Love Series to follow sometime this week)

Thinking about God and Housework


Lovely Mary at My Kisses from Heaven , Thoughtful Wendy at Letters from BlueBird Abbey , and Vivacious Stacy of With Great Joy , kindly graced with the Thinking Blogger Award... And yet again, it is you gracious folks who make me think...

Wendy referenced things that I needed to read again, things I once "knew" but had yet forgotten again : (here , here, here, here, here, here, and here)... and then these thoughts from from "Glorifying God in Housework." Wendy wrote: "Well if you've been reading my blog you'll have heared it quoted here "like a million times"...and that's how tangibly its impacted my thinking!"

They were words I don't recall writing, that the Lord knew that I needed to revisit in this past week of Mama meltdowns over socks, laundry and legos, to learn again:

"Yet, in small ways, I return to You and the Perfect Time Before when I order, wash away, sweep clean...beating back the chaos, the powers of destruction. Simple acts of cleaning are my humble, conquering efforts in the quotidian struggle between chaos and order, creation and disintegration, God and Death...

Deliberate, ritual motions maintain an easy order. Easier than wresting order out of invading chaos.

And a tidy house ushers in the possibility of a tidy heart. A heart beating with Yours, in a place more like that place In the Beginning."

Father? This messy heart desperately needs some tidying. I begin this morning with prayerful thoughts of You and Work... and then begin this week with Spring Cleaning: organizing, ordering... and ora et labora.

~~~
(Again, humble thanks Mary, Wendy and Stacy--and to any reading this, I appreciate you: and consider yourself tagged for the Thinking Blogger award! Post away!)