Showing posts with label hope. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hope. Show all posts

Monday, March 8, 2010

Jesus Rocked Their World

In the season of Lent, we journey toward the cross. Today, we know the significance of that journey and where it leads: to Christ's death on the cross and the resurrection. In this journey we understand that God gave His son for us so that we might live fully in relationship with God--be restored us in our relationship with Him. I feel overwhelmed by that thought during this season.

But the disciples didn't know this. As Christ moved toward the cross, his disciples only saw hints of what was to come. They did not fully understand what was about to happen would rock their world. Shake it fully.

They knew Jesus, saw the miracles, heard his message. Certainly they believed, if not by faith, then by sight. But, for them, the full meaning of the journey towards the cross could only be understood in hindsight.

I wonder how they felt once they fully understood. When Jesus prayed at the Mount of Olives, His disciples followed Him and He asked them to pray. Instead, they fell asleep. And, later, Peter disowned Jesus. They let Jesus down--because they felt tired or feared persecution. They were human.

But, imagine how they felt once Jesus revealed Himself to them after His death and resurrection. If I place myself in their shoes, I imagine that once the initial joy subsided, I would feel incredible regret. Regret that I failed Christ in what he asked of me, in His darkest moment during His time among us.

But the beauty of the story is that, despite the disciples' failures --disciples who knew Him and followed Him during his time on Earth--Christ went to the cross for them, too.
The disciples knew not only a direct relationship with Christ while he walked among them, but they were the first to be restored fully to God. They received forgiveness and grace that must have felt incredibly tangible in the moment.

When I put myself in their shoes, I think of those moments when I have wronged someone I love deeply--my husband or children or parents or sibling. I replay those moments, and I think of the depth of my regret, but also how intimate those conversations of restoration and forgiveness are -- the opening of hearts and the pouring out of forgiveness. Heartfelt moments--often difficult moments--like no others. The embracing of each other when the valley that separated us closes and we have that intimate moment when grace comes rushing down.

I imagine that is how the disciples must have felt.
Tangible love, grace, and forgiveness from God.

That is the same love, grace, and forgiveness that Christ offers to all. I don't know if it feels as tangible to me as it must have to the disciples, but it is the same. He is present always with that love, grace, and forgiveness. We just need to turn towards him.

So this season of Lent, as I journey to the cross, I think of how intimately the disciples knew Jesus and how He rocked their world. It reminds me just how tangible God is --if I will just enter into relationship with Him and let His grace pour down on me.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Teaching: It's not about the teacher

As a teacher, I sometimes get caught up in "teaching." Trying to figure out my lesson plans and crafting assignments that will help students learn -- learn the materials, learn to think, learn to write, revise, and edit. As part of this planning, I often think about the "professionalism" aspect of their learning, too. Are they aware of how to communicate professionally? Do they know the importance of being punctual? Do they understand that their integrity--their character and reputation--are far more important than what a supervisor may want them to do, or a client they may represent?

Sometimes I get so caught up that I forget that the students need me to remember that they are not just students -- but thinking, feeling, spiritual human beings.

Maybe it isn't so much that I forget. It's just that I push that aspect of the students off to the side, rather than keep it front and center. I need to love them, not just teach them.

Today, God reminded me.

The students had a first draft of a paper due, for peer review. Two students wrote me in the early morning hours, both in a bit of distress--expressing their frustrations. But between the lines, I could hear not just frustration, but the slipping away of their self-worth and self-confidence.

I added my students to my prayers this morning, but went along my way as usual. But God knew that it was me who needed His grace more than the students.

One of those students stopped by my office to talk later in the day. His face was long and he looked tired. We talked through his paper and his concerns about its structure and content.

Towards the end of the conversation, I saw a sudden flash of life in his face--his eyes lit up and a brief smile crossed his mouth. In that moment, the holy spirit stepped in and flooded the room with compassion. Before I knew it, words were flowing. I paused and something like the following came spilling out of me, "You know [Jason], you need to give yourself more credit than you do. You are really bright. Really capable. You have grown so much as a student and writer this year. This paper will come together and you will be so thrilled with it when you are done. "

It was a flood of grace. The air in the room lifted and [Jason's] demeanor changed completely. I felt his spirit change. I saw it in his eyes and in his face and in his movement.

As for me? I felt God's presence and his grace. Grateful that He knew that this young man needed more than help with his paper. Grateful that He gave me the opportunity and the words. Grateful for the reminder that I need to keep the whole person (not just the student) and God front and center--not me . . . Even though I might be the one standing in the front of the classroom.

Friday, February 12, 2010

God's hand. A man named Evan.

Two days ago, friends pulled a young man out of the rubble of a fallen marketplace building in Haiti. Given the recent earthquake that devastated the country, it was not unexpected, except, that it occurred 28 days after the quake.

28 days. No food. No human contact.

But hope. And, faith.

That young man's name was Evan Muncie.

I don't go around saying out loud things like "God is present," "God has his hand in things." Or other such statements. I think them and I feel them. But, I rarely share them.

I just can't resist it here. This young man's survival is a miracle. A wonder. God had to have his hand in things. I am certain.

Of course, the other side of things--the cynical side--is that God had his hand in all the devastation and suffering in Haiti, too. The poverty, the destruction, the death, the disease.

I know that God is present in all things. And, I wouldn't try to explain why there is pain, and poverty, and disease in the world. Why God just doesn't get rid of it all if he is all powerful. That is beyond knowing and beyond fully understanding.

But, despite those human sufferings, we have faith, hope, and love. And, I know, just from my own life experiences, that those three truly are powerful. And, that they spring forth with force during times of suffering.

While we could not prevent the earthquake, men and women -- of all faiths and backgrounds -- have stepped in to help the people of Haiti. We feel drawn to the people of Haiti. We have hope for her people. We have faith that perhaps, through this tragedy, we, as a world, can help Haiti rebuild and climb out of poverty and all that comes with that extreme poverty.

God reminds us--through the life of Evan Muncie--28 days later, that we need to keep our faith and hope and love for Haiti. God reminds us that his hand is in this all and that through Him all things are possible.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Living Intentionally

Days can go by in which I just live. Checking off the tasks on my list of to dos -- with no real direction, except that list. Go to the store, prepare for class, coffee with Cindy, call vet. Those days seem more about the end result--the destination--not the journey.

Other days I am more intentional about living the day and noticing the day, and the beauty, and the meaning, and in seeking God's presence. I love those days. I love the intention. I give full attention to the day. I see with eyes wide open those days. I feel deeply. I laugh, smile, cry. Those days are about the journey--not the destination.

So, today, my to do list includes more.

Spend time with God
See the people around you
Listen carefully
Be intentional about everything

Today will be about the journey.

http://thetodolistforliving.blogspot.com

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Stepping In To Community: Feeling Alive

I sat in the pews of our Church for three and a half years -- sitting upright, hardly anyone ever talking to me. Sitting and listening and praying. Feeling our pastors and elders are not accessable to the church body, except to the privileged few. I still feel that way, at least a little. While sitting and worshiping without much connection is what I wanted and needed at first, I grew to long for a true community. As Nora Gallagher wrote in her book, "Things Seen and Unseen," I didn't want the "false camaraderie." Rather, I grew to long for community, in all its joy and brokenness.

But I was fearful and tired. Too many times had I found myself stuck between the married, the divorced, and the unmarried. Being married to a non-believer puts you in a category that seems to make you an untouchable to some. Not that others don't want to know you or connect with you -- but I think people don't know how. Married couples look for other Christian couples to connect with; the divorced want to find others who are single and who understand the pain and hope of divorce; the unmarried seemed to be indifferent or maybe even shocked that I would be unequally yoked. Most didn't know my story at all before I felt the pain of the nails of judgment and the loneliness and hurt of being excluded from small gatherings.

No spiritual community at home and no spiritual community at church. Just communion with God and self. A place of pain and darkness at times. But a place of hope and comfort if I would look to Christ.

I felt like I was standing outside a circle of people, all with their backs turned to me. And yet, I felt God's grace.

At one point a few years ago I attended a church members' meeting at which the elders brought in a position paper on divorce. While I was not sure -- and I'm still not sure that I agree entirely with the position of the church on the issues of divorce--I found it refreshing and encouraging that the church actually would take a stance and be supportive of those who have divorced.

I spoke up about how I was encouraged, because as a person who was married to a non-believer, I understood the feeling of being marginalized in a community of believers. I don't think I used the word marginalized, but apparently that was the message that came across. At the end of the evening, the Women's Pastor came up to me and said she would love to talk to me further about what I meant. So, we scheduled a lunch date.

I appreciated her effort and concern to bring all women in the community together. She was genuine, a good listener, and engaged. I was encouraged that she would help me find a place in the community -- even if it meant helping me find a group of women who were also married to non-believers.

She did try.

But it was more affirmation that finding a place, if at all, was going to be a long and arduous and very lonely journey. And, that the journey was mine to make, not hers.

Time has passed. And, I am at peace. God has brought some amazing women into my life. They are women like me, who love God, but who are not afraid to talk about
their faith and doubt, joy and brokenness. They have issues with their marriages and families, just like I do. They grapple with the church and its position on so many things, just like I do. I have found community and hope.

God was and is faithful. I feel alive.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Thin Space

I seek the thin space
I find peace there
God reveals himself

Vulnerability envelops me
For there, my heart is known
I cannot hide in the pews silently

There I am stripped of worldly coverings
And I meet face to face
Eyes and heart open

I do not live in the thin space
But I return here often
For I long for this place

In between heaven and earth

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Adoption, Hope, God, and Heritage

I'm adopted. I was proud of it as a kid because it made me different and people always asked me about it.  What did I know about my birth mom? Why were you adopted?  Do you have any siblings?  It was cool, at least on the surface. 

I remember driving home from a trip to visit my Grandmother.  For some reason my sister, who was 22 months older and also adopted, wasn't with us.  Dad was driving the green 1970-something sedan, Mom sat in the front passenger seat, and I sat in the seat directly behind her.  From the safety of the back seat, where mom would have to turn around to an uncomfortable position to look me in the eye, I finally found the courage to ask.  "Mom, what do you and Dad know about my adoption?"  I could see Mom take a breath and she turned a little.   "What do you want to know?" I don't recall what I said then -- but I know I wanted to know anything they knew.  Every detail.  I hated that I didn't look like anyone.  I wondered why I was left handed and blond.  I wanted to know if I had siblings or a father that knew about me.  I wanted to know if my mother cried at the drop of a hat like I did and whether she loved sports and ice cream or was afraid of the dark.

So Mom told me all they knew.  Very little.  They were told that she was single and had moved to the Seattle area to work for the phone company when she found out she was pregnant.  Her fiance was Catholic, but had been killed in an accident of some kind. She had gone through classes to become Catholic before they were to be married, but the accident cut things short.   Mom didn't know if my father ever knew about me.  I was offered to another family first.  But, the attorney told Mom and Dad that when the family found out I was Irish and 1/32 Cherokee Indian, they decided they didn't want me -- they didn't want a "mixed race" baby.  So, the attorney called Dad at work the day I was born and told him there was this little girl that needed a home.  He left work early to tell Mom.  They decided to take me.  That was all they knew. Who knew whether any of it was true.  And, it really didn't answer any of the questions I had.

A few years later, a guy I dated for a short time while in college, asked me, "So what is your heritage?"  I remember it vividly.  I lived in a beautiful sorority house.  When male visitors would come by to see us, there were only a few places we could visit.  The favorite was a small window seat in a small alcove in the front entry of the house.  It had dim lighting and had just enough room for two people to sit and visit.  When he asked me the question, I thought it was rather harmless and I jumped at the opportunity to share with him my adoption story.  When I was done telling that young man my story, such as it was, he said.  "Wow.  So you really don't have any heritage." To him, it wasn't cool that I was adopted.  Not even on the surface.  The message of his response, at least as I took it at that moment was: heritage matters, you don't have one; therefore, you don't matter.  That comment haunted me for years.  And, in some ways, I think it became a subtle but significant force behind who I sought to become. 

If I didn't have a heritage, then I would create my own. I didn't want to ever feel insignificant because I didn't matter in someone's eyes.  In hind sight, of course, that young man, whose name I even struggle to remember, probably meant no harm.

At 22, I began the search for my birth mom.  I attended a meeting hosted by an organization called Washington Adoptee Rights Movement (WARM).  I remember it was in this room in a building on the port of Seattle.  It was dark and sterile and cold.  But a friend came with me, which gave me some comfort.  I don't recall much about the meeting except there was information about searching in Washington.  A few people introduced themselves -- as birth mothers or adoptees -- and told stories of their successful searches and reunions.  I felt hope and a longing to know my birth mother.  A longing to know my heritage.  A longing to thank my birth mother for this life.  I could hardly wait. 

I also remember a statistic I learned that night -- only 5% of birth mothers don't want contact with their children.  Wow.  It never dawned on me that my birth mother might be among that 5%.  But she was.  I did a search, through a confidential intermediary--which is how you get access to closed adoption records in Washington.  It took several years to get to the top of the list to be assigned a confidential intermediary, but after that the waiting was less than a year.  The intermediary petitioned for my adoption records to be opened.  Based on that record, she learned my birth mother's name and eventually found her.  She called me the night she made the phone call.  My birth mother was terse.  She had never known I was a girl.  She wasn't married currently, but had been.  My birth father had been the love of her life.  There had been an accident.  He never knew she was pregnant.  No one in her family--including her mother, who was still alive--knew about me.  She was never able to have children after me because of complications following my birth.  She didn't want to meet me.  She didn't want to tell me anything.   She didn't want to know anything about me. 

I learned a little bit more about her -- she was blond like me and about my height and build.  She was raised Baptist and was the youngest of seven children.  The first and only one to go to high school.  Her father had died from heart disease.  My birth father was Catholic.  One of two children.  An athlete.  His father had died of TB.  The file indicated I was a "mixed race" baby.  (are you kidding me, mixed race, really? who isn't mixed race?). That was my heritage. 

I grieved for a long time.  I felt a deep sense of loss because I would never know either my birth mom or my birth father.  I cried, I was angry, I was hurt. I longed to know them.  Deep down, I kept up hope that she would change her mind.  I knew she was alive so I had reason to hope.

Several years later, after I had children, I even convinced the intermediary to try to contact my birth mom again.  Maybe now she would want to know me.

The intermediary found her again--it took a while, she had changed her name.

But this time, my birth mother slammed the door. It was none of my business. Any of it.

My hope ended.  As painful as that was, it was what I needed.  I had closure even if I had no information.  I was who I was, in part, because I didn't have a heritage.  I needed to move forward and respect my birth mother's decision. 

While I moved forward, it took several years for the pain to fade.  A woman's retreat is where the veil of pain was lifted and I finally found peace. I remember that moment. In a time of reflection following the events of the day and time spent meeting with a guest speaker, I had an epiphany. I felt a flood of joy and peace come over me and the words, "you are a child of God."  I had heard those words spoken before, but I never really considered their significance to my life. I am first a child of God, and only second a child of a woman who had no room in her life for me or the child of a man and woman who chose to love me and raise me. My heritage was God's heritage. I can think of no better Father than the one who loves me unconditionally.

While I still rest in the comfort that I am a child of God first, I still carry the old tattered me around.  The me who strove to do well, strove to impress, worried about what others thought.  The me who worked so hard to create a heritage or legacy that I could point to as mine--seeking the praise and acceptance of others.  But I've been slowly shedding that weight. I remember that I need to rely on God more and seek His purpose for my life. I stumble with the weight still, but He is present, and He catches me if I look to Him for help.

And, now, I am more certain than I was as a child that being adopted really is cool--after all, it was part of my Father's plan for my life.