Beyond the Page

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“For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” ~ Matthew 6:21

Raising a soon-to-be-teenage boy seems to have increased the frequency of conversations in our home about value.  He’s earning his own money now and the list of what he wants to buy with it grows ever longer.  These conversations require me to keep coming back to the basics of what I value in my own life.  What really matters to me?  Am I living in a way that reflects what my heart truly values?

These questions were on my mind today as my husband and I spent the afternoon browsing through a few of our favorite antique stores.  He knows that he’s sure to lose me to a section of antique books.  I’m immediately drawn to the volumes so worn and frayed that the spines are unreadable.  Those are the books I pick up first. Most of the editions I’ve added to my collection are like this – old, dusty, and fragile.  They don’t have any particularly notable monetary value and they’ve probably been passed up by hundreds of people before finding a home on my shelf.  But for me the value of these books is beyond what’s printed on their pages.  I feel connected to the hands that held them before me and I long to know more about those stories.

When I opened the cover of this 1906 publication of Robert Louis Stevenson there was no question that it was soon to be mine. Handwritten on the endpapers is a primitive genealogy of the family that owned it.  Each name is marked by a date of birth and death. Time paused for a moment as I read of Carl Arzberger, written in his wife’s hand, that he died Jan. 19, 1946, at 7:15pm.  There’s no wondering if Carl’s wife loved her husband or how much she valued his life – she recorded it right down to the day, his last moment in her arms.

This is but a glimpse of God’s love for us.  He chooses us first, no matter how worn and frayed our lives may be.  He finds us worthy to do His work despite our weakness.  While others may disparage and pass us by He invites us to be in His arms for the entirety of the time we are given.  God’s love inspires me to reflect His value in my life every day.

Summer of Love

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Sand and surf.  Ice cream and road trips.  Swimming and stay-cations.  Anxiety.  Job hunting and uncertainty.  Not the ideal list of words that I would typically associate with summer, but it’s been reality for me this year.

Two weeks ago I quit my job without having something new lined up. This act did not align at all with my personality or fall anywhere close to my comfort zone. Yet the truth is that I should have done it sooner.  God had made it very clear to me that my season there was over, He didn’t want me in that situation anymore, but I was holding on out of fear.  How would I pay the rent?  How could I provide for my family?  It was a simple conversation with my mother-in-law that completely shifted my perspective.  She said, “You do realize that you’re not the one doing all of this, right?  You’re not the one providing for your family, God is.”

And there it was, truth spoken into my life.  A spirit-lifting, liberating, and humbling truth. I have nothing, God has it all.  The more that I run around frantically trying to pull all of the strings the further my gaze turns from Him and the more I rob myself of the blessing of knowing that God cares for me. Psalm 8:4 says “What is mankind that you are mindful of them, human beings that you care for them?” This scripture begs me to ask myself who I really am and to sit still long enough to receive the answer. I am a daughter of the King and I am cared for by Christ. There is no room for fear in my identity.

I’m adding a few things to my list of summer words, like peace, faith, and expectancy.  If I’m honest with myself I know that it will likely include some chaos, disappointment, and surprise (in both directions) along the way, but the word that will hold me this summer and every season to follow is love.  Hallelujah for the summer of God’s perfect love.

Word Matters

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“The sum of Your word is truth, and every one of your righteous ordinances is everlasting.” ~ Psalm 119:160

I’m an advocate for words. I will admit (and my husband will confirm) that I can sometimes get a little obsessive about it. Words and how they are used matter to me. They represent thoughts, emotions, and promises. I’m the woman who will spend more than an hour in the greeting card aisle because the words printed on the card that I choose must represent my true feelings. I flat out refuse to buy an e-reader of any kind as I prefer the tangibility of a book in my hands, where I can see and touch the author’s words on paper that I can smell. I can’t even bring myself to use abbreviations in text messages, I feel compelled to spell it all out and give each word the respect that it deserves.

I think I tend to approach words with reverence because they are the avenue to communicating truth. Recently I was involved in a conversation where one person said to another, “You are not a man of your word.” What a biting statement it was. For a few weeks now I’ve been thinking about that statement and what it would have felt like to have those words aimed at me. And then I realized that whether or not those words are ever spoken to me directly, I know that they are sometimes true in my own life. I have not always been a person of my word. I often use words out loud to disguise what is happening in my heart – to defend and deflect. I fall short of being consistent with truth in my words more often that I’d like to admit.

This is why I need a savior. Specifically I need God to be my Savior. His words are true because His Word is truth, and it is the same yesterday, today, and forever. I don’t ever have to wonder if He is being real with me or what His motives are. I am learning that if I want to be a person of my word I need to be a person in His Word. The more that I seek His faithful, unchanging presence the more pure my own motives become. God’s words matter most of all and I pray that I always have the ears to hear them.

Going Off Script

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I’m a self-proclaimed list maker. Even as a kid I remember every time that I had a school project, an assortment of Saturday morning chores to do, or even an upcoming summer trip, the first step was always to pull out a sheet of notebook paper and a pen. I’d often spend more time writing out and checking off my list than I would actually doing the work, the cleaning, or the packing. Something about having that tangible place where I could see the intentionality of my plans made me feel secure. I prided myself on being prepared. Even though I knew it was rare for every item on the list to get checked off, anything that was missed was likely to be minor. Besides, just having the list meant that I had thought things through, and I could prove it.
Needless to say I get a little antsy when life goes off script. I start to sweat if I don’t have the next several steps in my sight. I’m fascinated with improvisational actors because what they do is miles and miles outside of my comfort zone. Nothing terrifies me more than having to “wing it.” A good friend who happens to be very carefree and spirited calls me the “plaid princess.” It’s a term of endearment that suits me well – straight, clean lines, lots of structure. Practical. That’s how my brain works. I’m always looking ahead, anticipating what is to come and writing up my lists accordingly.
However yesterday I did something that I would have never written down on any list (except maybe a list of things I’d never do). I quit my job without having any prospects for something new. Just typing those words makes my heart beat a bit faster. It wasn’t as abrupt or thoughtless as it may sound – I’ve been struggling with this job for almost a year now. But I’m well aware that there isn’t anything about this decision that doesn’t appear crazy. I work from home, my hours are flexible. In the fall we’ll begin our fourth year of homeschooling the boy. Having had one interview and spoken to a few recruiters in the past few weeks, everyone has the same question. “You’ve got a good thing going here, why would you want to give that up?” And they’re right, on the surface my situation is ideal. Except that it isn’t.
Each day it becomes clearer to me how much I have suffocated myself with my own false sense of security. I’m ashamed to admit that I’ve become a slave to the lists. At any given time what’s scrolling through my head is an electronic marquee sign of items that I need to attend to because I’m the only one who can. And as the words roll by the voice in my head tells me that I have no options. I have to stick with this job because it’s the only thing that will afford me the ability to do all of the things. I’ve traded peace in my home and joy in my soul for a “flexible schedule.” That’s the lie I’ve been living.
Over the past few weeks I found myself having conversations and hearing messages that reminded me to raise my eyes, lift my head, and stop looking for God in the neat little box where I’ve placed Him. This week in particular, as I spent my mornings volunteering with the team at King’s Harbor Church Vacation Bible School, my heart has been encouraged in ways I can’t fully describe. I was approached by people who thought I was a teacher or a motivational speaker. When I shared that I’ve worked in accounting for the past twenty years the reaction was, “You sit at a desk all day? You need to be using your gifts!” These words struck me deeply, as this has been my secret prayer request for quite some time.
Until recently I have not spoken these things out loud because they seem ungrounded, lofty. They don’t make practical sense. The desire of my heart is to work in a space of integrity, with a team that I can safely invest myself in. I want to serve those in need, to comfort the grieving. I want to write and create things that inspire and encourage. Crunching numbers has kept the bills paid but it is most definitely not my passion. In fact dealing with people’s money almost always seems to bring out the worst in them.
On paper I’m not qualified to do much beyond the number crunching. Being five classes away from a bachelor’s degree doesn’t translate well onto a job application or a resume. Several years of non-profit program management and volunteer work don’t add up in a salary history. But this week I was reminded that God is bigger than my limitations. As I stood before two hundred kids today and shared the following passage from Jeremiah, the truth spoke life into me: “‘For I know the plans I have for you,’ declares the Lord, ‘plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you a hope and a future.’”
I don’t know God’s plans but I am learning to rest in the knowledge that He does. I don’t know what the next two minutes, two weeks, or two years holds for me. For the first time in my life I have no map to where I’m headed, no list of what to pack, and no script to follow. But I am learning to look forward with excited expectation instead of fear. I’m putting this out there in the hopes that you will also be encouraged regarding the uncertainties in your own life and that you will pray for me as I grow and learn how to surrender my own.

More than Fallen

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“…So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He created him; male and female He created them; Then God saw everything that He had made, and indeed it was very good.” ~ Genesis 1:27, 31

It started with the fall. Growing up, most conversations that I remember about God and my relationship to Him began with how great He was and I was not. I vividly recall the tension in my back, sitting in Sunday service, waiting for the pastor to pound his fist and proclaim what was wrong with the rest of us. We were sinners – unworthy and destined to dwell in our unworthiness. My story began with my fall, I was defined by my deficit. I believed I was filthy. Unlovable. And somewhere way above the clouds, far removed from me, was a disappointed, finger-wagging Father who breathed a heavy sigh every time He looked my way.

It’s not that I wasn’t aware of Christ’s love. We read the words and sang the songs. I memorized the 23rd Psalm like everyone else. But in my mind His love for me was parental and disciplinary, almost obligatory. Someone had to be there to keep my hand out of the spiritual cookie jar. God protected me from myself because He had to.

My breakthrough moment came last year during the first week of our Rooted group study.  I was nervous walking in, unsure that I was ready to tell the story of my broken self to strangers. But this time instead of starting with the fall we began at the true beginning – creation.  I discovered that my story does not begin with my failure, it originates from God’s love and intention to create me in His image. My story starts with His desire to have a relationship with me. I’m not the pesky kid that God HAS to wrangle, I’m the precious child He LONGS to hold. Yes I have fallen, I fail Him daily, but I am not defined by my failures. I am truly known.

How much more effective would we be in sharing God’s love if we all stood in the confidence that our stories begin there?  I am challenged to keep this perspective in my daily interactions. It’s easy to focus on where others have failed us.  Instead I choose to approach others mindful that the beginnings of their stories are the same as my own.

Of Joy

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“…and provide for those who grieve in Zion – to bestow on them a crown of beauty instead of ashes, the oil of joy instead of mourning, and a garment of praise instead of despair.” ~ Isaiah 61:3

My middle name is Joy. As a child I remember asking my mom how she decided on my name and telling her in my smart-alecky ten-year-old tone of voice, “You must have known that I would be a happy child.”

It’s interesting to think about those words that I spoke to my mother, especially now that I am a mother too. She didn’t “know” that I would be happy.  None of us “knows” what lies in store for our lives or the lives of our children. I also realize that I misspoke when I used the words “joy” and “happy” so interchangeably.  They are not the same. Happiness is a feeling, vulnerable to situations and circumstances. Joy, on the other hand, is a state of the soul, a purposed gift from God.

On the day that I was rushed to the hospital in pre-term labor and learned that my baby would not survive, I was certainly not happy. When I held my daughter’s tiny body on my chest and realized that we would not be taking her home, none of the emotions that I felt was anything close to happiness. And yet amidst the chaos, confusion, and heartbreak of that day, Elena’s life brought me joy. As I was being wheeled back from the recovery room and heard her name being spoken I knew that her life and her purpose were real and had been gifted to me by our Creator. While everything around me that day looked and felt like ashes, what followed in the months and years ahead revealed the oil of joy. At times it had seemed impossible to find but it was there.

That is the power and the grace of my God. He allows for us in our humanity to wonder and fear, to feel the anger, to cry the tears, to wish things were different, and through it all He weaves the thread of joy into a garment of praise. Those are the times we come to know Him in a deeper way and we learn to surrender more fully.

Wide and Long and High and Deep

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“…to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ, 19 and to know this love that surpasses knowledge—that you may be filled to the measure of all the fullness of God.” ~ Ephesians 3:18-19

I’ve been feeling overwhelmed.  Like most others have felt at one time or another (or more often than that), I’ve been consistently feeling stretched in every direction, doing too many things to be doing any of them well.  I don’t like that feeling.  Just as I was going into the weekend when I had planned to “catch up on everything,” I got sick.  I woke up knowing that I wasn’t going to be able to muster the strength to do much more than sleep. That’s when the questions began to swirl and the anxiety set in.  Who will teach my class?  How will I meet the tax deadline for my clients?  Who is going to do all of the things?

That day turned out much as I expected.  I slept a lot and did little else but feel like I was falling further and further behind.  The next morning I woke up with the words of the Lord in my head. I know they were His words because they were so opposite to my natural way of thinking and there was a peace within me as I heard the words over and over.  “I can do nothing without You. I have nothing without You. I am nothing without You.”  Those words repeated as I lay in bed and I closed my eyes in an effort to hang onto them. I wanted to stop time and stay in that moment of peace, fully aware that nothing I do, nothing I have, nothing I am is mine without my Heavenly Father.

I am notoriously bad at surrendering to Him, but in that moment I was overwhelmed in a whole different way.  Not with obligations and worry, but instead with love and the knowledge that my Jesus lived and died and lives eternally to set me free of the earthly bonds that I typically surrender to.  He wants that peace for me even more than I want it for myself.  That’s the overwhelming love of Christ.

Made Alive

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“But because of His great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions – it is by grace you have been saved.” ~Ephesians 2:4-5

I thought it was dead. When our very kind next door neighbor first brought over this beautiful orchid plant to welcome us to the neighborhood it was bursting with color and height.  I wanted to be diligent in caring for it so I sought out a couple of tips that seemed simple enough for even the most gardening-challenged. The orchid bloomed for weeks and then stopped.

Soon the leaves looked tired and weak. In my mind the plant was dead so I began to treat it that way.  I stopped caring for it figuring it was a waste of my time.  It certainly wasn’t the first time I’d killed a plant so there was no surprise there. The day came that I tired of looking at this sad little pot of dead leaves so I picked it up and headed for the backyard to throw it away. On the way I passed through the kitchen and looked up at the little window spot above the sink. The sun was shining beautifully and that little ledge looked bare. I placed the orchid plant there thinking to myself that it couldn’t get any more dead than it was so it was worth a shot.  A couple of weeks later I was taken aback to see life where I least expected to.  One tiny new leaf was making its way, breaking through the space where all the death had previously been.

And this is grace.  When all we can see is death in our lives and our relationships, when it feels like we have given all that we have with no growth to show for it, Jesus sees life. Because Jesus IS life.  He raises the dead, not just in our favorite Bible stories, but in our daily lives as well.  Nothing is ever beyond His reach, especially the hearts of His beloved children.  He will never treat us as if we are dead, His time is never wasted on us.  Instead He bled and died and returned to life purposefully to be our source and strength.

Goodnight, Princess

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When you share a name with a famous celebrity, the road is paved for many a strange and wonderful experience. Walking into a room of unfamiliar faces, you never need a conversation starter because you’re it. The moment you are introduced, whoever you really are takes the back seat to the most highly revered fictional character that your name is associated with. The pressure is off, there’s no ice to break. In fact you don’t have to do much talking at all. The mere mention of your name brings smiles to the surface and inspires laughter, fond memories and story after story.
Growing up Carrie Fisher seemed to suit me. It was like becoming an instant princess without the annoyance of sparkly nail polish. Better yet, I was an intergalactic princess who ruled over an entire planet and knew her way around a blaster. I was a risk taker, a girl who took matters into her own hands and didn’t wait around for the boys to save the day. I spent way more time in battle than on the throne. And I could always be counted on for a witty remark or snappy comeback.
I loved being called Princess Leia. I never bought into the prim and proper, poofy-dress concept of a princess anyway. I mean sure I took ballet for seven years, but I was no ballerina. My true self was always a bit more rough and tumble than that. After school every day I dove straight into homework in anticipation of changing into my “play clothes” and rolling around in the grass with my dogs. I was the girl who made her way to the world of make believe with a good book instead of a dress up closet.
As I grew older my name association grew more entertaining. There’s nothing quite like coming home from school to answering machine messages from adoring fans requesting an autographed 8×10 glossy. I certainly couldn’t complain about opening the mailbox to find all of the bills addressed to my parents while the fanmail was addressed to me. I endured a fair share of teenage awkwardness when the boys at school would ask where I kept my slave girl outfit. But overall I would say being Leia was a pleasure.
Of course we all know that the celebrity Carrie Fisher was not Princess Leia. As much as we’d sometimes like it to be, fiction is not fact. Carrie was a woman, a human being whose inward battles were far tougher than those she faced on the big screen. She struggled with drugs, alcohol, relationships, and her own mental health. She was born to celebrity parents and grew up in “the business” but her life was not one that she or anyone else would consider to be that of a princess.
Carrie Fisher’s life was real, not royal. Ironically her indubitably un-royal presentation is what I admire most about her. She was about as authentic as they come. With intelligence and humor Carrie used her time in the limelight to illuminate the dark places that we all find ourselves in. She embraced the whole of who she was, the light and the darkness, inviting all of it to enrich her work in ways that nothing else could. She became Carrie Fisher the writer, producer, comedienne, and advocate. Through it all she never lost her fire, bringing an edge and a wisdom to the world that is so hard to find in our current state of make-believe reality.
It’s hard to say goodbye to a person who shares your name. Carrie Fisher’s death somehow makes the inevitability of my own mortality a little more clear and constant. At the same time it reminds me of the importance of legacy. I wasn’t named for her, I never met her, we share no common lineage that I’m aware of, yet my distinct connection to both Carrie and Leia has left a welcome imprint on my life. And as the in-your-face-princess who fought valiantly for justice and peace in the universe, Carrie’s life will continue to inscribe itself on each new generation.
“If my life wasn’t funny it would just be true, and that is unacceptable.” ~ Carrie Fisher, 1956-2016

The Adolescent Marriage

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Sixteen.

It makes sense.

Our marriage is often like that rebellious adolescent who thinks he knows everything and then gets put in his place. The one who confidently asks for the keys to Dad’s car and only hours later has to conquer that nervous pit in her stomach to call home after a fender bender.

One thing I’ve learned for certain in the past sixteen years is that marriage is not love. Marriage and love are two very distinctly different entities. At its most pure love is all of the things that the Bible tells us it is — patient and kind, not boastful or proud. It seeks to honor the other not just please itself. It does not delight in evil but rejoices in truth. It protects, trusts, hopes, and perseveres.

Marriage thrives on these things, but it is not these things, because WE are not these things. Marriage is partnership and sacrifice. It is work, really hard work, and structure. Marriage requires us to show up, not just phone it in. Marriage is what happens AFTER the pomp and circumstance of the wedding day.

Though they are distinct and different, love and marriage are not mutually exclusive. They have a unique relationship, able to exist apart from each other but live and flourish most abundantly together. Usually one plays a more prominent role than the other, depending on what circumstances are faced. Sometimes we need the softness and carefree spirit of love to feed our souls and inspire us to take the next steps forward. Other times, particularly when we face grief and hardship, marriage has to take the lead and be the shoulder we lean our weary selves against, the firm ground that holds us. Love and marriage rely on each other, draw from each other, and together create something new that no other one word can adequately describe.

Sixteen years of marriage is somewhat vague and adolescent. It’s more than the tin of ten years but not quite the silver or gold of twenty-five and fifty. Sixteen has no traditional gift or element to call its own. For me it’s a space of simultaneous gratitude for what has been and hope for what is to be. I know I have a lot more to learn, and I expect to be challenged in the learning.

Today I celebrate love and marriage together, and all of the abundance that they have brought to my life.