Tuesday, June 24, 2008

from the mouths of babes.....



for a laugh to lighten your spirits, check out this somewhat sometimes delightfully irreverant but always inspiring blogsite. today's entry from the writer's son:

"i think we are in God's toilet."

deep theology that makes sense to me.

Monday, June 23, 2008

my chains are gone...

where do i start. it is hard to collect my thoughts and convey what took place at our student ministry youth camp. yes, i still work with the youth and joke that they'll have to run me off when i'm in my wheelchair dragging my oxygen tank across the sand.

lately i've wondered about my effectiveness; even though i'm not the stereotypical fifty-something church lady i don't want to overstay my welcome. i love the energy and the passion of students and have a heart for teaching them how to live Godly lives and honor Him in the choices they make. i also want them to know unconditional love as they sometimes make not so good choices.


this year i was asked to lead a breakout session by offering "my story" along with several other leaders. the day we were to leave to camp i confessed to our student pastor that i wasn't sure i could do it. i was so confused as to what was expected of me as a leader in telling my current story of pain, confusion, questions and anger. i was convinced just 30 minutes before we left that this camp was to be one of honesty, openness and authenticity. i was told it was important for our students to realize that suffering and questions are not unique to the young - we all face difficulties and pain in all stages of life. and it was necessary for them to hear the truth from the adults that lead them - the truth that includes amazing grace.



around 60 students were assigned to my group throughout the week. on the first day i was nervous and anxious about how i could possibly get through my story - the story of alyssa and sydney grace. but i prayed and i was given a peace about what i was to say and was assured that my words would be meaningful and would be heard.



these are the words of the email i sent our student pastor after we returned from camp and best explain what i experienced:



"i appreciate your encouragement of me on sunday before we left; i never want camp or any student event to be about the leaders but it was apparent that God used each of us to show openness and vulerability and reflect the grace that God gives each of us. amazingly, my story changed each day - not the details but what i was learning and could share. i felt layers being peeled away by God as i shared - it never occurred to me that that would happen. i thought that He would use me to reach the students - and throughout He was reaching me as well. in my last session i told the students that during worship the night before, i realized in the middle of worship that i was worshipping with JOY for the first time since nov 30th. that i had been worshipping every sunday faithfully but through gritted teeth and clinched fists - obedient to God but reluctant because of pain and confusion. the words i was speaking to the students during camp became more than words and it was a healing process for me as well. "



one of the leaders who attended my breakout session with students came to me one evening and said she had been angry and frustrated since the death of one of our students last year - a fifteen year old boy who was her son's best friend. she said for months she couldn't open her bible and she couldn't pray. finally a friend of hers laid it on the line: she said "you HAVE to open your bible and READ. and you HAVE to pray. even if you don't feel like it. if you don't do these things you will not hear Him or feel His presence. if you do these things, you will know His presence and He will begin to fill you back up." i shared this with the students because i know it to be true.



all of our teacher-led breakout sessions were raw and real. i saw more students open up and show vulnerability and honesty than ever before. i heard confession after tearful confession. i saw unconditional love and acceptance from one student to another. i saw and participated in passionate worship like i've never experienced before in the ten years i've been attending youth camp. almost every student said the same thing. our camp speaker did not mince words and was authentic from the first night of camp - no "building up to the last night" - he began camp on the same high note on which he ended camp.



i shared with alyssa that sydney grace's story had impacted many of the youth in our student ministry. but the most amazing and freeing thing that happened was the way i was released from my own pain by publically and openly sharing my story - harder than blogging but more healing face to face. God truly used me to share Sydney's story with students who suffer through divorce, death and depression. But He knew all along that as my story changed a little each day, He was changing me.



the song that has become the mantra of this year's camp is the rendition of Amazing Grace that includes the chorus "my chains are gone, i've been set free, my God, my Savior, has ransonmed me...and like a flood His mercy reigns, unending love, amazing grace."





Amazing. Grace.





Thursday, June 12, 2008

a mother's heart....


alyssa's appointment with another high-risk obstetrician is tomorrow at 9:00am mountain time. this doctor has reviewed all records from her pregnancy, abruption and delivery of liam as well as her records regarding her second abruption and sydney's stillbirth. statistics indicate that after one abruption, chances are high that another abruption will occur; after a second abruption. the chances are even higher.


alyssa is obviously very anxious; the doctor could recommend that she NOT get pregnant again or she could indicate that it is okay to try again. getting pregnant again would bring with it the almost certain possibility of another abruption and possibly the loss of another baby. in effect, getting the "go ahead" brings with it major decisions and more fears and anxiety. she experienced an emergency situation with liam's delivery and thankfully, he made it. my very uneducated guess is that if she does get pregnant again, she will either be put on bedrest starting the second trimester or even hospitalized as a precaution.


PLEASE pray for alyssa and ian tomorrow. pray that God would give them a good nights rest tonight and that He would give alyssa a peace about the meeting. pray for the wisdom of this doctor and that she would be clear and concise in her explanation and recommendation. pray for alyssa's anxiety to subside and for her to be able to hear and accept whatever the doctor tells her. please pray that somehow, whatever the news is, that alyssa will know in her heart that He will not abandon her and that He will walk with her wherever the path takes her.


a mother's heart hurts even when her children are grown and making their own way in life. a mother's heart aches for the pain of an adult child just as much as it did for that precious three-year-old or angst-ridden thirteen-year-old.


knowing that you are praying for her and her family eases the hurt.

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

i had a thought.....


could it be something so simple? could it be something that we have studied and read and know in our hearts but missed?

our questions demand answers. questions for which there are no answers. why? a loving God would allow THIS? why suffering? isn't there an easier way? it hurts. i don't get it. it happens over and over. tragedy. despair. emptiness.

and then i had a thought:

is it the love of a husband restraining his hysterical wife as she is told there is no heartbeat?
is it the love of a mother-in-law who grieves with her daughter-in-law the passing of a son and husband?
is it the love of a father for his son who was in the driver's seat of the car that struck down his innocent little sister?
is it the love of a young woman who falls to her feet in a dark, dirty garage in prayer for her friend whose baby is born still?
is it the love of a stranger who sends a special bracelet or a basket of flowers to a grieving mother?
is it the love of a co-worker who simply offers a gentle touch as she passes by?
is it the love of a friend of a friend who offers financial support for funeral expenses?
is it the love of a brother who climbs to the top of a mountain with his grieving friend and prays?

"A new commandment I give to you, that you love one another, EVEN AS I HAVE LOVED YOU, that you also love one another. By this all men will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another," John 13:34-35

who hasn't experienced the acute pain of grief and at the same time felt the overwhelming love of friends, family and strangers. the outpouring of love expressed in comments sections of personal stories is amazing. could it be so simple?

yes, we are disciplined and tested through our trials. the strength of our faith during these times is certainly a witness for others. our hope in redemption is encouraging to those who might falter. but the depth of the LOVE that is connecting all stories and strangers and even "blog-stalkers" is unfathomable. it is amazing. and if we are to be like Him, if He has loved us so overwhelmingly and if the greatest command is to love others..........

could it be something so simple?

"...but now faith, hope, love, abide these three, but the greatest of these is LOVE."
1 Corinthians 13:13