Browsing Tag

Hope

Family, Gratitude, Hope, Lessons, Love, Parenting

The Audacious Hope of Rooted Things

“The audacious hope of rooted things”

That was my first thought when I looked up from a traffic light this week and realized that the bluebonnets had bloomed.  It actually caught my breath looking at them and recognizing they were here, along with spring.*

I suspect the bluebonnets have been here for awhile, but my eyes have been cast down, along with my heart – and I missed the rebirth and bloom of the gorgeous wild flowers.

I feel ridiculous for how deeply I miss my GrandDad.  When life goes according to plan, we are supposed to bury our grandparents.  Sadly, all three sets of my grandparents buried their own children.  If life is sweet enough to let us plan according to the circle of a full life, then I should have been ready.  But, I never, ever would have been.

I miss him. He stepped in and raised me as a daughter when he didn’t have to. My parents divorced when I was eight months old, which lead to my mother and I moving in with her parents. Since my mom and her siblings called him Daddy, and my grandmother referred to him as Daddy in front of the kids, then I did too.  Lots of my cousins call him GrandDad, or Papa – but he was always Daddy to me.

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Family, Forgivness, Grace, Hope, Lessons, Love, Parenting, perfection, Prayer, Renewed

Sanitized Martha and Transforming Grace

Sunday morning started down a rough path…beginning on Saturday.  The oldest darling had sent me a text stating what his weekend plans were (with him now being an adult and all).  I replied that his social calendar was fine with me as long as he was asking and not telling, and that we were planning on going to church the next morning, so to make sure and factor that in. The whining that began was enough to make you want to donate your ears.  The arguments ranged from, “This is my only day this week to sleep in”, to “I don’t have anything clean to wear” to finally, “Are we going to the really EARLY service??”.

Irritated, (as he only goes to church with us twice a month due to our co-parenting schedule) I informed the entitled, overgrown tyke that we were going to the same service we always went to, then followed up with a short text telling him, “Don’t be a butt”.  Only I didn’t say butt.  Jesus fill the gaps.  (Feel free to message or email me for any further mothering tips.)  May God help me recognize earlier when to insert gentle teaching moments, as I clearly have some parental growing to do.  That is a scary realization when you have teenagers and hear the clock ticking down on your job being mostly done.

Mason has always referred to me as the “Blind Side Mom”, and I now see why.  I thought he had always based it on the “Get your feet off my dash.” line in the movie, also the fact that I will take in anyone – whether they have two legs or four.  I want to focus more on the opportunities for grace-filled, building moments and less snap-you-up moments.

Have you ever noticed that your attitude can sometimes determine your circumstances, and always seems to have a say on your outcome?  Obviously I haven’t.  No doubt, my attitude laid the foundation of our Sunday morning (starting on Saturday).  Mason was meeting us at church, since he had stayed the night with a friend.  McCray had decided to drop his brain in the toilet, which short circuited his memory into forgetting what he is allowed to wear to church and walked out to the car looking like we were headed to basketball practice.  “WHAT are you wearing?” is a sentence I learned not to waste my time on with boys, due to it never being answered with a good reason, but I relapsed.  I was stressed because my morning started with getting full out dressed (aka wash, dry, AND fix my hair…angels be near.) and load the car with all the fixings for Sunday lunch with it being my week to cook.

By the time we got to church, I felt as though I had fought my way out of a fierce swarm of bees, with some stingers still tucked inside my skin.  Irritation was written all over my body.  I might as well have been on a 24-hour college bender, because that’s how tired I felt.  Was the fuss even worth it?  It’s so peopley here today, with all these perfect families.  What did I just teach these boys with my attitude about them getting here to worship our God who is into simplicity?   Good grief, what a missed opportunity.

Then, we sang a song with the chorus that sings,

O church, come stand in the light.  The glory of God has defeated the night.”.

All the stings, given and received, and the past eighteen hours melted – like holy calgon, taking it away.  They say that hope begins when you stand in the dark, looking out at the light.  I believe hope is also realizing that our notion of a sanitized, perfect Christianity isn’t really what Jesus taught or intended us to strive for.  Hope is a whisper that says, “Come stand in the light beloved, no matter how dirty you feel.”

I had spent the last two days getting worked up that my boys didn’t have the right attitude about church or dress perfectly for church, that I missed an opportunity to attract them TO the church – the act of worship and the practice of filling your bucket.   Oh Martha, dear Martha, why do you have to show up here again?

When McCray was an infant, I started (note started, didn’t finish) the bible study, “Having a Mary Heart in a Martha World”, based on the story of the sisters in Luke 10.  I not only identified with Martha, but I felt so sorry for her.  Everyone was being so hard on her, wanting her to be more like her sister.  Clearly Mary wasn’t going to cook, clean, and prepare for Jesus, so who did that leave?  Martha!  I want to have a pep rally for Martha, or create a power point explaining her perspective, because every time I read the story, I see myself in her actions and frustrations.

Martha, dear Martha, you’re fussing far too much and getting yourself worked up over nothing.  One thing only is essential, and Mary has chosen it – it’s the main course, and it won’t be taken from her.”  Luke 10:41-42 (The Message Bible)

There is no space for sanitized Christanity in transforming grace. Transformations are messy, yet grace can clean better than a Roomba and bleach.  Grace can easily tackle messy foundations and sanitized surfaces. Poor Martha’s wholehearted service got tangled up in sanitation while Mary did the good thing and sat at the feet of grace Himself.  Grace says to our Martha moments, “You are worried and troubled by many things, but choose the GOOD part.  Calm down and come sit down, right at My feet beloved.”

I think I heard grace also say, “Who in tarnation cares what that boy is wearing, we are aiming for his heart, not his fashion sense”.  I’m pretty positive I heard that whispered.  God is into simplicity.  Let’s join Him.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hope, Lessons, Prayer

Clinging to Hope

“…Just give hope a chance to float up.”

Hope Floats was destined to be my favorite movie, simply because of the name.  The nuggets of humor and quotes found in it just sealed the deal.

The only thing I can fully understand about prayer and meditation, is how hopeless and helpless I would feel without them.  Hopelessness being a deep, dark cavern – with walls that seem to slowly close in around us, inch by inch. I can’t explain why some prayers are answered and some are not.  Most times for me, digging for answers only creates more questions.

I once was given a mind-opening visual on sin that I feel could pertain to prayer as well.  Place yourself on a sidewalk in the city, surrounded by the buildings that represent our needs and prayers.  Some being so urgent and desperate for us, they are skyscrapers reaching tall into the clouds.   Yet God has a different view.  Perhaps as He looks down on His beloveds, He sees our needs and prayers as the same height. He hears our conversational prayers, our desperate prayers, our mono-tone, memorized prayers.  He even knows our unspoken prayers.  Yet, He also has the aerial view of our location and the map of where we are going. He sees the whole picture, whereas we can only see our little corner of the world in current time.  He also knows that time is eternal, whereas we can sometimes be blinded by wanting more moments of togetherness, in our flesh suits.

We have a ritual of saying nightly prayers with our boys.  Before we dive into prayer, we take a minute for them to share what they are thankful for.  This gets a little habitual from time to time.  No matter the whole list, it always begins with, “Friends, family, animals, shelter, sports, parents…”.  (Apparently, parents are a completely different category from family.)  We sometimes give gentle reminders to really open their minds to ALL of our blessings.  Once, we threw out the idea of waking up in the morning with ONLY the things we gave thanks for tonight.   Which added a whole extra hour of air time, with long lists that included shoelaces, cheese graters, and football gloves. Well played kiddos, well played.

The hardest part about our family prayer time is taking out a prayer. Someone who has been on our prayer list and removed because our cries were answered in ways we didn’t choose.  Death leaves a void in so many places, our prayers included.  It is heart wrenching to hear the hitch in my husband’s voice as he gets to the part in the prayers where our loved one’s name was, to be reminded again that we are not in control.  As Shauna Niequist says, “We, in our humanness, cannot help but foolishly desire eternity in this life.”

In the past eighteen months, we have stood by three different friends as they have buried their sons.  I don’t know how they are still breathing through the magnitude of sorrow. It feels incredibly mean that they are still walking on earth without their son in their arms.  With each situation, we begged for God to heal their child.   Pleaded for their healing, claimed miracles in their names.  Only to later categorize these prayers as “unanswered” in my heart and on my list.  I believe there is a bigger plan, but sometimes life is just unbearable.

In May, we gathered to mourn and honor Madden Drew McCormick, his parents chose the beautiful song “Even If” to be sung.  As we sat there, tears streaming, it was the sweetest, most vulnerable feeling to absorb those lyrics.  It was as if the veil of comprehending was as thin as it’s going to be, and our Creator’s comfort was a soft blanket, tucking itself around all the aching hearts.  It was surrender – the sweetest version of Thy will be done.

“I know you’re able and I know you can, save through the fire with your mighty hand. 

But, even if you don’t, my hope is You alone. 

I know the sorrow, I know the hurt – would all go away if you just say the word. 

But even if you don’t, my hope is You alone.”

My hope is You alone…even when mountains remain unmovable.

Madden’s balloon send off. Photo courtesy of Madden’s mom, Jenny McCormick.

The opposite of not getting your hopes up is not harboring any.  A life without hope seems so bleak.  Hope assures us that we will see and hold our beloveds again. Hope keeps us afloat in the bitter times and bubbles at our feet in the sweet ones. Hope reminds us that the sun will rise again tomorrow.  Hope gently encourages us to keep walking and whispers “It is well with my soul” over and over, until we believe it enough to proclaim it.

Hope professes “earth has no sorrow that heaven can’t heal.”

And that, I can cling to.

Questions we can live with…hope we cannot.