December 29 2023

A Cup of Tea, A Pen and Some Paper

Sun Shining Through Trees in Woods

A Cup of Tea, A Pen and Some Paper

 

Another day, another week, another year –

how the time adds up, moves quickly and passes;

and yet, moves in slow motion.

Here we are again, just ahead,

another December 31st to reflect on and

another January 1st to look ahead from –

activities generally looked upon with great anticipation.

Yet, in this moment, I find myself,

a bit weary of reflecting

and unsure of looking ahead.

Here I sit, post Christmas lights and gifts and food

quiet

settled

a to-do list to my left

untouched for days

a hot cup of tea

a pen and paper.

How to explain

A year of waiting –

waiting to hear, waiting to know, waiting to understand, waiting for improvement, waiting for recovery, waiting for life to resume – to return to normal or a new normal or some sort of balance-

waiting on the Lord.

A year of watching-

watching for results, watching for appointments and surgery, watching beside the hospital bed, watching beside the bed at home-

watching the Lord at work.

A year of stillness and silence –

piece by piece the activities of life shut down

until all is silent-

new activity replaces-

but it is still and silent as well.

Then the withdrawal – the stillness, the silence

the pressure to fill them-

activity, doing, planning, organizing

when physically impossible or unnecessary,

the mind takes over –

filling the gap-

satisfying the craving to produce-

fortifying the lie that tells us

we must

move, do, plan, organize, produce

to exist, be seen, be heard, be loved

by others, ourselves and by God Himself.

In time,

the mind follows the physical body

in the waiting, watching, stillness and silence.

It feels less jittery, jumpy and unsettled

It sits in front of the Christmas tree and watches the lights.

It lingers over a hot cup of something, doodles on a blank piece of paper,

strings a few words together-

trying to explain its current position.

It walks in the woods and chooses to look and see, to hear and smell and feel,

rather than composing lists of things to accomplish.

It prepares food – intentionally – eats slowly and discovers

what it does and does not like.

It closes its eyes at night and chooses

to leave it all in God’s Hands.

It wakes up in the morning and lingers for a few moments-

asking God – what shall we do today?

It stops scrolling endlessly and aimlessly,

leaves the phone in another room

doesn’t listen for the ring or the buzzing and dinging,

and doesn’t worry about missing out.

It gives the physical body permission to

wait and watch –

sits in the stillness and silence-

in peace.

As the body and mind come into synch

the spirit quickens.

The waiting, watching, stillness and silence

open up new possibilities

to be in His presence-

to hear Him speak –

in the softest whisper-

to feel the lightest touch –

to see Him in the smallest details.

To know the joy of this moment –

Because He is

right here –

right now.

Another day, another week, another year –

how the time adds up, moves quickly and passes;

and yet, moves in slow motion.

Here we are again, just ahead,

another December 31st to reflect on and

another January 1st to look ahead from –

activities generally looked upon with great anticipation.

Yet,

in this moment,

this year,

this season….

waiting and watching

in the stillness and silence,

I choose to sit, post Christmas lights and gifts and food

quiet

settled

a to-do list to my left

untouched for days

a hot cup of tea

and pen and paper-

doodling and stringing a few words together,

to share (rather than explain) our current

position.

And He is here with me

His presence evident

in the present moment.

I trust He will lead us in reflection in the coming days

I trust He will show us the path forward for the coming year-

in big picture or in day-to-day snippets.

I need not

do, move, produce.

I can be-

just who I am,

who I was created to be,

here, in this very moment.

In this moment-

I exist-

I am seen, heard and loved.

And that is enough – 

more than enough.

I set my pen down and head to the kitchen

for some hot tea-

the lights in my window

catch my eye –

I smile.

August 23 2023

What I Didn’t Know About Surrender

Beach
Bench in Wooded Park

“Nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.” Matthew 26:39

It is late in the evening, as I sit here and write.  The days are noticeably shorter, so it is already very dark outside on this evening in August.  I don’t know about you, but I find that although the days move slowly, they accumulate quickly, therefore time moves slowly but passes quickly all at the same time.  I don’t know that this statement even makes sense, but it is my current experience.

I was able to slip away to the beach for a few hours a week or so ago. It was there, as I sat on the sand and listened to the waves, that the Lord spoke to me about surrender. He has been speaking to me for quite some time, in bits and pieces.  Reminding me He has a plan for me – inviting me to come to Him and rest – asking me if I am tired, yet, of always trying to be in control. Helping me to understand, day by day, a little at a time, what surrender really looks like in my everyday life.  But this day, on the beach, He summed it up for me. 

I was so deep in thought, listening so carefully to what God was placing in my heart, that the older gentleman who was walking on the beach, shifted the trajectory of his walk in my direction, to pause right in front of me.  I looked up at him and he smiled kindly and asked me, in French, if I was meditating.  Although I caught it, even in another language, he repeated it slowly in English for me.  He didn’t wait for my answer- he just swept his hand out toward the ocean in a large arc, and said – “This, this is good for the soul – good for the spirit”.  With one more smile, he nodded his head and continued on his journey.

As he went on his way, I looked out at the ocean and heard God say, “Tell me what you didn’t know about surrender.”

I smiled.  That was clever.  He didn’t ask what I knew or thought I knew – He asked me what I now know that I didn’t know before.  It’s a nice way of telling me I didn’t know all that I thought I knew. Also, a reminder that He has led me through a path in the last weeks, that has allowed me to learn what I needed to learn to respond in surrender.

How do you understand surrender? What comes to your mind?  How does the thought of it make you feel?  Honestly.  

I guess somewhere in the back of my mind I saw surrender as being beaten down, defeated, not able to win, and so standing up (hesitantly and fearfully, with great regret) and waving a little white flag that signalled that I was done, giving up, and ready to submit to a life of hard labour for the other; an “other” who did not have a good plan for me.

Sounds like something from a movie, doesn’t it? 

And perhaps, that is the way of surrender in the movies.  Or maybe even life in this world.

But, as Christians, although we are in the world, we are not of the world.  Therefore, how we understand things must be based on the truth God shows us, rather than what we see around us.  Often that truth looks a bit “upside down”. 

I am continuously amazed at the patience God has in showing me His truth, day after day. Helping me to see the world, myself and Him, through His eyes; changing my perspective, that lens I have developed over the years through which I see and understand things.

And I never know exactly how He is going to change that perspective.  So, as I sat on the beach, I began listing the things I hadn’t understood about surrender:

  1. Surrender is active, not passive – it requires intentionality- you must choose to surrender, it doesn’t just happen to you
  2. Surrender takes strength- it is not weakness
  3. Surrender takes courage – it is not for the faint of heart
  4. Surrender brings relief not regret
  5. Surrender helps you to feel more in control not less – more in control of the parts of your life you are actually in control of (like choosing to surrender)
  6. Surrender causes things to happen – it does not hinder things from happening or cause them to stall
  7. Surrender is more than acknowledging you are not in control – it is two-prong * choosing to let go of the control & *choosing to trust that He has a good plan for me
  8. Surrender does not lead to captivity- but to freedom

    2 Corinthians 3:17 “Now the Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty {freedom}.”

  9. Surrender does not lead to fearfulness or uncertainty -but to peace

    John 14:27 “Peace I leave with you, My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid.”

  10. Surrender does not lead to labour for an “other” – but to rest in Him

    Matthew 11:28 “Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

  11. Surrender is not a one-time thing- it is a daily choice
  12. Surrender is hard – it can be easy
  13. Surrender is easy – it can be hard

He went a little farther and fell on His face, and prayed, saying, “O My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.” Matthew 26:39

Again, a second time, He went away and prayed, saying, “O My Father, if this cup cannot pass away from Me unless I drink it, Your will be done.” Matthew 26:42

God showed me an interesting thing.  When Jesus was praying in the garden of Gethsemane, He asked God if this “cup” could pass from Him- nevertheless, He surrendered to God’s plan.  That was in verse 39. Then, a few verses later, after His disciples fell asleep on Him when they were supposed to be praying with Him, in verse 42, He prayed a second time, “if this cup cannot pass away from Me……” – almost like He was asking again. 

There will be times, when you surrender, then ask again, “God does it have to be this way?” That is OK.  God knows us, what we are made of, and how many times we will ask for things to be different, before we surrender and after we surrender and before we choose to surrender daily.  He is a gracious and loving Father.

Has God been talking to you about surrender?

Where are you at with that? 

Is He still reminding you that He has a plan for you?  Inviting you to come to Him and rest? Asking you if you are tired, yet, of always trying to be in control. Is he still helping you to understand, day by day, a little at a time, what surrender really looks like in your everyday life.  Or is He sitting with you at the beach, summing it up for you and asking you, “Tell me what you didn’t know about surrender?”

Wherever you find yourself on this journey – know that He is faithful, He sees you just as you are, He knows exactly what He has for you and He LOVES you so very much.

Life doesn’t always look the way we thought it would and we often are pretty sure we could come up with a better plan given half the chance. 

However, in the midst of all that, I am choosing, today, tomorrow, and the next day to not only acknowledge that I am not in control and to give up my need to feel as if I am in control, but to also trust that God has a good plan for me. 

Today I say: “O My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as You will.” – AND “O My Father, if this cup cannot pass away from Me unless I drink it, Your will be done.”

What will you choose to do?

Flowers
June 22 2023

They Sing in The Dark

“My soul still remembers and sinks within me. This I recall to my mind, therefore I have hope. Through the LORD’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness. “The LORD is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I hope in Him!” The LORD is good to those who wait for Him, To the soul who seeks Him. It is good that one should hope and wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD.” Lamentations 3:20-26 (NKJ)

Summer has arrived and as is the way of the weather in Atlantic Canada leading up to summer, we often transition through 4 seasons in a day. With summer’s arrival yesterday, came heat and humidity – a lot of it – a sudden change from the wet and cold of the week before.  Being in a transitional stage of life, where temperature regulation is not my strong suit, and with the combination of heat and humidity and unpredictable “tropical moments,” I have started to sleep with the fan on and the window open overnight.

I must say that the fresh air flowing in through the window at night and first thing in the morning has been refreshing.  Even Nico, the cat, enjoys it – spending much of his time sitting with his little nose in the air- “sniffing” the breeze as it enters the room.

Very early this morning, I woke to a beautiful song.  It was very dark in the room as I opened my eyes, looking around for the source of the melody.  I was still sleepy and it took me a few moments to figure out where it was coming from. 

It was the birds in my backyard.

It didn’t make much sense to me – it was still so dark outside- not even a hint that morning was coming or had arrived.

I laid back on my pillow and thought about this.

Jesus whispered softly to me- “They sing because they know what is coming.”

I imagine you stopped by to skim through this blog quickly- but don’t rush too quickly past this word: “They sing because they know what is coming.” Stop here and sit with this for a moment.

Does this speak to you? In what way? What are you hearing, at this moment?

The birds outside my window sing in the morning, in the dark, before a sliver of light can be seen.

They sing because it is morning –

 Although they can’t yet see the light

They sing because they know what is coming.

In Psalm 61:1-4, we hear the Psalmist’s heart. “Hear my cry, O God; attend to my prayer. From the end of the earth I will cry to You, when my heart is overwhelmed; lead me to the rock that is higher than I. For You have been a shelter for me, a strong tower from the enemy. I will abide in Your tabernacle forever; I will trust in the shelter of Your wings. Selah”

In time of trouble, and overwhelm, a cry flows from the Psalmist’s lips.  To Whom does he cry out?  His spouse, his family, his friends, his Pastor, church family, neighbours, strangers in the grocery store or his counsellor?  Perhaps at some point and at some level.  But this cry, the one that comes when he finds himself at the end of the earth, this cry flows out to God.  Why?  Because the Psalmist knows that there is a Rock, a Rock that is a shelter and a strong tower; a place of peace and comfort and compassion. A place in God’s presence that can not only bear the cry of his heart but can also respond to it.

Perhaps the birds sing in the dark, when there is not even a sliver of light because they know the safety and warmth, the refuge, of that place under the shelter of His (God’s) wings.

Lamentations 3:20-26 reads: “My soul still remembers and sinks within me. This I recall to my mind, therefore I have hope. Through the LORD’s mercies we are not consumed, because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness. “The LORD is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I hope in Him!” The LORD is good to those who wait for Him, To the soul who seeks Him. It is good that one should hope and wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD.”

Perhaps the birds sing to usher in the compassions of the Lord that are new every morning, in hope, in the quiet of the yet darkness.

In Jeremiah 29:11, we are reminded: “For I know the plans I have for you,” says the LORD. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.”

We often take this verse and think, “Yes, God has a plan, right now, a good plan, right now, everything is wonderful, right now.”

It is important, though, to read things in context.  The verse before, Jeremiah 29:10, gives us that context.

This is what the LORD says: “You will be in Babylon for seventy years. But then I will come and do for you all the good things I have promised, and I will bring you home again.” Jeremiah 29:10 (NIV)

If we put that all together, things look a bit different:

“This is what the LORD says: “You will be in Babylon for seventy years. But then I will come and do for you all the good things I have promised, and I will bring you home again. For I know the plans I have for you,” says the LORD. “They are plans for good and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope.” Jeremiah 29:10, 11 (NIV)

The Lord had good plans for the people, plans for a future and a hope, AND they would remain in captivity in Babylon for seventy years. 

Yes, God had a plan, for right now and for later, a good plan, for right now and for later, AND things were going to be hard, right now, before they were going to get to go home, later.

I often wondered why God told the prophet this.  Maybe to give the people a hope, not just for later, but a hope that would sustain them through the “captivity” of now.

Perhaps the birds sing because even as they sit in the dark, they have hope that the light will come.

Maybe you find yourself in the dark, this day, without a sliver of light showing through the blackness around you. May you be like the birds in my backyard early this morning, singing. 

Cry out to God- He is the Rock that is a shelter and a strong tower; a place of peace and comfort and compassion. He can bear the cry of your heart, and can also respond to it.

May you sing in the dark, when there is not even a sliver of light, because you know the safety and warmth, the refuge, of that place under the shelter of His (God’s) wings.

May you sing in the dark, in hope, in the quiet of the “yet darkness” to usher in the compassions of the Lord that are new every morning.

May you sing even as you sit in the dark because you have hope that the light will come- God has a plan for good and not for disaster – a plan for your future after the captivity– a plan you need to hold onto now; a hope in the midst of your captivity that will get you through to the other side of the darkness.

The birds outside my window sing in the morning, in the dark, before a sliver of light can be seen.

They sing because it is morning –

Although they can’t yet see the light

They sing because they know what is coming.

As I listened to the birds sing this morning- I watched the rays of the sun slowly make their way across the sky and into my room, spreading out across the hardwood floor; a beautiful testimony of what happens when we choose to sing in the dark.

May that be my testimony and your testimony as well.

Until next time!

laurie