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Culture Life

Another Story

Tell me a fact and I will learn. Tell me a truth and I will believe. Tell me a story and it will live in my heart forever. ~Old Indian Proverb.

Sitting Bull

We can ignore statistics. We can ignore the headlines and soundbites. But few of us can protect ourselves from the power of another’s story.

I was sixteen years old when I read Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee by Dee Brown. The book traced the history of western expansion in the 19th century not from the point of view of the explorers and settlers, but through the eloquent, sorrow-filled words of the American Indians themselves. The tragic tales of broken promises, ruthless greed and brutality beyond belief left me stunned.

My father still wryly recalls my frustrated angst dominating our meal time discussion. Every school research paper took shape around the topic. I don’t think statistics or a cold recitation of facts could have wrenched my conscience as did the simple words of other human beings with dreams and longings like my own.

I have since read other books, and other life stories have pierced through my self-deceit, so I know: There is power in another person’s story to grab us, wake us, and even save us from ourselves.

Everyone has a story.

Whose do you need to hear? Is there someone near you silently asking you to take a second look?

But not everyone knows how to tell it.

Some of us are hidden even from ourselves. It may be your voice we need to tell the world our tale.

Whose story has shaken you or wakened you?

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Faith Life

Facing Fear

For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach. ~J.R.R Tolkien

storm clouds

What you fear, you will face.

 

  • Introverts will be asked to speak to the crowd.
  • Extroverts will find themselves suddenly alone.
  • The timid will be appointed to lead the charge.
  • The arrogant will have power pried from their grasp

Have you seen this to be true? And when you face the very enemy you most dread, a circumstance that the person next to you would slip through with ease, do you chalk it up to the finger of sadistic fate, or to a Divine Artist’s careful design?

A prayer, a dance

In Elizabeth Goudge’s  The Scent of Water, a vicar offers a life-giving prayer to a young girl in crisis, There are three necessary prayers and they have three words each. They are these,

  • Lord have mercy.
  • Thee I adore.
  • Into Thy hands.

A cry for help. A sigh of gratitude. A costly surrender.

Trust, remember, yield. Turn, look up, let go.

A trinitarian dance for this life–the cadence and choreography to lead us through even what we dread most. But someday we will need only the middle prayer. In both meanings of the word we will adore God (verb) and adore God (feeling). We will realize that with every cry he drew near, and our every act of obedience was carefully poured, like precious oil, over the rusted, broken pieces of our efforts.

And we will fear no more.

Are you facing what you most feared? What are you learning in the midst of the storm?

 

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Faith Life

Sabbath Quiet: Rooted

To be rooted is perhaps the most important but least understood need of the human soul. ~Simone Weil

Barrington, R.I.

For the beauty of the earth, for the beauty of the skies, for the love which from our birth over and around us lies,

Lord of all, to thee we raise this our grateful hymn of praise.

For the beauty of each hour, of the day and of the night, hill and vale and tree and flower, sun and moon and stars of light,

Lord of all, to thee we raise this our grateful hymn of praise.

For the joy of human love, brother, sister, parent, child, friends on earth, and friends above, pleasures pure and undefiled,

Lord of all, to thee we raise this our grateful hymn of praise.

For each perfect gift of thine, to our race so freely given, graces human and divine, flowers of earth and buds of heaven,

Lord of all, to thee we raise this our grateful hymn of praise.

For thy Church which evermore lifteth holy hands above, offering up on every shore her pure sacrifice of love,

Lord of all, to thee we raise this our grateful hymn of praise.

~Folliot S. Pierpont

Photograph of Barrington, Rhode Island, where my roots keep drawing me back.

 

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Bible Studies Faith Life

Dream Keeper

Hold fast to dreams, for if dreams die, life is a broken-winged bird that cannot fly. ~Langston Hughes

leaves in pool

A gift of dreams

It was a birthday gift, The Dream Keeper by Langston Hughes–my first book of poems. Along with it, a black leather-bound volume of unspoiled pages, inscribed with these words, “The pages of this little book are filled with unwritten poems–your poems. May each be a true expression of what is in your soul.”

I thrilled to imagine myself as a poet, and spent long hours with paper and pencil stub in hand. But the book is not full, the last poem dated October, 1976. I’m not good at holding fast to dreams. I set them loose at the first sign of resistance.

Joseph, the dreamer

This summer I am writing a Bible study about Joseph, the one with a coat-of-many-colors. Joseph’s is a story shaped by dreams. Some are unspoken, like his brothers’ jealous longings, his father’s foolish hopes. But others are more literal–his vision of sheaves and stars and dominion, the Pharaoh’s troubled nightmares of cattle and corn.

And then there are God’s dreams. Joseph’s dreams almost kill him, the Pharaoh’s dreams lead to fortunes upended. But it is God’s dreams that steal the show. The nail-biter end of the story surprises me every time–in the fulfillment of God’s big plan, all lesser dreams come true as well.

I invite you to take a moment, away from demands; set aside the urgent and

Ask yourself :

  • What are God’s dreams for his world?
  • What dreams does he dream with you in mind?
  • What dreams do you hold close to your heart?
  • What dreams have you let go of before their time?
  • Have you let God be the Dream Keeper for you?
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Faith Life

15 Books That Found Me

If the book we are reading does not wake us, as with a fist hammering on our skull, why then do we read it? …A book must be like an ice-axe to break the frozen sea within us. ~Franz Kafka

books and glasses

Eugene Peterson shares Kafka’s startling thoughts in the opening pages of Eat This Book. The power of literature to leave us wrecked and shaken, or marvelously remade has been proven in me across a lifetime of inhaling words.

Hundreds of books have informed, intrigued or entertained me, but sometimes, with perfect timing, a book will plant itself like that ice-axe in my unsuspecting self, and I am changed.

I know I am not alone. Whose writing has crept up and caught you unaware?

I’ll start by sharing a necessarily incomplete list, in chronological order from childhood to today. Reading through the titles sends me on a fast-forward journey through the shattering and re-shaping of my heart by my story’s Author, who knew what was needed at each turn of the page.

15 Books that found me

  1. The Dream Keeper and Other Poems, by Langston Hughes
  2. Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, by Dee Brown
  3. Making All Things New, by Henri Nouwen
  4. Inside Out, by Larry Crabb
  5. A Long Obedience in the Same Direction, by Eugene Peterson
  6. Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, by Annie Dillard
  7. Abba’s Child, by Brennan Manning
  8. No Greater Love, by Mother Teresa
  9. The Powers That Be, by Walter Wink
  10. Lest Innocent Blood be Shed, by Philip Hallie
  11. Embracing the Love of God, by James Bryan Smith
  12. Descent into Hell by Charles Williams
  13. The Divine Conspiracy by Dallas Willard
  14. Humility by Andrew Murray
  15. The Gospel in Dostoyevsky, excerpts from the works of Fyodor Dostoevsky

I could easily keep going, but it’s your turn. What book has wakened you?

 

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Faith

Sabbath Quiet: Beauty’s Song

The sweetest thing in all my life has been the longing…to find the place where all the beauty came from. ~C.S. Lewis

Beauty on the sea

O LORD, how manifold are your works! In wisdom you have made them all; the earth is full of your creatures.

Yonder is the sea, great and wide, creeping things innumerable are there, living things both small and great.

There go the ships and Leviathan that you formed to sport in it.

These all look to you to give them their food in due season; when you give to them, they gather it up; when you open your hand they are filled with good things.

When you hide your face, they are dismayed; when you take away their breath, they die and return to their dust.

When you send forth your spirit, they are created; and you renew the face of the ground.

May the glory of the LORD endure for ever; may the LORD rejoice in his works–who looks on the earth and it trembles, who touches the mountains and they smoke.

I will sing to the LORD as long as I live; I will sing praise to my God while I have being. May my meditation be pleasing to him, for I rejoice in the LORD.

Psalm 104:24-35

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Faith Life

12 Ways To Live Truth

All Christianity concentrates on the man at the cross-roads. ~G.K. Chesterton

path to truth

An English teacher did not invent the sacred rule of fiction writing, Show, Don’t Tell.

God did.

It was his voice that first cried, “Don’t tell me what you believe is true, show me.” At the end of the journey we won’t be asked to recite a creed, we will listen to the story of our lives.

And as the plot unfolds, we will remember every moment, each encounter as a fork in the road. The tension will build as the story is told–did we walk in truth, or did we live a lie? Did we choose the path to the wisdom, character and purposes of God as revealed in Jesus, or did we pursue a dead end?

The road always divides, even now. At the end of this page an errand will be run, a person will walk in, a thought will cross our minds. If we listen carefully we can hear an urgent voice on the wind…live truth every moment of this day.

10 Ways to live truth

  1. Choose mercy over judgment.
  2. Choose kindness over indifference.
  3. Choose generosity over greed.
  4. Choose humility over self-importance.
  5. Choose forgiveness over disengagement.
  6. Choose trust over worry.
  7. Be self-giving, not self-serving.
  8. Be hospitable, not hostile.
  9. Be an encourager, not a competitor.
  10. Be slow to anger, not easily provoked.
  11. Be teachable, not unyielding.
  12. Say yes to God at every turn.

Which path will you take today?

Deuteronomy 30:15-20   Matthew 25:31-46   James 2:26


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Life

3 Things Truth Is

This is the way; walk in it. ~Isaiah 30:21

God hates lies, deceit, treachery, hypocrisy, pretense, flattery, slander, slurs, oath-breaking. The oh-so-close, just a bit off, slight twist of truth is what God especially loathes; almost-originals are the most effective counterfeits.

Why does God hate lies? Because any lie is ultimately about him.

Truth involves far more than accuracy–facts can easily be manipulated, actions and attitudes too often shout the opposite of our words. How does the Bible picture truth?

Way of truth

Truth is:

  1. A PATH: A way to follow, a voice to obey, a Person to know. The way things really work.
  2. A ROCK: God’s character–faithful, dependable, trustworthy, consistent. The way things really are.
  3. A GOAL: God’s plan and desire for all he has made–restoration, new life, another chance. The way things really will be.

God commands his people, “Act like I do, be like I am, want what I want.” That is truth.

But how do we know? It is easy to be

  • bewildered by what God does
  • baffled about who he is
  • unclear what he wants of and for us.

God’s answer is Jesus, who declares, I am the path, the character, the plan. Take Jesus seriously–not the Jesus you imagine, not just doctrine about him, not just the religion that claims his name.

Know Jesus–by his Spirit, through his Word, in the lives of his people–and you will know truth.

So what is truth?

If your heart is open to Jesus, your ears listening for his voice, your feet willing to follow, your eyes alert to his movement, your hands quick to serve him, your words reflecting his qualities, your character one he can count on, your determination to seek his way,

you will know.

A few verses to check out: Psalm 25:4-5   Psalm 33:4-5, 11  Isaiah 11:1-9; 45:19  Jeremiah 7:28  John 8:31-32; 16:13; 18:37   1 Peter 1:22  (In the OT the Hebrew word for truth is often translated faithfulness).

 

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Faith

Sabbath Quiet: What God is Like

The bridge of grace will carry your weight. ~Charles H. Spurgeon

Golden Gate Bridge

Christ walked with men on earth that He might show them what God is like and make known the true nature of God to a race that had wrong ideas about him.

This was only one of the things He did while here in the flesh, but this he did with beautiful perfection.

From Him we learn how God acts toward people.

The hypocritical, the basically insincere, will find him cold and aloof, as they once found Jesus; but the penitent will find Him merciful; the self-condemned will find Him generous and kind.

To the frightened he is friendly, to the poor in spirit he is forgiving, to the ignorant, considerate; to the weak, gentle; to the stranger, hospitable.

The greatness of God rouses fear within us, but His goodness encourages us not to be afraid of Him. To fear and not be afraid–that is the paradox of faith

A. W. Tozer The Knowledge of the Holy

Photograph by Kimberly Hanson


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Faith Life

What is Truth?

And diff’ring judgments serve to declare that truth lies somewhere, if we knew but where. ~William Cowper

Inspector Clouseau

I love truth. I imagine my role in life to be the troublesome child who announces that the emperor is wearing no clothes. Often, the “elephants” in the room are clearer to me than other humans nearby. I go for days accomplishing little because the inside of my brain resembles a disassembled toaster–nothing is left unexamined down to its smallest particle.

But, to my continual frustration, emperors avoid being faced with the obvious, elephants are perfectly comfortable where they are, and a toaster in pieces is not good for much.

Still, I am convinced of the beauty and priceless value of truth, and am ready and willing to do battle against its too common counterfeits:

  • Self-righteous offense–“How dare you believe differently!”
  • Pious platitude–“I’m sure he didn’t mean to hit you.”
  • Cynical sneer–“It amuses me to prove how deluded you are.”

Do you see yourself in any of those three? The tendency to moralize, to sentimentalize or to destroy any idea or thought left unguarded?

Or, to put it another way, is truth my fiercely guarded possession, silly putty to suit my fancy or a weapon of snarky destruction?

When I indulge in any of the three, I am holding truth hostage to lies.

What is truth? The Roman governor Pontius Pilate asked that question of Jesus, and it wasn’t because he was stupid or unfamiliar with the prevailing viewpoints of his day. There was a reason he failed to see.

And I think I know what it was. (To be continued…)

What have you noticed about truth’s counterfeits?


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