Monday, December 2, 2013

All Generations Will Call Me Blessed

The story of the most famous man in history begins with two women.

I just noticed this for the first time while doing my advent reading tonight.  The story of Jesus starts off in Luke with a focus on an old barren woman (Elizabeth, my first daughter will have her name) and a naive teenage girl. Not the picture of womamhood we're used to.  Modern media teaches us that success looks like a fit woman in her late twenties who waited to have kids and is unfulfilled if she's not working and making her husband into an accessory.  Modern feminism teaches us to shy away from motherhood and to see everything as a patriarchal attack.  And while the struggle for equality has been a long one (its almost as if there's some force in world working to destroy the sacred feminine), sometimes what we are fed in our society is not a true picture of the value of womanhood.

In Galatians, Paul (you know, the misogynist) writes that in Christ there is no differentiation of value between male and female. We're equally loved, valued, and saved.  In the birth story in Luke, God announces the birth of his son by blessing Elizabeth with a baby.  God uses little teenage country girl Mary to fix the fracture of the universe.  Mary, before anyone else, is the perfect example of faith in the new testament.  And then, the first person Jesus shows himself to after he is resurrected is a chick (whose testimony would not have even been accepted in the courts of the day).  Hundreds of women were part of Jesus' entourage as he traveled around Israel.  And God picked women to endow with his creative power. (I can grow a person-an image bearer of God!)

Its easy to forget that Christianity is a faith that deeply values women.  Its also easy to forget that women can be just as unjust as men. And its especially easy to forget that we women can be successful modern women, but that can just as easily mean executive as it can mean being a stay at home mom.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Retrospective Saturday Night

I want to be braver than I am.
I want to be kinder than I am.
I want the next time I fall in love to be forever.
I want to carry a baby inside of me.
I want to kiss in the rain.
I want to be spectacular.
I want adventure.
I want to grow and never stop wanting to grow.
I want to read a thousand books.
I want to make a great life with someone.

I believe that love is the most powerful force in the universe.
I believe that forgiveness is truly as important as the cliches say it is.
I believe that if we never realize that we need to be forgiven we are missing out on important depth in life.
I believe that if we never forgive others for deep hurts that we will never experience a very special kind of love.
I believe love means you will never leave.
I believe love looks like a man carrying a purse, fights with the kitchen sink sprayer, and laughing on a Tuesday night over a glass of wine.
I believe that everyone is important.
I believe that fairy tales are more true than non-fiction best sellers.
I believe that you can see beauty in anything.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

Down with the Sickness

One of the biggest things that has always bothered me about Christianity/Judaism is the idea that I'm paying for the actions that some foolish man made tens of thousands of years before I was born.  It seems unfair and ridiculous.  As time has passed I've had the sin problem explained to me, and it has made sense, but then I lapse back into the thought that surely this whole thing is just not fair.  And God is just after all, right?  Last night, my dad was mocking the idea and, as usual, I found myself struck dumb in intimidation.  This nagging annoyance in the back of my mind that maybe this sin thing is just pure injustice.

But then today, it occurred to me that such a thing is really not all that ridiculous at all.  It's like a sickness.  You may not be the carrier, but someone else's actions can give you the disease, whether you deserve it or not.  A woman who has AIDS or Herpes or something can give it to the child that is inside of her.  An innocent child.  Infected with this poison before it could even take a breath.  It's still innocent, but now its infected, and as it grows it will have the disease.  Sin is an infectious disease.  It's in our DNA.  It's been passed down for millenia.  It kills us in the end. 

On Revenge last week, the main character said something about forgiveness being granted, but we still have to live with the consequences of our sin.  That's exactly true.  You can be forgiven for having sex before marriage and having a baby with some loser, but the consequences of raising the child and dealing with the dead-beat-dad are still there.  You have to live with the consequences of your actions.  And often times, those actions hurt other people.

Adam's rebellion, he and Eve deciding that there was something better than God, deciding to try to be gods created this disease.  Their discontentment (grass is greener and all that), their choice, their listening to lies, their pride, bringing poison into a world that had never seen it before was so incredibly horrific that it ripped nature, the universe apart.  And we've been living in the aftermath of that ever since.

Hiroshima, Japan.  Before and after the American bombing.

~

PS. I've been so very busy with school lately. All that bureaucracy is a killer! Teaching is pretty time consuming too. Excited for the Protestant Reformation tomorrow (entire thing taught in two days)

PSS. Too many people around me are currently pregnant or just became parents.  This has led to an alarming amount of mornings where I wake up from a vivid dream to remind myself that I am not in fact pregnant, nor do I have any little person to breast feed.  I know you wanted to know.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Checking In

I head back to work in about 32 hours... :S. So, I just felt in the mood to check in with a few one liner thoughts of the past week as the summer ends.

Casablanca didn't impress me much.
My church family is so precious to me.
People must only live in California for the weather. I understand this.
Some relationships, friendships, are more intimate and valuable in their own way than words could ever explain.
Its very easy to become discontented with singleness. (Specially with some baby or wedding popping up left and right oon the facebooks)
Death just happens.
I miss being the lady I forget I can be. I like her. She's super cool.
I want to read Tolkien to my children someday.
MY Bible is an old friend to me.
I watched The White Queen this weekend and felt that enchantment that first drew me to history when I was just a little girl wondering how common German princesses were and if there really were fairies and dragons.
I wish I saw my sister more.
I'm starting to lament the passing of summer less, and get excited for a new start and a new year.

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Satisfaction.

Sittin' in a tree,
k-i-s-s-i-n-g,
First comes love,
Then comes marriage, 
Then comes a baby in the baby carriage...


My world has been filled with weddings and babies for over a year now!  Just like a little girl's fairy tale 20-something-life.  Some of it is "that girl from high school", "that couple that's friends with so-and-so", but a significant amount of it are people I'm very close to.  Just the other day I was talking to a close friend about her relationship and future unofficial wedding plans, and she apologized for talking about it after a while because she realized that it might be bothering me - the single-for-several-years-24-yo-friend.  I was actually kind of surprised to realize that the conversation hadn't bothered me in the slightest. No jealousy, no longing.

This new mentality is a double edged sword - I find myself not really into love songs.  I don't really want to watch girly rom-coms.  And, I think this is a healthy self preservation.  I'm in a place where, yes, I want to get married, but I don't really want to do that right now... Crazy, I know!  All these years of pining, and I find myself... satisfied?  (what is that? satisfied? psh.) But yes, I'm oddly complacent.

These years of singleness have taught me many things, but things falling into two main themes:

Singleness is a blessing. And God is good.
My heart needs a lot of repairing.

Blessing:
It's an amazing blessing to have a best friend to go through life with - who you can fight with safely and who will fight for you forever, who loves you even when you're not you, when you're on the bathroom floor in complete non-sexiness, and who's not going anywhere.
But not having to worry about maintaining that relationship is also a blessing.  Having time to serve without constraint, having freedom to read as late as you want at night, worrying just about your job and your ministry and not other things truly is a blessing (and God knows I've been busy this year).  It's also the perfect time to travel, to give your all.  A time to throw yourself into ministry, into life, and really learn how to live it well.  Paul said singleness was better, and I think the American evangelical community forgets that.  We (myself, included) watch The Bachelorette and you get out of college and feel like a failure if you're not engaged.  Marriage is wonderful, but not-being-married is also wonderful.

Repairs:
It's taken several years for me to really forgive past hurts, and to understand things about myself that I would have figured out with a partner in a much more destructive way.  I've never dated frivolously; I've dated deep.  I do everything deep.  I cannot live in shallow waters; I suffocate.  But that also means that I open myself up to a lot of pain.  I'm broken.  I've realized a lot of roots in my heart, and there's a lot of fixing to be done, but Prince Charming won't fix me.  Marriage is about sanctification, but my husband can't save me or love me perfectly.  Only God can.  So, we've been renovating for many years, extra costs included, deadline extended.  And we've been redecorating.  I'm such a settler, but as God grows me I'm slowly realizing that he is enough, that I trust him, and I'm worth more than settling.  So the decor has changed, and I'm slowly realizing my worth.  It has little to do with me, but rather, with who he has created me to be.

Also, I get to fully throw myself into these blessings...













 

 

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

What happened to love thy neighbor?

I just finished (reluctantly, though I loved it in the end) watching a movie called Copperhead.  Abner Beech is a man living in upstate New York during the Civil War.  Abner belonged to a small political group called copperheads, sort of in the same tone that Christians were called christians at Antioch - a derogatory one.  Others saw them as traitors or snakes willing to rip the union apart.  They were against the war between the states basically because it was unconstitutional, and suffered much persecution.

Abner explains his beliefs in this clip:


(spoilers next, if you care to see the movie)

At the end of the movie, the antagonist has killed himself and his son gives the eulogy at his funeral, and it shook me to the bone.  It felt like he was speaking, not to 1864 New York, but to right now.  He calls out the town who sing hymns in church together every Sunday, but yet when someone has a difference of opinion, they call them names, they quote scripture at them, they burn their homes down.  And throughout, the son asks, what happened to love thy neighbor?

What happened to "love thy neighbor"?  Why are we content to sit in church pews spouting hate and judgement when Christ said "Do not judge, or you too will be judged"? (Mt.7:1) 
Why do we kill and destroy others, physically and spiritually, when Christ said "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God."? (Mt5:9) 
Why are we so fake, complacent, ignorant, and unwilling to do anything when Paul advises us to "let love be genuine, abhor what is evil...love one another in brotherly affection, outdo one another in showing honor...live peaceably with all..." (Romans 12) and that "[love] does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth." (1Cor13:6)?

I couldn't go to church Sunday night because I was just tired.  I was... spiritually weary of it.  Sunday morning we sang a patriotic musical, and one part in particular completely broke my heart.  Within the musical was a medley of the various musical marches for each branch of the military.  After that song, there was a church wide round of applause, and you could just feel the jubilation.  This may seem perfectly acceptable, but it rocked me to my core.  My stomach turned. 

I love my church.  I really do.  They are like family to me.  It has been a very hard year for my church, and for me at my church, but believe me when I say that I love them so very much.  If I didn't, trust me, this year would have been a lot less stressful than it was, but in that moment I saw clarity, and I had to hold back tears.  I admit.  After church, I had to call my best friend and vent.  I was hurt.  I was distressed.  I was disappointed.  I was losing hope.

My church in that moment showed itself true.  When that song closed, and applause rang from the rafters, I looked around shocked.  There was more feeling, and passion in that one moment, than there hardly EVER is when we sing songs to worship God on Sunday!  My church was more excited about battle songs.  They approved of those songs more so than they approve of "Blessed be the Name" (because it repeats too much).  That song struck a chord deep with people.  I know it was an emotional moment as veterans were recognized, but yet, I can't even remember the last time that kind of emotion was stirred in people on a normal Sunday morning.

Now, I didn't start this blog to whine about church issues or even to speak about statism.  I SWEAR! In fact, when I started it I consciously thought that I did not want to mention this story!  But, I guess, this epidemic that has infected the American church manifested itself close to home this week, and... well, the pain, the sorrow, the worry brought it out. 

My church showed that it can feel, though most of the time, it feels lifeless, and it feels complacent or sometimes irritated.  We're comfortable, and do not want to be moved or changed, and if you're different or challenging we don't want you around. The American church is dying quickly because of this epidemic, but I am not dead.  Followers of Christ should be the farthest from dead-living than any human beings on the planet.

So, what happened to love thy neighbor?  The American church has done a horrible job of this.  The Chinese church is teaching Arabic to and training 1 million missionaries to go into the middle east in the next year.  What are we doing?  Are we sending missionaries to Iran?  No.  We want to send soldiers and ships to Iran.  Do you love your neighbor?  Would you have forgiven Pontius Pilate?  Or would you have hung him?  Would you have taken the whore into your home and heard her story?  Or would you have stoned her for her sexual sins?  Would you have left an unwanted child to die, because its not your problem?  Or would you have taken it in?  Are you saying "Of course, I would!  How dare you!" in your mind, but in your heart, you're really lying to yourself?  What happened to love thy neighbor?


"You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind.  This is the first and greatest commandment.  And a second is like it, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself.  On these two commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets."  (Mat. 22:37-40)

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Few of my Favorite Things

The smell of pine on cool-warm air.
Rain.
Purple sunsets.
Standing on the beach at dusk.
The smell of a new book.
Bohemian Rhapsody.
How the sun filters into my old church windows in the middle of the morning.
My grandfather's blue eyes.
The sound of old movies playing in the background.
When students make historical jokes.
Esther's smile.

Anna's hugs.
Leslie's laugh.
Alycia's wit.
The relief when Allie and I understand each other perfectly.
The blessed comfort and ease of me and Miranda.
When my kids make me laugh because of their teenage inhibitions.
The feel of a baby against the skin of my chest.
The South.
Sweet tea.
When my sister whips off a hilarious clever remark. 
Watching British television with my mom.
My old red Bible.
When Sarah blushes.
Driving with the windows down.
When Lori gets sassy.
Late night conversations with my dad.
Swan Lake.
When you get to smirk at yourself with God.
Renaissance Festival.

Watching planes take off.
Old things.
Getting a glimpse of time.
Waking up to birds singing.
Texas.
Wanderlust.
When old men at church show their love through long hugs.
The rush of excitement at any taste of Middle Earth.
Singing the Doxology with big family next to the lake that has witnessed it for a half century.
Passion still there after 20 years of studying history.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

I've always had a curiosity about the In Between.

I woke up really tired today. From beginning to end, I was just trying to get this day over, from one task after another. Writing assignments in the board, paining with coworkers, yelling at children, driving, making dinner, teaching a Bible study and not having a heart capable to do it best, complaining to mom after having a conversation with a friend who had also realized how much she complained through Lent. Tired and sleepy, just pushing through all the way to picking up this book.

Imagine all the years we spend just trying to get to bed. Imagine all the days spent where the best part was laying your head down at night. And what so we DO? We do a lot of the mundane in the in between moments. We truly live in the in between moments. Baseball games and ballets and wine festivals do not make up our lives. Laundry and conversations and dinner and grocery stores are life. But we live them - just trying to make to to unconsciousness.

And then, one day, we don't wake up. My great-aunt just died this week.  She went to sleep with nothing particularly wrong, and simply never woke up. I'm noticing that most people are not in the hospital for weeks, or get stage four melanoma. Most people just stop. And one phone call later, they are disappeared from our worlds. But in the in between, we watch the telescreen; we complain about our lot; we are numb; we don't feel good or bad; we make other people feel little; we bad mouth someone behind their back; we are tired. We are tired.

I'm slowly realizing just how much of our lives we waste. How truly ungrateful we are for everything we have been given. How very little I actually truly live my life. And how all of that is simply an action stemming from not truly trusting that the God of the universe really does love me.

Romans 8:37-39

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Why I'm Not Catholic

Every once in a while these topical issues start trending.  My Facebook tonight showed me two very interesting and absolutely different perspectives.

I myself posted this status:
"For some weird reason that has absolutely NO theological basis, I get really excited about Conclave! Something about the tradition of it. Habeant papam ;) #history #latinnerd"

Both of these perspectives come from very intelligent and seemingly introspective people, and they got me thinking.

Perspective #1 (guy I knew briefly through the -Protestant- Christian summer camp I worked at several years ago):
[in response to the above status]
"I did too in 2005, 6 years before I became Catholic. I am twice as excited now."

This got me thinking.  I was always really curious why anyone would sincerely convert to Catholicism.  What appeals to me is the history, the gorgeous buildings, the majesty of thousands of years of tradition that the Catholic Church embodies.  But, then I remembered that the tradition that appealed to me was countered by the corruption that drove me away.

Perspective #2 (guy I know from when I studied abroad in Oxford several years ago):
[his own Facebook status, edited for space]
"So, I posted a status today about the Pope. It was snarky, insulting, and frankly, really funny. I did this because I believe that the Catholic church, as a world influence in our current point in history, is damaging. It shelters abuses and hatred of all variety, and on a personal level, it represents a major institution in the world that systematically dehumanizes me, and others who identify as homosexual around the globe, and acts as an anchor dragging down the upward progress of human evolution... I am not kind when you speak to me of these people, and their claimed lineage to a mythic Christ figure... if you are a friend of mine celebrating the papal inauguration, and the abuses they have carried out and made no recompense for do not taint their character and impugn their claims of divine patronage, we will probably not have nice conversations. I am terrible, and fierce. And they are wrong...[he deleted the previous post and explained why] I am shooting you, hoping to injure the Pope..."

Homozexuality and the Catholic Church seem to be inseparable as of late. I stand with the second man only so far as that he points out that the church has really made no strides in curbing, being transparent, or punishing abuses and corruption inside.  I also think that their reliance on tradition often holds them back from the true gospel calling.  The second man believes that any organization that holds back homosexuals is abusive and dealing in evil.  This is a heartbreaking issue, and I truly do understand his argument as much as I possibly can without being gay myself.  I have people who are very close to me who are gay, and my heart breaks for them.  Christians ought to stand for love and dignity for all people, and we are very bad at doing that often.

The issue from both perspectives comes down to this.  God created the universe with a certain rhythm.  He created it so that he could create us so that we could be loved and enjoy the best of things.  But something went wrong.  The universe was fractured.  It was fractured by humans choosing what they think is best for them, what they desire, over what is really best for them - God.  Ever after the world was corrupted.  We were corrupted.  Jesus of Nazareth came to fix that corrupt.  So we wait, leading others to believe in this Savior, until the world is fully mended.

I do not believe that there is only one church (there is only one family of God however), and I take issue with important points of Catholic doctrine.  But mainly, as a historian and as a Christian, I cannot stand with any institution or organization that is harmful, and corrupt in the highest degree.  I love my Catholic brothers and sisters, and I pray the new pope is truly a believer who will follow the calling of Christ, but I will never be a Catholic.

Friday, March 8, 2013

An Important Expression of Truth

My students are always very put off when I introduce them to the term homo sapiens. I then explain that it just means the discerning of wise man. We are, as humans, essentially different because we have been given to ability to think on an extraordinary level. And from that comes this weird idea called morality.

We would all probably agree that if one man was harming another man, and both of them were in need of help, that we would help the one who was being harmed, not the one doing the harming. Also, historically people would not have flinched if their community or society chose death as the.punishment for an outrageous immoral crime. It would be totally simple to them. Death is the punishment, the just deserves. One of he main things we don't consider so often in OUR world is that the community would choose death primarily because it is an "expression of the moral importance of certain crimes".

Stories and books and thoughts are so important because they help us understand eachother a little bit better. This thought from Lewis made me understand the culture I live in just a bit better. We do not place moral importance on crimes or misbehavior. The disgusting behavior I see everyday in the next generation continues because they truly don't see anything wrong with how they act. The right or wrong of it, the principle of it simply does not matter or is not clear.

I think this simple idea is one of the keys. People just don't see. These things have no weight. We are far too easily pleased. We are far too eager to remain plugged in to the matrix and not open our eyes to seek what is truth.

(Reading The Weight of Glory by CS Lewis)

Monday, March 4, 2013

The Cheerleader

I ran into a girl I knew in high school for the first time in years the other night. She was gorgeous, with flawless skin, beautiful smile, a voice I didn't think she deserved, and she was a cheerleader. I didn't think very much of her back then. It seemed she could be cruel at times and could dish it out but couldn't take it, which I abhor. She is a few years younger than me, and we were always only acquaintances. I remember being genuinely shocked when I found out she was the daughter of a preacher. And then, it was reported to me that she had called me a very rude name during one period of time after only knowing a very skewed half of the story. Needless to say, I didn't really like this girl. She left a bitter taste in my mouth, mainly because she genuinely hurt my feelings a couple of times without ever really knowing me.

When I ran into her at a city wide church event all these years later she was so sweet and smiled, and looked genuinely happy to see me and the minister I was with. At first, I was immediately on my guard. Is she faking it? What's she really thinking? But then I started to be introspective.  Because of Jesus, I am a COMPLETELY different person now than I was five years ago (actually almost six... weird). Those things don't define me anymore. And then I thought,  ya know, I'm judging her now in the exact same way I resented her for judging me all those years ago.

It struck me as so odd! Who knows if Jesus hasn't totally turned her into a different person? What if she was being genuinely nice? Doesn't she deserve the same chance to show who she as as I want people to give me?

Just like Paul and his sin of religiosity and persecution of the innocent, everybody has the chance to experience revolutionary change! And then, thanks God, those stupid disgusting mistakes of the past are wiped away, and though they may explain who we once were, they in no way DEFINE who we are today.

Now, that is true liberty.  That is true redemption.

Saturday, February 16, 2013

A Little Dream

Discovered this song today and it is a perfect representation of my fairy tale...

Build a little cabin on a little tall hill
plan a little garden, pray for every meal
and we'll grow, and we'll grow
take a little nap in the butterfly grass
just you and I and the clouds a pass
and we're close, so close

We'll be living out where the river bends
where the grass gets green and the highway ends
living easy, easy
you and me baby and the daffodils 
the kids growing up in the rolling hills
and love will be enough for us

Rains coming down on the old tin roof
a lullaby storm in the middle of june
falling slow, falling slow

We'll be living out where the river bends
[ From: http://www.elyrics.net ]

where the grass gets green and the highway ends
living easy
you and me baby and the daffodils the kids growing up in the rolling hills
and love will be enough for us, 
oooooh, love, 
ooooooh, love, will be enough

Wake up darling let's leave tonight,
we can disappear under the clear moonlight

And we'll be living out where the river bends
where the grass gets green and the highway ends
living easy
You and me baby and the daffodils the kids growing up in the rolling hills
and love will be enough for us

We'll build a little cabin on a little tall hill


"Love Will Be Enough for Us" - Dave Barnes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jDSb1y6bBIo

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Amazing Gifts

Its amazing how much a truly innocent life can shift your perspective.

A friend of mine gave birth to a little girl on Sunday. I got to hold her yesterday. She's not even related to me, but the beauty of a new life, a blank book, trusting grip, helplessness, and the realization that she's a little soul just opens up an entirely new world.  I can't wait to be mind blown when that little one is actually mine!

"Behold, children are a heritage from the Lord, the fruit of the womb a reward... Blessed is the.man who fills his quiver with them!" PS 127:3,5

Catching Fire

I'm driving along a normal city road. I've been telling that owner for years that his house has terrible wiring, and that his wife and kids are playing with matches all the time. But he never saw it. It was so obvious to me, but he never saw it.  He saw the wiring, and the matches, but never he danger. This day, I'm driving by and the hiuse is in flames. I pull over wanting to run inside to save the family, but its too late. The flames are too high. The fire is too hot. The injuries too severe anyway. No foam or water can quench the flames. I stand back with tears running down my face, cursing that man for not just pulling out the wiring or watching his kids more closely. I stand by, helpless, knowing exactly how the fire started, and just waiting for the house to burn itself out.

Why waste the energy and make people angry, and give myself a reputation with no other outcome? Why am I even worrying about it? There's tracker jackers too.

Its the burning house. Its just going to get hotter. People are only going to wake up on their own time, and a lot if them are going to die in the process, but there's nothing I can do about it. I can see it burning, and I can see exactly how I will be burned.

This world is far too broken,  and we (yes, we) are far too uneducated and indoctrinated. But its hopeless until kingdom come. The house will burn to the ground, and hopefully, I'll be there having watched it burn, and be able to build a new house outside of the arena.

The noble thing to do would be to save the burning people. But honestly, their souls are more important. Their bodies are too far gone.

Monday, February 11, 2013

Fishing line, what?

I've been abnormally ill the past few months.  Not saying, I'm the picture of health, but my body has decided to take me down more frequently than is usual as of late. And its nothing certifiable. Mostly, its headaches and short bouts of returned-meals. The headache that kept me home from school/work today lasted three days and kept me away from a newborn baby I've been dying to meet.

My conclusion: stress. Its the only thing that fits. My dad asked what I could possibly be so stressed about, then told me to not let my kids get to me so much. On that one count, he's right. On the other... I have disrespectful, low achieving, and undermotivated children that I must prepare for a very hard test over 8000ish years of history in 15 weeks. Not to mention teaching Wednesdays and some Sundays to a youth group that is drowning. Among other things I've taken on. I think a lot of the problem is that I've taken all this on MY shoulders and haven't been leaning on the Lord. Quite honestly, I've never really learned how to do that. Instead, I complain a lot and keep pressing on.  The stress may be taking me out, but it seems his is also a spiritual wake-up call.

So here I am confessing that sin, and trying to do the cast your care thing. Honestly, its quite hard.  For me.

"Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will make straight your paths. Be not wise in your own eyes; fear the Lord and turn away from evil. It will be healing to your flesh and refreshment to your bones." Pv 3:5-8

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Quoth the raven... gimme your gold.

Today, I am making a study of the phenomenon in which the corporate establishment proliferates the collective hive mind by repeated propaganda messaging and the large scale simulation of war and the illusion of meaningful allegiance and affinity.

In other words, I'm going to a super bowl party.  Good to be aware, though. :)

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

This is stupid.

This gun show is getting ridiculous.  Inciting fury, people losing their minds, and blatant ignorance of reason all around!  Good times on all news networks.  This will be short.

Guns are inanimate objects.  They do not take any action.  You do not get angry at a knife for cutting you, it's the person wielding it that you get angry at.

People get shot all the time.  Usually its by someone they know, and is a result of domestic violence or drug/gang issues.  It's when the media decides to cover these things in such intensity that makes it seem like they happen all the time.

People scare perpetrators off with guns all the time.  It's when the media decides NOT to cover these things with intensity that makes it seem as if it never happens.

Guns are equalizers.  I am a weak, small framed girl.  I cannot overpower a lot of people, and I don't want to be close enough to them to have to!  I have been around guns that were not locked up my entire life.

Guns do not make for more violence.  In fact, the UK, where they have extremely strict gun laws and the entire populace is brainwashed to fear and hate guns, is in fact the most violent country in Europe, and is in fact more violent that America.

And finally, legislation is not the answer.  The issue is that the state does not have the right to restrict your right to defend yourself from the people who will ALWAYS have guns... ya know, like criminals (people who don't follow laws) and the government (who, by the way, does not care about you.  Stop believing that.  It's not true.)

Simple.

hehe.

Monday, January 14, 2013

The Strangest Thing

Has anyone ever asked you why you loved a certain person?
Have you found that to answer that question is actually quite difficult?
Has anyone ever asked you what love... is?

Naturalists believe its a chemical process in your brain.
Taylor Swift (though I love her) seems to equate it with intense infatuation.
Others believe they have it, but learn later that they really didn't at all.
think of all the love songs with so many different perspectives all trying to express the same thing.

This was the subject of an episode of one of the shows Mom and I watch recently.  The question:  What exactly is love?

...

Think about it.  It's actually really hard to put words to it.  To define it.
I pondered this a long time, and kept coming back to one singular answer:

Love never ends.

Parents.  Covenants.  Best Friends.  Old friends. Old romances. 60 years of marriage.  If it is truly a feeling of love, then though situations, chemistry, intellect, and relationships change, though love itself grows and changes, the strange supernatural thing called love never goes away.


Let me not to the marriage of true minds
admit impediments.  Love is not love
which alters when it alteration finds,
or bends with the remover to remove:
O no! it is an ever-fixed mark 
that looks on tempests an is never shaken;
it is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
within his bending sickle's compass come:
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
but bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me proved, 
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
(Sonnet 116, Shakespeare)


Love is patient and kind; love does no envy or boast; it is not arrogant or rude.  It does not insist on its own way; it is not irritable or resentful; it does not rejoice at wrongdoing, but rejoices with the truth   Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.  Love never ends.
(Paul, 1 Corinthians 13)

Do You Hear the People Sing?

There has been a crescendo of music in my life the past couple of weeks. Last night my dad and I stayed up far too late talking about the evolution of rock and fashion and watching videos. And then of course, I saw Les Miserables for a second time and I've been humming more than usual. My whole body is just itching with the urge to belt out!

Now, bear in mind, I am a stage frightened person. I love performing in groups, but I choke if a solo even looks my way. I've done two in my life, and they were very hard for me, and they annoyingly never turn out to be the best I'm capable of.  I am an innately shy person.

This music is burning inside me, just itching to get out, and I'm in need of an outlet. I want very badly for that outlet to be a church outlet...

I attend a very traditional Baptist church.  I adore my church family deeply, but like all of us they have their problems. Their biggest problem is comfort. They are incredibly comfortable. Consequently, tradition is highly valued.  And that bleeds over into... worship music.

Music is a language of the soul. The entire physical process if making and appreciating music is practically miraculous. The human experience that is music is so amazing in itself. I love music. My soul breathes music. I'm not all that. Creative or terribly talented but oh how I love it. How I just feeel  feeel! But not at my church.
The music minister is like a second father to me. I even went caroling with his family over Christmas and the harmonies and blending and love was so magical. He tries so hard to please and be wise and get people to worship, but its just... dead.
Few people are singing in their seats.
The choir are the only people standing.
There's barely any joy in the place.
Few smiles.
Just... dead.
I've been places where the music starts and people jump to their feet cheering, hands high when they feel it, and there is just an encouragement of love and worship and praise!
There's more praise going on at a Justin Bieber concert than at my church, and its left me starving.
Music is bursting out of me all day for weeks because I want to praise God. And I feel singled out and weird doing that at my church. It is so sad. I couldn't even get over the old songs if people were just worshipping!

I have so much hope resting on this coming year. Hopes that include my church becoming a house of worship once again.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

2013

My soul belongs to God, I know
I made that bargain long ago
He gave me hope when hope was gone
He gave me strength to journey on...


There was a shadow over this year for me.  But, I've gotten over the need to whine about it (I do that far too often anyway ;), and decided to take all those things that made 2012 bad and hard, and to instead list the good that came out of them.  List the good of this year, not the bad.  Because God reconciles all things for those who love him, and he is faithful.  So in that spirit, 2012...


My two best friends happily married the loves of their lives last year.
Their weddings gave me a LOT of practice!
I was blessed with a job I love.
I learned that I'm better at that job than I thought, and not as good at that job as I thought.
Les Miserables.  The Hobbit.  Both very important good things!
I learned that guilt is something that is reigning over me like a slave master, and not always for things I myself have actually done.
I learned to appreciate my grandparents so much more while they're here, and I love them so much more passionately.
My church is making some long-awaited changes, and I have hope that God is going to do wonderful things this coming year.
I have gained respect, and learned how perspective and littleness of mind are things to be carefully guarded.
I've been able to see in my grandparents how a Christ-exalting marriage after 58 years and counting is so much better than any other kind of marriage.
I've actually touched some kids lives and learned to love and appreciate them more when I was all but ready to give up on them because they're not the "smart kids".
I can see how awesome my sister has always been and continues to be.  She's amazing.
I've learned that true love, no matter what happens or what is uncovered about people, absolutely never ever goes away.
I've seen how communication and respect and kindness are key to relationships of any kind.
That's why God wants us to talk to him, too.
I was reminded tonight that my problems are small compared to some, and that I have been given years when some only have months, and that it is a sin to waste that time.
I see my parents in very different lights than I used to, and I think God is using this to teach my humility and prepare me for my own future.
I've traveled.  And I really must do that more!
My heart has been so full, and in how I responded to that I can see that I don't like the person I have become, and that is because I'm doing it all on my own.
I am more blessed than I remember day to day.

So, 2013 has begun!  I'm glad last year is over.  But, I have also seen that a lot of my problems are of my own doing.  This is the part where I list my resolutions, but really I have only one.  The same one I will have for the rest of my life! :)



God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him.