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December 1, 2011 10:32:00
Posted By Campus House Staff
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My daughter recently had her first birthday. For her birthday
I
made her a wooden rocking horse. She didn’t ask for a wooden
rocking horse. She didn’t really ask for anything, she was
just
turning one. But I’d seen her play with one and I saw the
great excitement in her eyes!
Of course, she had played with lots of toys her ‘play-date’
friends
had,
and she liked them too. The plastic, loud, battery-using,
sing-
songy toys that always end up breaking in a few months...you
know
the kind. I could have bought her one of those. But I love my
daughter a lot, and I wanted her to have, not only something
that
would last for years to come, but also something that would
remind
her of her dad. Something that would remind her of me not only
when she played with
it…
but years later when this wooden horse is passed down
to
her own kids.
Matthew 7:11 says, “If you, then, though you are evil, know
how
to give good gift to your children, how much more will your
Father
in heaven give good gift to those who ask him!”
God wants to
give us good gifts! He knows there may be bright, flashy
things
in the world that we think would make us happy for a little
while,
like the plastic battery-using toys my daughter thinks she
wants,
but he chooses to give us a gift that will last a lot longer…
for
eternity, and not just a gift for us, but one that we can
pass
on
to our children. A gift filled with love, filled with
everything that
He is. A gift that reminds us of our Father every time we
think
about it. And this time of year, all the world begins to think
about that gift. A gift that is so much more than a wooden
horse.
However much I labored, in love, making that horse for my
daughter,
it will never compare to the total love we received when God
sent
His only begotten Son, as an infant, to this world to save us
all.
As you give and receive presents this Christmas season,
remember
the reason we give gifts in the first place…. And remember
Matthew
7:11
“If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good
gift
to
your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give
good
gift to those who ask him!”
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December 13, 2011 10:06:57
Posted By Campus House Staff
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Childbirth sure seems like a miracle. You have sex. Grow
tired.
Grow bigger. Grow a baby in your belly and breathe and push
through enormous pain resulting in the most beautiful,
amazing,
tiny little baby. It’s just amazing and miraculous. This
miracle
happens every day. I pray you may partake in this miracle,
as a
mommy or daddy, in due time.
God becoming a baby: now that IS a miracle. Astounding.
Bizarre
even. Definitely miraculous.
Last night I saw a huge orange moon, two shooting stars, and
many
beautiful Christmas lights including Old Main’s. We had
Christmas
open house at the Songer’s where we enjoyed one another, yummy
foods, and sang Christmas carols. All in all the evening was
magical. The Christmas season, when I slow down, reflect and
enjoy it, is always simply…magical.
I do think it’s fitting that Christmas feels so magical. A
miracle so amazing, birthed from such love, should feel
magical.
Enjoy the season. Enjoy His love as you celebrate His birth!
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December 19, 2011 07:09:51
Posted By Campus House Staff
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Let me start out by having a small disclaimer here. My
intentions
for this blog are not to make it depressing, sad, or even a
tear
jerker. The reality of it, it very well may be a blog that
does
just that. I mean, who wants depressing news the week of
Christmas right? Not me, but this is something that is Amber
and I
are dealing with, and I would like to share it with you, not
for
sympathy, but for encouragement.
Back in August, the week before school started, Amber and her
family learned that her grandfather’s cancer had returned.
Not
only had it returned, it had spread and become much worse than
it
was before. This news came to a shock for the family as about
a
month earlier he was helping set up for a wedding!
Questions run through your head as to why, how long, what’s
next.
The following months turned into being a bit of a roller
coaster
as well. Some ER visit’s that turned to be somewhat scary and
frightening, as well as the frequent treatments for the
cancer.
Thoughts ran through my mind as well as Amber’s. Things like,
Will Grandpa be at our wedding? Will he be around for the
holidays? What happens when the time comes? One thing we knew
for
sure, grandpa was dying.
No one likes death. No one finds pleasure in death. There is
a
tendency to be very selfish when death is upon us, selfish in
terms that our loved one is leaving us and we are stuck here
and
we don’t like it. Now we have the hope that one day we will
rejoice with them in Heaven, and that brings some light to a
very
dark time.
Now we are a week before Christmas, and grandpa is still with
us.
Now we find ourselves thinking about what if he goes now. The
rest of our lives we remember Christmas as the time of year we
lost grandpa. Again your mind becomes filled with thoughts.
While these last four months have been a very long hard four
months, I have to say; I am extremely encouraged by Amber’s
Grandpa. We express that we are sad that he won’t be at our
wedding, but he reminds us that he will, and he will have the
best
seat in the house. We talk about how sad it is to see him
dying,
and he reminds us that it’s ok, this is the transition period
to
new life.
These last four months he has been an encouragement to me in
many
ways. He has simply reminded me and the family that he is
going
home. He even says that he is ready to go home, be with his
mom.
It is a huge comfort knowing that a man of God is at peace
with
his death, and is even embracing it. The way he has embraced
his
death, the way that he looks forward to rejoicing in heave
with us
someday, all of that is extremely encouraging!
Finally, I find comfort knowing that I have a God who loves
and
comforts me. I find comfort in the fact that when Grandpa’s
time
comes, he will leave the physical earth, he will transition
into
new life.
Revelation 21:1-7
1 Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first
heaven
and the first earth passed away, and there is no longer any
sea.2
And I saw the holy city, new Jerusalem, coming down out of
heaven
from God, made ready as a bride adorned for her husband.3 And
I
heard a loud voice from the throne, saying, "Behold, the
tabernacle of God is among men, and He will dwell among them,
and
they shall be His people, and God Himself will be among
themt,4
and He will wipe away every tear from their eyes; and there
will
no longer be any death; there will no longer be any mourning,
or
crying, or pain; the first things have passed away."
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January 23, 2012 02:13:12
Posted By Campus House Staff
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Recently I have been thinking a lot about what to do after
this
year of internship is over. As I think, a number of
possibilities
come to my mind. I could stay here at Eastern and do a second
year
of internship, I could pursue a campus ministry job on another
campus somewhere, possibly even in another state, I could
search
for job in family services, the field of study in which I
earned
my bachelor’s degree, I could start an all girl band and
travel
the world, I could join the circus, or I could play the
lottery
and hope to win big (ok, a few of those may not be real
options
). Anyhow, sometimes these questions and possibilities can
really
weigh me down. So heavy!
In the first few chapters of his book Hearing God, Dallas
Willard
explains an interesting concept about knowing and doing God’s
will. He explains that God may not be so interested in giving
us
specific answers and instructions about all of the who’s,
what’s,
when’s, where’s, and why’s of life. Instead God is most likely
more interested in developing in us, through the work of His
Holy
Spirit, the kind of character that makes good and wise
decisions
in everyday life; just like the father of a maturing child
does
not always tell him exactly what he should do, but instead
teaches
him how to make good decisions on his own. As I think about
making
big life decisions, I think this concept still holds true. If
it
seems like God is staying silent on the particulars of where I
should go and what I should do, maybe it’s because He is
leaving
it for me to choose. As long as I know that it is my duty as a
disciple to love the Lord my God with all my heart, soul,
mind,
and strength, love my neighbor as myself, and make disciples
as I
am going out into the world, then maybe He is leaving it up to
me
to decide where and how to do that.
So, all this thinking about what’s next makes me think about
vision. What does it mean to have vision? Where do my gifts,
talents, and passions meet with the world’s needs? How do I
discern my vision from God’s vision? Sitting on my bookshelf
is
an excellent book I read a few years ago called Visioneering
by
Andy Stanely. Through a study of the life of Nehemiah, Stanley
writes about “developing and maintaining” a God vision versus
a
good vision. It is a great read, and I highly recommend it.
So, as I think about my own life, future, and vision, I
propose a
question to you… “What is YOUR VISION?”
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February 8, 2012 02:42:37
Posted By Campus House Staff
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No, not “dryness” as opposed to “wetness.” But spiritual
“dryness.” Becoming spiritually “dry” happens
to all of us at one time or another. It is sort of the “dirty
little secret” of the Christian life that most of us
hesitate to share—and many of us will not even admit exists.
Seventy years ago, Hannah Whitall Smith, wrote this little
devotional classic entitled, “The Christian’s
Secret of a Happy Life.” The title might make you think that
she
believes that living as a Christian is all
sunshine, flowers, and rainbows, with happy-little-puffy-
white-
clouds. And, that there is some “secret”
formula that will absolutely guarantee that you will never
again
be anything but happy all the time if
you only become a Christian. But you would be wrong. In fact,
her
reason for writing the book in the
first place was that the dichotomy between the life Christians
“ought” and “want” to live stands in such
contrast to the life that Christians “really” live.
So, “dryness” happens. It almost never happens suddenly—all at
once. Like a literal drought which
creates a physical desert out of a previously lush climate,
spiritual drought (dryness) creeps up slowly. It
may come from laziness—like failing to regularly feed your
soul
from God’s Word, or failing to deal with
insidious temptations before they erupt forth in sin. Or,
“dryness” may come from weariness—life can
come at you with a vengeance. Illness, grief, broken
relationships, stress—all of these life situations can
bludgeon you until you are completely spiritually fatigued.
“Dryness” comes from any of a multitude of
sources and influences.
You have probably been there. I have been there. Actually, I
AM
there today as I sit and write this blog.
The one thing I do know, is that the “dryness” will eventually
come to an end. If I will begin to do my
part to reclaim the freshness in my spiritual life, God
certainly
will do HIS part to refresh, renew and
restore me.
Actually, having written this, I am beginning to feel a little
better already. Strange. Strange indeed.
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