October 18, 2008

joy in being part of powerful worship

I am at the worship conference.  It is a great joy and blessing, even though I am on my own and having to drive around a strange city and find various venues with maps and God's guidance.  World reknowned songwriters and worship leaders are giving workshops and there are many hundreds of dedicated people in attendance.  Last night it was a great joy to hear Robin Mark and his band lead us in some of his popular and anointed songs.  I sat with longtime friends, husband and wife, who are pastors in a nearby town.  I haven' t seen them for about six years.  

So there is much to take in, and much to use in future days.  I don't have time to write about it now, but I am sure it will make a big difference to my approach to creative ministry, giving me language and confidence for the future.  It is wonderful to be part of this movement in this generation, and to know that God is calling me to continue further in this area of ministry.

I look forward to another day of workshops and worship, and trust that the Lord will continue to watch over my driving.  My leg is sore and my foot is bruised, but I am walking okay for the most part.  God is faithful and will continue to be, as I am faithful to Him and His calling.

October 17, 2008

joy in not driving with my left foot

Last evening before supper I must have thought I didn't have enough stress in my life so I accelerated instead of braked as I brought the van into the carport. The woodpile absorbed the shock of the impact of the crash which shook the house. Everyone came running to see what happened. The van seems basically fine and will get checked out on Monday. I came off with a very sore left foot, mostly in the instep. I will hobble around today at the Unite in Worship conference which I had arranged to attend from August. I get to hear famous worship leaders and attend electives in various things to help me be a better worship leader. Tonight I will also see a dear friend in that area who is attending the concert given by Robin Mark. God is good. I will still get there.

My sister is staying at our place for her own reasons and she will be available to my husband when my daughters go to Toronto by bus tomorrow to join me there in the evening for other engagements for them on Sunday. God took care of us in the crash and is taking care of Jim. The doctor says he didn't have a real mini stroke in that it didn't show in the brain scan, but he is being put on preventative treatments and will see a specialist next week finally.

So except for my sore foot I am feeling excited about the conference and relieved about Jim and so grateful to my Heavenly father and His host of angels who took care of me last night. Mind you my foot is sore and I am sure glad that it is my right foot I use in driving. I will be driving my own smaller car so I trust my right foot will perform better than it did last night!!!!

I like this poem and agree with it....so despite all the worries I mused about lately, I am rejoicing today:

Overheard in an Orchard

Said the Robin to the Sparrow
"I should really like to know
Why these anxious human beings
Rush about and worry so."

Said the Sparrow to the Robin
"Friend, I think that it must be
That they have no Heavenly Father
Such as cares for you and me."

Elizabeth Cheney

Blessings and protection for you too today!!

October 16, 2008

joy in knowing He can do miracles

"Difficulty is the very atmosphere of miracle - it is a miracle in its first stage. If it is to be a great miracle, the condition is not difficulty but impossibility.
The clinging hand of His child makes a desperate situation a delight to Him."

quoted from Streams in the Desert, Oct. 14th

These words ring with biblical truth, and God's truth. What else can we believe when we have faith in Him? For anyone reading my recent posts, you can see the mixture of the honesty of my human struggles, in their depths, and the reality of my faith in God's power. These are the two counterpoints of my life, and, I would imagine, of yours. Whatever the level of consciousness or expression of these realities, they are there for each one of us who seeks to live in communion and faithfulness with our Heavenly Father, friend and saviour, and who chooses to work out all our struggles in His way, His timing, and His power.

As well as expressing these thoughts this morning, my waking thoughts were of the joy of seeing His work in so many ways in my life and the lives of others. One example for me is the miracle of writing this blog and being part of the devotional team blog www.whateverhesays.blogspot.com. Both of them have brought me some amazing experiences. To know that others read my blog regularly and receive nurture and encouragement from it is so wonderful. I don't want to write just to express myself or imagine that others might read what I say. I want to write what is going to make a difference for others too.

Sharing my own experiences only makes sense humanly and spiritually if that sharing is a blessing to others. And in God's economy that is what can happen. My weakness becomes His strength. It is another form of Him using difficulty as the first stage of a miracle. God is a god of contrasts, of counterpoint, of turning things around.

I guess I could go on and on about that, and I expect I will, in one way or another, as the days go by. For those of you who read my blog, I thank you for sharing my journey, and for letting me know that you do. Thank you for telling me from time to time that something I have said or quoted has made a difference for you. I pray that today will be a day where in every difficulty you will sense God's presence and believe for His miracles, as I will.

October 15, 2008

joy in having the courage to be

I wrote my weekly post for the devotional blog, www.whateverhesays.blogspot.com, in the middle of the night. I was so full of thoughts about supply teaching again today, for the first time in two weeks, and relaxing a little after Irish dancing last night with my daughter, that I forgot all about writing my blog. I didn't even know what I was going to write about. But that was good. Because I had to search my heart and ask myself what was really worth saying for that special opportunity I have been given once a week. Like all my blog posts, I didn't know fully what I was going to say until I saw it on the page. And that is such an exciting process for me. What a privilege, and what an opportunity for personal growth. So here it is:

The Courage to Be


What does it take to stay alive? I remember lying awake at nights in Uganda, listening to gunfire across the valley, knowing it was the night watchman at the water plant firing at potential intruders. After our armed robbery I never slept well. Unlike the water plant, we did not have an armed guard. We just had a "watchman" who was really a gardener whose living quarters were near the gate so that he could respond if there was a problem. Our intruders found their way around him when they entered our compound early one evening, in the darkness that had fallen like a curtain at 6:30 p.m. That night we joined the ranks of many foreigners in the country who were mistakenly assumed to have lots of money. We were saved by the fact that we did have quite a bit of cash ready to pay our project workers the next day, by the bark of our dog, and likely by my husband's cool head, our own prayers, and the sheer need of guilty parties to escape before they would lose what they gained by their clever robbery.

That was not the only time we escaped with our lives. When we lost ten times that amount of money to a trusted Christian employee who betrayed us when we were back in Canada for a much needed break, we were considered fortunate to leave the country finally with our lives and our most treasured possessions, mostly books. He did not take being fired in a Christian spirit, and launched a hate campaign against us, fuelling more opposition to our work and presence. We felt it was time to leave. The safety of our children was at stake, and the joy in our work.

Yes, those events were Satan's work. How else could we see them? Satan is a liar and a thief. Yet he is often God's unpaid servant. A few years later we were glad that these forces had brought us back to our own country. God had other things to do in our lives.

Here in Canada, I don't lie awake at night listening to gunfire in our peaceful town. I don't worry that at any moment we might have another armed robbery, or that someone we have trusted will rob and cheat us. Yet I have likely had more difficult moments here being anxious about the future and the present than I ever had in my five years of missionary life "on the field".

I am not one to see a demon in every doorpost, or to interpret a lot of life's events as the work of the devil. I work hard on my "stuff", taking responsibility for the way I come across and seeking to grow in new and creative ways, as a Christian and as a human being. I urge others to do the same, and not to blame the devil for what is really the result of their own immaturity or bad boundaries, or their addictive patterns of behaviour.

Yet I, and many I care about, often struggle just to have the courage to be, to stay alive, to continue forging ahead with the many difficulties, outer and inner, that plague us. I rejoice to say that I am not depressed, and find many moments of joy in my life, much to celebrate. I work hard to help others find reasons to believe God's promises for their lives - that they have a hope and a future. And I weep inwardly at the discouragement that Satan will bring to all of us, His capacity to rob and cheat us out of every blessing God intends, and to make us despair of the worth of living life.

We don't have to be on the brink of madness like Hamlet to say to ourselves: "To be or not to be, that is the question." We don't have to be famous like Dag Hammarsjold to write in our private diaries that the main issue in life is not to have run away.

What is the saying? "Faith isn't faith until it's all you're holding on to"? Is that how it goes? Well, you know what I mean. I thought I was really learning about faith and courage when I was a missionary in Uganda, went through an armed robbery, and then all the rest. But I have faced more existential questions about the courage of just living life since I have returned.

And for me, in the end it all comes back to God. He is my source, my supply, my capacity to stay alive. We got a lot of attention for a while when we told our story of the armed robbery or the betrayal of our Christian employee. But our private struggles back here in small town Ontario are not the stuff of missionary newsletters.

I wonder how the 4 million who have been butchered to death in Congo went through their struggles. How many of them will I see in Heaven? What are our struggles compared with the persecution of Christians all over the world? These are important questions. I am glad I can think about them, and not take peace and whatever prosperity we have for granted. Yes, I guess I am glad that it takes a lot of courage just to be, at times.

Of course God has blessings in store for us, in this life, but they are often not what we would expect. Often they are treasures of darkness, riches stored deep in the centre of the most difficult moments we know. And that centre is only truly the centre, like the true centre when you are throwing a pot on a wheel, when it is God. What else makes life worth living? Who else is there, in our darkest moments? Either we know Him in His presence in our lives, or we don't. And when we do, then He can be all that we need. He can give us the courage to be, and the courage to live out all that is before us.

And until we come to that place where He, and faith in Him, are all that we are truly holding on to, then I don't think we really know what it means to live.

October 14, 2008

joy in knowing the power of prayer

Today is the day after Thanksgiving weekend. Yesterday was the warmest October 13th in recorded history. We sat at the kitchen table with the back screen door open, watching the glorious sunset and eating leftover turkey, cranberry jelly, and apple pie. Outwardly everything was wonderful. All of us were doing our best to have our high minded chats about theological issues and world concerns.

Underneath are some profound concerns for each of us, and for others we love. We were discussing prayer, and trying to articulate how it works, praying in the Spirit to the Father through the Son. I got out some books on prayer, Jim and my nephew continued in their discussions. I was too tired to join in the theological discussion at that time, although I am well able to do so. But I did say, and they agreed: " I don't know how prayer works, but I know it works. That's what matters."

A few hours later I sat with my husband Jim in emergency again, not because he was having or had had another mini stroke, but because I wanted him to get some more attention to his increasing dizziness. This time the doctor reported that the previous time they had not even re corded the mini stroke that had brought him in, and he wondered why Jim was there as he was so well. I was angry at the medical incompetence that had not accurately reported what we had been told verbally, and that had left Jim wondering for almost a week, waiting to hear from the specialist and all he has been put on at the moment is the low dose of aspirin!

I came home to conversations on the phone and otherwise about the deep concerns in our extended family. The consensus is that all we can do is pray. I was able to sleep, although I made myself unavailable for supply teaching yet again because of all the pressure on me and the late hour at which I went to bed.

I woke up after quite a good sleep realizing I had to write email prayer requests about certain situations. I am confident that God will undertake. But there is so much to pray about, to be concerned about. What would we do without prayer? How could any of us live in the midst of our struggles and our concerns about those of others? How could we truly overcome?

Whatever else I know about my life, I know that it is a testament to the power of prayer. And I know that whatever happens, nothing can change that. What a wonder is this for all of us.

October 13, 2008

joy in an overcoming spirit, with meekness

Yesterday was our Thanksgiving celebration. We were small in number, smaller than we had planned to be, but enjoyed our meal nonetheless. Sarah and Rachel had made delicious pies, my turkey and dressing and vegies turned out well, and we have more turkey leftovers to look forward to. The weather was also incredible. As we waited for guests and turkey, Jim, savouring his moments of life even more these days, sat on the back deck in the sunshine reminiscing about sunlit days in his childhood. The evening before the girls had picked a family video to share that they treasured with its highlights of delightful moments in their very early years.

Obstacles in lives of our extended family reduced our number, but we overcame in a positive spirit. My sister and I affirmed how typical that was for our family. I recalled recent conversations I have had with others about my thoughts and feelings about family "archives" and their legacy in my own life. My mentor had said to me, "That's your archival story. Yours is a family of overcomers, every last one of them." It was so obvious when it was said by another; that is the chief story to take out of my connecting with family papers and memorabilia, and comparing them with my own story. Whatever the details of careers and public achievements and recognition, I am an overcomer like the rest of my family line. I carry that spirit deep within me and I call upon it often in the midst of adversity, opposition, and confusion. That spirit was so strong in my mother during her last year that it was confusing for her that it could not defeat her cancer. Her spirit would not let her body go when she needed to let go.

And sometimes it can be anger or pride that fuels our overcoming spirits. We have to be sure that the overcoming is in line with God's plans, and with His overcoming spirit. Then we move in that spirit with meekness and gentleness, despite the strength and courage inside. I realize that was also the story I was seeking to resolve in my family - when the overcoming was done in that spirit then I celebrated it. What hurt me was when those other forces were at work as well. In our family there were both, and those I recall with the greatest joy were those who wore the mantles of meekness in their courageous overcoming.

So that is the story I carry with thanksgiving as I gather fresh strength to move on with all that challenges me and my family. Ringing in my ears are the words from the old protest song of the sixties I knew so well:

We shall overcome, we shall ovecome,
We shall overcome someday....

It is really the rest of the words that set the spirit straight in that song:

We'll walk hand in hand....

The truth shall set us free...

When we overcome in love, with a desire to walk hand in hand, and when we overcome in truth ...then we are truly walking in meekness and a strength that is worth keeping...a truly treasured possession.