BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Mothers & Daughters

When I was 14 I observed an amazing thing.


We had recently began to attend church. How an unchurched girl suddenly starts going to church is a story soon to come. But anyway, this was one of the happiest times in my life. I was going to church, Sunday school, youth group, and I had friends!! Wonderfulness.

So one Sunday after church, one of my friends, Laura, invited me over to her house. Yay! At her house is where I saw the most incredible thing. I remember it vividly. She and her mother were standing there at the kitchen table, either talking about their purchases the day before or planning to go shopping. Can't remember which. But the important thing was...I could see that they liked each other!! Astonishment! Absolute astonishment! They looked completely at ease with each other. They were smiling, laughing. I was amazed.

Later, when I married and we were starting a family, I didn't out-loud, purposely ask God for daughters to be close to. But He, of course, knew the desires of my heart. And he gave me not one, but two beautiful daughters. Sarah Michelle, and Rachel Marie. My girls. It is so hard to sit, restrained, at a computer, and keep my excitement down enough to type about the two most wonderful women in my life. I'm a very theatrical, animated person and I want to stand up and use my arms and my facial expressions to convey my love for them.

So this will take some time. And, being the perfectionist that I am, I can't just whiz through it in a half hour's time. So....it will have to be in increments.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Still Drifting...

I'm not very good at this blogging thing, am I? Two months of silence here. I either need to do it. Or not do it. Ugh, indecisiveness.


I'm thinking about something my big sister said to me this morning. Not my literal, biological sister but a woman who came into my life 23 years ago and who I've recently reconnected with. Not that we were ever disconnected but, though we live in the same small town, we go to different churches --wait...I haven't been to church in about three months so I guess I need to say that she goes to church and I don't.

Gosh, I never thought I would be a non-churchgoer. (4/28/12: Update! I'm back in church. Not going felt so much worse than going. I'm glad about it! Best church in town, in my opinion :)

Anyway, she and I didn't see each other because our lives don't cross unless it's on purpose. So we agreed about a month ago to start getting together on Saturday mornings. To talk and to pray.

So this morning as I was praying ....praying for me and asking for direction.... that I pictured myself adrift ....out on the ocean and the piece of ice I was floating on was getting smaller and smaller. She told me that as I was praying that she pictured me on that ice and I dove off! When she said that, it seemed/sounded/felt like godly wisdom. So I'm pondering on that...

to dive off....what, where, how, when? eeeek!

So I definitely need some direction here. I'm ready to do. Ready to be.

Does God want me to be active in the LGBT community in a purposeful way....OR.....just love everyone that He brings across my path....OR............what?


Saturday, December 11, 2010

Unconditional Love for ALL




I've been sick for more than a week now, sitting like a zombie for days. So, I'm taking this opportunity to tackle the task of beginning my book. Or, rather, continuing a story that I've been unceremoniously catapulted into.

I started writing it about six years ago because of the response I was witnessing by the church to gay people. I was often saddened and, at times, horrified, by the utter lack of empathy and love from people who are supposed to be filled with God's love and compassion.

Well, just like so many things I start, I just let it sit there.....

....and sit....

and.........Sit.

Until now. Now it's even more personal. Before, it was my brother. Some cousins. And then a son of a dear friend.

I didn't have enough gumption, or desire...until my son so vulnerably and fearfully looked me in my eyes eighteen months ago and uttered the words I'd dreaded hearing: "I'm gay."

I think surely he wasn't afraid that I would reject him. Never would I do that. Never could I do that. He should know I love him unconditionally but he couldn't really anticipate what my reaction would be. How scary for him. Thankfully, I must say I think I handled it perfectly. That particular moment, I mean.

(Confession. I'm ashamed to admit this but when I found out my friend's son was gay, my immediate, gut-reaction was a rejoicing in my soul that it wasn't my son. We are told to rejoice with those who rejoice and weep with those who weep. Oh, I did feel sad for them, but more than that I felt happy and relieved for me and my boy.)

Those words, from your child, will shake you to the core. Take you from comfort, security, and oblivion and hurl you into another dimension. Everything is different now.

I no longer have the luxury of avoidance.

For the past year and a half I have been hanging on for dear life to the promises of God. To His mercy. Seeking His wisdom. Researching every perspective. (Ignorance is not bliss) Allowing God to break me from the inside out.

And praying and weeping and begging for insight into this most vexing issue of modern life. And dealing with hurt, grief, and gay jokes from people who probably mean no harm. But, please, I'd much prefer a literal kick in the stomach.

No, it cannot be avoided any longer. Besides, have you noticed? It's ev-er-y-where. Gay marriage debates from both sides. Young boys taking their own lives because of vicious bullies' words and actions. You cannot watch television or get on the internet or even walk by a magazine stand at Wal-mart without being confronted with the issue.

And so, church, what are we going to do about it?

Will we love these precious ones Jesus died for? Or will we continue to ignore, side-step, pretend we didn't hear, pretend we didn't see, pretend we don't know that around us are kids struggling with their sexuality. Kids in our churches.

I know your objection: "But if we are nice to them, they'll think we think it's okay." So, in an effort to avoid discomfort we claim that that wouldn't be loving. So we ignore them. Too many times we actually shun them.

Jesus did not operate that way. He did not shame people. He did not use disapproval to bring about repentance. Yes, I hear your other objection: Jesus said hard things to people. He spoke the truth and many people didn't like it. And who were the people that didn't like what He had to say? Answer: the religious people of His day. The self-righteous religious crowd was the only group of people he had harsh words for.

What if it's your child? You wouldn't know because of course they are not going to tell you. They dare not even hint at such a thing. So they suffer in silence. They want what we all want. Love and acceptance. To not be alone. And they want a relationship with God. But they're being raised in an environment where homosexuality is at times being called out from the pulpit as being the single most abominable sin imaginable.

It's not.

If not outright condemnation, they are hearing ridicule towards gay people. Derisive comments and belittling gay jokes being told amongst their Christian friends. And the message, of course, is that God hates them.

This is not true!

Can you imagine the fear, confusion and agony?

Please, let's be brave and use our brains and our hearts and our time to communicate unconditional love to them. At the very least, when you hear the gay slur or joke, speak up and point out how unloving it is. You don't know who is listening.

If we don't love them, they will leave and search for acceptance elsewhere.

And they will find it.

This is not what God wants.

Sunday, October 31, 2010

Books of Devotion

I don't know what I'd do without my books. My many devotional books. In addition to my NLT Daily Walk Bible I have Brennan Manning's Reflections for Ragamuffins (definitely a Ragamuffin here), Streams in the Desert (which is the greatest, classic daily devotional for someone who is grieving) and Henri Nouwen's Sabbatical Journey (his last diary, but I'm using for a devotional). I have collected many others over the years but Brennan Manning, Mrs. Charles Cowman, and Oswald Chambers are my all-time favs. So far. Oh, and Charles Spurgeon, love him too.


There's my short list, lol. My daughter Sarah kinda makes fun of me because I love lists. But who doesn't love lists?

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Met Needs--A Wonderful Thing.

I made homemade soup today. My own conglomeration of a few different recipes. It started out as potato soup, then on to chowder. Potato and corn chowder.


Threw in some thyme and hot pepper flakes.

Mmmm, yeah, and then cheese on top and some crispy rice noodles.

Gotta have some homemade wheatberry bread to go with that soup.

Now, something sweet. Chocolate chip cookies....but wait I don't have enough semi-sweet morsels.

Not a problem. I'll just chop up these semi-sweet Baker's squares. And some pecans.

And a glass of milk.

Yeah.

Now...checking up on some bloggers I love.

And I discover a new website, pretty much by pure chance.

Or a divine gift.

It's what I've been looking for for months and months in my quest to figure out.....what to do. What to think. What to believe.

Somebody who knows how I feel. I knew there had to be somebody else out there who can understand what I'm going through.

I've been grieving, I even described it that way recently to a friend. I've tried to not feel it. It feels terrible, and who has time for anything that makes you feel terrible. But today when I read this new (to me) blog .... it said to go ahead and grieve. That it's normal when you've found out your child is gay. And it expressed what I've needed to hear.

It's been a good day. Maybe things will start looking up now.


Sunday, October 10, 2010

God is Neither on the Right nor the Left

I hate the "us vs. them" mentality. And it's everywhere. Everyday.

Republicans vs. Democrats. Conservatives vs. Liberals. Blacks vs. Whites. Pro-Choicers vs. Pro-Lifers. Straights vs. Gays. And on and on it goes.

It wearies me.

I like what Brennan Manning has to say, specifically with regard to religious and political disparities:

Homophobia and racism are among the most serious and vexing moral issues of this generation, and both church and society seem to limit us to polarized options.

The anything-goes morality of the religious and political Left is matched by the sanctimonious moralism of the religious and political Right. Uncritical acceptance of any party line is an idolatrous abdication of one's core identity as Abba's child. Neither liberal fairy dust nor conservative hardball addresses human dignity, which is often dressed in rags.

Abba's children find a third option. They are guided by God's Word and by it alone. (I would disagree a bit here by saying I'm also guided by the Holy Spirit.) All religious and political systems, Right and Left alike, are the work of human beings. Abba's children will not sell their birthright for any mess of pottage, conservative or liberal. They hold fast to their freedom in Christ to live the gospel--uncontaminated by cultural dreck and political flotsam, and the filigreed hypocrisies of bullying religion. Those who are bent on handing gays over to the torturers can lay no claim to moral authority over Abba's children. Jesus saw such shadowed figures as the corrupters of the essential nature of religion in his time. Such exclusive and divisive religion is a trackless place, Eden overgrown, a church in which people experience lonely spiritual alienation from their best human instincts.

--Brennan Manning, Reflections for Ragamuffins


Why must we all be against one another? Doesn't God say that it is not people (flesh and blood) that we fight (wrestle) against? We obviously don't take that seriously. Just look around--behold all the division!

How sad. How grievous. What a waste of time and energy.

I know. I'm being a Pollyanna, not realistic. Sure, I can see that. I realize there will be no peace on earth until the Lord's return. But can't we try to pull in the reigns a bit and try to be a little less judgmental? A little less defensive? A little less tense? A little less patronizing?

Just a little wish of mine.










Sunday, October 3, 2010

Wanted: Followers

Okay, now that I'm kind of on a roll with this blog-posting thing, I'm ready to go invite some people to read it. When I look at my page, it's so pathetic that I have only two "followers" listed. One is my husband, who, I promise you, has completely forgotten this blog. And the other is my daughter who is waaaaay too busy to follow me. She is a business executive with a husband and five children!


So I have been just happily typing along here in total obscurity. It's kind of nice and I would go on like this forever, except....

1) Well, I guess I am pretty bored here all by my lonesome

2) Maybe I can encourage someone

3) Maybe someone could encourage me!

4) I need to be brave.

So....I think I'll just put my big toe in the water first. I'll put a link to this on my Facebook profile. Aaaand....include the link on my signature when I comment on other people's blogs. I guess that means I really need to start commenting on other people's blogs, haha.

Alrighty then. Here goes...