God’s Chew Toy

It seems my last post started a few people thinking. Among them is Larry, my always intelligent, curious, warrior-hearted dear friend. He has a way of taking the things I mean as sarcastic slams at my current "lot in life" (and often passive-aggressively at God) and turning them into positive images of God’s love. How does he do that??

Larry took my rant, drenched it in God-focus and came out with this:

Still, we’re all chew toys to someone or something. God is completely serious about making us able to live in His kingdom.[…]  We bear God’s toothmarks in direct relationship to how much we let him love us, and I suppose that starts with learning how much we need his love. Sometimes finding and picking up that stray sheep isn’t a gentle process. I’m convinced that God makes it as gentle as possible, but I hang on to my old deadly ideas with a death grip that only loosens with time and experience. Maybe it’s God’s saliva dripping over me that dissolves the old ways of living and seeing and thinking. (emphasis mine)

I know it sounds crazy, but I like the idea of bearing God’s teethmarks. It’s kind of like bearing His imprint, having His fingerprints all over my life, except with a long-lasting mark (fingerprints can be wiped off, after all). They aren’t like the open wounds from an angry dog, but they do leave punctures in my soul. I know ultimately it’s a good thing;  it means He’s making me into something new. I just wish His teeth weren’t so sharp.

I realize they have to be that way to fend off attackers and soul-stealers. I’ve seen God bare those sharp babies at my enemies. It’s truly a beautiful sight to behold. I remember reading somewhere that God just starts to get up from His throne and Satan and his minions scatter like roaches when the lights come on. If He can cause evil to tremble and hide without even baring His sharp teeth, think of how much more He accomplishes in protecting us when He does.

Yet for all my talk of embracing the idea of bearing God’s teethmarks, I’m still fighting against the reality that I’m His personal chew toy. I guess everyone wants to believe they were created for a noble purpose. I’m no different. Being gnawed and slobbered on till I’m like soggy rawhide just doesn’t sound lofty to me at all. Yet, when I view it through Larry’s eyes, I can see its exaltation.

This is the core of our preaching. Say the welcoming word to God—"Jesus is my Master"—embracing, body and soul, God’s work of doing in us what he did in raising Jesus from the dead. That’s it. You’re not "doing" anything; you’re simply calling out to God, trusting him to do it for you. That’s salvation. With your whole being you embrace God setting things right, and then you say it, right out loud: "God has set everything right between him and me!" — Romans 10:8-10 The Message

What I’m getting at, friends, is that you should simply keep on doing what you’ve done from the beginning. When I was living among you, you lived in responsive obedience. Now that I’m separated from you, keep it up. Better yet, redouble your efforts. Be energetic in your life of salvation, reverent and sensitive before God. That energy is God’s energy, an energy deep within you, God himself willing and working at what will give him the most pleasure. — Phil 2:12-13 The Message

Oh, the weather outside is…

Woodpilethrutree
…delightful! I woke this morning to snow, just a light dusting and nothing close to what we had a couple of weeks ago. Its continued to fall all day, but the ground is too warm so it’s not accumulating on anything but porches, cars and woodpiles. It’s so beautiful! I was so fascinated and excited, I spent most of my day, not doing my research for my paper, as I planned (and should have been)… no, instead I was either staring out the windows watching it fall, or running around outside trying to take pictures of it, trying to capture it’s beauty in digital format.

Do you know how hard it is to get a decent picture of falling snow?? To actually capture those little, or sometimes big flakes falling from the sky in a way that truly represents the way it looks with your eyes? Nearly impossible, I tell you. But I got a few.
🙂 See, look!

Snowinginthebackyard

Snowystreet

Windowcloseup

Here are some pictures I took from two weeks ago when I got "snowed in". Seriously. I got a call from my boss about 7am-ish that morning and he said I didn’t have to go into work. He and our other boss still remember the nightmare of unexpected snow that Nashville got about four years ago, where six or seven inches fell in a very short time. They both spent between 5 and 8 hours trying to get home that day and aren’t interested in doing that again any time soon. They’d rather stay at home and miss a day of work; which means those of us who work for them got to stay home too. Yippee!

Nashville just isn’t made for snow. We aren’t equipped to handle it, and we usually have a layer of ice hidden beneath the snow –which is treacherous on our windy, hilly, narrow roads. Its just not a place made for this white stuff. — Anyway, I got a long weekend out of it, so I didn’t complain.

The view from the front.

Snowedin

My landlord’s back porch

Backporchsnow

View from my front porch

Fromthefrontporch

Little Sassy!

Snowysassy

Mirrormirroronthecar

I always take a picture of this woodpile… I don’t know why

Woodpile

Tuft of grass in the front yard.

Snowgrass

I know, I know. It was just last week I was whining about the cold weather, and begging for 80 degree temperatures. But I can’t help it. I’m such a kid when it comes to snow. I love it!!

The Cost of Freedom

Flag_draped_coffins_on_the_beach_1

No matter what your personal opinion of the Iraq war, you gotta realize that this is the price we pay for the freedoms we enjoy; even the ones that let us vehemently disagree with our leaders and our military.

The amazing thing to me is that no matter what we say, even if we rail against what they are doing, our military will still fight, and die, so we will remain free. That is truly something to lauded.

Photo by the amazing Kat Bonson. All her memorial pictures can be found here.  The organization that puts on these memorials in Santa Monica is called Arlington West.

NOTE: I do not put this up to rail against the war, or to make a statement for it.  I am personally conflicted about it, and do not see a clear solution or easy answers anywhere.

Rather, I put this up as a salute to all the brave men and women who fought and died for the freedoms I enjoy. Whether it was in Iraq, Afghanistan, Vietnam, Korea, World War II, World War I, The Civil War, or the American Revolution, many, many people have given their lives so that I can live free. Free to pursue my particular dreams, to worship the God I want the way I want, to speak my mind on any matter I desire, to travel when and where I want…. I am blessed. We are blessed. Because they were/are willing to stand against tyranny and say, "not on my watch."

I Bring Myself

Today Jesus met me in a way I haven’t had in a long time. Today I sat at His feet and wept and worshiped. Today I had needs met in me so deep and so long unmet I’d forgotten what it was like to have them satisfied. Today I felt known; more over, I felt people wanted to know me. Today I found a place that values all that I value; that holds dear what I hold dear; a place where conviction meets real life and both walk hand-in-hand. A place that is as close to Mosaic as I think a place can get without being it, and yet is different.

Now that its over, fear is threatening to take over my heart. Fear that the whole thing was just a marvelous dream, or at best a one-time thing that won’t be repeated; fear that what I found is just too rare to be mine. Is that not the most insane thing you ever heard? But there it is. The reality in my heart. I’m so afraid I will come back empty-handed next time.

Two months ago I wrote about my dilemma. I’d been struggling for months with not having community at the church I was serving. I had prayed, reached out, gone to events and small groups, even had one in my home, but I could not seem to really connect with anyone. It was as if I was a foreigner to them, and they to me. We were interesting to each other but ultimately we spoke different languages, and I felt Lost in Translation. They want comfort, stability, safety, sameness, perhaps even God-in-a-box. I don’t. Here’s what I wrote; Here’s what I want.

I want to be known more than I fear it. I want
community more than I fear intimacy. I want to be challenged more than
I want to be "fed". I want to follow Jesus no matter the cost more than
I fear where He might take me. And I want a community of people to
journey with in life here in Nashville that shares my passion for Jesus
and my longings for community and challenge. I want that more than I want to shuffle
alongside people who still think Church is a fortress from the "world",
rather than the shelter and refuge FOR the world’s most broken, twisted
and shattered that it is and was always meant to be. I want a community
who desires to pursue Jesus with full-out passion. I want it so bad it
hurts. I haven’t had it since I left LA.

Today I think I found that place. Not only that, but I joined that place; for the first time since leaving LA I became a member of a church.

I didn’t mean to. I didn’t intend to. I intended to go to this event ("class") and just find out about this community, investigate it. I was going to keep my options open this time, and guard my heart well, in case they weren’t what my friend who’d told me about them said they were.  What have I done?

But people at the event were so friendly, so open, so willing to be known, and to know others. Conversation was easy, and for the first time in over two years I felt I belonged, really belonged. Like I wasn’t a foreigner speaking a strange language, or a stranger trying to force my way in. It felt very good.

Anyone who knows me knows I love people, but that they also exhaust me. I’m such an introvert! Crowds, big or small, scare me and I have to take a deep breath before I plunge in. Yet I felt no fear with this group. I felt no… discomfort at all. And the time went by far too fast. I wasn’t at all ready for it to be over when it was.

God spoke to me as I stared at the community’s commitment/covenant at the end of our time. He spoke of putting down roots and how I’ve been avoiding it since the church-plant fell apart. I invested so much of myself, invested my whole heart and soul in that group. To have it disintegrate before my eyes broke not just my heart, but my spirit, I think.  It’s like losing a baby that never got to be birthed.

But here He was, Jesus, talking to me softly about putting down roots, reminding me that it is a rare thing, and this was the first place I’d found it in Nashville. He was soft, but insistent, yet never demanding. So, I took a deep breath, signed the covenant and nervously handed it to someone on staff.

What have I done?

This morning was my last morning on the sound team at the other church, and it was filled with sweet fellowship with the team leader and with my ministry partner/producer. It was as if they were dangling carrots to keep me there and involved. It nearly worked; part of me really wondered if I really ought to be leaving and whether a year was long enough a chance to give a community.

But then I walked into the other community– my new community now — and Jesus sat down beside me. Wrapping up the sound in the chapel after 1st service of my old church had caused me to miss the worship at my new home. When I came in the pastor was already into his sermon. I sat down on some steps nearby, the nearest "seat" I could find, and Jesus made His presence immediately known.

I have this "language" with Him that I cannot explain, it just is. Its a visual language; one where He shows me things–shows me Himself–in my mind, or what I call my "mind’s eye". I get flashes of images, Him sitting somewhere or standing or in some position, always near or next to me. Sometimes we dance, sometimes He holds me, sometimes He’s drenching me like a rainstorm, sometimes He’s at my feet. No, often He’s at my feet. At first I fought that idea; that’s not where He belongs, He belongs above me and I at His feet. But He’s been insistent that His position is at my feet. He came to serve me, came to love me. He adores me. And He kneels in front of me, and stares intently into my eyes, my face, because He wants me to know Him, not just as "Lord" or "Almighty God" but as Lover and Counselor and Servant-Leader and Friend.

I realize some will call me a heretic for this. I cannot help that. This is who God reveals Himself to be, to me. And I know, to the core of my being, that it is Truth. He has proved it over and over. Its a position I don’t fully understand, I just know that it is. And I live by it.  Since He calls me to follow Him — His position toward me says to me that my position is kneeling at the feet of others, serving them, looking intently into their faces, letting them know me as friend, counselor, servant.

So often I’ve longed to kneel at His feet. So often I have, only to have Him get down on the floor beside me, so He can look intently into my face, and I into His. I try to tell Him this defeats my purpose in being on my face, only to have Him retort that His purposes are higher than mine, and His purposes are the ones that will last. There’s no point fighting with God. He decides He’s going to do something a certain way, that’s what will happen, regardless of what I try — and believe me I have tried it all.

Today Jesus let me sit at His feet. I don’t know why. But today, as the Pastor brought us into a time of quietness before God and the worship team led us to the throne, Jesus let me place myself at His feet. And instead of getting down on the floor with me, eye-to-eye, He stood tall, His hands on my head, as if to say to anyone, everyone in the universe, "this one is Mine. This one I love. This one I am–" dare I say it?? –"I am proud to call My own."

I clung to His feet, knowing beyond doubt how blessed I am to be known by Him, how unworthy I am to be loved by Him, and how grateful I am to belong to Him. I did not want to get up from that place, did not want to leave that position. It became holy, sacred ground in that moment, though the rest of the world would see them only as stairs at a movie theater.

The pastor had asked earlier, what do we bring to God this Christmas season? We spend so much time and energy telling people what we want for Christmas, making our lists for our parents, friends, family — perhaps even for God — of what we want this Christmas. But what do we bring to Him? He is, after all, the one who came; the one who’s birth we celebrate. Sadly, for all my talk of mission and passion, I had not really thought about that question, until the pastor asked it. Sadder still, I didn’t have an answer.

So, today I brought myself. Today I brought all of me to His throne, to His feet, for whatever I am worth and whatever He can do with me, and I worshiped. And I wept. While He stood tall and proclaimed me His own, His beloved.

And when He later whispered that I had too long resisted putting down roots, I brought myself to Him again. Perhaps what I have done is to bring myself to the community He has brought to me. Is it real? Will it last? I don’t know. But perhaps its time to step into the fear, instead of running from it, and find out.

Irrevocable, or Just Passionate?

God’s gifts and God’s call are under full warranty—never canceled, never rescinded. — Romans 11:29 (The  Message)

I realize this verse is actually referring to something else when taken in context, but it’s what echoed through my mind this afternoon and evening. See, Wade did it again; got me to thinking about the mission field overseas and helped me once again connect with the reality that my heart breaks for Japan, and India, and to so many other places.

Around this time five years ago, I was sitting in a hotel room in Richmond, Virginia at the beginning of the candidate process to serve long-term with the IMB. Four years ago I was overseas, finishing up a 6-week trip in Ethiopia heading back to my "home" in Cyprus, and wondering what in the world had I gotten myself into. Three years ago I was in desperate pain grieving the losses of my parents, my job, my home and my dream of being a missionary. I never thought I’d recover. Two years ago I was swearing I would never again serve overseas, but feeling guilty for it, and last year I realized I am finally content to once again live my life stateside outside the realm of official ministry.

So why is it today my heart was stirred like it hasn’t been in many years? Why is it when I went to the IMB website and looked at the current opportunities, all the openings I sawMary_lu_india in South Asia, particularly several in the city I lived in 2001 and one with the people group I learned about, learned from and became friends with–why is it those openings so excited me I began thinking through the process I might take (as well as the length of time it would take) to ultimately fill one of those positions — or something like it. Why is it, when I finally decided the issue was settled, the love affair with overseas ministry was over and I was content, my heart is stirred and excited?

Is it true — could it be true — that once God lays His hand on your life for a particular service, that that call is just as irrevocable as His call to Follow, or His command to Go?

Sometimes Life is Perfect

Or at least as close as you can get on this earth. Right now is one of those times.

I got off work early, so I’m already home, and in my favorite comfy clothes; curled up on my wonderful sofa under my favorite blanket, a mug of hot chai nearby, watching Oprah on the set of "Grey’s Anatomy". Outside its a brisk, cloudy fall evening, with a carpet of leaves and the smells of wood burning in fireplaces all over the neighborhood.  I can see the amazing reds, blues and purples of the sunset through my living room window. I don’t have any homework to do over the weekend, and no big plans to interrupt a perfect couple of days of rest.  I don’t think it gets much better than this.

Mozart and Schermerhorn

If you haven’t been the Schermerhorn Symphony Center, you need to go. Really. YouPiano_stage_lg
need to go. And those of you considering visiting Nashville, this is one place that needs to be on your Must See list (along with the Ryman and Fido; okay, yeah, my taste runs a little toward the eclectic).

The building itself is amazingly beautiful, with its airy, open feel, clean lines and mix of stone and wood. But I think its the acoustics that enchanted me most. Granted, I was sitting in the orchestra section in the middle. Pretty much the best seats to have to begin with — and I have no idea how I managed to score such great seats, seeing as how I got my ticket tonight at the box-office, with the help of my friends who have season tickets (tip to the interested: find someone who has season tickets and have them purchase your ticket for you. They get a big discount on any extra tickets they get. It is sooooo worth it, considering tickets can cost upwards of $80).

Perfect seats aside, the sound was amazing — which is a very important thing to this little Soundchick. I had read in several different reviews that there is no accoustically
bad seat in the hall, and after tonight, I’m inclined to believe it. I could hear everything, even the smallest whispers of sound from any instrument on stage, and none of the dynamic range between pianismo and fortismo got lost in the engineer’s attempt to balance our listening experience. In fact, a few times I wondered if they really had need for someone to man a sound board at all, even though I could see a battery of microphones strung from the ceiling. Was I hearing the symphony through a sound system, or was I actually hearing them "unplugged"? I have no idea.

And the symphony, wow! They are incredible. I’m not a symphony sophistocit, so I cannot rate how our symphony compares with those in other cities. All I can say is that I thought it was beautiful, and I would have been happy to stay there all night listening to them play.

Skim_lgTonight it was Mozart, and Sibelius. I love Mozart; have since I first remember connecting his name to his music. Sibelius I’d never heard of, but for the most part, I liked what I heard. Our conductor for the evening was Anu Tali, whom I found to be a delight to watch. And who shocked me with her youth (she graduated high school in 1991;jeez, I feel old).

The best part of the evening was, in my mind, the Mozart Concerto No. 5 in A major. Soovin Kim was the guest violinist. He was such a joy to watch! You could see his love for the music in every note he played. His face just shone with excitement. He made me smile and enjoy the music all the more just watching him beam as he played his 1709 Stradivarius. If you ever have a chance to see him play, take it; by any means possible, take it.

We ended our evening with sushi at Ru San’s. Oooooo, yum. You have got to try this place! I’m so not a sushi eater — raw fish give me the heebies — but I had veggie rolls with shrimp tempura inside that were absolutely To.Die.For. And the chefs and waiter all have way too much fun! I want me one of those cool t-shirts they all wear, "Got Sushi?" Yes. I am a happy, happy little camper tonight. It was the perfect way to end a perfect evening.

Photos from The Nashville Symphony website.