Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Baby Step 19 - Love

Mama, as she ages and dementia breaks down her memory and her filters, continues to be caring and considerate of everyone. Her loving heart remains intact. Even so, Mama bursts out at least once a day, “I hope she doesn’t come to play cards. I don’t like her. I don’t know why. I just don’t like her.”

Come time to pay cards; Mama will offer to be Hope’s partner. Mama will offer Hope a pillow for her back. Mama does not tell Hope there is a better way to play a wild card. Mama will say nothing rather than offer an angry retort. Alone again, Mama will ask me, “Was I loving?” It obviously took effort.

From time to time we all have people, whether we remember their names or not, that inexplicably raise our ire. They ruin our perfect day when they walk through the door. They don’t have to do or say anything to make us uncomfortable, cranky, even angry. The very fact they breathe the same air I do is enough for me to wish they didn’t exist.

I remember Mama would sometimes say, “You don’t have to like them, you just have to love them.” How do we love with or without liking? By being kind and thoughtful. Learning to practice peace and justice. By setting aside self and living with an attitude of generosity. 
And in the end, we may still not like her, but our hearts will be expanded, changed, warmed, and emptied so that we can sow pardon, union, faith, joy, light, understanding. We can choose rather than feel. We can learn to love.
“Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?” And Jesus replied to him, “ ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. The second is like it, ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself [that is, unselfishly seek the best or higher good for others].’ The whole Law and the [writings of the] Prophets depend on these two commandments.”

Matthew 22:36-40Amplified Bible (AMP)

Monday, June 20, 2016

Recognition – Baby Step 13

READ: Psalm 88


My Song is Love Unknown Samuel Crossman (1664)
1 My song is love unknown, 
my Savior’s love to me. 
Love to the loveless shown, 
that they might lovely be. 
Oh, who am I that for my sake, 
oh, who am I that for my sake 
my Lord should take frail flesh and die?
2 He came from heaven’s throne 
salvation to bestow; 
but they refused, and none 
the longed-for Christ would know. 
This is my friend, my friend indeed, 
this is my friend, my friend indeed, 
who at my need, his life did spend.
3 Sometimes they crowd his way 
and his sweet praises sing, 
resounding all the day 
hosannas to their King. 
Then, “Crucify!” is all their breath, 
then, “Crucify!” is all their breath, 
and for his death they thirst and cry.
4 Why, what has my Lord done 
to cause this rage and spite? 
He made the lame to run 
and gave the blind their sight. 
What injuries, yet these are why, 
what injuries, yet these are why 
the Lord Most High so cruelly dies.
5 With angry shouts they have 
my dear Lord done away;
a murderer they save, 
the Prince of Life they slay.
Yet willingly, he bears the shame,
yet willingly, he bears the shame,
that through his name all might be free.
6 Here might I stay and sing 
of him my soul adores:
never was love, dear King, 
never was grief like yours.
This is my friend in whose sweet praise,
this is my friend in whose sweet praise
I all my days would gladly spend.


PRAYER:

Oh, Lord, please break my heart as my body is broken, that I might see the gift of your Salvation. May I recognize my frailty as an opportunity to show ways I might run though lame, might see though blind, might be free though bound. Let me see the willingness of the Prince of Life to set aside his throne, take on the frailty of human life, and willingly allow Himself to be broken so I might be free. Let me find the freedom beyond my pain in praise. I would gladly spend all my days lost in wonder and praise. Amen.


Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Grandchildren





Monday, January 11, 2016

Day 11, Step 4: Grandchildren

They’ll rebuild the old ruins,    raise a new city out of the wreckage.
They’ll start over on the ruined cities,    take the rubble left behind and make it new. (Isaiah 61:3-4 MSG)


Lofty, strong and magnificent, distinguished for uprightness, justice and right standing with God. The planting of the Lord, that he may be glorified. (AMP)
In Christ’s family there can be no division into Jew and non-Jew, slave and free, male and female. Among us you are all equal. (Galatians 3:28 MSG)

You can tell for sure that you are now fully adopted as his own children because God sent the Spirit of his Son into our lives crying out, “Papa! Father!” Doesn’t that privilege of intimate conversation with God make it plain that you are not a slave, but a child? And if you are a child, you’re also an heir, with complete access to the inheritance. (Galatians 4:6-7 MSG)

On a news channel reporting on the international summit on climate change, I heard someone say something to this effect: 

“We are the first generation to recognize the significance of global climate change. We are the last generation able to do something about it.”

He was young enough to be our grandchild.

In these readings, God set the groundwork many generations ago. Isaiah the prophet had a wife, and since the Scripture does not say otherwise, I suspect he had children and grandchildren. God told us over and over from the time of Isaiah, a prophet of Judah in the 8th century BC, and I know biblically long before that, clear back to Noah and even Adam, we would keep leaving a mess for our children and grandchildren to clean up.

However, we are always asked if we left them the tools, the inheritance they need to do the job their generation must do?

Paul, the apostle, tells us over and over God has no grandchildren. Each generation we stand only one generation from the extinction of Christianity. Do we live a life that will call our children and grandchildren to believe?

Have we taught them love is unconditional, so they will recognize it in Jesus, and give it to others? Have we apologized, so they know, we know, we too, are not perfect? However, we know perfection as have those who went before us? 

Have we called them who they are:
·        





























                                                                                      ELAN: strong oak, great light, the essence of life
     


















                                                     GEORGE: guardian of the soil


      DAVIS: sons of David the King,
·         
       






























                                                                            MEREDITH: protector of the sea,
·                                                                                  ANN: grace, love, 
·        
         All, home grown and collected:  sons and daughters of the God of creation and salvation?

Have we taught them everything they need to know about staying connected to us, to their parents, their siblings, their cousins, because that is where they can always draw strength to live and to do?

Do we make it possible for them to see us caring for elderly parents, so they will know how to care for theirs when the time comes? Do they see us supporting their parents, so they can learn how to help their children? Do they see us loving, caring and serving?

No answers, just questions. Have we prepared them to be a generation that recognizes the needs of creation and the created? Have we prepared them to be the ones who will do something to preserve and defend?
Baby step four:

  • ·        Live and love where our grandchildren can see the good
  •       Tell our grandchildren stories 
  •       Invite our grandchildren to be a part of a bigger story.
What do your grandchildren need to know? What have you taught them? Tell us because our grandchildren need to know, too.

Monday, February 18, 2013

The Path to Joyful, Unrestrained, Undistracted, Obedience


Daily Scripture Readings
Lent Year One
February 18, 2013



Lord Heal My Soul - Psalm 41 


Uploaded on Apr 30, 2010

Composer: Eric Becker
Psalm 41
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Sons of Korah - Psalm 52: Why do you boast

 Uploaded on Dec 31, 2010
Sons of Korah - Psalm 52: Why do you boast
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Published on Aug 20, 2012
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Old (Hebrew) Testament Deuteronomy 8:11-18 A Warning Not to Forget God in Prosperity (*p. 227)

Israel faced severe hardship in the desert during the forty years they wandered. They had to depend daily on God for food, for water, for shelter, for life itself.

Now they have crossed over into the land of milk and honey. The fertility of the land is in marked contrast to the barrenness of the wilderness. “The plenty of the land poses the threat that Israel will forget the Lord and exalt itself. “ (*p. 227)

“We live as a blessed people, created in the image of a gracious and merciful God. God calls us to a life of blessing, through love and obedience.

“For Wesleyan Christians this is the call to a life of sanctification and holiness; as we walk in the ways of the Lord, we are on the path that leads to life.

“Along the way the roads will diverge and important decisions will loom before us. In these moments, we pray for wisdom and courage to choose life, holding fast to the disciplines that will keep us close to God’s purposes for us.” (*p.254)

Epistle Hebrews 2:11-18 “Exaltation through Abasement”

“Christ’s entrance into the heavenly realm announces the glorious destiny of all disciples. But Christ is also the bridge, as it were, by which we cross over to that goal.

“His own experiences of pain and shame assure us that our path of discipleship, though filled with experiences of loss and suffering, will also lead to ‘glory,’ and that our high priest knows from personal experience what we need to arrive there securely….

“God led Jesus through a path of hardest testing and deepest loss so that Christian disciples would be confident of Jesus’ sympathy and help in their own trials.

“Wesley observed that suffering incurred for the sake of obeying Christ helps ‘[to wean] us from sin causing our affections to be set on things above.’

“When people think that death is the final word, fear of death will keep them from fully obeying God and seeking God’s justice. Fear of death diverts their energies [from being obedient to God’s will] toward worldly achievement, amassing wealth, and seeking pleasurable distractions to ‘make the most out of life’ while they can.

“Because Jesus faced death and emerged victorious from the grave, we can be freed from this fear for joyful, unrestrained, undistracted obedience.” (*pp. 1485, 1486)

Gospel John 2:1-12 The Wedding at Cana (*p. 1288)

“Jesus is the bringer of God’s overflowing grace and end-time salvation, which the prophets depicted as a wedding feast and a time of abundant wine. In Jesus, God’s future salvation and abundant life are present now.” (*p.1288)

Abba, Father
Keep me humble. Let me feel my pain as a reminder of the barrenness of the wilderness, as a reminder of the “path of hardest testing and deepest loss” walked by your only begotten son. May my energy be freed from the distractions created by pain, and turn to “joyful, unrestrained, undistracted obedience.” Amen.

The daily readings are adapted from The Book of Common Prayer, Daily Readings for Year One.   http://www.crivoice.org/lent1.html

*My personal study bible for this Liturgical Year is The Wesley Study Bible, New Revised Standard Version, Abingdon Press, 2009