tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-9342305321752139112024-02-18T17:29:27.729-08:00Things I Learn While LivingJennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.comBlogger112125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-75425231659237201752011-10-07T08:56:00.000-07:002011-10-07T10:46:54.580-07:00Learn What This Means"It is not those who are healthy who need a physician, but those who are sick. But go and learn what this means: 'I desire compassion, and not sacrifice,' for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners."<br />Matthew 9:12-13<br /><br />Jesus throws down. But He doesn't spoon feed it. He tells His audience to go learn something...like all good teachers do. What's more, He is talking to Pharisees here... Pharisees who are also known as 'Teachers of the Law'...who would probably be offended that someone just instructed <span style="font-style: italic;">them</span> to go learn something... and who were upset that it's the same guy who's eating with tax collectors and sinners. The Pharisees see themselves as more 'righteous' than Him by cultural standards, so why do they need to be corrected? Sure, we can judge them from our current perspective...but what if we were there and were caught up in the wrong thing, too?<br /><br />Check it out - Jesus (God) goes over to Matthew's house because He just called Matthew (a tax collector) to become a disciple. Matthew hasn't changed his friend group to all Christians yet (like good Christians do) so there are a lot of dirty, rotten scoundrels who show up to party. Jesus (God) eats with them, talks with them, hangs out with them for a while...then the Pharisees notice, and they are offended. Why are they offended? Because they don't know JESUS (who shows compassion) as God, they only know RIGHTEOUSNESS (based on sacrifices) as God...and this all just isn't matching up.<br /><br />Jesus, point blank, calls them out.<br />Imagine Him saying this: "Look, you've been sacrificing and isolating and staying clean your whole lives, and, sadly, because of that you've missed the point. God has ceased being a person in your mind and has become a set of standards you must measure up to. But I'm telling you that God is a doctor who naturally goes to the sick...He is a person of compassion, who looks for His followers to be compassionate, too... And if you want to stay on your high horse and worship righteousness, that's fine, but what a shame...you may never feel the Father's heart."<br /><br />I read that passage and that's what I imagine. Rarely do I imagine that <span style="font-style: italic;">I'm</span> the pharisee He's talking to, though. I mean, I KNOW I'm a sinner, right? And I know a lot of times I'm the sick person who needs a doctor... I'm the adulteress sitting at the same table as Him.<br />But this morning I read it, and I asked myself, "Am I the one who <span style="font-style: italic;">shows</span> the compassion that God desires?" I mean, there's a difference between staying the sick one who <span style="font-weight: bold;">gets</span> compassion and becoming the disciple who <span style="font-weight: bold;">shows</span> compassion. And maybe that's really Jesus' point... Cause, sure, we're all sinners so of course we are relieved to read this passage and know He has come for us... But Jesus says to "go and learn what this means: <span style="font-style: italic;">I desire compassion</span>..."...He desires compassion. He desires that I have compassion. He desires that I show compassion. to others.<br /><br />Lately, I've been praying for God to remind me of who I used to be... I don't think it is a coincidence I read this today. I feel like I've been caught up in the wrong thing recently. I feel like I have lost some of the compassion I once felt. I feel like I need to go re-learn the meaning of what Jesus said...<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Is this not the fast which I choose,<br />To loosen the bonds of wickedness,<br />To undo the bands of the yoke,<br />And to let the oppressed go free<br />And break every chain?<br />Is it not to divide your bread with the hungry<br />And to bring the homeless poor into the house;<br />When you see the naked, to cover him;<br />And not to hide yourself from your own flesh?<br />...<br />And if you give yourself to the hungry<br />And satisfy the desire of the afflicted,<br />Then your light will rise in darkness<br />And your gloom will become like midday.<br /><br />Isaiah 58:6-7,10<br /></span>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-1074685519123720552011-04-29T11:54:00.000-07:002011-05-01T07:58:16.463-07:00Eleven or TwelveHave you ever just watched a kid? I don't mean a two or three year-old--I mean an eleven, twelve year-old junior higher. Have you ever just watched one be himself? I'm at E. Cypress Starbucks on the patio, and there's this family (at least I think it's a family) of three sitting in the opposite corner from me. A woman, a man, an eleven or twelve year-old boy. The boy has sandy blonde, wavy hair, and he's telling the adults a story right now. Hand motions and sound affects and giggles at his own jokes--this kid is alive with animation, and we're all the better for it. I can see his parents looking at him like he's both a mystery and someone they can understand far better than anyone else. I can see that they delight in his tales, not concerned at all with the time or the sun hitting them smack dab in the eyes. I watch all of this, and I think about how important it is to delight in a kid like this.<br /><br />When I have a kid, I want to be that interested in my child. I want to be enamored by his facial expressions and impressed by the social skills he's picking up somewhere, somehow...<br />I want to remember those simple things about him when I walk past his messy room or ground him for saying a certain four-letter word he learned (somewhere, somehow). And I want to take him out to coffee--as a family. I want to hear his stories and jump into what's important to him.<br />I think maybe when I go to coffee with God, this is what He desires, too. Do I tell God stories like that? I am His kid--a little older than eleven or twelve, but to Him, about the same maturity level. Do I let my self relax and let the expressions of it come through to connect with my Dad? If I did, I'd probably have a much more content spirit.<br /><br />Because what I'm watching right now is a kid with a content spirit. I can just tell by the way he sits comfortably with these two adults, who may or may not be his parents.<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.johnmariani.com/archive/2007/070506/nerdy%20kid.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 360px; height: 437px;" src="http://www.johnmariani.com/archive/2007/070506/nerdy%20kid.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-15277843392173899392011-04-25T14:48:00.000-07:002011-04-25T15:39:22.713-07:00A habit I had (have)My mom used to (and still does) tell me not to pick at my face. I tried to (and still try to) listen, but I have this habit... and this habit is hard to get rid of. Sorry for the un-lady like subject of this analogy (yes, this is going to be an analogy), but I've recently learned this habit mirrors something else I do way too subconsciously. In the same way that I look in the mirror for flaws on my face, I also look at my entire being for flaws I can pick at (and pick at and pick at...), as if they will be gone once I get every single one of them. This sounds like a good practice of self-awareness to someone who grew up in a culture where "self-awareness" and condemnation were all too similar. And even though I can distinguish the two now, it's still hard, sometimes, to feel the difference. So here's where the self-awareness line blurs and the picking goes too far...<br /><br />Have you ever tried to get a zit that wasn't ready? Or one that would have been fine and left on it's own if you would have let it and left it alone?<br /><br />The only thing left when you try too hard is more redness and irritation and noticeable scares.<br /><br />So I'm trying to learn to see one thing at a time...<br />I'm trying to live out: "Picking too much doesn't make anything right."<br /><br />This is what gets me, though. Picking actually makes my face dirtier - always trying to get the marks off. And if I would only wash it... Ha, if I would only wash my face every time I felt the urge to force something away... but the picking takes the place of washing, and the washing is too slow anyway...<br /><br /><br />And what's the point of all this? Here you go.<br /><br />I need to be patient with myself instead of forcing all the "marks" away. I need to remember the things that HELP in the long run--- though the long run is exactly that.<br />I want to be aware of when I'm being self-aware or just condemning myself.<br />Because when I'm constantly, subconsciously, religiously instigating me... my flaw is being magnified. And my problem is actually growing.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-66243539686932394422011-02-01T12:52:00.000-08:002011-02-01T12:53:11.139-08:00Petty convictions.Of this I am convinced: Neither rainy days nor sunny days, neither bad mood days nor smiling days, neither grieving days nor apathetic days nor running late to everything days, neither worries, nor headaches, nor poor body image, nor lousy music days, neither peaceful days, nor coffee on my shirt days, nor sick days, nor any others days in all of North America will be able separate me from the love of God... And then I realize how blessed I am, and I am moved with compassion and conviction of my pettiness.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-55486720883009796802011-01-27T10:43:00.000-08:002011-01-27T10:59:08.666-08:00Seven Songs<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipS8cBFnLLFmJikhNKKfos0U6nbL_t-Dp3CWpP4ckWwTFQw65Ev9J2GbyHpuKUC3lxnveSD-3_Fe52CErwaKnaGJdu7U_ryLsrXlSgt_LhY3ctDvg6IhgTO5saRM2txLpwKYyTCYeo70Oc/s1600/Songs86-7.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 318px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEipS8cBFnLLFmJikhNKKfos0U6nbL_t-Dp3CWpP4ckWwTFQw65Ev9J2GbyHpuKUC3lxnveSD-3_Fe52CErwaKnaGJdu7U_ryLsrXlSgt_LhY3ctDvg6IhgTO5saRM2txLpwKYyTCYeo70Oc/s400/Songs86-7.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5566941969802916898" border="0" /></a><br /><br />At Your Feet.<br />You Always Love Me.<br />Like Mary.<br />First Love.<br />Chaos.<br />When You Speak.<br />No One Is As Good As You.<br /><br />These are the seven songs.... for those of you who were keeping track.<br />How they sound is my secret right now. But I hope I can share them someday.<br /><br /><br />Until then... I ponder them in my heart and my room.<br /><br />Thanks for the faithful encouragement!Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-66807399185701474142011-01-27T09:09:00.000-08:002011-01-27T09:34:39.813-08:00Hello.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEia5GMkNv4q-UT-QWStEXdOGxEk3Fx-06nlwEuxLiRhrPWkdquNW__K7jAG33iYJTlhp4yxFqP2ly8h7TMT1osF_tL97h-YOu0Kr7RWL0Y25by0wQk2kp0Z5kCbwmQxSQWFcyjOc3it3GCZ/s1600/world-peace-in-our-hands.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEia5GMkNv4q-UT-QWStEXdOGxEk3Fx-06nlwEuxLiRhrPWkdquNW__K7jAG33iYJTlhp4yxFqP2ly8h7TMT1osF_tL97h-YOu0Kr7RWL0Y25by0wQk2kp0Z5kCbwmQxSQWFcyjOc3it3GCZ/s400/world-peace-in-our-hands.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5566919976234025026" border="0" /></a><br />Hey world, it's been awhile. I've been balancing time and rest and other things (like "Parenthood"), so there's my absence from blogging in a nutshell. But I was just reading Kendall's blogs, and I realized, "Wow, Kendall's blogs are really inspiring." It's a good thing he's my boyfriend... I need to be inspired sometimes...<br /><br />Alright, alright, but that's not the only reason I read his blogs - yes, I admit I am a bit biased.<br /><br />Well, who wouldn't want to be in-the-know of how their significant other is processing and sharing deep life lessons and meaningful times with God and "a friend" (he so meant me) with the world wide web??? Because, we talk... A LOT. But I like to understand the "scholar" Kendall, the "writer" Kendall, too, who appears before all of you after our conversations...<br /><br />Anyway, it's that Kendall (the scholar-writer one) who has inspired me yet again! Mostly just to write this blog, if nothing else. Mmm, that, and to bless someone by buying them coffee today, or just plain ol' bless God by whipping out my guitar and letting my lungs project all this crazy hunger to Him. You know someone told me last night that God LOVES His special, secret time with me? with ME! God l - o - v - e, llluuuvvvss His time with me! So great. I feel "jealous for." I feel like I want to give God what He loves.<br /><br />Don't you?<br /><br />Cause I bet He loves His secret time with you too...<br /><br />Ok so you go to yours, and I'll go to mine, and we'll just plain ol' bless God by projecting all our crazy hunger to Him...<br /><br /><br />And then we'll change the world.<br /><br />BREAK!Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-70413422390717285392010-12-15T09:58:00.000-08:002010-12-15T15:05:57.528-08:00January 1, December 25, and Today<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVXkA6pBS2GhfOCkj7D6dR8RC2p9Sfr2zWi2dpS_oSIRQ16Ll3xwvosyFDJ9Iyc_XoO9RbhkYpDmmdYQhZuUtkz8a0MMrxh8UXiIkUCoUm9QFmIJgj63QSCEHI6EXEfe9onF8BcoEFFRZq/s1600/advent.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjVXkA6pBS2GhfOCkj7D6dR8RC2p9Sfr2zWi2dpS_oSIRQ16Ll3xwvosyFDJ9Iyc_XoO9RbhkYpDmmdYQhZuUtkz8a0MMrxh8UXiIkUCoUm9QFmIJgj63QSCEHI6EXEfe9onF8BcoEFFRZq/s400/advent.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5551016922377156546" border="0" /></a><br /><br />The Lord spoke to me and said that January would start a "solidifying" season for me. I didn't know what this meant at first, so I asked the Lord, "What will You be solidifying?"<br />"Your integrity," He replied (in His gentle and powerful whisper). "I will be testing your integrity and showing you that I have set your freedom in stone."<br /><br />That makes me nervous and joyful all at the same time because the Lord has done some incredible things in me this past year. I have felt Him etching "freedom" into my skin, my hands, my bones... I have felt Him engraving those letters onto my heart... though my heart has budged a few times under the pain of it all. Now, I have stayed with the Crafter's tool long enough to recognize the safety of His hands rather than just the pain of alteration. So I know I can trust Him with what's coming...<br /><br />-------------------<br /><br />This morning, I thought about Christmas - and how Christmas is God's love in action. Yes, the Cross and the Resurrection are also epitomes too, but how odd that He would precede those with a specific kind of <span style="font-style: italic;">coming</span>... You see, He didn't just shoot down to earth for a couples days, get on a cross to die, get the grave/hell smashing part over with, and then fly off back into heaven right after. No. God came and stayed for awhile. He came and spoke for a while. He came and fed for awhile, healed for awhile, loved for awhile... suffered for awhile...<br /><br />He stayed His divinity and His power, so that He could stay in flesh and decaying earth. And He stayed obedient to His Father, loyal to His followers, committed to His message of incarnated love <span style="font-weight: bold;">the whole time. </span><br /><br />How do I come and stay for people more hurt than me? How do I suspend my privileges to take up a cross like His?<br /><br />I'm thinking about this season God is leading me into, and I'm thinking about what other things He will solidify into my integrity....<br /><br />I hope He will solidify an advent in me - a <span style="font-style: italic;">coming</span> posture that stays for awhile. Because I love Advent, and I don't want it to be another end to my year. I want it to be the beginning.<br /><br />------------------<br /><br />"Father, free me from all things impatient and hurried. Show me the value of staying and the beauty of waiting on You. I want to see the ones that You see; I want to love the way that You love. Because in You are all things good and righteous and joyful. In You is peace and laughter and a way to deal with pain that's different from our many killers and addictions. Spirit, Your breath sustains me; Jesus, Your friendship teaches me. Father, I wait on Your words... and I will stay... help me stay... I will stay my anxious urge to flee. In thirst and abundance, Amen."Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-82265959752097735382010-11-10T11:21:00.000-08:002010-11-10T16:15:00.956-08:00Polished<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://dailyvenusdiva.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/nail_polish.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 448px; height: 401px;" src="http://dailyvenusdiva.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/04/nail_polish.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />Whenever I paint my fingernails, it is rushed, and I don't let them dry long enough before touching things. They get squished against table chairs and have imprints of sweatshirt fabric on them before I'm out the door. Then, I spend the rest of date night trying to smooth out the smudged-up ridges and apologizing to Kendall for their messyness, which I catch glimpses of throughout the evening. It hit me the other day (mid-frantic-dry with a hair dryer in the bathroom) that sometimes I treat my spirituality this way. First off, the fact that I would think of my spirituality as an accessory is a little embarrassing to say the least... because it's actually supposed to be a part of my essence - something that can be seen, yes, but mainly something that is sown in and tended to. Furthermore, I'll find myself "polishing" my spirituality up right before leading worship or approaching an event/meeting that requires my life-with-God's presence. I want to present that life well, and often, I wish I had done a better job preparing in advance. I wish I prepared with enough "marinating" time for things to solidify. I wish I let the polish sit. On the flip-side, it's not above God to use whatever I've prepared and even compliment my efforts. He loves that I showed up - like my boyfriend loves that I show up.<br /><br />It's just... I want to do more than "show up." I want to prepare myself with intention and thought. And it's not just so I will be decorated. (I don't want my spirituality to be like a cheap broche saying this or that about me real quick.) I want to be <span style="font-style: italic;">adorned</span> in preparation - like with anointing oil - like something I've been soaked in long enough to make my skin smell good. Ironically enough, putting my nail polish on right before I head out the door, doesn't help me smell good. My unprepared polishings actually take away from what I <span style="font-style: italic;">truly</span> want to present: an adornment that was sown in, tended to, and given ample time to solidify as a part of myself.<br /><br />I'm not saying I'm going to wear nail polish all the time. Or, that I'll stop doing it in a hurry at ten-til-date night. I merely want to remember that there are certain things that shouldn't be polished in a hurry before certain engagements... my spirituality is one of those things. Plus, it will probably be a little messy with preparation anyway. (As will my fingernails.)<br /><br />But the polish was never the point...Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-86266312589042913862010-10-23T09:17:00.000-07:002010-10-23T10:14:31.149-07:00Isaiah 42:9There are some things in life I really enjoy: T-shirt sheets, good froth, movies that make you think... the sound of rain when you wake up in the morning. This morning, the sound of rain was there when I woke up. Something about the rain reminds me of childhood. At the same time, something about it reminds me of growing up and breaks from college and starting to like coffee. I'm listening to it fall from the living room right now, and I want to be back home in Oakhurst with my sisters and a fire going in the fireplace... and, since it's Saturday, I want them to stay home from work and we stay in our pajamas all day playing sing-song monopoly (self-explanatory) and then we finally get dressed to go to dinner because, suddenly, it's 4pm and we're supposed to catch a movie with Tiber at 6:20.<br /><br />I also want to be hiking. I know that sounds weird, but some of my best memories of hiking are with my cousin Richard in less-than-perfect conditions for it. To me, they turned out perfect, though... because it seemed like a better adventure in the rain.<br /><br />(I'm so daring.)<br /><br /><br />So I sit here and want all these things, but then God reminds me that I'm losing the moment. "What about the prayer room to your left?" He asks, "How about you make some new moments to remember enjoying... with me... in the prayer room, with it's less-than-sound-proofed walls, which, will turn out perfect to you because then you can hear the rain better..."<br /><br />Yeah... That sounds nice.<br /><br />Because there's nothing wrong with reminiscing. (Memories make great stories.) But something else about the rain - it signifies a refreshing... and an opportunity for new things. And God's doing some great new things.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-38487577253916258112010-09-16T07:54:00.000-07:002010-09-16T15:19:09.041-07:00"Feelings, nothing more than feelings..."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://blog.ajg.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/laura-and-falling-blossoms_780.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 449px; height: 317px;" src="http://blog.ajg.net/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/laura-and-falling-blossoms_780.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />God's not always interested in how I'm most comfortable hearing His voice. I don't think He was interested in that when He had fire talk to Moses through a bush. Moses probably wasn't used to shrubbery interrupting his sheep-watching time. But regardless of how I imagine God will or should speak, He's always taking care to touch on what I need to grow in. And He's helping me recognize His presence in new ways.<br /><br />I'm feeling Him stretch me in this season of my life. Well actually... I'm <span style="font-style: italic;">feeling</span> <span>Him</span><span style="font-style: italic;">.</span> It's not one of those stretches that hurts like hell... It's actually one that comforts like ice cream and falls like cherry blossoms. You might be apt to say that since it sounds so nice, it's no stretch at all... But I am not used to physically feeling <span style="font-style: italic;">God</span>... not in the way you'd feel ice cream on your tongue. Feeling God, to me, IS a stretch. It's a stretch that I'm ready for now.<br /><br />What a good stretch! However, what a scary stretch all at the same time. As a human being, I tend towards fear when something really incredible is happening in my life. Not necessarily a fear of the happenings themselves, but a fear of their absence. But something God has also been speaking to me in this season is that He is the God of their absences too... and whatever He brings into my life, He will be faithful to sustain for exactly as long as I need it. When seasons shift, or the blessings transform as time commands... God will not leave me with nothing. And He will certainly not let the absence of anything trump the reality of His presence!<br /><br />"You are talking about feelings, though, Jenna. Fleeting feelings - unreliable to be sure." (That was my alter-ego.) Yes! They ARE feelings! They are feelings of Him, which He has now introduced into my life. And though many feelings are fleeting, I should not be afraid of them vanishing forever. A winter season might come, and I might have to simply believe in spring time renewal for a while - choosing to press in, though the chill has frozen my senses temporarily- but once you know what the blossom feels like, it's easier to recognize when it hits your cheek again...<br /><br />What am I saying in all this mumbo jumbo flower talk? Mainly that God is stretching me to feel Him... that He is giving me a new way of knowing His presence. That He is blessing me with things like that right now; and when something is so good, it can simultaneously be just as scary. But I don't want to waste a season of rich sensations worrying that I will lose touch with it eventually. Instead, I am going to trust Him as He moves me along, teaching me to recognize things that may, in time, lay dormant at points but remain instilled in a new part of me.<br /><br />Kind of like getting a hug from a friend. The hug stops at some point, but you will forever recognize its enveloping touch.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-71036943335840094382010-07-17T13:22:00.000-07:002010-07-18T22:32:12.061-07:00Beyond the Stop<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_daNgLy6d96o/Srpfky5N5TI/AAAAAAAABH0/_ly4ZRhaPiI/s400/Puzzle+Pieces+%237.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_daNgLy6d96o/Srpfky5N5TI/AAAAAAAABH0/_ly4ZRhaPiI/s400/Puzzle+Pieces+%237.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br />I often wonder about things like destiny and tension and climbing mountains. I wonder about the person with a great destiny and about the things in his or her life that start making it uncomfortable...that start making reality harder than a dream. I wonder about the people woven into that destiny and the challenges ripping into it as well. I wonder about stories, basically... But I'm wondering about them more right now. It's funny, because in the story of my own life, this topic has been coming up a lot. I was away awhile, and during that time, I picked up the book <span style="font-style: italic;">A Million Miles in a Thousand Years</span>. I heard it was good, and I like Donald Miller, so I thought it'd be worth the fifteen bucks. It was. It's a good book... and it's mostly about stories.<br /><br />A few Sundays ago at the Stirring, I could tell that I wasn't the only one reading that book... Aaron Hayes talked about Luke 5:1-11, which shows Jesus pulling some fisherman out of their frustrating, mediocre stories and into the bigger story he was starting to tell with them. Jesus moves them "from a life of occupation to a life of mission... from lives of obligation to lives of meaning and purpose." I really resonated with what Aaron said there, because until you realize that Jesus wants to tell a great story with your life, whatever you're trying to "keep up with" outside of that is inevitably going to expose your inadequacies and always highlight your failures. But Jesus' story doesn't leave you at inadequacies and failures... it calls you THROUGH them. Because the point of His story is not your competence or successes... the point of His story is your transformation - your transformation that comes because He is competent and successful at loving you, calling you, and pulling you through, if you let Him.<br /><br />You see, I watch a lot of movies, and I get wrapped up in a lot of stories. And I was thinking the other day that the stories I get the most wrapped up in are the ones that have the best character development. I could watch a really "boring" movie or the most action-packed thriller in the world, but if I fall in love with a character, all I really end up caring about is how they are going to <span style="font-style: italic;">be</span> throughout the movie. And I don't care if the conflict is about world-rescue or relational-redemption, if the character is determined to move <span style="font-style: italic;">through</span> the conflict and come out changed for the better, I'm all over that! But here is the thing that matters most to me - here is the thing the makes the difference... If the CONFLICT ITSELF WINS... if the character receives nothing, learns nothing, surrenders nothing, moves nothing... if they give in to everything the story had mounted against them... that movie sucks. I would hate to watch a movie that only says, "There was once this man who was caught up in something that was ruining his life and his heart. He started fighting against this thing, because he had to or he would die. He got close to getting through it a couple times, and it seemed like he was changing, but then he went back to where he started... and even worse... and then he died." The conflict wins in a movie like that. And I don't think Jesus made us to have lives where conflict wins. He says we <span style="font-style: italic;">will</span> have conflict. The deep conflict is where the deep victory is possible (like Aaron was saying). But, "take heart"...because Jesus has overcome a WORLD of it.<br /><br />If we join Jesus' story, we overcome conflict, too. We go through it, like Jesus did (but we do it on a smaller scale because we don't have to go through the battle of defeating EVERYONE's sins)... and we come out on the other end risen and changed, because something is new in us now.<br /><br />I don't think a story is complete until conflict is defeated. The kind of movie I mentioned before - the one where the man is defeated by his conflict - it's worse than, "Oh, that movie has a bad ending" - I don't think that movie really has an ending... I think that movie just stops.<br /><br />And who likes to watch a movie that just stops?<br /><br /><br />When I said earlier that I wonder about things like destiny and tension and climbing mountains... that I wonder about the person with a great destiny and about the things in life that start making it uncomfortable and about the people woven into that destiny and the challenges in it as well... I guess I'm really wondering about the meaning that all those elements have. And I guess I'm wondering if they mean anything at all if the story doesn't pull them <span style="font-style: italic;">through</span> something in the end. I'm wondering if they are all just pieces, floating around on paper or on a screen (or in a life), waiting to find their weight in the end... waiting to have their worth completed when the Author says, "<span style="font-style: italic;">This</span> was how you moved my story along." How beautiful, if the main character lets the story be written like that, and lets the elements come into the fullness of that. How incomplete, if the conflict just stops him -Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-5794647896440687632010-03-09T21:58:00.000-08:002010-03-11T12:00:08.905-08:00Impossible Things and Vorpal Swords<z><z>Have you ever thought, "This is so ironic"... or wondered if somebody somewhere somehow knew you were needing to hear the thing you heard or watch the thing you watched or read the thing you read right when you heard, watched, or read it? Have you ever felt like somebody somewhere <span style="font-style: italic;">sees you</span>? I have. More times than I can count. To be quite honest, it's beginning to be a regular occurrence... Also to be quite honest, I'm beginning to think that that somebody somewhere is in fact God, and that He enjoys getting my attention this way. Which is encouraging, because it's something I've realized I can't ignore... and I like to think that I can't ignore God.</z></z><br /><z><z><br />What I couldn't ignore tonight... was brilliant. Incredibly brilliant. So brilliant that I might poke a hole in my "delete" key trying to get the words right for this. It was colorful, and it was devastatingly loud (to me, anyway... the person who lives my life and could recognize the analogues in the context of my life). It was a match after a parallel after a saying... and they just kept coming as I sat there taking all of them in - my mind imploding as I tried not to cry while these things confirmed and put pictures to what God has been (already) so loudly shouting at me for months... It was all very genius of Him really. God is a genius. And tonight, He spoke to me through Alice in Underland</z></z><z><z>.<br /><br />I shouldn't have been as shocked I was. Partly because, like you're thinking right now, "It's just a movie. You can find meaning in any movie"... but mostly because, I was afraid of this movie. I've been afraid of it for months. My little sister went and saw it with her friend, and I thought, "I'm afraid of that movie. It looks weird. I don't want to see it." I thought it would be exactly like the cartoon, and I never liked the cartoon - the cartoon scared me. I never watch it anymore.<br /></z></z><br /><z><z>Well so the story of how I ended up watching <span style="font-style: italic;">this</span> movie goes like this: Tonight, Aubrey picks this movie, <span style="font-style: italic;">Alice in Wonderland</span>, and since I want to try "being brave" on for size, I just go with it. Aubrey doesn't even realize it's 3D, but I do, which scares me more (and ends up being scary for her once she also finds out it's 3D... really funny), but again, I just go with it. Garrett comes too, and we all share popcorn. The movie starts, and I yell, "I'm afraid of this movie!" (I don't normal-yell, of course - the movie has started - I whisper-yell.) After about 30 minutes into it, our suspicions are confirmed that this is not the normal Alice in Wonderland's story... this is Alice in Underland's story, and this one is different. This one is about finding out who you are meant to be, and becoming that who... This one is ab</z></z><z><z>out believing impossible things, and facing a monster you never thought you could slay. This one is about being brave. And even if the whole time people are guiding you, supporting you, telling you about your destiny and who you used to be before you forgot about your destiny, the choice in the end is still yours... only yours... and YOU must decide to face the monster... because once you decide to grab your weapon, you will need to wield it.<br /><br />But don't worry too much, "insignificant bearer," the Vorpal Sword knows what to do... you just have to hang on... and believe the impossible...<br /><br /><br />There were a lot of other things (pictures, words, story lines) that stuck out, but if you aren't me, you probably won't understand God talking to me in them. In light of that, I am</z></z><z><z> glad I am me tonight.<br />For those of you who aren't me... bummer, it's quite the ride.<br /><br />Well, go see the movie and have fun! God might call you into a dream of special effects... or wake you up to a reality of your own that you need to face...<br /><br />Either way, it's worth the 8 bucks and recyclable plastic (if you see it in 3D)!<br /><br /></z></z><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://static.blogcritics.org/10/03/03/127813/Alice1.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 370px; height: 237px;" src="http://static.blogcritics.org/10/03/03/127813/Alice1.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><z><z>Gosh, and I was afraid of this movie.... I would have missed some serious muchness...<br /></z></z>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-27090481263424229732010-03-07T20:43:00.000-08:002010-03-08T09:12:04.943-08:00The way I want, or the way He wants me?"It may not be the way I would have chosen- when You lead me through a world that's not my home..." (Ginny Owens)<br /><br />This is an amazing song. And I hear it coming out of my soul right now. The lyrics above catch my attention every time I listen to them... but today, this part means more than I ever really thought it would. You see, God has these plans He works out... this "dream" for my life, if you will (Anyone at the Stirring today?). And sometimes, what happens to me and then what happens next out of that makes total sense in my mind. In fact, it makes so much sense in my mind that I could have planned it myself (so I do plan it). Cause I'm pretty good at figuring stuff like that out (Have you ever taken the Strengths Finder test? One of my top strengths is connectedness... so, ya know... I make the connections)...<br /><br />Well, sometimes I can't make enough connections to keep up with what God is doing... and what God is doing right now was definitely not included in the string of events that I had all connected and planned out for me about a month ago. Not that that matters much anymore... He has made it clear that <span style="font-style:italic;">His</span> way is best. And He has made it even more clear that His way is leading me on a path I actually thought I was avoiding. "It may not be the way I would have chosen." (Actually, it's not. I know this because I thought about this way multiple times, and I didn't choose it... multiple times.) But now, I am choosing His way. Which leads to the same end I always wanted. It's just that, this way, the <span style="font-style: italic;">me</span> at the end will probably match His dreams a little better...<br /><br />Someone once told me that God looks at you and sees the "whole-story" you... and that He has instilled hopes in you to align the "now" you with the you "to come."<br /><br />... So I am encouraged as I press in now to all I've hoped He's shaping me to become.<br /><br /><br />No matter that it doesn't look the way I always thought.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3185/3014083481_05ce122e31.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 333px; height: 500px;" src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3185/3014083481_05ce122e31.jpg" alt="" border="0" /></a><br /><br />P.S.<br />"Pit happens" ...hahaha.... oh Nathan...Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-46415859310121369512010-02-25T20:36:00.000-08:002010-02-26T14:07:49.693-08:00How things end up.<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWCBDS6PH_PsEtyJ1MazpL5DAx7VntzHpCliSE_rrYHdN8TV80rPyHNI-3x92PZqhBAYdRqkqQz0mCc9Ar-gsDal4OyoetfYc-sPkH8vfVvUrPDHNREJT9KHmBojdHk0FAndr-6eWZ0lLl/s1600-h/me+and+my+fish.png"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer; width: 194px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWCBDS6PH_PsEtyJ1MazpL5DAx7VntzHpCliSE_rrYHdN8TV80rPyHNI-3x92PZqhBAYdRqkqQz0mCc9Ar-gsDal4OyoetfYc-sPkH8vfVvUrPDHNREJT9KHmBojdHk0FAndr-6eWZ0lLl/s320/me+and+my+fish.png" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5442668785711635634" border="0" /></a>When I was a little girl, I wanted to be a boy. This is true. Once, I asked my mom why she had me, a girl, and why she didn't do something different so I'd be a son instead of a daughter. She laughed a little but then realized how serious I was and simply said, "Because God wanted you to be a girl, and He knew I wanted another sweet little princess..." She might have tried to pinch my cheek after that, which made me want to be a boy even more. My cousin was a boy... my friends were boys... why couldn't I be a boy, too? I liked action figures, pocket knives, building things (forts, chairs, traps) and carving things (wooden swords, tooth picks...). I liked exploring and going on crazy adventures (our backyards were HUGE). I liked sports and race cars and pulling barbie's head off. One time my friends and I made a flying fox out of twine and wash cloth... which was a dumb idea, but it was very Indianna Jones, and I bragged about my rope-burned hands for days. My dad used to tell me I was a "tom-boy," and I liked the sound of that... He took me fishing and encouraged my sports skills. Any time he was at his workbench, I was sitting on top, watching him saw and glue and hammer and sand. When he had a local basketball game to play in, both Joy and I would go so we could shoot around afterwards. Dad did always seem to hone in on <span style="font-style: italic;">my</span> dribble and stance and shooting form... I think, in a way, I was like the son he never had...<br /><br />I'm not upset about this, my dad never said he wished I was a boy or that he didn't want any of the four girls all his children ended up being. After all, <span style="font-style: italic;">I</span> was the one that said I wanted to be a boy... I think he was just happy to accommodate that part of me... and have a "tough" daughter and "little buddy" to share his cool tips with.<br /><br />... I didn't mind being his little buddy.<br /><br />><br /><br />When I was a little girl (but a little older), I had become obsessed with Star Wars and with Tomb Raider. I used to want to be buff and cool and fearless and able to do amazing flips while kicking bad guys' butts like Lara Croft. And I wanted to learn how to wield the Force like Luke Skywalker. About that time, I really started liking the color blue.<br /><br />... Kicking bad guys' butts and using the Force for good... Yup, that was the kind of stuff I wanted to do as a little older little girl. (Now, I just want to be buff... Don't judge me. You probably want to be buff, too.)<br /><br />><br /><br />When I was a teenage girl... I was on the basketball team and wanted to survive high school... yeah that's about it.<br /><br />><br /><br />Now, I'm not a little girl anymore. Nor do I want to be a boy anymore (well, there are certain times... VERY certain times...), but I do still like a lot of things I liked when I was younger. I still like sports. I still thoroughly enjoy fishing. And blue is my favorite color. I still watch kick-butt girls in movies and like that they're not "sissies." (If you take the "sissies" thing personally, please don't, I obviously still have issues to work through). But I also do like that God made me a girl... now.<br /><br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIONJuaXsS_PqznFAm4nDSDSAKtTnH9lntQ7JfaDJQI2ua6TC_8W1UYq1BEkV8VNR_5PzPrxRlJuwi1DEdUijDMrM8i77rkE3GDoXNP4xSriieZrZ6NNtjdI1pM-8mn704Ntq5dZ-7Y38b/s1600-h/me+looking+at+joy2.png"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 320px; height: 236px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgIONJuaXsS_PqznFAm4nDSDSAKtTnH9lntQ7JfaDJQI2ua6TC_8W1UYq1BEkV8VNR_5PzPrxRlJuwi1DEdUijDMrM8i77rkE3GDoXNP4xSriieZrZ6NNtjdI1pM-8mn704Ntq5dZ-7Y38b/s320/me+looking+at+joy2.png" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5442676699371705074" border="0" /></a><br />Sometimes I think about my sisters - I think about how beautiful they are - and I think how blessed I am to share that sister-bond with them (something I wouldn't be able to share as a boy). Sometimes, I think about how empathetic I can be - I think about how there are definitely empathic guys, but how there's just something unique about a woman's empathy, and I'm glad I can share that with other women that might be going through what I have gone through. Sometimes I even think about being pursued, being a wife, being pregnant, being a mother... and I think those sound like wonderful things to be. For now, I think about playing guitar and singing as a girl... writing songs from my feminine heart. I think about the workings of my theologically driven mentality... of doing and writing and professing theology slightly different than a man, because I am a woman, and that's no "slight" at all. I think about being a leader in a uniquely female way, and I think about being fiercely dedicated to Jesus' way in this manner of worship and love that I've found myself in... Suddenly, I don't want to be a man at all. Of course I think that men are great, and I want to be led by and married to a great man someday; without men, there wouldn't be women, and vice-versa, and I don't even know how to finish this sentence without filling it with understatements...<br /><br />But I guess what I'm ultimately saying is that... that I... that there are... hmmm... that I'm glad I liked the boyish things I liked when I was young, because they are a huge part of who I am as a woman now... And I don't mean that girls who liked horses and dresses and flowers and dancing are not appropriately (and also appropriately featured as) brave, strong, great women. I'm just coming to believe more everyday that I'm great as a woman, too. So I'm thankful God made me a girl after all. Because how things end up, my wants for me are more like His wants for me anyway... and I want to be a woman of God.<br /><br />Life is Beautiful.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-43728872681648391842010-02-08T14:31:00.000-08:002010-02-09T09:42:25.633-08:00In real life, too.This past month I've realized that facebook makes no big difference in my life. It hasn't been in my life at all this past month, and the only thing I've missed about it is all my witty jokes finding their way into the cyber world via another person's wall or the tagged photo they're attached to. Cause sometimes I feel like I'm that much funnier on the internet... (But then I make a joke in the office, and Dan Lance laughs at it, and that reminds me I'm funny in real life, too. And I no longer need facebook.) <br /><br />So we broke our fast from noise yesterday as a church (which I was ironically and quietly at home sick for). Mid-Friends episode, it hit me that I could get back on facebook again! The first time in a month! All that pent up... SOCIAL TENSION. And, I mean, what if the world is imploding and I totally missed the invitation to the group "We have a space shuttle that will transport you off earth on this date at this time, et cetera, et cetera (Hurry- limited seating!)"??? I thought about how I would come to Yaks today and get back on facebook, and about how getting back on facebook again would just blow my mind... I thought about how much of a difference facebook probably makes in my life and I don't even realize it...<br /><br /><br />This how much of NOT a difference it makes in my life-<br /><br />Messages waiting in inbox: 2 <br />Photo tags: a few times in 1 new picture album<br />Wallposts: about 5 (and two of them were because of prompts to "reconnect" with me)<br />Notifications: about 37 ...surprisingly low, considering the amount of flower pots and farmville corn I am usually "gift"ed in a day. <br />Invites to that group with the space shuttle: 0 <br /><br /><br />Anybody who's anybody on facebook knows what lame numbers those are.<br /><br />Anybody who's anybody on facebook knows that the underlying force of facebook is "tag and be tagged back"... if you don't thrive and live and flourish under the blue and white url f logo of this post-and-comment-now-comment-on-the-post world, you might as well not expect big numbers during one month's time of absence. This is what I knew going into the fast. This is what, I am slightly embarrassed to say, I had to pray to Jesus about. "But Lord- If I do not comment, I will not get a comment back!" <br /><br />Cause anybody who's anybody on facebook knows that if your status is old, you're old news my friend... <br /> <br /><br />Luckily, anybody who's status or pictures or dire re-connecting needs make a big difference in my life, also has my phone number. Or email address. Or I see their ACTUAL face as life affords. I'm definitely not being a facebook downer... I just think it's a relief every now and then to realize that you DO have bonds thicker than clear wire...<br /><br /><br /><br />Thank you, Jesus... I can trust you with my social life. (And my real life... the world is not imploding...)<br /><br />Good fasting lesson.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-29932498279839565342009-12-28T17:43:00.000-08:002009-12-30T16:06:59.158-08:00Mudhouse SabbathI'm currently reading a book called <span style="font-style:italic;">Mudhouse Sabbath</span> by Lauren Winner. It's a slender little book that I picked up yesterday in Barnes and Noble and decided to use my Christmas gift card on (Thanks, Mom). Reading it now, I wish I had picked it up the day before yesterday, just so I could have had it in my possession sooner. I'm pretty sure I've only stopped reading it to shower, pee, and drive... and to write this.<br /><br />The point of the book is ingeniously described by a phrase found directly underneath its title: "An Invitation to a Life of Spiritual Discipline." The phrase is printed in pink lettering and means what it suggests (as most phrases by Winner do). The fact that it's in pink means nothing, but I thought it was pretty and worth the mention. <br /><br />When I'm done reading this book - which will probably be around the same time I'm done drinking this latte - I'm going to seriously reconsider the intentionality I give to certain "ordinary" things in my life... things like sabbath and food and candle-lighting... and doorposts. (I haven't actually gotten to the "doorposts" chapter yet... but I bet I'll reconsider the attention I give to those.) <br /><br />It's a book about the link between spiritual practices of Judaism and the formation of our responses to God in Christianity. It is about "the rhythms and routines" that, as Winner puts it, "drew the sacred down into the everyday." It's a book that shows you you are practicing things everyday, but, how are the things you're practicing forming you to respond to God? Are they at all? Mostly, it's one of those books that asks if you'd like to pay a little more attention...<br /><br />I'd like to pay a little more attention. <br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">Mudhouse Sabbath</span>... Let me know if you want to borrow it. Maybe we'll read it for lifegroup.<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDFPgxiJGSe4pWHRBDQQYvDyPK_9rIA6en2zjm-4jj0EPNPp5LF1sK7-xX0irq3wxbp3QfMdvc80683PhatDib5fOQax1ZUGyINNQveseGXsHq8PXfahfoi_5sb2LHdCLdbNQSBZtJiFrO/s1600-h/mudhouse.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 210px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDFPgxiJGSe4pWHRBDQQYvDyPK_9rIA6en2zjm-4jj0EPNPp5LF1sK7-xX0irq3wxbp3QfMdvc80683PhatDib5fOQax1ZUGyINNQveseGXsHq8PXfahfoi_5sb2LHdCLdbNQSBZtJiFrO/s320/mudhouse.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5420490875813245234" /></a>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-17080154157352805512009-10-19T13:29:00.000-07:002009-10-21T17:35:18.331-07:00I was reading a very good book this morning, and I realized that if I ever wanted to write a good book, I would need to figure out what, exactly, I am writing about. And I would need to have a lot of things to say about whatever I am writing about. Then I would just need to write about it. It sounded like a simple enough formula: 1) Figure out what you are writing about, 2) Have a lot to say about it, 3) Say it in writing (I would add in, "with humor," for sales strategy). Then I realized something else: I don't think I could ever stay focused enough to write a good book about something. Unless, of course, it was a book about realizations... I might be able to write a good book about realizations... but whoever wants to read a book about that...Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-50803093572962144412009-10-12T09:16:00.000-07:002009-10-12T10:27:32.501-07:00Get up and walk...<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.surgeforward.org/images/BDillonweb.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 384px; height: 256px;" src="http://www.surgeforward.org/images/BDillonweb.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br />Bethany Dillon has an awesome new cd out. Danae Allen bought it for me for my birthday. Thank you, Danae...<br /><br />This is my favorite song right now:<br /><br />GET UP AND WALK<br /><br />I have got no one to blame<br />Except if that someone’s me<br />I washed my hands, but just the same<br />My eyes confess for me<br />I come in filthy rags<br />You know I’m guilty<br /><br />I wake up almost every night<br />Saying Your name<br />What I would give to walk in the light<br />But what I hide has made me lame<br />My face down on the ground<br />I wait to hear the healing sound<br /><br />You break through my deafness<br />Swing open the curtain<br />And I find the courage to get up and walk<br />I forget my weakness<br />For You’ve answered my loneliness<br />And through the mud on my eyes<br />I can see my Hope has come<br /><br />You’ll have to show me where to go<br />It’s been so long since I’ve used my feet<br />I got up today a cripple<br />And now I’m dancing<br />So let the power of Your move<br />Not stop with what I can see<br /><br />[back to chorus]<br /><br />I couldn’t walk<br />I couldn’t sing<br />I couldn’t love until You found meJennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-17889934522226198352009-10-08T13:46:00.000-07:002009-10-09T08:37:40.899-07:00"...that everywhere I am in Thy presence."About a month ago, I was invited to teach an FYE class on the Streams of Faith. In preparing for it, I realized that there are many crevices and pockets of these streams into which I have not stopped to dip my own bucket. So I typed up outlines for the Contemplative, Holiness, Charismatic, Social Justice, Evangelical, and Incarnational Streams, and decided that I would need to keep one for myself...<br /><br />At about 9:12 this morning, the prayer of Susanna Annesley (mother of John Wesley) was one of the last things I added to the Incarnational outline. Then I decided to add it to my day... Then, event-upon-event, a good breakfast with good friends, a somewhat disheveled but peaceful arrival to the class, and a slow reading of Psalm 139 to open... and I am convinced that He is with me.<br /><br />Pray this with me as I pray it about 14 more times today. And remember that He is with you too.<br /> <br /><br />“Help me, Lord, to remember...that everywhere I am in Thy presence. So my every word and action have a moral content...May all the happenings of my life prove useful and beneficial to me. May all things instruct me and afford me an opportunity of exercising some virtue and daily learning and growing toward Thy likeness...Amen.”<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg1Q9QNFmnDI4QD0ZbtTOFONn1xyTtIx9m1I8lQtpL633FrqgDkKigV7Gd2w7wP3hi_y-_LMLReowu_oCiSnMHnyX5KLmB8uH7PjdEQFk8FcisEh1YUTiKQAPsI63nwg_XNUTM4vxy6EmCd/s1600-h/in-awe.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 230px; height: 320px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg1Q9QNFmnDI4QD0ZbtTOFONn1xyTtIx9m1I8lQtpL633FrqgDkKigV7Gd2w7wP3hi_y-_LMLReowu_oCiSnMHnyX5KLmB8uH7PjdEQFk8FcisEh1YUTiKQAPsI63nwg_XNUTM4vxy6EmCd/s320/in-awe.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5390341674587444290" /></a>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-64838106339139154882009-09-06T07:33:00.000-07:002009-09-06T09:40:43.974-07:00My New Little HouseI moved into my new little house on Tuesday. It's not actually "new"... But it is little. And I love it already. Megan and I discovered that the bathroom door doesn't stay shut... which is fine, cause maybe we'll get a latch. We're grown up like that... we can get latches if we need to...<br /><br />But I've never rented a house before--big or small. So the fact that I'm typing this at our breakfast nook table on our "borrowed" wireless internet, while listening to the three sprinklers squirt around outside our kitchen window, is kind of surreal. Not the "I'm going to be on Wheel of Fortune tomorrow" kind of surreal... just... kind of surreal. The real part comes with the simple fact that I'm in a new stage of life again. Paying rent and electric bills, planning dinner parties and grocery shopping for the next couple of weeks (rather than a few hours of late-night-homework-cramming)... going to bed at a normal time of night, when I'm tired, because I have office hours the next day and not a final exam at 8 am... and knowing that I'm here in Redding to reside year round because of these wonderful office hours, but also because of so much more... much much more.<br /><br />And then it hit me when Meg's mom yelled from the kitchen, "Where do you girls want the toaster!?" that I've never thought about where a good place for the toaster would be... or a good place to put band aids... or where a good place to buy a paper towel rack from is... <br />I never really considered that I could have a garden if I wanted.<br /><br />Guess it's the little things that make you feel like you're getting older... It's the little things that change when you're growing up... It's the little things you start thinking about suddenly because your responsibilities are shifting and you are suddenly the one making the decisions about the little things. Not that the decisions about the little things make you more mature necessarily, but they're all accumulating to the bigger changes... Bigger changes that eventually find you in a new house you are responsible for... and where you begin to realize, "I think I know where the toaster should go now..."<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCJlasfC4Ov3mhLffByLkqlSMqDGguhpC1wZFllF7UHO7TQj2nPI4ZzXZ0zRGmN52lo3P06V9DaKRysRO-DlFoLxyKIIDt35fszroGpV9nZWvSa_cL4VcROacLl9rfrVl1TjbWn0SIM2Rx/s1600-h/toaster.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgCJlasfC4Ov3mhLffByLkqlSMqDGguhpC1wZFllF7UHO7TQj2nPI4ZzXZ0zRGmN52lo3P06V9DaKRysRO-DlFoLxyKIIDt35fszroGpV9nZWvSa_cL4VcROacLl9rfrVl1TjbWn0SIM2Rx/s400/toaster.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5378391278572368146" /></a><br />...and then you walk outside to get the electric bill from your new little mail box.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-89382655649416668992009-08-17T11:03:00.000-07:002009-08-20T00:41:43.118-07:00The Little Boy and the Road and the Hole(a story I wrote...)<br /><br />There was a little boy who kept falling into a hole. It was the same hole every time, over and over. And even though the little boy didn't like the hole, and the fall hurt every time, he kept walking on the road that had the hole in it. When he told his mom about the hole, his mom told him to stop walking on that road, and in fact, to stop walking on any roads without her. But he didn't listen to his mom because this was the only road to the place he was going... he also didn't tell her about the hole anymore because he didn't want her coming with him. After falling into the hole a couple more times, the little boy decided to tell his friend about the road and the hole and how it was starting to hurt more and more every time he fell in. When he told his friend, his friend asked him if he was sure that was the only road that led to the place he was going. The little boy was pretty sure... but not a hundred percent... but pretty sure... so his friend said he'd like to come with him next time and check out this hole the little boy was falling into. The little boy thought for a moment and decided that would be fine. <br /><br />So the boy and his friend began down the road with the hole. Along the way, the boy's friend saw another road, branching off from the one they were on. Even though this road looked smaller and longer and didn't look like it was going in the same direction, he stopped the little boy and showed him. But the little boy shook his head and said he was pretty sure that that road wouldn't take him where he was going... not a hundred percent... but pretty sure... so the little boy and his friend kept going.<br /><br />Finally, the boy began to recognize the scenery--it was the scenery close to where the hole was. He told his friend to slow down and be careful because, sometimes, he would just fall into the hole without seeing it. But he always recognized the scenery, so they decided to go very slowly. The friend was the first to see the hole... so wide and unmerciful, stretching all the way from one side of the road to the other. It seemed to the friend that if someone was determined to keep going on this road, there would be no escape from falling in. He turned to the little boy to tell him, but the little boy was already in front of him, headed for the hole. The friend wondered if the little boy could see the hole this time or if he couldn't, like the other times. When he called the little boy's name, the little boy stopped for a second and looked back and asked him why he stopped. The friend told him that the hole was right in front of them and that the little boy was getting too close--couldn't he see it? <br /><br />But then the friend noticed that the little boy wasn't looking at the hole right in front of him. In fact, the little boy wasn't even looking at the road anymore. The friend ran to catch up with him and tried to point out the road and the hole and the fact that there was no way around the hole and they should go back and try the other road... but the little boy kept looking at the scenery and pointing past the hole and saying that if they could just jump over the hole, he was sure this was the way he needed to be going (he seemed a hundred percent sure... but he really wasn't). The little boy told his friend to look further down the road and see how pretty it was and to look around them and see how enchanting the scenery was now--now that they had come to the edge of the hole. It was enchanting scenery, the friend agreed, and the rest of the road looked oddly pretty as far as the eye could see, but the friend could still see the hole plainly, and the hole was not pretty, and the hole hurt, and the hole would not let them keep walking down the road looking at the scenery and heading towards... well, whatever the little boy thought he was heading towards... <br /><br />If you ask the little boy what happened next, he might not be able to recall. He might tell you that he fell into the hole again because he took more steps towards it, even while his friend was talking. Or, he might admit that it would have been disappointing to have gone so far down that road again just to go back and try the other road... so he tried jumping this time instead. <br /><br />He <span style="font-style:italic;">will</span> recall that his friend pulled him out of the hole and that his friend walked back to his home with him. And he will remember that his friend was not scolding him or ignoring him or calling him stupid for being... stupid. Instead, his friend was guiding him, examining his wounds, telling him to rest on their way, and sometimes quietly crying, just because he was sad the little boy couldn't see what he could see... <br /><br />...But the little boy could see all of <span style="font-style:italic;">that</span>. <br /><br />If you ask the little boy whether or not he is going to fall into the hole again, he might not be able to predict the future... he might not be able to say that even though the hole hurts, the road or the scenery or the pretty other side will be easier to not think about and look at and want to go to. But maybe he will say that he knows the road always leads him to the hole, which hurts to fall into more and more every time. And that he knows the road is more dangerous than the hole itself. He might be able to say that he is not going to take that road anymore. He might even admit that his friend was right and that the other road is probably a much better option. <br /><br />He <span style="font-style:italic;">will</span> be able to say that his friend is a good friend... that his friend has offered to try the other road with him. His friend has good eyes, so he will help the little boy see other holes if they come across any. The little boy hopes that he has good eyes again someday... ones that don't just look at the scenery. He hopes that he gets eyes like his friend's... ones that can see when the hole is too close and when the other side is actually not very pretty at all. <br /><br />The little boy wears glasses right now. He hopes that someday he won't need them. When his mom asks him about the glasses, he just smiles and says he is training his wandering eye. And when she asks him whatever happened with that hole he told her about, and that road leading to the place he was going... he smiles again and says that he and his friend decided to take a different road. He tells her not to worry and that it is a better road. <br />Because he's pretty sure he wants to go to a different place now... <br /><br />No... a hundred percent sure.<br /><br /><br />The Middle.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-2897575767987721612009-08-04T18:41:00.000-07:002009-08-04T22:09:52.001-07:00What DOES it sound like?<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://www.filmconnection.com/images/portals/edgy_film_careers_sound1.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 229px;" src="http://www.filmconnection.com/images/portals/edgy_film_careers_sound1.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br />I haven't blogged in a while... Probably because I haven't read in a while. Usually when I'm not reading, I'm not getting much motivation to write... Yeah, that makes sense. But I have been writing songs lately... I find that life in general motivates me to write songs. More specifically, life as I encounter it in other living people motivates me to write songs.... I write a song when I see a homeless man digging through the trash for food. I write a song when I find a girl too afraid of her past to move forward. I write a song when I hear about prostitution... and then meet its oppressed firsthand. Or, I write a song when I meet Jesus again firsthand... and when He makes Himself known through the life of a friend. <br /><br />I write joyful songs... though some may seem less "happy" than others.<br />I write hopeful songs. All songs should have a glimmer of hope in them...<br /><br />I write songs full of thought... because my own life is saturated with it. And if the songs I write don't provoke others to think too, then I don't know what the heck I'm doing here...<br /><br />Sometimes I struggle with finding the right words (There are so many words in our world). But God refines those as He refines me more with His... So I don't worry very much about lyrics. I think about them and revisit them and pick and choose and change them with purpose... but I am rarely anxious over them.<br /><br />Melodies, however, are a different story. Melodies... I need to hear. I don't know what else to say about melodies right now, other than- there must be a million of them in heaven... If I could just hear the melodies of heaven... <br /><br />"Whatever the angels are singing..." <br /><br />...Sometimes I dare ask God to let me sing "whatever the angels singing..." <br /><br /><br />This is a little bit of why I haven't read in awhile, I suppose... <br />I've been preoccupied with trying to hear heaven.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-40520225903578120752009-07-18T10:37:00.000-07:002009-07-18T21:29:22.260-07:00BBQs, Baptisms, and the Kingdom of Heaven...<z><br />Our church family amazes me more and more as the weeks pass. The leadership inspires me, the servanthood humbles me, the generosity awes me, the courage convicts me... I am honored to be part of such a dedicated, passionate group of Jesus followers. We had our bbq baptism last night at the Hayes' house. I watched as even more followers symbolically declared that their hearts and lives are for His Kingdom. I spoke with three amazing young women afterwards, and we agreed that talking about Jesus beats many other convo-topics, by far. We were encouraged by seeing our older brothers anoint the younger ones... and we are excited about our generation's call. It's incredible to be a part of this stuff...<br /><br />When I think about times like that, I see that God is doing so much. But we don't always need those signs to know that He is working... Jesus says that an "evil and adulterous generation craves for a sign; and yet no sign will be given to it but the sign of Jonah the prophet..." He goes on to say that Nineveh didn't have Jesus come to them--they had Jonah, and still they believed more than the generation that craves signs. He says that the Queen of the South "came from the ends of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon; and behold, something greater than Solomon is here." That queen didn't have Jesus come to her--but she had the idea that Solomon was onto something. The generation that craves for signs has the "something greater" than even Solomon's wisdom... but they turn to the cravings rather than the Lord in their midst. I'll be honest, that part of the story scares me! ...I want to turn to the Lord...<br /><br />But Jesus continues (He usually does...), and He gives His disciples hope when they ask Him how anyone is supposed to understand all this crazy stuff He's saying! Jesus turns to them and says... <br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">"To you it has been granted to know the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not... But blessed are your eyes, because they see; and your ears, because they hear. For truly I say to you that many prophets and righteous men desired to see what you see, and did not see it and to hear what you hear, and did not hear it" (Matt.13:11, 16-17)</span>.<br /><br />...I want us to be the disciples that turn to the Lord... the ones that He then turns and says <span style="font-style:italic;">that</span> to...<br /><br />When I watch baptisms and church gatherings and encouraging moments with our incredible church family--when I think about times like that--I try to remember that visuals are wonderful, but we do not always <span style="font-style:italic;">need</span> the signs. I try to remember that JESUS is in our midst, and that it is He Who even grants us the eyes to see and the ears to hear these mysteries of His Kingdom.Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-10150490828233314762009-07-06T18:08:00.000-07:002009-07-07T10:11:10.523-07:00He knows my name.I never cared that my name meant "little bird" before. If anything, I was embarrassed by it. Most of my friends have really cool meanings for their names, and some of my friends hate birds. Either way, I always claimed the "spiritual meaning" that would pop up on the more obscure websites... the websites on the 17th page of the Google findings...<br /><br />Bethany Dillon once asked me what my name meant, and I was too embarrassed to tell her the "little bird" part. She seemed to like my name, and I didn't want her to change her mind... I told her "I think it means something like, 'The Lord is gracious'..." (which is true! One of the 17th-pagers said so). She smiled and said that she liked it. Sweet. I was right. <br />I think I smiled back... or I peed my pants... I can't remember...<br /><br />Anyway, after a couple more years of similar stories (ones with me claiming the "spiritual meanings," not ones with Bethany Dillon), I began finding an actual appreciation of the "little bird" meaning... I started seeing pictures of birds everywhere, and they were a lot prettier than I remember (or at least a lot less scary...fewer crows). There were a lot that showed birds being released from cages, free to fly in the open air once more. Some of them showed birds simply resting on branches, singing what I imagined to be the most pleasant of songs (...they weren't steller-jays...or else I probably would have imagined fire alarms). They <span style="font-style:italic;">were</span> "little" birds, and I started to like seeing them around. Four women from Bethel came up to me at the Sundial bridge one day and gave me a picture of a sunrise they had drawn for me... It had birds flying in it. "The Lord's favor is so heavy on you.. and you are going to be like these birds soon... flying so high and free in the sunrise." I contemplated telling them my name and what it meant, but I didn't. All I said back was, "Thank you. I really do hope so..." <br /><br />They didn't know my name...<br />but God did.<br /><br />I flirted with the idea of someday just coming out and saying to my friends that hate birds, "My name <span style="font-style:italic;">means</span> 'little bird'!"--and to my friends with really cool name-meanings, "Well <span style="font-style:italic;">my</span> name means 'little bird'..." And this idea became a million times more attractive when someone finally said to me, "You know you're name also means 'white wave'?"<br /><br />Ok. So "Little bird" it is...<br /><br />It's been a few months since that initial acceptance... I haven't thought about it at all since then. <br />But on Friday, my iPod's "shuffle" settings did it yet again...<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><span style="font-weight:bold;">FLY</span> by Jason Upton<br /><br />Going out to new atmospheres<br />Going out to new places<br />Going out to new atmospheres <br /><br />You gotta to have new ears,<br />Gotta have new ears to hear...<br />Heavenly places, heavenly, heavenly places...<br />New revelation.<br /><br />What are doing? (singing to lost soul)<br />Where are you going? (singing to lost soul)<br />God is going to give you wings...<br /><br />Some of you have been fighting for a very long time<br />Some of you have been fighting that ground warfare for a very<br />long time...<br /><br />Sticking out your fists and fighting... <br />God wants to take you to new places,<br />New revelation,<br />New perspective,<br />An arial view... <br /><br />I declare over you, God has given you the air...<br /><br />So fly, it's time to open up your wings,<br />to shake off the things that hold you down,<br />It's time to spread out your wings and fly.<br /><br />Do you see what I see?<br />Do you hear what I hear?<br />Do you know what I know?<br />Do you want what I want?<br />I want you to fly<br /><br />Fly...<br /><br />(from God)<br />I have given you wings<br />I have set you free from the things that held you<br />I have given you wings<br />I have set you free, so come to me and<br />Fly... <br /><br />Like a bird in the air, you have escaped the snare <br />Like a bird in the air, you have escaped the snare<br />Like a bird in the air, you have escaped the snare of the enemy<br /><br />You have been set free<br />You have been set free<br /><br />Nothing, nothing, nothing, no nothing could ever hold you. <br />Nothing can stop you now- <br />because you are.... <br />Free.<br /><br />Fly. </span><br /><br />I'll admit, I started to cry on the treadmill. I'm glad no one was around to ask if I tore something. But if they had... I would have told them, "Guess it just kinda hit me that God knows my name..." <br /><br />I happen to care now that my name means "little bird," because God <span style="font-style:italic;">always</span> has. And He is remaining faithful to the promises that He's apparently had in mind since before I was born...<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhupxP_4E0g9yQ8JNamyUxO7-F9268hsCtcFJFHH8Arp1g10srFZ03jZoJjJm5lo_WgXPET7VyZvZIUT-J8gMdaHL7IXm5IoJdnCfUtuFi1tAC7cLxHmuMtC7jiyc8xZr3FmIMrFjTDl-YS/s1600-h/freeing+bird.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 400px; height: 313px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhupxP_4E0g9yQ8JNamyUxO7-F9268hsCtcFJFHH8Arp1g10srFZ03jZoJjJm5lo_WgXPET7VyZvZIUT-J8gMdaHL7IXm5IoJdnCfUtuFi1tAC7cLxHmuMtC7jiyc8xZr3FmIMrFjTDl-YS/s400/freeing+bird.jpg" border="0" alt=""id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5355541753013051970" /></a> <br /><br />What does your name mean? He knows your name, too!Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-934230532175213911.post-88479274340210073432009-07-01T10:24:00.000-07:002009-07-02T00:53:05.284-07:00The Land of "Why?"<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://bedtimebooks.net/davidandgoliath/images/hi-jpegs/pg-20-sitting.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 398px; height: 522px;" src="http://bedtimebooks.net/davidandgoliath/images/hi-jpegs/pg-20-sitting.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br />On Sunday, Dan spoke about how God has chosen you to be an instrument for a specific purpose--how God redeems your story, and how your story makes you the perfect one for a certain job. I've never thought I was perfect <span style="font-style:italic;">for</span> anything. I've just always thought I'll "do." <br /><br />I did always want to <span style="font-style:italic;">be</span> perfect. But I've never thought I made it there. That's no surprise... I was wanting the wrong thing anyway... <br /><br />I've asked "Why?" to God a lot. And I always have regrets and wishes. There are things I've done that I don't understand... and things I never did that I hoped wouldn't haunt me later. But they do... I am haunted by my mistakes sometimes. <br /><br />Dan continued talking. He talked about the land of "Why?" He said, "We all live in the land of 'Why?'...but God's redeeming all things, He's making all things new! God wants to change those parts of you that are so broken, that you think are beyond repair, that you thought could never be different, and He wants to use your testimony--the hardest, darkest, most painful places of it--to minister to others and help someone who may be going through something similar." He said, "You have a story that makes you effective in certain situations...and you will just connect with certain people because of it." And then he asked us, "Do you ever have those moments when you see a situation and realize, 'I am the chosen instrument for this moment' ?" <br /><br />...It was this part of the message that made me lean forward in my chair a little more...<br /><br />"Now, I want you to hear this," Dan continued, "Because this is what God has been speaking so clearly to me."<br /><span style="font-style:italic;">What? What is it??</span> <br />There are some things that just get my full attention.<br /><br />"When God calls me to something sometimes, I have those 'Yeah, buts', ya know? It's like, 'Yeah, but God, I'm a [fill in the blank]' It could be, 'But, God, I'm a coward' or 'God, I'm not eloquent in this' or 'God, I'm still broken' or 'But, there's that other thing...' or 'Yeah, but God, I'm such a mess...' We all have those 'Yeah, buts'... But then GOD answers and says, 'Perfect. I can still use you.' Or, He doesn't even let me finish...<br /><br />I say, 'Yeah, but God, I'm a-' <br />'PERFECT,' He says, 'I can use that...' He looks at me, and He says, 'I can use you. I want to use you.'<br /><br />Dan: 'But, I'm a-'<br />God: 'PERFECT. You're exactly what I want for this.'<br /><br />...And then I realize that God has seen a situation and said, 'Dan would be PERFECT for this... <br />I HAVE to have a Dan for this one!'"<br /><br />That last sentence would probably make more sense with Dan's analogy of the different-guitars-for-different-musical-purposes behind it... but you can download the podcast if you want the whole message.<br /><br />For now, I just have a song that I thought was PERFECT <span style="font-style:italic;">for</span> this blog...<br />It came onto my iPod at the gym this morning... my iPod nano, which isn't as "upgraded" as my iPod touch...probably not as elegant or complex or sleek-looking... it's not a 'clean' black--it's a tarnished green... and it's pretty beat up from years of being banged up against random trees and treadmills...but it's perfect for my morning jogs, and I wouldn't use any other...<br /><br />Maybe <span style="font-style:italic;">it</span> (if "its" could ask...) doesn't know "Why?" I'm using it rather than my iPod touch.... but I do.<br /><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;"><span style="font-weight:bold;"> I AM</span> by Ginny Owens</span><br /><br /><span style="font-style:italic;">No Lord, he said, you've got the wrong guy.<br />Simple conversation gets me tongue-tied.<br />And you're telling me to speak with a maniac king.<br />Or could it be I've lost my mind?<br />And besides, I am weak, don't you want someone strong,<br />To lead them out of Egypt when they've been there so long?<br />And anyway, they wont believe You ever spoke to me.<br />That's not your problem, God replied. <br />And the rest is history.<br /><br />There's a bigger picture you can't see.<br />You don't have to change the world, just trust in me.<br />'Cause I am your creator, I am working out my plan,<br />And through you I will show them, I Am.<br /><br />Now Lord, are you sure? He's just a shepherd boy,<br />Too small for battle gear with a giant to destroy.<br />What on earth can he do with five stones and a sling?<br />That's not your problem, God replied. <br />'Cause I can do anything.<br /><br />There's a bigger picture you can't see.<br />You don't have to change the world, just trust in me.<br />'Cause I am your creator, I am working out my plan,<br />And through you, I will show them, <br />I Am the first, I Am the last,<br />I Am the present and the past,<br />I Am tomorrow and today,<br />I Am the only way.<br /><br />Great Lord, she said, I'm just a simple girl.<br />You say that I will bring your son into the world.<br />How can I understand this thing You're gonna do?<br />That's not your problem, God replied.<br /><br />'Cause, there's a bigger picture,<br />And you don't have to change the world.<br />I'm your creator, I am working out my plan.<br />And through you, I will show them, <br />There's a bigger picture, you can't see.<br />You don't have to change the world, just trust in me.<br />I'm your creator, I am working out my plan,<br />And through you, I will show them, I Am</span><br /><br /><br />Moses, David, and Mary the mother of Jesus are three Bible characters that I have always been inspired by...<br />They weren't perfect. They had regrets. They were afraid and crawled to Him, honest about it. But, eventually, they were willing and didn't ask "Why?" as much anymore--though if they looked back and reflected, I'm sure certain things would have suddenly become clear...<br /><br />I'm sure they could see some incredible answers to that question in their stories. What encouraging things those would be to look back and see. We get see those things, now, and we realize that God is a MASTER story-teller...<br /><br />And He is STILL using their stories today...<br /><br /><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="http://new.rejesus.co.uk/images/area_uploads/nativity_film/mary_angel.jpg"><img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;width: 356px; height: 226px;" src="http://new.rejesus.co.uk/images/area_uploads/nativity_film/mary_angel.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a>Jennahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01656298291026140858noreply@blogger.com2