3/31/08

Book Meme


Challenge from Upsidedown Bee 

A Reading Meme:

What was the last book you bought: 
No Graven Image by Elizabeth Elliot
Name a book you have read MORE than once:
Confessions by Augustine
Has a book ever fundamentally changed the way you see life? If yes, what was it:
Future Grace by John Piper
How do you choose a book - eg. by cover design and summary, recommendations or reviews:
All of the above
Do you prefer Fiction or Non-Fiction:
non-fiction
What’s more important in a novel - beautiful writing or a gripping plot:
I am really attracted to both aspects, but if I had to choose, it would be a great plot.
Most loved/memorable character (character/book):
Jean Valjean in Les Miserables
One book you'd want on a desert island:
The Bible; but if you want me to choose a book it would have to be Lord of the Rings
One book that made you laugh:
It's a shame, but I don't read things too often that make me laugh.  I am re-reading The Hobbit, and the exploits of Bilbo and the Dwarves make me laugh.
One book that made you cry:
The End of the Affair by Graham Greene
A book you didn't enjoy:
The Invisible Man by H. G. Wells
One book you are currently reading:
Paradise Lost by John Milton; one of the best books/poems I have ever read!
One book you've been meaning to read:
All of The City of God by Augustine.  I have only read parts.
Book you remember as a real page-turner:
Angels and Demons by Oh his name escapes me.
Non-fiction books that you have enjoyed:
Oh, there are so very many.  Habits of the Mind by James Sire, How to Read a Book by Mortimer Adler, The Call by Os Guiness (one that had also changed my life), How Should We Then Live by Francis Schaeffer, and many, many more.
Your favorite place to read:
At my lake house either in my big chair or on the bed.



3/29/08

Last Night the Moon Spoke to Me.....


Upsidedown B last wednesday gave a writer's challenge on her blog.  If we decided to take up the challenge. we would start out a monologue that started like this:  Last night the moon spoke to me....
I accept the challenge:


Last night the moon spoke to me of it's creator.  It told me of the many millenia that it has reflected the sunshine onto the earth.  The moon spoke of it's wonder of only being able to completely be hidden except in the light of not just the sun, but of the Son who crafted both. Being a shadow of Him was the greatest honor that could ever be bestowed, pure light of pure light, of who made him.  This reminded me of dying to self and only being a reflection of Him who made me, being lost in Christ Himself.  Oh, that I might be like the moon, a reflection of the bridegroom, giving Him all glory, honor, and praise.  

3/26/08

Musings on Suffering


"God whispers in our pleasures, but shouts in our pains."  C. S. Lewis

When I am in pain I turn to several different writers.  First of all, the Bible and the Psalms are the greatest source of comfort. With that being said, this time around I have turned to Peter Kreeft, and also to C. S. Lewis, Tolkien, and listened to the sermons of Tim Keller, Pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York,  on Job.  Reading Kreeft's wisdom on suffering has helped me tremendously.  Below are some of the most poignant quotes.  


Making Sense Out of Suffering:


"Modern man does not have an answer to the question of why we suffer.  Our society is the first one that simply does not give us any answer to the problem of suffering except a thousand means of avoiding it." 
  
"Our only qualification for God's grace is our emptiness, not our fullness; our undeservingness, not our deservingness."  

"Humankind cannot bear very much reality."  T. S. Eliot  Which in my opinion (LC) is only brought about by suffering, reality that is.

Kreeft quotes from Boethius's The Consolation of Philosophy:  

   "The argument from experience is that bad fortune is really just as good for you as good fortune is, in fact, it is better, because he says, bad fortune teaches, while good fortune deceives.  When the worldly toys in which we foolishly place our hope for happiness are taken away from us, our foolishness is also taken away, and this brings us closer to true happiness, which is not in worldly things but in wisdom.  Bad fortune wakes us from our deceptive dream, and thus is good for us-assuming, as assumed, that we need truth more than comfort, that we need not false happiness but true happiness."

Back to more of Lynn's Musings on Sufferings:


Without suffering we remain a child, trapped in an adult body.  Without the right response to suffering in our lives we continue to remain a child, immature, and having to repeat the lessons that God wanted us to learn in the first place.  Not that God is the maker or the creator of the suffering.  As Job tells us God permits the catastrophe's of Job, but Satan carries them out. In our suffering Satan is trumped, and his motives for bringing us pain, God turns around for good.  Satan badly wants us to believe that God is not good, and He doesn't really love us. God then turns the pain into good; Satan is defeated, and we believe even stronger in the love of God for us.  When we want our children to grow and mature we don't do it by giving them everything that they want when they want it.  We, as adult parents, know that what their immature mind or body wants is not always good for them.  God deals with us in the same way a Father deals with their children.  He never gives us more than we can handle, only what will help us to; run to, cling to, trust in completely, long for, desire above all else, the one thing that will make us happy, and that is Himself.  Don't be surprised when suffering out of the blue comes upon you, it is from the loving hand of our Heavenly Father pursuing you as a lover pursues the beloved.  It is proof that He will never let you go.  We know this because the Son was willing to suffer alone for us.  Let suffering have it's perfect way with you.  Hold on to the promises of Scripture just as you would hold on to a rope from the only boat in the midst of a stormy sea.  Tenaciously fight the fight of faith.  When the doubts scream at you, not just whisper, when they shout in your ear and demand to be heard, hold on to the truth.  When you have fought the battle you will begin to see wisdom and greater humility gain a much stronger hold on you than before.  It all begins with humility, "God gives grace to the humble." Of course everything is GRACE, everything!  If you do not, fight the fight, you remain a child trapped as an adult, being tossed to and fro from every corner.  
Job went through his suffering without knowing the plan.  Satan had taunted God concerning Job saying that the only reason Job loved Him was for the blessings.  God withheld the reasons for Job's pain in order for him to trust Him for who He was, the God of the Universe, maker of all, the only one to be worshiped.  At the end, Job had to place his hand over his mouth, because He saw the Lord of all, the one who even allowed his suffering for good.  For our good too.  

3/15/08

"No Good Deed Goes Unpunished"

As I was growing up, The Wizard of Oz was a very big part of my life.  Every year when it would come on, we would head on over to my cousins house to watch it on their color TV.  The first part is always in black and white, and then when Dorothy lands in Oz the screen turns to the vivid colors that are alive in Munchkin Land.  I read the stories of L. Frank Baum, collected Wizard of Oz memorabilia, and when I became a Christian adopted the rainbow as my symbol all throughout college and beyond.  L. Frank Baum did not create the rainbow, but it became a bridge for me between my pagan past and my new life in Christ.  My first response upon learning about the rainbow as it had to do with Noah and the Ark, was, "wow, God has a rainbow too."  I never really thought much of the wicked witch, except to be scared of her.  She was the bad guy and Dorothy was the good guy, and of course the good always wins.  With that said..... 


I have for a while now been meditating on the the Broadway Play and novel; Wicked.  My friends and I were able to go to New York not too long ago to see it, and also to wander around any book stores we might come upon.  When I get something on my brain I mull it over and over until the symbolism becomes apparent, or until I have satisfied my qualms, questions, and querulous pondering.  While sitting at the play in NY with my friends, I was struck with the fact that I thought it was a very multi-layered story.  Applications that were immediate were about friendship and the development of character through difficult circumstances.  Sitting in the theatre I began crying and realizing how much God had blessed me with friends that pointed me to Him.  Then my mind jumped to the thought that the character of the Wizard was much like a god/figure. Discounting that theme I went on to meditate on the friendship part, and not just friendship, but all the  people that come into our lives.  God places sovereignly people in our paths so that we will be changed for good, and encourage others to be changed for the good.  I couldn't get it out of my head though that the major themes in this play were upside down to a Biblical worldview.  Of course, every writer or story teller borrows from the Christian worldview, so the themes of friendship were wonderful and something that my friends and I enjoyed immensely. 
The opening line of the play spoken by Galinda asks the question, "are we born wicked, or do we get that way later on."  My philosophical brain became alert at that point, and tried to pick apart just what the author was trying to say.  The main character, Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West, spends her life against great odds being and doing good.  The play answers this question when towards the end Elphaba realizes that all that she has ever done for good backfires on the people she loves the most.  She tirelessly takes care of her wheelchair bound sister throughout her life, she turns on Elphaba and Dorothy's house drops on her from a plot by the Wizard and his assistant.  She selflessly tries to help the animals and at the end the lion turns on her, her professor Dr. Dillamond (the goat) is run out of town, and her parents have never accepted her for being born green.  She marches on trying desperately to hold on to her dignity and not compromising when the wizard offers her fame and fortune, which she has always wanted, by compromising her principles.  She turns him down and is then lied about, hunted to be killed,  and all the bad things in Oz are then blamed on her.  As she has resisted the dark side long and hard, she then breaks.  She decides that selflessness only brings you heartache, pain, and suffering.  She says in the line of the song, "no good deed goes unpunished."  



Elphaba:

No good deed goes unpunished
No act of charity goes unresented
No good deed goes unpunished
That's my new creed
My road of good intentions
Led where such roads always lead
No good deed
Goes unpunished!


One question haunts and hurts
Too much, too much to mention:
Was I really seeking good
Or just seeking attention?
Is that all good deeds are
When looked at with an ice-cold eye?
If that's all good deeds are
Maybe that's the reason why

No good deed goes unpunished
All helpful urges should be circumvented
No good deed goes unpunished
Sure, I meant well -
Well, look at what well-meant did:
All right, enough - so be it
So be it, then:
Let all Oz be agreed
I'm wicked through and through
Since I can not succeed


I promise no good deed
Will I attempt to do again
Ever again
No good deed
Will I do again!




Psalm 73
ESV




1Truly God is good to Israel,
   to those who are pure in heart.
2But as for me, my feet had almost stumbled,
   my steps had nearly slipped.
3 For I was envious of the arrogant
   when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.

This is where Elphaba finds herself, envying the wicked.  The Wizard has prospered from his evil, selfish  deeds.  What had her altruism ever done for her?  Except brought pain to her and to others.  The Wizard had also gotten away with murdering her sister, and come to find out he, the Wizard himself, was her real father.  This revelation didn't make any difference to him at all.

 4For they have no pangs until death;
   their bodies are fat and sleek.
5They are not in trouble as others are;
   they are not stricken like the rest of mankind.
6Therefore pride is their necklace;
   violence covers them as a garment.
Their eyes swell out through fatness;
   their hearts overflow with follies.
8They scoff and speak with malice;
   loftily they threaten oppression.
9They set their mouths against the heavens,
   and their tongue struts through the earth.
10Therefore his people turn back to them,
   and find no fault in them.
11And they say, "How can God know?
   Is there knowledge in the Most High?"
12Behold, these are the wicked;
   always at ease, they increase in riches.
13All in vain have I kept my heart clean
   and washed my hands in innocence.
14For all the day long I have be stricken
   and rebuked every morning.


Then Elphaba gets to this point, she knows that if she gives in she will betray all she holds dear.  Just like the following passage in this Psalm.  She then gives into despair, because she had done all she did only for herself.  Have you ever been tempted like this?  The Psalmist had.  The song that I posted not too long ago about doing good anyway, is also at the heart of this Psalm.  With the recent events of my life, I have been tempted this way as well.  Why should my family keep on doing good to the people of God?  They bruised us, they beat us, they lied about us.  I also caught myself singing this song, "no good deed goes unpunished."  I have gotten close to betraying the generation of His children.  Just as the Psalmist says. Thinking about God's people is a selfless act.  It means that the persecution was not necessarily going to end, the lies were not necessarily going to go away, or that God was going to make it all better right then and there.  


15If I had said, "I will speak thus,"
   I would have betrayed the generation of your children.


Then I went into the sanctuary of God.  Not just a building, or a place to meet with Him, but a place of safety that only He could protect me.  Elphaba had only her own resources to count on.  I know that my resources are completely unreliable, unsteady, and useless.  Until I came under the shadow of His wings.  

 16But when I thought how to understand this,
   it seemed to me a wearisome task,
17 until I went into the sanctuary of God;
   then I discerned their end.

 18Truly you set them in slippery places;
   you make them fall to ruin.
19How they are destroyed in a moment,
   swept away utterly by terrors!
20 Like a dream when one awakes,
   O Lord, when you rouse yourself, you despise them as phantoms.


I was a Brute beast able to identify with those that I thought had persecuted me, no difference.  The only thing that separates us if grace, grace alone.  You say in this next verse that I was a beast toward You, not people, You.  Nevertheless, You are with me, You hold me up, You guide me, and You will make sure that I receive Your glory!  You love me so much that You do not ever want to be without me.  Amazing.  

21When my soul was embittered,
   when I was pricked in heart,
22I was brutish and ignorant;
   I was like a beast toward you.

 23Nevertheless, I am continually with you;
   you hold my right hand.
24 You guide me with your counsel,
   and afterward you will receive me to glory.


25 Whom have I in heaven but you?
   And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you.
26 My flesh and my heart may fail,
   but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.


My flesh and my heart have failed, and God's strength has prevailed.  

 27For behold, those who are far from you shall perish;
   you put an end to everyone who is unfaithful to you.


28 But for me it is good to be near God;
   I have made the Lord GOD my refuge,
   that I may tell of all your works.


Do it Anyway!!  Only for the Glory of God!






3/13/08

"There is always Hope"








The Lord of the Rings is one of my favorite books.  I have read it over and over, and also taught it several times.  As I have been meditating on the recent events of my life, I have also been meditating on Gandalf, Gollum, Frodo, Aragorn and Sam.  Somehow I keep coming back to these friends of mine who have so often helped me in times of stress.  I cannot count how many times I have tried to encourage friends with the line in the movie, by Peter Jackson. Aragorn in the midst of the Battle at Helms Deep looks on a very young warrior as he asks Aragorn the King if there is any hope?  The reply from Aragorn is, "there is always hope." Even in the situation that I find myself in presently, I can hear Aragorn say, "there is always hope."  
Hope is a particularly unique perspective only found and grounded in Christianity.  That is one of the reasons why Tolkien saturated his works with it.  He was a believer in hope.  The new fantasy literature that has come about since Tolkien, doesn't share his perspective about hope. The writers seem to be steeped in a modernist viewpoint of relativistic truth, and realism that can never produce true hope.  That kind of relativistic hope is based on the person himself to produce it on their own.  The example that comes to mind is the scene in Harry Potter when Harry looks in the mirror and realizes that the hope he needs to carry on is within himself, because of who he is and where he came from.  Tolkien gives us a whole different approach to hope.  In The Hobbit as well as The Lord of the Rings the characters are helped unexpectedly by someone or something outside of themselves.  Gandalf sitting at the top of the tower is helped by the Eagle.  The whole procession of men, elves, and dwarves are helped when the hobbits look up into the sky to see the Eagles descending to help them.  Hope to Gandalf is from an outside source.  Our hope as believers is not from within, but from the Lord of all hope and comfort.  
A friend who lives in Japan sent us a book called, The Steadfast Heart by Elyse Fitzpatrick.  I looked at it and immediately wrote it off as one of those "women" books.  Not that I am not a woman, but I see myself as more of an academic/theologian type.  Give me Augustine, Boethius, and Calvin not some feel good book that I can read in a half an hour.  Now I realize that I am confessing my sin here, because that came out of a heart of arrogance and pride. Pride is usually rooted in a sense of self inferiority, at least mine is.  Please, Mrs. Fitzpatrick forgive me.  It has opened our hearts up to Scripture that we have never had to hold on to.  Psalm 57 especially.  My husband and I have read it everyday.  Thank you to my friend and to Mrs. Fitzpatrick for writing such an excellent encouragement.  
This makes me especially grateful for the universality of the Bride of Christ; His Church.  My friend sent it all the way from Japan for our edification.  She didn't even hear about our trials from us, but from some one else in the Body.  An anonymous reader to my blog wrote me her story of betrayal that has greatly encouraged me.  Bless the Lord O my soul and all that is within me, Bless His Holy Name!  The Body of Christ marches on.  How I love the peoples of God.

Psalm 57

Let Your Glory Be over All the Earth
To the choirmaster: according to Do Not Destroy. 
A Miktam of David, when he fled from Saul, in the cave.
 1 Be merciful to me, O God, be merciful to me,
   for in you my soul takes refuge;
in the shadow of your wings I will take refuge,
    till the storms of destruction pass by.
2I cry out to God Most High,
   to God who fulfills his purpose for me.
3 He will send from heaven and save me;
   he will put to shame him who tramples on me. 
                         Selah

God will send out his steadfast love and his faithfulness!

 4My soul is in the midst of lions;
   I lie down amid fiery beasts—
the children of man, whose teeth are spears and arrows,
   whose tongues are sharp swords.

 5 Be exalted, O God, above the heavens!
   Let your glory be over all the earth!

 6They set a net for my steps;
   my soul was bowed down.
They dug a pit in my way,
   but they have fallen into it themselves. 
                         Selah

7 My heart is steadfast, O God,
   my heart is steadfast!
I will sing and make melody!
 8 Awake, my glory!
Awake, O harp and lyre!
   I will awake the dawn!
9I will give thanks to you, O Lord, among the peoples;
   I will sing praises to you among the nations.
10For your steadfast love is great to the heavens,
   your faithfulness to the clouds.

 11 Be exalted, O God, above the heavens!
   Let your glory be over all the earth!

Unexpected Tragic Events


 "At this junction of my life, I never saw what was about to take place.  Being the very sheltered daughter of a country doctor, life was simple, but hard.  My mother had died giving birth to me, and all along I had been daddy's right hand man.  We did everything together.  I had helped him as he was called out at midnight, candle in hand, to the farms all across the county.  I always went with him, even when I was very, very young.  Some one's loved one would begin banging on the door, and it was that clarion call that they were sick, or bleeding or even dying.  We would climb into our wagon, after daddy gathered up his bag of instruments, and set out to a farm somewhere down the old road that led from our place to what ever house we were called on to go.  

This one particular night, I remember arriving at the old abandoned shack at the edge of town.  No one had ever lived in it as long as I could think back.  The boy that had banged on our door couldn't have been over eight years old.  What were they doing squatting here?  Where had they come from? What were we going to find once we got there?  The little boy was scared, real scared.  He told my daddy his Pa had been shot.  I wanted to go to Sheriff McGuire's house, but Daddy said we needed to attend to the man right away.  When we got to the door, the lock had been pounded off by what looked like a rock.  What was left over, from that part of the door, was lying on the front porch like so many pieces of forgotten rubbish.  The woman that greeted us was sweating; her hair looked sleek, and out of place, in the light of only one candle, blood covered her hands.  What had happened here we did not know.  She was agitated as she led us to the corner of the room where on a small cot was a man whose shirt was bathed in crimson.   Daddy knelt down, tore open the shirt where the wound was, and went to work.  The man  groaned as pressure was applied by the expert touch of my Father.  Then something happened that changed my life forever.  A man; angry, dark, and wild rushed in, knocking the door off it's hinges, he had a gun in his hands, they were shaking as he shot the man lying on the cot in the head.  Then he turned the gun on my Daddy and put a bullet in his chest.  How come when tragedy strikes we are never truly prepared for it?"
I wrote this several weeks ago right before tragic circumstances happened in my life and to the lives that I love the most.  Writing is a passion, and I wrote this piece for a blog called Five Word Monologues.  If I look carefully at the time period just prior to the sad events, I can truly say that the Holy Spirit gave me some foreshadowing.  Writers use this technique to give the reader a clue what is going to happen in the story.  I remember thinking about a month ago, that I felt so very close to the Lord that maybe I was going to die.  I didn't, but it sure feels like death has surrounded me and those that I am closest to.  
Of course, the above monologue is fictional, but it is very symbolic.  Not that I am such a good writer that I crafted it ahead of time to be that way.  It has turned into an allegory of my life in some ways.  I am the little girl helping her daddy as he serves others by healing and restoring peoples hearts to see where true life is.  I have been doing this for a long time.  We serve, help, and bandage wounded souls that only Christ with His expert hands can heal.  These last few weeks though, I have watched as the one that I have served side by side with was shot in the chest.  Symbolically, of course, but it seems to feel the same.  A physician of the soul has been wounded, shot, and the tragedy of it all is it wasn't a stranger who pulled the trigger, it was those that had walked with him for almost two decades.  Then, once the trigger was pulled, others rushed to the man who pulled the trigger, who carried out the disaster, to comfort him, to console him, not the man bleeding and dying with a bullet in his chest. 
I am a Calvinist.  I believe in the sovereignty of God.  He is on His throne, and He does all things for our good.  I am holding on to these truths with my whole being.  I love Him, even while I watch the others that are wounded as they have been brought to my house for consolation, and direction.  I know now what it feels like to be the family member of one's spouse that has died.  Except, I have not been allowed to rejoice that my loved one is in Heaven with Jesus.  He is still here fighting the fight of faith, through the discouragement, the anguish of seeing others in pain, the betrayal, and the complete loss of everything familiar before February 25, 2008.  
My husband and I have walked through some very hard times in our lives.  We have not been immune to pain, suffering, and loss.  We brought his mother home to our house to die. He preached the funeral of his brother, who was murdered.  He buried both of his grandmothers. He lost his father at the age of six.  We began our married life being completely rejected by my side of the family.  I have over come abuse as a child.  God has always brought our good and His glory about in the hardest of days, and I know He will again.  Right now I only see the ones that I love bleeding from wounds in the chest.  I am fighting the bitter bile that comes up through my throat, and only by God's grace will I recover.  That reminds me of the scene in RingLord of the Rings where Frodo is talking to Gandalf in the Mines of Moriah.  Frodo notices that someone is following them.  Gandalf points out that it is Gollum their enemy.   Frodo says that Bilbo should have killed Gollum when he had the chance.  Gandalf says to Frodo, "who are you to deem out justice?  How do you know that Gollum doesn't still have a part to play in the quest?"  Those of us that think that we know what true justice is, don't really want real justice carried out on our behalf!  Who is to say that Gollum isn't the real hero at the end of the story? After all Frodo's strength failed.  He couldn't part with the ring.  What if Gollum had not been there to bite off Frods's finger and fall into Mount Doom?  God will use it all, and redeem it all.  Even the Gollum's, the bullets, the betrayals, the wounds, the pain, all of it, or else His Resurrection is in vain.   
This time, awaiting the restoration.......




Related Posts with Thumbnails
Praise God!