Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Decking the Halls


The King is coming. The King is coming. 

Can you imagine if someone told you a king was coming to your house for dinner? Oh, the dust bunnies would quiver in their hiding places. What would you serve? Quail and pomegranate. What crimson carpet would you unfurl at your front steps? Movie star welcome. 

I LOVE decorating for Christmas. Each year, I delight in the puzzle to re-purpose all of my supplies into a new spectacle for the eyes. A visual feast. I start from scratch each year. I'll spend two hours ornamenting a garland that I will dismantle in 10 minutes come January. 

As I drove home last night in the early darkness, I thought about my decorations. The sugar-crusted faux fruit and iridescent balls. Magenta. Flame orange. Peacock green. Beauty revealed but once a year and I remembered that I was decorating for a king. A king who doesn't need grandeur, but infinitely deserving of it. The King. 

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Blessed




The youth of the church gathered a few months ago to lead the worship service. It was the close of summer and nervous teens took turns climbing alter steps to offer up their testimonies about recent mission trips. They stood small behind the carved lectern. Hesitant, but committed. A trickling, then torrent, of verbs and adjectives poured forth of their experiences. Laughter bubbled from the audience at times and humbled silence followed at others. These students realized that through seeing others' pain and need, did they understand what it meant to be blessed in their own lives. 

The stories ended. Slowly, each teen navigated through the maze of dark pews. Acoustic guitar music surrounded them as each song line repeated, "We were blessed...We were blessed..." One after the other came forward again. Shoulders lined shoulders to stand on the alter and raise a handmade sign branded with that common word. Blessed. Blessed. Blessed. I was moved. Literally. I scrambled from my rear seat in the dark cavern sanctuary. My husband edged me on, "Go, Honey, go." I knew he felt it too. Front and center, I clicked photos from my camera phone. It was too powerful a moment not to capture.  

While school peers may have chosen music camp or sports camp, these rare few chose mission camp. Awkward, nervous, shy, bold, pimpled, beautiful.  To see the love of our Lord surge forth in a generation often labeled as adversary, we were blessed for having witnessed it. Blessed.   

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Incognito


"We may ignore, but we can nowhere evade, the presence of God. The world is crowded with Him. He walks everywhere incognito. And the incognito is not always hard to penetrate. The real labour is to remember, to attend. In fact, to come awake. Still more, to remain awake." - from Letters to Malcolm: Chiefly on Prayer by C.S. Lewis

Incognito. The birds' chatter concerto. The perfect flight of an arrow. A smiling, bubble-foamed baby swirling round the bathtub. Seemingly painted legs of a hopping grass eater.

Can we recognize the incognito? Discern it among the ocean of noise that floods our days?

More so, if we can find God in the beauty, can we find Him in the burden? The life-application notes of my Bible explain to me, "God does not keep us from encountering life's storms, but he will see us through them. In fact, God walks through these storms with us and rescues us." Can we pause between the rain drops and lightning bolts to seek our rescuer, to cry out before the incognito and awake? I wonder.

Saturday, October 22, 2011

Yummy Mummies



Chocolate cupcakes.
Strips of vanilla icing.
Candy dot eyes.
Black gel icing for pupil center.

The only cupcake paper liners I had were for Valentine's Day. Covered in fuchsia hearts. Why not? Everyone should love their mummy.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Never Land








Never Land. An underground passage that escapes the tick of time. Crocodile hungry time, that wears on hearts and souls and bodies, etching grooves in cracks of skin, deep as canals. The Lost Boys are there and the Mermaids, too. That cast of unforgettable characters in life that make you forget the tick tock, tick tock, as chapter after chapter closes in the novel of life. The friends of mischief, the beauties of compassion, those you love in laughter and lamentations. Fold them close and find your way to Never Land.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

September Saturday

Brown sunflowers. My favorite.
A toasted version of the golden child flower.

My son. A haystack guardian.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Flapjacks with Daddy



The Golden Arches. And pancakes? While many children may associate McDonald's with cheesy burgers and nuggets of chicken crispiness, my boys think about breakfast. My husband has started a new tradition. On hectic mornings or rainy mornings or random mornings, he will splurge on our sons with a flapjack treat. Sometimes he brings the dynamic duo together to tackle a short stack or two. Other times, it's one on one and each child alone basks in the glory of Daddy's limelight and the sweet buttermilk goodness. Whatever the combination, it gives our men-in-the-making a chance to connect with their father in the calm of morning, over the smell of bacon, before busy days burst forth and where a dialogue begins that will hopefully never end.

"Listen, my sons, to a father's instruction; pay attention and gain understanding." - Proverbs 4:1