Sunday, November 24, 2013

Thanks Giving

"Thanksgiving." A painting by Doris Lee.



The first Thanksgivings were harvest festivals where families and friends gathered to enjoy the fruits of their labors. We can imagine the women and children bustling in the kitchen and pantry areas perhaps for days to prepare a feast of pies,various sweets and breads, garden vegetables, and meats.

The thought of getting together, eating together and giving thanks together before winter weather must have exited the children for weeks before the actual event.



Today, kitchen technology has made life much easier. We don't have to spend days preparing our family feast. We can even order take-out with all the trimmings from Hy-Vee. Traditional foods are still anticipated along with time off from work, visiting with family and friends and early holiday sales.




While listening to morning Christian radio,
an announcer encouraged listeners to call in
and share what they were thankful for.
Unanimous answers were--
family,
friends,
work,
community,
church
and God.


Although these are typically our most-praised blessings, I'm asking you to "think outside the box." In another words, give thanks for family, friends, work, community, your church, and especially praise God and, then, do a little creative thinking.

What else are you thankful for?

I started thinking of the spontaneous events
and persons who occasionally appear in my life
that have brought joy in an unforgettable way.

Let me give you some examples.

While traveling to Texas to visit grandchildren, I boarded the plane and approached my seat, 19E, where bubble gum was smeared on the seat and in the seat belt strap. I called the flight attendant and asked if there were an open seat elsewhere. I was directed to the only empty seat on the plane next to a lady named Darlene. Darlene and I talked from DesMoines to Denver non-stop. I gained a new friend.







At a recent workshop in October on marketing and writing, I met Sharon, another writer. We swapped books, started emailing, and I eventually lined up a speaking engagement for her in my home town. Another friend.












Traveling home on I-35 one day, my husband spontaneously called his sister. "Want to meet for supper in Ames?" "Sure," she replied, "I'll bring Sydney." A college freshman and attending ISU on track scholarship, Sydney was delightful company. The rest of the trip home no longer seemed long.









Arriving home from an extended trip, I walked the next morning and had to shout for joy as the sun rose. I felt the scene was created just for me!




Give thanks for family, friends, your work, your community.
But, above all, give thanks to God for everything good in your life.
And, then, constantly seek it....
A smile from a friend
A job well done
Reconnecting with someone from the past
Meeting someone new
God's awesome creation.



"I have come that they may have life, and that they may have it more abundantly." John 10:10

"A cheerful heart has a continual feast." Proverbs 15:15



Dear Lord, You have given me many reasons to celebrate life. Today, help me find joy in simple and spontaneous happenings. May my behavior and attitudes reflect your incredible love for me.
To God be the glory.
Amen

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Little Things

Why is it that
it is the
little things in life
that drive us crazy?

I have just moved.... into a smaller house...
that wasn't decorated to my liking...
Hmmmm....
After a month, boxes are still unpacked...

I lost my favorite brownie recipe....
The carpet hasn't been cleaned...
I need another book shelf for all my books...
a smaller one to fit into my smaller room...
Hmmmm....
I haven't worked out in ages....
I need a haircut....
My fingernail polish is from the dark ages...

Notice the me, me, me... in all this?


 
 
Every day of my life
was recorded in your book...
before a single day had passed.
How precious are your thoughts about me,
O' God!
Psalm 130: 16-17
 
 
God is having precious thoughts about me and I'm letting little things like nail polish, a roomful of boxes, and a lost brownie recipe irritate me?
 
 
Hello...?
 
And, yet, according to Matthew 10: 29-31
....the very hairs of your head are all numbered...
So, God does care about little things...


 
...even the hairs on my head--the head that needs a haircut and more...
 

 
It was the little things on 9-11--
when the towers crashed and thundered down
--that saved some lives.
Did you know
that one man was late to work because he had to pick up donuts?
Another lady's alarm clock didn't go off;
one spilled food on her clothes the last minute
and took time to change;
another's car would not start.
And, yet, another was late due to new shoes.
New shoes?
Yes, the new shoes caused a blister,
and he stopped to buy a bandaid at a drug store.
 
Little things....
 
Where am I going with this?
These "little things"--picking up donuts, a dysfunctional alarm clock, spilled food, a blister saved someone's life on that particular day.
Don't let the little things get you down...
they just might be a part of God's greater plan for your life.
 
Remember, God knows the number of hairs on your head (no matter how it looks today).
 
I'm going to buy a brownie, pull my hair back in a ponytail and say a prayer of thanks for a God who loves me and you with incredible love.
 
Thou dost keep her in perfect peace
whose mind is stayed on thee.
Isaiah 26:3
 



Saturday, November 2, 2013

A Morning Walk, Ancient Paths, and Peace








I couldn't help but think of the Bible verse . .


Stand by the roads and look and ask for the ancient paths
where the good way is
and walk in it
and find rest for your souls . . .

     when I studied the sign.

 
I thought about the phrases
"minimum maintenance,"
and "road not plowed,"
and although the road was not an ancient path,
the sign enticed me.





Should I take the
enter at your own risk
road or stick to my
usual morning route?



I studied the country trees tunneling the road and the occasional wild roses
highlighting the ditch grass.



Joyce Rupp's
Deep is calling into deep.
Stop standing before the dark, empty cave.
Take a step. Let go. Walk in.
Just like the seed must fall into the dark,
deep black soil,
so must I enter into the darkness,
go where there is mystery.






Startling me but without a sound,
two deer sprung from one side of the road to another
and disappeared into a drying cornfield.


Black-eyed Susans stretched toward the eastern horizon.




As the gravel grunched beneath my footsteps,
I took one step after another
and noticed ordinary beauty.










Breathing in morning coolness, I quickened my pace and
Leaving the cemetery, ancient paths, rest for your soul. . . thoughts lingered.
approached an aged cemetery. Unhooking the rusted wire that held the gate shut, I wandered among the burial stones with names and dates from decades past faded by sunlight, wind, time.















Fifty or more steps further, I stood at the
edge of the ditch to view a large stone
with a crown of fall-colored, wild flowers.

Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from Me. . .
Matthew 11:28 +









And even further...
a rock pile of huge proportions
landscaped by clipped grass
and cornfields . . .










As I walked an incline and looked ahead,
I delighted in how the fog blanketed the dips in the road.
A covey of blackbirds--big and noisy--
called out their day's agenda.



Reaching the end of the mile, I turned to
retrace my steps
to be greeted by sunrise--
eagerly seeking the horizon.
Filled with joy,
I felt like a child.

Then my soul will rejoice in the Lord and delight in his salvation.
Psalm 35:9





Being touched by His
creation welcoming me to a new day,
I remembered God's promise given
thousands of years ago:

The way of salvation has been marked since the beginning of times.
Deuteronomy 32:7


You have made known to me the path of life; you will fill me with you in your presence, with eternal pleasures at your right hand.
Psalm 16:11


Donna Carter in her book, 10 Smart Things Women Can Do To Build A Better Life, recommends that we live generously, offload stress, and grasp grace. Perhaps one of the easiest ways to accomplish these things is to

Be still and know that I am God.



Take a different route today.

Expect unexpected blessings.



Thou dost keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee.
Isaiah 26: 3