Musings on Marriage

Month: February 2015

I Wonder as I Wander

Dear Daughters,

Last night I was taking a short walk after dinner when the spring night was clear, crisp and cool.  It is not officially Spring according to the calendar but it certainly feels like it here in Idaho.  Typically I look down at my feet as I walk in the dark making sure I don’t trip on a tumble weed or a little critter scampering across my path.  Tonight, though, I looked up into the starry, starry night and the song I Wonder as I Wander came to mind.Weed

I wonder as I wander, out under the sky,

How Jesus the Savior did come for to die.

For poor, ornery people like you and like I

I wonder as I wander, out under the sky.

Just before I left the house I made a snide remark to Dad about some trivial thing he did to annoy me.  Then as I was looking into the sky I suddenly heard the thought

Get out of your own little world and open up to the Big Story that God has for you.       

 Far too often I get caught up in what I can see directly around me, in front of me, and to the side.  Then I wonder about Jesus our Savior who came for to die.  Certainly He wouldn’t have come to live, suffer and die, his only intent being to give his followers a ticket to heaven.Rainbow

During this season of Lent, a time of waiting and pondering the suffering of Jesus Christ, I am drawn to this statement of His: “If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me.  For whoever wants to save his live will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it.”  Matthew 16:24-25 In marriage it is so important to lose our life because that is distinctly how we will save it.  Being annoyed by trivial comments, complaining about dirty socks on the floor, arguing over what movie to watch are simply distractions to keep us in those lesser, smaller stories.          

 Knowing the Bigger Story in which we are living certainly makes our lives and our choices more significant.  Almost everyone has a longing to be part of something bigger than their own little sphere of influence.  There must be more to life than the day in day out grind of work, tending children, eating meals, changing diapers, watching basketball games, looking for hearing aids….

Philosophers call this longing to be a part of a Bigger Story transcendence.  It is the desire to make a difference in the world, to be bound together in some heroic purpose with others of like mind and spirit.  John Eldredge in his book The Sacred Romance, writes so eloquently about God’s incredible pursuit for people who will take a step into a larger story, a story that will consume all their life and desire. SacredRomance That story is the narrative of God pursuing His people, and His people responding by letting their hearts be turned toward and molded by their loving Heavenly Father.

We all love a good story – fairy tales, romances, epics, biographies – any adventure story is worth telling.  The Bible is full of stories about people who have loved, hated, obeyed, rebelled, worshipped, lamented, grieved, rejoiced, failed – people who have experienced every emotion that you have.  You will find that the people who are the most memorable, the ones who have the finest stories are those who understood the Bigger Story.

Consider Joseph.  Sold into slavery and forgotten by his brothers, he became the best slave that he could.  Wrongly accused by his boss’s wife he was thrown into prison for years, and he became the most honorable prisoner that he could.  He knew and believed that there was a Bigger Story of which he was a part.  Because he knew and trusted the Hero of the story, he was free to forgive and wait patiently on God to do whatever He saw fit to do.  Later, God’s story became evident when Joseph was appointed second-in-command over all Egypt in order to save many from starvation during the famine that was to come.

Many people in the Bible knew that they were a part of a Bigger Story.  Others were simply caught up in their own small stories of control and gratification. For many years I struggled to control our family, to make you all do things that I thought were best.  Inevitably God let those plans disintegrate because He wanted me to step into the larger story, giving you daughters and Dad to Him.  God, the Hero of the Bigger Story, has immeasurably greater plans that far surpass anything I could ever imagine for all of you.

I used to think that I needed to be the answer woman and have all the right words for everyone, including you girls, but now my favorite phrase is “You better ask God for wisdom about that one.”  My greatest desire is that each of you will seek God on your own, looking for your place in the Bigger Story, listening, learning and loving.  I can point you to God’s heart, His love of forgiveness, reconciliation, compassion, helping the oppressed, and then I can stand back in awe, watching each of you making those choices that will bring you into the Bigger Story.

I am constantly amazed that Jesus came to die for poor ornery people like you and like I.  He loves us just as we are, but has plans for so much more – because Heroes are just like that.

Love, Mom

It’s Not My Fault

Dear Daughters,

I remember the first time I led worship last year at Westwood Church.  I had just finished welcoming the people and launched into the beginning song which was energetic, loud, and fast.  When the worship team started (3 guitars, drums, bongos, 2 singers and me on the piano) I suddenly heard a minor chord and immediately thought “OK which of those guitars are playing the wrong chord?”  Then, to my horror, I looked down at my hands and saw that it was me!  In my nervousness I had placed my hands in the wrong position and was playing an A minor chord instead of a G major.  I quickly moved into the right position, and perhaps nobody heard, but I was astounded and saddened at my eagerness to blame someone else for my mistake.Piano (3)

In Battlefield of the Mind, Joyce Meyer entitles Wilderness Mentality #6:

It’s Somebody Else’s Fault.

 

How quick we all are to pin the blame on someone else and,  of course, it’s nothing new.  Starting in the Garden of Eden the serpent tempted Eve and both she and Adam disobeyed.  When God came around and found them hiding in the bushes from their shame He asked them for the story.  Immediately Adam blamed Eve, Eve blamed the serpent, and now we all continue in that sad tradition.  It is a rare person who is willing to say, I made a mistake, it was my fault, and I take full responsibility.

In the desert the Israelites complained that all of their problems were the fault of Moses and God.  It was easier to blame Moses for their inconveniences than try to be grateful that God fed them every day, never allowed their shoes to wear out, led them with a cloud both day and night, provided water from a rock – to name just a few ways of how God cared for them.

Another interesting story from the Bible: When Sarah and Abraham had tired of waiting many years for the child God had promised them, they decided to take charge of the situation themselves.  Trying to help God out a little Sarah suggested that Abraham sleep with her maid.  Abraham complied and Hagar, the servant girl, conceived.  Later, of course, Hagar starting boasting and bragging about her pregnancy because Sarah was still barren, so there was strife in the household.  And what did Sarah do?  She blamed Abraham for sleeping with Hagar and producing a child, even though it was her idea in the first place.  Humanity has really not changed much over the millennium.Water (2)

For several decades of our marriage, I’m sad to say, I was the Queen of Blame.   I didn’t always say it out loud, but often in my head I would think “If Dad wouldn’t have done that, this wouldn’t have happened.”  In fact Dad has said recently that the hardest time in our marriage was when I blamed him for the lifestyle that some of you lived for a time.  I remember thinking (much to my embarrassment and shame all these years later) that I was such a wonderful mother, and that if he were as good a father as I was a mother, our daughters would be so much better.  Lord have mercy!  Such arrogance, pride, and all that other stuff that God hates.

Somehow in my deluded way of thinking, I thought I was speaking facts when blaming Dad for circumstances in our family.  Oh how deceived I was until by God’s grace He opened my eyes and I saw how I was most certainly a variable in the equation of problems in our family.  Not that I never accused him again, but I understood that my judgmental attitude was doing nothing but dividing, and certainly not conquering the circumstances.

You remember whenever traveling by airplane there is always the speech about the oxygen mask, “Put on your own mask first, and then assist others around you.”  It reminds me of the blame game.  We cannot help anyone unless we are first honest, forgiven, and open to God’s work in our own lives.  We need to let Him change us before we can ever be of help to another person.Pikespeak (4)

So…. I am learning to train my mind and my mouth to take responsibility for when I fail.  I have learned to say, “I was wrong.”  Taking responsibility for our actions takes courage, but it also takes the Holy Spirit to open our eyes to face the truth about ourselves.  When we blame others for our attitudes and actions we are not able to see the truth about ourselves.  It truly takes an act of God to open our eyes, but if you ask He will certainly make it known to you.  It’s a bit scary, and it will be painful but oh so freeing.

It’s so easy to blame our moods on other people.  But I love a quote from Joyce:

People can take a lot of things away from you, but no one can take away your good attitude.

If we ask God to show us where we are in error, he certainly will.  It is not easy to see ourselves for who we truly are, but as Jesus said

You will know the truth and the truth will set you free.Tulips

Love, Mom

I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the light.

3 John 4

I Shouldn’t Have to Wait

 

Dear Daughters,

I cringe every time I read about the Israelites traveling through the desert because I feel like I am often just like them. Even though they had been freed from horribly oppressive slavery in Egypt they repeatedly wandered around, complaining, impatient, depressed and discouraged.Joyce3

In  Joyce Meyer’s Battlefield of the Mind we find #5 of the Wilderness Mentalities:

I shouldn’t have to wait.

Now that’s a good one for our immediate gratification society of which we have become such a part.  When you consider that everything around us screams that we should have it our way now, we deserve the best now, we need fast food fast, pain relief now, it’s quite a shocker that God would actually expect us to wait.

The beautiful thing about God, though, is that He doesn’t change just because our society changes.  Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today, and forever.  If He expected people thousands of years ago to wait for Him then He expects us to wait as well.

If you haven’t experienced this already in your life, I will tell you a fact that I’ve learned: God is not efficient.  He is in absolutely no hurry to give you what you think you want or need.  When I got sick three years ago and had to quit teaching school mid-year, I was certain that I just needed a few months of rest and then would be back to school in the fall.

God had different plans.SnowRiver

Having  struggled with insomnia for over ten years, by February 2012 my body simply would not go on.  Being so tired, exhausted, completely spent and still not able to sleep well had cast a long shadow over a decade of my life.  So I finally collapsed, able to go no longer.  The majority of my days were spent alone on the couch, so fatigued, wilted like a flower.  Meds had helped me survive through many years – barely – but now I was weary of life, exhausted and still unable to sleep, night or day without artificial help.

So often when challenging circumstances come, we ask the question, “Why is this happening to me?”  We all have plans for our lives, good things we want for our kids, for us, our marriages, our husbands  –  and most of them have not yet happened.  But how would our attitudes change if we asked the question, “Why is this happening for me?”

As I lay on the couch I became impatient, depressed, discouraged.  Around this time of despondency I got a package in the mail from Aunt Rhonda.  It was a CD by Laura Story, and included the song Blessings in which she sings:

…what if your blessings come through raindrops,

what if your healing comes through tears,

what if a thousand sleepless nights are what it takes to know You’re near….

I had never heard the song before and as I listened to the words I wept, I felt as if the song had been written for me.  As months went by and still so little recovery, I lamented that my physical healing was not happening as I waited.  Yet something better was happening – a change in my heart.FallNMI

When my body collapsed and was subjected to hours on the couch I needed God and Dad more than I ever had before.  I couldn’t shop for groceries, I rarely left the house.  I had to learn that my identity was being a child of God, not doing all those things that had become such a part of my life – a music teacher, mother, preacher’s wife, Bible Study leader….

Before I got sick I was proud of who I was, what I could do, and often I didn’t feel as if I really needed God all that much.  Sure, I went to church every Sunday, attended Bible studies, I even read the Bible on my own once in a while.  But over all I was self-confident about what I did.  I had gifts, I had talents and I used them for God.  Independence, the ability to do things on my own was what I loved.

But now I had to allow Dad to take care of me, do most of the stuff I used to do.  Interestingly, as he did, my love for him grew.  We talked better than we ever had, we were honest about things that in the past we had simply let slide.

God uses marriage and other hardships as a crucible to refine us, heal us, teach us to love, and above all become like Him in character, especially learning that difficult trait called patience, learning to wait.

So often we want to have a life that is happy and trouble-free.  Everyone wants their own Utopia.  But history has proven over and over again that when our lives are easy, everything going our way, we forget God.  Only when circumstances come that are out of our control, do we cry out for help.Road (2)

Throughout the Bible, in story after story, people forget about God when times are good.  So God lovingly allows a little misery and hardship to come.  Inevitably there is repentance, sorrow and sadness from the people who had tried to live without God.  And as always, God has mercy and grace and forgives His people time after time, year after year, century after century.  It’s often only when we are hurting, wounded, and weakened that we cry out to God for help.  When you stop to think about it, it’s quite a self-centered way to live, but it’s typical human nature.  As I look on my life I had behaved exactly the same way.

I have learned that God is never in a hurry to change us, never in a hurry to demand we be more loving, more submissive, more compassionate.  He knows our weaknesses, our brokenness, our struggles and he simply encourages us every day to wait on Him and trust  the Holy Spirit to change us and our marriages moment by moment, day by day, year after year.  Then slowly, gradually, we will grow to be the women that God has intended us to be.Flowers (3)

Before I was afflicted I went astray, but now I obey your word.

You are good and what you do is good: teach me your decrees.

Psalm 119:67-68

Love, Mom

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Bury the Complaining

Dear Daughters,

I recently read the book Joni and Ken – an Untold Love Story  and found it intriguing.  Because Joni and Ken Tada were so famous and had flown all over the world encouraging others with disabilities, I had always figured that they had a most wonderful, stress-free marriage.  Not so.  In the book they were both honest and vulnerable about their struggles.  Their story fits very well with Joyce Meyers’s Wilderness Mentality #4: Grumbling, faultfinding, and complaining, taken from her book Battlefield of the Mind.

Joyce3 Joyce starts off the chapter with the verses from 1 Peter 2:19-20.

For it is commendable if a man bears up under the pain of unjust suffering, because he is conscious of God…..But if you suffer for doing good and you endure it, this is commendable before God. 

Obviously if we live in this world we are going to suffer – it’s simply a part of life.  God, of course, walks with us through every part of our suffering, but He desires that we honor Him in the midst of our suffering.

When the Israelites suffered in the desert they made sure that Moses and Aaron knew whenever they were miserable, which seemed to be their chosen chronic condition.  They grumbled, they murmured, they blamed Moses for anything that brought them out of their comfort zone.  They were not about to be patient or trust God even though they had seen miracle after miracle – which is the reason it took 40 years to make what could have been an 11-day trip.Desert5

The same is true with us.  If we continue to grumble and complain, our marriages will not improve, in fact they will probably sour and begin to crumble.  We will go through the same petty arguments, the same minor incidents becoming major battles.  Complaining simply poisons our heart toward God.   It’s not until we decide to trust God right where we are – in the midst of our suffering, in the middle of our storms – that we will enable Him to do the work He desires to do in our marriage.

Back to the Tadas: The simple fact that Ken was willing to marry Joni, who is a quadriplegic, is amazing to me.  After 25 years of marriage he was still committed, but getting weary of the care and the constant battling with health issues; then there was breast cancer and debilitating chronic pain.  But one day as Ken was out alone on a lake fishing, he heard a clear voice in his mind saying “Joni is the most precious gift I have given to you.  You take care of her.”OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Knowing that the thought was from God, he gradually accepted the fact that caring for his wife was the most important thing he was called to do in this life.  So often he had been caught up in the physical sameness of life.  Taking care of Joni and her immense physical needs was on top of all the normal ups and downs that marriage entails, and he had started to weary, complain, grumble and escape emotionally.

Everyday life often gets us bogged down in the mundane details that we tire of so easily.  It is then that we need to remember that caring for the people that God has put closest to us is the most important thing we can do.  It’s more important than our job title, our income or the cleanliness of our home.  We, of course, need His strength and wisdom to love those He has entrusted us with, and He is always willing to give it when we ask.

Then I got thinking about my marriage.  Over the years I have complained more than I like to admit.  Finally I am learning to shut my mouth when I need to and listen to Dad, value him, encourage him with my words.  No more grumbling or complaining – giving thanks and praise no matter what we are going through is much more worthwhile and gives joy abundant.  I have learned that true love grows over time – lots of time – and if we are simply committed, faithful, and bury the complaining, God will bless beyond our wildest expectations.FallsID

Your husband is the most precious gift that God has given you, take care of him.

Love, Mom

I have no greater joy than to hear that my children are walking in the truth.

3 John 4

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