I honestly don't even know where to begin. So many things clogging up my brain!
Several of my family members are in a health crisis, we have two "less than desirable" candidates vying to run our country, upheaval across the country in racial divides and a lack of trust/support in our police officers.
I'll start with the police officers because that one seems the most "simple" to put it very mildly. Across the country Americans are saying (and rightly so) that you cannot judge someone based on their skin color, that you cannot know a person based on what they look like. THIS IS ABSOLUTELY TRUE! Why then, I wonder, can the same principle not be applied to police officers? Is EVERY person "in blue" to be judged the same? Yes, there are a few bad apples in every bunch, but that is true for every group of people and every demographic. I guess, my question is, why is it ok to say that you can't judge a black person and assume they're up to no good based on skin color (cause, DUH, you can't!) when it seems the same people that are raising this battle cry are using the same process against police officers. Yes, SOME police officers may take their authority too far, but definitely not all of them. It seems to me that arguments like that are simply trying to put out a fire with gasoline.
As far as the racial divides in our country go, mostly what I have to say about that is: just stop it! People are people. I did not live through the 1960s so my knowledge of the civil rights movement is from history books and my grandparents and parents, but I do know that racism is taught. My mother grew up in Mississippi in the early 1960s, (picture an adorable little white girl), and she told me a story once about her wanting to play with a neighbor girl down the road, and the girls father held out a finger and told my mom that she shouldn't be down this way and led her home. The only reason she shouldn't have been down that way was because the other family was black. This makes me sick. My mom said she remembers wondering why she wasn't allowed to play there but she took the mans hand and he walked her home. My grandfather was also raised in Mississippi, he easily could have taught his children to avoid/dislike black people, but he didn't. Because my grandfather, who grew up in the 1930s south knew better than what was being taught around him. His parents knew that people are people, created by God to love and be loved.
I think when we stop segregating achievements we will maybe truly have integrated our country. Please don't get me wrong, I understand that getting an award or discovering a planet or something is a big deal, but why must we so narrowly pigeon hole everything? When a person of any sort of ethnicity is given an award or gains an achievement, why do we need to add an asterisk? Why does it need to be "Jane Doe, wins the Harvey Porter Award, *The second black woman to win). While I understand the reason for saying things like that, I think it only furthers the divide.
I dislike that America is called a "melting pot" I disagree. Come with me on this :) Say you have 15 different cheeses and you put them all in a pot to melt together, when they're all melted and liquid, can you then pull out the Cheddar from the Asiago? NO! Because they have become ONE! If you want to think of America in terms of potted food, how about a chowder? Some of it has blended together but you can still pull out individual chunks that distinguish themselves from the rest! Isn't that the way we want it? We don't want "Stepford America" we love the different cultures and backgrounds that we have everywhere! Considering that technically most of us are immigrants (from however far back we need to go) we've kept parts of our cultures intact! We celebrate Cinco de Mayo, St. Patrick's Day, some even celebrate Bastille day! We should be encouraging our kids to step outside of their "Mayberry's or Leave it to Beaver, heck or even Springfield or Quahog" to see beyond what they see with their eyes. .
Please understand that these are just my opinions and I'm sure if I ran for president I would lose handily lol, but I take heart in the fact that God has not only a plan for us, but this election, and it's...erm...candidates...have a purpose.
I know that as a country we need to do better. Better for OUR citizens, elderly, children, people that just need a helping hand, before we continue to throw billions at other countries. There's nothing wrong with people coming to our country, heck, that's how most of our relatives got here, right? But the system is broken, many of our countries systems are broken, don't get me started on healthcare lol, that's a whole 'nother post!
I think it boils down to prayer, faith and trust. Trust that God hears your prayers and have faith that He is doing what is best for us.
Monday, October 17, 2016
Wednesday, July 20, 2016
Picking at scars.
To say that I'm a "thinker" is a vast understatement; I'm an "over thinker" of the worst kind. Simple statements made to me can have me picking them apart for hours, days and even longer! I love people hugely and unabashedly. I spent a lot of time in my younger years, trying not to be noticed, until I realized that "HEY! Maybe someone needs or wants to hear what I have to say too"! Frankly, at this point, I tend to say things whether or not it's needed or wanted!
The point of this particular writing, is attachment. I get attached to people very easily. I am very sentimental and very thoughtful. Have you ever wanted to have that friend that would remember you said you like blue elephant pencil toppers (or something just as random) during a conversation 7 months ago and surprise you with it for your birthday? That's me. I have a knack for remembering birthday's and other small details about people that honestly I have to keep to myself sometimes so I don't sound like a psycho!
I tend to dive into friendships with both feet, lol, I'm kind of like a puppy, I'm just so happy to have a friend and to be a friend that I so very often overlook painfully obvious signs of being used by people. I help too often, I give too frequently, and I care too much, at least this is what I'm told by some. I get my heart broken sometimes.
It hurts when a friend moves on without you. Especially when for years they were as close as family. I try to remember that God sometimes puts people in our lives for a season and not for a lifetime, and that the lessons to be learned may not be something that was for me but for the other person, part of me prays that I was a helping hand and not a stumbling block for them, the other part of me is in pain. I also try to remember that when God takes someone out of our lives, we need to let them go. Too often, we try to hold onto something that isn't what God knows is in anyone's best interest. I feel like it's when we're kids and we want to touch that red thing on the stove, mom says it's hot, but maybe we just need to see for ourselves, so we reach out and touch it and we get burned and realize that mom was right! She was trying to look out for us, but we had to get hurt to realize that if we'd listened to her we wouldn't have had to go through that.
The part of me that misses my friend still gets a stabbing feeling in my heart when I see some of those old pictures or think of some of those hundreds of memories. We went through a lot together, and the optimistic, happy puppy side of me thought we'd be friends forever. I'll get over it. Don't roll your eyes! I will!! I'm sure in some way I will always miss my friend, I don't know that I've ever had a friend like that, nor if I ever will, or for that matter, if I even can again.
I can still have friends of course! I can be a GREAT friend!! I AM a great friend and I will help too often, and give too frequently, and care too much about my friends! Because that's what friends do! But I won't forget the friend that took too much.
I learned again in the last few months that Godly forgiveness means forgiving a person even when that other person didn't say they were sorry. It's very true, it's VERY difficult to forgive at all, especially when the person you're forgiving isn't apologizing! But, again, I was reminded in last few months that when you hold onto bitterness or anger it's like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.
I am surrounded by wonderful, God-loving, God-fearing, amazing, people. I don't think there are enough adjectives to describe them! They pray for me, they encourage me, and they are my friends. We laugh, we cry, we talk in funny voices, we comfort, we console, we grieve and we worship together.
The point of this particular writing, is attachment. I get attached to people very easily. I am very sentimental and very thoughtful. Have you ever wanted to have that friend that would remember you said you like blue elephant pencil toppers (or something just as random) during a conversation 7 months ago and surprise you with it for your birthday? That's me. I have a knack for remembering birthday's and other small details about people that honestly I have to keep to myself sometimes so I don't sound like a psycho!
I tend to dive into friendships with both feet, lol, I'm kind of like a puppy, I'm just so happy to have a friend and to be a friend that I so very often overlook painfully obvious signs of being used by people. I help too often, I give too frequently, and I care too much, at least this is what I'm told by some. I get my heart broken sometimes.
It hurts when a friend moves on without you. Especially when for years they were as close as family. I try to remember that God sometimes puts people in our lives for a season and not for a lifetime, and that the lessons to be learned may not be something that was for me but for the other person, part of me prays that I was a helping hand and not a stumbling block for them, the other part of me is in pain. I also try to remember that when God takes someone out of our lives, we need to let them go. Too often, we try to hold onto something that isn't what God knows is in anyone's best interest. I feel like it's when we're kids and we want to touch that red thing on the stove, mom says it's hot, but maybe we just need to see for ourselves, so we reach out and touch it and we get burned and realize that mom was right! She was trying to look out for us, but we had to get hurt to realize that if we'd listened to her we wouldn't have had to go through that.
The part of me that misses my friend still gets a stabbing feeling in my heart when I see some of those old pictures or think of some of those hundreds of memories. We went through a lot together, and the optimistic, happy puppy side of me thought we'd be friends forever. I'll get over it. Don't roll your eyes! I will!! I'm sure in some way I will always miss my friend, I don't know that I've ever had a friend like that, nor if I ever will, or for that matter, if I even can again.
I can still have friends of course! I can be a GREAT friend!! I AM a great friend and I will help too often, and give too frequently, and care too much about my friends! Because that's what friends do! But I won't forget the friend that took too much.
I learned again in the last few months that Godly forgiveness means forgiving a person even when that other person didn't say they were sorry. It's very true, it's VERY difficult to forgive at all, especially when the person you're forgiving isn't apologizing! But, again, I was reminded in last few months that when you hold onto bitterness or anger it's like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.
I am surrounded by wonderful, God-loving, God-fearing, amazing, people. I don't think there are enough adjectives to describe them! They pray for me, they encourage me, and they are my friends. We laugh, we cry, we talk in funny voices, we comfort, we console, we grieve and we worship together.
Wednesday, March 30, 2016
Fathers
I've been thinking lately about fathers. The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly. In my circle of friends and family I've seen all of the above. This post however is not to offer a critique I guess but more to ask a few questions and state a few things that I don't understand.
I don't understand a father that is uninterested in his child(ren). Or a father that uses his children as leverage or as bait.
I understand the basic principle that it's rooted in selfishness and a desire to put self above all else, and I get that mothers (usually) are wired differently, but maybe it's my experiences with my own biological father and some fathers around me that have me scratching my head.
Do absent fathers or "barely there" fathers understand what they're doing to their kids? I'm kind of torn on this one, on one hand I hope they don't know because it's just painful to witness, and on the other hand, I hope they DO know, because they should know what they're causing. Being "abandoned", "forgotten", "dismissed" or "rejected" messes with a kid.
When your dad is supposed to pick you up at 3 and he doesn't get there until 3:30 or 3:45 that matters to a kid. When calls don't come, or holiday gifts are "lost in the mail" or visits get constantly rescheduled it matters to a kid.
Children internalize things; the fact that their dad is late, to them, may mean that he's late because he doesn't want to be there. And that may not be the case, but generally speaking, if you want to be somewhere, you usually bother to show up on time.
I know that when I was a kid, it was so important for me to please my father, because I was so sure that the first time I did something wrong or displeasing, that he would disappear from my life again. So I would bend over backward to act the way I thought he wanted me to. I was a much better behaved person, more cooperative, less sassy than I was at my house.
In my mind, it was ok for me to be snarky and ill-behaved and "teenager-y" with my mom and dad (step-dad) because I knew they weren't going anywhere. They loved me unconditionally and proved it over and over again. I was unsure of my father.
It pains me to write this because even though I am well into adulthood, the sting of rejection is still there. I wonder if there is something I could've done better, something I shouldn't have done, or if I just wasn't the daughter he wanted?
But I do know that God works everything out for His glory and I have a wonderful dad, I had the worlds greatest grandpa and I have a Heavenly Father who loves me in spite of my failures.
In my circle of family and friends, I am surrounded by families that have AMAZING dads!! There are divorced families, single moms, step-families, and everything in between. There are dads that make me want to scream and cry and generally I just grit my teeth.
But then I see dads like my husband, who is everything I wished for a father for my child to have. He takes time for our son, he talks to him and with him, he teaches and guides, disciplines and instructs, he is a parent first, and then a friend.
I feel like I pretty much rambled through that, and I hope it made sense.
I don't understand a father that is uninterested in his child(ren). Or a father that uses his children as leverage or as bait.
I understand the basic principle that it's rooted in selfishness and a desire to put self above all else, and I get that mothers (usually) are wired differently, but maybe it's my experiences with my own biological father and some fathers around me that have me scratching my head.
Do absent fathers or "barely there" fathers understand what they're doing to their kids? I'm kind of torn on this one, on one hand I hope they don't know because it's just painful to witness, and on the other hand, I hope they DO know, because they should know what they're causing. Being "abandoned", "forgotten", "dismissed" or "rejected" messes with a kid.
When your dad is supposed to pick you up at 3 and he doesn't get there until 3:30 or 3:45 that matters to a kid. When calls don't come, or holiday gifts are "lost in the mail" or visits get constantly rescheduled it matters to a kid.
Children internalize things; the fact that their dad is late, to them, may mean that he's late because he doesn't want to be there. And that may not be the case, but generally speaking, if you want to be somewhere, you usually bother to show up on time.
I know that when I was a kid, it was so important for me to please my father, because I was so sure that the first time I did something wrong or displeasing, that he would disappear from my life again. So I would bend over backward to act the way I thought he wanted me to. I was a much better behaved person, more cooperative, less sassy than I was at my house.
In my mind, it was ok for me to be snarky and ill-behaved and "teenager-y" with my mom and dad (step-dad) because I knew they weren't going anywhere. They loved me unconditionally and proved it over and over again. I was unsure of my father.
It pains me to write this because even though I am well into adulthood, the sting of rejection is still there. I wonder if there is something I could've done better, something I shouldn't have done, or if I just wasn't the daughter he wanted?
But I do know that God works everything out for His glory and I have a wonderful dad, I had the worlds greatest grandpa and I have a Heavenly Father who loves me in spite of my failures.
In my circle of family and friends, I am surrounded by families that have AMAZING dads!! There are divorced families, single moms, step-families, and everything in between. There are dads that make me want to scream and cry and generally I just grit my teeth.
But then I see dads like my husband, who is everything I wished for a father for my child to have. He takes time for our son, he talks to him and with him, he teaches and guides, disciplines and instructs, he is a parent first, and then a friend.
I feel like I pretty much rambled through that, and I hope it made sense.
Wednesday, March 23, 2016
Parenting Ain't For Sissies!
Sometimes parenting sucks.
I often wonder why there are such rigorous tests for becoming a licensed driver or to carry a firearm, but there are no qualifying tests to become a parent, any old dummy can do it.
There's no instruction manual that the hospital sends you home with, no "hey! you might wanna expect this in the next few years". Nope, they just make sure you have a car seat, and smile and wave you out the doors!
The first few years, looking back, were the easiest, if you're currently in those years, try not to despair! I heard a quote years ago that said "the days are endless, but the years fly by" this is the truest parenting statement I've ever heard. I was certain my son was going to be 5 weeks old forever, and then 8 months, and 19 months, 3 years...etc.
Take heart. They do get older. And with every new age comes a new challenge. My son is 8 (he'll be 9, June 27), and he already knows everything. :) He's not a sporty athletic kid, he's a reader; he likes video games, YouTube and his books. He's a deep thinker, a litigator (he will argue about EVERYTHING!), honest, thoughtful, sensitive and sweet. He's whiny, and emotional, and tends to get frustrated easily, and like most kids, thinks a Band-Aid will fix any bump.
As I only have one child, I'm learning vicariously through my cousins and friends kids and my youth group kids, what teenagers are like.
I know that they can be amazing, awesome, funny, entertaining, encouraging people that I love to be around! However, I also know that there is a dark side lol. I know that there is an underlying evilness (sort of) to teenagers.
I'm not sure what it is about the teenage years that turns kids into this....thing. But it seems to be universal, I'm sure if you asked my mother, she would tell you that I was no different during those years. There's an entitlement, an attitude, and an aloofness that is all rolled up into a ball of angst that builds into a wall of parental resentment.
Now, I know that not every teenager is like this, and that they're not like this all the time.
I know that when they reach the age of driving and girl/boy friends that they want some freedom, but what I don't understand is why they believe that freedom is something they deserve? Or once they have a license and a car, why they suddenly feel they are free to roam the country side as they please? Or why getting them to help around the house is a chore in itself? I feel like if you ask a kid to put the dishes away, you might was well have asked them to repave the driveway or change the oil in the car!
I've been trying to examine why it is that kids have the idea that they are entitled to do what they want when they want, and I think I may have come up with a possible answer....to some degree.
I tried to think of the way I thought when I was a teenager and what was going on around me and the responsibilities and duties I had at that age and I realized that I had a lot going on. When I was 16, I was in high school, had a job, had responsibilities at home and struggled with depression and emotional issues.
Not that every teenager has all of these issues but I realized that when I was a teenager, I had no idea what my parents were dealing with. I was concerned with my issues, I was dealing with MY homework, MY work schedule, MY feelings and so forth. So when my parents asked me to vacuum or put dishes away, I didn't see it as something that was legitimately helping them out, all I thought was "UGH! Don't you know what I'M going through!" I think the teenage years are about self discovery and finding out where we fit in, but it should also be about understanding where others fit into that dynamic as well.
While it may take some time for the realization that the outside world does in fact exist, they will get there I think. We were all teenagers, right? While we probably don't like to think that we were THAT bad...we probably were...just ask your mom!
I often wonder why there are such rigorous tests for becoming a licensed driver or to carry a firearm, but there are no qualifying tests to become a parent, any old dummy can do it.
There's no instruction manual that the hospital sends you home with, no "hey! you might wanna expect this in the next few years". Nope, they just make sure you have a car seat, and smile and wave you out the doors!
The first few years, looking back, were the easiest, if you're currently in those years, try not to despair! I heard a quote years ago that said "the days are endless, but the years fly by" this is the truest parenting statement I've ever heard. I was certain my son was going to be 5 weeks old forever, and then 8 months, and 19 months, 3 years...etc.
Take heart. They do get older. And with every new age comes a new challenge. My son is 8 (he'll be 9, June 27), and he already knows everything. :) He's not a sporty athletic kid, he's a reader; he likes video games, YouTube and his books. He's a deep thinker, a litigator (he will argue about EVERYTHING!), honest, thoughtful, sensitive and sweet. He's whiny, and emotional, and tends to get frustrated easily, and like most kids, thinks a Band-Aid will fix any bump.
As I only have one child, I'm learning vicariously through my cousins and friends kids and my youth group kids, what teenagers are like.
I know that they can be amazing, awesome, funny, entertaining, encouraging people that I love to be around! However, I also know that there is a dark side lol. I know that there is an underlying evilness (sort of) to teenagers.
I'm not sure what it is about the teenage years that turns kids into this....thing. But it seems to be universal, I'm sure if you asked my mother, she would tell you that I was no different during those years. There's an entitlement, an attitude, and an aloofness that is all rolled up into a ball of angst that builds into a wall of parental resentment.
Now, I know that not every teenager is like this, and that they're not like this all the time.
I know that when they reach the age of driving and girl/boy friends that they want some freedom, but what I don't understand is why they believe that freedom is something they deserve? Or once they have a license and a car, why they suddenly feel they are free to roam the country side as they please? Or why getting them to help around the house is a chore in itself? I feel like if you ask a kid to put the dishes away, you might was well have asked them to repave the driveway or change the oil in the car!
I've been trying to examine why it is that kids have the idea that they are entitled to do what they want when they want, and I think I may have come up with a possible answer....to some degree.
I tried to think of the way I thought when I was a teenager and what was going on around me and the responsibilities and duties I had at that age and I realized that I had a lot going on. When I was 16, I was in high school, had a job, had responsibilities at home and struggled with depression and emotional issues.
Not that every teenager has all of these issues but I realized that when I was a teenager, I had no idea what my parents were dealing with. I was concerned with my issues, I was dealing with MY homework, MY work schedule, MY feelings and so forth. So when my parents asked me to vacuum or put dishes away, I didn't see it as something that was legitimately helping them out, all I thought was "UGH! Don't you know what I'M going through!" I think the teenage years are about self discovery and finding out where we fit in, but it should also be about understanding where others fit into that dynamic as well.
While it may take some time for the realization that the outside world does in fact exist, they will get there I think. We were all teenagers, right? While we probably don't like to think that we were THAT bad...we probably were...just ask your mom!
Wednesday, March 9, 2016
This Youth Group Leaders Life :)
As you may have gathered given the sporadic appearance of these blog posts, I'm generally an emotional writer. :) I write when the mood, or emotion strikes. In this case, it was a particularly well spoken Tuesday night Youth Group talk last night.
I'll elaborate a little for you, if you don't know much about me, I am a high school youth group leader at my church. Christ's Church in Federal Way, WA or CCFW in the shorthand, lol. this is my 5th year leading teenaged girls through their tumultuous high school years and I believe I have found my calling. This year I have seniors, at least 3 of whom I have known for several years and I know their parents and it's a family type relationship! A few of the other girls, I only know them and of their families through their laughter, stories and tears.
To tell you what emotion got me writing this I have to go back several years, so bear with me...feel free to drift off if you've heard this part before. When my husband and I were married about a year (waaay back in 2002, we decided to try to have a baby! YAY!) we were CERTAIN that we would have NO trouble with this, we were (and are) the perfect couple! So how could this be difficult for us?! Not to toot our own horns but anyone who has spent 5 minutes with Trace and I know that we were meant to be :) well, to our great surprise, our baby bliss just wasn't happening! And because of some internal issues of mine, I never knew whether or I was need of a test or not! I swear I should have bought pregnancy tests at Costco!
Fast forward to early 2006, I had recently given my heart and life to the Lord and had a talk with Him one day and very candidly told Him (lol, imagine my gall, to tell HIM anything!) I said, "if You want us to be parents You'll make it happen, so I give up! This is all on You, only YOU can make this happen!" In November of 2006 the pregnancy test made a symbol we'd never seen before. The Amazon river bed couldn't hold the water of tears I cried in gratitude.
**this is just a funny aside, nothing to do with the actual point ;) I went to my doctor for a blood test THAT SAME DAY lol, and my doctor wasn't even in the office that day actually and I sat and waited 2 hours for the results, the receptionist, told me a couple of times that I could go home and they would call me with the results, but I smiled and told her no, I would wait.**
Ok! Now, That being said, after our son was born in 2007 we tried another 3 years with no success and in 2010 I ended up having to have a complete hysterectomy. No more biological babies for us. We were mostly ok with that.
In 2008, I think(?) I served a few years with the children's ministry at my church and while I LOVED my 5th graders (now in 11th grade) children's ministry just wasn't the right fit for me. While I was serving there I was also serving in the high school group of our Awana ministry, called Journey and I found I LOVED the energy and enthusiasm of the high schoolers!
So in 2011 after watching the youth groups annual VBS/Work Party trip to rural Montana presentation, I told the youth pastor at the time, that I REALLY wanted to be a part of the youth group, I probably hounded him and he probably only let me as a last resort lol!
I was put in as a leader with a group of 10th graders, I was SO nervous! I was instantly the new kid in school who didn't know who to sit with at lunch haha! While there was an adjustment period, they got used to me, and the other leader they had that year, and I got used to them, I grew to realize that serving the Lord isn't always about serving but being served.
I may not have been able to have anymore biological babies, but God knew exactly where I was headed and that if I had had more babies, that maybe I wouldn't have had the time or energy for youth group and all it entails. As I told one of my girls when they were at my house one night for one of our famous sleepover/cookie baking/movie watching/laughing/staying up way too late/fun fests, I know why God didn't give me any more babies...He was sending me you.
NOW! That you've waded through all of THAT! Here's that ACTUAL reason for this blog post haha!! Our youth pastor Caleb, teaches from the heart and from the brain at the same time! His teaching style reminds me of a quote I saw on Pinterest once (don't ask me who said it, I have no idea), but the quote was "follow your heart, but take your brain with you". I'm sure Caleb would have a bit more to add to that but that quote always reminds me of him. Caleb has the ability to be a friend to the kids without being overbearing yet at the same time can hit them over the head with a book and be like "STOP IT!!!" He's really great for our kids.
So in his Tuesday night talk time last night, Caleb talked about biblical discipline and biblical obedience. That parents are biblically called to instruct and discipline their children, while children are called to honor their parents.
No where in the bible does it say "honor thy mother and father....if they're honorable"! Nope, there are no qualifiers.
The part that got to me the most was that he was talking to a room full of 14-18ish year olds and told them "do you know how you spell LOVE to your parents? T-I-M-E". I was in tears. He is so right, parents don't want to rule your life or tell you what you should be doing 24 hours a day. We want to instruct and guide and then gently discipline so that you can (insert cheesy line) spread your wings and live your own life! We know you want to live independently, and be your own person, but I think that as parents, we can all agree that if we could just get one concept through your head (other than biblical principles and a love of God) we wish you could learn from OUR mistakes, and that with our rules and discipline and checking in and worry and even though you feel like we're constantly on your back. Just as God the Father loves us enough to correct us and discipline us, if we didn't love you, we wouldn't do those things.
My mom said something to me a couple of times that at the time she said it, made NO sense "this is going to hurt me, more than it hurts you". WHAT?!?! I'm the one getting a spanking!! I get it now. While I as a parent may not have an aching backside, my heart hurts when I have to discipline Lucas. Not only because I know there's a moment of pain, but because I wish he could have learned the lesson before a punishment was necessary. I know we all do things that require punishment, but just as we hate to punish our children, how much more must God have hated to see Jesus on that cross? He was punished for someone ELSE'S mistakes and sin! MINE! and YOURS! My heart hurts with gratitude.
I mess up. I hurt God's heart. But just like I love Lucas enough to go back and explain why he was punished and how to not to that again and how to go forward, God leaves us this example in the Bible.
I am loved. I am forgiven.
I'll elaborate a little for you, if you don't know much about me, I am a high school youth group leader at my church. Christ's Church in Federal Way, WA or CCFW in the shorthand, lol. this is my 5th year leading teenaged girls through their tumultuous high school years and I believe I have found my calling. This year I have seniors, at least 3 of whom I have known for several years and I know their parents and it's a family type relationship! A few of the other girls, I only know them and of their families through their laughter, stories and tears.
To tell you what emotion got me writing this I have to go back several years, so bear with me...feel free to drift off if you've heard this part before. When my husband and I were married about a year (waaay back in 2002, we decided to try to have a baby! YAY!) we were CERTAIN that we would have NO trouble with this, we were (and are) the perfect couple! So how could this be difficult for us?! Not to toot our own horns but anyone who has spent 5 minutes with Trace and I know that we were meant to be :) well, to our great surprise, our baby bliss just wasn't happening! And because of some internal issues of mine, I never knew whether or I was need of a test or not! I swear I should have bought pregnancy tests at Costco!
Fast forward to early 2006, I had recently given my heart and life to the Lord and had a talk with Him one day and very candidly told Him (lol, imagine my gall, to tell HIM anything!) I said, "if You want us to be parents You'll make it happen, so I give up! This is all on You, only YOU can make this happen!" In November of 2006 the pregnancy test made a symbol we'd never seen before. The Amazon river bed couldn't hold the water of tears I cried in gratitude.
**this is just a funny aside, nothing to do with the actual point ;) I went to my doctor for a blood test THAT SAME DAY lol, and my doctor wasn't even in the office that day actually and I sat and waited 2 hours for the results, the receptionist, told me a couple of times that I could go home and they would call me with the results, but I smiled and told her no, I would wait.**
Ok! Now, That being said, after our son was born in 2007 we tried another 3 years with no success and in 2010 I ended up having to have a complete hysterectomy. No more biological babies for us. We were mostly ok with that.
In 2008, I think(?) I served a few years with the children's ministry at my church and while I LOVED my 5th graders (now in 11th grade) children's ministry just wasn't the right fit for me. While I was serving there I was also serving in the high school group of our Awana ministry, called Journey and I found I LOVED the energy and enthusiasm of the high schoolers!
So in 2011 after watching the youth groups annual VBS/Work Party trip to rural Montana presentation, I told the youth pastor at the time, that I REALLY wanted to be a part of the youth group, I probably hounded him and he probably only let me as a last resort lol!
I was put in as a leader with a group of 10th graders, I was SO nervous! I was instantly the new kid in school who didn't know who to sit with at lunch haha! While there was an adjustment period, they got used to me, and the other leader they had that year, and I got used to them, I grew to realize that serving the Lord isn't always about serving but being served.
I may not have been able to have anymore biological babies, but God knew exactly where I was headed and that if I had had more babies, that maybe I wouldn't have had the time or energy for youth group and all it entails. As I told one of my girls when they were at my house one night for one of our famous sleepover/cookie baking/movie watching/laughing/staying up way too late/fun fests, I know why God didn't give me any more babies...He was sending me you.
NOW! That you've waded through all of THAT! Here's that ACTUAL reason for this blog post haha!! Our youth pastor Caleb, teaches from the heart and from the brain at the same time! His teaching style reminds me of a quote I saw on Pinterest once (don't ask me who said it, I have no idea), but the quote was "follow your heart, but take your brain with you". I'm sure Caleb would have a bit more to add to that but that quote always reminds me of him. Caleb has the ability to be a friend to the kids without being overbearing yet at the same time can hit them over the head with a book and be like "STOP IT!!!" He's really great for our kids.
So in his Tuesday night talk time last night, Caleb talked about biblical discipline and biblical obedience. That parents are biblically called to instruct and discipline their children, while children are called to honor their parents.
No where in the bible does it say "honor thy mother and father....if they're honorable"! Nope, there are no qualifiers.
The part that got to me the most was that he was talking to a room full of 14-18ish year olds and told them "do you know how you spell LOVE to your parents? T-I-M-E". I was in tears. He is so right, parents don't want to rule your life or tell you what you should be doing 24 hours a day. We want to instruct and guide and then gently discipline so that you can (insert cheesy line) spread your wings and live your own life! We know you want to live independently, and be your own person, but I think that as parents, we can all agree that if we could just get one concept through your head (other than biblical principles and a love of God) we wish you could learn from OUR mistakes, and that with our rules and discipline and checking in and worry and even though you feel like we're constantly on your back. Just as God the Father loves us enough to correct us and discipline us, if we didn't love you, we wouldn't do those things.
My mom said something to me a couple of times that at the time she said it, made NO sense "this is going to hurt me, more than it hurts you". WHAT?!?! I'm the one getting a spanking!! I get it now. While I as a parent may not have an aching backside, my heart hurts when I have to discipline Lucas. Not only because I know there's a moment of pain, but because I wish he could have learned the lesson before a punishment was necessary. I know we all do things that require punishment, but just as we hate to punish our children, how much more must God have hated to see Jesus on that cross? He was punished for someone ELSE'S mistakes and sin! MINE! and YOURS! My heart hurts with gratitude.
I mess up. I hurt God's heart. But just like I love Lucas enough to go back and explain why he was punished and how to not to that again and how to go forward, God leaves us this example in the Bible.
I am loved. I am forgiven.
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