Monthly Archives: November 2014

Sunday night Traditions

Memories make for fascinating conversation.  You likely have some great ones.

Maybe you have some sad, unspoken, even regrettable

ones.

It’s ok

I do too

Have good ones and sad, unspoken, even regrettable

ones.  They all get mixed up together.  Good and not so good.  God can take all of the mixed up good and bad and do remarkable, even miraculous things with it.

It’s Sunday evening.  Not late really, but

dark.

I made us, him and me, just two of us

muffins and fruit salad.  Not just any muffins.  This is a recipe from the past.

Thirty two years ago just about right now, we, the two of us, were new together.  Far from home.  That was before my heart adjusted to this place.  Before I could think of calling this new land HOME.  It was just beginning to turn cold and we lived in a dark place, in our hearts and in a little basement that was dark most of the time and he was learning how to do what he does so well and I was

well, I was learning to be grown and joy filled and God was showing me what it meant to Bloom Where I was Planted.  I wanted Him to plant me back, where He had transPlanted me From.  He said

No.

He took years to patiently show me, where He chose was better.  Oh I have stomped my feet and that is certain.   Back then, at the beginning of the learning to be a wife and then a mother, I decided to attempt some traditions,

Some “we always” for us.

I look back now and wonder at the miracle of trying and succeeding and failing and trying again and some ideas didn’t work and others stuck.

One of those ideas was for a Sunday evening refreshment, informal lunch.

You see, where I came from,

not geographically but historically,  my upbringing, my original family, we did things in a different way.

Well, maybe not different from how you did it but different from how it’s done now.  Our family, the preacher’s family, went to Sunday School and then worship service and then we came home to our Sunday meal.  For a few years we lived in that little community surrounded by farmer’s fields.  We walked to church and walked home and my brother was sort of shy.  He was a middle schooler then and he would walk home first.  When we finally got back to that little house because some of us have not changed much and even then we liked to stay until there was nobody else to talk to, until everybody else had gone home to their own Sunday meal,

he, that brother, had the potatoes boiling on the stove.   The roast beef or roast chicken that our mother had put into the oven before we walked to church that morning, would be ready to pull out of the oven.  We ate, we cleaned up, we rested, one of us wrote letters to her loved ones living a whole country away.  We had a light snack and then went back to church for evening service.  Sometimes there was a Fellowship time after but if not, we would come home and eat toast and drink tea and go to bed.

That was Sunday.  It was good.  It was simple.  It was quiet.  It was love.

We don’t do it that way anymore but back 32 years ago,  at our beginning, we still had our meal at lunch time.  Sometimes we went to Swiss Chalet, when we could afford it and sometimes we would come home to the roast I had managed to get into the oven early.  In the evening we had a snack.  Something light.  It was sometimes muffins, sometimes biscuits(scones but in the 80’s they were more often called biscuits)sometimes grilled cheese and most often with fruit salad.  As we welcomed little ones and they joined in our tradition of a big lunch and small dinner, we continued.  One of my husband’s very favorites and one he asked for regularly over the years, was this one I am sharing with you tonight.  They didn’t really have a name.  They were just The Good muffins.

I am calling them Muffin Scones and I made them tonight along with a fruit salad.  They are still a hit and I was told that if I made them again, they would be well received.  I wonder if my little ones would still like them.  I think I will check one of these days when they come back,

come home.

The senses were created for us, by Him,

God,

for our pleasure.

So kind of Him.  Really.

Memories are brought back from the archives of the past, to here and now

when I smell, or taste, or see, or hear.

When it happens I am thankful.  Even the ones that cause one more crack in my heart, I know they have been

pebbles, boulders maybe, on the journey God chose for me.

As I often do, I am listening now to

music.

Right this minute I am hearing Steven Curtis Chapman sing about loss and heartbreak and he is wondering as he sings, about God and His choices.

He says We don’t understand God’s higher ways

And I agree but wonder if the hardships from my past and within my memory are God’s higher ways or my foolish ones.

Whichever

He is so good to redeem my foolishness and make it into something  beautiful.

Steven is also saying that Without this hope in Jesus there’s no way we could survive.

I know people who say those words through tears gliding down their faces.  Those who have

lost

children or jobs or husbands or friends.

Just this week I said to someone that the thing about sad and hard is that mine might look not so bad to you and yours might look not so bad to me.  We all know though,

that it is.

Whatever causes hurt or sad or weary or broken or desperate

hearts

knocks us over.  Can appear disastrous.

As much as we wish,

we cannot heal each other’s hearts.  I told this friend that it’s okay though.

God made and holds and heals and embraces

hearts

Traditions are good as long as we hold them in open hands.  It’s okay to do it differently.  Things change and even so, to try something from

Back then

can bring back good memories and good memories are a gift.  Dig deep.  Are you sad?  Are you full of Joy?  God has done great things.

God says that we don’t understand Him.  That’s because He is God.  We don’t need to know everything.

For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the LORD.

For I, the LORD your God, hold your right hand; it is I who say to you, “Fear not, I am the one who helps you.”

whipping up some comfort food

Well, it’s here.

Fall I mean.

Actually, it’s getting awfully close to Winter and I’m not much of a fan.   At least not once February 15th rolls around.

The other day I paid a visit to our newlyweds.  I first of all invited them here for dinner and then said I would be happy to go there, and bring dinner of course.

They jumped at it.

I had leftover turkey in the freezer, from Thanksgiving just a few weeks earlier, along with a few litres of turkey stock.

I have a bit of an obsession when it comes to FENNEL.  It is so delicious in soups and stews and salads and I just really like it.  I dreamt up a couple of recipes and they both include this sweet juicy vegetable.

One of them was designed to use up some leftovers and the other is great if you can find yourself a couple of boneless, skinless chicken breasts.  This second one, I forgot to take pictures of since we were feeling like eating.  So I find myself in a bit of a dilemma.  Should I post the recipe without pictures?  I think I will and the next time I make it I will add the pictures.

I call this one 40 minute chicken with applesauce and maple syrup.

The wheels started to turn and I headed to the grocery store for the ingredients to fill in the spaces.  I ended up with something pretty tasty.

I am calling it Turkey Brown Rice Curry Bowl.  Give it a try!

What’s inside counts most

Hi!

It’s me again!

I’m excited today and wanted to tell you why.

I have a friend who loves to read.  She’s one of those who has a night stand stacked high with books.  She is smart enough to be able to read three or four at a time and remember what she’s read.  I enjoy reading but these days, for some reason, I have a hard time sitting still and focusing long enough to get through a book.  In actual fact I have started three books in the last few months and they have sat, half read, waiting.  I did just finish one, on the plane the other day.  It was good and I enjoyed it.

This friend of mine likes fiction and devotionals and the ones full of travel information and those that point her towards God and the most important God book of all, His words in print.  She once told me she liked to read anything worthwhile and she continues to remind me that life is short and we shouldn’t feel obligated to finish a book , if it becomes a chore.

It was a few weeks ago that we both realized there was a new book on the stands.

You may have heard me mention in past posts that I hesitate to use the phrase,

my favorite (colour, friend, food, book, author).  

 There is another phrase I am learning, the hard way, to use less.

I always.  You always.  Yes, that last one has gotten me into lots of pickles, backed me into a whole slew of corners over the years.  That’s a different story for another day.

But back to my favorite

 It just seems, when I say it, something happens to freedom and there is a sort of constriction, a closing of doors, lessening of willingness for something new, turning away from what could be.

Now, I would not call myself, well read.  I tend to read books that have been recommended by people I trust.  It’s a huge responsibility to recommend a book.  I mean, it takes hours to make your way through the labyrinth of a story.

To be clear, ideas from ‘excellent’ writers may inspire and motivate me, but they might leave you yawning and bleary eyed.

I want to say that this book, the new one on the stands, is written by my very FAVORITE author.  I say it casually and with an open attitude but I am pretty sure she is at number one on my list of writers.  There are 10 books in the series, with a smattering of extras off to the side.  I can’t remember another series of books that has consistently brought tears followed by laughter.  There was a time, it was years ago now, that I was away at a retreat with my husband’s firm.  There I was sitting on the beach with the first book in the series propped on my lap.  I wondered, as I wiped the tears from my eyes with the tissue I had somehow thought to put in my beach bag, followed by my loud burst of laughter, if perhaps there were people sitting nearby who might be wishing I would compose myself a bit better.  I sometimes care a lot about such things, but this book, these books, are so good I just don’t mind what They think.

A few days after my friend and I chatted about the newest installment of our dear friends in a tiny town somewhere to the south, we got together along with a few others.  She took a package out of her bag and said “I have something for you”.    I knew immediately what it was and must tell you, I think I squealed out loud (as only I can do.  Remember, I was the gal who was reprimanded on more than one occasion for being heard All The Way down the hall, when I was just a lamb).  “I am lending it to you”, she clarified.  That was fine with me.  I suggested she might like to read it first but because she is just that kind of friend, she said I should go ahead.

Two months have flown by.  This treasure has sat next to the window in my bedroom and I have looked at it every day, thinking I so wanted to dig in.  You see, I have a few obsessive issues and one of them is that I must be disciplined.  I had a couple of books on the go and although I longed to start on this beauty, I insisted I would finish the Not So Great book I was reading, first.  Yes, my friends words kept popping into my head, about not reading a book, just because.  Actually there is another reason I waited.  I love the anticipation of something good.  I love surprises (as long as they are good and don’t hurt).  This book was a surprise.  The author, at the end of #9 said The End.  It was a  farewell to our friends in our favorite small town.  It made me sad.  Now, with a revival of the story, a continuation of the journey to wisdom for our friend Father Tim and his loved ones, I am looking forward to traveling to that place and being part of their lives again.  However, once I read it, it will be over.  There may not be another.  Looking at that book, all wrapped up and waiting, makes me smile.

But today is the day.  My chores are half finished and my commitments are in the works of being taken care of.  I have a couple of errands to do and then, a little later, I am going to open the front cover and turn past the foreward.

I have taken it out of its wrapping.  The title is inviting and the jacket is beautiful.

IMG_0624

The jacket is so beautiful in fact, that I have removed it like my dad taught me.  We don’t want it to get ripped or tattered so we set it aside while we read the book.  When we are finished we put the jacket back.

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 I have already read the first sentence

His wife was determined to march him to the country club this Saturday evening.  Worse, he’d have to stuff himself into his old tux like sausage into a casing.

I am already smiling.

A good book is a sweet thing.  I will likely read it cover to cover in just a few hours.  Yes it is fiction and yes it is full of all kinds of wisdom.  I don’t know the author but I think she and I would have much to chat about if given the opportunity to visit over a cup of something.  Jan Karon puts everyday words together to say beautiful things.    her books are as beautiful on the inside as they look on the outside.  This makes me happy.

 

 

 

 

All kinds of Revelations

It happened again.

There I was sitting under the shade of an umbrella, on the other side of the pool.  It was the perfect place for relaxing and reading.  There was a group of ladies on the far side, sitting in chairs that had been lined up for easier chit chat and laughing and visiting.  I could not help but overhear some of their conversation since just as I do when I am with friends, the voices were sometimes raised and laughter rang out to my side of the deck.  They were from somewhere in the midwestern USA and had come for a few days together.  I watched them out of the corner of my eye.    Suddenly, before you could say desert sun,   they had moved to the pool steps in front of me and continued their conversation right under my nose.   It became impossible to read.  My eyes were glued to the pages but my ears heard all that was being said.  They talked and I longed to jump in.  Maybe I should have.

I didn’t

I listened and bit my tongue and thought so many thoughts.

There were seven of them and they were talking about “spirituality”.  One had grown up in a denomination where she may have heard a few things about Jesus and another said she was sure she had been someone very different in her past life and another spoke knowingly about how Christians really truly believe that Jesus lived and was God and another said that she didn’t buy it and really as long as you think good things and want to be a good person, that is spiritual enough.  Yet another said she didn’t believe in God at all, because how could God let such bad things happen in the World and these were all angles and arguments that I have heard before and I sat there and listened and thought

about

Ecclesiastes 3:11  (Living New Testament)  Yet God has made everything beautiful for its own time. He has planted eternity in the human heart, but even so, people cannot see the whole scope of God’s work from beginning to end.

No matter where I go or the setting I find myself in, there is so often talk of God.

My boy got married a week ago.  He married the girl that God hand picked for him.  I listened to these seven ladies talk

about chance and luck and the uncertainties of their lives.   Worrying about children and  wondering about the meaning of life.  They talked all around the subject of the creator of their souls and could not find their way to the center of the target.  The bulls eye.  The axis.  The pivot.  The CornerStone.  We could have had ourselves a big old evangelistic meeting then and there

if I had spoken up.

I didn’t and I thought about my boy and about his brother and his sister who stood and encouraged him just last weekend.  I thought about the blessing of that evening 6 days ago and I was sad for these girls and so thankful on behalf of the children who married each other next to a mountain.

The girls will need to hear the message about

Jesus love for them

from someone other than me, because I won’t see them again in this life.  I don’t know their names but God does.  I missed a chance to tell them the truth and I wonder, if Billy Graham had been sitting there, or Elizabeth Elliot or Corrie Ten Boom or…

God knows these seven ladies because He made them.    I will pray that He will make Himself known to them.  Perhaps that was the purpose of plunking them down right in front of me.  To remind me

yet again

 that I can neither save souls or make people want a saved soul.  That is God’s job.  I can though, ask, that He clear their cloudy vision and give them eyes to see.  Even if they are people who splash very briefly into my space, I can ask on their behalf.

I will and He will hear me.

Something else was revealed to me in this wedding week.  It’s about friends and acquaintances and God’s gift of provision.

Thirty Two years ago I married a boy and came to a strange land.  I have sometimes likened myself to Abraham’s Sarai because she did not know where she was going and who she would meet when she finally arrived.  I prayed a prayer when I got to my new home and asked that God would give me ONE friend.  Just one.  I didn’t need more.  One would be enough.  Just someone to confide in and share my heart with.  Just a girl, like myself, who loved Jesus and needed a friend.

As I mentioned at that wedding last week, I am often reminded of Paul’s words in Ephesians 3:20   Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us,  

He brought people into my life and some of them He later removed.  There were friends who were dear for a short while and some who became dearer over time.  Friendships change and sometimes the ones we hold onto so very tightly end up being pried out of our grip.

You see,

being dependent upon people comes easy to me.   Relying upon God is much more of a struggle.

Because He loves me and wants what’s best and worshiping people isn’t that

He begins the business of prying my fingers open and that is usually painful.    He reminds me that although like minded friends are a gift, He has other people, sometimes strangers, for me to interact with who could benefit from a smile and a kind word.  They may have insight for me.

I listened to those seven by the pool, their chatter and their discussion.  They were friends and yet I wonder if, when they each get back to their own homes, their lives will be the richer for spending those days together.

I stood up in front of that relatively smallish group of wedding guests.   I talked about the boy who had just gotten married and about the girl that I have prayed about for longer than she has been alive.  I looked at those people sitting in chairs watching and smiling and I needed them to hear me.  Not just my voice, the words.  I spoke of learning to be a mother and wise counsel and making mistakes and growing in understanding of what makes life worth living.  I talked about gratitude and not because life is perfect.  Far from it.  But in it’s imperfection there is beauty in relationships and friendships.  Some old and some new.

As I prepared my speech for that evening I thought about the people who would be sitting there under the stars.  Unfortunately not everybody I call friend, was there.

I reflected upon the people who have impacted my life.

I am sitting here now, alone in this desert place and my suitcase is packed and I am going home.  Friends and family await me and I am blessed.

There are friends who make me laugh and friends who exhort me and others who mirror Jesus mercy and those who reflect beauty in their simplicity of living and those who challenge me and some who weep with me and some I see often and a few I see much less.  My life is full of amazing friendships because of the people that God has placed strategically in my way.

I came to a place far from home, a lot of years ago, dragging my heals and God has blessed me abundantly.  He continues to teach me about leaning in on Him and listening when He talks.

Romans 12:10 says

Love one another with brotherly affection. Outdo one another in showing honor!