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Here you will find scattered pictures from my point and shoot camera, random thoughts from my little world, treasured memories of days gone by, hopeful dreams of the days yet to come, and a bunch of ideas - because I've always got ideas!



Sunday, January 21, 2007

Sunday Morning

I was unable to make it to church this morning, due to some rather severe stomach trouble. Lest you worry, I ate at On the Border yesterday afternoon, and became extremely ill shortly after. It hasn't all been resolved. I actually got ready to go, but then fumbled my mascara brush which left a large splotch of Dark Brown on the front of the only shirt that matched the pants I was wearing. I would have been late. And, from what I know now, I would have had to leave. Ahem. 'Nough said.

So, today is morning worship at home.

"Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ." - Colossians 2:8

Oswald Chambers had to say about this: Men pour themselves into creeds, and God has to blast them out of their prejudices before they can become devoted to Jesus Christ.

Yesterday, THGGM and I framed four hymns. Two of his favorites, and two of mine. Each have lines in them that jump out at us.

From "Come Thou Fount" the line that resonates with me is 'Prone to wander, Lord I feel it, Prone to leave the God I love.' I realize that I am prone to wander. I feel it. Much to ponder there.

Isaiah 35:3,4 - "Strengthen ye the weak hands, and confirm the feeble knees. Say to them that are of a fearful heart, Be strong, fear not."

To this Chambers says, "The weaker and feebler you are, the better. The one who has something to trust in is the last one to come anywhere near saying - "I will serve the Lord."

The other hymn I framed was "Immortal, Invisible". This line "All praise we would render, O help us to see, 'Tis only the splendor of light hideth Thee" is rich. Does it help you to think that there is another dimension that we cannot see? Right here, right now, the only thing keeping us from actually knowing that God is everywhere is that we were not meant to see Him yet?

That thought makes my hands weak and my knees feeble.

If pondering is a gift, it's one I have. I can ponder something for days at a time. Sometimes I have to reign it in. Last week a read a line from a favorite author who said something like 'Joy is my gift, not faith. I struggle with faith.' I'd like to get to know her, because I don't struggle with faith, I struggle with joy.

Doesn't it seem weird to live in a world filled with war, poverty, sickness, broken relationships and pain all of which will end eventually in death, yet somehow we are supposed to find joy in it? Oooo. Plenty of faith I have here, but joy comes to me in small increments that end in guilt because sometimes being joyful just seems wrong. But it isn't wrong. And there I struggle.

But not as someone who has no hope.

This reminds me of a song Daughter used to sing when she was very young. She had a friend named Joey, whom she adored. She would sing with much gusto and one wrong word, "I've got JOEY down in my heart, deep deep down in my heart!" THAT I understood. And, she sang it with such joy that it was obvious she had that too. But she didn't KNOW it.

Did you ever wonder if the gifts we have aren't for us to recognize? I'm rather sick of taking spiritual gift evaluations. But, I have 'pondered' the value of taking them for other people.

There are other people I would really like to get to know because of the 'gifts' they possess. Only they don't know it. Might that not be a good thing? If they did know it, wouldn't that cheapen it somehow?

I had a friend who delighted in telling anyone who would listen, and those merely trapped, exactly what her gift was and how she planned to use it on them. I still cringe at the very mention of her name. She thought the entire Christian world was just slow at catching on to what she had to offer, and put the blame of it's failure on all of us (you too, you just didn't know it). By trying to grab at her perceived gift, she obliterated it. Did YOU ever try to hold light?

Is maybe the 'light' that surrounds us, that we cannot see but other people can, our gift? If we 'saw' it, would it retreat, evaporate or at least diminish?

All of this pondering has reminded me a verses learned a long time ago.

"Let him who walks in the dark, who has no light, trust in the name of the Lord and rely on his God." - Isaiah 50:10b.

8 comments:

tlawwife said...

I had my husband come and read this as it describes so well the way he feels. He has lots of faith but feels like he is missing out on the joy. It was good to see someone else describing the same thing. I loved the way you described then inability to hold light. So many times I have seen people so proud of their gifts which then dimminishes said gift. Thank-you this was very good.

MissKris said...

I too spend a lot of time pondering the imponderables. I think the one I ponder more than any is how those who call themselves Christians can get away with saying and/or doing cruel things to others and then justifying it in their own hearts. Cruelty is cruelty, plain and simple. I try very hard not to hurt anyone, when I have I try to make amends. But gifts or talents? Well, I love to pray! Great post, Judy.

Geekwif said...

There are some gifts, I think, that we must be aware of if we are to use them to our full potential. There are others, I think, that are in danger of being negated by our recognizing them to be true, mostly because of our human capacity for vanity. Others may recognize those gifts in us, but we cannot without the risk of losing them.

Thank you for the food for thought. If you'll excuse me now, I have some pondering to do. :)

Anonymous said...

Ah, the old hymns...how much they minister to the spirit! Where one can find joy often, I think! It is hard to be joyful as much as one feels they should...and still see what is going on all around. But we can be joyful when we are in the midst of God's presence, which is available to us and often we seem to fail to take advantage of that. Amazing the patience, grace, and mercy HE extends to us frail and flawed humans!

Sure hope you get to feeling well again...guess the mascara spot might have been a blessing in disguise? Hope the shirt can be cleaned up too!! Thanks for sharing...

Melissa said...

'Prone to wander, Lord I feel it, Prone to leave the God I love.'

This has been a favorite since I was very young - something like Jr High - somehow even though at the time I did not fully appreciate what those words meant the grabbed me.

daisymarie said...

I love those hymns. Now I'll have music in my head and heart all day! Thanks!!!

joyce said...

ahh, Judy. I love what you've written here. I like the bit about if we try to bottle our light, will it not scuttle away? And the spiritual gift evaluations- gag me. Your ponderings resonate with me, and I like your ruminations on them.
thank you

Judy said...

You are all too too kind.