Paper Roses

paper roses def

On my way out of the gardening shop I spotted these roses near the door.

“Wow! Are they real?”

They seemed too good to be true. They were –too good to be true, I mean. As soon as I felt them I knew they were paper. Pretty though.

I drove home singing an old Loretta Lynn song I used to hear crackling out of the plastic  radio with the big gold dial that sat on top of Grandma’s fridge when I was a kid.

Paper roses paper roses oh how real those roses seem to be
But they’re only imitation like your imitation love for me…

That got me thinking about the nature of deceit and manipulation and feigned love. In the cold greyness of spring that doesn’t feel like spring, those paper roses were beautiful and you know, I can appreciate them just fine –until the real thing comes along.

We joke about our tendency in Canada to be more polite than some other cultures. Honestly I grew up thinking it was normal to say sorry to the person who bumped into you with a grocery cart. It’s not heart-felt, but it does ease tensions and keep the traffic flowing in the produce section.

Someone told me the story of watching a woman trying to purchase a can of pop at a convenience store with a fifty dollar bill. The cashier took it but didn’t even look at the bill as he said, “This is fake.” The woman left the money  –and the Coke – on the counter and dashed for the door.

My friend asked how he knew it was fake.

“I’ve been handling money all day, every day, for years. When you are familiar with the real stuff the fake stuff is obvious.”

There are a lot of people in the world who have no idea what real love feels like. They mistake politeness, tolerance, gratitude, warm fuzzies, lust, familiarity, loyalty, manipulation…all manner of things, for love.  They have never been the recipients of true, unconditional, self-sacrificing love.

Here’s the thing. You can’t give what you have never received.

It is so easy to be critical of prickly people  -the ones who are difficult to feel affection toward, or manipulative people –the ones who prod you into serving their own priorities with large dollops of honey on that stick. My son calls them EGN people. Extra Grace Needed.  I believe that is one of the reasons why believers are to band together like a family. You can pick your friends, but God assigns family because we need practice learning to love EGNs, and also to experience being loved ourselves by those who can discern the real from the counterfeit and demonstrate the difference.

Very few new family members come with 70 years of wisdom. Very few church members start off as sanctified lovers, and some, like irritable, contentious old uncles sitting down at the end of the Thanksgiving table take much longer to get there than we think they should. It takes time –and just because a person recognizes an ideal doesn’t mean they are skilled in the practice of it. It’s not about tolerating hypocrisy; it’s about needing grace to grow.

Sometimes the best demonstrations of love some people can offer are like paper roses because that’s all they know. I wonder if, rather than reject the imitation item, we need to smile and accept politeness or tolerance or even well-intended criticism graciously –then return  genuine love we have received from God by being willing to lay down our lives for people who have never truly known love before. Lord knows we all need some grace.

“It’s easy to say “I love God,” but genuine love reflects God’s love. If we belong to God, then we will love each other regardless of how hard love is.” (Note on 1 John 5 in The Voice version)

This is the embodiment of true love: not that we have loved God first, but that He loved us and sent His unique Son on a special mission to become an atoning sacrifice for our sins. (1 John 4:10)

Everyone who trusts Jesus as the long-awaited Anointed One is a child of God, and everyone who loves the Father cannot help but love the child fathered by Him. Then how do we know if we truly love God’s children? We love them if we love God and keep His commands. You see, to love God means that we keep His commands, and His commands don’t weigh us down. Everything that has been fathered by God overcomes the corrupt world. This is the victory that has conquered the world: our faith. ( 1 John 5:1-4)

Save

Save

Flooded with Light

 

kin park rays

“The Puritans used to say that far too many Christians live beneath the level of their privileges. Therefore, I need to be told by those around me that every time I sin I’m momentarily suffering from an  identity crisis: forgetting who I actually belong to, what I really want at my remade core, and all that is already mine in Christ. The only way to deal with remaining sin long-term is to develop a distaste for it in light of the glorious riches we already possess in Christ. I need my real friends to remind me of this–every day. Please tell me again and again that God doesn’t love me more when I obey or less when I disobey. Knowing this actually enlarges my heart for God and therefore shrinks my hunger for sin. So, don’t let me forget it. My life depends on it!”  -Tullian Tchividjian

 

I pray for you constantly, asking God, the glorious Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, to give you spiritual wisdom and insight so that you might grow in your knowledge of God.  I pray that your hearts will be flooded with light so that you can understand the confident hope he has given to those he called—his holy people who are his rich and glorious inheritance.

 I also pray that you will understand the incredible greatness of God’s power for us who believe him. This is the same mighty power that raised Christ from the dead and seated him in the place of honor at God’s right hand in the heavenly realms.  Now he is far above any ruler or authority or power or leader or anything else—not only in this world but also in the world to come. (Ephesian 1: 16-21)

Il Signor non è morto: Mercy Triumphs over Judgment

While on the long drive home from Alberta today I was listening to my iPod on a shuffle setting. Two pod-casts I didn’t realize were even on there showed up between songs. I have enjoyed the speakers in the past so I listened. Both were on the same topic of law versus grace and how mercy triumphs over judgment.

This stood out to me: The letter of the law is like a doctor who gives only a diagnosis. The spirit of the law (love written on the heart) is like a doctor who can offer a cure. The rules (thou shalts and thou shalt nots) can only show us where we went wrong, but they cannot show us how to change at our core, not in any major permanent way. We need mercy and grace for that. We need a supernatural work inside our very being.

As I was thinking about this illustration, a song from Cavalleria Rusticana started playing on my iPod. I have pretty eclectic tastes, but even I was a bit jarred by the juxtaposition of a sermon on grace and mercy and a scene from an opera with themes of adultery and murder. But as the song progressed I felt a correlation in my heart. The scene of the Easter church service became another illustration of the difference between justice and mercy.

In this scene Santuzza is standing outside the church on Easter Sunday. She has been judged and excommunicated because of her affair with a married man. (Some productions have the chorus singing from off-stage after the processional to highlight her rejection and isolation). The excommunication was meted out by those demanding justice, and she was indeed guilty. The sentence labeled her a sinner and amputated her from the fellowship of other believers, but it offered her no way to change nor hope of restoration. Yet Santuzza cannot help but be moved and sings from the outside, “Innegiamo, il Signor non è morto.”

(Translation)

Let us sing His praise, the Lord is not dead,

let us sing His praise, the Lord has risen

and today ascended to the glory of Heaven!

Resplendent, He has spread His wings.

She is on the outside of the religious establishment, yet sings praise to the risen Christ from her heart, while many others on the inside may be participating in ritual for less devoted reasons.

I wonder how many broken, humbled people who don’t fit in a regular “church” still desire to worship His Presence from their hearts on their knees in the street (or on a mountain side.) I wonder if  more “outsiders,” those Jesus called the poor in spirit, find it easier to experience God’s love in a place where they are not diagnosed as terminal sinners. I wonder if the grace and mercy of the risen Jesus Christ will soon touch more genuine seekers in mercy and restore them to the way God sees them, as He says gently, “Neither do I condemn you. Go and sin no more.”

He did for me.

Mere Mortals

Cougar Creek Thinker
Cougar Creek Thinker

When I … see the work of your fingers…
     what are mere mortals that you should think about them,
    human beings that you should care for them?

(Psalm 8:3,4)

Down by the Creek

Skimming
Skimming the Surface

Icicles
Icicles

Contact

Contact
Flow
Flow
Baubles
Baubles
Black ice
Black ice
Bend
Bend

It seemed so dull and dreary I almost didn’t go out today. I’m glad I did.

There is grace even on dull days.

God is good.

The Good Mentor

The Road
The Road

 

The good mentor always tries to work himself or herself out of a job.

The good mentor is not afraid to say,

“You have caught up with me.

Now pass me.

Keep going.

And don’t look back.”

There are rules and then there are guidelines

Rules and Guidelines
Man-made Posts and God-made Trees

You don`t obey your way into love; you love your way into obeying.  -Chris Hewko

You should be free to serve each other in love.

For after all, the whole Law toward others is summed up by this one command,

‘You shall love your neighbour as yourself’.

(Galatians 4:13, 14)

Learning to step lightly

Sometimes it don’t come easy.

Elefeet

Let your gentle spirit be known to all men. The Lord is near. (Philippians 4:5)

But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy. And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace. (James 3:17, 18)

Remind them to be subject to rulers, to authorities, to be obedient, to be ready for every good deed, to malign no one, to be peaceable, gentle, showing every consideration for all men. (Titus 3:1, 2)

Brethren, even if anyone is caught in any trespass, you who are spiritual, restore such a one in a spirit of gentleness; each one looking to yourself, so that you too will not be tempted. (Galatians 6:1)

Forsake Not the Assembling of Yourselves (flap fwoosh splash)

Photos: On the flyway

At sunset the birds landing on the shallow lake on the edge of town make a flap, flap, fwoosh, splash sound as they veer in over my head and plop down. There was a lot of flap, flap, fwoosh, splashing this week. We live on a flyway and apparently this is a staging area for many waterfowl to assemble before heading south for the winter. It’s like old friends meeting in the airport on their way to Mesa, Arizona. I wonder if the ducks ask each other ask how their summer went. I was surprised by the variety of birds and the size of the assembly. They’re a noisy bunch.

When I was a kid I used to think the scripture verse about “forsake not the assembling of yourselves together” was about the shoe-polishing, face-scrubbing, hair-curling, clothes-pressing, hat-applying kind of assembly line in the hall by the bathroom where mom assembled us into some sort of semblance of civility for Sunday morning assemblies.

To this day my father quotes himself regularly: “If you were invited to visit the queen, would you not put on your very best attire?”

He still ignores my response: “Not if I were the queen’s kid. Then I would probably run into her room and jump on her bed in my jammies.” (Yeah.  I know. Even the Queen’s kids have to dress for company.)

I remember the burgundy robed choir filing in every Sunday and singing, somberly, “The Lord is in His holy temple, (then louder) The Lord is in his holy temple. Let all the earth keep silence. Let all the earth keep silence before him! (then softer) Keep silence… keep silence…  befo-o-ore Him.”

Kind of a four-part a capella “Here come da judge.”

That was my cue to start counting holes in the acoustical tiles overhead.

I meet a lot of people who are tired of counting holes in the ceiling. Some of them are even from churches where jammie jumping (metaphorically speaking) has been sanctioned for years. Some of them are not only not expected to keep silence before Him, they are encouraged to make a joyful noise (although that commandment also seems to be subject to some reining-in and still remains a heavy burden for natural introverts.) Many have tried a lot of “assemblies” and dutifully genuflected, sat, stood, knelt, greeted warmly, came forward and passed a variety of money gathering receptacles. They joined mega-churches, corner churches, home churches, cell groups, classes, choirs, praise bands, aid societies and brought a bakery load of “goodies” –and bought them all back. They have been sprinkled, dunked, soaked, and eaten wafers, chunks of fluffy white French bread, dry cracker bits, and even matzo at Easter. They’ve imbibed disposable plastic thimbles of Welches, silver chalices of Mogen David and a good red Merlot from tea cups. They still feel like square pegs trying to fit into those tiny round holes in the ceiling somehow.

I’ve learned a lot from all the churches I’ve been in –and for the most part I’m very grateful, especially to the Sunday school teachers and youth directors and music directors. I’ve had some great pastors too.

But there came a day when a lot of accumulated stuff we never talked about began to stifle the joy. The unwritten rules. The unstated statements of belief. The abuse of power. The stuff people just hoped would not be noticed and would somehow go away.

One day I couldn’t do it anymore. I couldn’t tell love from manipulation. I was becoming the hypocrite (the Greek word for actor incidently) that I accused others of being.

I quit.

Well, I tried to quit.

Church was about more than a belief system to me. Church was my culture, my family, but every time I attended a service some angry not-niceness boiled up inside. I couldn’t explain it and the volunteer recruiters wanted to know when I would be over this silliness and get back to work. One morning when I opened a church bulletin to read the sermon title, “Seven Things Every Christian Must Do,” I folded it up and walked out — for several  years. I just couldn’t add any more “musts” to my list. I couldn’t try any harder.

I didn’t quit Jesus, though, although I was rather ticked off with his father for being so impossible to please.

During that time a kind person asked me, “What does grace feel like?”

I answered with the response I learned in Bible School, “Grace is unmerited favour.”

“No,” he said, “I didn’t ask for a definition. I’m asking you, ‘What does grace feel like?’”

I didn’t have a clue. I had been taught that feelings were the unreliable loose caboose that couldn’t be trusted.

“Don’t go by feelings. Obey and the caboose will eventually catch up,” they said.

How many years do we wait for the caboose to catch up before we can admit it must be on a track to Addis Ababa?

I set out on a quest to find out what grace felt like. I asked a lot of people, including those I did not admire. The question seemed as confusing to most of them as it did to me. Some said it felt like a get-out-of-jail-free card. Some said it was the God-given ability to put their shoulder to the wheel, work hard and obey all the rules. Some said it was the Sunday kick in the butt that allowed them to coast all week.

One person showed me what  grace meant. He was the pastor of another church, one that was judged as inadequate in the works and behaviour department by the church I had grown up in. A friend recommended him. I told him about my history, my guilt over not going to church anymore and the anger that I felt when I was there.

He said, “I tell most people they should go to church, but I think for you, the church would be one or two people you can trust to listen. God loves you and he’s not afraid of your feelings. Beat on his chest. He can take it.”

A preacher who said church could be something other than the organized thing in the big building with salaries and a mortgage payment due every month? A church leader who didn’t see me as an unclaimed sheep or hand me a spiritual gifts inventory so he could start visualizing where he could plug me into the machine?  Someone who didn’t panic and had faith that Christ could  fix me? That was different.

That was the beginning. I couldn’t bring myself to beat on God’s chest so I just sent him snarky letters with what I thought were rhetorical questions. Somehow my questions were answered; he sent a random phone call, a commercial that made me cry, a book, a blog, a stranger on a bus, a fawn in the woods… and a couple of people I could trust.

Then it dawned on me. Jesus said whoever had seen him had seen the Father. God was not the mean old judge I had to keep silence for, nor was he a megalomaniac who was sadly out of control of a world that somehow got away from him. He was just like Jesus, willing to serve, willing to experience the same betrayals and abuse we have, willing to forgive, willing to heal, willing to risk speaking truth to people who thought they had the religious system in their back pocket, desperately trying to communicate his love. It hit me that nothing I did could make him love me more than he already demonstrated by laying down his own life for me.

Today grace feels like being adopted by the most loving, safe (but incredibly powerful) Daddy  in the world who wraps his arms around me, lets me sit on his lap, rest my head on his chest and joyfully be at peace.

“Church” simply consists of everyone who admits their need, lifts their hands to him and says, “Up, please.” We get to play and work together because we have the best Dad in the whole wide world.

So flap, flap, fwoosh, splash! Come together! Assemble yourselves together, brothers and sisters, because the whole family gets to travel together on this journey.

We’re headed into a new season.

This is going to be good. Really good.