Friday, April 24, 2020

Upside Down

A few months ago, I had some hopes and dreams about what life "ought" to look like.

They involved slowing down.
Effectively, it had everything to do with actually turning life upside down.

Oh, the irony.

A dear friend had presented on Sabbath and it reminded me of this deeper longing within. A longing to be a person of God, first and foremost. Not a wife, a mother, an employee, a person people go to for solutions, etc. etc. etc. I can still be all of those things, but ideally, the first informs all the others. That being one of God's people means that I know Him, love Him, spend time with Him, am changed by Him...and that drastically impacts the way that I then relate to my husband, my child, my co-workers, my community, the strangers I encounter...

I remember thinking, How do I even do that? 
How do I make my life so about Jesus, first, and fill in the rest of my life around that? How do daily and weekly habits, routines, and rhythms change to become centered on Him? How do I slow down, how do I stop doing all the things that I'm doing, how do I decide what is good and what needs to cease?

As a result, Kel and I decided to adopt some new habits. Ones, we hoped, that would center us back on Jesus each day. We were committed to slowly working them into our life, convinced that if we added them in at turtle-pace, we might be successful at developing new, lifelong habits. We invited others to journey with us, basing our "new habit" adventure on the book The Common Rule, by Justin Whitmel Early.

We had just begun when coronavirus hit.
Slowing down became a new way of life for us. Work from home. Eat at home. Video calls by day and by night.

And then we lost our jobs.
Staring into the face of our first week without 40+ hours of work brought up a lot of thoughts and emotions: anxiety, worry, fear, sorrow...questions about how we would fill the time, if our life would lack purpose.

And then I remembered...
Just a few months ago I had wanted to somehow, miraculously, turn life upside down.
And here I was, with my life turned upside down.
Living in a bit of a nightmare, but also living in one of my dreams.

Here before us was a chance to be.
For the first time, and maybe the last time.

What a gift.
We are literally "stuck" in New Mexico as we figure things out with Baby K- for weeks, if not months.
We are literally "stuck" in our home, as the pandemic rages on - for weeks, if not months.

I have hours each day to choose how I will spend my time.

I wish I could say that this week has been filled with pure joy and adoration of the Father. I wish I could say that every waking moment was marked by prayer, gratitude, and a seeking to know Jesus, even in the uncertainty.

There's been some of that, for sure. Some of it has come about through grief, as I work through the pain and loss only to be reminded of God's generosity and kindness. Some of it has come about through confession, as I am ever-aware of my sinful state that demands to know, that seeks to be right, that pridefully believes I am "better than" while simultaneously believing I am nothing. In these moments, I humbly encounter the Savior who washes His betrayers' feet...the Savior who restores, redeems, and places faith again in those who deny Him. In these moments, I beg that the Spirit would be strong when my flesh is so weak.

In this upside down world, we have new habits.
Kneeling prayer - morning, midday, and evening.
Lunchtime walks.
Times of solitude. Time that I've resumed journaling.
Time to talk...time to dream...time to think about what could be and where the Lord might lead us next.
Time for projects, for clean-up, for packing.
Time for egg-collecting, plant-watching, and baby giggles.
Time for making more new habits - ones we pray will stick with us in this lifetime. Ones that we pray will center us as people of God, first and foremost, so that everything else is rooted in that.

Before us, each day, we have hours. Hours of opportunity. Hours I do not want to waste.

In this upside down world, life looks different.
And, as we move and find new careers and a new community... I hope and pray that our new "normal" looks a bit more like our current upside down world (coronavirus-free, of course). Slower. Rhythmic. Centered. Purposed and overflowing.

We have an opportunity press pause. To start over. To establish a new way of life. To create a new normal.

To be instead of being consumed by what I do. Because, I (sooooo easily) get consumed by doing and finding worth, value, and purpose in that alone.

What a sweet, hard opportunity before us.
It is one that we are painfully thankful for.

A few things we would covet prayers for, if you think of it:

  • Figuring things out with Baby K and (hopefully!) the adoption process. 
  • Jobs: Kel and I are both excited about what COULD be with our next careers, but pray that we would seek, listen, and be willing to go where the Lord leads. We have loved being a part of camp ministry and would love to love our next jobs, as well. 
  • That we would be able to mourn, but also rejoice - even in a hard, sad season. 
  • That we would invest in our community while we are still here and wouldn't withhold or draw back (we have continued to be blown away by the love they have shown us during all of this). 

Thanks, friends.
We are forever grateful for friends/family near and far who rally around us through all the seasons - good and bad.

(Also - if you want to join in on the new habits, let me know!)


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Sunday, April 19, 2020

Purpose in Pandemic

There aren't great words in the midst of a pandemic.

Sometimes you want magical words to fix things.
To provide certainty in the midst of absolute uncertainty.
To assure you that there will be enough jobs, enough money, enough time to figure out the next steps. That there will be full healing and restoration. That life will go back to how it used to be.

These are imagined promises that might never be fulfilled. Perhaps they're never meant to be. We get to figure out the reality of being okay in a new world. A post-pandemic world. If we even make it that far.

This weekend, Kel and I joined the 22 million people who have filed for unemployment in the past month. The last 144 hours of our lives have been filled with grief, pain, anticipation, hope, gratitude, and a million other things in between. Our last day of work was Friday. I sent the following email to our staff and, rather than try to recreate it, I feel like it continues to sum up the cry of our hearts right now. So... here you go. 

_________________________________

I was putting Baby K (our foster baby of almost 8 months) to bed the other night, processing through the weeks' events. Through the tears, I looked into the bright blue eyes of this miraculous gift and found myself choking out the words of the catechisms we sing to her often. 

How and why did God create us? 
There was a purpose statement in the question that seemed meant for me in the moment. Debbie- why were you created? 

My heart ran through the list of possible answers: 
To be heard?
To be known? 
To be valued? 
To be right? 
To be wanted? 
To work at camp? 
To be a wife? A mom? 
To be healthy? Safe? 
To live in the mountains? 
To be comfortable? 

Quickly, the catechism responded: 
God created us male and female in his own image to know him, love him, live with him, and glorify him. And it is right that we who were created by God should live to his glory.

Too easily I forget the purpose for which I was created. 
In a broken world, with a broken heart, and the uncertainty of what will unfold next... we tend to think we were created for something other than which we were. 

The false narrative causes us to worry, to fear, to believe lies about our worth and our value. It causes us to think that this is all that matters. This present circumstance before us-- it's all-consuming. Our normals have been wrecked by a pandemic, causing us to lose jobs, communities, neighbors, camp, a way of life... causing us to worry about our health, our families, our finances, our futures... 

But here we can remember the purpose for which we were created. 
To know Him.
To love Him.
To live with Him. 
To glorify Him

Through anything, in anything... because of who God is and what He has done. Immanuel... God with us. 

I don't know what category you stand in today... worried, broken-hearted, angry, confused, lonely, wanting to run, scared, wishing away our realities, relieved... 

But I do know one thing.
We are people created with purpose.
Don't forget that.

Even in the hardest, most unimaginable circumstances.... even when our April, normally brimming with campers and the crazy anticipation of summer staff arriving, is now filled with good-byes and unknowns and closed gates...
Our purpose remains the same.

How and why did God create us?
To glorify Him.

In all things. All seasons. All circumstances. No.matter.what.

Let us declare it and live it loudly, courageously, and with steadfastness-- even if it's through tears and brokenness, even if we have to beg the Lord for the strength to do so. There is a beautiful simplicity about our purpose that surpasses our circumstances, that surpasses all time... and reminds us that we serve the King in whom there is victory over death, sin, and pain-- the King who is making all things new

Not to us, but to God be all glory and honor and praise. 


“Worthy are you, our Lord and God,  
to receive glory and honor and power,
for you created all things,
    and by your will they existed and were created.”
- Revelation 4:11-

____________________________________________

And He is so worthy. My little human mind can't even begin to really comprehend it. But I am humbled that He calls me daughter. Relieved that He takes care of His children. 

We don't know what is next. 
And that's okay. At least today. 

More musings will come, as we will have ample time to process, to reflect, and to share. 

For a little while, we will remain in New Mexico as we figure out the adoption process with Baby K. And for the foreseeable future, we will wait. We will pray. We will trust. And we will seek to glorify the Lord however we can, in the midst of something only the Lord knew was coming.



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