OF BOATS AND STORMS

A friend of mine shared the following post yesterday, and it resonated with my heart. A quick google search showed that it has been making its rounds on the internet, but the original author is unknown.  It has been added to, edited and modified several times, the version I share below is the one I read.

These words arrived as the forecast was for a beautiful week of sunshine and with it a ray hope as we heard the plan for the slow reopening our the Colorado economy and a gradual ending of the stay at home order.  

There are no right or wrong feelings in this season.  No one way you should feel or act,  all of us experience this in our own way.  My prayer is that this week, you find love, empathy, and hope in the sunlight on your face. 

WE ARE NOT ALL IN THE SAME BOAT

I heard that we are all in the same boat, but it’s not like that. We are in the same storm, but not in the same boat. Your ship could be shipwrecked and mine might not be. Or vice versa.

For some, quarantine is optimal. A moment of reflection, of re-connection, easy in flip flops or pajamas, with a cocktail or coffee. For others, this is a desperate financial & family crisis and you don’t know if you will survive it or where your next meal will come from.

For some that live alone they’re facing endless loneliness and depression. While for others it is a peaceful time full of rest & time to get caught up with things you’ve neglected or time with their spouse, mother, father, sons & daughters.

With the $600 weekly increase in unemployment some are bringing in more money to their households than when they were working. Others are working more hours for less money due to pay cuts, hours cut, or loss in sales.

Some families of 4 just received $3400 from the stimulus while other families of 4 saw $0 and are still anxiously waiting.

Some were concerned about getting certain candy for Easter while others were concerned if there would be enough bread, milk and eggs for the weekend.

Some want to go back to work because they don’t qualify for unemployment and are running out of money and need to pay their bills. While others (both those still earning a paycheck and those who are not) want to kill those who break the quarantine.

Some are spending 2-3 hours/day helping their child with online schooling while others are spending 2-3 hours/day to educate their children on top of a 10-12 hour workday. Some are teachers trying to juggle teaching kiddos online while holding down their own home and teaching their own children all while holding a baby on their hip.

Some have experienced the near death of the virus, some have already lost someone from it and some are not sure if their loved ones are going to make it. Others don’t believe this is a big deal or think it’s some kind of a conspiracy.

Some are extremely worried about the elderly. Some think because the majority of the people dying are elderly, it’s ok to go out and make the risk higher for them as if their lives don’t matter.

Some have faith in God and expect miracles during this 2020. Others say the worst is yet to come. Some don’t believe in God or believe in a different higher power and hope things will eventually get better.

So, friends we are not in the same boat. We are in the same storm but even the storm looks different for everyone. We are going through a time when our perceptions and needs are completely different.

Each of us will emerge, in our own way, from this storm, but we will all emerge different and with a new normal. It is very important to see beyond what is seen at first glance. Not just looking, actually seeing.

We are all different ships during this storm experiencing a very different journey. Let’s be kind to each other and respectful of those different journeys.

How about we love each other and extend grace, mercy, kindness, and smiles…even if they are hidden under our masks.

Choose Wisely

We’re in a weird season.   Two months ago I could not have imagined the turn our world would take.  If I spend too many hours on social media or watching the news it can become overwhelming to think about the impact this virus is having and will continue to have on our community.  Depending on which posts I read, I can hear that this is everything from a government conspiracy to enforce control, to a plan to eliminate the aging population, to a political game to destroy a party, and the list goes on.  I could get lost in the negativity and the accusation.  It would be so easy.  I have spent much of my life battling anxiety, and it would be easy to invite that voice back in, to allow it to overshadow everything else.  But in this season, I refuse.

I refuse to be a slave to anxiety.  I refuse to allow hate to take root.  I refuse to allow fear to make me selfish.  I refuse to allow anger to spew over onto those around me. 

I also refuse stick my head in the sand and pretend everything is ok.  I refuse sit back and enjoy my family at home, and ignore the hurting around me. I refuse to think of this as someone else’s problem. I refuse to disengage.

Right now may not look like anything any of us were planning, but right now is the only guarantee we have.  We can anxiously wait for the future, or passively wait for this to end, or we can stop, and look around.  Your life, your calling, your adventure is right now.  It’s not on hold.  It’s not later. It’s not when this is over.  It is here, in this moment, in the waiting.  What is God calling you to do.  Who is He calling you to become.  God is not quarantined.  He is not waiting for this to end so we can get back to work, He is here, working, right now.

So today, I challenge you to choose joy.  To choose life.  To choose growth.  Ask God where He is leading.  Not out of busy-ness or the need to be defined by something.  Ask Him, because you are in a uniquely quiet season and have a unique ability to stop and listen.  Is He is calling you to rest? Is He is calling you to serve? To be a voice of encouragement, or a prayer warrior, or to donate all your extra toilet paper?  Is it a season of learning, or just being present?  Maybe it’s a season of listening, intentionally, to Him, to your family, to your friends?  Can you find joy in the sunshine again, in the sound of the birds returning, in the awakening of spring?  Can you find childlike joy in the dogs playing, or the kids’ making up silly songs? Can you rediscover a slower pace in trimming hedges and mowing lawns.  Can you rediscover the art of emailing letters, or the really old art of handwriting them?

Whatever it looks like for you in this season, you have a choice.  You may not like all the choices, they may not be the choices you wanted, but you have a choice.  Choose wisely.

“I Refuse” by Josh Wilson

“I don’t want to live like I don’t care, I don’t want to say another empty prayer, oh I refuse

to sit around and wait for someone else, to do what God has called me to do myself, oh I could choose, not to move, but I refuse.”

Way maker
Miracle worker
Promise keeper
Light in the darkness
My God
That is who you are

 

You are here
Touching every heart
I worship you

You are here
Healing every heart
I worship you

You are here
Turning lives around
I worship you

You are here
Mending every heart
I worship you

“Way Maker”

 

 

Resurrection Hope

Easter week is upon us, and I think it’s safe to say it’s not exactly panning out as we had planned.  Whatever grand plans your ministry had for Easter when you began the conversations earlier this year, it couldn’t possible have looked like your new reality.  It’s easy to get lost in that, get lost is the loss.  But, this week, as we redefine our normal, and plan Easter services so very different than anything we’ve ever done before, I just want to encourage you to find the hope of Easter for yourself, and share the hope of Easter with those around you.

Ironically, if we think back to that first Easter, I think it would be safe to say things weren’t exactly panning out the way the disciples had planned either.  They had dinner with Jesus, He spent the last hours giving them advice on how to live, teaching about love, praying for them and praying for us. With the beauty of hindsight and the full picture, we also know He was preparing them for the loss that was about to come, but they didn’t know.  One moment He was with them, teaching them, and the next his body lay in a tomb. The whole world changed right before their eyes, all their plans and hopes seemed lost in a moment. 

As heartbreaking as that moment was, we know that it was necessary.  That it was part of a bigger plan.  That the very despair they felt, was the event that would provide hope & life for every generation to come.  When we celebrate Easter, we celebrate that through the crucifixion Jesus conquered sin and death.  In the darkest of days, the most beautiful work was being brought to completion.  It is the hope, joy, and promise for all of us, to carry us through our darkest days.  It is the hope, and joy and promise that Jesus told us to share with everyone.

Imagine, the opportunity we have to offer new life to the broken and hurting in our communities.  Imagine the life and freedom of Jesus reaching every ear. Imagine the hope and joy and power of resurrection being sought and found in Jesus, by a desperate and hungry world.

Resurrection is what we need. Resurrection is what our world needs. Our hope is found in the resurrection and we have a unique opportunity to share our hope, our joy, and the glory of the resurrected King with a hurting world.

 

 

Our Next Chapter

It’s a beautiful Tuesday morning.  The sun is shining and I’m sitting in a cozy chair in my bedroom, you know the one, the chair that had dreams of being used for relaxing and reading, maybe doing some work, but in reality is always covered in laundry… either fresh from the washer or preserving the previously worn clothes, that could be worn again.  But today it’s cleaned off, for the first time in a long time, and ever since I cleared it last Friday, I’ve been planning to sit in it to write this blog post.

It’s a simple thing, I’m finding joy in the peace of my bedroom, while in the bedroom next door my oldest is working.  She doesn’t live at home anymore, but has come home for this time, for companionship, safety, and probably, most of all food.   My college student is attending online classes now that Spring Break is officially over, and my younger two are in their respective corners working on their schoolwork for the week.  My husband is grilling up some meat in between work meetings in the living room and on the deck.  This is our new normal.

In just a few short weeks, our world has gotten smaller, we run considerably less errands, all those meetings and places and things that we are always running to have been kept at a distance.  If this were a vacation it would feel relaxing to get away from it all, however, nothing about this feels relaxing.  And it’s more than the things we don’t get to do, but it’s also the people we don’t get to see, the people we know who are suffering. People who have lost jobs, who are fighting to keep their businesses alive, are fighting for their health, fighting depression and isolation.  People confined to their homes in unhealthy relationships, stuck at home with nothing to do but worry about the future, ministries struggling to keep supplies on their shelves and so much more.

We are writing the next chapter of our stories, individually and as a community.  How my brain receives this information and processes it, very much depends on the voices I allow to be the loudest.  My memory of this time will, in large part, reflect what I choose to pay attention too.  There is so much that could hold my attention, choosing the hope & joy and the life-giving is a conscious choice I have to make.

The stories are endless.

 

Writing an Epic Story

Our rural school district has gone to online school, while knowing that not all of our kids have access to internet and have lost their access to lunch & breakfast.  So, what are they doing about it?  They are sending out buses, every morning to central stops and offering free breakfast & lunch to any kids who show up.  Those buses are also offering wifi hot spots for those kids to download/upload their assignments for the week.

A local ministry is having trouble keeping the basic food supplies on their shelves, today a friend is dropping off two 50 lb bags of rice that we purchased to help.  Others are doing the same, it’s not a lot, I’m limited to one bag of rice per day just like everyone else, but together, we can keep them running.

A local upholstery company got a shipment of medical mask material.  What did they do?  They made it available for free to anyone willing to sew medical masks for their community. One person with a giant roll of mask material can help, together, we can take a huge step in supporting our community.

I’ve seen picture after picture of hearts in windows and sidewalk art to encourage our neighbors.  We are not alone.  We see each other, we see you.  One encouragement can save a life, together, we can save a whole nation.

Local Churches are rising to the challenge, offering online services, worship, youth meetings, prayer.  Individually they will provide hope to some, together, they can show the world the hope of Jesus.

Today I choose to sit in my chair and share the good stories.  I choose to be in the moment, not the future.  Today the sun is shining.  Today my chair is clean.  Today my kids are home with me.  Alone, I can focus on the good and share it with those I love, and we can write a better chapter, together, we can write a great one, and epic one.

 

 

“”None of us, including me, ever do great things. But we can all do small things, with great love, and together we can do something wonderful.”                                                      – Mother Teresa 

Esther Guzman

 

 

“My life is in You, Lord,                 

My strength is in You, Lord           

My hope is in You, Lord,                 

In You, it’s in You.             

I will praise You with all of   my life,   

I will praise You with all of   my strength

With all of my life,  and all of my strength     

All of my hope is in You.”

-“My Life is In You,”  Hillsong United

Our Rescue Story

It’s been a few weeks now of ever increasing social distancing measures, the World continues to alternately go on about it’s normal business or panic. Jobs are lost, people are working from home, schools are on hold for an unknown amount of time. A trip to the store feels conflictingly normal and yet so strange, as the things we’re used to seeing every day aren’t always there.
Last week we challenged you to take a look at how you are reacting in this crisis and how you are responding those around you, reminding you that the world is watching, and what picture of our God are you painting?
This week I just want to take a moment and say good job. good job to all of you serving, working, helping, loving, and just being present.
Our world is never lacking in anger, frustration, and uncertainty. There are plenty of people filling up our social media pages with fear and rage. However in the midst of all that, more and more positivity is taking shape.
Offers to shop for those who can’t, or sharing your supply of toilet paper. Postings of where items are stocked and when, special hours for the most vulnerable. Businesses and organizations donating medical supplies to much needed area hospitals. People supporting local businesses through online ordering, food pick up, and buying gift certificates for the future. People tipping extravagantly to help in this time.
More and more people are choosing to post messages of encouragement and hope instead of focusing on all that is wrong. There’s plenty wrong, we all know it, this won’t be an overnight return to normal, but there’s also still so much good in this world.
We are called to be salt of the earth, light in the darkness, and every time I open my connections to the outside world, I see it. Churches offering online services, youth leaders having online Netflix sessions with their students, churches recording full services from empty rooms, band members playing their hearts out as if the room was full, so that we can all participate at home.
Small groups moving to an online Bible study format and still connecting via Skype or Zoom or any one of the other tools available out there. Ministry after ministry offering free services, free connections, free tools. This is what coming together looks like. This is what rescue looks like.
So, again… Good Job, we see you!

Drowning in Fear

“Therefore I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more than food, and the body more than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?”  Matthew 6:25-34

You know this verse, you’ve probably taught this verse, but can you just take a moment to sit in the peace and promise it offers. Our world has gone crazy in just a few short days, my social media feeds and email are overflowing with worry, frustration, and fear.  But the truth is right there, always has been, all the fear and frustration will not change a thing.  All the anger will not make this virus go away.  Hoarding supplies may satisfy a momentary fear, but will not sustain anyone in the long run.  The truth, the knowledge, that my God is still on the throne, is the only thing that will silence the voices of panic the enemy is screaming loudly in my ear. 

A Hurting World

I don’t know what the next few days, weeks, months are going to look like.  Today, my husband and I work from home, my kids are online doing school work (middle school, high school & college), my oldest goes to work at a church that is trying to figure out how to be an online voice to our students & families, my over 80 parents are staying home and safe, if a bit lonely.  But there are others;  friends and family who work in ski resorts that have already lost their jobs;  who own small businesses that are figuring out how to stay open; who work hourly jobs that are losing work hours; and those who work in grocery stores or medical fields and are working more hours than ever and putting themselves at risk daily.  None of us are unaffected, and we have to be in this together.  Our world will default into “I have to take care of myself” mode, but this has never been Jesus’ example and call to us.

 

Your Call to Rescue

Prepare, take care of your family, and then look around you.  Who needs your help, your compassion, your kindness?  Who desperately needs your hope?  Are your words and actions aligned with someone who believes that their God is bigger than every challenge and circumstance?

35 By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” John 13:35 (NIV)

This is that moment.  Truly every day is that moment, but if you have a hard time seeing it some days, let me assure you, you can see it now.  The world is panicking, the world is scared, the world is hoarding, the world is trying to control its loss of control, but make no mistake, they are watching.

What will your neighbors, friends, family, and coworkers think of you and more importantly your God when this is over?

 

Called to Rescue

There is a call on our lives to have a relationship with Jesus and to walk into the hard and holy places he is calling us to.  They are calls to speak, rescue, fight, change the world, proclaim Jesus, give life- but all of us are called to do this in different ways. Some of us loudly and publicly, some of us in quiet ways, some from in front, and some from behind the scenes. Some with strangers and some with family and friends. There are no wrong ways to battle, just different battle fields.  But make no mistake, all of us are called to battle. 

In Need of Rescue

When I was 12, I moved.  It wasn’t my first move, as the daughter of a career Army family, moving was a regular thing, but this time was different.  Our previous assignment had been in a German community away from American Bases, and so, for the first time in my life, I had connected with people that didn’t move every few years.  Additionally, that assignment was 4 years long, I had never stayed anywhere that long before, and it was definitely home. My unwillingness to leave my home, partnered with the awkward age of starting Middle School in a new country did not make for a smooth transition.  Turns out the cultural differences between pre-teen Germany and California in the 80s were significant. For the first time in my life, I didn’t fit it.  I wasn’t up to date on the current trends, styles, make-up or even the right TV shows. That first year was hard, I was lonely, depressed and homesick, but had managed to form a small circle of friends.

Rescue is Coming

My new best friend invited me to youth group.  Her parents were making her go and as her friend, I felt obligated to go with her. Church in and of itself held no particular appeal. I was raised in a family that went to church on Christmas eve, primarily out of tradition.  God was the Jeanie in the bottle you prayed to when you wanted or needed something, usually an item or a fun activity. What I found there was my own rescue.

I met this group of people who loved each other, had great friendships, were real about life- they were family and I was hungry and desperate for that. I wanted to be a part of this so I attended youth group for several months, continuously turning down offers to come to church.  Finally, after months of attending only youth group, I agreed to go to church.  I couldn’t tell you what the message was but I do know that the Pastor asked us all to bow our heads and say a prayer- when it was done- he said if you prayed those words for the first time and meant them, that you were now saved and to connect with someone who could help you get to know Jesus and what salvation meant. That started and amazing life with Jesus- not always smooth, but my life will never be the same. The rescuers in my story, include that Pastor who ultimately made the alter call, but the path to that day, included teenagers who loved me, included me, invited me; volunteers who offered rides, repeatedly invited me to church, talked with me, and taught me; and parents who valued my attendance as much as their own kids’.

Rescued to Rescue

But I’ll tell you something, I didn’t know what I was doing then, I didn’t know the life I was looking for. All I knew was there was this group of teenagers and adults, who had already provided momentary rescue to a lonely-hearted teenager, and I would follow them anywhere they asked me to go, fortunately, they chose Jesus and it became a life rescue.

 

Who’s Rescue Story are you helping to write today?

 

 

 

Andschana Aljets is the Executive Director of Finding Zarephath and loves to share stories of rescue.  

Called to Rescue

March is here, and with it comes the promise of Spring, of new beginnings, and very soon the Easter season will be upon us.  As we get ready to celebrate the greatest rescue of all, we would like to spend the next few weeks talking about everyday rescue.  We were rescued and now we are called to rescue. 

So, this month we will take a look at rescue, what exactly is it that Jesus is calling us to.  I would like to suggest that rescue may not be about fixing or saving, that’s what Jesus offers, but that our rescue of each other is found in offering moments of hope, of holding space for each other, for simply being present. 

 

“When you hold space for someone, you send them the message that they matter. This is the gift of presence.” – Danielle Doby

 

Cayla’s Story – Dec 2017

 

Two days ago, my dad had a severe heart attack. They have had him sedated for two days. He has a machine breathing for him, another is pumping his heart for him, there is a machine for everything his body should be doing. I have spent a lot of time staring blankly at walls. I still have so many unanswered questions and prayers waited to be fulfilled.

But I have to tell you something about people. In the coldest winter I have ever felt, people will not let me shiver. They are astonishing.

When I arrived at the hospital Wednesday morning, someone I loved waited and walked in with me. When the nurse brought me to my mom, she was surrounded by people we loved. While we waited hours to hear what had happened, they all stayed and prayed. While they prepared my dad for the ICU, my siblings and I were whisked away for a few hours of distraction and joy. When I tried to run away, my friends gave me a place to rest. While my brother had to experience his 18th birthday without my dad to sing to him, the people who love us carried the tune, and brought cards and balloons and cupcakes. While my world is so many question marks and I don’t knows, people surround us and pray. And pray. And pray.

I owe my people more thanks than I could ever speak aloud. When my world feels like darkness, they come and light candles. There are hundreds of people that deserve endless thanks right now:

The people who have refused to leave my mom alone in the hospital: thank you.

The people who have texted, commented, or spoken their regards and prayers: thank you.

The people that bought my brother cupcakes and cards and sang to him in the midst of crisis: thank you.

The people that took my car keys from my hand and began fixing it without being asked: thank you.

The people that have taken in my siblings and I, with unconditional love, comfort, and kindness: thank you.

The people that have held me close and let me cry, made me laugh, and just held my hand while I stared blankly: thank you.

That’s all I have. That’s all I can give. I will thank you and thank you and thank you until my voice goes out, because you have overwhelmed me with love. And I will sing hallelujah until my vocal chords burn because God has given me all of you.

Cayla Aljets is the Family Journey Director at Discovery Church Colorado in Colorado Springs.  She has an amazing heart for Students and Missions,  and combines those passions whenever possible.  Cayla is also creatively gifted and finds her outlet in words, photography, and exploring abandoned places.

 

When Love Hurts…

We live in a broken world.  This is not the world the way God designed it, our human relationships aren’t what God envisioned when he set us up in the garden.  There was intimacy and trust and a natural balance in our world which we have lost as a result of the fall and so very many bad choices since then (Adam & Eve aren’t the only ones who blew it).  I’ve made my share of mistakes; I’ve been a distracted friend, an impatient mother, a frustrated wife, a disengaged employee, and an unreliable volunteer… my guess is so have you.  Not always, not even mostly, but it’s there.  And then there’s the other side, I have been hurt by friends and family and employers and coworkers…. my guess is so have you.  Not always, and not even mostly, but certainly there have been seasons and moments that the pain has felt like too much to carry.

So, how do we still love, keep moving forward in the face of betrayal, abandonment, or even just invisibility?  We’ve all heard the lessons about forgiveness, that forgiveness is more about us than the person we are forgiving, and I believe that wholeheartedly.  Harboring anger and resentment will eat you up from the inside and leave the person you direct it at relatively unscathed in comparison.  But even as we move in obedience to forgive, our hearts ache.  There is always a loss of some sort in broken relationships.  So how do we fight for our hearts?

Grace & Truth

We are at war.  Our war is a generational blood feud and we have been born into it and have been fighting even before knowing our enemy – he has come in like a thief and told us lies, lies about men, lies about church, lies about society, lies about women, lies about God, and lies about us.   He has been our accuser , he has called us too much and not enough, he has called us shameful and worthless, he has called us unloved, unprotected, not worth fighting for and even before we understood all the words,  we agreed with him, in a million small ways and later in life in bigger ways.  And the reality is, the most painful hurt we receive from those we care about, are that they appear to be in agreement… a guilty verdict.

The same war we are battling, the same ways we have failed, our loved ones battle and fail too.  Their accuser, their lies, their fears, look so much more like ours than most of us believe.  They do not wake up in the morning thinking “How can I hurt someone I love today” the offence usually comes in a moment of reaction to their own wounding.  So, can you spend just a moment sitting in their shoes, knowing what you know of their story (while understanding you barely know anything), and see where their brokenness showed up?  Not to excuse their actions, but to understand them.  To feel their hurt, and their insecurity, and in doing so, can your anger turn to grief.  Grief for their heart and their identity.  Can you stand in Jesus’ shoes for just a moment… Father forgive them, they don’t even known what they’ve done.  Can you honor your pain, by acknowledging the lie it poked at? Honor your relationship by standing in empathy with the person who hurt you for just a moment? And then, can you ask Jesus to step in and heal you both.

Restoration

Someday this world will come to an end, at that time the proper order of all things will be restored, with God at the head, us by His side, and everything else beneath that.  We will see each other clearly the way we were designed to be, the way God already sees us, in the meantime the path to loving well even when it hurts is to trust that Jesus sees it all more clearly and to lean into Him.

Andschana Aljets is the Executive Director of Finding Zarephath. 

She loves to share the things she is learning and hearing and

invites you to journey with her. 

Loving God

Now that the romance of Valentine’s Day is behind us, can we shift our focus of love for ourselves and others to the most important relationship –  To love God.  I love God, of course I do, but do I love God well.  For much of my life doing was my measurement of loving God, did I do enough for Him.  And certainly, when we love someone, we want to do things for them, so yes, that’s a real thing, but… is that it?

The Heart of Jesus

A few years ago, I was going through the study “Captiving” by Staci Eldredge. In it, Staci was talking about Genesis describing us as being created in God’s image, male and female He created us, but then she went on to say “we bear the image of God, but in a way only women can. What does that tell you about the heart of God?”

It feels like a simple question, but let that sink in… I can’t even tell you what these words did to me. I was in my mid 30s and had spent most of my life apologizing – I’m too needy, I’m too emotional, I’m sorry I need you to tell me you love me, I’m sorry I need you to pursue me, I’m sorry I still need to hear that you like me and want to spend time with me, etc. I’d spent so many years thinking of this is a feminine weakness, neediness, insecurity and in an instant I realized, it’s not that at all.

This is the feminine heart of Jesus – this is a reflection of Him and His desires – he wants to be desired, to be pursued, to be known. He wants quality time, He wants words of joy and enjoyment, He wants all of me and wants me to want all of those things with Him. Those desires are holy, God-given – I was just looking for answers in all the wrong places. I was looking to my husband and my family and my friends, and yes they have a role to play in this, but this bottomless ache, this empty void, is a place only Jesus can fill and it was meant for him.

Andschana Aljets is the Executive Director of Finding Zarephath.  She loves to share the things she is learning and hearing with the rest of you and invites you on the journey with her.  “None of us have arrived, I am closer today than I was 10 years ago, and will be closer 10 years from now than I am today.”

 

 

Loving Better

We were designed to walk in relational intimacy with the God of everything – we were designed to see him delight in us, rule the world with us, laugh with us, sing in the rain with us.  We just celebrated relational love last week, our world tried to sell us love in flowers, and cards, and expensive gifts and dinners out, but truthfully, most of us just wanted a reminder of the connection we feel to someone when we are deeply known.

You are deeply known.  God knows every hair on your head, every dream in your heart, every fear that settles in your stomach.  He delights in you and sees you.  And He wants the same.  Will you join me in choosing to continue to know Him, to pursue Him, to see Him.  Oh, how often I don’t see Him. I continue to lean how to love Him better.

Love Well!