Saturday, September 17, 2016

Since there must be grief...

This one goes out to all who have grieved, are grieving, or who will grieve. So yeah. All of you. 

I wish our culture did grief the old biblical way: the tearing of clothes, some dirty ashes, wailing and weeping, and some stiff, scratchy burlap - all a palpable representation of what is actually going on. 
So authentic.
Honest.
Raw. 

I know too many people grieving deeply but forced, by a culture that is poorly equipped to address the real needs of those in grief, to walk around like they're all good - required to fake their "fineness". It's like a second, third, fourth, 1,000th wounding to the original, still gaping and gushing, flesh-exposed gash, all this faking. 

Look at one such example of mourning found in the Bible when  Jacob found out his beloved son Joseph was dead. “Jacob tore his clothes in grief, dressed in rough burlap, and mourned his son a long, long time. His sons and daughters tried to comfort him but he refused their comfort. “I’ll go to the grave mourning my son.” Oh, how his father wept for him.” Genesis 37:34-35 MSG (btw Joseph wasn't actually dead. His filthy brothers sold him into slavery and lied about his death to their father. Stellar people. But don't worry. It all worked out in the end - several decades later. Oi.)

And notice the time of mourning. None of this, "Hey, it's been a month - Time to get back to normal - Resume schedule - Do the old stuff with the old people, in the same way, as though nothing has changed," sentiments that our culture communicates. No. He grieved a long. long. time. He said he'd go to his grave mourning. 

I reread the whole Joseph story today and for the first time all the weeping stood out to me. Joseph weeping, in fact wailing so loud at one point that all of Pharoah's household could hear him. Jacob weeping. Weeping, weeping everywhere. It was oddly comforting to read - because, in my experience, grief is messy and it lasts a loooong time and it changes everything - and there's a lot of weeping. I just wish we were free to be honest about it. But since we don't have a culture that can be publicly honest about it, we at least need a posse of real people around us with whom we can be privately honest.

Who will those people be? Who will show up? 

Not everyone you'd expect. Not everyone is equipped.

Instead, it will likely be people who've traveled the path of deep grief before you. They can see it on you. They can hear it in your words and tone. They can feel it as you pass. Because they're already a member of this elite grief club. It's the kind of a club you don't know you need until you really need it. And it turns out, it's a pretty sacred one. No one is raising their hand, eager to join, but once you're in, you'd never go back to the old way of doing relationship because you've found something deeper. You've found the kind that touches your soul and, in doing so, heals your wounds. 

What will these healers say? 

I don't know. There will be words, but there really are none that can bring back a loved one or fix an unfixable situation or recover an unrecoverable loss. And more often than not the words attempted only add to the burden of the grieving one. It turns out the only ministry with any currency is presence. Sitting patiently with a grieving person and feeling their pain with them is gold to the grieving. It's their lifeline through. 

When someone is deep in their grief, struggling not to drown, it's not comforting to hear that they will one day find themself on the guiding side of grief as they shepherd someone else through. But that opportunity will come, and when it does they'll be thankful they have the skills and supplies for this extreme kind of trekking. 

#BringBackBurlap #CrackOutTheAshes
#GrieveLikeAHuman
#MournWithThoseWhoMourn
#ThatSherpaLife

Friday, October 17, 2014

He Keeps in Perfect Peace...
I am, by nature, a worrier. My brothers called me their second mother because I was often more concerned with the safety of their bless-ed little, dare devil boy lives than our own mother. If there is a problem, my natural inclination is to jump to the worst possible conclusion...in a single, breathless bound. Fun gift, right? So here's my real life experience. It is summed up best by Isaiah 26:3 which I paraphrase this way, "He keeps in perfect peace all who trust in him, whose thoughts are on him". I run my natural inclination toward fear through the filter of God and his word. The result? The world is crazy and I will do whatever I can to help BUT I'm not even worried. No anxiety here. No fear here. Only perfect, supernatural peace. Not duck my head in the sand and ignore the crisis peace, but real, tangible, informed, actionable peace. And it is available to everyone.
No I'm not even worried about the Seahawks trading Harvin ;), Ebola, ISIS, or Persecution. It's time to calmly solve some problems. Let's do this.

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

The NEWS and what to do with it...
Just read a few news articles. They left me feeling disturbed...
Never has it been more obvious that this world is broken, that common sense is nearly dead, that evil is running rampant and that people of God inspired principles are targets.
If you are a Christian and your prayer life is weak it's time to rev it up. Your brothers and sisters need you and, frankly, you're going to need it too in the coming days. If you are a Christian but rarely read the Bible it's time to mak...e it priority number 1. You need to know what IT says more than you need to know what someone else says it says...

You and I need to be inspired by David and Daniel stories because we need more Davids and Daniels. We need people who do what's right whether it's popular or not. We need people who will speak truth in the public square rather than remain silent because they're scared or they've bought the lie that it's not the way to win people or the lie that their voice doesn't belong there. We need brave truth tellers, truth demonstrators, truth illuminators. Sometimes I feel like we're standing here holding this great orb of light. It's stunning and life giving but we're covering it because we're listening to these little voices..."They won't want it", "That's not how you share it", "They won't like it", "They'll hate me"...meanwhile...the people are perishing! They are entangled in their sin, becoming more lost to it everyday and we're just standing here tongue tied, scared, defeated...LIED to!


But here's the truth. We hold life. We hold truth. And we're meant to share it! 


And then there are those who are intentionally trying to take us out, trying to smother any hint of God. And yes, it often looks like they have the upper hand, like they are winning BUT, again, if you read your David and Daniel stories you will see their situation was the same. It looked impossible. It seemed extremely unlikely that they would win or make any positive influence BUT GOD. 


"The king is not saved by a mighty army; A warrior is not delivered by great strength. A horse is a false hope for victory; Nor does it deliver anyone by its great strength. Behold, the eye of the Lord is on those who fear Him, On those who hope for His loving kindness, To deliver their soul from death And to keep them alive in famine. Our soul waits for the Lord; He is our help and our shield." Psalm 33:16-20


My prayer today is this, that his Holy Spirit would be the wind at your back, causing you to soar and making you brave. I pray that he would illuminate your way, that he would speak his truth to your heart and to your mind, and that he would inspire you with his ideas and his solutions. So make sure you get in a position to hear from him today. Read his word. Pray. Worship. Let him fill you...and then see what he will do with you!

Sunday, February 9, 2014

More of What Matters, Please.


I want to be less like an American Christian and more like just about any other country's definition of a Christian. Here's what I mean. I spent the week with pastors and missionaries from the US and around the world. I heard stories of people so desperate to hear about Jesus that they walk hours one way to sit on the ground in tiny, overheated, completely inadequate structures just to hear the message. People who risk punishment and financial ruin, who defy their family members and their government, all to know and live for Jesus. I heard about Bible students who are so eager to carry the gospel to others that they travel 9 hours by bike each weekend to minister, and then travel 9 hours back to school when they are done (Cambodia). I heard that one of our Assembly of God pastors from northern Nigeria was beaten and burned to death this last week for his faith.
 
(Just let that sink in for a moment...)

Lord, forgive me for every time I've ever complained about anything in the church that has nothing to do with you and the good news of your gospel. Forgive me for my petty complaints about the sound or the songs, the decor or the length of the service. Forgive us for complaining about the lack of people there who are just like us or that little lyric or bit of the sermon that we just didn't like. Forgive us for being offended by anything and everything. Forgive me. Forgive us. Because not a bit of it matters. 
 
Instead make us like the new believer who can't get enough of you, like the Bible student who'll go any distance for you and like the pastor who gave it all for you!

So this probably isn't a good week for me to be within earshot of anyone saying that there should be more or fewer guitars/drums/keys in our time of worship. I don't want to hear that our leaders should be younger/older/more perfectly middle aged or, heaven help me, that they should dress in any particular style. Or whatever. Because I might just throw up. Because not a bit of it matters! 

And if it does matter to me or to you then we have a heart problem that we need to ask Jesus to help us with. And he will. He'll remind us of what actually matters to him. And we'll be broken again for those who haven't had the chance to hear his name once. Not even once! And we'll be motivated to pray and to give and to go. We'll know just what we need to do, to say and to pray because he'll tell us what actually matters to him.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

In Defense of the Introvert Student

I did well in school. I loved it. I miss it now. The learning, the interacting with new ideas and people. I had great teachers and got good grades. Lots of "Is a pleasure to have in class" and "Positive Influence on others" and so on.  But there was one comment that showed up periodically all throughout my education. I thought I was over it until I started to see it pop up on my kid's report cards, even my ridiculously intelligent and conscientious child's report card.

"Needs to participate more".

I hate that comment.

It may be appropriate to use on some kids report cards. Maybe. But let me defend those who, such as myself and now my introvert kids, have unfairly received it. Those of us who took school seriously and really generally gave it our best, most conscientious effort. If I could write a letter to those teachers it would go something like this.
 
Mrs./Mr. Teacher who used that comment on me,
You have taught hundreds, perhaps thousands of students in your career. God bless you. I loved your class! But I didn't understand the "needs to participate more" comment on my report card. You may have mistaken my silence for a lack of listening or interacting with your material. It was not that. I was in fact, constantly interacting with what you said or wrote. For the sake of argument, out of every hour you taught I may have missed 5 minutes of what you said while distracted by something another student did, but the other 95% was focused on your teaching. I was asking myself if I agreed with what you stated. Where you got that information. What I thought about it. What I would do with that new piece of info. I didn't raise my hand a lot. I needed time to process what you said. I found I did that best in a written assignment rather than a class discussion. But I wish you could have seen my mind or heard my conversations later with friends and family. My mind was busy processing, making connections to other ideas, and forming theories. Honestly, I'm probably one of the top listeners and "interacters" with your material who has ever sat in your class. Sometimes I tried to acquiesce, so I'd raise my hand and say something just so you couldn't put that comment on my next report card. I literally faked questions that I already knew the answer to just to meet your requirement. I wish you'd just valued the kind of learner that I was, and allowed the more verbal students to carry the class discussions. I wish you'd seen my lack of verbal participation as just part of my personality, as I've come to learn it just is. I never refused to answer if you called on me specifically, well unless it was 8th grade Geometry. That class made 0 sense to me. But I was always willing to answer, it just wasn't, and still isn't, in my nature to willingly volunteer my answers/opinions. But I'm generally happy to give them when asked. I'm also very happy to share when I do have a strong opinion that I've thought through. I love to share then! I'm just not a fan of sharing my half baked ideas in front of a group. I only do that with a select few. I value people's time and show that by only speaking when I have something useful or beneficial to say. Anyway, I hope you know how much I loved your class and deeply appreciate the time and effort you put in to educating students! And I hope you don't mistake quiet for a lack of participation again. Believe me when I say, we introverts are always listening and participating, just quietly.
Respectfully,
Rosalind Fuiten Gorc

So what do you think?


Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Shhhh...

 I was scrolling through my facebook news feed the other night, when I came across a post and subsequent conversation that turned my stomach.  Fellow Christians were tearing into a local minister. The minister being ripped into was not from my church or even my denomination.  I too have disagreed with things he says.  But my thought was, "This is so pointless. What a waste of time and energy."  If you really dislike or disagree don't attend, don't give your money, and go somewhere else. It's not hard to find other options.  If you really love Jesus don't tear down those who are doing His work.  And seriously, it's the easiest thing in the world to find points of disagreement.   Impress me with your ability to find common ground.  We're on the same team, for Heaven's sake!   Yes really, for Heaven's sake.

So here's the thing, as the daughter, granddaughter, sister in law, friend and wife of pastors you will not hear me speak harshly about another minister, ministry leader, ministry or church.  Could I find things to criticize?  Sure.  But I will not do it because I am well acquainted with the pain when on the receiving end of it.   Were it not for the healing work of Jesus in me I would have curled up into a ball and thrown in the towel a long time ago.   Just don't do it, Christian people.   Ain't nobody got time for that and nothing life giving comes from it!   And furthermore, run away when others try to engage you in such talk.  Run.  Away.  And now I'm headed to the treadmill to run and talk to Jesus.   And I'm mad, so it wouldn't surprise me if I broke a speed record tonight. Silver linings, baby. 
 
Later...
 
I just ran my fastest mile ever, although it's still not very fast.   I'm really more of an endurance girl. Which, as it happens, is a great characteristic for ministry life!  Lemonade, anyone?  :)