Month: July 2012 (Page 2 of 5)

The sick and the twisted

Sick people flocked to Jesus. Guys with shriveled hands, women hearing voices, scary characters who were typically chained to trees, young men trucked around on a pallet all day (and let’s not forget the bleeding woman)… it seems that if you had any physical or mental malady, then by the second chapter of any gospel you’ve zeroed in and hunted down Jesus to ask a favor. 

I cannot let it drop: a religion and a faith belief existed for centuries (eons!) but when Jesus showed up, it’s evident that the religious system had nothing to offer these people. The crowds followed Jesus, sick and hurting, hoping his words and touch would bring healing.

But the religious folk? They watched Jesus from afar, offering critical commentary on his perceived shortcomings, waiting for him to misstep on the Sabbath. They waited anxiously to announce how exactly this round peg of a messiah wouldn’t fit through the square hole they’d carved through their understanding of scripture. 
Those whom religion served best needed nothing from Jesus, or so it seemed to them. 
It’s fascinating to me to watch how those at the top of the food chain resisted the change, they missed the messianic meaning. More so, they tried to control and limit the Goodness of the News Jesus brought with him. “We need to limit this, we can’t just have people being healed on the Sabbath!” they said in their board meetings. 
Jesus offered a faith that served those who needed it rather than a belief that continued to serve those at the top. 
 

The work of the daily

Three loads of laundry, a trip to the grocery store, reheating leftovers for lunch. Vacuuming. Getting dressed, brushing teeth, making beds. Vacuuming. Making it to a toilet in time. Cutting our own chicken.  Vacuuming. 

Chores, household duties and basic responsibilities are not what gets in the way of life, but they’re where life happens. Somewhere, someone (probably Pinterest) told us that if we have it together, these things occupy the peripheral regions of life but the in the focal point lies vacations, promotions and that day you hit the lottery. A fox snuck into the hole and said, “get it together, get the house clean and then you can come out and play! That’s where you’ll make memories with your kids. That’s where they learn and grow.” 
Liar. 
We can allow some imaginary standard to weigh heavy on our shoulders as we think about what it takes to keep a house running. Or we can decide to live each day, drudgery included, knowing that today is the stuff of life. We’re not merely filling hours until the next Main Event. Each day is the main event, when we choose to see it that way. 
Living from highlight to highlight misses the point of life. Sure, it can be tougher to grin and bear it when the kids are whiny and dinner tastes subpar. Survival mode might be necessary in the first trimester or during finals week. But even “making it” allows moments to transform into memories with your eyes wide open to it. 
 

Observations from a fully-lived day

Observations from a fully-lived day:

1. Hospitality is far more than a well-stocked pantry or nice ribbons around party favors. True hospitality includes enjoying the presence of your guests and living beyond the details of hosting. 
2. Family is good. It’s a beautiful thing when it cares for one another, celebrates one another, challenges one another and celebrates one another some more, this time with food. 
3. Good things in life are hard. It’s easier to sit on the couch. It’s easier to stay home. But Easy is not always Good. Good things are worth the Hard. 
4. Early morning + eventful race + afternoons with cousins + swimming = very tired littles, with early bedtimes for all. Which makes for a nice evening for the adults. 
5. A year goes by very quickly. Babies grow quickly. Houses are no longer new, quickly (and should have things hanging on walls by now). 
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