Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Compassion as "feeling with," or even "suffering with"

Compassion
--'com'=together
-'passion'=feeling

When we see someone making a mistake in how they live their life, It’s so easy to say ‘it’s their choice, I’ll let them make it.” Our society perhaps reinforces this with its doctrine of independence and tolerance. "Live and let live." But the fact is, we suffer through the choices of others. We are not, none of us, completely independent. We deal with this by maneuvering ourselves out of the path of the storm brought on by someone else's poor choices. Frequently, we accept this as the most logical action.

Is it ever the right choice, rather than backing away in self-preservation, to throw our lot in with someone else, and take on the consequence of their foolishness?

What will we do for another?


For a friend, I would join in something crazy. For friendship, I went camping in November when the temp barely hit 60 during the day even though it seemed like a crazy idea. I did so because I valued the friendship more highly than my own comfort, and whether my friends were doing something crazy or not, I wanted to be with them. Yet this is a minor example. Would I face danger for another, when I could just as easily walk away? What if the danger was the direct result of that person's actions, yet had nothing to do with my own?

For a friend, perhaps. For someone who had proved their worth, possibly. For a good cause, hopefully.

What would it say if we did that for a total stranger, treating a stranger as a friend, casting our lot in with theirs to show that we are with them, accepting them as they are despite the mess they carry with them?

In the book A Wind in the Door,  by Madeleine L'Engle, there is a scene in which the boy Calvin is trying to prevent a farondala (mythical character) named Sporos from joining the other farondalae in destroying the fara (their parent-creatures), and says (paraphrased) “If you go in, I’m going in with you.” Sporos: “To kill the fara?” Calvin: “No. To be with you.” And that’s what he does. And then when he is sucked in, and another character, Meg, is sucked in, one of their companions, Mr. Jenkins, who has difficulty even believing in the farondalae, comes to pull them back—successfully, but he is ensnared. It is this action that speaks to Sporos and reveals the distinction of good and evil—that Mr. Jenkins would risk himself for Sporos, who he barely knew, and that the Echthroi (the forces of evil trying to lure Sporos) would then try to kill him. A somewhat similar scene is in the movie Hook when Peter Pan's son Jack, attracted to the fatherly affection Captain Hook has shown him, sees Captain Hook kill another boy, Rufio, whom his father then grieves as a son. Jack realizes that his father has indeed risked his life and the lives of others to save him, despite his fickleness, while Hook will kill to keep his power.

We, collectively as humans, have made a mess. A big mess. A mess created by millenia of poor choices, a mess so big that we have little hope of cleaning it up. If another being saw our world, would they care to visit? With corruption in our politics, murder in our streets, and selfishness in our hearts, we have not made this world a pleasant place.

Yet Someone came to visit--Someone who was so perfect that only He was even capable of cleansing us. He refused to sit back and watch us suffer from our mistakes, commenting "oh that's too bad for them" (this is pity), but instead came down, not as a glorified being, which would create a stark and intimidating study in contrasts, but as one of us, taking human flesh, sufferling our fatigue, touching our frailties, contending with our foolishness. Not only so, but He submitted to our mess, brought to face death by the envy and corruption of the leaders, and taking on, taking upon Himself, the full weight of our sin. Jesus cast his lot in with us, knowing that unless he did so, we would perish from our foolishness. It was only the sacrifice of perfection that would make a way for us to turn and be cleansed, able to now approach God with a clear conscious (Eph. 3:12).

What will we do?

We have a dying world around us. It will not be saved by our cool, pitying observance from the comfort of our church sanctuaries. We must not be afraid to be out there, sharing in the pain of this world, risking our health, our safety, and whatever security we've got, to offer salvation. The real sacrifice has been made, by Jesus who was perfect, but He asks us to follow His example, to go, tell, share, sacrifice, and love.

"If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me."--Jesus, Matthew 16:24

Follow in His footsteps. He's shown the way.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Caption this


If you come by this post, create your own caption and post it in "Comments" :) Note: the bear is looking at zoo tourists through a glass wall.

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

"Hurt" ≠ "bad idea"

When we get hurt, perhaps in a relationship or in the process of completing a task or even in trying to serve God, we hear an accusing whisper in our ear as we pause to recover.

“Now see what happened! You should know now that this isn’t going to work. You don’t have what it takes. It was a mistake to even try, and now you’re paying for it!”

This is the lie we hear over and over again. It may come from the spectators, the cynics with a narrow vision of what’s possible. It may come (in softer words) from those genuinely concerned for our well-being. It may even come from the recesses of our own mind, our natural (but world-based) reason. But in the end, this is the deception of Satan, who hates to see us persevere. Our own experiences of growing up should teach us that “hurt” does not necessarily equal “bad,” just as “comfortable” often does not equal “right.”


I was watching some kids riding bikes the other day. One little girl, about seven years old maybe, toppled off her bike a few times. But rather than sit down and cry, nurse her hurt, and refuse to get back on, she smiled a little, promptly got up, and resumed riding.

Perhaps the analogy is a tad cliché, but when we ourselves learned to ride a bike, our success depended on our willingness to, after falling flat on our face, get up smiling and hop back onto the bike, confident that eventually we’d be a smooth rider. If we just lay on the ground thinking "this proves I'm a terrible rider, maybe a terrible person; this isn’t going to have a good ending," we would never be successful cyclists. We had to push ourselves up (often with encouragement from parents, teachers, and friends), hit the road again, and keep learning.


That's really what life is about, isn't it? Not about feeling good every single moment, but about pushing on through the hard times and learning what its all about.


Right now I'm going through some discouragement and circumstances that really remind me of my last year of high school (it’s now my last year of college). I've definitely felt the inclination to look at the situation and say "why does this keep happening? it must be my fault. I'm never going to get better at avoiding these problems."

Who among us fell off his or her bike ONLY once?

Even if my circumstances resemble a broken record right now, the song is going to have a different ending than it did in high school. I believe this for two reasons.
1. I've changed. I learned from my previous mistakes and know what not to do; that is, not to give up, not to cling tightly to my own control, not to become a cynical recluse (the thought has crossed my mind…). Instead, to trust God, and remember that He is ever-faithful and ever-present. This leads to the second reason.
2. This is NOT the end of the story! My story will not end this way, if I'm faithful to God and He has anything to say about it. He promises hope, honor, glory in the end. This stepping-towards-joy journey will END in joy, and in Jesus.

"For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. "--2 Corinthians 4:17-18

Take hope, fellow journeyers! Even though we're surrounded by darkness, we will see good days. Just keep going, keep learning, and never lose sight of the Savior. He does not change.

"But hold on to what you believe in the light
When the darkness has robbed you of your sight"

--Mumford and Sons, "Hold On to What You Believe"

Monday, October 3, 2011

READ Matthew 14:22-33

Peter abandoned his ideas of what was "possible" or "natural" when he saw Jesus walking on the water. He chose to step out in faith, fully trusting Jesus. But when he took his eyes off Jesus, he "saw the wind and the waves", probably thought "this isn't supposed to be happening!!!" and began to sink. Yet a thread of faith was still revealed when he cried out "Lord, save me!" And Jesus did.

Even after we choose the “impossible” way of Christ, we will face crises of faith. We may still lose sight of what we believe. We will still stumble. We will still utter desperate, fear-filled prayers (which are nonetheless better than trying to fix the problem ourselves). Jesus still answers, and reaches out a hand. He asks us why we doubted when He was right there all along. And then He invites us to keep walking with Him, restoring us and enabling us to do greater and greater things as long as we are willing to trust again.

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Quick recommendation

If you.
a. live in a small apartment
b. are just starting to live on your own
c. are a student (of any kind)
d. have a busy schedule
e. know nothing about cooking
f. some or all of the above

...then you should check out my sister's blog at www.thegradstudentskitchen.blogspot.com :)

Sunday, July 24, 2011

Under Construction

My university is currently cluttered with construction sites. A new dorm is gaining height across from my apartment complex, continually shedding dust on my sister's new car. Several roads are blocked off, and the music building I would usually practice piano in is closed for remodeling. If a prospective freshman came to visit right now, I imagine they would think, "This campus is kinda ugly."

I'll admit my attitude hasn't been the greatest either--I don't like having to take detours, and I miss the piano rooms of Hughes Hall. It's none too pretty either, and it feels like the construction phase will never ever end. But as I was rambling around campus this evening to clear my head, I started thinking about how our lives often look kinda like this campus. We don't have everything together, no part is completely polished, and some aspects of our lives are downright grimy. My life certainly reflects this--I feel like I'm constantly having to work on my people skills, while covering up annoying habits and cleaning up the sin-stains. Even so, sometimes my carefully placed covers fall down revealing the unfinished work. It's a never-ending process.

But I draw hope from the fact that there's an Architect at work here. He has the design mapped out, and He delights in bringing His plan to life. The scrappy pieces don't worry Him, because He has in his head and heart what they can become.

"As you come to him, the living Stone--rejected by men but chosen by God and precious to him--you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ."--1 Peter 2:4-5

"And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit."--Ephesians 2:22

These two verses are both talking about the church, the people who have chosen to follow Christ. They do not say "you have been built" but "you are being built." It is a work in progress, an unfinished progress. But He has great plans.

"O afflicted city, lashed by storms and not comforted, I will build you with stones of turquoise, your foundations with sapphires. I will make your battlements of rubies, your gates of sparkling jewels, and all your walls of precious stones. All your sons will be taught by the LORD, and great will be your children's peace. In righteousness you will be established: tyranny will be far from you: you will have nothing to fear."--Isaiah 54:11-14

Even the lives, the churches, the nations that seem wrecked and destroyed, He is able and willing to transform into something beautiful. The work-in-progress may still look dusty and ugly at times, yet the Restorer will not give up, because He has the final, beautiful picture in mind.

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

A Constant Source of Water

"This is what the LORD says: 'Cursed is the one who trusts in man, who depends on flesh for his strength and whose heart turns away from the LORD. He will be like a bush in the wastelands; he will not see prosperity when it comes. He will dwell in the parched places of the desert, in a salt land where no one lives. But blessed is the man who trusts in the LORd, whose confidence is in him. He will be like a tree planted by the water that sends out its roots by the stream. It does not fear when heat comes; its leaves are always green. It has no worries in a year of drought and never fails to bear fruit.' "--Jeremiah 17:5-8

A similar passage to this one says that a man who delights in God's law "is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit in season, and whose leaf does not wither" (Psalm 1:1-3). I took this to mean that those who followed God's law received nourishment and refreshment. Jeremiah suggests the same thing in this passage; those who trust in the LORD are fruitful. What I noticed today, however, is that the tree isn't just well-watered because there happens to be a lot of rain. It's healthy because whether there is rain or not it remains by the stream, rooted in a place of safety and refreshment.

Jesus commanded his disciples, "Remain in me," and noted that those who are not are like a branch "that is thrown away and withers" (John 15:4, 6). We wither and dry up when we step away from God and His Word. We may get some rain here and there, but this world has a lot of "parched places" filled with withered people who have walked away from their Creator. If we stay close to God, if we keep him near to our hearts, and if we daily immerse ourselves in His precious Word, then that Word promises that we will not need to worry when trouble or "drought" comes--we will find our strength and renewal in God and continue to be fruitful.

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Faithless

There's doubting, and then there's ignoring. Seems to me that the latter is the worser.

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Preparing the soil of our hearts

"Sow righteousness for yourselves, reap the fruit of unfailing love, and break up your unplowed* ground; for it is time to seek the LORD, until he comes and showers his righteousness on you."


--Hosea 10:12



Lately God has seemed rather distant. I feel like I've lost my sense of direction and gotten caught up in my own desires. I'm still finding my way back from that, but seeing this verse this morning reminded me that our own efforts, although insufficient, still should be aiming towards righteousness--even when we don't have a clear "sense" of God's presence and direction. Our spirits should be set in a state of waiting for God to come in us through His Spirit and lead us into real righteousness. As we wait for more knowledge of Him, we continue to do what is right, remember the great love we've already been given and let that have an effect on our lives, and prepare our hearts for further teaching and development by weeding out anything false or unclean and making room for the Spirit to flow through us.


Ideas on specific ways to do this?


*"The primary purpose of ploughing is to turn over the upper layer of the soil, bringing fresh nutrients to the surface, while burying weeds and the remains of previous crops, allowing them to break down. It also aerates the soil, and allows it to hold moisture better."


--"Plough" on Wikipedia,

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Newhopes

So my old blog got a). neglected by me, and b). overrun by comments in an Asian script. I'm not sure why b). happened but a). was because I forget how much I like writing about life. So I started a new blog in hopes that I will have/find/invent time to use it. I was also re-inspired by a friend's recent beginnings in blogdom (welcome Morgan!). Unfortunately, time is something I lack at this precise moment, so I have to cut this entry short.

be of good cheer.
--christine