Tuesday, November 13, 2012

The Importance of Grace-Saying

I love what Anne Lamott says about the simple act of saying grace. . .

No matter how you say it, grace can transform an ordinary meal into a celebration—of family, love, and gratitude.

We didn't say grace at our house when I was growing up because my parents were atheists. I knew even as a little girl that everyone at every table needed blessing and encouragement, but my family didn't ask for it. Instead, my parents raised glasses of wine to the chef: Cheers. Dig in. But I had a terrible secret, which was that I believed in God, a divine presence who heard me when I prayed, who stayed close to me in the dark. So at 6 years old I began to infiltrate religious families like a spy—Mata Hari in plaid sneakers.

One of my best friends was a Catholic girl. Her boisterous family bowed its collective head and said, "Bless us, O Lord, and these thy gifts. …" I was so hungry for these words; it was like a cool breeze, a polite thank-you note to God, the silky magnetic energy of gratitude. I still love that line.

I believed that if your family said grace, it meant you were a happy family, all evidence to the contrary. But I saw at certain tables that an improvised grace could cause friction or discomfort. My friend Mark reports that at his big southern childhood Thanksgivings, someone always managed to say something that made poor Granny feel half dead. "It would be along the lines of ‘And Lord, we are just glad you have seen fit to keep Mama with us for one more year.' We would all strain to see Granny giving him the fisheye."

I noticed some families shortened the pro forma blessing so they could get right to the meal. If there were more males than females, it was a boy chant, said as one word: "GodisgreatGodisgoodletusthankHimforourfoodAmen." I also noticed that grace usually wasn't said if the kids were eating in front of the TV, as if God refused to listen over the sound of it.

And we've all been held hostage by grace sayers who use the opportunity to work the room, like the Church Lady. But more often, people simply say thank you—we understand how far short we must fall, how selfish we can be, how self-righteous, what brats. And yet God has given us this marvelous meal.

It turns out that my two brothers and I all grew up to be middle-aged believers. I've been a member of the same Presbyterian church for 27 years. My older brother became a born-again Christian—but don't ask him to give the blessing, as it can last forever. I adore him, but your food will grow cold. My younger brother is an unconfirmed but freelance Catholic.

So now someone at our holiday tables always ends up saying grace. I think we're in it for the pause, the quiet thanks for love and for our blessings, before the shoveling begins. For a minute, our stations are tuned to a broader, richer radius. We're acknowledging that this food didn't just magically appear: Someone grew it, ground it, bought it, baked it; wow.

We say thank you for the miracle that we have stuck together all these years, in spite of it all; that we have each other's backs, and hilarious companionship. We say thank you for the plentiful and outrageous food: Kathy's lox, Robby's bûche de Noël. We pray to be mindful of the needs of others. We savor these moments out of time, when we are conscious of love's presence, of Someone's great abiding generosity to our dear and motley family, these holy moments of gratitude. And that is grace.

From Anne Lamott's newest book,
Help, Thanks, Wow: The Three Essential Prayers.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Dealing With Hatred

Followers of Christ know that we are supposed to "turn the other cheek" when we are personally attacked.  However, what action should we take when a group of people are the target of hatred and persecution?  And how can we resist evil without getting caught up in a never-ending cycle of eye-for-an-eye retaliation?

The following children's story shows that there is an alternative to violence on the one hand and passivity on the other:

 




Tuesday, August 28, 2012

A Sacrifice of Praise

One short biblical phrase--four words in English--intrigues me.  What does the Bible mean when it talks about "a sacrifice of praise" (Hebrews 13:15)?  I think it means praising God when we don't feel like it

If I praise God when the sun is shining and all is right in my world, how is that a sacrifice?  However, if I praise God when life is cruel and crummy, then I maybe I am making a sacrifice.  I'm choosing to worship in faith instead of going with my natural inclination to complain.

Joni Eareckson Tada Joni Eareckson (Tada) experienced "a sacrifice of praise" after a diving accident left her a quadriplegic.  Up until the accident, she had been an excellent athlete and very active person.  Now she stewed in bitterness because she couldn't understand why God allowed the accident to occur.  A friend read to her from I Thessalonians 5:18:  "Give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you in Christ Jesus."  He then said, "Joni, it's about time you got around to giving thanks in that wheelchair of yours."

Joni retorted, "But I don't feel thankful," to which the friend responded, "The verse doesn't say 'feel thankful.' It says 'give thanks.'  There's a big difference."

Joni gritted her teeth and with tears found things to thank God for.  And that was a turning point for her.  The practice of thanksgiving began to change her until she eventually was able to feel and express gratitude.

It is humbling for me to look at her website and to see what Joni has been able to accomplish from within the confines of her wheelchair.  She truly has learned how to make "the sacrifice of praise," and most of us could learn a lot from her.  If you're someone who struggles with chronic pain or depression, I highly recommend her resources (http://www.joniandfriends.org/blog/pain-and-depression/).

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

How do we show gratitude to God?

Mother Teresa advised:  "The best way to show our gratitude to God is to accept everything with joy.  Never let everything so fill you with sorrow that you forget the joy of Christ risen."

"Being happy in Jesus means loving as he loves, helping as he helps, giving as he gives, serving as he serves, rescuing as he rescues, being with him twenty-four hours, touching him in his distressing disguise."

Did this work?  Does it sound grim rather than joyful?  Malcolm Muggeridge didn't think so.  "Their life is rough and austere, yet I never met such delightful, happy women, or such an atmosphere of joy as they create.  Mother Teresa, as she is fond of explaining, attaches the utmost importance to this joyousness.  The poor, she says, deserve not just service and dedication, but also the joy that belongs to human love.  That is what the sisters given them abundantly."

What is your joy quotient today?

Monday, March 5, 2012

Why Are People So Unhappy?

In his book, Knowing God, J. I. Packer illustrates why so many people are confused and unhappy.  He asks what would happen if you took a member of a primitive tribe from the Amazon basin and flew him to London and dropped him off in the middle of Trafalgar Square.  With no knowledge of the language and culture, how would he fend for himself?  And even if you dressed him in modern clothes, wouldn't everything he said and did be nonsensical to those around him? Surely none of us would be so insensitive!

However, as Packer says, "We are cruel to ourselves if we try to live in this world without knowing about the God whose world it is.  The world becomes a strange, mad, painful place...for those who do not know God."  Later he writes:  "As our knowledge of God increases, so does our peace, our strength, and our joy."

Are you confused and unhappy?

   

Monday, February 6, 2012

Relationship or Religion?

Henry Blackaby may be the most spiritually sensitive person I have ever known.  I met him long before he became well-known as the author of Experiencing God.  He spoke at some of our regional college retreats when he was a pastor in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

I love reading the devotional thoughts that he and his son, Richard, wrote for Experiencing God Day by Day.  They are short but pithy.

Here is what they said in a recent devotional:  "Christianity is an intimate, growing relationship with the person of Jesus Christ.  It is not a set of doctrines to believe, habits to practice, or sins to avoid.  Every activity God commands is intended to enhance His love relationship with His people . . . Religious activity apart from fellowship with God is empty ritual . . . Don't settle for a religious life that lacks a vital relationship to Jesus Christ.  When God is present, the difference will be obvious." 

If that made you think, maybe you should get a copy of the book.  Or, you could access it online at http://www.blackaby.net/.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

A Prayer for Today


Soren Kierkegaard's prayer is my prayer for today:  
"And now, Lord, with your help I shall become myself."
Indeed, come quickly, Lord Jesus.  Let Christ be formed in me. 

Saturday, January 14, 2012

After Christmas

Katharine Lee Bates was a 19th Century professor of English literature at Wellesley College.  She authored many volumes of poetry and children's books but is best known for the lyrics of "America the Beautiful."

Four of her lines from another poem describe how we should know and experience Jesus Christ today:

          Not the Christ in the manger,
          Not the Christ on the Cross;
          But the Christ in the soul,
          When all but love is lost.

Isn't this what Jesus meant when he said, "I am with you always..." (Matt. 28:20)?  Isn't this what the Apostle Paul meant when he wrote, "I live; yet not I, but Christ lives in me" (Gal. 2:20)?

Or as Charles Allen has said:  "the Christmas message should bring home to each of us not that we must still seek a Babe in a crib He outgrew, not a Teacher who has now moved from the classrooms of Galilee, nor an exhausted Savior stretched upon a cross, nor a Leader wrapped in the soft linens of death, but rather "Christ in you, the hope of glory" (Col. 1:27).

Friday, January 6, 2012

Thoughts for a New Year

We often become discouraged because we measure our Kingdom efforts by the enormous needs that we see all around us.  Jesus' Parable of the Mustard Seed (Mt. 13:31-32) reminds us that "the smallest of seeds" grows up to become a tree.

Lord, help me to stop complaining about my "lack of resources" -- inadequate time, money, or energy -- and to utilize the resources you already have placed at my disposal.  Then, when you do a "mustard seed miracle," I will know that it was not because I was so smart, spiritual, or resourceful, but because You are the God who gives abundantly and disproportionately.