we gave thanks

Because Christ is in us, the hope of glory {Col.1:27}.

Because He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together {Col.1:17}.

Because He is our praise {Deut.10:21} and our very life {Col.3:4}.

Ten thousand reasons for our hearts to sing.  We gathered… we brought our harvest… we did the work of hands and the work of hearts and the work of love.  We feasted and laughed and just enjoyed the simplicity of each other.

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^^^arriving at my parent’s house.^^^

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^^^^ my beautiful momma & her cranberry relish^^^

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^^^^ these precious kids, playing & waiting to feast^^^^

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^^^^ dad’s rolls {thanksgiving essential}^^^^

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^^^^ dancing with grandpa ^^^^

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^^^^ homemade cranberry sauce = the best cranberry sauce ^^^^

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^^^^ waiting & lounging & playing.  I love how Noah sits like this, little feet tucked. ^^^^

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^^^^ the finished cranberry sauce ^^^^Image

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^^^^ cherry pie, for brandon ^^^^

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^^^^ Phoebe & her auntie AllieMarie watching grandpa get ready to carve up the turkey ^^^^

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^^^^ this scripture, ringing through my mind all day.. (find this print for free here) ^^^^

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^^^^ commencing feast ^^^^

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^^^^ my precious girl & I ^^^^

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^^^^ the essential post-feast walk {but we actually did one before & after this time around with energetic kiddos} and my beautiful parents with my two little lambs ^^^^

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^^^^ the lights in their neighborhood at night ^^^^

It has been a year with so much to be thankful for, and our hearts are full.  That’s the crazy thing about Jesus.  He can make even a broken heart full.  He can make joy in the midst of sorrow.  We are so thankful for family to gather together with and a family we share in Christ with, as imperfect as we all may be.  Hope your Thanksgiving was lovely!

snow day

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we woke up to the welcomed surprise of ice & snow!  up on this mountain, it means we are staying in, and that means daddy is staying home!  the kids didn’t waste a minute:

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and as quickly as we could, we bundled up, snotty noses and all, for a walk in the dusting of snow before it all melted away (which it did, pretty much by the end of our walk).

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happy girl in the littlest bit of snow!

our hearts are full and thankful even for the simple joy of being all together today and seeing snow falling.  i hope everyone has a lovely thanksgiving tomorrow!

On Confession

 

“At the root of our lives, we are ‘bent’ away from God.

We admit, perhaps with tears, that we love the things of self

and yawn in the awesome presence of God.  

We acknowledge that we obsess about our whims

and recoil from self-sacrifice.”

Timothy Jones : The Art of Prayer

groaning

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If you listen close, if you listen patient, you could hear it.  The way the tree’s fingers reach for heaven, the way they scrape through dirt and up to sky, hands raised to Him.  Their speaking is bound to time, to the rhythm of the seasons, and in this season they let go of their leaves, the million little hands that cup the warm sun and drink it down to the roots.  They close up and keep warm for the long cold months and they nourish the ground with what falls.  It’s a death of sorts.  A death that gives way to the next years’ life.

Do they get tired of this rhythm like I get tired of it?  The bondage of corruption.  The work of living.. producing, growing, feeding, transporting, competing, protecting.  And all the small deaths before the final death.

Can you hear the groaning?  In the way they winter, can you hear their cry for redemption soon?

For I consider that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us.  For the earnest expectation of the creation eagerly waits for the revealing of the sons of God.  For the creation was subjected to futility, not willingly, but because of Him who subjected it in hope; because the creation itself also will be delivered from the bondage of corruption into the glorious liberty of the children of God.  For we know that the whole creation groans and labors with birth pangs together until now.”  {Rom. 8:18-23}

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And how back in that good Garden, where futility and thorn began (Gen.3), the creation’s eye was trained on mankind and on the story of redemption playing out.

The star that bore witness (Matt.2:9-10) and the rocks that held their tongues in worship (Lk. 19:40).  And then, when the Redeemer held arms wide and let breath go, creation couldn’t hold back any longer.  The Son, in whom was all light and life, had darkened, and so the Sun could no longer shine (Lk. 23:45).  The earth gave a violent shudder and the rocks broke open, maybe from horror, maybe from worship they could no longer silence (Matt. 27:51).  How could Life itself die?  How could the creation open up her cold ground to bury the Creator?

Though redemption was secured that day, creation still groans and labors toward the consummation.  These waiting trees, bound in time and curse, they are still waiting and watching as the Story of redemption continues to unfurl.  And I can’t help but wonder if they don’t glory over redemption’s victory every time.  One more life redeemed, one more reminder of the redemption they too will one day receive, when all things can return to full obedience to God’s intended design.

This past weekend, my extended family gathered to sing and to feast and to rejoice over the life and death of one of our own beloved ones.  Yes, mourning too, but oh, how the grave is swallowed up in victory!  The mourning doesn’t stand out to me, the piercing joy is what I remember.  And as we gathered yet another time to sing together, these words ran through my mind.  My sweet loved one, he lived a lot of life far from God and from his family.  But in his last years, he came near and he found his Redeemer.  And the wasted years were swallowed up in joy and in victory and blessed assurance.

IMG_1445*photo credit: Catie Councell

 

My loved one, they said he smiled as he died.  That his mouth hung open in a small smile as he breathed his last; but two hours later, his mouth closed in a full-on grin.

He went out of this world in JOY and the Father saw fit to lead Him out in peace.  The very mountains and hills broke forth into singing before the One who carried him to glory, and the trees of the fields clapped their hands with a raucous, fist-pumping roar of praise (Isa.55:12).  The very creation can’t help but rejoice in God’s acts of redemption.  The beauty of the Gospel… there’s nothing like it!  You can almost hear it, if you listen.  The heart hears the testimony, because there is no language where the voice is not heard (Ps.19:1-4).  The heavens declare the glory of God, and day to day pours forth speech.  “For since the beginning of the world, His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His eternal power and Godhead, so that they are without excuse” (Rom.1:20).

The Gospel is the story creation labors to tell, season in and season out.  Redemption is what makes creation sing, for she knows her full release from corruption is coming.  What a mercy that every day God puts the Gospel visibly on display in the created order for all our senses to experience, to the praise of His glorious grace.

Not only that, but we also who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for the adoption, the redemption of our body.  For we were saved in this hope. {Rom.8:24}

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for jennie

I watch my two play together, hear the way they belly laugh together over their own secret unspoken joke, and I think of you.  That from my earliest memories, you were always there.  And I always admired you so.  Those two realities shaped my existence.ImageImage

This morning I looked back on pictures of us in those early shaping years.  I remember always wanting to be like you.  You were always confident and joyful and wild and strong.  You gave me courage to try new things and taught me things that became my own, things that shaped my soul and altered my future.  God and His word.  Guitar.  Snowboarding.  Running.  Reading good books.

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Those early years are all bits and pieces, but you were a leader from the beginning, as any firstborn must be, and we followed you gladly.  Plays and productions that we put on in Canada with cousins, in our playroom at Martindale, in the white brick-walled basement where we had meeting.  Always we were roommates, Susan Ashton and Twila Paris singing us to sleep at night.

I remember the teenage years, watching you run hard and wild, making your own way in the world.  I remember being afraid for you, seeing the anger in you.  I remember finding out the reason for some of that anger, for the pain you were holding close and tight.  I kept the secret too.  And yes, these coming-of-age years are hard years on sisters, lots of fighting over clothes, rivaling one another, all the expected things that accompany two similar but different souls fighting their way to adulthood.

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Then the Colorado years, and new beginnings.  The loneliness of our family, the brokenness and devastation.  The slow finding of our way again.  The quiet healing.

I still remember that morning, you and I alone at the house on Oswego, sitting in the kitchen eating pancakes, morning sun spilling in the windows.  And talking for hours, sharing hearts.  And you struggling so much to protect a knowledge that you were under the weight of, and telling me there was something I didn’t know that you couldn’t share.. and that moment when I looked at you and said, I know.  I already know it.  And how we cried and cried and found company at last in the knowing and the pain.

Then we lost our way in the snow.  Together in that white winter all around us.  Huddled in the dark and in the cold.  Baring hearts.  Sharing whatever we might want to share, not know if these moments would be our earthly last.  And how you even then, as only the oldest sibling can, took the lead and took care of me, laying down and lifting me up off the icy ground.  Then screaming with delight when rescue came and screaming praise to Jesus.  How I admired you then!

And then those years, our last years, though we didn’t know it, when we lived together in Breckenridge.  We worked together, cooked together, worshipped together, struggled to pay bills together, climbed mountains together and snowboarded together.  Shared a white subaru and the bills that it brought.  That Christmas when we couldn’t afford to get home, and we opened our couple of gifts under the tree and then lay on the floor and cried because we missed everyone.

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Then the time came for us to go our own ways.  Off I went to college, and you to the work world, to Whistler.  And we grew apart a little then.  But engagements and weddings drew us home together.  And you did my flowers, my decorations, my makeup, my hair.  You walked the aisle by me, and a few months later, I walked with you.

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It’s been years since then.. and who can know what the future holds, if we will live side by and side and share the daily’s like we once did.  I will always hold out hope and look to the One who knows and who made us to long for these things.

Life presses us and crushes us and reshapes us, and we forget who we are.  And sometimes your family can remember for you, can help you remember who you always were, who you still are way down beneath it all.

I treasure you.  You have always been a glue of sorts in our family.  Where the rest of us were awkward, you loved easy.  In almost every picture you have arms stretched wide pulling everyone in close.  So much love and laughter and steadfast support of us all.  Always our fierce champion.

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You are special, stunningly beautiful, strong, gifted in so many ways.  I am thankful for it all, all the memories and the way that a relationship between two people holds secrets and treasures only the two can know.

Happy birthday, Jennie!  I love you always and forever.

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“Sometimes we a…

“Sometimes we are called to proclaim God’s love even when we are not yet fully able to live it. Does that mean we are hypocrites? Only when our words no longer call us to conversion. Nobody completely lives up to his or her own ideals and visions. But by proclaiming our ideals and visions with great conviction and great humility, we may gradually grow into the truth we speak. As long as we know that our lives always will speak louder than our words, we can trust that our words will remain humble.”
Henri Nouwen

everything He gives

This past spring, my husband decided to surprise our two-year-old daughter with a bird feeder, so she could watch the birds and learn about them.  We hung it and slowly the birds began to take notice.  Then, much to my amusement, we began to observe the birds (and squirrels) getting protective and greedy and territorial about the bird feeder.  Some birds were fighting other hungry birds off, claiming this food as theirs.

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It struck me to the core.  I wanted to tell the greedy birds, “You didn’t secure this food for yourselves.  I put it here.  And it’s not yours, it’s for all of you.  And there will be enough to share.  Enough for each of you.  You don’t have to hoard it and protect it for fear that it will run out.  I will keep it full.”

Immediately this question came to mind: “And what do you have that you did not receive?” (1 Cor.4:7).

I am so like those birds.. getting greedy and protective and boastful about things that are all GIFTS, things that I have received.  There isn’t one thing I have that I didn’t receive, even my own life & existence.

What joy and freedom there is in that truth.  It didn’t come by my hand.  It won’t stay because of my hand.  It’s not in my control.  Yes, it can be a fearful admission because if I’m not in control, I must trust.  But the freedom comes and the joy comes when I remember WHOM I am trusting.  He is good.  He is LOVE.

Thus began the idea for the theme of this blog.  What do I have that I have not first received??  And what is the best thing to do with a gift?  To pour it out.  To keep giving it.  To let another be blessed by it.  To include and to share and to bring others in.

That’s part of trust.  Trusting that it won’t run out, it won’t fail.  Because the One who is giving is a tireless Giver.

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Emily Freeman says in her latest (and so awesome!) book, A Million Little Ways, that we are “colanders filled with glory-water.  Our best efforts are spent trying to cover the seeping holes with not enough fingers.  God’s glory demands display.  Yet sometimes when we get a glimpse of it, when we taste something we come alive doing, when we feel that sense of purpose wake up within us, we become terrified.  And so instead, we spend our time looking for plastic bags to catch it before it pours out, wasted.  We want something more sensible, more practical.  Something like a jar with a lid.  No holes.  No glory leaks.  Let’s control it, contain it.  Let’s be reasonable” (p.27-28).

I want to let the glory leak.  Not to be reasonable or safe or contained or selfish or afraid.  But to entrust myself to Jesus, and to pour out whatever He gives me, faltering though I am.

This peculiar journey began a few years ago when I read Ann Voskamp‘s book One Thousand Gifts and began to see all of life as a gift, began to wake up to the truth that all is grace.  God shifted something in me then.  As a wife and a stay-at-home momma to two precious children, I began to trace His grace in the crazy, stressful, joyful, mundane, full and ordinary life He has given me.  To see the moments as grace.  The smiles, the tears, the meals cooked, the laundry, the bills, the laughter, the adventures and the day-to-day routine.. beautiful, ordinary, common grace.  But in that, discovering the extravagant and lavish grace in what I have always called “common.”

And so.. this blog.. a place where I can record, pour out, share, exult in everything He gives.

begin

“Now, God?  Like, literally, right now?”

“Now.  Begin.”

That’s what has been keeping me from beginning.. not knowing how to begin.  But here goes.

So I have been thinking about, praying about, wrestling over whether or not to start a blog.  Everyone has a blog, it seems.  What could I possibly have to say?  I have been making a lot of excuses and asking a lot of questions. But its time.  Time to just follow and to obey.  Time to BEGIN.

Somedays the need to write is like a fire burning in my bones, restless and fierce to be released.

But the self-doubt and the fear are enough most days to keep me quiet.  And busyness does its work, too.

It’s time to begin.  To take that first step, in courage, in faith and trust in the One who calls and leads and equips.  Time to carve out another small space in this internet world to shine a tiny light to the glory of His magnificent name, the name of Jesus!

So this is my brief hello!