“Not Yet”

Girl Reading A Book At School

I will never forget when my little niece Logan was going through her “not yet” phase.  No matter what we were doing “not yet” was a constant refrain.  One afternoon I was reading her a story and as I began to turn the page she shot her little hand down upon it.  “Not yet,” she said.  What was the problem I wondered?  I thought I had given her plenty of time to take in that part of the story and to look at the pictures.  What did she mean, “Not yet”?

It was many months later I found myself stuck.  And angry.  Not one to lose my temper I was literally clenching my fists in frustration over something I had hoped to accomplish more quickly.  I had worked and waited a long time and I was ready to cross the finish line on that thing.  I was on a walk thinking and praying when I remembered Logan and her “not yet” phase.  I thought about the day I read her that story, and about how she laid her little hand down on the page.  I was puzzling over the memory when I heard a whisper to my heart.

Slow down.  You’re rushing the story.”

What?”  I thought as I slowed my pace.  “What story?”  I asked almost out loud.

The story of your life,” came the reply.

I was bewildered.  And exasperated.  “Lord, how on earth can I possibly rush the story of my life?  I am the slowest person I know!  Don’t you see what I am trying to do?  I know this scene.  I’ve been stuck in it for months.  I am well acquainted with this page and I am more than ready to turn it.”

Gently, so gently, it was as if the Lord laid his hand down.  Laid it over my restless heart.  Laid it over the scene before me.  And with great kindness said, “Not yet.”

I felt myself calming.  And I felt God’s love for me even though I wished He had said something different.  I didn’t understand, but I wanted to trust.  I walked on.  I kept thinking.  And as I did I started getting the feeling that there was something very valuable on this particular page of my life, something… I just hadn’t seen yet.

I let go of my frustration.  And a new response began forming in me.  A response like this:

Lord, you are the author of my life.  If you say it’s not time to turn the page, it’s not time to turn the page.  I will look for what I have not yet seen.  I will find beauty in the unfolding.  I will cherish your hand upon my life.  And I will wait.  I will wait for the day when you say, “Okay.  Now.”

               I wait for the Lord, my soul waits, and in his word I put my hope. Psalm 130:5 NIV

 

 

The High Ways of God

Daisy Flower In The Desert

He…

Asks a man to build a boat in the middle of the desert.

Chooses an old, infertile couple to be the birth parents of a nation.

Saves a baby’s life by giving it to the enemy’s daughter.

Calls someone who stutters to be His speaker.

Uses a prostitute to protect religious men.

Tells a commander that he has too many warriors for battle.

Turns a whale’s belly into a prayer chapel.

Uses a boy with a sling shot to kill a giant enemy.

Picks a bunch of fishermen to deliver the most important message of all time.

Turns a place of execution into a doorway for new life.

 

                         “As the heavens are higher than the earth,

                          so are my ways higher than your ways and

                         my thoughts than your thoughts.”  — God  

 

A Door of Hope

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Would God ever lead you into a desert? Yes, but not without a promise. God was talking about his people Israel when he said:

“I will lead her into the desert and speak tenderly to her.
There I will give her back her vineyards,
and will make the Valley of Achor (which means “trouble”) a door of hope.
There she will sing as in the days of her youth.”  Hosea 2:14-15 NIV

Deserts are hard places. The days are extra hot and the nights extra cold. Needs are intensified. “I’m thirsty.” “Where are my friends?” “Am I on the right path?” “I feel confused.” “Is that real or is it a mirage?” If God has led you into the desert it will be tough, but according to the verse above you have four excellent promises.

First, God will speak tenderly to you. So, watch and listen for his tenderness.

Second, God will give you back something you have lost. And He will determine what it is. For Israel it was vineyards. Remember, fruit often comes from plowed up ground, a good seed, watering, and pruning. That means you need, an open heart, God’s word, daily prayer, and the willingness to let go of things that are weighing you down.

Third, God will turn your trouble into a door of hope. Doors lead somewhere, and I love the thought of a hopeful threshold to cross, don’t you? Watch for it.

Lastly, you are promised that you will sing like a child. Children don’t sing about cheap thrills or love gone bad, they sing about hopes fulfilled and dreams coming true. What have you been singing about? Do you need to change your tune?

God never leads his people into the desert to die. He leads them there to carry them through, to a promised place.

This Little Light of Mine

Single Candle With Back Lit. Tranquil Scene

It had been a stormy week and I was praying. My heart was full of fears, dark thoughts and doubt. My faith felt rattled. I talked to God a long time and finally ran out of things to say. I couldn’t find the answers I was looking for. I ended my prayer with a question. “Lord, is there anything you want me to know?” I tried to listen. I was desperate for something. I waited… nothing.

Then… as if on a breath, this verse came to mind. “A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out.” (Matthew 12:20 NIV) The verse surprised me. My thoughts gathered around it. I thought about how you handle a candle whose wick is sputtering, about how you don’t grab it and shake it, but instead quietly approach, and gently blow.

A quiet approach. A gentle blowing. That is what I felt in response to the storm raging against my soul. In a moment I knew for certain that God was near and guarding my flickering faith. There was no, “what’s the matter with you” shaking. No harshness or rebuke. Just this impression, “I am here and I will keep your faith light burning. Don’t worry so.”

As I calmed down my thoughts drifted back over my week. I remembered some things that happened, and saw other ways God had been there cupping his hands around the light of my soul, shielding it from the snuffer. All that day I marveled over a God who would offer such undeserved kindness to such a weak and sputtering person, me. I still marvel. That’s who he is.

Who am I that you are mindful of me?  Who am I, O Lord God, and what is my family that you have brought me this far? Although I am less than the least of all God’s people: this grace was given me, to preach… the unsearchable riches of Christ. 

                                             Psalm 8:4, 1 Chronicles 17:16 NIV, Ephesians 3:8 NIV

You, O LORD, keep my lamp burning; my God turns my darkness into light.

                                                                                    Psalm 18:28 NIV

I Do

Hands Of A Bride And Groom

Jake was wooing me. Over meals, on walks and through talks Jake shared with me who he was, what he believed in, and where he felt he was headed in this life. He told me he loved me. Then he asked me to marry him. Would I be joined with him forever in love, life and purpose? I have to admit his proposal was a little scary. I knew that Jake was a man who would think nothing of living without electricity in the African bush. If I said “yes” where would he take me? What would I end up doing?

I couldn’t know that. I could only believe and trust. Believe that he loved me and trust his love to blanket each decision he made about us. When I stood at the altar and said “yes” to Jake I wasn’t placing my trust in a wedding ring, a special ceremony or even in the “institute of marriage.” I was trusting in him.

Jesus came into our world. He has shown us who he is. We see that he is brave and kind, that he saves people from horrible things, that he always forgives, and that he loves to the death. Jesus has invited us to accept his love and join him in his purpose. We can’t know ahead of time all the places he will lead us, but we can know that his plans for us will be covered in his love. When we say “yes” to Jesus, we’re not trusting in a cross around our necks, a special prayer or ceremony, or even in the “institute of religion.” We are trusting in Him.

Jesus has said, “I love you. I will never leave you.” He’s made his promises. He said, “I do.” Will you?

                           “…we know and rely on the love God has for us.” 1 John 4:16

The “Streams in the Desert” Sisterhood

 

Arms That Are Strong

“Then those who feared the Lord talked with each other, and the Lord listened and heard…”
          Malachi 3:16 NIV

Recently I was asked to think back on a hard season of my life and recall a good or funny memory from it. I thought about when I quit my teaching job some years back, about the loneliness and confusion I felt as I set out to become a writer. Soon I began to smile and even laugh in my heart as I remembered three friends God gave me during that time. Two of them were going through some very hard and heartbreaking things; the other was our upbeat and wise cheerleader.

Our foursome kicked off when one of the heartbroken friends began raving to the rest of us about a devotional book she was reading. She would get so excited saying that it always had the perfect word for her discouraged heart. She even quoted to us from it. The book was “Streams in the Desert” and it wasn’t long before we all had a copy.

So began what I call “The Streams in the Desert Club.” Oh it wasn’t an official club. In fact it was very unofficial. But a meeting came to order anytime one might see another and say, “Did you read ‘Streams’ today?” (Our upbeat friend called it “Storms” since she thought the topics were always about something so stormy.)

In our club of four I knew I could count on four things: confidentiality, sympathy, prayers, and laughter. It was a sweet sisterhood. And though it’s been years since that time, I still smile when I think about us.

Here is a truth: In every trial there will be a blessing. In sorrow or hardship, you will find something sweet. Watch for it. Count on it. It is God’s way.

I’ll leave you with this passage from “Streams” today.

“The burden of suffering seems a tombstone hung about our necks, while in reality it is only the weight which is necessary to keep down the diver while he is hunting for pearls.”
-Richter

Back On My Diet

The word Goal on a scale to illustrate you have reached your tar

Several years ago I put myself on a diet. This week I fell off the wagon, again!  Determined to get back on, I hunted around in my files for this little piece I wrote back then.  It will explain everything…

I have a size 8 ½ mouth. I know because I put my foot in it several times last week and it fit perfectly. Upset over saying some things I regretted, I decided to go on a verbal diet. I determined to speak only what was good and necessary. I would skim the fat from my conversations by refraining from complaining and criticizing. And I would stop all my opinion giving binges. How did I do? Not very well. But I happened to do just well enough to be surprised by the benefits of such a plan.

The first thing I noticed on my verbal diet was that I experienced more peace. I never realized how much worry accompanied words of complaint and criticism, or how much angst went into my attempts to influence others with my opinions. Secondly, I noticed that my relationships seemed to improve on the spot. I became a better listener when I wasn’t waiting to get in my two cents. I enjoyed people more and understood them better. Thirdly, I noticed that when I talked to people less I talked to God more. What I wanted to tell them I turned into prayers to Him. When I started this diet I worried that my relationships might go hungry on fewer words. Instead I found they were better nourished and more deeply fed!

“…be quick to listen, slow to speak…” James 1:19

A Blessing in Disguise

MIRACLES ROOM

Would I recognize a blessing if it showed up on my doorstep?

Before Jesus came, God spoke to people through prophets, and one of those prophets was Elijah. One day God sent Elijah to the town of Zarephath so he would be taken care of, because a great drought had devastated the land.

Elijah arrived at the gate of Zarephath hungry and thirsty (and just in time for a divine appointment). A widow was there and he asked her, “Will you bring me a little water to drink?” The widow went to do as he requested and Elijah called after her. “Bring me a piece of bread too please.”

She stopped, faced Elijah, and cut to the quick of the situation. “I swear by the Lord your God that I don’t have a single piece of bread in the house. I have one drop of oil and a handful of flour and that’s it. I was just going to use it to cook my son and me our last meal before we die.”

Harsh conditions! But Elijah was not taken aback. He did not flinch and say, “Oops sorry, never mind about the bread then.” Instead he said, “Don’t be afraid!” And “Do just as you were going to, but make my bread first. Then make some for the both of you. Because God has said that you will not run out of provisions until the crops return to this land.”

Wow.

It was a strange sort of blessing God was giving this widow wasn’t it? He didn’t arrange for a strong man to show up with a giant vat of oil and a 50 lb sack of flour. I mean that would have made everything clear from the beginning right? That’s how a blessing looks right? God gives us money, a new job, a new car…

God had something different in mind.

This blessing would not be a giant one-time provision. This widow wouldn’t wake up to see (and fawn over) a full jar of oil. And she wouldn’t have to worry about anyone taking her king-sized bag of flour.

No. This blessing would be daily. And personal. Every day a little fresh flour and oil would appear, enough for her needs. God would never forget. He wouldn’t miss a day. Each morning there would be a new mercy. Each morning a gentle whisper, “Yes, my eye is still upon you little sparrow.” How sweet is that? This would be a special relationship.

I have found myself thinking about how I would have responded had I been in the widow’s situation and Elijah asked me for some bread. I feel pretty sure I would have lost it, snapped, and said something like, “You’re kidding right? My husband has been taken from me. My land has dried up. And now God wants my last meal?”

I wonder how often I have misjudged God. Been insulted by a request he made of me. A request that was meant to bless. I wonder what I have missed out on while trying to guard, what I thought was surely, my last dollar, or my last nerve, or my last bit of energy, my last hope… my last drop of oil.

Are you down to your last drop of oil? Will you be open to receiving a blessing in disguise?

Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God!  How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out!  “Who has known the mind of the Lord?  Or who has been his counselor?”  “Who has ever given to God, that God should repay him?”  For from him and through him and to him are all things.  To him be the glory forever!  Amen.                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Romans 11:33-36 NIV

 

Confessions of a “Know it All”

Beautiful little girl in a red dress on a motorcycle

God asked, Who is this muddying the water, ignorantly confusing the issue, second-guessing my purposes?”  Job answered, “I admit.  I was the one.  I babbled on about things far beyond me, I made small talk about wonders way over my head.  I admit I once lived by rumors of you.  I’m sorry—forgive me.”  Job 42: 2-6 (The Message) 

As a young girl I appreciated my fathers love but I didn’t always appreciate his authority.  Why didn’t he like me driving around after midnight on weekends?  What was wrong with going to a class alone in downtown Minneapolis at night?  Why spoil my fun and scold me for riding through an icy parking lot on the back end of a car?

I didn’t go to work with my father, so I didn’t understand his job.  I knew he was a police officer, but I envisioned him writing traffic tickets all day.  I had no knowledge of the situations he came across.  I had not been to accident scenes, witnessed the effects of a drunk driver, or taken reports of rape and abuse.  When I questioned my father’s boundaries for me, I spoke of things I knew nothing about.  My view of life was little.  His was big.  I understand better now how my father’s higher knowledge impacted the decisions he made for the daughter he loved.

Dear God,

I don’t know the paths you travel.  I have no idea what all you see and do.  I imagine I understand your work.  But my view is limited.  I have rolled my eyes at your commands and argued with you about your way for me.  I have spoken of things I don’t understand.  I am sorry.  Help me to trust in your love, rest in your wisdom, obey your commands, and appreciate your authority.                                                                                                   

                                                                                                                                    Amen.      

Chapter 3: The Passage

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“From the Forests and Highlands we come, we come.”

                                                   (Out of Africa page 2)

 

I was walking on a bridge from the old to the new, from the familiar to the unfamiliar.  It was a melancholy walk, a walk of mixed emotions.  I hated to end things, but longed to begin them.  I was reluctant to go, yet eager to leave.

“Remember, people are helpful,” my mother said as I stood at my boarding gate.  My family and some friends were gathered to see me off.  Hannah had returned early from her honeymoon just to say good-bye in person, a wonderful surprise.  My parents were passing out sheets of labels with my new address on them.  (Since I would be in the care of an American Embassy I had a Washington D.C. address.  This helped greatly as any letter or package could be sent with U.S. postage.  That meant nothing would be opened or pillaged through along the way as it would travel in what was called “the diplomatic pouch.”)

They called for boarding and I said my final goodbyes.  As I walked toward the jetway I looked back into the earnest gazes of the people I loved.  Their smiles were urging me forward, their hands reluctantly waving “Good-bye.”     

I settled into my seat and tears filled my eyes.  When the plane took off the only spot of land on which I had ever lived disappeared from view.  I cried all the way to Chicago.  The man next to me occasionally patted my knee. 

Three hours later I was on a flight to London.  After dinner was served they dimmed the cabin lights, but I couldn’t sleep.  I kept thinking about how I was flying over the Atlantic.  Suddenly the earth was huge, and I so small on it.   

Four hours later the sun came up and I caught my first glimpse of green in an ocean of blue.  England.  Sure I had seen Lady Di’s wedding via satellite, but here people were living on a completely different piece of terra ferma.  While I had been paying out dollars they had been doling out pounds.  While I had been waking up to coffee they had been sitting down to tea.       

I landed at Heathrow Airport and entered a world of delightful British accents.  After exchanging some money I headed to a small shop for a snack.  Picking up what looked like cookies, but was labeled “digestive biscuits,” I walked to the counter.  I held the biscuits in one hand and a fist full of coins in the other.  The clerk picked through my coins and I became aware that each was labeled, pound, pence, or shilling.  I felt embarrassed for acting like a child. 

When I asked a man for help in finding my way and he said “Are you from America?” 

“Yes” I replied.

“Oh yup. Ah cahn tell iyt,” he smiled as he offered assistance.

I took a shuttle to the Gatwick airport and boarded a train for London.  I found a window seat and enjoyed watching the English countryside roll by, old farmhouses, cows, gentle hills, long grasses.  All were beautiful in the early morning light.  As we entered the city hundreds of houses stood shoulder to shoulder as they watched us chug through their tiny backyards.  Each had fresh laundry waving on the line and nodding bunches of blooming flowers.  It was a fine welcome.

When I stepped onto the platform at Victoria Station I stopped for a moment to take in the place, the cathedral-like ceiling with its ancient wooden beams, pigeons roosting, flying and flapping about, rows and rows of train tracks with fresh steam rising from them…  I felt I could almost see the millions of good-byes that had taken place there, soldiers hugging loved ones, ladies running along side trains weeping and waving.  Something in me loved the place.   

Near midnight I was back at the airport waiting to board my flight to Lusaka.  I had spent the day touring London in the top of a red double-decker bus.  I saw Big Ben and those men with the tall fuzzy black hats standing guard at Buckingham Palace.  I bought T-shirts and key chains, and paid a shilling every time I used the restroom which was called the water closet, WC for short.  I even took a nap in Hyde Park.

As the minutes dragged on I found myself looking around at the others who were waiting to board my flight, wondering what their stories were.  Across the room I saw an attractive young couple.  Like me they were slumped sleepily in their seats.  She had dark hair and the face of a china doll.  He was blonde, handsome and tall.  Jealousy pinched at my heart.  I could never have gotten anyone to come to Africa with me I thought as I did a quick inventory of boys I’d dated.  I glanced around at the other passengers.  Everyone had someone it seemed.  Even those who sat alone had their wedding bands. 

The steward broke into my thoughts and called for the boarding of British Airways flight 1251 to Lusaka.  I tried to shrug off my loneliness as I shouldered my bags and boarded the plane.  A half hour later we taxied and took off for the Dark Continent.

After a dinner of beef fillets in gravy the cabin lights were lowered.  All was quiet except for the hum of the engines and the hushed tones of mothers and lovers.  Using my jean jacket as a pillow, I laid across an empty seat and fell asleep.  Everyone in my dreams had British accents.

When I woke up the sky began to lighten.  I was rummaging through my carry on for my toiletries when I noticed an envelope my mother had shoved into my hands at the airport in Minneapolis.  “Open it as you are flying over Africa,” she had said dramatically.  I didn’t want to.  It would be hard to see her handwriting, to read her parting words.  Yet as she wished, I tore the envelope’s seal and removed the contents, a bulky card with snowy pine needles on the front.  Opening it, I found that each of my parents had written a short message.  I read my mother’s first.   

Dear Dana,

Two things I want to send with you. One, the snow on the front.  The second, a promise from God’s word.  It goes like this: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and lean not to your own understanding.  In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your paths.”  Well okay, three things, the pin, to add a little class to Lusaka

                                                                                                                   Love you, Mom

 

Taped inside the top of the card was a gem filled pin and earrings I had admired on our last shopping trip.  What a kind thing to do.  I don’t know why people’s parting words are so powerful but they are.  As I looked at the verse my mother had written I hoped it would stay in my heart and become like a little compass pointing the way when I felt lost or wondered what to do.

Next, I read what my father had written.   

 

Dear Dana:

I look forward to the next two years as a wonderful opportunity for you.  I will be praying for you continually.  I believe it will be a truly special time in your life.  God is going before you to prepare the way.  He will guide you and protect you while you are there, and bring you safely home. 

                                                                                               God Bless You. 

                                                                                                    Love, Dad                                                                                         

“Bring you safely home,” I liked those words.  And there was my dad’s trademark “God Bless You.”  I don’t think a day ever went by that my dad didn’t say “God bless you.”  But in that moment, for the first time ever, I lingered over his words, really cherished them.

I stuffed everything back into the envelope and returned it to my bag.  In need of a distraction I found my toiletries and headed to the lavatory.

As I brushed my teeth and tied my shoulder length blonde hair with a pink ribbon my eyes connected with those in the mirror.  One of me was asking the other, “Will we make it?”  Would I, now uprooted, survive the transplanting?  I smoothed my wrinkled jean dress, gathered my things, and willed the butterflies in my stomach not to take flight as I walked back to my seat.

The cabin lights came on and breakfast was served.  I sipped hot tea and nibbled a marmalade covered scone as I looked out the window.  When the plane began to descend, a lump rose in my throat.       

I will never forget my first view of Africa.  The lush beautiful country I’d dreamed of was bare, brown and flat.  Nothing but a few scrappy bushes broke the monotony.  Where were the coffee planations?  The long grasses?  The jungles?  What I saw was a land so desolate, so endlessly dry, I wanted to cry, to water it with my tears.  I was devastated.  It was so unlike what I had imagined.

All at once I felt as if I had been jerked awake from a pleasant dream, a dream that clashed loudly with my present reality.  My thoughts raced as I inwardly started to panic.  What was I thinking?  What had I done?  I wanted to yell at the vehicle moving me forward, “Take me back!  I want to go back!” 

Was this how realizing a dream felt?  Like a mistake?  Like a punch in the stomach?  Like gasping for air?  I would tell Dr. Keller I’d made an error, pick up a carved giraffe, and take the next flight back to… life as I knew it.

Why had I signed that contract?  Made a promise of all things?  “Two years is nothing,” my dad had said.  “It will be over in no time.” 

No time?  Two years suddenly felt like an eternity.   

My nose began to sting and my eyes filled with tears.  I knew just one blink would send them pouring down my face.  I will not blink I told myself.  I will not begin with tears.  Hold your eyes open wide, will them to dry, I preached to myself as the plane made its final approach.   

And so with eyes wide open I landed.  Not on a movie set, not on a book page, but on a small tarmac ribbon laid across the middle of the real Africa. 

africa brooch 2