Friday, October 29, 2021

BLOOM AWAY

During my lifetime I've watched the coming and going, and coming back, of this phrase often put on decor plaques: “Bloom where you are planted.” I was reminded of it the other day as I snatched random weeds growing under the hedge of “Knockout Roses” in our front yard. My husband planted a long line of these brilliant pink roses by the sidewalk in front of our house in honor of his late mother, who loved pink and filled her life and home with that color.

I'm always amazed how desolate they look in the winter. We add further punishment by taking a hedge clipper to the top and sides to shape them. But they roar back, providing color the whole summer. They're not finicky like the “tea roses” that I have to carefully prune and daily deadhead. They just bloom away where they've planted.

Curious about where the “bloom where you are planted” slogan came from, I was surprised to trace it back to St. Francis de Sales (1567-1622), who served as the bishop of Geneva and was respected for his leadership and spiritual walk. He is recorded as saying this: “True charity has no limit; for the love of God has been poured into our hearts by His Spirit dwelling in each one of us, calling us to a life of devotion and inviting us to bloom in the garden where He has planted and directing us to radiate the beauty and spread the fragrance of His Providence” (emphasis added).

The Bible has several commands to be fruitful. The first is God's command to Adam and Eve after Creation (Genesis 1:28). Another compares a fruitful tree to a believer whose trust in God frees him from worries and who never fails to bear fruit (Jeremiah 17:7-8). Psalm 1 has a similar message.

The “bloom” idea goes deeper—against our natural inclinations—later in Jeremiah, where the context is the exile of the Israelites to Babylon. Here they are—captives, far from home, dumped into a foreign land, despised and stripped of hope. There seems no way out. But God tells them: build houses, plant gardens for food, let your kids marry and build families, and....”seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you into exile. Pray to the Lord for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper” (Jeremiah 29:7-8).

That's the same chapter that has the more famous quote about God's plans to prosper them and give them a future and a hope (v. 11-13). But it wouldn't happen if their motto was “gloom where you are planted.” They had to bloom where they were planted. They weren't living in pleasant little bungalows in their native land. They were slaves. But this was what life had to be, now. And their response to bloom instead of  "gloom" would make the difference.

Funny, that advice still makes sense in our thorny world.


Friday, October 22, 2021

NESTED

Years of putting off trimming the arborvitae had turned it into a monster hedge probably fifteen feet high. Our servant-hearted son came by to help his dad finish the arduous task. In doing so, they pulled out a small nest, carefully wound with twigs and plastic strips, well glued with mud. Sturdy, hidden, it had served its purpose as a bird's nursery.

“Even the sparrow has found a home,” wrote one of the temple musicians, “and the swallow a nest for herself, where she may have her young—a place near your altar, O LORD Almighty, my King and my God” (Psalm 84:3). It's a beautiful set of words to inscribe on sacred art. It's also a beautiful reminder how God cares for even the humblest birds.

First: context. It's believed this psalm was written by one of the temple workers (“sons of Korah”) who had to be absent from his duties in Jerusalem for a while. While we acknowledge that God doesn't dwell in the structures we call now churches, for ancient Jews the temple was revered and respected. From the rituals for sacrifices to even the places where its janitors served (the “parbar” or western colonnades), everything was prescribed and honored.

Yet birds came and found homes. As they chirped and flittered about, carrying on bird life, they had protection and purpose. Notice: these were not powerful birds (like eagles) or beautiful ones (like peacocks). They were ordinary bird life. Sparrows symbolized something almost worthless. Bible-time boys who caught sparrows to sell worshipers for sacrifices could earn two farthings (the smallest, least valuable copper coin) for five birds. Swallows are known for always flitting about. Yet when it comes times to nest and hatch eggs, they settle down. What an image of finding our peace and purpose in God. Such was the observation of St. Augustine (A.D. 354-530) in his famed quote: “Our hearts are restless till they rest in thee.”

This whole psalm throbs with a yearning for authentic worship: “Blessed are those who dwell in your house; they are ever praising you” (84:4). But the psalm doesn't stay inside the temple:

Blessed are those whose strength is in you, who have set their hearts on pilgrimage. (v. 6)

In those days, a trip wasn't as simple as filling the car with gas and hitting the highway. Travel was by cart, animal or sandaled feet. It was hard and hot. It took days and days. But the traveler to Jerusalem kept his eye on the goal: the temple, a divinely-planned, human-constructed worship center. A place to come apart and focus of God's holy character, divine plan and perfect purpose.

The psalm ends with this encouraging word:

The Lord bestows favor and honor; No good thing does he withhold from those whose walk is blameless. (v. 11)

This is not some paste-on-every-situation verse. It's a statement of the character of God. Even in pain and loss, we will eventually learn the “good thing” He could bring of it—if we strive to walk close with him, with “blamelessness.” It's the same principle as Romans 8:28: “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him.”

We don't always have those blessings in our line of vision. Sometimes, like a little bird nest, they're tucked away behind layers of ordinary branches and needles. But if God could give perches and protection to birds, can He not also take care of me? Jesus affirmed that truth: “Don't be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows” (Matt. 20:31). Even abandoned nests attest to that.


Friday, October 15, 2021

SEARCH ME

A monthly series on inspiring hymns.

A hundred years ago in Ireland, a little nine-year-old boy prayed to become a Christian. His life would end at age 75 across the Atlantic in Asheville, N.C., where the next day he was to speak at a Southern Baptist convention. By then James Edwin Orr was known world-wide as an evangelist and historian of revival movements.

But first came his youth and the death of his father and older brother. Forced to leave college, he worked in a bakery to support his mother and siblings. At 19, he and a friend began open-air evangelism in Belfast. At 23, he believed God was calling him to be a traveling evangelist, and was soon preaching across Britain. Then he sailed to Canada for meetings, held more in the United States, and then went on to New Zealand, Australia, and Africa, concluding with meetings in Norway.

By then, he felt he needed to rest—and also needed a helpmate. He telegraphed a young woman he'd met in South Africa and proposed. She agreed. They held an evangelistic meeting at their wedding reception.

Orr's evangelistic travels (including a stint as a chaplain in the Air Force, seeing service in the South Pacific) would take him around the world—150 countries including the Soviet Union. Said another way, he preached in two-thirds of the world's 600 major cities. He was also a scholar, with earned doctorates from universities in Europe, Asia, Africa, and America—including a Ph.D. From Oxford, and a Ed.D. From UCLA. He became known as the foremost authority on the world's great revivals, with his doctoral dissertation on the Second Great Awakening in England in the mid 1800s. He wrote numerous books, sometimes two a year.

His studies pointed to one major fact of revivals: they had to begin with prayer. He once wrote: “Little by little, the church loses its grip on essential things, becomes a social club, goes to sleep or flies off at a tangent. All over the world we find sleeping churches, and all around them are the gospel-starved masses. Instead of performing the first things of importance, evangelizing the masses, they are engaged in a bewildering variety of pastimes—anything but the real thing.”

Located on the north island of New Zealand's up-side-down
"boot," the town where Orr evangelized was named
for a 17th century tribal-healing wedding reception
Yet for all his scholarly and evangelistic work, Orr is best remembered for a simple hymn that grew out of revival meetings he held in Ngaruawahia (N-gu-ru-WAH-hee-a), New Zealand when he was only 24 years old. Covered by intense prayer, the meetings resulted in huge numbers of conversions, reconciliations between believers, and hearty singing in services.

When Orr prepared to leave the country, four Maori girls approached him with a beautiful indigenous song of farewell. He couldn't forget the beautiful melody, and English words for it starting coming to him, based on Psalm 139:23-24. Quickly he jotted them down on the back of an envelope. Eventually, that hymn would become popularized throughout Australia in the 1930s and through the English-speaking world.

It was said of him: “Some men read history, some write it, and others make it. So far as the history of religious revivals is concerned, J. Edwin Orr belongs to all three categories.”

A longish commercial precedes the music video. Click on "skip ad" to hear this inspiring hymn sung by an all-men chorus:

The Cathedrals - Search Me O God (Live) - YouTube

Considering reading through the uplifting comments by listeners below the video.

Friday, October 8, 2021

TEAR-JERKER

Oh, the tears that flow when I peel and chop an onion in food preparation. There's an explanation for that! When cut, onions release “syn-Propanethial-S-oxide,” a chemical irritant that stimulates the eyes' “lachrymal glands,” releasing tears. Next time you're experiencing buckets of tears while chopping onions, impress somebody with that explanation!

But there's another way to look at onion-peeling, one that's really personal. Prayer-centered monk and author Thomas Merton (1915-1968) compared the misery of onion-peeling to God's refinement of our character. Layer by layer, He peels away our self-centered spirits until the real-”me” is revealed. It's the idea expressed via another ancient spiritual spokesperson, Jeremiah, who gave this word from God: “I [God] will bring adversity on all flesh” (Jeremiah 45:5 NKJV).

What! Isn't God the grandfatherly type who answers every prayer for health, wealth and happiness? Sorry, but no. He uses hardship, tears, misery, of our fallen condition for good—if we let Him. One writer, commenting on the Jeremiah passage, put it this way:

God says that when he brings great disaster upon you there will be no time to pack a bag filled with ego, self-centeredness, lust, or materialism. He'll let you escape, but only with the Jesus clothes on your back. What you're left with is your real life in Jesus (Colossians 3:4). A life that is filled with God's purpose and a life in alignment with God's heart and mind. In this real life, we enter into the abundance of life promised by Jesus (John 10:10). (1)

Every layer of selfishness and “entitlement” that's peeled away, like an onion, is apt to produce angst and tears. But it's the process that brings us to the heart of God. No matter what hardship or discipline we endure, there's a bottom line—that nothing “will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 8:39).

Our spiritual journey will involve trials and tears, all part of God's way of peeling away layers of the self-focused life. Tough times may result from our own bad decisions, or from the negative actions of others toward us. Such times—it's often said—can leave us bitter or better. “Better” happens when hardship presses us closer to the heart of God.

And I remember: God's own Son wept. Over the pain of a sin-soaked world. But in His divinity He knew the rest of the story, in heaven:

He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away. (Revelation 21:4)

Such hope sometimes brings tears to my eyes—good tears, not the onion type.

  1. God Peels Back the Layers until the Real You is Revealed | Devotional by Jon Walker (thoughts-about-god.com) Oct. 19, 2019, accessed Aug. 24, 2021.


Friday, October 1, 2021

GONE

I write at length this week to remember some remarkable friends. God teaches us through wonderful people we have known.

We hadn't driven west of our neighborhood for a while—east is the route that takes us to “town”--and were shocked by a gap just a block west away. An old house in that block was gone—torn down, most of the debris removed, only a derelict “free” refrigerator by the sidewalk. A couple decades ago it had been replanted there by house-movers who lugged it about a mile and a half from a high-profile spot near the town's major health clinic. Now, it was gone.

The symbolism of that neighborhood loss was stark for me, as within days three dear Christian friends died. Gone....to Heaven. But gone from earthly contact. All were role models for me. As I have processed their deaths—correction, their Home-goingsI have reconsidered the words of Moses in Psalm 90 as he anticipated his own death at age 120:

Teach us to number our days aright, that we may gain a heart of wisdom....Satisfy us in the morning with your unfailing love, that we may sing for joy and be glad all our days....May the favor of the Lord our God rest upon us; establish the work of our hands for us—yes, establish the work of our hands. (Psalm 90: 12, 14, 17)

Longtime friends from our church, Al and Georgia Burgener were 95 and 90 when they died within a short time of each other on Sept. 15. Their daughters were with them as the end came in the comforting surroundings of their neat, cared-for home. Al was a worker-bee who lived quietly and diligently. After a career delivering milk, he went to work as a church janitor, serving way into retirement years. He kept their home's yard immaculate, even into this last year—with the concession of hiring out the lawn mowing. He also loved sports and sometimes shared watching games with my husband.

Georgia was the complement to Al's quiet demeanor. Outgoing, social, she made friends wherever she went. Neither she nor Al were Christians when they married. Four daughters came in rapid succession, and in the busyness of mothering Georgia felt her spiritual void. She visited a church—daughters in tow—and had a follow-up visit that led to her accepting Christ as Savior. She kept praying for Al, and in time, he, too, decided to follow Christ. A quiet man, he honored the Lord through his diligence and steadfastness.

As their daughters grew into beautiful, talented teenagers, the boys came around. She insisted that their dates be Christian young men. That meant that some heard her present the “Four Spiritual Laws.” As a result, lives were changed. Some ended up in ministry vocations. Her nest empty, she still impacted her world and growing “grand” family. Her outside-the-home interests—including “senior swims” at the YMCA and a weight-loss group—became platforms for her faith. I remember her joy when one of her swim-partners started coming to church.

I was about a decade older than her daughters, but she still scooped me into her friendship circle after my marriage. She modeled good people skills for me. She also modeled service. When I broke my ankle at a terribly inconvenient time (I was care-giving my mother-in-law, slipping into dementia), Georgia was among those who showed up with beautiful meals to help carry us through the worst of being “laid up.” Later I returned the favor a few times when they went through illness. By her reaction, you would have thought my plain cooking was something a gourmet chef whipped up.

For several years we exchanged the same silly “old-age” birthday card featuring birds known for their longevity. For example, the Algerian condor, 106 years. We'd add an appropriate note each year as we sent it back and forth. Georgia also did something nobody else had done for me: she put on a surprise birthday party for my 65th birthday. She was 81! But I came to her house to find many dear friends gathered to celebrate me! I cry to even think about it. She'd asked the guests to bring something (like fabric or gift cards) to support my ministry of sewing baby blankets I donated to local hospitals for families in need. Imagine, a party honoring that! In subsequent years, she'd always ask, “How many blankets are you up to?” (I got to 1,400 when she died.)

More important, Georgia prayed. She knew the burdens of my heart. She prayed and checked up on the requests. About two weeks before her death, when Al was struggling to live, I called and asked if we could have a “two minute porch visit.” With Covid concerns (even though we'd both been vaccinated), she sat in a chair on the porch and I had a chair in the walkway. She, the encourager, now needed encouragement. Two minutes went to fifteen. I broke the “no-contact” protocol and hugged her when I left. I had no idea that in the next two weeks a cancer diagnosis and major stroke would end her life. How sweet that Heaven called both the same night.

Three days later, I got word that an incredible friend, Dan Miller, died at 84, his polio-damaged body just worn out. Some thirty years earlier, I heard him speak at a banquet honoring church volunteers, and it was a WOW! event. He was one of the last victims of polio in North Central Washington in 1955, just weeks after he graduated from high school as a decorated athlete. Yet, despite profound disability, he headed for college determined to major in physical education! As he put his dream before his college advisor, the wise man said, “Let's see what you can do.” And Dan did it, becoming (like my husband) an elementary physical education teacher despite significant paralysis. Plus, he taught himself to play guitar (holding it backwards to accommodate his disability) and played in a band. And, later, he got his pilot's license and even flew an ultra light.

Finally, when post-polio problems made his daily school-administrator-role harder and harder, he retired early, transforming his occupation into “inspirational speaker,” sharing through humor and honesty his life story of breaking barriers. Mostly through word-of-mouth, his opportunities exploded over the next twenty years. In more than 1,500 presentations, he spoke to thousands in 44 states and provinces. He had major appearances:

*8,000 at the “Million Dollar Round Table International Conference”

*6,000 at back-to-back services at Schuller's Crystal Cathedral

*12,000 at Gaither's 25th Praise Gathering in Indianapolis. (Plus, featured in a Gaither Homecoming video.)

*13,500 at two California Christian school teacher conferences

Besides the mega-conferences, there were the smaller gatherings—like my church's “volunteer banquet.” After hearing him, I told my husband, I need to write up his story. Dan and his wife Judy were so gracious in that process, which eventually resulted in articles in major inspirational magazines. Then it went in a “Chicken Soup for the Soul” book. And finally, gathering together our notes, I helped him write his autobiography, Living Laughing and Loving Life. He self-published, selling or giving away an extraordinary 72,000+ copies. (The cover--reflecting Dan's sense of humor--showed his son cradling a fish like a baby and holding a granddaughter like a prize catch.)

Because of the friendship that developed through our interviews and contacts for the articles, it was a natural transition to help him prepare his autobiography—without charge. Asking for pay never was in my plan. I was simply glad to help spread his amazing life message. But Dan and Judy were givers. I needed a newer computer. He gave me his when he upgraded. Then came a traumatic year when we were nearly killed by a drinking driver. A few months later, Dan was speaking in our town and called our home. I was at the hospital with our son, who needed some treatment for his face scars from the wreck. My husband took the call; Dan told him to take me to a certain computer store. While in town, he had picked out a new system for me, paid for it, and told the salesman who to call. I wept over this extravagant gift—a boost to me and to our high school kids as the technological age took hold. For several years, they also sent unexpected/unsought checks of “appreciation”--sharing the blessings of his speaking ministry.

In our life journeys we will encounter difficult people and wonderful people. God knows we need the latter's encouragement. And as we have been blessed, we are in turn to bless others. How grateful I am for these “senior-than-me” folks who lived out in winsome ways the Lord's command to “love one another.”

I miss them. We will meet again. The house has left the lot. There's an empty spot on earth. But there's a new home, in Heaven.