Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Dancing in the Minefields, Christian Marriage

Christian marriage song--Dancing in the Minefields





What's making you cry on the radio these days?  For me, it's this beautiful song about Christian marriage called Dancing in the Minefields, by Andrew Peterson.  It reminds me that marriage, sanctioned by God, is bigger than any two people who enter into it.  God will never forsake your marriage--he will never leave you alone in it.

Hebrews 13:5 tell us, 

"Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.”

This loaded verse doesn't specifically speak to a married couple, but holding these words dear all the days of your marriage will serve you well as a couple. God will never leave you, so cling tightly to one another and trust Him always, no matter what comes.  

Listening to these beautiful lyrics makes me feel like grabbing my nicely-muscled, gorgeous honey, and slow dancing through this song many times over.  

Unlike many top hits that repeat the same lyrics over and over, this song is a story that spans years--rich in words and in meaning.  I can't even write about it without crying.  Sniff, sniff.

My favorite lines are many, but especially the last two stanzas: 

'Cause we bear the light of the Son of Man 

So there's nothing left to fear 

So I'll walk with you in the shadowlands 

Till the shadows disappear 




'Cause he promised not to leave us 

And his promises are true 

So in the face of all this chaos, baby, 

I can dance with you



Here are the complete lyrics:

Dancing in the Minefields, by Andrew Peterson
I was nineteen, you were twenty-one 
The year we got engaged
Everyone said we were much too young
But we did it anyway 


We bought our rings for forty each 
From a pawn shop down the road 
We made our vows and took the leap 
Now fifteen years ago 

We went dancing in the minefields 
We went sailing in the storm 
And it was harder than we dreamed 
But I believe that's what the promise is for 

"I do" are the two most famous last words 
The beginning of the end 
But to lose your life for another I've heard 
Is a good place to begin 

'Cause the only way to find your life 
Is to lay your own life down 
And I believe it's an easy price 
For the life that we have found 

And we're dancing in the minefields 
We're sailing in the storm 
This is harder than we dreamed 
But I believe that's what the promise is for 

So when I lose my way, find me 
When I loose love's chains, bind me 
At the end of all my faith, till the end of all my days 
When I forget my name, remind me 

'Cause we bear the light of the Son of Man 
So there's nothing left to fear 
So I'll walk with you in the shadowlands 
Till the shadows disappear 

'Cause he promised not to leave us 
And his promises are true 
So in the face of all this chaos, baby, 
I can dance with you

Monday, March 7, 2011

wisdom on first time obedience from Sally Clarkson - grace!

I came across a link this morning on the folly of first time obedience training. I've had parenting spells in which I've tried first time obedience, usually following tough times with my kids, as you might recall if you've read here for very long.  Each time, I've abandoned it for many of the reasons Sally Clarkson mentions in her post, First time obedience, really?

Sally Clarkson writes very long posts and I don't usually have time to read them.  She's a stream-of-consciousness blogger.  I guess kind of like me? Ouch.  Only she has tons of wisdom to share!

Her post above is worth any time you can give it!  The post received 114 comments, which gives you some idea of the number who were blessed by it!

grace--are you good at it?

Are you good at grace?  Does it pour from you effortlessly?  Are you always satisfied with your responses to life...to your loved ones...to strangers?

I've seen grace pour readily from past and present sufferers--wrought from their intense suffering.  These sojourners are intimately acquainted with that low down feeling.......with powerlessness and emptiness.  When you're low down yourself, instead of giving advice, they just hold your hand...not assuming they could've done it better than you....or that mistakes brought your suffering.

I want to be like this--to acquire such gentleness--but I'm fearful of the intense suffering it entails.

Lord, may grace pour readily from me.  Help me be the face of Christ to those around me.  I haven't suffered cancer or the death of a living child I've held and nurtured and laughed with.  I haven't been betrayed.  I'm not a widow.  My kids don't have terminable diseases.  I am not starving or cold.

But I want to be grace-filled, grace-full.  May it be so, Lord.

I love this excerpt from Ann's book, One Thousand Gifts, A Dare to Live More Fully Right Where you Are (Ann Morton Voskamp, 2010, pp. 96-97)


     I awaken to the strange truth that all new life comes out of the dark places, and hasn't it always been?  Out of darkness, God spoke forth the teeming life.  That wheat round and ripe across all these fields, they swelled as hope embryos in womb of the black earth.  Out of the dark, tender life unfurled.  Out of my own inner pitch, six human beings emerged, new life, wet and fresh.
     All new life labors out of the very bowels of darkness.
     That fullest life itself dawns from nothing but Calvary darkness and tomb--cave black into the radiance of Easter morning.
     Out of the darkness of the cross, the world transfigures into new life.  And there is no other way.
     Then...yes:  It is dark suffering's umbilical cord that alone can untether new life.
     It is suffering that has the realest possibility to bear down and deliver grace.
And grace that chooses to bear the cross of suffering overcomes that suffering.

My favorite line:  "It is suffering that has the realest possibility to bear down and deliver grace."

We can't argue with that.  That's truth.


Lord, may we welcome suffering, and not fear it.  May we know the beauty birthed from it.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Saturday spiritual highlights

Saturday Gratitude


- Favorite quote from Saturday devotions, found in A Gospel Primer for Christians,  Learning to See the Glories of God's Love (Milton Vincent, 2008, p.54):

Understanding that I am not the ultimate end of the gospel, but rather that God's glory is, actually enables me to embrace my salvation more boldly than I would otherwise dare to do.  For example, when my timid heart questions why God would want to love one so sinful as I, I read the answer, "to the praise of the glory of His grace."  I figure, then, that my unworthiness must actually be useful to God, because it magnifies the degree to which His grace might be glorified as He lavishes His saving kindness upon me.  This line of reasoning makes perfect sense to me and convinces me to embrace the gospel with greater passion so that God might glorify Himself through me, an unworthy sinner.


Indeed, the more I embrace and experience the gospel, the more I delight in the worship of God, the more expressive my joy in Him becomes, and the more I yearn to glorify Him in all I say and do. 

- My Peter read the book of Jonah at the dinner table, without a single OCD-related stutter or repeat of words/phrases.  Momma proceeded to do the hallelujah dance.  How fitting that God healed it as Peter read from the Word.

- Nursing my toddler to sleep and watching her eyelids fall, long lashes resting against milky smooth skin.

- A perm from a very nice stylist in a salon where everybody had normal hair, which was quiet enough for me to read 2 more chapters from Ann's book.

- A 53-year-old stylist who shared my middle-age, wrinkling-skin angst. Like me, she doesn't feel any different and when she catches a glimpse of herself in a store or a random mirror, she questions who that person is.  "Surely that can't be me?"  I will be 45 in a few days, and I look 50.  I told her she'd taken very good care of herself--and obviously never resided in California--because at 53, she looked better than my impending 45.  She said that was nonsense.....and then I liked her even more.

- My handyman cousin is coming soon to size up some handyman projects that need to be done around here.  The dining-room light fixture is faulty, leaving us with too little light for school on dark, rainy days.

- Couch cuddling with my kiddos....something I'm making intentional nowadays.

- My Beth holding onto Goodnight Moon like it was a precious stuffed animal.

- A husband who let me sleep in, after at least ten wake-ups from my teething toddler.

- Whole-wheat flour shortcake with strawberries on top, tasting so wholesome.  Forgot to buy vanilla ice cream.....wishing we had an ice cream maker...hoping to find one at a garage sale this spring.

- The keyhole in the van is acting up, making it difficult to get it started lately.  I'm giving hard thanks for the way God uses that van to make it so clear that He is in control.

Saturday, March 5, 2011

the stove wasn't the blessing

Our new oven range was delivered today!  Let's hear a hallelujah and an amen!

When we moved in only three burners worked and nothing on the hood worked.  Tonight, I cooked with a stove light and a fan!  It was so wonderful! I felt rich, people.  Positively rich.

The old one was so ready to go, that even the time and oven temperature display window was failing.  My children and I always had to guess what temperature we were up to, as we waited eons for the thing to preheat.

The delivery men were very nice.  They hauled our old one away and completely installed and tested the new gas range and hood.  And you know, I think they were very happy for me!

The best thing about the whole experience wasn't the new stove, however. It was my kids and what they taught me.  They loved the delivery guys and charmed them with their child-like excitement and innocence.  The two men learned--without even asking--all my kids' name and ages, their interests, their present and hoped-for pets, how they caught a pill bug and named him Zack, and how spring must be coming because we're seeing bugs and robins. And how we were probably going to use our barbecue grill this summer instead of our gas grill, because we wouldn't be able to afford propane.  (They remembered that we couldn't afford it last summer).

I wasn't bothered by anything the kids said, despite them telling the world we were relatively poor.  Instead, I was tearfully happy at their sweetness, their contagious joy, their intuitive feeling that these two guys were very nice.  One guy may have been a Christian, because he asked if I homeschooled and expressed a desire to do the same, if not for having to work.  They couldn't have been nicer guys and we were blessed to have their help and fellowship for an hour--especially since we aren't handy people and prefer not to deal with circuit breakers and gas lines.

It's not that I thought my kids were incapable of being charming, or that I worried about their social skills.

It's that I'm here every day with them, seeing them fail to flush and wash after toilet use, seeing them wipe food on their sleeves, seeing them walk on our off-white carpet with muddy boots, time and again, despite throw rugs.  I listen to whining, fighting, complaining.  I repeat, repeat, repeat, and then I repeat some more.

It's hard not to worry about why they repeat the same mistakes.  I wonder what we're doing wrong.  I brainstorm how we can parent better.

My conscientiousness makes me insufferable sometimes.  Conscientious people aren't exactly the relaxed type. I'm sure you know someone like me?  I admire my kids and know their strengths and celebrate them, but I also drown in frustration sometimes, at how hard it is moving them forward with maturity.

Their sweetness today, their charm, reminded me that God takes over when it matters.  Those guys enjoyed being here with my kids, despite my flawed mothering.  Despite my struggles to remain calm.  Despite my overly-conscientious ways.

I've had lots of reminders lately that without Him, we are nothing. God continually shows me that I can't do a good enough job at my work.  At my mothering.  At anything.  It's not that striving is bad.  Indeed, working to bless one's family is good.  But my striving can't crowd out Him.  He is my focus, my whole point.  He is my life.  The Marthas of the world--that's me-- need to learn this anew, every day.

Any frustration I feel is sin.  It's wanting my own way.  It's a refusal of His way, His timetable, His purpose.

God will provide for my kids.  They will be raised up for His purposes, not because of my efforts, but in spite of them.

How this releases me!  How their liveliness, their conversation, their charm, released me today.  I saw God in them, not because they are particularly godly, but because God wanted to shine through them.  Because God took over.  I witnessed God's power and sovereignty.  I witnessed my own insignificance.


After the kids went to sleep tonight, I read this in My Utmost For His Highest (Oswald Chambers, 1935) August 4th entry:


Oh, the bravery of God in trusting us!  Do you say, "But He has been unwise to choose me, because there is nothing good in me and I have no value"?  That is exactly why He chose you.  As long as you think that you are of value to Him He cannot choose you, because you have purposes of your own to serve.  But if you will allow Him to take you to the end of your own self-sufficiency, then He can choose you to go with Him "to Jerusalem" (Luke 18:31).  And that will mean the fulfillment of purposes which He does not discuss with you.


We tend to say that because a person has natural ability, he will make a good Christian.  It is not a matter of our equipment, but a matter of our poverty; not of what we bring with us, but of what God puts into us; not a matter of natural virtues, of strength of character, of knowledge, or of experience--all of that is of no avail in this concern. The only thing of value is being taken into the compelling purpose of God and being made His friends (see 1 Corinthians 1:26-31).  God's friendship is with people who know their poverty.  He can accomplish nothing with the person who thinks that he is of use to God.  As Christians we are not here for our own purpose at all--we are here for the purpose of God, and the two are not the same.  We do not know what God's compelling purpose is, but whatever happens, we must maintain our relationship with Him.  
I can rest so peacefully in that.  Can't you?  I can give thanks for, and count as gifts, all my troubles.  No matter that we've been underemployed for two years.  No matter that my son has heart wrenching difficulties.

My troubles impoverish me.  They take me to the end of my self-sufficiency.

And then it's just God and me.  No distractions.

Beautiful.