Monday, July 11, 2011

Shaun Groves, Hero of the Faith

Today's post is about Shaun Groves, a stand-up guy and real hero of the faith.  As I've mentioned before, he's a full-time Compassion International employee, who, among other things, heads up the amazing Compassion Blogging Trips.

He's more than the face of Compassion International, however.  In his own words, taken from his website:

Shaun Groves is a communicator who’s known by a lot of titles: Singer/songwriter. Speaker. Blogger. Husband. Daddy. Friend. He feels and thinks deeply and laughs easily. And he’s helping Christians discover what they were saved for, and being a voice for children around the world, desperate to be saved from poverty.

As a loyal Shaun Groves blog follower, I can attest to the deep thinker and feeler part, and yes, to the laughs easily part.  He's very witty.

His heart for the Lord and for the impoverished will slay you, and soon, you'll find yourself one of his groupies.  Believe me.  And it's not because you'll worship him, but because he's so good at pointing you to the Savior. It's never about him.  And that's why he's so beloved.  Humility. Obedience. Love. Grace.

Well friends, Shaun's got exciting news to share right now!  His first album in five years, Third World Symphony, is being released August 30th!  Praise the Lord!  My kids and I love the songs!  He's a very talented singer and songwriter. You'll find the lyrics and melodies very moving, very worshipful.  

Now before I give you the listening and buying links for his new album, I have a surprise!  

I interviewed him!  

Okay.....not in person or anything, and he doesn't know me from Adam.  But I'm still very excited, as you can tell.

He offered to answer any 3 questions for bloggers willing to promote his album.

So, my brain started working.  Hmm.  Any three questions.  I'm. so. on. it.

Without further ado.......here's the interview.

Question 1:  Matthew 6:25-34 seems to say that God will provide for our daily bread, yet so many go hungry....even Christians.  Through your blogging trips, I've seen the faithful display the joy of the Lord, despite their abject poverty.  The Lord provides spirit joy, but he doesn't always stop the hunger pains.  How do you wrap your head around Matthew 6?   

Shaun Groves:  Matthew 6 is only one passage dealing with daily bread. It's sandwiched (pardon the pun) between Exodus 16 and 2 Corinthians 8. Those two passages help me make better sense of Matthew 6. in Exodus 16 God guarantees daily bread for his children who are wandering in the wilderness. But with his promise of provision he also gives them a new law - the first law he gave his people after they left slavery in Egypt. He says to them, "I will rain down bread from heaven for you and you are to go out each day and take only enough for that day. This is a test to see if you will obey my instruction."  When they disobey this law a few verses later by saving up food, God angrily turns their leftovers into maggots and causes it to stink. Exodus 16 ends with God's people obeying God, collecting only daily bread (about 2 liters per person in each house) and the bible says "He who gathered much [because he had much family] did not have too much and he who gathered little [because he had little family] did not have too little." Everyone had enough for that day.

Then in 2 Corinthians 8, Paul tells the church in Corinth, who has leftovers, to share with their brothers and sisters in Jerusalem who are not eating every day. He tells them that he is collecting their leftovers not so that others might be relieved while they are "hard pressed" but so that there will be "equality." He uses that word again a couple verses later when he says God wants equality. Then he defines equality by quoting Exodus 16: "He who gathered much [because he had much family] did not have too much and he who gathered little [because he had little family] did not have too little." That's the kind of equality God wants. In the Old Testament and here on the other side of the cross too.

So, if there is inequality - some with too much and others with too little - it is not because God isn't providing. God is keeping his promise to rain down bread from heaven - enough for all. It is God's people who are not sharing.


Question 2:  What changes did your family make in order to simplify, spend less, give more?  

Shaun Groves:  It started with cable before our kids came along. We didn't think of it as simplifying and we had no grand motivations. We simply didn't like what was on! We'd surf and surf and realized we were paying for something we didn't really like or need. So we turned it off. And we suddenly had extra time and extra money - a little more freedom.  Years later when I went overseas for the first time - to El Salvador - we decided together that we'd move into a smaller house. And because we had less space we got rid of some stuff. And I started cutting my own hair because, really, can anyone tell the difference with this haircut? We eventually started a garden. My wife isn't a world class coupon clipper but she enjoys it.

So it's been small things, slowly. No grand scheme. Just cutting a little here and there, which has slowly given us more time, more attention, more money to spend on more important and lasting things - mainly people.

Question 3:  Do you have a favorite song on this album?

Shaun Groves:  That's like asking which of my kids I like best! Unfair. (This week it's the youngest, by the way.) At the moment No Better is helping me out. Musically I love what producer Mitch Dane did with the song - the banjo, the bass line - the whole thing feels like something the Muppets would be driving down the road too. But theologically I need it right now. I'm speaking at some Christian music festivals on behalf of Compassion International - perhaps the worst environment in which to ask an audience to sponsor a child...or even listen to some speaker guy they've never heard of. At my own concerts and speaking events at colleges and churches the response is phenomenal. A large percentage of the audience winds up sponsoring a child or committing to make some sacrifice to help someone in need of food, medicine, shoes, the gospel. It's unbelievably rewarding to see how God moves people to gratitude and generosity. Incredible. 

But at a festival seeing what God is up to, or seeing Him at all takes better vision that I've got much of the time. There are thousands of people there enthusiastically singing when the famous guys are on stage and then going to get a corndog when I get sent out to speak. Ouch. And very few, percentage wise, sponsor a child - compared to what I'm used to. And it's not for lack of funds because everyone is buying $30 t-shirts and $10 keychains and glowsticks and all kinds of stuff that's not bad but certainly not needed. Not to mention what it costs to go to a three day music festival! So you can see where this is going right?

I'm not a nice guy, in my head, sometimes. Festivals bring out that judgmental jerk in me - feed him what he needs to be cynical and wonder if his time is wasted. So I need a song like No Better to wake that other guy in my head, that humbler guy who can count the mercies shown to him, who remembers when he didn't care about the poor or the speaker guy talking about them either. No Better stirs compassion in me and reminds me that being an angry jerk who has a hard time loving the rich and seemingly unmoved is just as bad (if not worse) than being that rich seemingly unmoved guy. Both of us need compassion.

What did I tell you, friends?  He's a real hero of the faith, isn't he? Humility. Obedience. Love. Grace.

Please buy his album, and spread the word on your own blog, or on Facebook or Twitter, by reposting this interview and the links.  Thank you, friends!


Click here to listen:  

Click here to buy ($10):  



Click below to read about his Compassion Blogging Trips....and bring the Kleenex, preparing for a heart change:










  

Sunday, July 10, 2011

This and That and a Teaser


Looking at pictures of my children after the house is quiet and they're all asleep, always emotionally charges me. What an awesome responsibility! What an indescribable blessing!  What a grueling task, many days, physically and emotionally speaking, for the mother....just caring for their daily needs and shaping them to be Christ followers.  I look at the day's photos and remember my failures, my triumphs, as a mother.


Most of the time, I conclude that only my prayers will save them.  I'm too flawed to reap the miracles I want for their hearts.  My prayers change me, if not them......and by changing me, the Holy Spirit shapes them.


Somehow, looking at pictures in a quiet house, I know what the answer is:  A mother's faithful prayers.


The park is my favorite outing.  Always.  I love the way they push themselves, showing confidence and spunk.  I love it when they call for me, wanting to show me their feats.  I love their joy!  Being outside the confines of the house, with its never-caught-up imperfection, does us all good.





Here is our most recent Monarch, ready for release after drying its wings and consuming its chrysallis coating.



Titus Treefrog food.  Does he look like he knows his fate?


This morning Husband took Peter to a nearby nature park, having signed him up to participate in a children's nature photography class.  I use that word "class" loosely.  Instruction wasn't involved, but we did get a good printed sheet with some suggestions.  Regardless, this free outing blessed Peter very much. In two weeks he goes back to be presented with an 8X10 photo of his best picture, which the ranger determined to be the dragonfly shown below.

I am so proud of Peter!  We have a terribly cheap digital camera, with focusing issues.  Someday I hope to invest in a camera that Peter can use to learn a marketable skill--nature photography.  If training your child in the way he should go includes pointing him in the direction his gifts and passions take him, then just maybe, Peter's calling will be to point people to the Father by taking photos that prove His majesty.


Peter most certainly feels closer to God after a day out in nature.  Whatever deficits his neurological problems cause seem to be lessened, soothed, by nature. This has been proven, and is called green therapy.  My husband, too, feels relief through nature.


The turtle and the following photos, up until the bubble play outside our house, are all Peter's work.

Enjoy!







Psalm 19:1
To the choirmaster. A Psalm of David. The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork.


Peter will receive an 8X10 of this photo.  Yeah!  He's so excited.

Genesis 1:31
And God saw everything that he had made, and behold, it was very good. And there was evening and there was morning, the sixth day.





Psalm 50:2
Out of Zion, the perfection of beauty, God shines forth.







Exciting announcement:
Shaun Groves, Christian musician and spokesman for Compassion International, has a new album coming out on August 30.  He asked his blog readers to help him promote the album.  Considering him one of the heroes of the faith, I'm a loyal blog follower.  I jumped at the chance to ask him three questions, as detailed in his post.  Honestly, I wasn't sure he'd respond, since I have less than a hundred readers and I don't use Facebook or Twitter.  He has FBI-type ways to check into a person's blog traffic and internet use.  Creepy, isn't it?  

Anyhow, since he's such a stand-up guy, he did respond, and his answers were outstanding...witty and inspired!  Few people read blogs on the weekends, so I will wait until Monday or Tuesday to post the interview. Tease.  Be on the lookout for it!  

Listen to his new album, Third World Symphony, here:   http://soundcloud.com/shaungroves/sets/third-world-symphony


Friday, July 8, 2011

5 steps to better prayer

Praying Hands

The secret to effective prayer is simple.

1. pray
2. pray some more
3. pray even more
4. pray more than before
5. pray more than ever before

Start with ten minutes, work up to an hour a day.  Soon, you'll enter prayer continuously, effortlessly.

You learn to pray by praying.  It's not easy at the beginning, as you work to defeat Satan and develop a habit.  Satan, of course, hates when a Christian develops a spiritual habit. The word habit is viral to him.

But soon, you will defeat him, and if you stick with it, your life will resemble Abraham Lincoln's telling quote:

"I have been driven many times to my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had absolutely no other place to go."  Abraham Lincoln

"We learn prayer's deepest depths in prayer, not from books.  We reach prayer's highest heights in prayer, not from sermons.  The only place to learn prayer, is in prayer, bent and broken on our knees." Dick Eastman

Do you still think you don't have time?  Consider this:

Prayer does not fit us for the greater work, prayer is the greater work. Oswald Chambers 

How is it going this week, friends?  Easier than last week?


Thursday, July 7, 2011

Drifting Away From God: A How-to Guide

Title: God

How do you drift away from God?  Let's count the ways.

~ Worry about your problems.  A lot.

~ Spend a great deal of time looking for solutions to your problems.....do Google searches, ask the experts, read self-help books, make pro and con lists.  Be proactive and ready for anything.

~ When you're not busy solving your problems, go shopping and get new things. You deserve nice things.  You work hard.

~ Keep your distance from other people's problems and hardships.  You don't need that stuff dragging you down.  Besides, they probably made their bed.......let 'em lie in it now.

~ Keep up with all the news, the trends, the hotspots.  Be sure 'n look cool.  Be the trendsetter, even! 

~ Talk a lot.....on the phone, in person, through e-mail, through social media.  Let your voice be heard!

~ Schedule a lot of things and stay really busy.  Smart people are on the move. Yeah, baby!

~ Don't pay any attention to brightly dressed flowers, that funny chipmunk, those creepy crawly caterpillars, that songbird, those amazing cloud formations, that peachy pink sunset.  Such things will waste your time.  You aren't Ferdinand the Bull, after all......are you? What did he ever accomplish?

~ Consider that in this big world, with such diverse people, there can't really be Absolute Truth.  Everyone needs to find their own truth.  What works for you? What fits for you?  A loving existence rests in our willingness to be all-inclusive.

~ Purposely build yourself up.  Keep all eyes on you, baby!  Be the center of attention.  Tell about your amazing list of accomplishments.

~ Never say you're sorry.  Never admit defeat.  Never admit fault.  Stand strong and firm.  You are invincible.  Believe it!


Wednesday, July 6, 2011

telling of His wonderful deeds



Psalm 75:1
We give thanks to you, O God, we give thanks, for your Name is near; men tell of your wonderful deeds.


My Gratitude List

~ Miss Beth finishing her nap in my happy arms.....me, awed by the blessing she is.

~ Putting a towel around a shivering poolside toddler

~ Husband feeling positive about a job interview (he has a 20-hour job and a 30-hour job...this would be a replacement for the 30-hour job (much better hours, slightly better pay, paid sick and holiday time, pay raises, vacation after a year).  In a recessed economy, you do the best you can.

~ Miss Mary being the perfect sister........she's Paul's art companion, Peter's nature companion, Beth's playroom companion.

~ Peter sitting by the kiddy pool with his bird field guide

~ An eight-year-old penpal from India....filling my heart like one of my own

~ Huge (larger than my girls) stuffed dog at the library, delighting my girls

~ Titus Treefrog delighting my children as he snatches up crickets with lightening speed (now that's an exciting pet!)

~ The Holy Spirit having me drift in and out of prayer all day

~ Peter passing me in the hallway, telling me, "I prayed for our penpal...that she would not be hungry today." Hugging my thanks, I fight back the tears.  The Holy Spirit lives in my son!  Hallelujah!  I knew it was so, but when I see evidence like this, I'm still awed.

~ Changing a messy number two--done in a bathingsuit with no swimmy diaper--that required a shower, then having my toddler say, "Kiss me?" as she happily went back out to play.  Oh, the sweetness of that kiss..and the smile that accompanied it.  I won't miss diapers, but I'll greatly miss the little people who wear them!  Sniff, sniff.

~ Never tiring, year after year, of watching monarch caterpillars become monarch butterflies.  The imagination God has!  So enchanting to witness!

~ Boys filling a balloon with water and freezing it, so they can play bowling on the driveway with water bottles from the recycling box, using their ice ball. :)  They learned that it takes more than one day to solidly freeze the water.  This is try #1.  George, that curious monkey, put them up to this.  The new library we're using has episodes they haven't seen.  So daily it seems, they are trying new science and engineering-type schemes.

~ Playing Jenga as a family

~ Miss Mary asking questions about the breakfast Bible passage

FYI:  The number to call for a Compassion penpal......800-336-7676