birthdays and storytellers.

Last week I celebrated my birthday.  The entire day was simple yet so perfectly delightful.  Just the way I like it.  My family treated me to dinner and lavished me with kind words and fun renditions of the birthday song.   There were handwritten cards in the mailbox and dozens of Facebook messages.  There were a few phone calls and a delicious apple cinnamon muffin topped with a brightly lit candle at morning bible study.

Birthdays always have a way of bringing Psalm 139 into focus for me.  I am immensely humbled when I think about the way the Universe Maker had a plan to redeem my life even though He knew just how grossly I would divert from His perfect ways…

… the way the Life Breather sustains my daily & eternal breath even though death is all that I’ve ever earned

… the way the Grace Giver rescued me from the pits of despair and put a new song in my heart

… the way the Highest One gives me the chance to be one of his storytellers through words, pictures, and life as I declare His glory among the nations, His marvelous deeds among all peoples

So, today I leave you with a few verses from Psalm 139 and a few images from His littlest storytellers.  Without even uttering a word, these little ones are dramatically declaring the glory of the Saviour King, Jesus Christ!

May God grant you eyes to see and a heart that believes that you were made FOR HIM!

PSALM 139:13-18, 23-24

F

or you created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb.


14 I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well.


15 My frame was not hidden from you when I was made in the secret place, when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.


16 Your eyes saw my unformed body; all the days ordained for me were written in your book before one of them came to be.


17 How precious to me are your thoughts,God! How vast is the sum of them!
18 Were I to count them, they would outnumber the grains of sand— when I awake, I am still with you.

23 Search me, God, and know my heart; test me and know my anxious thoughts.
24 See if there is any offensive way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.

caught up in grace.

Isn’t life made up of a million little moments? A million every day graces? Moment after moment after moment… all strung together like precious pearls… or maybe paper beads?

Some moments are tiny, fleeting. Others bigger, noticeable, lingering. But some are so monumental they are permanently fixed upon our hearts… memories we return to time and time again.

I’ve had many of those. I know you have too. I had another one last night.

Hillsong United at the Alive Festival

We bought the tickets knowing that we were taking a risk — an outdoor concert in one of the wettest years Ohio has ever seen. But these aren’t just concerts and we are not just spectators. We are worshipers of the One True God, and we go to meet with Him there. And over familiar songs, familiar words, He speaks into our hearts, and we are caught up in His grace.

So we pressed purchase. Expectations high. Anticipation building.

The day came and the excitement was palpable. The band said it was their first time to be in Ohio, and it was a warm, muggy night. The first day of summer. The longest day of the year. The grassy lawn gently rolled toward the stage. The word “Aftermath” flashed on the side screens. We set up lawn chairs, picnic blankets. Brought bubbles for the kids to play with in the waiting. Drank lukewarm water to stay hydrated while the sun blazed down on us. We waited…

When the first beat rang, the sun had not quite set. The band led out with “Go” and we sang “We’ve come alive in you, Set free to show the truth, Our lives will never be the same.” A reality, indeed.

The set continued… powerful, worshipful, fun! Then one of the lead worshipers spoke up — the Gospel message — and he called on us to be present in that moment, not dwelling on what happened earlier in the day or what may happen over the course of the next few days because God had something for us in that very moment. And they began to lead us in singing “Aftermath”. And God did have something for us in that moment.

We sang Aftermath, and as we sang, the night sky began to darken even further. Ominous clouds began to move in. The sky looked threatening. And we kept singing:

The skies lay low where You are
On the earth You rest Your feet
Yet the hands that cradle the stars
Are the hands that bled for me

The weather was quickly changing, and His power and presence was surely felt. The storm was very near. Yet we kept singing:

And in that moment You opened up the heavens
To the broken, the beggar, and the thief
Lifted out of the wreckage
I found hope in the aftermath

And the clouds got even darker… the temperature fell quickly… and the wind began to swirl around us. And we sang on:

And I know that You’re with me
Yes I know that You’re with me here
And I know that Your love will light the way

And the dark sky began to brighten with bursts of lightening… the wind whipped strong in the trees… and the night air grew cool. And we kept singing:

Yes I know that You’re with me here

And the cool wind felt like His breath… and the knowledge of His presence was felt by our hearts and by our skin. And in the storm, we felt His strength.

The song ended, and the storm rolled in strong, fierce, brilliant. We sought cover, hundreds of us huddled in the tent called Prayer. Some sang. Some talked. Most wondered. Everyone waited on Him. The rain pelted the tent, the bright lightening lit up the night sky, and the thunder rolled louder than any bass drum on stage. My two children huddled under a blanket their little hands covering their ears… the littlest one eventually climbed up into Daddy’s arms.

And we waited on Him.

And when the storm had passed, we emerged uncertain. There was movement on the stage. Was it possible to go on? We waited. We watched. Then the screens began to lift and the lights began to come back on, but not all of them. The band came back out, and we kept singing:

I’m not shaken
I’m not letting go

And everything comes alive
In my life as we lift You higher
Let Your freedom arise
In our lives as we lift You up

And everyone came alive! It was as if the wind of His presence had breathed life into our praise that evening. Those who stayed continued to worship long into the night, humbled by the magnificence of His presence, thankful for the grace that we had been caught up in.

We made the long drive back, arriving home in the wee hours of the morning. The little ones made their way to bed. When the sun rose this morning, they did too. I asked them what they thought of their first Hillsong United concert, and littlest one answered. She said nothing about the band or the storm or even the bubbles she’d had so much fun with. She simply said “I saw that God is really powerful!” Yes, baby girl, He is!


small.

I heard something several months back… can’t remember where, though.  It went a bit like this:

Be simple, hidden, quiet, small.

This quote reverberates in my mind often, particularly when pride rears it’s ugly head… when arrogance & selfishness threaten anything pure… when flesh wins over spirit… when I sense that I am striving… when I lack a contented heart… when my restless soul wants to run… when my energy reaches its end… when I’m serving out of my own strength.

Today, I read a post by Lysa TerKeurst which, for me, followed a reading of Richard Foster’s Celebration of Discipline.  Both raised so many thoughts on humility, being hidden, quietness, smallness, solitude, submission, simple living, and service.

Mind racing, soul penetrating thoughts. 

Wanted to share a few of them today in this quiet, small space of mine.

From Celebration of Discipline

Without silence there is no solitude.

The purpose of silence and solitude is be able to see and hear.

… infatuation with natural human powers and abilities without any dependence upon God.  That is the flesh in operation, and the flesh is the deadly enemy of humility.

From Lysa’s article “Don’t Despise the Small”

I see the place from which humility is birthed.  That glorious rare quality that doesn’t take too much credit.  That knows real success is laced with upward glances, bent knees and whispered praises to the only One. The One.

The small we should not despise.

The quiet nurturing taking place, the unfolding, the stir beneath where none can see.

But for the soul that has tasted small, humility becomes their richest fare.

Oh the beautiful gift of small.

Small isn’t a belittling of one’s calling nor an indication of one’s future.

Small isn’t what keeps us from that grand vision.

Small is what keeps us for that grand vision.

Words help me, and I am thankful for what the Lord revealed to me through their words over the past few days.