Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Giving Good Gifts

This will likely be my last post for a while! Once Baby arrives, I'm not sure how much time and thought power I will have for a bit. I will be back sometime in the Spring. Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and have a wonderful rest of winter.


“I wanna do my cawendur.” He says to me with blue eyes sparkling. I note that the ottoman is pushed up against the door where the Advent Calendar is hanging.
“You have to wait until Daddy gets home to do the Advent Calendar.”
“I wanna do a GREEN one!” He clarifies, referencing the color of the pocket on the calendar.
“Yes, when Daddy gets home.”
Not a minute later, when my back is turned, he climbs up on the ottoman and his sneaky little hands start patting the pockets to see which ones have chocolate in them. Obviously one of the green ones does. So much for listening and obeying and waiting.

When my son was first born, I was ecstatic about being able to celebrate Christmas with him. The first Christmas was kind of a flop though. He was barely one year old and didn’t get it. I put a lot of time into planning Bible verses for our Advent Calendar, listening to beautiful Christmas carols and hymns, and he was completely oblivious to it all. Except for the big boxes that stuff came in. Those boxes were GOLD to him.

The next year I tried again, he was comprehending more and I wanted him to grasp how magical and amazing a time of year this was. Again, he didn’t get it. And on Christmas morning, he began to get really frustrated when he HAD to keep opening presents and couldn’t just start playing with the ones he had. I believe the concept of the 12 Days of Christmas was developed by a mother with toddlers. A new gift every day for 12 days? Genius! Just not the birds, that’s too much bird poop for anyone to handle.

This year he is excited about the Calendar. It mostly has chocolate and lollipops in it, and a few toys and new, unbreakable, ornaments. But still, he’s excited. We talk about Jesus, and how this is the day he was born. We’ve had some wonderful moments. And then, because the days are short and he is bored with the house, or because he just wants chocolate, we have tantrums. I’ve wanted to cancel Christmas several times. Why am I trying to reward this little fiend when all it gets me is tears and tantrums, and makes me feel like a horrible mom when I have to yell and discipline?

A few nights ago, my husband and I had a conversation about giving gifts. Sometimes it’s hard to spend money on people we don’t think deserve it. It feels like a waste of our resources and time. And then my husband said, “What if God had felt that way about us?” Ouch. What if God had looked at us and seen that we would be selfish, angry, uncharitable, judgmental, discriminating, unappreciative, and forgetful until our dying day even with Jesus’ sacrifice, and decided it just wasn’t worth it. What if He had decided to turn a blind eye to us because we just weren’t worth redeeming and left us to wallow in our own sin and evil tendencies?

If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him! (Matthew 7:11).

How easy is it to forget this! I love seeing my son’s eyes light up when I hand him a new Hot Wheels car, or a lollipop, or something he is excited about. I love how he does his little happy dance and grabs my leg and hugs it tight. It brings me such joy to reward him when he has successfully filled out a sticker chart or been a good listener through a hard errand. I know how to give him good gifts, and I love doing it. Why do I assume that God is any different? He gave us the greatest gift, the most costly and valuable thing He had to give: His Son. God the Son became incarnate, he became human. The infinite became an infant and didn’t just teach us about God and how to live and what was right, he died for us. He paid our debt. He restored us to righteousness. He gave us the opportunity to know and love God, and to enter into His presence unashamed.

So when we give gifts to those who seem unworthy, we are actually emulating the love of God. God didn’t withhold from us when we were at our worst. He didn’t wait for us to get our ducks in a row or our crap together.

As for you, you were dead in your transgressions and sins, in which you used to live when you followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient…But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions—it is by grace you have been saved. (Ephesians 2:1-2, 4-5)

God saved us when we were dead. Think about that. We weren’t mostly dead—there was no miracle pill to save us. We were all dead. There was nothing left to save, there was nothing worth saving. As Miracle Max would say, “The only thing left to do is go through his clothes and look for loose change.”[1] The only thing left to do is loot the body because there is nothing left in it. We deserved death, but He didn’t let us languish there—that’s mercy, that God didn’t give us what we deserved. But because of his great love for us God raised us to life and filled us with His Spirit—that’s grace, that God gave us what we didn’t deserve: life, and life in abundance.

On those days when I consider whether my son deserves that huge Monster Truck that is hiding in the basement, or when I wonder if I did the right thing spending money and time on something or someone, it’s important to remember that it isn’t about me and my resources, but about God and what He has already done. When we give good gifts, we get to emulate the love of God in our lives and show the world that God is present! He is not far away, He is not disinterested, He is not immune to our tears and tragedies, or our joy and success. He is near, He is interested, He celebrates and mourns with us. He disciplines us for our good, and gives us good gifts because He loves us. If we remember nothing else this season, let us remember the love of God. Amen.




[1] From the movie, The Princess Bride.
            Miracle Max: He probably owes you money huh? I’ll ask him.
            Inigo Montoya: He’s dead. He can’t talk.
            Miracle Max: Whoo-hoo-hoo, look who knows so much. It just so happens that your friend here is only MOSTLY dead. There’s a big difference between mostly dead and all dead. Mostly dead is slightly alive. With all dead, well, with all dead there’s usually only one thing you can do.
            Inigo Montoya: What’s that?
            Miracle Max: Go through his clothes and look for loose change.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Awaken the Dawn


During the fall, I began trying to get up early each morning so I could have a longer amount of time for prayer and reading my Bible. It is always a struggle to do a quiet time after my son is awake and moving, and the many interruptions always decreased the time I had available and increased the effort it took to consistently study. I realize that trying to start new habits while eight months pregnant is not my best idea. Still, it has been fruitful and the mornings I can drag myself out of bed are good ones. It also helps to treat myself to something yummy to eat along with my morning cup of tea—zucchini bread and Eggo waffles have been the latest winners.

However, when you are out of practice on something, it always takes time to get back into it and hit a good groove. This was definitely true for me, and as I look back through my prayer journal, there was a lot of stuff I needed to get off my chest. Some mornings, all I wrote were complaints about how life was going, and prayers that God would hear me and change something, do something, give me rest, or at least let me survive the week. Not much in the way of worship and thanksgiving. But about mid-November, things began to change. I would have small sentences of things I was thankful for: a good meeting with a friend, a productive afternoon of writing, a successful day of parenting my son, a good night sleep, or even just getting everything off my to do list. Then there began to be phrases of worship in there too as I began to move past my problems and see the good God I was talking to: praise for my work and responsibilities, praise for how He created the world, praise for the journey He is taking our family on, and that His plans are sure and good, and just praise because God is good.

Finally, one morning, I came to Psalm 108. Verses 1-5 say this:

My heart, O God, is steadfast;
I will sing and make music with all my soul.
Awake, harp and lyre!
I will awaken the dawn.
I will praise you, Lord, among the nations;
I will sing of you among the peoples.
For great is your love, higher than the heavens;
your faithfulness reaches to the skies.
Be exalted, O God, above the heavens;
let your glory be over all the earth.

Previous to reading this Psalm, I had been lamenting that I didn’t feel like I was making any progress in life apart from making myself more tired by getting up an hour earlier. But this Psalm praises God first thing in the morning. It is not a quiet time, it is a time of loud worship and music and singing because God’s love is great, higher than the heavens and His faithfulness reaches to the skies. How can we not praise God? The Psalmist affirms that the sun will not sleep in because his loud worship will awaken the dawn.

This ended up being one of those mornings when I truly felt God’s presence and love. Not because He answered my prayers for rest, but just because He was there.

After reading Psalm 108, I leaned back to stretch my back and look out the window, and before me was a stunning sunrise. Be exalted, O God, above the heavens; let your glory be over all the earth. And so, for those few minutes as the sun climbed higher over the horizon and houses, I watched an truly felt as though God were reminding me that He is in control, even when I am out of control. Then, with the light of day upon me, I had to get my son up, and get the day going and get busy with everything that needed to be done.

That’s how life goes, isn’t it? We don’t necessarily get the rewards we want for doing something good every time we do it. Over the past several weeks that I have been getting up early (sometimes successfully, sometimes not), I have never seen a sunrise like this again. Not with all the colors. It’s usually just a gradual brightening of the day. And believe me, I do keep looking. God is not a vending machine; he doesn’t just hand out rewards for every little thing we do, and anytime we make the effort. This is why faithfulness is so darn hard sometimes. God is pleased by our efforts to be faithful and righteous and to learn more about Him, but He also wants our trust and faith in Him to mature and grow, and not just stay rooted in the mundane and little things. We have to trust God with the big stuff too, the stuff that is far out of our control and ability to understand. But, we can start with small things: a sentence of thanksgiving, a word of worship, and these things will grow and develop into solid anchors that hold us rooted in God when the worst storms come.


This blog is called His Splendor Like the Sunrise because we need to remember that the dawn comes whether we are there to greet it with worship or not. The sun rises whether we are thankful for its light or dread the morning. God is good, and He is pouring out His goodness upon us whether we notice it or not—but life is more fun if you notice it. May you know His goodness every new morning, and be moved into loud, joyful worship with the first rays of light in the morning.