Showing posts with label Ecclesiastes 3:11. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ecclesiastes 3:11. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 14, 2022

When your life feels like an earthquake

 

Have you ever felt an earthquake?

 

I’ve experienced quite a few, but Seattle’s 1965 earthquake stands out. People felt it across Washington, British Columbia, Idaho, and Oregon. The 6.5 quake (some officials called it a 6.7) lasted 45 seconds, and that’s a long time for an earthquake of that magnitude.

 

Without warning, a jolt rocked our world. What had seemed solid and predictable and dependable suddenly lurched and crumbled.

 

And the earth’s eerie roar lasted even longer than that.

 

Sometimes life can feel like an earthquake.

 

Think about a time when something happened to you

and it felt like an earthquake struck.

 

Without warning, an unwelcome surprise shook your world.

What had seemed predictable and dependable

suddenly tilted and collapsed.

And even when the shaking stopped,

the eerie roar rolled on.

 

After the April 29, 1965 Seattle earthquake, countless structures had to be repaired and strengthened and, because of that, I added a new word to my vocabulary: Retrofitting.

 

Just about everything needed to be retrofitted: bridges, roads, buildings, chimneys, and equipment. That is, they needed not only repairs but significant modifications to lessen the damage if future earthquakes should strike. Often retrofitting required the development of new gizmos and doodads and technology.

 

After that earthquake, I remember all of us—my family, classmates, friends, neighbors, Seattle’s newspapers and TV stations—all of us relived the trauma, trying to process what had happened, amazed and thankful our damage wasn’t worse, worried that aftershocks or even bigger earthquakes would soon follow. Our talk and worry were like that eerie roar that kept up after the ground stopped lurching.

 

And, years later, another “earthquake” hit—my husband burst through our front door and announced he wanted to move our young family to South America so he could teach missionaries’ kids—and believe me, the earth beneath my feet felt like another major earthquake had struck and I literally fell to the floor.

 

In coming days and weeks and months, the eerie roar rumbled on. My dreams and plans had taken a hit. My sense of where my life was headed had fallen apart.

 

What I didn’t know then was that

the earthquake that my husband

(and eventually, it turned out, that God, too)

sprung on me was meant for good.

In fact, I would later learn

that some of my dreams and plans

weren’t the best for me and my family.

They needed to crumble down in ruins.

(Read more in my memoir,

Please, God, Don’t Make Me Go: A Foot-Dragger’s Memoir)

 

But I didn’t recognize that then. Instead, the stuff of earthquakes—like crumbled bricks and debris—covered me. It was dark down there. I felt bruised and broken. Alone.

 

I was only 27 years young. The old me now wishes I could have told the 27-year-old me that I could live a good life even after earthquakes and loss and the shock of it all.

 

As Christine Caine said,

Sometimes when you’re in a dark place

you think you’ve been buried,

but you’ve actually been planted.”

 

It would take me a couple of years to recognize that. The process included confusion, pain, waiting, and mystery.

 

Even though I struggled to recognize the specifics of God’s presence and guidance, deep down I knew He was working out my future.

 

That future would involve helping people who had nothing—nothing—of the Bible in their own languages. They had no way of knowing God and His goodness and involvement in their lives, especially when they, too, experienced life’s earthquakes and heaps of ruins.

 

But I—I did have God’s Word to stabilize me and give me hope. It tells me—and you, too—that He is present with us in our troubles and, “So we will not fear when earthquakes come and mountains crumble. . . . Let the mountains tremble . . . !”

 

And then He says, “Be still, and know that I am God!” (Psalm 46:1-11)

 

Wow! What a contrast: The earth trembles and splits and crumbles and roars, yet we are to be still. Still in God’s presence.

 

Be still and be assured:

He knows all about our lives’ tremors and jolts

and upheavals and lurches and joggles.

And He knows about the resulting broken pieces

and piles of rubble.

 

Be still and be assured: He repairs and rebuilds us,

retrofitting us to stabilize and strengthen us,

making modifications to lessen the damage

if other “earthquakes” should strike

all to make us beautiful, and useful to Him, in His time.

(Ecclesiastes 3:11)

 

What stories can you write about your life’s earthquakes?

 

Write about a time when, without warning, a jolt rocked your world. What seemed solid and predictable and dependable suddenly lurched and crumbled. Your dreams and plans had taken a hit. You felt bruised and broken. Alone. And even when the shaking stopped, the jarring trauma rolled on and on.

 

What Bible verses helped you survive?

 

Maybe, like me, you eventually discovered

that God had a hand in what happened,

and that He meant it for good.

Maybe, like me, you learned your plans and dreams

needed to crumble down in ruins.

 

Write about God’s retrofitting—the repairs He made,

the modifications He made in your life

to lessen damage from future shocks

that would come your way.

 

 

Write your story! Tell about the ruins.

Tell how God stabilized you and strengthened you.

Write how God brought good from it all.


Christine Caine also says thisGod is able to take the mess of your past and turn it into a message. He takes the trials and tests and turns them into a testimony. 

 

Someone needs to know your story.

It could make all the difference

in the way your readers handle their own lives

and endure their own earthquakes.




 

 

 

Thursday, March 24, 2016

“The unmistakable mark of divine contrivance”


“Event after event has the unmistakable mark of divine contrivance,” writes Lawrence Kushner. Divine contrivance! He writes about recognizing “it is all the doing of the Holy One.” (Eyes Remade for Wonder).

Kushner was writing about what was true in Biblical times, yet it’s still true in our times—but we often overlook the ways God is with us in our everyday comings and goings.

Too frequently we fail to recognize He’s busily at work—that He has the big picture in mind and is taking steps to make important things (often disguised as small details or coincidences) fall into place.

Memoirists need to catch glimpses of God at work. We need to notice His loving care and help in our tragedies and failures and heartaches—our huge defining moments (or months, or years)—but also in our day-to-day activities and relationships and opportunities.

And so, today I hope and pray the words below will stir up story ideas for your memoir—that they will lead you to think deeply and discover “divine contrivances” and “doings of the Holy One.”

Before you read these words I have compiled for you:
  • get out a pencil and paper (or sit down in front of your computer),
  • read the first quote slowly,
  • ask yourself what experience (yours or someone else’s) it reminds you of,
  • and jot down a few notes.
  • Read the rest of the quotes, doing the same exercise listed above,
  • then use your notes to craft stories for your memoir.

Okay, let’s get started with the quotes: 


“God has made everything beautiful in its time” (Ecclesiastes 3:11).


“When I looked back at the years of struggle, I realized they all took part in the beautiful pattern that became my miracle and it would not have been possible without the struggle.” (Lene Fogelberg)


“The flower that blooms in adversity is the rarest and most beautiful of all.” Walt Disney


“Doubts are the ants in the pants of faith. They keep it awake and moving.” (Frederick Buechner, Wishful Thinking)


“We are all brave men and we are all afraid, and what the world calls a brave man, he too is brave and afraid like all the rest of us. Only he is brave for five minutes longer.” (Alistair MacLean)


“Do not be afraid, for I am with you. Do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will strengthen you. I will help you. I will uphold you with my victorious right hand” (Isaiah 41:10, NLT).


“Do it trembling if you must, but do it!” (Emmet Fox)



“We are all travelers in what John Bunyan calls the wilderness of this world… and the best that we can find in our travels is an honest friend. He is a fortunate voyager who finds many.” (Robert Lewis Stevenson)


“It’s one thing to go through a crisis grandly, yet quite another to go through every day glorifying God when there is no witness, no limelight, and no one paying even the remotest attention to us. To do even the most humbling tasks to the glory of God takes the Almighty God Incarnate working in us. The true test of a saint’s life is not successfulness but faithfulness on the human level of life.” (Oswald Chambers)


“God is already working on Plan B even as Plan A lies in shambles around your feet.” (John Claypool)


“It’s one thing to say God is a way-maker. It’s another thing to see Him make a way.” (Tony Evans)


“'Can anyone hide in secret places so that I cannot see him?' declares the Lord” (Jeremiah 23:24a).


“Someone I loved once gave me a box full of darkness. It took me years to understand that this too, was a gift.” Mary Oliver


God has said, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you” (Deuteronomy 31:6 and Hebrews 13:5).


What we need is a hope that’s more than wishful thinking or blind expectation that everything will work out smoothly. We need a hope that is vibrant in pain, consistent in grief, indefatigable when people break our hearts, unassailable in disappointment, and unflagging in life’s pressure…. True hope… does not come from searching for hope. It grows out of two basic convictions: that God is in charge and that He intervenes.”(Lloyd John Ogilvie, God’s Best for My Life)


“You never know how much you really believe anything until its truth or falsehood becomes a matter of life or death to you.” (C. S. Lewis, A Grief Observed


“…Our Lord never wastes times of testing. The pain and struggles and confusion connected with my circumstances only seemed futile and unfair.” (Charles R. Swindoll, Come Before Winter and Share My Hope


“Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience” (Colossians 3:12).



Notice God
doing major things
during momentous, life-changing events,
but also search to discover
God doing major things
in what you thought were everyday,
even trivial,
activities.


“Father…You met me
at every fork of the road
with clear guidance
and fresh grace.
I beheld Your glory.”
(Lloyd John Ogilvie, Quiet Moments with God;
emphasis mine)


Your stories are important. Your memoir can be a life-giving handbook.
It can offer readers:

hard-earned wisdom, 
hope, 
guidance, 
courage, 
joy, 
a hand up, 
a warning, 
a smile, 
a good cry, 
a more meaningful life, 
a solution to a problem, 
help in making a decision, 
faith in God, 
determination to keep a promise, 
and so much more.





Thursday, May 7, 2015

Marvel at the mosaic of your life


What does a memoir and a mosaic have in common?

You’ve probably known about mosaics since you were a little kid, but today let’s take another look.  

A mosaic is a collection of small stones (or bits of colored glass, tiles, pebbles, paper squares, seashells, or similar materials) which, when arranged and glued together just so, create a large picture, a piece of art.

Think of your life as a mosaic, and then read these words from Henri Nouwen. They’ll get the wheels turning in your head:

“A mosaic consists of thousands of little stones.
Some are blue, some are green,
some are yellow, some are gold.
When we bring our faces close to the mosaic,
we can admire the beauty of each stone.
But as we step back from it,
we can see that all those little stones
reveal to us a beautiful picture,
telling a story none of these stones can tell by itself.”
Henri Nouwen, Bread for the Journey
(emphasis mine)

In the story of your life, stones of one color represent one experience, stones of a different color represent another experience.

Stones of other colors represent:

each person who comes into your life,
each choice,
each victory,
each relationship,
each heartbreak,
each celebration,
each new job,
each mistake,
each new home,
each joy,
each setback,
each surprise,
each significant life event.

Each little piece has a size and shape and color and texture of its own. Some are light and crisp and fresh. Others are dark and dull and brooding, while others are shiny and intense.

Each little piece plays a special part.

We often recognize the individual pieces—the individual events and people—of our lives and appreciate them up close at the time, but what about the bigger picture?

In writing memoir, we deliberately do what Nouwen says:

We step back, take a broader, deeper, higher look.
We glimpse the bigger picture, The Big Picture
and WOW, it can surprise us!
It can bring us to tears.
Taken together, like Nouwen says,
it can “reveal to us a beautiful picture,
telling a story none of these stones can tell by itself.”

And we realize that without each piece, the larger picture would lack in vibrancy and beauty, and it would be incomplete.

Make time to recognize not only the smaller bits and pieces of your life, but to stand back and marvel at the big picture.

When you do, you might hear God whisper in your ear: “Remember all the times I told you I knew the plans I had for you? They have been good plans, plans to prosper, not harm you. Plans to give you hope and a future” (Jeremiah 29:11).

When you look at the big picture, you’ll witness the way God brings beauty from ashes (Isaiah 61:3).

You’ll see that God does make everything beautiful in its time (Ecclesiastes 3:11).

Look for God’s fingerprints and footprints all over the mosaic of your life. Notice the ways God has guided you and brought you to where and who you are today. He is making a beautiful picture out of you and your life.

When you write your memoir, 
assemble the pieces—
the small bits of colored glass, stone, tiles, 
pebbles, paper squares, seashells—
and you’ll begin to see that, together,