The Evolution of a Worshiper (Part I)

Disclaimer: Before I tick anybody off, I don’t think that you have to worship like me. The Bible gives like a gazillion ways we can worship – with tambourines, in silence, with dancing, with lifted hands, in prayer, with loud cries, in meditation, etc… I love ’em all. I want to worship Him in every way possible.

But do you think you have to learn how to worship God? I’m not sure, but I felt a little like that as a new follower of Christ. I didn’t quite know how to express my awe of Him, how to communicate my adoration for Him. Initially, I cried a lot. When I would experience Him afresh, or hear from Him, or sense His presence, I would cry. I worshiped with tears because it was all so new (and to be honest, so supernatural) that I just melted, walked around in a puddle every Sunday after church.

Then, as I became more accustomed to encountering Him, I learned how to talk to Him and how to interact with Him through His Word. We began a real conversation, and I learned how to praise Him through prayer (praying the Psalms was great practice when I couldn’t think of my own words) and how to hear from Him through Scripture.

After we had a few years under our belt, I discovered how to be open to allowing music to take me to a place of worship – how to close my eyes, listen intently, and allow the lyrics to become my prayer. I still worship in all of these ways, but this is probably my favorite because I love me some tunes.

But I noticed as I sang in worship in the car and at church and sometimes even at home, I felt I had to consciously think about my hands, arms, legs, and feet because they were getting into this thing too, and if I didn’t keep a watchful eye on ’em, they were definitely going to embarrass me in public. So, I became a closet singing/dancing/crying/praying worshiper. I would go into my bedroom at night (while Chris watched TV); I would close the door, cut out all the lights (I didn’t want to see myself either) and really pour myself out to Him.

That was about the same time that I began to try out different postures of prayer. I was ready to break free of the notion that prayer HAD to be head bowed, hands folded, eyes closed. I began to worship on my knees, completely prostrate on the floor, in a ball on the floor (like how you do in leap frog when someone is leaping over you), and standing with both arms lifted to Him. I still worship in all of those ways and have found it very meaningful to seek a posture of humility, of praise, of submission, etc…, as I approach Him.

Now, I feel pretty free to be publicly demonstrative in worship. I do try not to wig you out if we are in the same row together at church, but I also try to close my eyes and focus only on HIM, adoring HIM.

Disclaimer #2: What I do with my body when I worship means nothing. Worship occurs in my heart and in my mind. I have just tried different ways to arrive at a place of total concentration on Him.

Don’t know why I wanted to share this except that I think it’s pretty interesting how a girl very uncomfortable with demonstrative worshippers in church actually became one.

Disclaimer #3: Where I worship can and should be anywhere. In fact, I had one of my favorite worship experiences today at the gym. Stay tuned for that experience and a few of my other faves. As far as I remember right now, only one of them actually occurred in a church. Until then…

Dig Him!

An Assault of Thought

I am thinking all of these things simultaneously right now!

  • Being a mom is meant to change me as much as it is meant to change my children.
  • Buying that package of break-and-bake chocolate chip cookies last night was a real big mistake.
  • Am I strong or just spoiled? (Beth Moore, Esther – Yeah, that one’s a zinger!)
  • I am not an Adam Lambert fan.
  • “For we are to God the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved and those who are perishing.” – 2 Corinthians 2:15
  • If you play a country song backwards, You get your house back
    You get your dog back
    You get your best friend Jack back
    You get your truck back
    You get your hair back
    You get your first and second wives back … šŸ™‚ (courtesy of Rascal Flatts)
  • Children are meant to play and make messes and be slow. Why do I spend so much energy fighting against that?
  • Lord, arrest me with Jesus Christ. (BM – Esther)
  • I am really enjoying the Hannah Montana soundtrack.
  • My husband lavishly spoils me, and I love feeling that everything will always be okay if he is present.
  • The idea of a nap with no pre-determined end makes me warm and fuzzy inside.
  • I am tightly held. (BM – Esther)
  • I am very afraid of being mediocre.
  • Warm socks are year-round comfy apparel for me.
  • I am not called to an easy life. I am called to a purposeful life. (BM – Esther)
  • What will I do if it rains on the day of Campbell’s birthday party (at the park)?
  • Where should we eat tonight? It’s date night….
  • How am I currently serving the poor and oppressed?
  • WOW! The laundry sure is piled high…
  • Does anybody still read this thing?
  • I need some new music (OBVIOUSLY!); a little funky and soulful with a good beat and a deep female vocal. Anyone?
  • “The more detached and self-absorbed we become, the more we mistake annoyances for agonies.” (BM – Esther)
  • What tough decision do I need to make? Embrace the pain! (courtesy of Chris Reeder from the All Access 2009 Conference)
  • I LOVE BLOGGING! I don’t know why my brain has turned to sawdust and rarely has anything to contribute to the conversation šŸ™

Signs, signs; everywhere signs

I guess this may be a sign of the times…

But the lil’ orange sticky note posted above her beautiful sleeping head is our sign of the times…

My sweet first grader loves Kit Kittredge, an American Girl. We watched the movie and have – over the course of the past six months – had snippet conversations about similarities between the Great Depression (the time period for the movie) and the current state of the economy. About a month ago she recently began having nightmares, three nights in a row. As we talked through that the next day, she had made this very astute connection in her brain that terrified her. Bad economy = Increase in crime. She was afraid that someone would break into our house. We prayed this verse and posted it above her head as she slept. She has not had one more scary night and has only made mention of the whole thing once when she said, “Momma, that verse really helped me. If I wake up, I just look at it and go back to sleep.” šŸ™‚
For the word of God is living and active.
Hebrews 4:12
PS – Okay, sing along with me now, “And the sign said long haired freaky people need not apply…”

Bare Feet

I love to walk around in my bare feet. I always, always have.

Of course, there is a price to pay for shoelessness, and I pay that price.

The other morning I was sitting on the floor finishing my quiet time when Campbell kinda stumbled in – still mostly cloaked in sleep. Don’t you love a puffy face on a three year-old? She fell into my lap and I just wrapped both arms around the ball of her to love her into alertness. I began to rub the soles of her feet. They are no longer tender like that of a baby. They have toughened a little. Although there’s the well-worn “smooth as a baby’s bottom” simile, I have always thought the skin of a baby’s foot is most delicate and perfect. So it was disconcerting to discover one more way my littleness of a girl is no longer a baby.

Life can sometimes to do that to us, huh? Toughen us. Harden us. Make us calloused. Closed.

Ezekiel 36:26 – I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh.

Psalm 95: 7b-8 – Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts…

With Love

Contrary to what you might think, love is a super difficult topic to delve into. After all, people have been writing about it since the beginning of time. What could lilā€™ ole me have to add to the conversation? Nothing new, Iā€™m afraid, but maybe some observations from my own experiences. I wonā€™t be taking you down some flowery path of feelings because I think thatā€™s the aspect of love that gets the most attention but is the least reliable.

I think love is a choice, a promise, an act. It is selfless and honest and protective. I think it tastes like ooey gooey chocolate chip cookies snatched from the oven before they are completely cooked. I think it feels like fuzzy, comfy socks on a cold afternoon and warm air from the heater vent blowing up the back of my shirt as I sit on the floor and struggle to awaken on a winterā€™s morning. It sounds like a Jack Johnson song thatā€™s fun and light and a little sassy. It smells like the thick aroma of comfort food that just wraps itself around you as you walk in the door of Mommaā€™s house. It looks like a wide smile. Thatā€™s love to me.

My husband and I have been together twelve years, and donā€™t get me wrong. Iā€™ve got some mad love vibes going on for my man; weā€™ve got feelings oā€™ plenty for each other. But I would argue that we feel that way because we regularly (if not always daily) choose to honor, respect, and serve each other ā€“ maybe even when we donā€™t feel like it. In his profession, Chris drives around two hundred miles or more a day. After his last call is made, he is ready to arrive home as soon as possible. As he nears his destination ā€“ more times than not ā€“ he will stop at a convenience stop and buy me a cold 20 ounce Diet Pepsi (I have an insatiable appetite for those things). Now I would offer a super healthy wager that he doesnā€™t feel like stopping to do that, but he chooses to, and that communicates love to me in a giant way.

I also think love is a promise to choose me even when I am most unlovable, which is more often than I care to admit. To me, there has to be a component of security and commitment in love that says, ā€œI dig you ā€“ warts and all!ā€ I take promises seriously, and I need love to assure me that it will stick around, that it can be trusted, that it is constant and unwavering, that it will not be offended by my bed head and morning breath, that it will persevere through PMS, and that it will look unafraid into the face of any emotional, irrational, hysterical behavior that I may exhibit on any given day (feel like I need to ask for an Amen after that one). It also means that I offer that same promise in the other direction; I will choose to love and respect him even when he works too late or leaves clothes tossed on the floor or when he disappoints me or when heā€™s just having an off day.

Lest you get the wrong impression, I am in no way claiming to be a super wife. Aiming to be one? Yes. We scrap like the best of ā€˜em, but there is safety even in our marital misunderstandings because we are committed to the promise.

Love is an act on behalf of the other. Sometimes I can pass on the last 100 Calorie chocolate snack in the pantry just so Chris can enjoy it later (but passing on a 100 Calorie Twinkie is out of the question, just so you know). Seriously, I have never met anyone more selfish than I am, but I am consciously trying to act on his behalf in more instances ā€“ to act in his best interest ā€“ to put his needs and wants before my own. So hard! Can we say, ā€œI am woman, hear me rationalizeā€? I try so hard sometimes to justify why I need to gratify my own wants and needs, but my lines are always so lame. I can try to keep the girls out of the living room so he can watch some Clemson football, or I can understand that he just wants to go outside and bond with our grass on Saturday mornings during the spring. Whenever I can beat back my own selfishness, I can express love to him through my actions.

Love is selfless.

Love is sometimes painfully honest. Chris and I have become interested in examining the differences between men and women, the similarities and differences between us as individuals, and in better understanding how God wired each of us. We are currently reading companion books (For Women Only and For Men Only by Jeff and Shaunti Feldhahn) as we continue to study each other, and our research has generated a lot of healthy (albeit uncomfortable) conversation about temptations and frustrations and disappointments and needs. We have evaluated each other as partners, discussing strengths and areas for improvement, and that type of honest communication has better equipped us to guard our marriage in a culture that rages against it.

And you can believe nothing raises the hair on my neck like somebody slamminā€™ my guy. Thatā€™ll draw out sharpened claws, a neck roll, and three snaps in a minute. Thatā€™s because love is protective. He protects me, and I him, but more importantly, we are diligently protective of us.

I hope that we are never so arrogant to believe that our relationship is safe, impervious to the daily erosion that can occur. Honestly, weā€™re just trying to keep it real as we pursue our own happily ever after.