Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Father's Day in July

Recently I went for a hike along the Bruce Trail near where I live.  It was nice to hike for a change.  I usually go cycling for exercise, but this particular morning the Lord prompted me to revisit a part of the trail that I’ve hiked through many times before.  I consider it a pleasant walk, up and down the hills and through the trees – past the brook, over the bridge and past the railroad tracks.  I guess I was about 2 hours into it when it suddenly dawned on me that I missed going for long hikes in the woods by myself.   Then the Lord spoke to me.  Funny how when He starts to speak, all these emotions and memories come flooding back into your mind in the same instant.  Today was no exception.

When I was growing up, I used to go on long walks in the woods.  I spent many hours and many days doing that as a kid.  Mostly they were in the forest at the end of our street, but sometimes I would ride my bike to a nearby provincial park.  There I would ride around for the morning and hike all afternoon by myself.  As I recall, I did that a lot.  Pretty much the whole summer when I was 13.  I knew every trail and every hill.  When I got old enough to have a camera, I took pictures of the trees by the cliffs in the fall, and the shadows fallen logs cast across the frozen creek in the winter.  I still have most of those pictures.  They are the one tangible thing I gained from all those hours alone.  But they can never communicate the profound melancholy of those days.  In hindsight, I realize that I spent all that time walking and taking pictures partly because I loved being outside, but mostly because I didn’t want to be inside.  To be inside was to be ever reminded of something.  Something I didn’t quite understand at the time.  But now I could see the faded silhouette of the reason; I was lonely.

It’s not that I was an only child.  I had two brothers.  Mostly my older brother and I fought.  Virtually daily we’d get into a heated disagreement, and the war would not end until one of us was bleeding.  Mom stayed out of the battles for the most part – she had too much of her own struggle to deal with ours.  An immigrant struggling with the language, raising three rowdy kids on a shoestring budget with a workaholic husband.  On top of that she was dealing with the memories of her own childhood during the war in Europe.  Both my parents had that in common - children in Nazi occupied Europe did not fare well.  So Mom retreated into cleaning the apartment constantly, and Dad retreated into his work.  He was at work before I woke up, and still at work long after I went to bed.  He worked 7 days a week, though on Sundays he’d be home for a few hours in the afternoon.  My young mind was indubitably stamped.  Work was important, because without it, you would have nothing.  Work was important, and loyalty and perseverance for the job and the task at hand were more important than me.  I grew up hurting inside without even knowing it.  Hurting was normal.

As I grew to adulthood, I continued my habit of walking among the trees, especially when I was under stress.  There was something about long walks in the quiet of the woods that gave me room to think and some measure of healing – at least enough to face the next day.  As often as I would go, I found myself virtually always walking alone.  Long walks.  Long, painfully lonely walks.

Now it’s many years later.  Life is different now.  I’ve known the Lord for more than 30 years - I have a loving wife and together we’ve raised 6 kids.  I am in a different place in every respect – spiritually, emotionally, mentally and physically.  Today, as I walked into the vast green field of view, the Lord spoke.  

He said, “Do you remember those walks?”  
“Yes Lord”, I affirmed.  
“Did you know you were not alone then?”  
“No, Lord, I thought I was alone that whole time,” I replied, for I had only come to know Him as an adult, and only learned what it was to hear His voice in daily prayer more than twenty years after that.    
“I was there,” He said, “speaking over you the whole time.”  
“What were you saying?” I asked.  
“I was speaking my love over you,” He said, “To give you strength, lest the loneliness crush you.  For I love you, and have loved you all your days.”   

And all at once I realized why walking in the woods was so meaningful to me.  For there, in the quiet of my footsteps among the trees, God my Father was walking with me.  Even from before I knew Him.

“Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, And before you were born I consecrated you.” -Jeremiah 1:5a



I've heard a thousand stories of what they think your like
But I've heard the tender whisper of love in the dead of night
You tell me that your pleased and that I'm never alone

You're a good, good father
It's who you are, it's who you are, it's who you are
And I'm loved by you
It's who I am, it's who I am, it's who I am

I've seen many searching for answers far and wide
But I know we're all searching for answers only you provide
Because you know just what we need before we say a word

You're a good, good father
It's who you are, it's who you are, it's who you are
And I'm loved by you
It's who I am, it's who I am, it's who I am

You are perfect in all of your ways
You are perfect in all of your ways
You are perfect in all of your ways to us

Love so undeniable I can hardly speak
Peace so Unexplainable I can hardly think
As you call me deeper still
As you call me deeper still
As you call me deeper still
Into love love love

                   -“Good Good Father” by Housefires

Saturday, May 23, 2015

Writing a book

In case you’re wondering why the first blog post of 2015 is only in late May:  I haven’t written this year because I’m focusing on writing a book.  After writing 20 blogs about prayer in Genesis I realized that there was much more there for the mining then I could possibly do in a blog post, so I’ve reworked and added significantly to the work while reformatting it as an e-book. I’m up to chapter 11 now, so I hope to have it published by the end of this year.  That said, there are so many things I’m coming across that deserve some thought that I cannot stay silent:

The other day I read a quote from Elton Ladd.  Speaking about the ultimate meaning of history, he said, “Some day when we go into the records of heaven to find a book that tells the meaning of human history as God sees it, we will not draw out a book depicting, ‘The History of the West’; ‘The Progress of Civilization’; ‘The Glory of the British Empire’; or ‘The Growth and Expansion of America’.  That book will be entitled, ‘The Preparation for and the Extension of the Gospel Among the Nations.’  For only here is God’s redemptive purpose carried forward.  This is a staggering fact.  God has entrusted to people like us, redeemed sinners, the responsibility of carrying out the divine purpose in history.”

Why would God do such a thing?  I mean, what if we fail?  We’re only human after all, and we’re fallen creatures at that too.  In fact, Adam and Eve had only to avoid one thing in Eden to keep life on course, and they couldn’t do that successfully.  If we can mess up such simple and obvious instructions so badly (and we all have personal illustrations of just how poorly we’ve done), how can it be that God would entrust the entirety of His holy plan to US?  Yet Ladd says, “Here is the fact.  God has entrusted to us this mission, and unless we do it, it will not get done.”

That’s a pretty poignant fact in the light of Matthew 24:14, where Jesus said, ““And this gospel of the kingdom will be preached in the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come.”   That’s a description of the condition of the world (as having the Gospel preached to it) at the end of days.  It’s also an answer to the disciple’s question of ‘when will these things be’.  And, it’s also a mandate.  Ladd and AB Simpson consider that verse, and would agree with Simpson’s commentary on it, “We know that our missionary work is not in vain, but, in addition to the blessing it is to bring to the souls we lead to Christ, best of all it is to bring Christ Himself back again. It puts in our hands the key to the bridal chamber and the lever that will hasten His return. What a glorious privilege. What a mighty incentive.

I do agree that it’s a huge incentive.  But Ladd hits on another incentive.  That perhaps – as each of us go about fulfilling that mandate – we are actually writing the second book of Acts.  After all, the first book of Acts is the account of the disciples who obeyed the mission mandate.  So it’s not a stretch to consider that those who participate in God’s mission are participating – by their very lives – in the writing a heavenly book.  For we have here His heavenly work, written down for us through the Spirit by the hands of mere men (that is, the book of Acts) – but perhaps when we get there, we will read of His earthly work though our own lives, written down for us by the Spirit’s own hand.  A holy edition, of which the author is not debated.  For Revelation says, “And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Another book was opened, which is the book of life. The dead were judged according to what they had done as recorded in the books.”[1]

Far be it from God to write a book that only gets used once (at the judgment).  I rather think that just as we’ve used his last book for millennia here, we’ll read those books for eternity there.  What is written in them will eventually be known by all the redeemed.  Your life is a chapter in that book.  Will it be a chapter like the book of Judges – a chapter full of sorrow and misery and failure and disobedience, with a tag line like ‘he did whatever was right in his own eyes’?  Or will it be a chapter like the book of Acts?  A chapter full of promise and miracles and hope and obedience?   

Food for thought.




[1] The Holy Bible: New International Version. (1984). (Re 20:12). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.