Thursday, October 24, 2013

In Running...and In Marriage


Early last spring, B.J. and I started running together.  Three mornings a week, we slip out of the house and make our way down 33rd and through the Benson Sculpture Garden before heading home.  By the time we return, a few of our children are usually snuggled on the sofa, greeting us with puffy eyes and sleepy smiles.
Thanks to these early morning runs, we just might be in the best combined physical shape we’ve been in since we married 10 years ago, even though we’re older and getting gray hairs (shhh!  ;-).  The same could be said for our marriage, I think.  We’re in better shape than we were 10 years ago.  Together we’ve exercised what it means to serve and submit.
There are other things I’ve observed during these early morning workouts.  Things that are true in running…and in marriage. 

1)      It’s never too late to change your stride.
I can still remember the exact place I was in the balcony of our high school gym when I fell down.  We were training for track long before the snow outside melted, and day after day of pounding on the concrete floor wrecked my shins weeks before my first high school track meet.  I continued running for the next four years, getting through countless practices and meets by popping Ibuprofen pills like candy.  I quit running once I graduated.  B.J. and I used to jog a couple of blocks to Dordt’s rec center in the wee hours of the morning, but that was my limit.  The pain that would shoot through my shins with every step for days following a jog was simply not worth it.
During my pregnancy with Eli, Dr. J. asked me if I was exercising.  “Not much,” I replied, “other than chasing the kids around.”  I told him about my shins.  “Even if I just walk a mile or two at a time, my legs start aching all over again,” I told him.  Dr. J. snorted, “Must be your stride!” and referred me to the physical therapist upstairs.  The PT was not in, and I had three hungry kids with me.  I left shaking my head.  Tell a 29-year old woman to change the way she’s walked and run all her life?  Yeah, right!
Well, when we decided to try jogging again, I knew I was going to have to try something different.  And so I worked hard to change my stride.  I leaned forward. I focused on lifting my legs with my core muscles.  And most importantly, I taught myself to land mid-foot, instead of on the ball of my foot.  The result?  No shin pain.  None.  Nada.  Not even a hint in 7 months time.
What about in marriage?  It’s easy to excuse ourselves.  “That’s just the way I am!”  “We’ve been doing it this way for 10 years!  Too late to change now!”  Really?  And what if “the way you are” or that 10-year-old habit is causing yourself or your spouse pain?  What if it’s limiting an area of your marriage to a walk when you could be running together?  It’s never too late to change your stride!

2)      I am the weaker vessel.
When we started running this spring, we first started running separately.  From the get-go, I ran farther.  And I probably ran faster.  Then B.J. decided we should run together.  At first, I set the pace.  This made sense to me.  I was the “runner,” after all.  B.J. had never cared for running - he’d rather lift weights.  But as time went on, B.J. became the pace-setter (much to my chagrin).  And now, he always finishes first, sometimes way ahead of me, and when his lead is not that great, I can usually tell that he’s holding back.  And so I learned that I am the weaker vessel.  My body is not as strong as his is, not capable of maintaining the speed that he does.
And what about in marriage?  I knew 1 Peter 3:7 when we first married.  Yet, in all honesty, I did not consider myself the weaker vessel.  Who got the higher grades?  Who had the more disciplined habits?  I was sure I did, hands down.  I considered myself more spiritually-minded, too.  More mature.  And all that arrogance on my part made for a rough start.
But ask me now, Who is the weaker vessel, Sarah?  And I will tell you this: I am.  I am quicker to doubt God’s good providence.  I am quicker to fear the future.  For all my devotional-writing and knowledge of God’s Word, I falter in the silliest and most mundane of circumstances.  My husband, on the other hand, encourages me.  He assures me that God’s way is always good, even when I refuse to see anything beyond myself.  When I shut up, he talks me through.  And every night, when I leap into bed, teeth chattering and bone-weary, he pauses at the foot.  Gets down on his knees.  And prays.  For me, I know.  And for all the other people and pressures that ride on his strong shoulders.

3)      It’s still work.
B.J. said it just the other morning as we walked back down 33rd.  “It’s still work.  I’d thought we’d get to a point where I’d feel like I could just keep on going without any effort, but the same distance we’ve been running for months is still a work out!”  And it’s true.  I feel like quitting a fourth of the way in every time we run.  And I’m always breathless when we’re done.  Neither of us suffer from sore muscles like we did when we started, but it’s still work.
So, too, a healthy marriage requires work.  I think all of us who are married need to remind ourselves of that.  You never reach a point in married life where you can just coast, no effort required.  Not in year one, not in year 10, not in year 55.  Conscious, strenuous effort to build your marriage strengthens it like conscious, strenuous effort strengthens your body. 


4)      We are on the same team.
I admit it: when B.J. started consistently finishing first, I was a little bitter.  But it’s hard to stay bitter when I come gasping to the finish and he’s there waiting for me, squeezing me way too tight when I’ve hardly slowed my pace and am already winded, and wheezing in my ear, “Good job, dear!  Good run!”  Then I remember: this is no competition.  We are on the same team.
I have to remind myself of this when I consider our married life, too.  In this season of our life, my husband has more opportunities for adult conversation than I do.  He gets out of the house every day and has contact with a multitude of people.  I don’t try to be a recluse, but the very nature of my work means that sometimes I’m home for days on end with sick children.  Or lots of laundry.  A house to maintain.  Food to prepare for seven hungry people.  Plus the multitude of time it takes to care for and teach our children, to discipline them, read to them, and help them with their catechism, school work, piano lessons...  Being faithful in my calling doesn’t leave me a lot of time for socializing or for hobbies. Or, to treat another aspect of our married life, physically, the past 10 years for me have been a roller-coaster ride. Just pregnant and nauseous, medium pregnant, very pregnant and lumbering about, enduring labor and delivery, nursing, weaning, hormonal, and then, whee! off for another round.  ;-)  I know that some of you reading can relate to this exactly.  And our husbands merely see it all through a glass, darkly.
Sometimes I can be bitter about these things.  I can be jealous of my husband.  I find myself thinking that his calling is nobler than mine, more desirable, more intellectually stimulating.  That it makes more of an impact.  I’ve resented the fact that physically he simply maintains status quo.
What I forget when I fall into this kind of sinful thinking is this: we are on the same team.    We have the same goal.  And at the same time, I minimize the very serious struggles he faces in his calling, while rendering myself useless to help him since I’m wallowing in my own self-pity.  The Master has given us different positions, yes.  Though very different, both positions are not only honorable, they are necessary in order for us to accomplish our goal.
What is that goal?  It’s a multi-faceted gem, friends.  The main goal is to show forth God's praise.  The facets?  To do so by growing in the grace and knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ as we walk the path of life.  By bringing up the children that He has so graciously given us in the fear of His name.  By painting that picture of Christ and His Bride as beautifully as we are able.  By finishing the race to hear those gracious words, “Well done.”
And whether B.J. finishes first or I, I’m looking forward to the hug when we both reach the end.
 “Good job, dear!  Good run!”

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Leah Faith - 9!

One week ago today, our Leah turned 9.  Sometimes, when I actually stop to consider things, I’m startled that we have a daughter who stands shoulder high and asks the questions that she does.  One-on-one she converses less and less like a child.  Are we old enough for this girl to be ours?  Yikes!

Leah won passes for our family to go to Denver’s Butterfly Garden as part of Loveland library’s summer reading program.  So we spent part of her birthday there, and for dessert that night we enjoyed the birthday cake that she decorated herself – her first ever.  She and Cousin Evan, whose birthday is the following day, opened their gifts from Grandpa and Grandma over Skype.













Nine Notable Things About Leah


1)  She talks.  And talks.  Andtalksandtalksandtalksandtalksand-Leah!  talks.
2)  She reads.  And reads.  Andreadsandreadsandreadsandreadsand-Leah! reads.  (“Just one more chapter/page/paragraph/sentence, Mom?”)
3)  She’s crafty.  When she’s not talking or reading, she’s digging through my stashes for some project she’s making.
4)  She’s kind.  For all that talking, we’ve never heard her say a negative word about anything or anyone at school.  Everyone in her classroom is “darling/hilarious/funny/adorable...”
5)  In contrast to Lady Marie, Leah’s a blue-jeans, plain-tee, and I’ll-do-my-own-ponytail kind of a girl.  There are books to read, after all.
6)  She started playing the piano one year ago, and I already have trouble demonstrating some of her lesson without trouble.  Now, I’m not very good, but she’s doing great.
7)  She's a perfectionist.  B.J. and I can't send her downstairs to tidy the basement without periodically checking that she's just tidying, not meticulously organizing everything.
8)  She's assuming more and more responsibility on her own.  What a great help!
9)  She's a smart and sweet and very special to us.  We're humbled that our Father has entrusted her to our care.
Happy Birthday, Leah!

Thursday, October 17, 2013

Praying That Our Father's Will Be Done

                It was at one of our oldest daughter’s well-baby check-ups that our family doctor commented, “I don’t see how anyone with a young child can not believe in original sin.”   I couldn’t help but chuckle at the truth of his remark.  Although she was only nine months old, our little Leah was already asserting her own will – a will that, very apparently, was bound by sin.
                There is not one among us – male or female, young or old – who desires that our will be subject to the will of another.  And yet, our Lord teaches us to pray to our Father, “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
                The writers of the Heidelberg Catechism and believers for centuries have understood this petition in the following way:
               
“Grant that we and all men may renounce our own will, and without murmuring obey Thy will, which is only good; that so everyone may attend to and perform the duties of his station and calling as willingly and faithfully as the angels do in heaven.”

                What is the will of God?
                This question can be answered in two ways.  We can understand God’s will to be His eternal counsel, or decree.   Is. 46: 9-10 reads, “I am God, and there is none else; I am God, and there is none like me, declaring the end from the beginning, and from ancient times the things that are not yet done, saying, My counsel shall stand, and I will do all my pleasure.”  No man can thwart the unfolding of our Father’s will.  Nor does any man know exactly how God’s counsel will unfold in the coming year, not to mention the remainder of this day.  The child of God rests in this knowledge, however, “That all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose” (Rom. 8:28).
But there is a sense in which we do know the will of our Father.  In Matt. 7:21 Jesus declares, “Not everyone that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven.” The inspired apostle Paul wrote, I Thess. 4:3, “For this is the will of God, even your sanctification.”  God’s will is that you and I live holy lives.  Our rule for that life of holiness is found in the Ten Commandments, which Jesus summarized in Matt. 22:  “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind; and thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”
The end of praying this petition is that you and I might attend to the duties of our station and calling as willingly and faithfully as the angels do in heaven.  Some weeks ago, when we considered the Christian’s calling to work, we defined one’s calling or vocation this way:  “The place one occupies in the present.”  When you pray today that our Father’s will be done, you are asking that His Holy Spirit equip you to run the machine, drive the truck, change the diapers, clean the house, teach the students, finish the homework…willingly, cheerfully, “heartily” – that is, with all your heart – “as to the Lord, and not men; knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance; for ye serve the Lord Christ (Col. 3:23-24).
This petition exposes our prayers for the self-centered ditties they too often are.  Prayer is not a way of changing God’s mind, nor is it a means of getting from God things that we want.  True prayer changes us, forcing us to acknowledge the bondage of our own will in light of the goodness and unchangeableness of the will of our Father in heaven.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Monday, October 7, 2013

Thy Kingdom Come

               German theologian Deitreich Bonhoeffer visited the United States in the 1930s.  In one of many letters home he writes, “I often wonder whether it is true that America is the country without a reformation.  If reformation means the God-given knowledge of the failure of all ways of building up a kingdom of God on earth, then it is probably true.” 

                If that was the perceptive Bonhoeffer’s take on the Christian church as it existed in the United States nearly one-hundred years ago, I wonder what his assessment of current American Christianity would be?

                What do we pray when we pray, “Thy kingdom come”?  Do we pray with the God-given knowledge that it is impossible to build the kingdom of God on earth?

                When our Lord began His earthly ministry, He came “preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God, and saying, ‘The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.’” (Mark 1:14-15) 

Nearly all of Jesus’ disciples expected Him to establish an earthly kingdom.  They hoped that Jesus would free Israel from Roman rule and bring an end to poverty and disease.  But notice how the kingdom of God is established, according to Christ Himself: by repentance and belief in the gospel.  “Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God.” (John 3:3)  “And when He was demanded of the Pharisees, when the kingdom of God should come, He answered them and said, The kingdom of God cometh not with observation: neither shall they say, Lo here! or, lo there! for, behold, the kingdom of God is within you.” (Luke 17:20-21)  So also Christ instructed His followers not to worry about food or clothing, but to seek “first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness.” The apostle Paul added, “The kingdom of God is not meat and drink; but righteousness, and peace, and joy in the Holy Ghost.” (Rom. 14:17). 

Jesus also taught that His kingdom, though at hand, was not yet fully realized.  “My kingdom is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, that I should not be delivered to the Jews: but now is my kingdom not from hence.” (John 18:36)  The thief on the cross recognized this when he said, “Lord, remember me when Thou comest into thy Kingdom.”  Jesus responded, “Today thou shalt be with me in paradise.” (Luke 32:42-43) 

In Lord’s Day 48 of the Heidelberg Catechism, the second petition of the model prayer is broken down into four parts. 

Thy kingdom come; that is,

1)    Rule us so by Thy Word and Spirit, that we may submit ourselves more and more to Thee.  “Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?” (1 Cor. 6:9)

2)    Preserve and increase Thy church.
“And when they [Paul and Barnabas] had preached the gospel to that city, and had taught many, they returned again to Lystra, and to Iconium, and Antioch, confirming the souls of the disciples, and exhorting them to continue in the faith, and that we must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of God.” (Acts 14:21-22)

3)    Destroy the works of the devil and all violence which would exalt itself against Thee; and also, all wicked counsels devised against Thy holy Word.
“Again, the devil taketh Him up into an exceeding high mountain, and showeth Him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them; and saith unto him, All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt fall down and worship me.  Then saith Jesus unto him, Get thee hence, Satan: for it is written, Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve.” (Matt. 4:9-10)

“Till,” the answer concludes, “the full perfection of Thy kingdom take place, wherein Thou shalt be all in all.”


Is that the kingdom for which you pray?