Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Mosaic

I.
The arms of my childhood stretched from the window of the chapel,
a cavern long cleared of benches and other trappings.
Only waifs and wayfarers found it,
who had fled for sanctuary from the arm of the flesh
striking out in retribution
against the failure of fate to fulfill dreams,
as expressed in such transgressions as soiled shoes
and unsatisfactorily completed chores.
Christ's banner called, "COME UNTO ME,"
no matter how deep the fall from grace:
through lost Little League games to failed tests
to dates that traded up to shun disappointment.
Evidently, He did not see it,
or at least was not so startled.
He always reached; He always called.
II.
I could now see the top of the window sill,
full of the dust of stone, of me,
and of those before me whose legacy was retained below mine.
Christ reached in the half-light as a dove mourned and mist fell,
causing the whole window to weep.
How did this quiet place understand
the momentary light affliction of mortals
finding that filling larger shoes did not equal stepping into invincibility?
Shadows in the corner drew my eyes~
I didn't see the stone,
but heard the ring and dance of glass across the floor
through the throb of adrenaline,
and the clicking as it skipped to a resting place out of sight.
It was forgotten in the distress of random color
that had lost its form that lay across the floor.
The window still wept, I wept,
and the dove still mourned.
I sifted through the shards, touching some familiar form,
red trailIs spreading through the tears of the window,
and the window's requiem.
III.
Light broke through the heavy air,
the clouds spent in the mist.
The laughter of the sunlight on the ceiling
in greens and blues and reds shed long before that day
had not been told that Christ lay shattered.
Perhaps it saw what I had not~
as I lifted my gaze to the stream through the window,
I saw that He still called, "COME UNTO ME."
He called still!
I remembered kindly coaches,
invested teachers,
and just-friends who resisted the scorning
of those fancying themselves our betters and critics:
a mosaic of similar tesserae.
The had colors like to Christ's,
who knows that the broken speak more freely
because they have flown from their original framework
to fill a larger place.
The dove mourned one last time that I had not seen Him as He was,
and fell silent.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Free verse allows a pivotal moment in time to be set up and all of its colors and textures examined in-depth without concern that the couplets be forced to rhyme. Sometimes happy accidents of rhyme (red/shed) or alliteration (failure/fate/fill and freely/flown/framework/fill) occur naturally as the narration unfolds.

Thursday Thirteen #5: The Innovation Superhighway

I'm without my trusty laptop until the AC adaptor can be replaced with the kindly assistance of the tax return sometime around the first of the month, so I needed a fairly simple topic for TT that I could bang out quickly on a friend's computer. I got to thinking about some of the ways that the information superhighway has bettered my life, and came up with the requisite thirteen improvements.




1. It's provided me with virtual travel opportunities. I've physically visited eight states during the course of my lifetime, but have friends or friendly acquaintances in eighteen states and the United Kingdom. If you count our UK scholar's home state of New York, it's nineteen states. The North Carolina friend was actually on an extended missions trip to Japan when we started to correspond, but she's been a stateside pastor for awhile now (and recently married--congrats again, Joe and Pastor Parato, if you're reading!)

2. These far-flung contacts built my confidence, since this bunch thinks I'm pretty cool. It gave me a foundation to develop more friendships with people that I could see!

3. It's sometimes easier to reach the busy local friends by e-mail than it is by phone. E-mail also doesn't cost three dollars a gallon to transport.


4. I've written a lot of confessional passages that have taught me some things about myself that I hadn't allowed to surface. It seems to be easier without a face there.


5. We used to spend all kinds of time wondering what our "ministry calling" was years ago. I found out what mine was through a combination of all of the things that I just said--finding people who asked my opinion and helped me to develop confidence as I fielded prayer requests, provided encouragement, and taught on prayer or the subject at hand from the scriptures as the situation may have warranted.

6. When you're up in the Midwest at 1 AM thinking troubled thoughts, West Coast friends are just getting warmed up for an evening online. I have one that's particularly good at showing up and talking about anything and everything to fill the void and restore tranquility.


7. I love research, and I can do more quicker with less clutter by just Googling whatever topic inspires burning questions.

8. I've used my experiences online as a message board member and moderator as references on applications that show that I have marketable skills related to the Internet.


9. Prospective writers have a number of places to publicly display their latest works. If you're brave enough to start trying to sell them after some positive feedback, you can always register with a site like Helium.com.

10. Another expression of artistic sensibility you can develop online, if you're good at visualizing images related to an idea and manipulating the applicable tools, are computer graphics using various programs and languages like HTML, CSS, etc.

11. You can get a lot of news from various sources, including your friends' forwards of the latest alarming information that they received. If it looks a little too farfetched, you can always go check out how verifiable the information has been found to be on Snopes.com.

12. When the news gets on your nerves, you can get a greater variety of radio stations than are probably available for you locally (or that seems to be the case in the rural Midwest, by a large margin), as well as webcasts of topics that may not interest enough of the masses to end up on plain ol' TV. Some of them are on plain ol' satellite stations, but I don't have access to those right now.

13. I will have to doff my cap at this point to Blogger, where it's possible to pull together several of these experiences at the same time--posting original writing, modifying the layout, and communicating with folk far and near that you may not have otherwise ever gotten to meet.

Next week's TT will be some other expeditious topic, and then maybe we'll be back to exciting layouts with photos that take hours to dream up and assemble. Happy TT!

Saturday, February 16, 2008

A Chicken, A Kaleidescope, and the Pottery Barn

There was a hen with a tube of mosaics
That made watchers cry, "Goodness sakes!"
So it caused some alarm
At the Pottery Barn
When a salesmen showed how well chicken bakes.

Where should I begin? The limerick above was a case of rising to a challenge to compose, with $10 on the line. I probably won't collect the prize; somehow, getting a chicken and a kaleidescope to converge at The Pottery Barn is its own reward.

The dare came forth on a message board thread about Edward Lear that was a spinoff from a thread about tears that was a spinoff from something else. Edward Lear's "The Owl and the Pussycat" was quoted, as well as several poems that I'd never encountered. He felt pretty free to improvise when trying to get couplets to rhyme. Our crowd can do some improvisation of its own, since there were several other things going on that had nothing to do with Edward Lear before we got to The Pottery Barn. I still haven't figured out how the chicken and the kaleidescope made it into the conversation.

Today, a friend who makes his living by his right-brained wits and I discussed the role that commissions by patrons played in both classical composition and art. In that day, royals and other wealthy folk rather than publishing companies and record labels came up with the cash to fund these projects. They probably offered opinions on how they wanted the final result to sound as they signed the cheques. The creative juices would have to find a way to flow down the given sluice.

There are still instances where composition is called upon to take a certain shape. A regular feature on The Mac Davis Show involved the star sitting in front of the audience with his guitar, attempting to instantly put together a verse from odd suggestions called out to him. One instance in particular must have really made an impression on me, because I still remember the lyric.

The topic was bleu cheese.

What happened was as follows:

My cheese fell in love with my banana
As sometimes cheeses do.
This morning, I ate my banana.
Then, my cheese was blue.

Let's hear it for the flow of the juices down the sluices!

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Thursday Thirteen #4: Writers' Workshop

The first poem that I posted here was written based on an exercise that we did in a writing class that involved handling a series of objects with our eyes closed in order to experience the details more individually through the sense of touch rather than taking it all in as a single picture. I thought that it would be interesting to find thirteen things that I would put in my box to bring to class if I taught a writers' workshop, and what might be discerned through touching them.




1. This was my first thought: the milkweed pod. There's such and endless catalog of things going on there--rough walls, silky strands ending in hard seeds, the hinge on which it opens, the flight that initiates when the strands detach.




2. I thought this violin was an great combination of lines and curves. It would be fun to receive this blindfolded and discover the sound unexpectedly rather than knowing it would be there when you plucked a string. (That, and it made me think of mom huebert, who usually drops by!)




3. Would a flower still feel like a flower if the velvet sloped down from the spines rather than up around them?





4. Could a dry winter leaf fool us into thinking that it was a thin piece of parchment for a moment? What took place beneath the tree that would appear on a page of its history?





5. After another hundred years, would a section of this window sill be so light and porous that it felt more like cork than wood?




6. Would man-made beads feel like God-made seeds if you couldn't see the colors, particularly if they weren't all round? What was in the mind of either creator when they were made?





7. Does down feel more like feather or like fur?






8. Wet feathers might seem more like moss. What path does a feather take to find itself in a river with fins and moss?




9. Men have learned to weave spiders' webs. Would any part feel like the original? What do men catch in their webs?




10. Would there be enough variations in the height of the features to piece together the details of Thomas Kincade's wharf in your mind before seeing it, or would it be a surprise?





11. Is the soapstone bear just a very bold wax casting? It would be interesting to see how much difference the theme of the shape made in discerning its nature.




12. Most of us had a doll or bedtime toy when we were very young. Could an old Coke bottle wrapped in a blanket stir up a memory before we reached the top and realized what we actually held?




13. Okay--before complete hysteria sets in, I want to acknowledge that I know that the elephant would definitely NOT fit in the box.

It does remind me of a story about touching what can't be seen. Some blind men were given an object to identify using only their sense of touch. One thought that he had a rope in his hand, when in fact it was the elephant's tail. Another was convinced that he was hugging a tree, when in fact it was the elephants leg. Each misdiagnosed their target. From them, we learn to take a little extra time to look beyond appearances to see the full picture, even with our eyes wide open.

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

The Way It Should Be

I made some decisions early in my life. I decided that I was enraptured with Christ and the scriptures. I decided that the church that I grew up in didn't reflect what I saw in the scriptures, and horrified my family by refusing to go through the rite of confirmation. In God's redemptive economy, I did go back to a service in a church of this type (albeit in a different synod), and received what was probably the most dramatic inner healing that I can remember. God can show up and do something real wherever He is honored; the choice lies with the people there that day.

I've been on a quest throughout my life to see the real thing spiritually. The failure to be impressed with unsubstantiated appearances has been a universal principle in my life. I remember commenting on an awards ceremony as a young child that it was silly to make that big of a fuss over people who put their pants on one leg at a time just like everybody else. It's led me in some unexpected directions, but nothing succeeds like success. I know the real deal when I see it.

One of my favorite scriptures is one that I've mentioned elsewhere: "God sets the lonely in families, he leads forth the prisoners with singing...." (Ps. 68:6a). God has set a number of people in my life to replace the side of the family that had taken their leave that function more like family than the departed ones did--may God have mercy on them. They're too numerous to list here, but this weekend we got to see several of them.

The Guitar Player is my son's big brother from God. I got to know him when I was one of three people that made it to one of his coffee house shows (the other two being his parents). He's a former pastor that came to feel that there was not enough of the real thing in his denomination, leading he and his wife to become part of the house church movement. My son was a fairly faithful regular at their Tuesday evening Bible studies when he lived in their neck of the woods.

The Equestrienne is a friend that has been more like a big sister to me since I was 18, and actually finished raising me. She taught herself horsemanship, with a little help from my Dad at the beginning. He was vastly different than the misguided father she had known. For all intents and purposes, he adopted her. She trains both horses and riding students.

The Linguist is someone whose path I was thrown into until we finally bonded. When her sister disowned her during a period when her family was not being present during a difficult time in her life, I adopted her. She shares my love of art and multiculturalism, and makes me feel less alone in the world. Her career as a self-employed translator brings her into contact with an array of different people.

The Helper is always there when you need something. She calls once a week or so just to let you know that she remember that you're there, which has been critically important during these months of relative isolation. She and her husband attended Christ for the Nations Institute not long after they married, and came to view service to the people around you as an important expression of faith. She does a lot of uncompensated tasks in her position as church secretary.

The Liaison finds herself guided into tasks that involve bridging gaps. She just finished a year in the VISTA program bringing a women's transitional shelter's needs to the community. Now that she's done, she seems to be inundated with information supporting what is probably her real calling--bridging the gap between the culture in which she was raised and her birth culture on the Native reservations.

The Soldier's Mom has this ability to find the path amid the smoke, and I'm grateful to have her in my life. She can find a forward-moving perspective in some pretty deep murk. Most of our conversations have to do with sorting out for each other what's actually going on and how to handle it. It's ironic how much easier it sometimes is to assess someone else's situation and to lose the forest for the trees in your own. The family of God is constructed so that we need each other.

Everybody's Mom has taken care of her own kids, raised her friend's grandchildren, and taken in strays with various degrees of formality and duration. One of the strays was my son, who she helped to get to school back in the days when I left for work at 6 AM, and for several weeks last year when our family was at such loose ends. She loves you even when you feel that most other people have had it with you.

The Entrepreneur learned risk-taking in her former days in a religion that requires door-to-door recruiting. She built her cleaning business knocking on random doors and taking referrals. Her other forays are into the prisons to aid reintegration of inmates into society, and into the troubled lives of domestic abuse victims. She's under the impression that these things require more going and fewer committees to discuss the subject.

The Comedienne was not present, but was certainly discussed and missed. I would love to see her enter a position that would appreciate her ability to facilitate group communication and lift the mood of any room that she enters with her professionally-honed improvisational skills, rather than laboring under collective stress in a struggling marketing firm. She's probably much on my mind because I need to call her after her first day back to work for the week. Even the cheerful need some cheering sometimes.

The occasion was my son's departure to Job Corps. It was a long time coming, but the date was finally announced. The six days between the call and the actual trip to the bus station involved packing, sorting, and as many goodbyes in person as could be managed.

Friday was Grandma's day. We do actually have some blood relation that still acknowledge us. My Mom has put up with a lot of turmoil, and has been there for us through thick and thin. Some still see that as the role of family and community, thank God. She gave him some party money for the next day, as well as some of his beloved hot buffalo chicken. Without Grandma, we never would have made it.

We did leave for a few hours to get my stuff out of Mrs. Everybody's Mom's garage. It was stashed there when she followed me down to take the last car to the salvage yard, and has been shuffled around this last year until I got another car that had an empty trunk. We had to catch up on the latest news about her granddaughter that has been the subject of an abuse case because of her commentary on her visitations with her mother. I don't know many people with simple, problem-free lives. It helps us empathize with each other.

The next day started early. We went to see the young assistant pastor from the area that was speaking down the road at our former church. He can draw quite a crowd, partially because he combines very diligent scholarship with authenticity. He ain't from here, and hasn't picked up some of the conventional just-because-we-do moves. The most encouraging thing for me personally was to hear about his plans to return to his native Zambia next month to set up a prayer center and apartment community in which widows and orphans can live interdependently. His value for prayer is seen in his willingness to pay these women to staff the prayer center. The other encouraging thing was getting to talk to Mrs. Soldier's Mom for a few minutes. My son left with a number of questions, which we discussed on the way to our next stop.

Ms. Equestrienne had told us about a seminar at the health food store that she would be attending. We at least got to sit next to her at the event, although the fact that it ran 2 1/2 hours over its scheduled time kept us from having a conversation just then. We did learn some things, and I got to watch my son ask some insightful questions that showed how analytical he's become. We finally had to leave to make it to our next scheduled event.

We wanted to go to the restaurant that had been designated in our visitation order as a pickup/dropoff site as a choice rather than as something that we were compelled to do. It's a good reminder of how God got us through that very difficult time. I'd told Ms. Linguist that we would arrange our meal there to accommodate the open part of her afternoon so that she could join us. Fortunately, Ms. Entrepreneur had an open evening, so she also joined us. The three of us had done several after-meeting get-togethers following the domestic abuse support group that we all attended. In the process of the conversation about where cooking was going to lead my son in the future, Ms. Equestrienne called as the seminar finally ended. She confirmed the start time for Mr. Guitar Player's show that evening, and felt that she could probably make it out. After Ms. Linguist had to leave, I got to once again see my son demonstrate some of the insight his perseverance has wrought in his life as we discussed deep subjects with Ms. Entrepreneur.

We were so long at our discussing that it was time to head downtown to the show. We put the cars in the parking garage, since that's a good way to minimize frustration on a weekend evening in that city. We were fortunate to get there a little early and pick our table, since that ended up being the biggest Mr. Guitar Player coffee house show that I can remember. Ms. Equestrienne didn't make it until about the halfway point, since things on the acreage were being affected by the ice. Her strength of purpose, ability to cry out to God when she runs out of strength, and love of horses keeps her going despite a significant case of fibromyalgia; I wish I had her ability to release frustration through tears. I think the evening brightened her outlook, as she thanked me for her very late birthday card that acknowledged what a big part of my life she'd been. Mr. Guitar Player invited my son to play harmonica on one of his rarely performed songs that happened to be in the right key for one of the harmonicas he had with him. It sounded great to Mom, anyway! He also did his "Amazing Grace" medley that included the Nirvana version, the Elvis version, and the Gilligan's Island theme version. Mr. Guitar Player's parents sat at the end of one of our tables, and his brother and sister-in-law sat at the next table. They're both huggy guys, and sent hugs around. It was family night in several ways. Ms. Entrepreneur and Ms. Equestrienne had never met, and did get into a conversation that started with horses and ended with natural foods and supplements. In the meantime, my son helped Mr. Guitar Player load equipment. He then got into a conversation with a gentleman that I've seen in a number of places in that city. He came away from that conversation higher than a kite: after hearing about his "evangelistic gift" so many times, he finally saw it kick in and roll! Both conversations kept up until the staff gently pointed out that the shop had actually been closed for 45 minutes. My son gave his number to the gentleman, and Ms. Entrepreneur and Ms. Equestrienne made me promise to get their contact information to each other. We got back at 1 AM on a very cold morning. That's the happiest that I've seen my son in some time, despite the weather.

We did make it to both the morning and evening church services on Sunday. The youth pastor and his wife (Ms. Equestrienne's son and daughter-in-law--it's a small world!) made sure that he had a small sendoff party at the evening youth service. He spent a lot of time listening these last several months, and was a great asset to my son. The only other guys that he'd regularly gotten to talk to were one of Mrs. Everybody's Mom's sons by text and phone periodically, and Mr. Guitar Player now and then over the phone. I remember when we were praying for him not to die before he got his life right with God and was in a bad motorcycle accident. God heard us, and then some! The evening ended with a call from Mrs. Helper, who wanted us to stop by on our way in since she couldn't get away to join us at the bus stop, and some last-minute repacking.

Monday also started early. We were advised by the letter from Job Corps to have him at the bus depot no later than 9:30 AM, and the director of the organization that has hosted us since my son's abuse and stalking by a church elder (long story for another day) told us to be there at 9 AM. We did stop at Mrs. Helper's house, who fed my son and I breakfast and visited with us, giving the driver time to wake up a little more. Still, I went to the wrong area, but the resourceful son called and got us a landmark that simplified the matter for the driver. We had no more than walked in when Ms. Linguist followed, relieved she hadn't missed us. My complex explanation of our plans had her thinking he was actually leaving at 9 AM, but I've been known to make things more complicated than they need to be. They started a conversation in which my son shared his spiritual journey and the "coincidences" that weren't, and the last-minute saves that showed us that God hadn't forgotten us. I could see that Ms. Linguist was appreciating his commentary, since the distance that her relatives have shown her despite professed spirituality had sent her on a quest for the real thing. Somewhere in there, Ms. Equestrienne called to talk to my son, since she wouldn't be able to make it in. They completed their conversation, allowing my son and Ms. Linguist to pick up where they left off. They were interrupted again by the Job Corps rep, who impressed us by showing up to make sure everything was running smoothly. I somewhat regretted that they didn't finish that conversation, but they can perhaps renew it via e-mail when my son gets fluent in that communication skill with his new address. We finally put him on the bus, and she told me how mature he'd gotten, and what an asset he would be to anyone who got him. We both hoped he could end up cooking someplace that would allow him to do the kind of sharing that he'd done Saturday night.

We weren't ready to part company after the bus left, so we agreed to go to a coffee shop near the campus, where I needed to pick up a duplicate W-2. On a whim, I called Mrs. Liaison to see if she could join us. Our conversation, as usual, was about helping the downtrodden and the righting of wrongs, and about our friend, Mama Grace, who had returned to the Sudan. I'd had the privilege of taking her to the Consulate to get the work permit that took five years of hard-fought effort to obtain rather than the projected three months, due to the lack of diligence on the part of her attorney. We also recalled how Ms. Comedienne had been so "on" and had cheered us all up the day that she came down with us to another coffee house three weeks after the death of Ms. Linguist's #2 son, and how we needed to see how we could draw her out now that she was in a time of great stress. In the midst of the conversation, my phone rang with a return call from Mrs. Liaison, to my delight and that of Ms. Linguist, who hadn't yet gotten to meet her! We spent the final 45 minutes discussing how God had revealed her origins to Mrs. Liaison through a series of dreams about Native people, and about introducing herself to her birth family, and the way He was now guiding her efforts to obtain a better way of life and access to the spiritual teachings that had so faithfully aided her for her people. Ms. Linguist again got to listen to someone share some real spirituality, and was quite excited at the assurance that it brought, and that it was leading toward helping people. I'm glad for the people in my life that are after something real. They have plans together for later in the week.

I'm glad for many things today--for those that we were able to see, for those that couldn't make it but have greatly touched our lives with the reality of their walk with God, for the last-minute saves, for the chance to see the God of love intersecting our courses according to His purposes. As I experience yet another sick day, I have an overwhelming picture of hope to assure me that it's not over yet.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

The Road

The earth is green beneath me,
The sunlight clearest gold.
The breeze teases me forward
As I start off down the road.

I find some scattered stumbling stones
Of which I was never told.
Signposts shake in angry winds
As I stumble down the road.

The miles compress my shoulders;
Memories make a heavy load.
My knees give way beneath me--
I have lain down in the road.

I see the tracks etched deeply,
As though cut while pushing through a flood.
Still they stretch on out before me....
It's time to move on down the road.


"Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart....Therefore, strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees. 'Make level paths for your feet,' so that the lame may not be disabled, but rather healed." (Heb. 12:1-3,12-13)

Thursday Thirteen #3: Concert DOs and DON'Ts

In the spring of 2004, a number of things just went right that allowed me to actually leave home overnight to attend a concert by 2/3 of my favorite band that a friend of mine put on about seven hours down the road at his church. The 2 of 3 of the current 77s lineup that made it are known as 7&7 Is, or just Mike Roe and Mark Harmon. It was ostensibly a youth event, but the middle-aged fan base had all the serious fun after the kids filed out at their regularly scheduled time.

1. DO make your desires known to God about attending the show after it's announced as you experience a particularly tender moment in prayer about the rather difficult way your life has gone. It won't kill you if He says no, and He just might say, "YES"!

2. DO ask all your friends to pray with you about whether you should go. You'll be amazed how stuff can come together when something is supposed to happen!

3. DO have the biggest bonus you've ever gotten from the company show up two weeks before the show as you're trying to decide if you have enough money to go.

4. DON'T get so wound up in the departure details that you forget to take the bonus check to the bank. It will cost you a bit in overdraft fees later.

5. DO enjoy the trip down in the sweetest ride you've ever owned.


(This isn't the actual item, but is also a very nice black 1989 Buick Skylark.)

6. DO get excited about seeing your cyberfriends in person for the first time. Take them some good teaching materials to help them with the concerns about which you've been posting and praying.

7. DON'T insist on carrying all five of your bags full of books and tapes and your great outfit to your motel room at once because you get there later than you'd planned and are missing part of the pre-show get-together. You may get to see the show with a screaming headache!

8. DO make sure that you get a picture of the fork by the road before you leave, or nobody will believe that it was there.


(Notice that I did say, "The fork BY the road").

9. DO agree to run your buddy's very nice digital camera so that he can battle with the temperamental soundboard, and get as many pictures of the show as possible. Get brave and go right up to the edge of the stage, like you own the place!

10. DO stop shooting long enough to whip out your keys for the traditional multiple-sets-of-keys audience participation sound effects during the intro to "Snake", and to watch some amazing guitar work on the bridges without distraction.

11. DON'T walk in front of the video camera because you're no longer looking where you're going, and have the back of your head needlessly immortalized for posterity.

12. DON'T try to catch another one of your buddies with a camera as he trips and falls in your general direction. The difference in proportions say that you couldn't do anything to help the situation, and he's tough enough to take it.

13. DO somehow manage to sit on the same end of the table with the lead singer at the after-show dinner for the band and serious fans. It will allow you to catch up on prayer request updates, have a good single parent conversation, give him the wind-up dinosaur you brought along for his daughter's dashboard dinosaur collection, and generally serve as another reason to believe that God put you with this cool bunch of people for a purpose.

God sets the lonely in families,
he leads forth the prisoners with singing....(Ps. 68:6a)




Below is a clip from a video taken that night. The song is their version of "Denomination Blues", a song originally released by Washington Phillips in the late 1920s.

Sunday, February 3, 2008

Torch

From dancing to free-falling
With strength already spent,
The signal fire of victory
Becomes a torch for the descent.

When do the depths take over?
When does darkness eat the light?
What is left but sleeping
When surrounded by the night?

Sundance throught the lattice
Opens forward-looking eyes.
Sundance on the water
Calls me to rise and come outside.

Strong, like Sun above,
Soft, like mother's love.



Ps. 139:8
If I go up to the heavens, you are there;
if I make my bed in the depths, you are there.

Is. 50:10
Who among you fears the LORD
and obeys the word of his servant?
Let him who walks in the dark,
who has no light,
trust in the name of the LORD
and rely on his God.

John 1:4, 5.9a, 14
In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness....The true light that gives light to every man was coming into the world....
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only,who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.

Rom. 8:37-39
No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us. For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.


What a thought: God carries a torch for us when we've fallen out of love with our own existence, from which we can reignite!