The Sacred Breakfast
The sun is awake; but the world is sleeping.
Hair in a messy bun,
No make up on,
and the remains of yesterday's dreams rippling through my heart.
The house is sleeping
and the dog
watches silently.
He is used to this ritual;
this sacred moment.
As if he knows his barks would destroy this moment.
This sacred time.
We sit my friend and I around a kitchen table; usually so filled with life.
Strawberries, yogurt and coffee,
Nothing extraordinary.
She starts and I listen; sharing in her triumphs and laughing with her joys.
Sometimes I ache with her. But today we smile with the sunshine.
We follow a rabbit trail, as only old friends can.
And I marvel at the fact that this woman has known me.
She has known me in my nose ringed, bleach blonde phase;
In my zealous and passionate youth.
She saw me declare God’s word, in a sweaty tent,
and like no other, knows how terrified I was that it would all go wrong.
Our lives look so different now
but those moments defined us
That shared history binds us
This life is for sharing.
I have seen her swell and shrink with children.
and I prayed for the young life;
that sits on the couch with adoring eyes.
Convinced I am there to see her.
She may be a little bit right.
We have watched seasons come and go;
We have known belly laughs and heart cries.
And the deep groans that communicate with God.
I have seen her wrestle with truth, and fight for wisdom,
She has watched me grieve.
We share the minute details of our lives.
Aware that how we spend our days;
is in fact how we spend our lives.
We have known sorrow,
Grief that could have destroyed our friendship
And yet we chose to protect.
We have grown in kindness.
Our rivers are such different colours;
but the water that feeds them is fresh.
We return to our first topic aware that the clocks ticks on.
I breathe and talk sharing heart secrets letting fences down.
This sacred hour
A central hub for our hearts
We often leave with questions
But in that moment
The sacred breakfast; questions are permissible.
We have shared theses moments for many years now.
We have grown accustomed to our quirks.
A friend and I have shared breakfast together every Friday for the past few months. We have known each other over 20 years and are obsessed with God’s Kingdom and his incredible love for His world. There is nothing special, no formula and no pretense. I encourage everyone to do the same. Find a friend and chat deep… This bread is in the sharing.
Saturday, 30 June 2018
Tuesday, 1 November 2016
Cinderella and the hope of Spring!
I have never been a tidy person. I have too many thoughts and get distracted in the middle of cleaning. I do crave order though, and every so often, I go crazy and clean everything like a fiend. My overwhelming memory of childhood is my mum saying “concentrate on the job at hand” I could not do it. It remains a challenge for us, when we are together, she epitomizes task oriented and I leave things like dishes half done; get partly dressed and then start reading a book. In the months after my dad died, and my relationship ended, it became even worse. There seemed little point in anything, let alone keeping a tidy home. Cups began to grow mold, laundry spilled everywhere, and my bedroom floor was covered in clothes and papers. The fierce grief and loss of the first few months of the process had an almost epic exhilaration. The pain was so raw and so complete that I produced massive amounts of adrenaline to cope with it. As the days passed, and the initial feelings subsided, the euphoria of my ability to cope diminished as well. For a month I kept myself as busy as possible, this became exhausting. I stopped planning ahead and after a massive ice storm, I just stopped. The massive feelings had subsided and I was left with a feeling of nothing, an emptiness; a kind of idle pointlessness. I felt little about anything, happy or sad. A kind of emotional hibernation. I did the things I absolutely had to, and little else.
One day I woke up early, and decided to pass the time by watching a film. I made coffee and settled myself down on the couch to lose myself in the glittering world of the Moulin Rouge. As I was slipping the DVD out of it’s case, I snapped a little too hard and the DVD snapped from top to bottom. The film was unwatchable. I was done for the day. I left my coffee cup on the table and went back to bed. I huddled, still, defeated, under the comforter (a poorly named American term, I prefer smotherer) for several hours. It was an end of winter day and the birds were singing. Honestly, at first I wanted them to shut up. It was the first time I remember hearing them that Winter, the persistent bird song awakened something in me. The Winter was not dead yet, but the birds were singing. It was a reminder, a natural hint, that there could be Spring again. There certainly was not an abundance of Spring joy in my apartment that afternoon; but there was a thought, that perhaps, everything would not always be completely frozen. I would not always be numb. I would not always want to hide. The thought chiseled at my icy, numb heart, melted at it a little.
The birds were singing and much like the Cinderella cartoon they pulled the covers back from my bed. That's not quite the truth, I lay in there feeling warm and comfortable; but I came to realize, I had a need. This was the first time in a while I had felt anything close to an emotion, and it was a completely out of character one. I felt a need to clean the kitchen. I started by gathering the filthy cups and plates from around the house. I took them into the kitchen and made a start. I had a purpose, an objective, and I started. It took me about an hour and a half to bring order to that little part of my world. It was definitely a cathartic experience. This preparation, this I looked at the warmth of my bed many times but the hibernation it offered seemed almost stifling now. An unnecessary protection, like fur coats in July.
I was in a church choir growing up, so I have been to many, many weddings. We got paid £3 a service for weddings, it seemed like a good deal. Hymns were a staple of the service, and Great is thy Faithfulness was a top 3 choice. I still know all the words. It was fun to see the bride sneaking a smile at her husband and thinking:
“Great! This great thing has happened and great is his faithfulness.”
Maybe it was association, or the delightful way the bride sneaked a grin, or my teenage understanding but it has stuck in my head and in my heart that Great is thy Faithfulness should be written like this
GREAT! Is thy Faithfulness.
Monday, 17 October 2016
The Shoreline of the Invisible
As far as you can hold your confidence.
Do not allow your confusion to squander
The call which is loosening
Your roots in false ground
That you might come free
From all you have outgrown
What is being transfigured here is your mind,
And it is difficult and slow to become new
The more faithfully you can endure here
The more refined your heart will become
For your arrival in your new dawn.
John O’Donoghue
I love to look at the ocean, being near water brings joy to my soul. I love that game of standing on the edge of the shore line. Inching yourself closer and closer to get a little bit wet and then running away. That waiting and running, falling and giggling. Pretending you can predict the rhythm and power of the vast water. It is the bread and butter of holidays. If you haven’t played that game and got soaking wet you are doing something wrong.
A few months ago, I sat on a beach, in England and looked at the immensity of the north sea. It wasn’t a particularly bright or sunny day. I had a coat on. I sat and drank an amazing cup of coffee, and ate a delectable brownie. I felt, in a good way, very small, as I looked at the ocean. It contains so much power and rhythm. I looked at the beach and journalled for several hours. The space, distance and disturbance between here, the very real right now of our human experience and the Kingdom of heaven, where the real and the right now, are perfected seemed to grow smaller and smaller. There was something transcendent in the rhythm of the ocean. Knowing the unknown moment exists, when the energy of the tide will shift, and waiting in anticipation for that moment. There is an exquisite anguish in that transitory expectation. It refines away the roots that no longer nourish, and the patterns that now cause harm, and the armour somebody else tried to put on you. It is the moment, where if we can endure faithfully, rather than rushing to fix things, our hearts will be refined in a way that constant activity cannot accomplish.
I have been through some transitions in my life. Big ones, and small ones and they are never easy. It isn’t easy. The waiting is terrible. The unknown, is challenging, nobody likes a cliffhanger and yet that is what keeps us watching and waiting. I tuned into Lost faithfully every week for seven years, mainly because the cliffhangers, thank you J J Abraham, were enthralling. I have begun to realise that when the bible says our hearts are restless till we find our rest in Him. It’s because He is the only constant. We crawl, walk or run through life along a shoreline of experiences. An invisible sea washes over us. In this constant interim, we call life, with an eye on heaven and our feet in the very real, actual world we find our rest in the one who calls us to walk, as closely as we can to the shoreline of invisibility.
An ache of discomfort grows in the interim, some of the roots we are familiar with no longer nourish. The next moment is what we are waiting for. The next moment comes and then transition follows again.
So the interim, is a place where God dwells, a place where God calls us to dwell also.
We live in a constant interim, a constant understanding of waiting on God, understanding that what our hearts yearn for, more than anything else, is a place we can only glimpse in this life. I have become increasingly comfortable with the mystery of God’s will and at the same time more assured than ever of the goodness of his heart. This tension is the interim where joy and contentment dwell. This causes me to be at peace when relationships hurt, when work has failed and everything seems to be falling apart. One of my favourite poets penned these immortal words and they ring true in this interim
No Coward soul is mine,
No trembler in this world’s storm troubled sphere.
I see heaven’s glories shine
And faith shines equal arming me from fear.
There it is, right there! The truth that our world is storm troubled, but the greater reality that the heaven’s shine brighter. Emily Bronte walked along that invisible shoreline and left a trail for me to follow!
The constant interim is the call of the Christian. Abraham lived his entire life in Faith, longing for a building whose architect was God. He completed decades of faithful service in hope for something he would never see. As Christians, we live on the shoreline of the invisible. Knowing that what we see is barely a pin prick in the tapestry of eternity. We are desperate to make our pin prick count. That the shoreline of the invisible might be visible to one who walks behind us.
Sunday, 19 July 2015
New yet familiar
There is something exceptionally comforting about places that are familiar from childhood. A memory is definitely more than something that we take from a place. It is also a tangible presence that we leave in a place as well. I think this is especially true in a place you visit in love or with joy. When we re-visit ancient places, we can feel the fullness of the memories, that have been deposited over decades, even centuries. That's not all! When we return to our childhood haunts, the memory that we created there runs to meet us in the familiarity of a cobbled street or the imposing energy of an ancient forest. We find in that familiarity, even decades later, a link to who we were. I also believe we find a real connection to who we are in the present.
The same is true of the scriptures. I have been reading through the Psalms consecutively over the past few months. reading them, chewing on them, praying them. I've dipped into them time and time again over the past few years, but I've been going through them one by one for the first time in a few years. It is amazing to me how familiar they feel. As familiar as a street in my home town, or the voice of a longtime friend. They also arrest me every day as I recognize thoughts and revelations that other readers have shared, As I have matured in my faith, and grown in my knowledge of Christian teachings, hymns and poems. I recall them as I read the scriptures as if their memory has been left for me by my fellow sojourner's pen. Through their writing they have left something for me to find.
As I look at familiar Psalms like Psalm 2 I recall the prayers of faith who have acknowledged Jesus as the anointed one, set on a hill. Saints like William Wilberforce, Dietrich Bonhoffer, C S Lewis and Corrie Ten-Boom. It's there in their speeches and writing. They have visited Psalm 2 with me and prayed that prayer of faith. It's all there in their speeches and writing and it's all there in the familiarity of the Psalms.
A Psalm is not so much words in a page as an ancient place that we visit for reflection. A place, ourselves, and others have visited before. Familiar, and new, as our experiences have brought us to a familiar phrase or verse with new eyes. The way the familiarity of the ancient chapel was completely new with my adult eyes.
If I must give an application of some sort, let your familiarity of certain scriptures give you a peace that passes understanding and let that peace inform your reading. When you look at a familiar scripture for the first time in a while remember what you left there and let it shine on where you are now.
Peace
Serena
The same is true of the scriptures. I have been reading through the Psalms consecutively over the past few months. reading them, chewing on them, praying them. I've dipped into them time and time again over the past few years, but I've been going through them one by one for the first time in a few years. It is amazing to me how familiar they feel. As familiar as a street in my home town, or the voice of a longtime friend. They also arrest me every day as I recognize thoughts and revelations that other readers have shared, As I have matured in my faith, and grown in my knowledge of Christian teachings, hymns and poems. I recall them as I read the scriptures as if their memory has been left for me by my fellow sojourner's pen. Through their writing they have left something for me to find.
As I look at familiar Psalms like Psalm 2 I recall the prayers of faith who have acknowledged Jesus as the anointed one, set on a hill. Saints like William Wilberforce, Dietrich Bonhoffer, C S Lewis and Corrie Ten-Boom. It's there in their speeches and writing. They have visited Psalm 2 with me and prayed that prayer of faith. It's all there in their speeches and writing and it's all there in the familiarity of the Psalms.
A Psalm is not so much words in a page as an ancient place that we visit for reflection. A place, ourselves, and others have visited before. Familiar, and new, as our experiences have brought us to a familiar phrase or verse with new eyes. The way the familiarity of the ancient chapel was completely new with my adult eyes.
If I must give an application of some sort, let your familiarity of certain scriptures give you a peace that passes understanding and let that peace inform your reading. When you look at a familiar scripture for the first time in a while remember what you left there and let it shine on where you are now.
Peace
Serena
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