Friday, December 31, 2010



Rather than making resolutions, I have added to my "must/mustn't list"

Must:
•​give more of myself than seems possible

•​give a witness of what I have seen

•​learn to rest

•​learn more about my identity

•​listen more readily

•​compile and reduce my wardrobe

•​line up creative activities

•​work more and pay more in order to pay less

•​start asking more probing questions


Mustn’t:
•​fail to try

•​believe what I know to be a lie

•​waste money

•​waste time

•​think that all is for naught

•​condemn what I do not understand

•​live a life against the good command

•​shrink back for the fear of man

•​spend time in self-serving imaginary worlds

•​jump to conclusions

•​submit to escapism

•​resort to excuses

Thursday, December 23, 2010

As His Bridegroom.


”..Nor is the Church barely lovely, she is superlatively so. Her Lord styles her Thou fairest among women. She has a real worth and excellence which cannot be rivalled by all the nobility and royalty of the world. If Jesus could exchange his elect bride for all the queens and empresses of earth, or even for the angels in heaven, he would not, for he puts her first and foremost-fairest among women. Like the moon she far outshines the stars…” - Spurgeon

We are lovely when we let the incarnate shine.

Monday, December 13, 2010

simpler then.


it was simpler then, i'll say. life should always be as simple as this. the most terrifying thing in the world should be a gust of wind and the sensation of a friend passing underneath you on the swingset. or, the most complex thing in the world should be the monkeybars, i could say that, too. the biggest thing we ever do should be climb to the crest of a slide and slip down, courageously, into the mulch below.

Friday, December 3, 2010


"O spare
Me now, my friends, your packages
Of God, your simple adages:
"Be good and strong, but weak when wrong."
They make good rote and clever song,
But do not hold the wisdom of
Our God. A whisper from above
Is all I have. Yet from it I
Have learned through horrid nights that my
Redeemer lives, and when my skin
Has been destroyed, then from within
Shall I behold him on my side,
And I will live though I have died."

this.

Saturday, November 13, 2010

The Idol of Acceptance.


I abandoned this blog almost as quickly as I had commenced it, noticing that my only temptation was to blog in sorrow rather than in praise. I have decided that my mind was not at ease for that season in my life and that, though sorrow still finds me, I am ready to engage this world of blogging for the sake of release and not another way to try and impress the world around me.

I've been given the gift of adaptability, but the curse of resistance to change - it is the anticipation that nearly kills me every time.

How might one prepare oneself and yet be fully invested in the things given? How can you continually consider the future without lending yourself to it, and missing where you are - and the possibilities of it?

Father, You see me and know me. Lord, you guide me and discipline me. Jesus, you see my wickedness and you still persist in Your love. Holy Spirit, You keep me thirsting. Savior, You bring me rest.

The past few months have been nothing short of exhausting and stressful. I felt (still feel) buried. After wrestling, struggling, crying out to the Lord and trying to find my sanity in the midst of rejection and extreme discombobulation (to say the very least), it finally occurred to me that the “safe place” I clung to, was not safe at all! Comfort we seek, and comfort - I am certain - will lead us to death. The thing that we do not realize is that when a place so readily accepts us, when we find our confidence in others' opinion of us, we are just as doomed than if we had no community at all! My false sense of security led me to trust in my control over the lie that I carried. The Lie? That I am rejected. The self contrived remedy? To receive as much acceptance as possible, from as many people as possible.

It has only taken an ounce of rejection to reveal where my worship has been. I learned that, in my wickedness, I would rather have death, than rejection. I have fought every day of my life as a believer, to seek acceptance from humans, rather than acknowledging fully, my acceptance from my God. In Ezekiel 16, the Lord says of this:

" 'I bathed you with water and washed the blood from you and put ointments on you. 10 I clothed you with an embroidered dress and put leather sandals on you. I dressed you in fine linen and covered you with costly garments. 11 I adorned you with jewelry: I put bracelets on your arms and a necklace around your neck, 12 and I put a ring on your nose, earrings on your ears and a beautiful crown on your head. 13 So you were adorned with gold and silver; your clothes were of fine linen and costly fabric and embroidered cloth. Your food was fine flour, honey and olive oil. You became very beautiful and rose to be a queen. 14 And your fame spread among the nations on account of your beauty, because the splendor I had given you made your beauty perfect, declares the Sovereign LORD.

15 " 'But you trusted in your beauty and used your fame to become a prostitute. You lavished your favors on anyone who passed by and your beauty became his. 16 You took some of your garments to make gaudy high places, where you carried on your prostitution. Such things should not happen, nor should they ever occur. 17 You also took the fine jewelry I gave you, the jewelry made of my gold and silver, and you made for yourself male idols and engaged in prostitution with them. 18 And you took your embroidered clothes to put on them, and you offered my oil and incense before them. 19 Also the food I provided for you—the fine flour, olive oil and honey I gave you to eat—you offered as fragrant incense before them. That is what happened, declares the Sovereign LORD."

"Yet," He reminds us,"I will remember the covenant I made with you in the days of your youth, and I will establish an everlasting covenant with you (60)."

This is so emblematic of His love for us, and our natural response to Him; to use the gifts He us, and to make them into idols. I have Jeremiah 17 as my prayer, in seeking a right heart before God. If you use your best friend, your boyfriend, your husband, your old friends, your city, home, parents or reputation as your security, beware and flee from evil! For your Father is a jealous God, and will return your affections to Himself, at whatever cost!

“Like a partridge that hatches eggs it did not lay
is the man who gains riches by unjust means.
When his life is half gone, they will desert him,
and in the end he will prove to be a fool.
A glorious throne, exalted from the beginning,
is the place of our sanctuary.

O LORD, the hope of Israel,
all who forsake you will be put to shame.
Those who turn away from you will be written in the dust
because they have forsaken the LORD,
the spring of living water.
Heal me, O LORD, and I will be healed;
save me and I will be saved,
for you are the one I praise."

No amount of suffering is in vain, for as I become more aware of my sinfulness, and suffer the pain of those who are also in need of a savior, I am reminded, by grace, that none is in vain. For as a wise puritan once prayed:

"Make me an instrument in thy hands, ready to seize every opportunity of usefulness, and willing to offer all of my talents to Thy service... my trials have been fewer than my sins... all Thy work for me is perfect, and I praise thee."

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

flags.


you who mourn will be comforted
you who hunger will hunger no more
oh, the last shall be first,
of this i am sure


you who weep now, will laugh again
oh, you lonely will be lonely no more
yes, the last will be first,
of this i am sure.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Let that be enough.


But when he heard it, he said, “Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. Go and Learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy, and not sacrifice’. For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners.” Matthew 9:12-13

During these past few weeks, I have begun to truly experience what it feels like for the Lord to shower me in His peace. As humans, we will encounter many high anxiety, high stress moments. Everything can be perfect–and then three hours later, your world is falling apart.

I know we’ve all felt this. One thing goes wrong and before you know it, seventeen other things have gone wrong alongside it. Satan tries to overwhelm us. He tries to convince us that we can’t possibly handle it, so our minds become preoccupied, arguing with him in a feeble attempt to prove that we can figure it out on our own. He is distracting us from the face of Jesus.

These past few weeks have been filled with some very heavy realizations about myself. It is human nature to crave approval and affirmation. But it is also deadly.
This has been a time of pure revelation sent from my God. As a result, I have found myself bogged down with stresses, silly details, worries, and anxieties. I didn’t know what to do, so I started writing. Here is what He said:

While you are pretending to have it all together, you are killing any sense of identity you have.

You are losing yourself in your efforts to hide imperfections.

The beauty of your spirit is that it is individual… you’re letting that deteriorate because you can’t embrace who I’ve made you to be.

Stop pretending.
Stop pretending.
Stop pretending.

So here I sit, still entirely uncertain about what is going to happen and lacking any sort of understanding of God’s reasoning behind all of this… but I have resolved to wait upon the Lord. Those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength. No one whose hope is in the Lord will ever be put to shame. The reality of who God is and how He works is just massive, something my mind can't fathom. Live in humility, knowing that you will never be able to fully understand.

Love,
eli

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

safe.


Haiti earthquake facts reveal that the earthquake occurred at 4:53 p.m. on January 12, 2010. The center of the earthquake was about 16 miles away from the capital – Port Au Prince. The magnitude of earthquake was measured at 7 richter scale. The human loss ranges between 50000 to 200000, exact number is still to be calculated.

Last night was the first time I've been able to accurately [and at length] explain my heart in regards to my recent Haiti trip. Since I got back, everyone I came across wanted to know how "it" was. I felt like it was not something that could be answered in that context. "Uh, errr... well...? It was hard…" was usually my eloquent response.

I was so conflicted internally, and I didn't understand how people could simply ask "So, how was it?" and expect me to answer in passing. My pride caused me to actually feel anger towards these people, who I assumed "didn't get it" and wouldn’t, even if I attempted to explain. The day after I got back, an innocent soul mentioned "Hey! I heard you were on vacation! How was it?"... my face, I'm sure, said everything I was thinking.

After previous experiences with a variety cultures, I still found myself in the Miami airport with butterflies in my stomach. I kept thinking "What am I doing? Why am I doing this? I need to go home"... so scared and unsure of why He would place me on a plane headed to Port Au Prince to do construction. In the air flying over Haiti for the first time, my first thought was how calm everything looked down below. Untouched, it seemed. I took a moment to admire the colors of the Caribbean city that would become my home for the next week. As the plane descended, I was horrified to see that the colors I had been admiring from afar… were instead the plastic tarps people had been using to construct tent cities so numerous and huge that they were visible from thousands of feet in the air. So many people are living in the streets of Haiti, either because their homes were destroyed or because they are too afraid to return indoors... so many sleep in tents right next to their constructed homes. Life’s difficulties are nothing new for the people of Haiti, the devastation is not new... it has always been a 3rd world country with a lot of poverty... but I am struck by the fact that prior to the earthquake, most Haitians rented their homes, or were still paying them off, meaning that even if they had the tools necessary, these homes are not theirs to rebuild. The land where their previous homes stood is not theirs to use for the rebuilding of their lives.

The first few days, I was frustrated [though I probably didn't show it]. I didn't understand why God would have me do construction when my [obvious] strengths and desires [I thought] were more relational and personal. I just wanted to love people. I wanted to go village to village and just sit and talk with each person. I wanted to hug some orphans and hear their stories. I did not want to do construction, because I was not good at construction. I was prideful in assuming that my desires trumped Gods... "But, God... seriously... construction? What are you thinking? You are obviously mistaken if you think my strengths involve hammers and circular saws."

Throughout the week, there were several opportunities to be relational and to love people. Not just the Haitian people, but really - the Lord definitely showed me that I am to show love towards my team... and encourage. That ministry should begin with the person who is in front of me, before I can genuinely love my neighbor.

I limited God by doubting His sovereignty in placing me on this trip. I assumed I knew better. I assumed I knew my strengths better than He did... and He showed me that although I feel incapable, at times, to do what is asked [or ill-equipped to do what He asks]... I am still to do them. How prideful and arrogant of me to even begin to think I know what is better and more beneficial to His world than He does.

One of the roofs the team put on was the roof of Shawmi, a man whose home was demolished by the earthquake. When the earthquake hit Haiti, on January 12th, Shawmi's wife and children went to live with some family a few hours away... Shawmi stayed to help rebuild their home. Shawmi had not seen his family in 4 months... his children had not been in the arms of their father in 120 days. We were able to put the roof on his home. Sunday morning - there he was. In a pew with his sweet family. How utterly gracious of the Lord to give us this glimpse. Something so tangible... we could see what our hands were able to do. I was so caught up in my frustrations with "merely building a roof", that I couldn't see past it. I didn't take time to see what else might come from a roof. Uniting a child with their father, a wife with her husband. How beautiful. How sweet and gracious of the Lord to show us this image.

THE lesson of this experience, although it will change and grow within the next few months [I hope]... would be that I should never limit God by assuming I know better. That my feeble attempts to control how I serve Him are but filthy rags on the foot of the cross. I returned to Rockwall, Texas... humbled, broken, humiliated that I would begin to think I knew better than He. The constant praises upon my return actually stung. I am awkward when accepting praises on a normal day, but when I am faced with my own pride [so "in your face" as I was], I was ashamed and wanted nothing to do with anyone who thought of me as "inspiring". I have always been happy to embrace my imperfections, because they only further highlighted my desperate need for a Savior. This time, it only further highlighted my desperate need for His grace that He [thankfully] freely gives.

Thank you all for bearing with me as I processed and analyzed just what I needed to learn. Thank you for your patience and your love.

Eli

Thursday, May 13, 2010

this is haiti.


I sit here, anticipating words to convey just what my heart is feeling, accurately and eloquently. I feel overwhelmed at the thought [and pressure] of telling His story, but know how purposeful and intentional He was in placing me on this trip – so I have to at least try. My mind is scattered and it reflects the state of my heart right now.

It was a difficult trip. Emotionally, physically and mentally. I’m not an emotional person, I like to think, and yet there were several instances where I felt the sensation of tears running down my face. We arrived on Tuesday afternoon in Port Au Prince. We were told to be aware of our surroundings outside of the airport – as Port Au Prince was a bit crazier than Guibert. As we were waiting on Jean Alix to arrive with our Tap Tap [Haitian Taxi Bus], we were amidst the crazyness of the busy street. I would look around and would try to avoid the several winks I got from the men [playing the oblivious card always works in my favor, or so I like to think]. A man asked me if I was married, I said no, and he replied “would you like to be?”, I answered [while chuckling] “no, thank you”.

A younger man came up to me and asked me “Why are you smiling? Do you always smile?”, I answered “Ha! I guess I just have reasons to smile” and he said “Does nothing bad ever happen to you?” and I said “Well, of course. Bad things happen, but Jesus loves me… so it’s okay”, “Ohhh… so you believe in Jesus!” “Yes, I do… do you?”, “No, I do not. I can’t”, “Why?”, I ask. He replies “Because, I have a family. I can’t be a Christian and do my job” and that’s just about the time our Tap Tap gets there… So I start walking down the road and he walks alongside me. I told him “Jesus meets you where you are” and he nodded. I told him “I will pray for you” and he said “Please don’t forget”.

As we left the busyness of the airport, I wore a smile until we were a few miles from the airport. A sea of blue “U.S. Aid” tarps were the first I saw. We were told that this is where they eat, sleep, cook, live and use the bathroom. Several people under one tarp. As soon as we passed a tent city, another one would soon approach… my heart was heavy and my smile was fading.

We arrived at Jean Alix’s house after an adventurous ride from Port Au Prince up the mountain to Kenscoff. The magnitude of devastation seemed a bit larger in Port Au Prince than farther up the mountain, but you could still sense that they were dealing with the effects of the earthquake, as well.

Wednesday was our first day of work. Our purpose was to roof 4 houses in 5 days. Starting the work day at 8am and ending when dusk came. None of us had experience with roofing, and with 7 girls and merely 3 men on the trip – I would be lying if I said I wasn’t a little worried.

The beautiful thing about Haiti is their sense of community. If one family is without a home, the entire community will come together and fix that. The beauty of their selflessness and love towards one another was something that continually brought tears to my eyes. We worked alongside the families and the neighbors to put the roofs on. That way, it wasn’t a bunch of white people coming to take over… rather, a group of white people coming to help them in the process.
We got all of the supplies together [16 planks of wood, and several sheets of roofing tin] and carried it all down the mountain. Jeff, one of our fearless leaders, was great at figuring out the steps and delegating tasks to the rest of the team. There was a sweet boy that started following us on this day. His name was Evens, and he had quite the smile and heart. A small scar on his forehead, but his huge smile is what I mainly remember.

There was a point during the day that a few of us were waiting on a task… just helping where we could. A Haitian woman pulled her chair and laundry buckets over to where we were working and was quietly doing her laundry by hand. I go over to her and somehow communicated with her enough to ask her if I could help. She handed me a piece of clothing and a bar of soap and nodded. As I’m scrubbing this article of clothing [realizing it is her delicates], I look up and see a crowd of Haitians encircled around us. Some laughing, smiling… and some just watching. I looked around to a few of the girls on my team and questioned with my shoulders and facial expression, “what are they looking at?” hoping I didn’t do something to offend their culture.

Afterwards, I asked Jen “What do you think drew the crowd? Did I do something wrong?” and she assured me that I didn’t. She said they probably thought it odd/funny that a white girl would hand wash their laundry… because they think that all Americans have laundering services. As simple as it was, that was my favorite part of the whole trip, probably. There were a ton of other sweet things, but this one really sticks out. A friend recently said that their goal was merely to “love the person in front of them”. That has really stuck with me. How simple, how true. Simply love the person in front of me.

We finished the roof and prayed with the family inside their tiny [roofed] house. There were so many people in that tiny middle room, but it was so rich. After returning to Jean Alix’ house that night, I sat outside and journaled… reflecting on the days’ events and spending some time in prayer. As it started to rain, I thought of the sweet family that now had a roof. The daughter, Abigayle, that is sleeping under a roof, staying dry, rather than under a plastic tent/tarp. Although, I love the rain… I love how it sounds, smells, regenerates and refreshes, I was reminded of the several thousand people that I saw just a day prior, under their blue tarps. The heavier it poured… the more my heart ached and pleaded on behalf of the Haitians. We all were exhausted and crashed fairly early [ended up being a trend we fulfilled throughout the week].

Thursday, we didn’t have a house to roof. None of the houses were ready for roofs [the sides weren’t finished on some, and the cement forms weren’t poured yet]. We did not waste any time, though… Jean Alix had plenty for us to do. We broke up into two teams… one team went to help with the progression of one of the houses down the mountain, and the other team helped organize the supply room and built shelves. I was on the shelving/organization team. We started out strong [4 of us… Jesse, as our leader]. We built the frame, and realized we had messed up a few measurements… so we had redo some of it. After a few times doing that, frustrations were high and our spirits weren’t as encouraged as they once were. Something that was estimated to take a few hours, took close to 8… just due to our miscalculations. At the end of the day, we felt good – because it was done correctly. We were still waiting on a few sheets of plywood to completely finish, but we were told we’d get that within a few days.

Friday, I woke up feeling headachey and ew. I went to the bathroom and hovered over the toilet, anticipating the worst. Sure enough, the worst came [I’ll spare the details]. I felt better afterwards, washed my face and went about the day. Not wanting to miss out on the days activities, I kept it all to myself. Stubborn? Yes. That morning, I drank two liters of water just to make sure it wasn’t dehydration. We walked to the house we’d be roofing and I felt a little dizzy. I drank more water and took an advil and kept working [though, not nearly at the ideal pace]. I walked back with Tammy around lunchtime and started feeling nauseous and dizzy once again. I mentioned it to her as we were sitting at the boys home waiting for the rest of our team. Before lunch, Jeff came over and said he heard my secret of the morning. After lunch, he suggested I stay at the boys home for the rest of the afternoon. That was the last thing I wanted to do, but did it anyways due to the persistence of Jeff and Tammy. ;-)

My head was pounding and my feeling was “frustrated”. As much as I desired to be with my team, to not let them down… I took time to shut off my own thoughts and words. Since seeing the devastation in Port Au Prince, I’d had so many thoughts that I assumed would be better to just shut off until I had the time [and energy] to process them. So, here was my moment to be still… and I listened to what my God had to say. He was saying to me over and over: This is mine. This country is mine. I am their hope.

Monday, we were at a house a little further than the rest. We got there with the supplies and met the family. I immediately gravitated toward the babies and stroked the cheek of a little one. His big toothless grin and excitement made my morning. I asked to hold him and the mother [I assumed] said yes. I pick him up and something feels off. I realize his legs did not move from the sitting position. As I hold him, his legs are stiff and seemingly stuck in that position. After holding the happy baby for a few minutes, I ask a team leader what was the cause of that. They said some babies are rarely held… they’re almost always sitting on the ground, so their legs grow in a sitting position. What? My heart breaks. This adorable baby boy in my arms, laughing and cooing, is rarely held? I fought against the [very strong] urge to take him home with me right then. Can I change my profession to “professional baby lover and holder?” I would be good at that.

I had one of those “I’m really in Haiti” moments when I was wiping the sweat from my forehead, I look out from the window of the house and see this amazing image. There were three women sitting together under some shade… one was doing her laundry in a bucket, one was breast feeding her baby and the other was sitting idly. The background of this image was mountains as far as I could see. Peace.

The question that has been asked by many has been “will you go back?” and I’ve learned to never limit God by a “yes” or “no”. If it were up to me… yes, but it clearly is never up to me. After leaving Nigeria 4 years ago, I was sure I would be back the following year… and God hasn’t allowed it yet.

“did you love it?” :: yes and no. There were aspects of it that I loved. I loved the culture, the sense of community, the beauty [of the country and people], the joy that everyone had, the children [shocker, right?]. As the sunburn turns brown, the mosquito bites fade, the Haitian rash goes away, my body isn’t as sore and reality sets in, my heart is still very heavy for the Haitian people.

So here I sit, still entirely uncertain about what is going to happen in my life and lacking any sort of understanding of God’s reasoning behind all of this [the trip, the reason for my presence on it]…but I have resolved to wait upon the Lord. Those who wait on the Lord shall renew their strength. No one whose hope is in the Lord will ever be put to shame.

“But even if I am being poured out like a drink offering on the sacrifice and service coming from your faith, I am glad and rejoice with all of you.” Philippians 2:17

Pictures to come.