In a pit with a Lion on a snowy day

October 21, 2008

I just finished reading Mark Batterson´s book, In a pit with a Lion on a snowy day. In the last chapter he confesses that God gave him two lions that were to be chased in his life, planting a church and writing a book. And while the writing venture didn´t happen with ease and was replete with over 10 years of rejections, set-backs and discouraging circumstances, he never stopped chasing. And write that book he did! This book is chalked full of wise, biblical, one-liners, that would make as good of prayer material as they would board room topics. He talks about so much good stuff and how we´re not just missing it, but we´re settling for far less in many aspects of our so-called fearless, ever-chasing-after-God faith. Which means, as one could surmise, we´re not just missing out on God, we don´t even know we are. 

So, instead of trying to re-cap the good stuff he touched on throughout his book in my own paraphrasing attempts, I´m just gonna give it to you the way it came to me…in his words.

2 Samuel 23:20-21… There was also Benaiah son of Jehoiada, a valiant warrior from Kabzeel. He did many heroic deeds, which included killing two of Moab´s mightiest warriors. Another time he chased a lion down into a pit. then, despite the snow and slippery ground, he caught the lion and killed it. Another time, armed only witha club, he killed a great Egyptian warrior who was armed with a spear. Benaiahwrenched the spear from the Egyptian´s hand and killed him with it.

You are responsible forever for what you have tamed.     – Antoine de Saint Exupery

“A sense of destiny is our birthright as followers of Christ. God is awfully good at getting us where He wants us to go. But here´s the catch: The right place often feels like the wrong place, and the right time often feels like the wrong time.”

How much happier you´d be, how much more of you there would be, if the hammer of a higher God could smash smash your cosmos.      – G.K. Chesterton

“Lion chasers know and believe God is bigger than any problem they face in this world. They thrive in the toughest circumstances because they know that impossible odds make for amazing miracles. This is how God most enjoys revealing His glory (shaming the mighty with wonderful capable weak)…and how He blesses you in ways you could never have imagined.”

“Too often our prayers revolve around asking God to reduce the odds in our lives. We want everything in our favor. But maybe God wants to stack the odds against us so we can experience a miracle of divine proportions. Our impossible odds are a way to way to experience a new dimension of God´s glory.”

The most important thing about you is what comes to mind when you think about God.   – A.W. Tozer Read the rest of this entry »


Dorothy Sayers said

October 21, 2008

The people who hanged Christ never, to do them justice, accused Him of being a bore – on the contrary; they thought Him too dynamic to be safe. It has been left for later generations to muffle up that that shattering personality and surround Him with an atmosphere of tedium. We have very efficiently pared the claws of the Lion of Judah, certified Him meek and mild, and recommended Him as a fitting household pet for pale curates and pious old ladies.  


Ms. Heidi Baker (part 2)

October 21, 2008

Notice how willing this woman is to fail. A great reminder that the key to success is failure! And the key to overcoming failure, is, yep, you guessed it, failure. Learning from our mistakes makes us God-strong, because it teaches us to be God-dependent. History is being made by this simple, God loving woman who calls the Holy Spirit her “best friend” and preaches in the darkest and deadliest parts of Africa to groups of hundreds of obviously frustrated Muslims who are more concerned with trying to hit her with rocks than hearing about Jesus Christ.

She does all this, and just giggles as she re-tells of His Love. She weeps and giggles because we just don´t get it…we don´t get how simple it is to just abandon everything and just say “yes” to God in all the ways we can. I´ll admit, I´m ever learning this simplicity and can´t honestly imagine how I could ever look spiritually like a Heidi Baker, but I bet you, at some point, she was saying the same thing to this God we both follow.

Here´s to the God of epic proportions…the God of intimate nooks, crannies and cosmos. 

  


Ms. Heidi Baker

October 21, 2008

So, as many of you know, this is the woman whom I have recently fallen into the deepest respect for spiritually. I have fallen for her heart with all of mine in only ways God could create.

She is the co-founder of Iris Ministries, an orphan ministry that has sought out and saved over 10,000 orphans in Mozambique alone. Drop in some several thousand other churches Iris is responsible for planting, hear how they are all still loving strong to this day throughout the Africa nation…not to mention an Iris prsence in the thousands in Brazil, Israel, India, etc…and you have God clamoring nice and loud in all His glory in only the way He can. I adore this woman.

She´s kind of kookie. She´s incredibly Lovely. She can´t speak about God without letting escape the constant utterings of the Spirit…shouts of “Rrrreba,” “Rrrraba,” ”Shamba” and the neck jerking “Whoa” sneak out of her like giggles from a little one. People are undoubtedly caught off and put off by her supernatural sense of things, but I am learning to Love it! She lets things fly like, “I wanna smell like Jesus.”

And I ask…why the heck not!? God is a supernatural God, is He not. So, as I´ve had to learn and still am growing into, I am embarking upon learning from this woman about our supernatural God.

She, aIong with a Irish Pastor God put in my life a few months ago, have caused me to ask some new questions. I wonder often about our (my) conservative walls. Where our healthy religion ends and our straight-jacket spirituality begins? I know a main motivation behind the conservative construction of my walls was to keep a watchful eye out for things like heresy, and compromise. But at some point, those high walls kept and keep my supernatural, freaky sounding, radical Savior Jesus outside as well. 

I´ve heard some churches and pastors call religion, “The ride Jesus rolls up in.”

Last I checked, my Jesus rode a donkey, where He probably dragged his feet along the ground atop the might steed of choice…and He rode clouds from Heaven, with legions of Angels at his back while rockin´a tat. That´s what Jesus rode, and that is how Jesus rolls.

Religion, if pursued as an end in and of itself, to me has only ever had the intimacy and promise of masturbation…feels good at the time, but doesn´t actually give life to anything. 

That said, I love this woman, and I pray many many more sons and daughters of our Father get to meet her and serve in her vision, and hopefully meet with God in giggling, freaky ways that forever change us.


Scotland hugs

October 13, 2008

This video made me think of Heaven. I bet there´s a fair amount of this going on, only signs wouldn´t be needed to attract the affection. Imagine that, hugging and loving on complete strangers without hesitation…no side-hugging, no second guessing, just embracing them, full-on, left and right. That´d be brilliant.


Faintly heard

October 12, 2008

I can barely hear you.

You´re so very softly spoken…

but alive in my distance.

I find myself grinning, as you are always trying to speak to me.

I wonder…

do you know that I can hear you…

that I´ve always heard you?

If you knew,

then I am yours,

for you have shown me what it is to chase someone with wonder in their steps and wild in their eyes…

what it is to traverse whatever distance necessary,

just to be next to them,

warm whispers and all.

If you knew not of your earshot,

then you are the great Lover indeed,

not needing the promise or even the hint of it returned.

I wonder though…

how you have waited? Read the rest of this entry »


The Irish tale of “Stingy Jack”

October 5, 2008

The Tale of the Jack-o´lantern…

As the story goes, several centuries ago amongst the myriad of towns and villages in Ireland there lived a drunkard known as “Jack the Smith, or “Stingy Jack” as he´s now known. Jack was known throughout the land as a deceiver, manipulator, and otherwise dreg of society. On one fateful night the Devil overheard the tale of Jack’s evil deeds and silver-tongue. Unconvinced (and envious) of the rumors, the Devil went to find out for himself whether or not Jack lived up to his vile reputation.

Typical of Jack, he was drunk and wandering through the countryside at night when he came upon a body on his cobblestone path; the body with an eerie grimace on its face turned out to be the Devil. Jack in a somber mood realized this was his end, the Devil had finally come to collect his malevolent soul. Jack made a last request: Read the rest of this entry »