Tuesday, July 3, 2012

Daily Bread


So we have now been in Honduras for two weeks.  Two weeks of learning to slow.  Two weeks of every meal at this same table.  Two weeks of no “let’s just go out for dinner” option, and once-a-week trips to the grocery store.

You see, The La Rancho Ebenezer is over an hour away from the city.  And it is not just any hour drive.  A large portion of it is a steep climb over gravel roads that are unlike anything I have ever traveled upon.  It is the kind of bumpy ride that makes you very wary of sitting next to the window in the van, because if you are not compensating for the potholes and unexpected swerves, your head will smack the glass.  I know this from experience.  I feel like a bobble head all the way down the insanely washed out road.  My kids throw up their hands like they are on a roller coaster and cry “weeeee – weeeee – weeeee” all the way home.  And last week, Ellie threw up at the bottom.  She was just all shook up.  Mmmm –mmm – mmm – mmm – mmm - yeah – eh – eh.

And here’s the really tricky thing for me.  We only go to town once a week.  Oh, yeah.  I did not realize the implications of this on every day living.  Simple questions like “Can we have milk?” results in me whipping open the fridge door and suspiciously eyeing the level of the opaque white gallon container, mentally counting the days until the next wagon ride down the Hon-D’Oregon trail, and trying to figure out if we are going to make it, as if our very survival depends on milk.  But let’s just say there have been multiple meals in which I stand over the pot stirring or over the dough kneading and praying God will stretch it to feed our expanded family of 8 (or more, as we have welcomed many to our table), because the pantry is nearly empty and I am running out of tricks up my sleeve to MacGyver into meals.

Add to this the very exciting element of undependable power lines and the now very familiar black outs of varying lengths.  Oh yeah, baby.  I miss OG&E (Oklahoma Gas and Electric) and the beauty of a well-constructed infrastructure.  Those guys are like my new super heroes and next time they drive up in their loud beeping yellow light blinking bucket truck to the breaker outside my house I will go inside immediately and bake them cookies with real butter and the expensive chocolate chips, providing they can fix the juice so my oven will bake.  See, at home, when the power occasionally goes out due to a fallen limb, electric storm, or the occasional insane four-day ice storm or freezing rain that encapsulates everything in sparkly death, those guys don hard hats and arm themselves with chain saws.  They work around the clock to set things right in the grid and bring the Force back into balance.  I think I will now carry a secret flame in my heart for those scrappy pole climbers.  They deserve a parade.

Here, electricity is a privilege, not a right.  Even writing that out shames me, as I consider the way I know most of the world lives.  But how many times have I felt more than a bit miffed that I can’t download very important things fast enough, like the latest Autotune of the news from YouTube (I love those guys!!), or that my show gets interrupted because there is a tornado in the next county and the weather man just has to give us an excruciating blow by blow (it’s an Oklahoma thing), or heaven forbid – the picture is fuzzy

The time we are spending up on this jungle-y mild weathered mountain is killing something ugly in me.  It is not just the power outages that are chipping away at some deeply entrenched pride and self-sufficiency, but also things like, oh - the resulting loss of the some of the precious food reserves I already am worried will not last us the whole week, the feeling like we will not have enough, and the blasted inconvenience of the power fizzling out one hour before I have to feed eight very hungry people when I am tired and only want to get through dinner so I can plop all the grouchy folks, including me, in front of a feature film and zone out from my caged misery for at least two good hours, then tuck everyone in bed before my hair self-ignites and I outwardly morph into the angry freak of nature I have brewing inside.

Among other things.

But yes, Friday evening rolled around and I found myself staring into a nearly empty fridge and counting the meals to make and mouths to feed until the after-church Sunday shopping trip.  My options were quite limited.  As I struggled with a nagging fear of starving to death (As if! I could live off the reserves in my thighs for a good four weeks), I struggled with the greater sin of ingratitude.  Of looking into my pantry and my life at the moment and accusing my precious Father that this, whatever it was before me, was not good enough. 

Last year my precious mentor, Diane, and I read the book, “One Thousand Gifts” by Ann Voskamp.  If one reads it with a heart open and a desire to embrace the heady truths it poetically weaves, it is a game changer indeed.  But Friday, I found myself in front of the open cabinets, rummaging through my sub-par stores and grumbling in my heart.  All I wanted to do was pick up my sweet little iPhone, punch the single magic button that offers a world of ease and information at just one little touch and sweetly command it through gritted teeth, “Call Pizza Shuttle” and pick up a hot dinner in less than 20 minutes.  But this was not an option, not in the least.  So, I was forced to deal with my ugly heart.

I stood there and pulled down flour, yeast, and oil.  My only option.  Bread.  Yes, we can live on bread.  A stale plan formed in my mind: some sort of fusion focaccia trio (not at all able to be mistaken for pizza for there was very little cheese) one with leftover chicken bits and lots of spices to cover over its barrenness, one sprinkled with a handful of slightly slimy lunch meat and the remaining cheddar scraps, and one with cinnamon, butter and brown sugar to try and end well to redeem the poverty of my offering.  Done.

But my heart was still angry. Still accusing.  Still not still.  I kneaded that triple batch of dough with gritted teeth, wondering if we would have enough, and feeling more than a little trapped on The La Ranch.  The sounds of a wild game of futball wafted into my kitchen from the campo just above our Casa Shalom.  But my heart would not reach for the joy the moment held. 

Halfway through my very aggressive dough making, the Spirit (Friend, Helper, Teacher) whispered to my heart, “Kristin, what is in your hands?”  I looked down, my scarred hands covered in white flour, submerged in warm, soft, heavy dough, and plenty of it.  Daily bread.  Manna.  Just enough for today, but more than enough really.  My bowl was full of it, my hands immersed in it, up to my elbows in it.  My heart softened and turned to the Bread of Life.  And I picked up again the training of my heart towards eucharisteo, taking whatever is given and giving thanks for it, no matter what.  For you see God is always good and I am always loved.  Always. 

The bread transformed into a mound of promise, a bowl full of joy.  Warm, fragrant and delightful, it held the nutrients and everything my expanded table of 8 needed for today.  I held what was given to me, the option I had, and I gave thanks.  I thought of the widow in the bible whom Elijah was sent to, who originally had only a little flour and oil, just enough to make one last meal to feed she and her son, and then slowly starve, and suddenly my meager meal turned into a feast of provision.  If given to the Lord, it would be enough, just enough each day to sustain us.  It wasn’t about bread anyways, it was about gratitude and trust, both of which I had less of than pantry stores.  I patted our dinner now with gentle gratitude, covered it with a clean towel in an oiled bowl, and set it on the oven to rise.  And right as I was reaching out to preheat the oven to aide the rising of our dinner and the moment’s redemption of my deflated heart, the power zipped off.

Oh yeah.  Bleep.  Nothing.  Zip.  Nada.

Crickets, baby.

My left eyebrow shot up, and my lips puckered.  Ah-ha.  I turned inward and I swear the Helper had a little holy smirk upon his ethereal visage.  “Very funny, God.  I appreciate the humor of your timing, but seriously now, bring it back on.  I gotta bake this holy manna you have given.”  And his very smarty pants response?  “Ah, Kristin, but man does not live by bread alone…”

Very funny, oh Master of all the Universe.  Very funny.

I waited, no dice.  I went out onto the campo to watch the late afternoon futball frolicking.  I just knew that the power would zip on right when I really needed it.  God was just having a little fun with me.  He’s funny like that, you know.

But an hour later, when I really needed it to heat my oven, the electricity remained off.  The clock was ticking, the seven pairs of shoes were 30 minutes away from being kicked off outside and the little people they carried inside would be hovering in my personal space in the not-so-big kitchen asking the inevitable “What’s for dinner?” line every mother loooooooves to hear when the plan is not working out as, well, planned. 

I needed some serious help.  I assessed the situation and went to the front closet to rummage through my options.  I needed a stovetop idea, for we have a gas range.  I came up with one dusty can of diced tomatoes, one tube of tomato paste, and two sleeves of pasta – one spaghetti and one linguini.  Voila!  It’s I-talian night, people.  I found an emergency loaf of white bread in the deep freeze and toasted it on the tortilla flat iron as the pasta boiled and I tried to conjure red sauce out of my random tomato products. 

As evening fell the darkness encroached quickly with no lights to be flicked on at the touch of a finger.  Everyone came in hungry and tired, washed hands and sat down to my thrown together meager offering.  The first option I originally begrudgingly formed out of flour and oil now lovely and moundy and risen looked like the Promised Land, all flowing with milk and honey.  My watery red sauce and sticky pasta seemed a pitiful plan B, indeed. 

Kensi, one of the 10-year-old girls we are caring for, rummaged under the kitchen sink (I always pray against roaches when I open those mysterious doors beneath the sink) and produced a random assortment of candles.  We lit the motley crew of wax with wicks and the table transformed into a child’s delight.  Kate, my eldest, nearly began to quiver with elfin glee, “ooooooooh mom, plain pasta with salt – my favorite!  And by candle light…!  I hope the power goes out every night!”  And the frustration of the situation crystallized into unexpected beauty.  We bowed our heads to pray and I truly gave thanks for all of it; the near empty fridge, remaining bag of flour, risen dough punched down and stuck in the slowly thawing freezer, the pan of weepy red sauce, white toast, and sticky spaghe-uini.  When seen through the eyes of a child, this dinner was not some mishappened afterthought – it was a candlelit feast to be treasured and remembered!



I settled into my chair, my heart quiet and my bowl full.  This was enough.  In fact, this was good, very good, for it came from the hands and heart of a very humorous, unimaginably loving God who is dying to show me that to truly die to self is to live the fullest life in him.  The richest life.  The not-as-you-planned-or-expected-it-to-be-but-not-in-the-least-disappointing life.  The moment by moment indwelling of the Teacher who will show me the most excellent way, if I stop to ask and always hold up whatever I find in my hands as an offering of thanksgiving and pass it around to share.  And last Friday night, we supped by candlelight atop a mountain somewhere in Central America on a coffee-roasting, blackberry-growing, child-rearing ranch and found our hearts crying out, “Best!  Dinner!  Ever!”  Can we do this again, Papa?



And I would have missed it all if Pizza Shuttle had been within the realm of possibility.

PS - It took me nearly half an hour to get this thing posted with these two pictures.  

Friday, June 29, 2012

Journey to Honduras


As I write I am sitting in a cement block house near the top of a mountain that has no name an hour outside of a city which I cannot spell, much less say right.  I am in Honduras.

Kate sits behind me on the bed James and I are borrowing for another three weeks or so.  She sits and merrily sews fuzzy white yarn with a very blunt needle into plastic canvas.  She is creating a little box with a grinning bunny face upon it.  I have never seen her happier, this creative child of mine.  Nothing brings her greater joy than making things.  Her name, Katherine Joy, means “Pure Joy” and nothing makes her heart sing more than crafting something beautiful out of things others might consider trash.  Her “Collection of Collections” underneath her bed testifies to this gift of hers, making something out of what others quickly dismiss as nothing, nothing of any real value.  A box of used batteries, a box of colorful lids of markers long dried out and thrown away, a box of various glittery things found on the floors of mall playplaces and left over from birthday parties, and many other things waiting for the right moment of inspiration.  This little girl teaches me of our Father, hers and mine, who never wastes anything, and sees value in the things everyone else considers leftovers, trash, or worthless.  In the hands of a Creator, there is nothing worthless.  Everything, even things we label as terrible, painful, a mistake or a waste can come alive to whisper His redemption, sing His majesty, and testify to His unfathomable creativity and ability to make beauty from ashes. 

This I know from my life.  I have experienced hurt, rejection, pain, fear, loss and sorrow so deep I felt if I even began to cry, I would never stop.  How it is that my God has taken the mess and of it made majesty?  He is so amazing, my fingers could never type words eloquent enough to even begin to capture it.  I thank Him for the creative process He is working in me, in James and my marriage, in our family of five, in our journey Home.  After all, every morning we are given the gift of waking up is one day further in our journey to Home.  I want to travel well.  And take as many sojourners with me as Papa allows.  Every day we live, we are one day closer to Home.

Speaking of journeys, you may wonder how it is we came to Honduras for nearly a month of our summer.  Mostly for my own clarification and processing, I will write it out here.

James and I met at Ouachita Baptist University in Arkadelphia, Arkansas.  (Oh yeah, we're going way back...)  We fell in love and a great many other things happened soon after that, including but not limited to a plane crash, a two-month hospitalization resulting from a life-altering injury, a six-month engagement and resulting marriage, and a courtroom battle fought against a major airline.  And that was the first 18 months of our journey together.  (Please imagine me throwing back my head and laughing loudly, not out of the bitter cynicism that once infected my soul, but out of crazy joy from all that God has delivered us through and from.) 

During our first days of falling in love, the Spring of 1999, we often went for long, lazy walks in the sultry Arkansas spring evenings.  Even now, over 13 years later, the scent of honeysuckle wafting on waves of humid evening air makes my heart go pitter-patter.  I am right back there, strolling lazily along, hand in hand with this tall, dark Asian fellow that just months before was nothing but an awkward missionary kid that I always mistook as a foreign exchange student who spoke English really well.  But I digress.

I am not sure how it happened the first time, but it became a pretty common event for us to end up on a professor and his wife’s porch not far from campus, confiscating their porch swing for the evening.  If we were really fortunate, they might come out and visit with us.  Bryan and Leigh Anne were actually not much older than we, maybe five years, but they had recently returned to Ouachita after his graduating law school.  He was legal counsel for the University and taught an occasional class, one of which James had been in the semester before.  She worked in the Admissions office.  As I mentioned, very shortly after, just around four months after James and I started our journey of falling in love, I was in a major airline disaster traveling with a choir from Ouachita.

I had to stay home in Oklahoma the following fall.  During this time, James and I wrote letters, occasionally called, and emailed back and forth.  Oh, that was a miserable and lonely time that seemed to stretch on forever.  We got engaged that Christmas (1999) and I returned to campus, and began to plan a wedding.  When the weather warmed up, James and I found ourselves again on Bryan and Leigh Anne’s porch.  It was only one year later, yet we had traveled thousands of very difficult emotional miles, and were still struggling in countless ways.  Our time on their porch and later in their young-marrieds fellowship class at Park Hill Church was life-giving in so many ways.  I so needed to feel normal when everything in our lives was spinning madly out of control.  They let me be me, the me they had known before and didn’t openly pity me like I felt from so many.  I was such a hot mess.  I chuckle to think what mess I brought to their peaceful porch all those evenings.  Regardless, they were a haven indeed and we watched them closely, both their personal walks with Christ and the way they tended their marriage.  Bryan gave James and I wise and biblical counsel regarding our decision to sue the airline.  There were so many screaming voices in our heads and pressure from all manner of outside sources about what to do, his steady voice speaking truth and grace and wisdom was like cool water in a scorching desert.  God used them, their personal lives, and the peace of their porch to minister to us in a very chaotic time in our lives.

Our friendship has continued.  We actually have children around the same ages, and secretly have plans to do some very stealth and skillful smooshing together of them to see if anything sticks relationally in the years to come.  I admire deeply their purposeful parenting, the order and intentionality of the way Leigh Anne runs her home, and Bryan’s self-effacing humor.  In the twelve years since we have left Arkadelphia, Bryan has become Dean of the School of Business and God has grown in he and James a common passion: the ministry of business as missions. 

Over the past few years they have read the same books and entered into email conversations with a few other like-minded (read: brilliant, God-loving, passionate for the spread of the Gospel) guys who desire to hash out hard questions like how best to help the poor without creating a cycle of dependence?  They like to kick around abstract economic theories and then ask the hard questions of how does this apply to us personally and to God’s people, the church?  How can we effectively do what he has called us to do – take care of the poor, the widows, the orphans?  This kind of think tank stuff makes my head spin and I thank God for giving James Bryan and a handful of other really clever guy friends to wrestle over these things with. 

So around October of last year, Bryan called James with an offer.  A ‘friend of a friend’ kind of opportunity.  An “Hey, I got a guy” kind of connection.  So, it turns out that Bryan had a connection with a family serving as house parents in a children’s residency program outside of Tegucigalpa, Honduras.  The program is sort of a mountain farm that grows amazingly delicious coffee and blackberries out of which they make jam and different teas.  The idea was to travel to Honduras with Bryan and a small team of business students from Ouachita to Rancho Ebenezer in order to see the operation and get to know the business side of it in order to try and find a market niche for their products so they can become more sustainable.  Please imagine the excited gleam in my husband’s chocolate brown eyes, because for a business-as-missions kind of guy, this opportunity was hitting the jackpot.  The small team left in January for a whirlwind tour of the facilities, the Ranch and the ministry.

Upon his return, James found it difficult to describe what he had experienced.  The opportunity for growth, the beauty of the ministry, the structure of the homes, and the delightful children stole his heart.  There are around two dozen of them, ranging in ages from 3 to 17, plucked from the streets and removed from homes in the inner city in which their parents were unable to care for them.  On the ranch, they are growing up in homes with house parents who love the Lord, and are protected, cared for, taught well and growing into God-fearing, Christ-loving, gospel-spreading Hondurans.  It was just the kind of thing James and I had originally been passionate about in our early years of marriage as we hashed out what our calling might be as a couple and now as a family. We are hungry to find programs that support Christian ethnic people in their own countries to take in orphaned or abandoned children who desire to raise deeply passionate Christian young people who can shake up their own country for Jesus.  I am a huge supporter of adoption both domestic and international, but I can’t help but ask the question, “how can a nation rise up into healing if we deplete it of its most precious natural resource, its children”?  We have long desired to support this very kind of ministry, one that is empowering local people to care for their own, in their own language and culture to, by God’s grace, raise up a generation of world changers launched into their native culture and context.  James came home excited for me to see it for myself, this coffee-roasting, blackberry-growing, Honduran kid-rearing ranch high on a mountain somewhere in central America. 

So, we decided to visit as a family this summer.  Bryan and Leigh Anne also planned to come with us (perhaps the initial stage of our stealth plan to smoosh our children together, yes I know they are all 10 and under, but the pictures might come in handy at the rehearsal dinner…).  We threw some dates back and forth and entered into conversations with the staff of World Gospel Outreach about a short trip to have the Rancho Ebenezer experience. 

About mid-March we received an email simply asking, “Instead of a four-day trip, would you consider something more along of the lines of a six-week visit?  We are in need of some substitute house parents when a missionary couple goes on furlough for the summer…”

Whoa.

Last fall I devoured an autobiography of a young 20-something named Katie whom God has used to launch a ministry in Uganda.  It is called “Kisses From Katie” and she details the radical, amazing journey the Lord has led her on over the past four or so years, so amazing that she has written this autobiography as a 20-something and I cannot wait to watch the rest of her story unfold, for there are many chapters left to be lived.  In one of the chapters she simply states (I do not have my copy with me here – so I am loosely quoting from memory and will fix it later) “People say I must be ‘special’, that God has ‘special’ plans for my life.  All I do is simply wake up and say “yes!” to whatever it is God has for me that day.  All I do is what He gives me for that day.”  And there she is, a single white 20-some year old female, now an adoptive mother to around a dozen Ugandan girls and operating a ministry that feeds and provides school fees and uniforms for hundreds of Ugandan children.  I suppose instead of saying “Yes to the Dress”, she has trained herself to say “Yes to the Mess”, and trusts God to see it through, after all, it was His idea in the first place.

Well, James and I have often been overwhelmed with the needs of this world, the reality of the suffering and hurt and loss and depravity and exploitation of innocence.  Where do we even begin to help the hurting, to find ways to reach out to those who do the hurting?  Where do we even begin to meet the staggering practical needs all around this world, always with the goal of feeding the greater hunger of spiritual starvation with the Bread of the Life, Jesus Christ?  Well, we are learning to simply wake up and say yes.  We can only be obedient with the opportunities we are offered.  We are only asked to do what is placed before us.

So, when the question was asked “how about six weeks instead of four days?” the answer was simple.  What can we do with this opportunity given?  We consulted our calendars and said yes to the dates we felt our family could offer.

And here we are on a mountain, in a cement block house, somewhere in central America.  I am still not totally sure I can find Honduras on a map, but I tackled the grocery store yesterday afternoon with the 17-year old Fany as my right-hand gal (Who am I kidding?  She was really in charge of me, poor thing.)  And today we Chengs begin week 2 of cooking and caring for, playing and laughing with three of those little people James and I decided long ago we wanted to be passionate about.  A precious national and spiritual resource, redeemed from the streets and the hands of broken parents with broken hearts who were for countless reasons unable to care and provide for them, taken up on a mountain farm and tenderly grown into something beautiful by the grace of our Lord.

I love our Creator.  He indeed makes all things new.  Especially me.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Learning to Listen

Today is May 12, 2012.  It has been over a year since I have really written anything.  Over a year since I turned off my facebook account.  Over a year since my mother in law died. A year of radio silence, facebook silence, blog silence.

Yet my hands so often reach for and pick up the laptop, logging in yet again to email, hungry for something I cannot find.  My fingers still so often enter in my credit card number again to get that thing, whatever it is, trying yet a different angle to scratch an itch I cannot ever seem to really pinpoint, always just beyond my fingertips.  I go to the fridge and rifle through it for something that I never seem to really find, shovel in another fistful of something salty or sweet, in reality trying to fill the bottomless, yawning cavern in my soul with a tiny toy plastic spade. 

It has been over a year since my friend Salli sent me a link to the blog of a woman whose writing has changed my life.  Over a year since I bought the book and began to read its life-changing message of learning and keeping the practice of counting the gifts, the abundant grace gifts all around.  Asking God to open my eyes and my heart to his unending mercy and grace gifts all around.  Even when my heart feels dead within my and my dry, thirsty soul reaches for things that will not satisfy.  When my hands again pick up my phone and send out random texts to good friends about trivial things, but really asking, “Am I ok?”  “Are you there or am I really alone?”.  No matter the trivial subject, is that not often the real message?  “Do I matter?”  “Do I count?”  Am I seen?”

Over a year of trying to pull away, and only just now am I really turning in, trying to learn to listen to the Spirit of God.  Yes, I am just now, just really now am I taking a pen and paper and sitting in silence.  I am only a few days into this practice of listening.  And you know what?  After a year of striving to create a vacuum into which He can speak, I am only just now turning in and finally, well, finally…

…listening.

Ah-ha.

And you know what.  If I sit still and bow low and quiet my heart, He speaks.  His word rises up in my heart.  Still and quiet a book, chapter and even verse number will come to my mind, I turn to it and my breath catches in my chest. 

He is speaking to me

The God of the Universe, through the quiet whisper of the Helper promised by the truest Revelation of Himself, the Son, speaks to me

Whoa.

I am undone. 

That first morning I sit in the big blue chair under the lamp my bother gave me for Christmas, its soft yellow light spilling over my white cotton gown, an oasis of light in the still darkened house. 

Do not be deceived, I have nearly lost the discipline of daily rising before my wee ones.  By some miracle, I stumbled down the hall and into His grace.

He was waiting for me.

I shyly pile around me my bible, journal, and a new little devotion book.  It is almost awkward.  Like being naked for the first time in front of James.

Spiritually I disrobe, and stand before him.  I am starving in the one way I need most to be filled.

I turn my heart to the God of the Universe, and ask for him to speak.  I sit.  I wait.

His whispers to me begin with the phrase, “Arise my love, my Fair one, the winter is gone a new season is here…”  My heart quickens within me.  I jot it into my journal, first contact! 




“I know this!”, I think, “I know this!  This is scripture.  This is His word – now where was that?”  My hands instantly reach for my laptop, just a few inches away, instantly seeking to utilize the world wide web of information at my fingertips, a god to which I constantly appeal through the séance of google – desiring what Eve first lusted after when she sold us all out: knowledge. 

Perhaps it is called the web because it is a trap into which I am so often entangled. 

I often pluck this fruit and sink my teeth into the juicy stuff it offers, and sell my own soul for trifles of useless knowledge, mere morsels of tantalizing entertainment and before I know it I have wasted hours of my precious resource: time. 

He whispers again, “Be still.  Listen.  Do not seek it, let me give it to you.” 

I pull back my hand, not wanting to rip into this gift before it is given.  This is something new, this waiting for it to be given. 

“Psalm 72”, whispers the King to my heart.

I read it.  I sit.  Nothing jumps out.  I wait.  My eyes linger on the print on the page.  Words that stand forever, printed on fragile onion skin that will one day crumble into dust.  Then I see at the top, “A Psalm of Solomon.”  My spirit quickens within me. 

And again, that quiet voice, “Song of Solomon, Chapter 3.”

I flip to it, my heart beating a little faster.  I read it.  It is juicy. 



“Are you gonna get up and look for me?  Go out and seek me?  Reach first for me?  How bad do you want me?”

My appetite is stirred.  I want more.  I want to seek him, I want to listen – to really hear him, and to respond to him in ways I never have before.  I want to find him, and cling to him, and not let go of him until I am satisfied.  Oh yeah, I am all in, more than I have been in a long time.  I linger over the passage, finally stilled.  Striving ceases.  I do not need more information, I need more silence, I need to wait until what I really need is given.  Even the waiting can be a gift.  I need the stillness in my whirling world.  He knows this, this lover of my soul.  I wait with great anticipation. 

 My eyes fall on the words just above chapter 3 on the very to which page he led me so gently.

They leap out and call to me, an aria of invitation welling up and bursting forth with tenor joy:

“My lover said to me, ‘Rise up, my beloved, my fair one, and come away.  For the winter is past, and the rain is over and gone.  The flowers are springing up, and the time of singing birds has come, even the cooing of turtledoves.  The fig trees are budding, and the grapevines are in blossom.  How delicious they smell!  Yes, spring is here!  Arise, my beloved, my fair one, and come away!’”  
(Song of Songs 2: 10-13 NLT)

Puccini sung by Pavarotti on his best day ain't got nothing on my lover Jesus.  His voice cascades over my thirsty soul like living water from an eternal spring, cool, refreshing, and everything I have been seeking, longing for, that itch that I cannot seem to scratch that is always out of reach, no longer tormenting, that hunger so deep and elusive, satisfied.  

He has been waiting for me.  And finally I hear, turn, and respond.  

Whoa.

I got bumps on my goose.

He is speaking to me.  He is speaking to me.

The God of the Universe, through the quiet whisper of the Helper promised by the truest Revelation of Himself, the Sonspeaks to me.

After over a year of silence, he is speaking to me.

The winter is past, the rain is over and gone…