• the truth about hard things

    A year ago, I stood in front of a hundred women and made them repeat after me, “I can do hard things.”

    We were talking about studying our Bibles, acknowledging the discomfort of entering unfamiliar territory, and our tendency to cut and run when things get hard. Growth happens in the tension, I assured them. As we persevere in the hard work of studying the Word, it penetrates our hearts and renews our minds. So we can tell our brains to pipe down; we can breathe deeply; we can do the hard things.

    I felt pretty confident after that: I can do hard things. And I loved that it became a mantra of our women’s discipleship efforts–this challenge to one another to do the things we may not feel like, but which we know are ultimately for our good.

    I love studying my Bible. I don’t say that to display my piety but rather to admit that this “hard thing” is really not that hard for me. Maybe at some point it was, but really, maybe not. When I heard the gospel 7 years ago and realized I’d been taught wrong my whole life, I couldn’t devour my Bible fast enough. I wanted to read all the books and understand all the things. I wanted to undo years of wrongful thinking and with every discovery, there was more light. And the light was addicting. I couldn’t get enough. Even in dark seasons or busy seasons, the Word was my anchor–words to nourish my soul and steady my feet. In the middle of the night with babies, in the early hours of the morning, on notecards around my house, and in my lap while the kids watched TV, I found a way most days, because the words were life itself.

    This is why I beat the table for women to know the Word, because I simply can’t understand–how can you live without it?

    My mind is a terrifying place even when it’s tethered to scripture–but it’s much, much worse apart from it. It’s not that I’ve been able to study in depth at all points in my life, but time in the Word has been a fixed part of my daily routine for many years now.

    The only conclusion I can reach is this is solely a work of God’s grace. I can’t desire God apart from his work in my heart, but he has faithfully cultivated that desire over the years, and he’s done that primarily by revealing himself to me in his Word.

    There is discipline involved in my pursuit of understanding scripture, but it doesn’t feel like discipline. It’s like eating breakfast. I wake up hungry.

    But it’s not just Bible study that’s not really a hard thing. School was always pretty easy for me. I only had to pay attention to ace a test. And if it was an essay test, I probably didn’t even need to pay attention. (College was a little different, but skipping class might have had something to do with that.)

    I often found courage where others were fearful. For example, I love roller coasters. At youth group camp in the Appalachian mountains, my peers stood trembling on the mountain’s edge, clinging to the ropes and paralyzed from stepping over. I was the first to go, marveling at the rush and the beauty as I repelled down. A couple of years later, I dove head-first off a cliff into the Caribbean. I flew to Chad when I was 16 and home again, alone, to catch another flight to Russia a week later. When I was 19, I volunteered for an internship in Los Angeles without any personal contacts or idea of what I was getting myself into. And I love public speaking.

    These, again, aren’t meant to be examples of my awesomeness but rather my reality. While I might tell people to do hard things, what I haven’t really admitted deep down is that many of these things haven’t been hard for me. I’ve always loved an adventure, a challenge, a change. Come on, guys, we can do hard things!

    I tell it to my kids, too. We can push through the discomfort! We can do things we don’t feel like! We can do hard things!

    Which is why I hate to admit that this move to California has knocked me off my feet. What I once might have found thrilling is now mostly overwhelming. It turns out, I hate doing hard things. I want the comfortable things. I want to shop in a store where everything is where it should be; I want to be surrounded by a crowd of people who know me; I want to send my kids to the basement or backyard while I have coffee with a familiar friend.

    I don’t care if growth happens in the tension; I’m tired of the tension.

    At times, the darkness has hovered so thick I’m not sure I can breathe. I wonder if I’m really just a fraud. Have I even fooled myself?

    I’ve felt this compulsive need to confess to all my friends back home: I can’t do hard things! They’re too hard! Let’s all just go back to bed!

    I want to say my struggles these past months have been humbling, but mostly they’re just humiliating. It turns out I’m weak where I thought I was strong. I’m fearful where I thought I was courageous. I’m self-righteous where I thought I was helpful.

    But there’s grace to be found even in my stubborn refusal to do the hard things.

    By God’s grace, I stumble out to the patio most mornings, cup of coffee in hand and Bible in my lap. I search for hope in those well-worn pages. One morning, the words leap off the page: “This I know, that God is for me” (Ps 56:9). It takes my breath away, this reminder of the God who did not spare his own Son–how will he not also with him graciously give us all things (Rom 8:31)?

    But also these words: This I know.

    And I realize that I do know.

    That even in the midst of the depression and the loneliness and the uncertainty, that in these years, God has been at work in my heart, helping me to dig down deep, setting my feet upon a Rock (Lk 6:48, Ps 40:2). This God-given discipline–this one hard thing–this is how he sustains me (Matt 4:4).

    It’s not that I hold fast to him–it’s that he holds fast to me.

    I wake up hungry, and every morning he spreads a feast and invites me to come and sit–to eat food I haven’t paid for and drink until I’m no longer thirsty (Is 55:1-2).

    He meets me with mercies new every morning. Even when I’ve doubted his goodness. Even when I’ve forgotten the ways that he’s proven his faithfulness. Even when I’ve refused to receive from his hand the good he’s continually provided–new places to belong, new people to love. He reminds me that, though I am faithless, he is faithful (2 Tim 2:13). That when I am weak, he is strong (2 Cor 12:9). That my flesh and my heart fail, time and time again, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever (Ps 73:26). And that he is working, even when I fail to do the hard things (Rom 8:28).

  • on grace and goodbyes

    We spent the weekend saying goodbye. Even though we’ve known for months that these goodbyes would come, they were no less painful. After the whirlwind of loading the trailer and cleaning and making sure everything was gone, I stood alone in my empty living room and fell apart. We only lived in that house for 2-1/2 years, but it’s an adequate representation of our life here.

    When we moved into that house, we learned shortly after that my mother-in-law had stage 4 breast cancer. What we thought would be a season of remodeling and settling into our new home became a season of maximizing time spent with family. But as sweet as those last months with her were, living in the basement of a house with everything upstairs torn apart began to take its toll on us. We would try to squeeze projects into the crevices of our disappearing time, but we lived in a constant state of upheaval. Through that season, our church family faithfully brought meals, chipped the ice off of our driveway, painted our walls, and, in what is still one of the sweetest acts of generosity I’ve been privileged to witness, rounded up a crew of people to come finish our floors so we could actually move into our bedroom and use our kitchen.

    I stood on those floors in my empty living room and cried tears of gratitude. For that house, for those people, for our life here.

    I moved to Fargo in 2007. Though Fargo had never really been “home” to me, I was pregnant with Hadley and needed my mom. But I dreamt of leaving the moment I arrived. I would just take a year or two to get my bearings, then head back to the city, I thought. I never imagined living here for ten years. I never imagined what this life would become.

    On Saturday, I went to some friends’ house to drop off something I’d borrowed. As I drove the way to their home, I noticed how familiar it was. Seven years ago, this was a well-worn path. These were the people who welcomed Hadley and I into their family, who told me over and over again about Jesus, who taught me what it looks like to follow him, who protectively interrogated by now-husband and who helped us learn how to be married and raise children together. These are the people we turn to in crisis, the ones who bring a team of people over to clear off our driveway and finish our floors. Despite the fact that recent years and the natural course of our lives have created more distance between us, there is no being prepared to say goodbye to people like that.

    On Sunday, we braced ourselves for our final goodbyes at church. As I listened to my pastor’s sermon, I remembered that Sunday I sat there seven years ago, waiting for him to say something that would give me an excuse not to come back. Instead, he preached the gospel and I was ruined. As we’ve navigated the messy and beautiful paradox of life in a church, these people have become our family. They are the people I’ve learned from and alongside. Through conflict and crisis, joy and grief, these people have become fixtures in our lives. We can’t picture life without them.

    In the midst of the grief, I’m pondering grace. I’ve been thinking how God’s grace is so vast–there’s his grace that saves us and grace that sustains us. But through this transition, I’ve realized that one of the primary ways he extends his grace to us is through his people. His comfort in our grief was in the form of people who cried with us and supported us. His provision was in the form of people who brought meals and watched our kids and helped with house projects. His love was in the form of sweet friendship. His growth in the form of the mentorship and discipleship of others.

    When the Bible says that God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble, I think it applies here. In order to experience the grace of the family of God, you have to be willing to need it. I can’t say that we’ve always been so humble as to say we need it, but more often humbled by God’s gracious provision through his people in spite of our pride. I can testify to his grace at work in my people–they have been loved deeply in Christ, and that love has poured over into my family through the years.

    When the Israelites are standing on the border of the Promised Land, after 40 years of wandering in the wilderness, Moses lays out the law one more time and warns the people not to stray from their God. He says:

    “And when the LORD your God brings you into the land that he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give you—with great and good cities that you did not build, and houses full of all good things that you did not fill, and cisterns that you did not dig, and vineyards and olive trees that you did not plant—and when you eat and are full, then take care lest you forget the LORD, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.” (Deut 6:10-12)

    I thought of this warning as I stood in my empty living room that friends had cleaned, on floors I didn’t install, surrounded by walls I didn’t paint, having emptied our fridge of food I didn’t prepare, knowing that a trailer sat outside that was loaded with the help of many. These words warn me, too: “Take care lest you forget.”

    My ten years in Fargo have been marked by God’s grace. The Lord graciously drew me to this place where I could encounter the truth of my wretchedness and his holiness. Where I could be confronted in my prideful self-sufficiency and learn for the first time what grace actually is. Where I could learn to love God and share my life with others. Where I could learn how to be a part of this family God was growing around me.

    This is the place where God rescued me. Where I brought my babies home. Where I met and married my husband. Where we loved and said goodbye to foster children. Where we said goodbye to my mother-in-law. Where we have lived and celebrated and laughed and wept alongside our people.

    Growing up and moving a few times, my mom would always insist to me, “Home is where your people are.” That truth has taken root in me, and as I look at this little family God has grown, I’m grateful to know that I’m bringing home with me. And yet, “my people” have expanded over the last ten years. My home is not this house, but in some ways it is this place and these people. There’s a grief in this goodbye that I’ve yet to fully swallow.

    And yet, I want to take care, lest I forget God’s faithfulness these ten years. Lest I forget his love and provision through his people. Lest I forget that all that we’ve gained here was by God’s grace. Lest I forget that it’s God’s grace that will continue to sustain us as we go from here.

    As I say goodbye and prepare for this next chapter, I do so marked by my seasons here in ways I’m sure I still don’t comprehend. I’m so deeply sad to leave, and so overwhelmingly grateful.

  • This meaningful life: the plain things

    I spent a lot of years believing the gospel was, “Follow your dreams!” God wants you to live out your full potential, they told me. So I quit college and moved to Los Angeles. It’s ironic, if you really think about it–that I didn’t need college to reach my full potential. Despite having no plan, no money, no life experience, and no expertise, I moved to Los Angeles to follow my dreams. (More like follow my boyfriend. And the sunshine. Dreams are loosely defined at 20. #IguessIamaMillennial)

    Even when I encountered the true gospel, it was radical Christianity that beckoned me. Francis Chan, Shane Claiborne, David Platt–they invited me into a life that rejected the American dream and embraced complete surrender of my time and resources. I sold what I could and put my house on the market, certain that my next step of faith would catapult me into a life of radical obedience (and extraordinary experiences).

    And really, it did. But not in the ways I imagined.

    Marriage, parenting, life and ministry in a local church–I never would’ve applied “complete surrender of my time and resources,” “radical obedience,” and “extraordinary experiences” to these ordinary aspects of life, and yet here I am, poured out and, when I’m willing to step back and see it, blessed.

    One Christmas, my sister Taryn gave me a simple gift: a picture frame containing the words to John 21:25. We share a love for words, and these are among our favorites:

    “Now there are also many other things that Jesus did. Were every one of them to be written, I suppose that the world itself could not contain the books that would be written.”

    Besides the personal encounters and miracles that happened during Jesus’ public ministry that weren’t recorded, there’s the reality that he lived 30 years in obscurity before emerging into the public eye.

    “What in your life won’t be recorded?” Taryn asked me in the accompanying note, “Far more than for Jesus. We do not need to fill volumes with great words or great deeds. We are the great things–the plain things–Jesus did that I suppose even the whole world would not have room for. I promise that is all we need.”

    The note hangs before me as I sit down to write, as I scroll Facebook and see the extraordinariness everyone else seems to have, as I hide in my office for some peace and deep breathing before I head back into the house full of life that has somehow become my own.

    These are the plain things. The things that go unwritten and unseen. The things that make up a life.

    Since reengaging my faith these past years, I’ve been drawn to the life of Moses. Particularly to that zealous activism that he thought would be the moment of deliverance for his people (Acts 7:25), but instead was the source of his banishment. Following a life of luxury in Pharaoh’s household, Moses spent 40 years as a shepherd–an occupation his Egyptian upbringing considered detestable (Gen 46:43).

    I wonder how long it took for his resentment to subside. I wonder when he stopped beating himself up or analyzing where he took a wrong turn. I wonder when humility took root in his heart. I bet he didn’t notice. I’m guessing he didn’t realize he was ready to be used by God–it was just the process of time, the unnoticed work of God in his heart. And one day, he found himself standing on holy ground.

    This is how God works: not with major benchmarks, but causing faithfulness to take root, day by day, as we learn to depend on his grace to persevere in ordinary life. Through diaper changes and dirty dishes. Through boring jobs and forgotten dreams. Through mistakes and failures and less-than-impressive passing moments. Through the plain things.

    Most days, I resent the plain things. I long for adventure and meaning and I’m certain those things aren’t found here. I start to feel a little frantic, wondering what I’m doing with this life God has entrusted to me; I wonder how I ended up here, and is this really where I’m meant to be? Opportunities to write and speak and participate in the ministry of the church have helped at times, but there’s always this restlessness beneath the surface.

    This fall, when plans for our next step began to take shape in my heart and mind, and when they began to pan out in real life, I could hardly catch my breath. This is it! Our time has finally come! Back to California! Off to adventure and uncertainty and big, beautiful dreams.

    When Jordan and I sat through the information sessions and Q&As at Westminster Seminary California, God’s call became all the more clear in my heart and mind. This was undoubtedly the place God was calling my husband. This was his grand adventure. These were his people. But the reality of what that meant for me began to sink in as well. This wasn’t my grand adventure–at least not in the ways I imagined. I imagined that we’d pursue education together, preparing for a life of exciting ministry side by side. And while I still hope for such an outcome, the pathway isn’t what I expected. Spending my days homeschooling my children, doing what I can to support my husband–these feel far more ordinary than the California adventure I envisioned. It feels like another season of waiting.

    But the truth of the plain things is this: the in-between times are really the times.

    If I look at the plain things as something to endure to get to the “good stuff,” I’ll miss what the Lord has put before me right now–the little hearts he’s shaping right in front of my face, the adventure to be found as I live in gratitude and wonder, the ways he wants to work in my heart right now.

    If I stop fighting against this ordinary life appointed for me, I start to realize: I’m not waiting, I’m living.

    As I head to California and take up this blog, I’m laying down my arms in this fight against the plain things. I’m breathing deeply, ready to engage this life before me, filled with dirty dishes and sticky fingers. Wholly dependent on God’s grace, I’m leaning into the ordinary, believing that even in these mundane moments, I’m standing on holy ground.

    Photos by Northern Stories.

  • parenting as a means of grace {& a poem by Hadley}

    I didn’t necessarily choose to become a mother, but God in his grace chose it for me. Despite my sinfulness and foolishness, my “consequence” turned out to be one of the greatest blessings of my life–my daughter, Hadley.

    I was sharing that with a friend this week, recalling the ways Hadley was a means of God’s grace to me. Because of her, I moved home. The depth of relationship I have now with my parents and siblings is in part due to our moves around the country, but it’s largely owed to those most recent years we spent together again, with most of us back under one roof, all of us in one city for at least a little while. My family loved my daughter and supported me, collectively taking the place as Hadley’s other parent. A few years later, my brother would walk Hadley down the aisle at my wedding, this symbol of my family relinquishing that role to my new husband. They stepped back into “just” grandparents, aunts, and uncle, but not without holding Hadley tight and making sure they were entrusting her to a man worthy to be called her dad. They handed her over to my husband confidently, but we all knew he had big shoes to fill.

    Though I don’t remember it clearly, I figure Hadley was part of the reason I went back to church. Even though I felt the need to protect her from God, I was also lonely. Being 22 and a parent made it difficult to make friends, and eventually I found myself in a church, drawn once again into the community that can be found there. Later, I landed in a church where the gospel rang loud and clear, penetrating my heart and bringing me to life. I sat in a living room filled with strangers and wept as I confessed my unwillingness to dedicate Hadley to God–my fear that he couldn’t be trusted–the reality that I’d been running from him for years. I don’t remember the words that comforted me, but I remember that they were gentle and welcoming, that they assured me of God’s goodness, that I started to believe maybe he was my good Father, and that maybe he could be Hadley’s, too.

    My entire journey of faith is intertwined with my growth as Hadley’s mom. It’s been a means of God’s grace to me. A means through which he drew me to himself. A means through which he reveals to me who he is, reminds me of my desperation – of his power in my weakness, of his sufficiency in my inadequacy.

    I know we go through seasons as parents where we’re confident we’re failing, and we’ll all pat each other’s shoulders and say that we’re all doing the best we can. And deep down, we’ll know that may or may not be true. Am I doing the best I can? Am I stewarding these little hearts entrusted to me?

    Lately, I’m not sure the answer is yes. Lately, I’m tired and a little frantic. Following a season of feeling most like myself, there’s this growing distance between my kids and I, and also this pending deadline where we’ll all be together, packed into a tiny house, wondering how we’re going to make it through the day without killing each other.

    And, like most moms who feel like we’re failing, I forget about the grace. I forget that it doesn’t all rest on my shoulders. That just as God is shaping me in the mess, so he is shaping my children.

    He calls us to be faithful participants, but it’s his work, and he’s faithful even when we’re faithless.

    This morning, I went to “Muffins with Mom” with Hadley. Hadley had signed up to read a poem she’d written, and her words took my breath away. Afterwards, I sat in the car and wept. Certainly in poems written to honor your mother you don’t say all the terrible things, but to think she could say such beautiful, kind things about this monster of a mother I’ve been–to think that perhaps this is how she’ll remember me–perhaps these will be the attributes we share. Only by grace.

    This morning, I experienced God’s grace through the simple love of a daughter for a sinful mother. It’s just a Mother’s Day poem. But it’s also a reminder of the privilege it is to be this child’s mother. And it’s hope–hope for this next season of deepening friendship with my children, of growth as a faithful steward of their hearts, of ever-increasing dependence on the God who lavishes grace upon grace.

    Here’s Hadley’s poem:

    Collaborative, creative, courageous, and kind
    Critical thinking and using her mind
    Adventurous, active, artistic, and all
    She’ll keep going no matter how many falls
    Strategic, scientific, surprising, and sweet
    Being in her presence is always a treat

    Who is this person, strong of heart, mind, and muscle
    Pulling people out the door in a hustle
    Being the best just when you need it
    She is amazing, no one else can beat it

    This person I speak of with this certainty
    Who is so special and amazing to me
    Is my mom sitting right down over there
    I could find her anywhere

    And now my poem is ending like all poems should
    I hope it’s been great, or maybe just good
    But all of this is just to say
    Mom, Happy Mother’s Day

    (Photo by Northern Stories)