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Conversations at Grace Table : on Quiet Hospitality

Feb 18, 2015 Leave a Comment ~ Written by lisha epperson
quiet hospitality_ Looking Up To God_GT21

photo: Grace Table

“But oh! GOD is in his holy Temple! Quiet everyone—a holy silence. Listen!” ‭Habakkuk‬ ‭2‬:‭20‬ MSG

I’m at home with the littlest lovelies. Chailah has a cold and the deal-breaking fever that kept us from attending co-op. It’s cold and quiet and tiny flurries whip through the sky foreshadowing the storm to come. It is well with me. An impending storm and the holy hush that silences a city is perfect for quiet hospitality…indeed the simple celebration of being at home. In this season, my home is the temple. I welcome the silence. It’s sacred.

I’ll make soup. Bake bread. Along with a fair measure of Motrin shots I’ll hug and kiss the cooties away. I’ll have coffee ready when my husband comes home and listen to my teenaged son talk about attending high school next year. I’ll draw angry bird figures with Ade and teach him to play Go Fish. I’ll let Ila stay up late tonight. Maybe over tea we’ll discuss life – woman to woman.

But if someone stopped by today, unannounced, I’m not sure I’d answer the door. I shouldn’t admit that right? For more reasons than I can name here, my family needs all the hospitality I can offer. What we need is quiet. I need to listen for the yes, and for the no. The “as for me and my house WE”. I need to hear God – His holy affirmation of a hospitality that is quiet.

Have a seat with me at Grace Table. I want to tell you more. 

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged God, Grace Table, hospitality, quiet

Give Me Grace : Slow

Dec 27, 2014 19 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

Slow down. Take a deep breath. What’s the hurry?
    Why wear yourself out? Just what are you after anyway? – Jeremiah 2:25

Cease striving and know that I am God” Psalm 46:10

Christmas leaves in its wake an ease I find liberating. The days after, feel slow. The flip side of a whirlwind of preparation reveals a future open wide for reflection. The holy pause of contemplation. A generous helping of selah before the rush of a new year. Suddenly we have time.

A slower pace is perfectly matched for the way I’m hearing from God. Slowing down helps me see Him. When I realize He’s already here I notice Him everywhere. Sort of like my gold Honda odyssey. Since buying one a few years ago, they seem to be everywhere. I see four in a three block walk to the subway – regularly. Gold Honda Odyssey’s are apparently…a thing.

This revelation was an epiphany of sorts and one long in coming. It allowed me to relax into the season with fresh perspective. I can chill out about the to do list because I’ll find God in the middle of my dirty kitchen. He’d take that last-minute late night run to Target. Hold my hand when I feel frustrated. Nothing like a toy kitchen that takes 6 hours to assemble to help you remember the truly meditative process of slow.

Even my walk towards the chaos of Christmas was slow. My choice to “be joy”, make it happen – intentional. There were moments when I had to smile when I didn’t want to, areas of tension smoothed with a deliberate measure of grace…conversations I tried to avoid…that happened anyway. But it’s a choice. I want Him to be the river of peace I walk on.

I want to savor the season, let it linger long, simmering as it were, warm and tasty on my tongue. This season my usual 3,2,1 Jesus jump is a glide. It’s slow and thoughtful…a lyrical melding and continuous motion. It’s about finding myself adrift in quiet conversation – celebrating the flow of communion with God.

What better way to do that than to remember and reclaim family traditions that force me to slow down.

I remember outings with my godmother during the holidays. Every year she’d take us for a Christmas walk. We’d walk around our neighborhood to see holiday decorations. We’d peek in windows. We’d talk and laugh. A brisk walk during the holiday forced us to slow down. Sometimes we’d ride the subway to see the Christmas windows at Lord and Taylor. My husband has similar memories. Why haven’t we done this with our children?

Native New Yorker’s take for granted the beauty of NYC. If you stay here long enough a serious “been there done that” vibe can overtake you. That definitely happened to me. Thankfully, the arrival of LiChai and Ila put it in remission. I wanted to show them everything. Our decision to homeschool was largely influenced by where we live. LiChai and Ila grew up riding around in a double stroller hearing my “Manhattan belongs to me” mantra. The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Central Park, 125th Street, Prospect Park, the Botanic Gardens…we saw and experienced it all. Regularly and on purpose.

More children meant less time. I lost a little of my zeal for all things New York. Mind you, I still loved it but I lost the drive needed to be the biggest promoter of all things New York. I never had the time. It’s a strange paradox. The busier I am the less I enjoy any of the things I’m doing. And the less productive I feel. Is it like that for you?

So living slow in New York means remembering and reclaiming all the things I love about it. Last night we relived a childhood memory and took a walk. No schedule. No appointment necessary and admission was free. Last night slow told a story. Last night I listened.

5th Avenue. Happy children. Department store windows. A cathedral. A door. A star.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace 

~ read more ~

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, children, Christmas, God, last night, New York, slow

Christmas : When You Realize Love Is Already Here

Dec 24, 2014 5 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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We watch and do wait Lord we anticipate…the moment, you choose to appear.

We worship we praise until there’s no debate, and we recognize you’re already here.

Hallelujah, hallelujah, hal-le-lu-jah – Brian Courtney Wilson

We talked about racism after breakfast this morning. Over pancakes LiChai told me about a situation he encountered in class a few weeks ago. He and a few friends were discussing the “N” word. He also wanted to know why racism only involved African-Americans and whites. Why not Mexicans or Asians? I told him about Chris Rocks brilliant piece in the Hollywood Reporter. I reminded him of the shameful past we’re fighting to break free from, the wounds…that just won’t heal. I gave him the breakdown on the complexities of our love hate relationship with THAT word.

In all my dreams of motherhood and parenting I never imagined conversations like this would take up so much of our time. I think I dreamed the dream my parents probably had for me. I dreamed the dream of a better world. He’s 13. Still a little green and super geeky. He likes manga comics and still leans way in when I read to him. He’s old enough to know that the love-filled multi-cultural world of family and friends we created for him isn’t what he’ll always experience when he leaves the nest.

And so the questions, the conversations continue…

Trading the kitchen for the family room Ila opens up with how she overheard two lighter skinned girls call a darker skinned girl ugly. Specifically pointing out skin tone as the reason for her poor looks. Chailah and Ade’ floated in and out of the room dressed up as ninjas while we talked Disney and Barak Obama, the doll test and Native Americans.

We talked a river of words. It couldn’t be stopped. The volatile virus of earthly angst that’s permeated the city all but robbed us of a season of joyful expectancy. But we still want to believe. By His grace we’re a family that knows love wins.

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The time is right for Christmas. This world needs the undeniable truth of an unbelievably scandalous birth to remind us that God is here.

So we pick out and put up trees. We read the Christmas story and endure the labor of advent. We bake cookies and hang stockings. We buy presents and plan celebrations – because we still believe. We have to.

The atmosphere is littered with stories of hate, the threat of war and rampant disease. Racism, the dirty laundry of our American family drama is splayed across our collective consciousness. It is the current cloud that covers the story of love we cling to. But there is love. And love wins. I tell myself over and over – Love wins.

How I got over
How did I make it over
You know my soul look back and wonder
How did I make it over
How I made it over
Going on over all these years
You know my soul look back and wonder
How did I make it over – Mahalia Jackson

I watched Alex Haley’s Roots when I was 11 years old. And The Butler at 46. Huddled together around our floor model tv we watched the evil of slavery come to life on the big screen. Despite claims that Haley’s work is fiction it still exposed the horrors of slavery. Do you remember the whipping of Kunta Kinte or Mariah Carey as Hattie Pearl when the slave owner said he “needed her help in the shed”? The look on her face stays with me. And too, that of her emasculated husband. My children are a little embarrassed by slavery. They see themselves the way God sees them and resist a connection to anything less. They want it to be over and feel uncomfortable seeing images of people that look like them treated so unfairly. So do I. But I want them to know the beautiful history of a people that survived. I re-frame every conversation with “how we got over”.

I grew up with a father whose views were what you might call militant. From my mother, I learned the religion of love. I mourn the tragic loss of any life but I do stand with those who protest police brutality and racism. My faith is big enough to do both. But right now all I feel is peace. I’m quieted by a rumbling urgent wave of silence. God says hush. Growing up, my mother seemed unbearably passive but I see, especially now, the power in her quiet stance. Sometimes love is the only answer to live with. Sometimes love doesn’t say a word. And lately,  prayer-filled silence is all I can offer.

The worst thing that could happen in response to repeated cries for justice happened three days ago. Innocent police officers, serving their community were killed by a lone gunman. This man also took his own life.

Peace, like a river, come quick.

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We should mourn with those who mourn and in this God simply asks for our silence. No words. No debate. It’s the resolved silence, the very voice of death that shifts the paradigm of this battle. May this be the tipping point, where the crux of the message is driven home. Would that it could be finished.

Brian and Mahalia and Stevie are the balm for my soul today. My advent song has no words today. And that’s okay. My praise and worship is a lifting of hands to a holy God who simply says surrender. Maybe I’ll do this until I mean it. Maybe I’ll sit with love until I feel it.

I keep looking for the sweet softness of love swaddled as a baby in a manger. But Jesus isn’t a baby anymore. He’s all grown up. His love eclipses the facts of a familiar birth story. His love is truth. What we experienced as love come down in a manger has exploded – showering the world with fiery sparks. If we pay attention we’ll find burning bushes every where.

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When Jesus returns He’ll look like Michael Jordan. Or Chris Martin from Coldplay. Or maybe like Malala Yousafzai. Maybe Jesus comes now in the rocking chair wisdom of a grandmother when she admonishes us to remember that “two wrongs don’t make a right”. Maybe Jesus huddles with the hobos under the Metro North Tunnel at 106th Street. Maybe we can see Jesus in the tears of the mother of that gunman, as she laments her sons wrong choices and repeated cries for help. Maybe we’ll be about the business of kingdom living instead of creating our own. Maybe Jesus is on Facebook every now and then…disguised as hopeful status update. You know, that message that suggests we simply love one another. Maybe Jesus is in and about everything and if we could see him in all he’d actually be the all that we need.

Maybe..

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Maybe Jesus comes as the Eric Garners of the world. Martyred for a movement…a moment in His story.

We are a community of people groaning towards heaven. We are the weary who grope in the dark of night for a star. We are souls crying out for the union of our disjointed spirits. We crave a communal redemption. If we are not all saved then none of us are. None of us are.

And all I hear is praise. Because if we won’t do it the rocks will..they’ll cry out and sing a heavenly praise and redemption song. His word is for the fallen, the broken, the lame and the sick. His word is the gospel. His word is for the sinner. And that’s all of us. His word picks us up and puts us back together again. All of us.

He’s already here. Jesus is in the middle of the rally. He sits in the tension filled moments when we wonder what’s next. He is the thrill of hope for a jaded world. He is the peaceful resolution to this revolution. He is Jesus.

And He’s already here. He’s in the middle of every choice we make. This Christmas might we choose Him. Before we speak a word, write a post, unfriend a follower. May we not miss him in the middle of the madness.

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Love’s in need of love today
Don’t delay
Send yours in right away
Hate’s goin’ round
Breaking many hearts
Stop it please
Before it’s gone too far – Stevie Wonder

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Posted in Advent in the City, christianity, faith, life, uncategorized - Tagged #TellHisStory, Advent, Brian Courtney Wilson, children, Christmas, dream, God, grace, Jesus, love, Mahalia Jackson, Motherhood, racism, Stevie Wonder

Food and Family : Figuring it Out {a guest post for Grace Table}

Dec 08, 2014 Leave a Comment ~ Written by lisha epperson
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photo : grace table

 “It was very pleasant to savor its aroma, for smells have the power to evoke the past, bringing back sounds and even other smells that have no match in the present. -Tita, Like Water for Chocolate

If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world.” – J.R.R Tolkien

I learned to make pancakes as a Girl Scout and remember the smell of liver and onions simmering in my mother’s kitchen. It’s still a favorite, the scent of food prepared with love, a deep childhood memory. That my mother found time to prepare meals every day amazes me now. We never ate out and rarely had company. No take out Chinese or “save the day” pizza. My mother cooked every day. Only as an adult can I understand a little about how hard her life alone with four children must have been. How hard it must have been to make it happen in the kitchen… every day.

So what’s with this passion for food and fellowship. I’m still not quite sure but I guess it was her…in spite of the circumstances she prepared every meal with love. I’m sure I felt that. It was one of the many ways she showed love.

But I didn’t learn to cook at home. I’m a recipe girl through and through. I tweak to make things mine but I know how to follow a recipe. A clear recipe offers a guideline and serves as a foundation for safe exploration. My first cookbook was B. Smith’s Entertaining and Cooking for Friends, purchased in Costco for $15. This book was my food bible. Her recipes, scriptural revelation for the meals I’d prepare for my new husband. In the tiny kitchen of our first apartment I’d cook gourmet soul food by candlelight – thoroughly reading each instruction….chapter and verse. Listening to Sade and Nina Simone I’d lean into the poetry of a perfect dish.

Join me at Grace Table to hear the rest of my culinary journey.

 #GraceTable#food #family #faith

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, nutrition, uncategorized - Tagged B. Smith, B. Smith's, family, food, Grace Table, kitchen, mother

Remembering the Road to Motherhood

Nov 06, 2014 Leave a Comment ~ Written by lisha epperson

road to motherhood Women-Walking-Beside-Me

Infertility is lonely—a scarlet letter experience of isolation and shame. But the years of childlessness were helped by a special group of friends.

I remember the road to motherhood and the women who encouraged me.

I didn’t know it at the time, but I was walking in the part of my story where the Giver of dreams held me closest. I was learning to let go. God helped me through this season by settling me in with a group of women who could help me see past my circumstances. They helped me expand my vision to include a broader scope of possibilities. It all began with letting go.

There’s something special about being in that place, where you begin to loosen your grip on a dream. We don’t realize it, but we’re getting stronger. We’ve done the heart work that enables the letting go. We’ve fought the good fight and face the future in peace. It’s a good thing.

The move is both metal and spiritual. Calculated and precise, yet completely out of our control.  We’re intentional, yes, but God’s hand-print is all over our choices.

That’s where I was in 1999. Three years earlier, I’d prayed for and lost a baby at 14 weeks. And no pregnancy followed. I endured three long years of thinking it wouldn’t happen.

Then…the shift. It was time to imagine my life without children.

Nothing impacted my future motherhood more than walking toward it knowing God, would hold me without it.

My first post with friends at Deeper Waters goes live today.  Join me. 

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, life, relationships - Tagged Deeper Waters, dreams, Friends, God, Motherhood, women

Give Me Grace : Holy Ground

Sep 20, 2014 36 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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God said, “Don’t come any closer. Remove your sandals from your feet. You’re standing on holy ground.” (‭Exodus‬ ‭3‬:‭5‬ MSG)

Our gps signal wavered in and out on the ride up to Warwick, New York. What should have taken an hour and a half took almost 3.  Still, the last 30 minutes was all God glory. By the time we reached our destination we’d been cleansed and stripped. A brilliant sun broke through the veil and fields of buckwheat brushed us new…erased anything keeping us from His presence. In the last 30 minutes we took off our shoes.
And smiled.

His presence pierced our little family bubble and we felt it. This…was holy ground.

Stop.
Pause, breathe.
Enjoy the stillness
Because it’s quiet here
This…is holy ground
Everything IS – as it should be
Human arms can’t hold the paradox of this holy place
So just Let. Go.
It’s wild and perfect, groomed and broken
Listen
His words poured holy, painted on the door of  hearts stained a blood bought red.
Now ready, now ripe for the reading of natures’ sacred text.

This…is holy ground.

Sometimes to survive in the city, I leave. Intentional time away helps me see and carefully turn every stone. Time away repairs tears from unexpressed hurts and helps smooth over our family mess ups. The too quick response, the hurried hug, the many ways we tell each other we don’t have time. To hear. To listen. So yesterday we packed our car, grabbed my mama and took a drive. We went apple picking, drank hot cider, walked long and unrushed through lush orchards. And we ate the most delicious apple cider donuts. Taking time to be together outside our usual grind is holy. A little country does a city girl soul good.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace ~ read more ~
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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, motherhood, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, exodus 3:5, family, God, holy, holy ground, Listen, Words

Beautiful : May I First See Her Heart {a guest post for SheLoves}

Aug 13, 2014 7 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
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flickr cc : aussiegall

My dreams kept time with the early morning song of unnamed birds. In the spaces of silence I wondered…would she be beautiful? We’d talked about her that night and every day before. Imagining life with a little girl no one would call beautiful. Would we love her? Could we? Should we say yes?

Having no point of reference for a child’s physical appearance, more than biological parents, prospective adoptive parents wonder what their children will look like. We want them to fit our family and recall hopefully, adoptive families where we’ve seen Gods hand in the match. Wondering how these mystical pairings will work out for us is where it gets tricky.

Everyone wants a beautiful child, especially when the child is a girl. For some reason, we worry less about boys.

“and then she stroked his neck and smoothed the feathers, saying, “It is a drake, and therefore not of so much consequence. I think he will grow up strong, and able to take care of himself.” – from The Ugly Duckling by Hans Christian Andersen

♥

I’m sharing writing space with the beautiful women of SheLoves Magazine today. I’d be delighted if you’d join me. You can do that here. 

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, motherhood, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged beautiful, birds, child, parents, SheLoves Magazine

Give Me Grace : A Second Chance

Jul 26, 2014 49 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
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flickr cc : vinoth chandar

Second chance…

GOD, my God, I yelled for help and you put me together. GOD, you pulled me out of the grave, gave me another chance at life when I was down-and-out. (‭Psalm‬ ‭30‬:‭2-3‬ MSG)

You did it: you changed wild lament into whirling dance; You ripped off my black mourning band and decked me with wildflowers. I’m about to burst with song; I can’t keep quiet about you. GOD, my God, I can’t thank you enough. (‭Psalm‬ ‭30‬:‭1-12‬ MSG)

A baby. Swaddled potential and a basket of dreams. New life. Gods’ promise of hope. A wished upon falling star…captured.

My friend is the new mama of a healthy baby girl. And today, I write through happy tears because she’s been granted a second chance.

The miracle of birth is not lost on me and I have a God story to tell. I hold the stories of victory close because I know the battle for motherhood is real.  There’s something special about the testimonies of women who fight for the title. My friend is an infertility warrior. We met on the field.

She is the mother of one son through adoption. A son whose sudden passing shattered every thing she knew about the world. It’s said a mother shouldn’t have to bury her child and tasting even a sip of that bitter brew, through her experience, tells me the saying is true.

“I’m mad at God.”

The pain in these words rang through the halls as I sat outside a memorial service delivered by Reverend Calvin Butts. He was referring to the untimely passing of a young mother in our community. I knew what he meant and appreciated his transparency in that moment. His humanity couldn’t comprehend why something so terrible had to happen. He was thinking of the husband and child she left behind…and he’d loved her and it hurt. The reverend said those words through tears.

So hearing the news of my friends loss at an annual picnic a few years ago was more than any of us could bear. It wasn’t fair. I was mad at God too. I know He’s sovereign but I’ll be honest – I was mad anyway.

Last night I heard the news. She gets a second chance. A second chance at motherhood, a first chance at a daughter, another chance at life.

I drank in the picture of their daughter and prayed His favor over their family. They aren’t young, or new parents. They’re brave and wise. This is a bold step of faith and they’ll need God, like we all do,  to raise a little girl for His glory.  She’s here! I imagine their sorrow turned joy, their mourning turned dancing. They’re celebrating the life of a son…gone too soon,  the grace gift of a daughter and a God who declares this season new – a second chance.

Rejoice with me. Her name is Mariel.

and this song, a little gospel in my head – “Special Gift” by Donnie McClurkin

 

heaven sent me a wonderful, very special, beautiful gift

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

♥

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, infertility, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, God, hope, mother, second chance, women

Give Me Grace : give thanks

Jun 14, 2014 22 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
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Photo:flickr CC: Vince Alongi

It is good to give thanks and praise to the Lord because of who He is and what He has done – Psalm 92:1

Heavy rain poured in the city that morning. From my sweet spot on the terrace, I stood in the doorway and listened. The God cord of my heart had been pulled. It tugged taut and tense forcing my attention. Gently winding it’s twisted strands around me – I woke up in the security and comfort of a smile. I was in a good mood.  ~ read more ~

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, give thanks, God, psalm 92, thanks

When You’re Too Tired For Sabbath

May 15, 2014 22 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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We haven’t gone to church regularly in weeks. A long winter, work schedule changes and a church move at the beginning of the year have left us in the middle. Facing a string of sabbath free weeks turned spiritual black hole. And the bounced check void I feel when acknowledging the tiny tears that led to this canyon sized chasm. None of it feels good.

I don’t know if I’ve ever been intentional about keeping sabbath. Regular church attendance required the real life work of getting a family into the building on time. Once there, it meant hustling off to dance ministry or stewarding my toddlers through bathroom and snack breaks. One of these days they’ll sit through a sermon but until then, we hang out in the hallway. Our only “day off” had become a job. The days before, a nonstop schedule of chores and activities. With all we have going on we’re almost too tired for sabbath.

In this season of very little church going I’ve struggled to find equilibrium. My feet hover just out of reach…the solid rocks a sure thing, but I don’t feel grounded. It seems our life, our struggles, our plans have gotten in the way. We’re out of balance.

So although I feel the very worst conviction about our lack of consistent attendance I’m settled with finding sabbath wherever I can. Perhaps its time to expand my vision of what sabbath can be. Observe His commandment to keep it holy by living the sabbath wherever I find it.

I find sabbath on the subway. In my daughters toothless grin as she runs to me declaring “It came out”. Sabbath finds me when I say no to blogging even when I don’t want to. When I say no to link ups and blog hops and read His words…instead of writing my own. I find sabbath when my youngest 2 surprise me with synchronized naps. Sabbath waits for me in the early morning rush of the city – at least 3 times a week God meets me in my car during alternate side of the street parking.

He’s there. Always to be found in the hushed holy, in time for reflection. God peace in the middle of my storm.

Sabbath calls us. The plumb line to our hearts, God uses the need for sabbath to draw us to him. The holy wonder of a nap, a walk, time out in a corner with a good book. Sabbath is about rest but it’s also about silence – entering God inspired stillness where I can hear Him speak. For me it’s about shutting, even a little, of the regular noise out. The sounds we’ve become accustomed to and don’t hear anymore… sounds that color and cover our spiritual white space.

Funny how our spirits cry out for God..having known, we want to know more. We crave God encounters and whether we realize it or not we look for him. Everywhere and in everything we do.

I also find sabbath in service. Service is the connective tissue…it ties me to Jesus. Anchoring me through discipline. Even obligation. When I commit myself through service to the kingdom and His people, I find God meets me in the middle of my promise. He gives the holy water refreshment I need to keep growing.

The word is alive and living in me. The church is a building. I miss it. I’ll get back to it. Until then I’m grateful for this wandering season.  When I took the time to look… I found sabbath everywhere.

joining The High Calling for stories on Keeping the Sabbath

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Posted in christianity, faith, life, motherhood, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged church, God, holy, sabbath, The High Calling, tired, Words
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lisha epperson

lisha epperson

recipient of grace, lover of family, woman of God. Christian, homeschooling mama of 5, wife of 1. believer in miracles and the promise of redemption. passionate about parenting, adoption, women, nutrition, dance, fashion. a lover of words.....

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