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Posts tagged Ferguson

Give Me Grace : Laity Lodge

Dec 06, 2014 32 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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Elijah obeyed GOD ’s orders. He went and camped in the Kerith canyon on the other side of the Jordan. And sure enough, ravens brought him his meals, both breakfast and supper, and he drank from the brook. – 1 Kings‬ ‭17‬:‭5-6‬ 

Faith makes us sure of what we hope for and gives us proof of what we cannot see. – Hebrews 11 : 1

“Laity Lodge“…my 12-year-old daughter says I just like to say the name. She’s right. The name rolls off my lips like a lullaby from a soul known language. Laity Lodge called my name in tongues of fire. I heard. I answered.

It’s a special place. Sitting in a canyon felt like the right place for my city girl soul to unload a little of the drama of my daily life. I could unpack the questions, the disappointments, the longing. And the earth was ripe and ready. Yielding to my request for a little loving time…the canyon held me.

The land is prayer soaked. Every step taken releases a whispered prayer, voices of saints who covered the ground in tears for the people who would come. I needed Laity lodge and Laity Lodge was ready for me.

I can’t say how I got there. The months leading up to the trip were crazy and on several occasions I thought about canceling. The recent slew of deaths of unarmed black men by police officers or officials left me emotionally spent. My trip to Ferguson in August was like a branding iron on an old scar. My families personal connection to the unanswered questions surrounding tragedy like this opened up a Pandora’s box of emotions I had no name for. I needed to go. I didn’t know how badly.

Still, one thing or another never felt right and my initial peace over a longed for retreat with the staff and writers from The High Calling morphed into a battle with doubt and fear. I didn’t want to leave my family. I was afraid to fly. Every reason topped the other. I didn’t want to go if God wasn’t going with me.

When my husband dropped me off at the airport I crumpled in his arms as the stress of going turned to tears. Our goodbye hug/ prayer sent me safely, peacefully to the Texas hills. I knew god would hold me. If I didn’t know it then I received my last flight confirmation from a security guard who sang No Weapon by Fred Hammond, (out loud and loud ) while checking passengers in.

A miracle got me on the plane and a miracle met me in the canyon. My first conversations with Amy Brietmann and Tammy Hendricksmeyer involved talk of unicorns. I knew we’d hit it off. I believe in miracles. I needed friends to believe with me.

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I got quiet. The combination of spiritual retreat and physical rest scratched dreams and ideas loose from a mind cluttered with content. To do lists, responsibilities, relationships….content. Only on the ride home did I fully recognize how much had been poured into me. Time spent with such inspiring people left me with lots to process. Those conversations helped me claim the dreams I’ve held tight. From others, from myself.  To let some things go.

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I had coffee in a rocking chair overlooking the Frio River and took a magical walk with friends up, around and through brambles and pathways marked by the memory and stories of those that walked before. I stopped. I looked. I listened. Each day the canyon seemed to open wider to accommodate anything I might offer. I experienced the drive through the river and the Threshold tower designed by Roger Feldman. Walking toward it broke the last pieces of my city girl soul. Preceded by a pathway of brittle, crumbling rocks, the tower stands alone in a clearing calling out for restoration. The tower is the epitome of decency and order with every stones placement having been precisely calculated in derivatives of 3. It’s a Trinitarian beacon of hope and place for deliberate respite. I walked in and took a seat.

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And the bookstore. I’m not sure what it is about the bookstore but the first time I went in I collapsed in a pool of tears while fingering through a copy of Madeleine l’Engle’s “Walking on Water“. Where they came from was a mystery. I wasn’t feeling sad, or tired. I’d been at the lodge a few hours and I guess the fragrance of god and a lone empty chair in the corner offered the permission I needed to breakdown. A wave of cleansing tears washed over me and marked the beginning of the soul excavation that took place in the canyon.

The staff at the High Calling is perfectly matched for this magical place. Taking seriously the sacred work of hospitality they met every need. From delicious, lovingly prepared food to the open palm feeling of a bed calling me to nap in the middle of the day… I felt cared for.

Prayer is our souls language…for connection and communication to our creator. It makes sense our souls know it well. And prayer is the language of Laity Lodge. Only God could crack open a space on earth to hold the hearts of such weary souls. For refreshment, for peace. Laity lodge is a place for quiet, for healing.

I had to report for jury duty the morning I returned home. And the world seemed to crumble under the burden of systematic injustice in the days that followed.  It was hard to hold onto the unicorn and the billion stars I thought I could touch one night in the canyon. So the devil did everything he could to make me think Laity Lodge was a dream – fantasy conjured up from a clearly delusional Jesus freak.

But faith is part fantasy. I can’t make you hear the messages I received from the saints that knew I’d come…I can’t make you hear the voice of God crying out from a canyon. I can tell you it happened and you’d have to believe me.

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I’m holding onto the unicorn. I saw a unicorn at Laity Lodge. I did.

Were you there? Leave a link to a post you wrote about your experience. Have you ever wanted to go? I think you should. Do you believe in unicorns?

 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, canyon, God, Laity Lodge, The High Calling, unicorns

A Drum Solo and Dance for Peace : Releasing My Christian Anger {for Mike Brown}

Nov 25, 2014 19 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
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all photos: flickr cc Dave Pape

Its 3:22 p.m on Monday, November 17th. I live New York City but my mind, my mind is in Ferguson. All day, several times today I’ve scrolled through my news feed waiting for the news. So far…nothing. But the National Guard is on alert and local and nationwide people are preparing for the grand jury’s verdict.

I’m trying to not make Ferguson about me. But it is. #BlackLivesMatter

Since Last Thursday I’ve sat with the feelings behind this post. Chewed the cud like a cow on what I would say if asked. What I would say when the decision comes down. How I’ll tell my teen-aged son that another unarmed black man was shot and killed and no one will go to jail for it. The precedent set says it’s not a crime to kill unarmed black men. Or maybe it is, but try it, you’ll probably get away with it. A lot about this world scares me.

I’m trying not to make Ferguson about me but it is.

So I can’t write the Jesus is love, let’s move on in prayer post. Although that is what I will do. My faith is built on Christ’s finished works on the cross. And grace. Anything going on or not going on is no surprise to Him. Not even this post. But there is room, even grace for my holy righteous anger. Christians can be angry too.

So I’ll write what drums out of my heart. Blow fresh wind on a dream deferred. Beat the hope I need out of a drum. I’ll cry and teach my children to love. I’ll pray.

♥♥♥

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I closed the screen last night, the bright white light from my iPad having finally won the battle with my eyes. I took off my glasses, resting my face between my palms. I remembered a feeling I had on the train the other day.

I took a ride on an iron horse in the belly of the beast. The New York City subway to be exact. It’s chauffeured me around the city all my life. From dance class to museum, to school. Uptown, down town, across town but always, always home. Not today. Today it feels like the Amistad.

I found myself and my girls 3 of only 4 people of color on a crowded train in Harlem headed downtown. Gentrification will do that. We hopped on, the doors closed and suddenly, my soul remembered.

His name was Bongo, a percussion specialist and teacher for the Board of Education. In his free time he gave impromptu performances/ history lessons in drum culture. He played and talked and sang a percussive, persuasive beat. A melody drilled in my core since the beginning of time. I couldn’t be still. I can’t. The drums are calling.

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The rhythm took over and I imagined the power of the drums. The power of a form of communication…for celebration, mourning and warning. Bongo told us about the silencing of the drum. And I remember the most effective way to vaporize a whole culture is to deny their customs and culture. Their music, their stories.

It begins with a little toe tapping and hip swaying. My chest is ready to pop but first contract…ahhh release. I heard the rhythm in my head and my body saluted the drum. An involuntary salutation of movement and prayer. I give in. It’s visceral, tangible and my daughter looks at my face as she catches a glimpse of the drum in my eyes. She knows I’m dancing.

I’m doing a centuries old dance where I move like a mother who wonders what will become of her daughters, a woman who may have lost her husband….forever. I’m thinking like a woman trying to hold her family together and a woman who’s afraid for her life. How much? How much? What is the price for a human life? How much am I worth? my daughters…my sons? Will this ever change?

The doors open and close as we make our way downtown. I’m spent. My movements were a mournful lamentation and offering – a cry. But a song won’t come.

It’s a difficult subject with no easy answers. Many don’t see the church as part of a movement towards social justice. I do. I’m a daughter born of the peaceful sit-in…but also the riot. I’ll turn the other cheek…only so many times. I bet that’s true of you too. And I’ll be honest I struggle because we live in a country that fought itself to wipe out the vile business of slavery. How do you live the love of the Bible with the side that lost?

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I’ve said before fight or flight is real and it’s human. Most men will move to defend themselves when threatened. Women too. That’s what’s suggested of the officer. He shot in defense. But what of Mike? For men of color being pulled over by a police officer is often a life-threatening situation. They grow up knowing this. I can’t say Mike Brown was an innocent man. I can say he was unarmed. And shot 6 times. I can say I don’t believe he deserved to die.

For there they that carried us away captive required of us a song; and they that wasted us required of us mirth, saying, Sing us one of the songs of Zion.
– Psalm 137:3

I will not sing. But I won’t be silent. My weeping has turned to rage. It’s gnashing of teeth and holy hot fire streaming down my face. They’d rather I sing . Sing while they dishonor black life, sing…while they trample human dignity. They ask for a song. I will not sing.

So no more words. Let’s pretend all the differences and drama are done. Today I will not sing… I’ll beat the drum.

This is the rhythm from rivers of blood poured for peace, for justice, for freedom. It’s holy and sanctimonious. Its sunshine and rain, blazing and bloody. It’s loud and it won’t be stopped. And I don’t want this feeling to leave me…this rhythm to disappear like the rainbow I saw last week. It’s fuel and fire. It’s life and longing and hope and tears. It’s my heartbeat. And yours. This is the drum.

Play with me, pray with me now on the djembe, the bada, the conga and the bongo. Batta bop, bop, bata, bop, bop…. Mike…Brown….Batta bop,bop,bata, bop, bop Mike …Brown

The grand jury decision is in. Darren Wilson will not be indicted….but that doesn’t mean a crime wasn’t committed on August 9th.

Hear me now…

I’m trying not to make Ferguson about me
but it is.
I’m trying not to make Ferguson about me
but it is.
Ferguson is about me.
Perhaps Ferguson is about you too.

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Posted in christianity, faith, life, uncategorized - Tagged #blacklivesmatter, drums, grace, mike brown, verdict

Give Me Grace : Justice

Aug 30, 2014 29 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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Give Me Grace : Justice

Jesus told them a story showing that it was necessary for them to pray consistently and never quit. He said, “There was once a judge in some city who never gave God a thought and cared nothing for people. A widow in that city kept after him: ‘My rights are being violated. Protect me!’

“He never gave her the time of day. But after this went on and on he said to himself, ‘I care nothing what God thinks, even less what people think. But because this widow won’t quit badgering me, I’d better do something and see that she gets justice—otherwise I’m going to end up beaten black-and-blue by her pounding.’”

Then the Master said, “Do you hear what that judge, corrupt as he is, is saying? So what makes you think God won’t step in and work justice for his chosen people, who continue to cry out for help? Won’t he stick up for them? I assure you, he will. He will not drag his feet. But how much of that kind of persistent faith will the Son of Man find on the earth when he returns?” (‭Luke‬ ‭18‬:‭1-8‬ MSG)

She carries the word, the law. Walks with wide eyes (in some depictions). And did you see her sword? She’s a bad mama-jama, walking with power and grace. I’ve always been drawn to the image of justice as a woman.  A woman after Gods heart, but a woman nonetheless. She’s objective and fair. She’s righteous. But I never forget she carries a sword.

Hmmm.

They’re still marching in Ferguson. And online the call has gone forth. Christian leaders and laymen are going before the throne for Ferguson. Each hashtag and tweet a voice added to the collective cry for peace. I’ve said it before I want shalom to rock this world. I want divine order, the sacred power of justice to silence the enemy.

And in my desire, my heart call and passion, my deepest prayers – I never forget my sword. I walk with the sword of the spirit but I do carry a sword. For battle. I want swift justice and would call myself a lover, not a fighter.  But I’m not afraid to…I’ve never been afraid of a fight. Not when I’m right.

I cry loud and long in prayer but a part of my heart is always on the battlefield. In the riot. In the crowd that screams “No.” But I don’t want to fight. Not anymore.

So the other day I wondered what it would look like if I put down my sword (the one for fighting) and for a season, emotionally explored Martin Luther King Jr’s non-violent approach.

Jesus knows there are enough reasons to fight, to put your hands up in frustration or anger. To take a stand when you know you’re right. To go down in a blaze glory. For justice.

There are few solutions for the crisis in Iraq and Syria, a glimmer of hope in medical labs researching Ebola and the girls…the girls are still gone. We have to stay vigilant. I want peace and healing and justice – and I want it without a war so I’ll have to get used to simply asking. Asking God to fight for me again, and again and again.

In Ferguson I realized the power of persistent hope. And like the widow in the above scripture..I can’t give up, cave in, or quit. I have to press forth. I have to keep asking. I have to leave margin for forgiveness and no matter what the issue, conduct myself in the image of Christ. I must steward well my words of hope. I have to be relentless in my pursuit of justice because prayer matters and changes things. Even without a sword. I’ve got to believe that.

Resolution looks like me standing up in church with tears in my eyes when he finds me in Ferguson and sings my favorite song.

Resolution is crawling towards redemption and forgiveness…again. Redemption is revelation – knowing when justice isn’t swift… wisdom waits. Revelation might look like remembering Jesus shared these words, for such a time as this. He didn’t want me to give up.

Revolution might look like us changing and growing. Rather than being right, might we agree to go with God. Wherever He leads? Revolution might be a platform to share our struggles. To hear and be heard. 

Revolution looks like this – me wiping my feet at the door and asking to come inside…again. Laying low and listening. Being transformed. Being like and with Jesus. Always.

As much as I want to remember his powerful acts of defiance I have to remember his word and the many times he walked softly. Jesus chose to lay down his life – when he might have fought to be right. I’m working on balancing my intentional, passionate love for justice – with a wisdom that waits. When justice tarries…wisdom waits.

So grateful God doesn’t mind seeing me every day. In fact I think he rather likes it.

“Won’t he stick up for them?
Surely He will.”

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

♥

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, God, Jesus, Justice, pray, prayer, redemption, resolution, revelation, Revolution

What Ferguson Taught Us : Setting My Heart To Hope {for The High Calling}

Aug 29, 2014 4 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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Setting My Heart To Hope

Ferguson broke my heart. Broke my heart in pieces ….a trail of crumbs leading to a rose lined road. I left a piece of my soul on the pavement in Ferguson. And not because I wanted to. God ripped a piece of it as a remnant. A reminder of the work that still needs to be done. In Ferguson. In me.

“F…the police! F… the police!” Boom boxes blared. Men, women and children stood around doing – nothing. They protested with presence. Maybe that’s all they had left. Their stance, their eyes and the music that screamed “we’re fed up”. And half way down a double yellow-lined street, a makeshift memorial of stuffed toys and cards; a shrine to the boy who’d baptized the spot with his blood. Passersby stopped to take selfies, and a cocoa-skinned grandmother prophesied the destruction of Ferguson if a trial didn’t lead to conviction. And it just might. Because the people in this rally didn’t seem to care anymore and they think the world doesn’t either. I couldn’t resolve my compulsion to yell “wake up” with a soul-weary feeling of “Been there, done that. Here we go again.”

I’m at The High Calling today, processing my dream for resolution and revolution – and finding redemption. Join me.

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, uncategorized - Tagged heart, hope, The High Calling

Five Minute Friday : Change {Going There in Ferguson}

Aug 22, 2014 47 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

 

missouriMagdalenaRoesler

When I found Deidra Riggs online I froze. Silenced in the stillness of joy, I caught my breath – in awe of her gift. It’s a gift you know, to gracefully challenge people towards change. Without saying a word, she encouraged me to write about racism. She left room for my words and a safe space to “go there” in discussions surrounding diversity and reconciliation.

God’s called me to the conversation surrounding race and the church. I’m sure of it. And so I write. I engage. I listen. And now, I go.

On Friday I’ll leave the Lovelies and Big Daddy to board a flight bound for Ferguson, Missouri. I’ll have the opportunity to serve a community by listening to and prayerfully, telling their stories.

In the past weeks, after years of city and system wide inequalities, Ferguson erupted. The frustration of the people mirrors a nations cry to end the division and centuries long pain of Gods people based on color. Traveling to the city of Ferguson feels like walking into a war zone and I have no idea what I’m doing but I’m praying for change. Last Sunday I prayed this “Give me grace to listen. To engage my senses for the cause of Christ. To discern your truth, taste and see that You are good – lend and lift my voice to speak when called.” When Deidra asked, I knew my yes would be an offering and part of the grace message I live, my prayer for change.

I’m not a reporter. Or popular blogger. I’m a wife and mother, daughter of a king answering a call to serve. And in saying yes, I’ve never felt more inadequate to fulfill a task and powerless to bring about change. Never felt more like I’m stepping into a pair of shoes two sizes too big.

So I withdrew. The enormity of the task, the life legacy of a family – make this thinker quiet. I withdraw to grow small. Because we spend our days online thinking about numbers and influence and how to grow bigger and now, right now, my words are but illegible markings in the sand.  I can’t decipher their meaning and know the tide will soon wash them away. Those words wouldn’t matter anyway. What remains will be His. I’ll grow quiet knowing every scratch of it is linked to the only story that matters. Spirit washed and carved on tablets of stone, that story must be told. That truth transforms. That truth heals. I will tell it.

I’m going there. I’m taking my mother heart, a prayer for peace, my passion for justice…my faith in God and I’m going. In Ferguson I’ll join Deidra, Jennifer, Preston and Nish – believing God we’ll form a five fold ministry of grace, of whatever’s needed for such a time as this. We want to hear.

We’ll follow His lead.

Pray that I listen for His heart and words as I offer my vessel. Pray He pours words of meaning and hope…and grace. That I hear. Pray His riches and glory, that my feet spiritually fill the shoes before me. That the stories held are freely shared and that most of all, the words point back to Him. Pray for change.

an offering to the community at Five Minute Friday

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Posted in blogging, christianity, faith, life, uncategorized - Tagged change, Deidra Riggs, five minute friday, God, Going There, prayer, racism, write

Give Me Grace : A Prayer

Aug 16, 2014 67 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
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photo: flickr cc/ john steven fernandez

The prayer of a person living right with God is something powerful to be reckoned with. – from James 5:16 The Message

A prayer.

Give me grace because I’m angry.
Give me grace because I’m tired.
Give me grace because I need  the good news of your love.

Right now.

Give me grace to not grow bitter.
Change is coming. Change is inevitable. Change is slow. And Lord, please remember Ferguson.

Dear Jesus are all these stories true? The real life testimonies of terror?

The babies, the girls, the believers, the black men …Jesus – I know you see the black men.

Give me grace to not give up.

Give Me Grace to #gothere
In love of course
But just the same

Give me grace to uncompromisingly walk my faith
Call me out when I use it as a crutch to support my biases.
I don’t want a truth unless it’s wrapped in you.

Give Me grace to hear another side
Because all stories belong to you.
The original writer and poet
creator and collector of all things lovely.

Give me grace to express how I feel and not let the onslaught of information dull my senses.
I want to feel.
Please Lord
Give me grace to feel.

Because you’re in the middle of it all. Between the gentrified hi-rise and the poor folks pantry, the aids ridden grandma and the juiced out junkie. The downtown diva and the power-hungry terrorist. You’re there.

Give me grace to see them . To feel.

Because we hear these stories and still rattle off posts about crème brûlée and create platforms with You as pillar
Pall bearing a casket of glory – Going. No. Where.
It’s got to be 100% about you. Or not at all.

photo : flickr cc / leland francisco

photo : flickr cc / leland francisco

Give me grace to listen. To engage my senses for the cause of Christ. To discern your truth, Taste and see that You are good – lend and lift my voice to speak when called.

Give me grace to wield my sword and go to war. Prayer helps. And right now it’s the only weapon in my arsenal.  Give me grace to fight.

Give me grace to mind my mission, in my family and community without forgetting my humanity makes my garden global.

Give me grace to know water is water. Is water. And all people deserve to have it. From Detroit to Dakar. From Brooklyn to Babylon. Give Me grace to help share the water that promises eternal life.

Give me grace to see my neighbor. Yes. The one who sells drugs, or smokes pot all day, the single mama with 5 kids she won’t/can’t take care of properly. Stop judging and get down to the business of serving. For the least of these. Not just the pretty these. Not the far ways these. The least of these just down the hall or across the street. The least of these on my job, in my dance class, on the bus … in cyberspace.

Give me grace to fight for justice. I want to live your peace. But I know the wrath of God is real. When all the love had been poured and the beautiful words espoused…You came into the tents knocking things over. Jesus raised a holy hell when necessary.

Give me grace to be tender and pliable. To sit silently when directed. To remain humble. Be love. To know when my words should float softly adrift a heaven bound cloud and too, when to send them aflame. Teach me Lord, how to fight.

Give Me Grace to pray for a holy righteous cleansing. A physical outpouring of your
spirit to mix things up. Pour down, bleed the beautiful on this crazy concoction of sin and death, of tears and trauma, bandits and beasts. Jesus wash it away. Jesus make it rain.

And after all this, when my heart can’t hold the price of freedom, and my flesh fails (because it will) – After I’ve done all I can and all you’ve asked, Let me offer myself to you, lay my burden down

with this prayer…

photo: flickr cc / chrisada

photo: flickr cc / chrisada

Give me grace.
Give me grace
Give. Me. Grace.

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, black men, change, Christ, God, love, prayer

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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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