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Posts tagged grace

Give Me Grace : A Little Bit of Love

Feb 14, 2015 41 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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“Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove.
O no, it is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;

– from sonnet 116 William Shakespeare

I yelled these words to my husband across a glacier in Iceland, whispered them in the rain forest in El Yunce and cried over them while watching a doomed love grow between Marianne and the dashing but dumb Willoughby in a scene from the movie Sense and Sensibility.

I’ve tried to live these words in our relationship. Because you don’t make it through the covenant of marriage without a little rattling. Love, commitment, the promise is made for shaking. Inherent in love is the promise of testing and trials.

I focused on being the ever-fixed mark. I forgot the mark lies at the center, the very bullseye of my heart. I forgot I’d get tired of being a target. Holding it down in love is hard.

Today is as good as any to check in with my heart. I’m paying attention to slight differences, however small. How marriage changes, how I am changed through choosing to go through life one part of a whole. If I’m smart I’ll choose to see the beauty in the many shades of my marriage. I’ll steel myself with the truth of our many shades of gray. It’s the journey through the spectrum that makes us real. I see consistency in complexity. And I see God.

Appreciating the difference is intentional. It’s the challenge and choice to play with texture and tone while staying in the same box. To walk through each shade as it were, with passion and hope. And grace. Gray is the perfect choice for our marriage. It’s solid but ever-changing.  The subtle degrees of difference detected in hue from day-to-day, week to week…from year to year –  are a gift.

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I got a manicure for my birthday and almost cried. The acknowledgement of self care…simply catching myself in the middle of it, almost made me cry. My littles love me up all day long but this was different. The technician cradled my hand and I melted in the simple grace of being held. I need more of that. My marriage needs more of that.

We push through weeks of skating and science and architecture and music concerts. Somewhere in the middle of all that are meals to cook, children to bathe, hugs to give. We’re knee-deep in this parenting thing and we don’t always make time for self-care. Days go by before we remember we haven’t touched.

We crawled into bed the other night with no children between us…only the 50 shades of gray that come with any marriage that lasts almost 20 years. There’s pewter, blue, ash, silver, slate, battleship gray and sometimes charcoal…almost black. Sometimes I find myself trailing off into the abyss of a blinding black hole. Sometimes love is hard. I don’t know if I want to get lost in it or face the fight to get out. This year love isn’t shiny or smooth. But it’s solid. I’m grateful for that.

I curled into his arms and breathed deep the smell of home. I held him and let myself…be held. A little bit more and a little bit more. Longer. The longer we’re together the more aware I am of loves complexity. Love takes time and I’m still getting to know the man I gave my heart among a field of flowers on a sunny day in June. I’m slowly flowering again to his embrace. Our love is like the night sky. The darkness before midnight and the morning after. Our love is a garden…growing. We’ll need at least another twenty years to harvest all Gods promised.

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all images flickr cc : Brenda Clarke

This love thing of ours was never black and white. It was always shades of gray. I knew that walking down the aisle holding a bouquet of wilting peonies. I knew it.

So today I remember…the lavender gray of twilight and the hope I found in a few still thriving branches on the Christmas tree we threw out last week. And there you have it – our love is a surprise.

I want to notice the nuanced, shaded, degrees of change in our love. The barely perceptible but beautiful changes. It’s something I can trust. May each shade be a layer, another layer of love.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace
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Posted in christianity, faith, life, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, 50 shades of gray, God, gray, hope, love, marriage, sonnet 116, William Shakespeare

Give Me Grace : Wanderings of a Daughter

Jan 17, 2015 24 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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May our sons in their youth be like plants full grown, our daughters like corner pillars cut for the structure of a palace; – Psalm 144:12

Trailing skirts, braided hair, turrets and a tower. I never walk past the towered church on 86th St and West End Avenue in New York City without imagining myself in a period piece. Say what you will but my heart belongs to the old world. I have an affinity for the architecture and fashion, the speech patterns and peculiar graces of a society set on the semblance of propriety. Even knowing the lack of adequate plumbing doesn’t deter my kindred connection to anything Romanesque, Gothic or Renaissance inspired.

♦♦♦

I spent Friday morning sitting in a pew at The Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew. Churches in the city have been a great friend to the homeschooling community. On Friday mornings my tween and teen explore algebra with a small group of children on the third floor of this beautiful church. I have the privilege of spending a few hours bathing in the perfection of midday light flooding the sanctuary.

It’s quiet and spacious. And holy. That day I sat and cried while reading a gorgeous piece of writing by Holly Smothers Grantham. She lost her mother last year and her struggle and longing, her wrestling to make peace with the now of this transition as a daughter has been hard and beautiful…all at the same time. I’ve learned so much from it. Her struggle makes me think of my own.

“But, even at her weakest, my mom never stopped throwing open wide the doors of her heart. Whenever I crouched at her bedside to feel the heat rising from her brow or curled up under the covers and clasped her hands in mine, I was received into her deepest places. Not even disease could choke out love born in a broken body. Those fissures of cell and marrow became offerings of humility and grace and I always wept in their holy presence.”

Her words washed over me. Warmed and healed me. They did their magic, filling the wordless chamber of my heart – the silent space where I wrestle with being a daughter of an aging mother…the daughter I was, the daughter I am now. My mother is changing, forgetting. The mother I remember. The one who mothered me. I need her but she needs me more and that shift is hard.

I’m living in the tight space between two worlds. In one world I’m corn-rowed and carefree, in the other I’m doing the braiding. I’m washing hair and paying bills, wiping noses and folding laundry. I’m waking up for coffee after too little sleep. I’m sending out and tucking in. I’m planning and doing… all the things she did for me. And now I wonder and worry about her… if she’s eating well… if she went out today. If she’s afraid.

I’m thinking about legacy and living well. I want to live the example my mother set for me. I want to love and hold her up during this transition. I want to live every thing she taught. How she held our hearts by melding the old and new…her life lessons and dreams, her individual creativity and inspiration to build a family…a home, a tower of love for her children…even through change.

I am her daughter.

I wander through the complex floor plan of our relationship. I’m finding my way in the spaces between rooms my mother designed.  Everything is familiar and foreign – because we’re different. Both of us. Still, this season finds me meandering through the palace she built.

But our  foundation is laid solid with grace. No matter how complex I find areas of affinity, threads linking, connecting me to the home she built.  I’m searching but sure. I know why I’m here.

I’m here to maintain the structure of her palace. As my daughters will do in mine.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, motherhood, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, church, daughter, mother, psalm 144:12

Give Me Grace : a slow walk into a new year

Jan 03, 2015 25 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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 Behold, I am doing a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it? I will make a way in the wilderness and rivers in the desert. – Isaiah 43:19

The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. “The Lord is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I will hope in him.”  – Lamentations 3:22-24 

I can’t explain the feeling of hope that overshadows everything at the beginning of a new year. Wiping the slate clean at the end of a season of doubt feels right. Surely there’s hope, life even. It pushed through the cracks in a stable to stream the most powerful light over 2000 years ago. That same light filters through my bedroom window every morning. Soft shafts of light tickle my face, waking me up to hope. At least for that moment, every thing feels new.

Each year is marked by the completion of the earths rotation around the sun and hope…morphs into a new configuration of numbers. But it’s not an ending. It’s the glory of again. Again God positions our hearts with purpose and intention. He aligns our hearts for redemption. With hearts set to believe, we try again. We hope.

My one word for the year is slow. Think fluid, easy…thoughtful. I’m aligning myself with the unforced rhythms of grace that herald the promise of a melodious new song. I’m asking god to grant the favor of an unhurried grace. A steady stream of growth marked by a seasoned wisdom. I want a grace that’s gradual, unrushed…a lilting adagio to listen to all night.

We live in a world of lightning speed connections further ignited by subliminal voices telling us to do and be more. All the time. We receive it in hurried sound bytes that suggest we operate in performance mode all day.  I want something different. I want an easy immersion in everything lovely. And I want time when life feels hard. I want to slow down enough to cry when I feel broken – and not feel bad about it. I want to stop long enough to recharge…restart.

To be clear this isn’t about a slothful season of unproductivity. It’s a time of being selective and choosing a pace that right for you. It’s a time of saying yes when His voice calls – a time for enjoying the clarity and freedom of saying no.

So right now in your part of the world. With your family and work, your relationships and plans, your frustrations and delights. Might I invite you to join me in a quiet slowing. To consider living dreamy.  Measured. Deliberate. To breathe soul deep. To linger when necessary, to flip the script on last.

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, hope, new, one word, slow

Top 5 : Remembering {a year end review}

Dec 31, 2014 11 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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What a year it’s been. Actually I’m glad to see it come to a close. Let’s just say it wasn’t a top 5 year. Not for marriage or parenting or finances. It’s gone by in a blur of just good enough. I’m not proud of it but I’m grateful for grace that pushed me through from month to month. Sometimes it’s about survival. This is the year where the goal was getting by.

I’ve felt like a newly shorn sheep all raw and exposed. It was a year of being uncomfortable and naked in a way I know God will redeem for His glory. But in the meantime…y’all I’m naked and tender and so very fragile.

There’s a reason for that. Remember my one word … Yeah that one. Well my one word “discipline” demands a do over. I did well until August. And then…”discipline”  kicked my butt. In the fall I confused discipline with over scheduling. Disciplined people do everything, right? I said yes too many times and committed myself in a way that I couldn’t sustain. I tried too hard. I gained 5 lbs. I stayed up too late every night and settled into being cranky mommy. Nobody likes cranky mommy. God put a stop to that with the only thing that would work. He strong armed me with a spiritual headlock. And then the crashing silence of a sucker punch.  A dozen stars circled somewhere above my head and all those spinning plates fell. Woman down.  He got my attention through force. It worked. I give up. I’m learning to enjoy the grace of slow. I’m doing discipline differently.

I’ve shaken off most of that funk and look forward to a year of slow. I’m at the head of this remedial class but it’s clear I’m doing the super senior thing. What should have taken 4 years to complete is taking five. I know the faculty, they know me – too well. The feigned worship of bright-eyed freshmen lets me know it’s time to go. Discipline for dummies is lame but I’ll own up to being here. My new word complements the word I struggled with last year. So there’s grace in that. Living slow may help me conquer the discipline demon once and for all. Maybe it won’t. There’s grace for that too.

It wasn’t all bad. There was the joy of watching my children work hard to meet personal goals and a bunch of beautiful firsts {a ballet class, a solo subway ride, a haircut and a few baby teeth}. Big Daddy and I still share the same warped sense of humor. Eruptions of healing laughter when the stress of marriage feels anything but funny is a huge gift.  There was travel and a check and opportunities to write more. It wasn’t all bad. There was grace and God is good. I’m still here…I get another chance to figure this thing out. I get another chance to wake up to the grace of living slow.

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I opened an email from MailChimp to learn my top 5 posts of the year. Mailchimp compiled a list of the posts that got the most views in 2014. I was a little surprised by what made the list. I’m listening to what that says and figuring out what steps I’ll take to work that information into my plans for next year but honestly it’s been organic around here. I write and share what God places on my heart to share. I let God push the pen and go with that.

I appreciate the numbers behind the work but thought, wouldn’t it be cool to share my top 5. The 5 posts I enjoyed writing the most – where I felt God digging in and doing His work. In the spirit of paying it forward I’ll also share 5 posts I read that stilled my breath, reminding me of the great work God’s doing in all of us.

We can have fun in the comments section with this. Share your favorite posts. To keep it short and sweet lets limit it to 1 you’ve written and 1 you’ve read. I’m looking forward to this.

Blessings and favor to all! You were part of the grace that brought me through. Happy New Year!

My Top 5 2014

At the Kitchen Table : A Memory

Give Me Grace : Grounding {on being loved}

Give Me Grace : On Growing Older With God 

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

Give Me Grace : A Prayer

Top Five Favorites written by you and in no particular order (okay 6)

Christmas is for the Broken by Ashley Tolins Larkin 

Three Word Prayer by Chelle Wilson

The Murmuration of the Body by Holly Grantham

Skin by Deidra Riggs 

Whisper by Marcy Nell Hanson

That Song Y’all Prayed Me Through by Dana Butler

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Posted in christianity, faith, life, uncategorized - Tagged 2014, discipline, God, one word, top 5, year

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, parenting, uncategorized - Tagged #TellHisStory, Advent, Brian Courtney Wilson, children, Christmas, dream, God, Jesus, love, Mahalia Jackson, Motherhood, racism, Stevie Wonder

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, Ferguson, mike brown, verdict

Give Me Grace : A Gratitude Giveaway

Nov 22, 2014 29 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

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I dreamed of Laity Lodge. Long before I knew it existed a part of my soul knew this place. As a new mommy I read about their family camp and considered applying for a scholarship for my young brood. That was 10 years ago. The Lovelies were really little.

At Allume in 2013 a friend asked if I’d be attending the High Calling retreat at Laity Lodge. I remembered the name immediately and reflected on how life sometimes seems to circle back. Allowing us to revisit places and things we felt important or a connection to. Laity Lodge was on my radar. Laity Lodge called my name.

I didn’t make it that year. Blogging/ writing has become a part time passion but I can’t attend every conference. Who can handle all the awesome? But I’m here. And I need this. I’m filled with gratitude for the way God showed himself mighty in bringing me here. I’ll tell you in a later post all the hoops I jumped through to get here. The back and forth, the yes and no. Yeah…I’ll tell you about that later.

For now I’m waiting for the final leg of the journey to begin. A three hour drive to the canyon – and I’m told through a river! Yes, a river. I already know I’m in for a treat. I can’t wait to share it with you.

~~~~~~~~

I’m speaking to you out of deep gratitude for all that God has given me, and especially as I have responsibilities in relation to you. Living then, as every one of us does, in pure grace, it’s important that we not misinterpret ourselves as people who are bringing this goodness to God. No, God brings it all to us. The only accurate way to understand ourselves is by what God is and by what he does for us, not by what we are and what we do for him. (‭Romans‬ ‭12‬:‭3‬ MSG) (edited)

Can you believe we’ve met together like this 28 times? That’s more than half a year! I can’t tell you how I’ve grown, how God has stretched me. How He’s used your words and stories to bless. Your words and encouragement have been a light. A special meeting place, a study in discipline and devotion. I’m so very grateful for this weekly offering of grace. God meets us here. He does that for us.

I’ll celebrate and say thanks by hosting the first annual #GiveMeGrace gratitude giveaway!

Link-up today to automatically enter for a chance to win an Epperson goodie grab bag. Filled with some of my favorite things you’ll find – a designer original from Epperson, a sweet art print, a pair of my favorite fleece leggings and my latest lip balm addiction. The winner will be selected and announced on Monday via Random.org

I don’t have pictures of all this goodness. I’m scheduling this post from the airport but trust me…you don’t want to miss it. Link up NOW!

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, Blogging, giveaway, Laity Lodge, Words

Life in the Church: Living the Sacrament of Grace {a guest post for Outside the City Gate}

Nov 19, 2014 5 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson
photo : flickr cc/ jumpingjimmyjava

photo : flickr cc/ jumpingjimmyjava

We have just enough religion to make us hate one another but not enough to make us love one another. – Jonathan Swift

This isn’t a post where I’ll shame the church I met Jesus in. And it won’t be a post where I call out the imperfections of a single church in comparison to another. It will be a post where I admit my part in watching churches go sour. I wish it weren’t true but I’ve watched the church go south.

I’ve watched leadership manipulate members for selfish purposes. I’ve watched leadership bend the truth. I wonder now about the role I played in that. Because I was as an enabler. By saying nothing, going along with the program to keep the peace, I sanctioned the mistreatment of congregants. Under the guise of respect for authority I gave my nod of agreement, a non-verbal acquiescence to misconduct.

All of this went on for years…until it changed me. 

Small churches are notorious for big time family drama. Familiarity breeds contempt. And our close family like relationships bred all the “crazy uncle drama” you can imagine. When family members were turned against each other or people were shunned for not going along with the program… I still watched from the sidelines. I even took part in shaming when I felt obligated to disclose someone else’s sin. I was never so free with sharing my own.

That’s when I knew something was wrong…my behavior had begun to change. I’d become a judgmental Jesus freak.

In as much as church is the ideal setting for believers to walk out His word… it’s also a Petrie dish of problems.

I’m thrilled to share how I learned to live the sacrament of grace with friends at Outside The City Gate. Join me.

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Posted in christianity, faith, Guest Post, life, uncategorized - Tagged church, love, Outside the City Gate, religion

Give Me Grace : In Which I Take a Walk to Find My Way Home

Nov 15, 2014 22 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

walk1

“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.”                 Matthew 11:23 -30 The Message

Yesterday the grassy banks of Central Parks north woods welcomed me.
I accepted an invitation for a walk among the trees. Water loving ginkgoes, red maples, and sweet gums bowed low to greet me. And a sweeping weeping willow sung my name. I heard it above the noise of the city. And lingered long to enjoy it among the peaceful sounds of the woodlands. Her mournful, haunting melody followed me through the ravine, granting me permission to cry.

walk2

I did.

Everything was big and beautiful or small, important and full of wonder.
The earth gave under my feet, absorbing the weight of my body. Accepting my presence as part of the landscape she offered handfuls of life-giving sustenance when I pulled. And I remembered my belonging to this earth. Through lug sole boots, I felt a soul connection, sure and true – grounding me in Gods creation.

Rustic trails led to a wildflower meadow quickened with birdsong. Dramatic boulders of the cascade herald a hush. Without a sign or word I know the only right response is silence…rustling leaves mimicked the sound of rain. Every where I turned. God glory. Warmed by his sisters colorful gloves, my teenage son offered a bouquet of quickweed and I stop to weave a crown of the tiny white flowers. Two hours have passed when I realize the park had done a Narnia like number on me. I’d walked through the wardrobe.

walk3

I’m not lost but something tells me I’m finding my way home.

We nosh on thick slices of country bread and cheddar cheese to fill our bellies and nibble other edible plants and roots we find along the way. Heart-healthy hawthorne berries. The dark flat leaves of lambs quarters, dandelion and bitter burdock. My belly is full but more than that I’ve feasted on a smorgasbord of grace. I’m satisfied.

A walk along the water’s edge takes us back to the hawthorne bush. It’s there we met and there the magic began. Just steps from civilization, but a world away.

walk4

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight…#GiveMeGrace

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, Beauty, God, grounding, home, Walk

Give Me Grace : Grounding : on Forgiveness {Day 14}

Nov 08, 2014 42 Comments ~ Written by lisha epperson

 

photo: flickr cc / spencer314b

photo: flickr cc / spencer314b

Grounding : Forgiveness

“Everyone thinks forgiveness is a lovely idea until he has something to forgive.” - C.S. Lewis

At that point Peter got up the nerve to ask, “Master, how many times do I forgive a brother or sister who hurts me? Seven?”22 Jesus replied, “Seven! Hardly. Try seventy times seven. – Matthew 18 : 21-22 The Message

I received an email from an assistant at the church plant my family attends now. You might remember it, my certain brook for such a time as this. The one I walk to. We’ve experienced the temperature dip that pronounces summer officially over in New York City. It’s all about layers and scarfs and rustling leaves. There’s a biting chill in the air that foretells a harsh winter – but I still love our walk.

I’ve committed to assisting in one way or another once a month. I’ve only served as a dance minister in other congregations…so this is new. On the form I couldn’t decide where I wanted to be used so I asked God to use me however he needed me. So far that’s included prayer after service, serving communion and last weeks first time request.

I opened the email with little expectation. We’ve worshipped there a few months now and I’ve gotten used to the flow of connection with regard to communication. But this week was a little different. I received two emails. The first asked if I was available to serve that weekend offering no clear directive. Ummm…ok. Whatever, however Lord. I confirm my availability and answer yes. And then the second email….

“Thanks Lisha. Could you read scripture in the service? The scripture is
Matthew 18:21-35 (NIV Version). Just let me know if you would be willing to do that.”

And just like that God called me to a face to face meeting where I’d be forced to think about the spot on my heart. The almost undetectable blemish that I successfully cover – most days. But His word is a powerful scan, highlighting things I deny, revealing hidden truths. Scars. It’s there – The “f”word. Forgiveness.

I already know where this is going but the little girl gangsta in me feigns innocence. I clutch my pearls or cowrie shells or whatever and act like God didn’t just call me out. I sit with my bible and read the words. I imagine how my voice will sound wafting through a room full of people. I wonder where I should pause for significance and how I might allow my voice to rise and fall for effect. In the light of His works, my reputation and performance are of no importance. I know this. It’s only what I do for His name and renown that matters but like I said, I’m struggling. My head takes over just as the walls go up around my heart. I’m on lock down, in full on defense mode.

I’m not half way though before the Holy Spirit power of those words jumps off the page and wrestles me to my knees. “This word is for you. You, Lisha , have to forgive.”

And that’s all kinds of hellish scary and hard. I don’t know how to forgive. I know I’m called to do it but I don’t want to. Forgiveness comes in stages.  Today its a strange mix of denial and maintenance. It’s asking for grace to make it through another day. Sometimes it’s keeping quiet. Others, it’s a fist shaking scream to the heavens where I beg God to remove the thorn. It’s causing me to limp and I don’t want to look like a victim. Jesus, you know I can’t let them see me weak.

I know that word was for me. I’ll stay grounded in the truth of His forgiveness for me. I’ll ask for grace to believe it and look forward to the freedom it promises. It is lovely isn’t it…until you’re called to do it. Touché Mr. Lewis. Touché.

I guess I’ll start here.. Lord, have patience with me, help me extend that grace to others. Lord let me learn from your example. Lord forgive me and teach me to forgive.

That I’m asking for something I haven’t been able to give isn’t lost on me, it’s just God’s way of humbling me, laying bare, my great need.

Let your handmaiden finds grace in your sight..#GiveMeGrace ~ read more ~
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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, uncategorized - Tagged #31days, #GiveMeGrace, forgiveness, God, grounding
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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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