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Posts tagged love

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, grace, Jesus, Mahalia Jackson, Motherhood, racism, Stevie Wonder

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, grace, Outside the City Gate, religion

Give Me Grace : Wake Up

Sep 27, 2014 33 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
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waking up to the glory of a great day  made greater – hanging out with Big Daddy after her 1st ballet class

Give Me Grace : Wake Up

And the angel that talked with me came again, and waked me, as a man that is wakened out of his sleep. (‭Zechariah‬ ‭4‬:‭1‬ ASV)

I’m ready, God, so ready, ready from head to toe, Ready to sing, ready to raise a tune: “Wake up, soul! Wake up, harp! wake up, lute! Wake up, you sleepyhead sun!” (‭Psalm‬ ‭57‬:‭7-8‬ MSG)

The past few weeks have been soul heavy. Overgrown with grief. Yet, I’m still on Facebook.

I post on Facebook, like we do, to connect. To check in with family and friends. To celebrate birth announcements, engagements, weddings, new jobs and adventures. All good stuff. But the dark and hard things?…I generally leave those things out. And for the most part, I think I should. Because for crying out loud this is Facebook and I’m a grown woman. I believe in drawing a line on social media. But I also feel like it’s Facebook , and it’s been here, in the past year and half that I’ve been encouraged and inspired and learned to publicly walk my faith. Where I’ve seen communities come together in prayer over the little and much of life. I love Facebook for that. So the line? well now it’s blurry.

It seems, if we’re doing life well on social media, we learn to share a skillfully nuanced painting. We show the glory and hide the grit. We share the beauty,  rarely the blood. So much so that we’ve gotten used to unbalanced images.  We cast our carefully crafted narratives into a sea of online engineered reality.  The expectation is that it’s all good – all the time, when it’s not. The almost too good to be true is just that. The line can be confusing.

But I’ve learned everyone , every one has something to cry about, something that given a stolen moment can break through the veil we put up. Something that shatters the heart. Every one. It’s how this life is lived. Sun, rain, up, down. Broken, beautiful. Wrecked, healed. We live for the spaces between and believe God for the road to redemption. On the way we covet the peaceful moments, the holy silence, the wisdom of a redeemed after. In the middle…we rest, at least we try to.

I’m waking up to the power of a soul willing to explore crossing the line.

Last year a friend told me about an unfortunate life event and I practically scolded her for waiting to tell me. For telling me when it was too late. I don’t want to do that. Not when I have a community that cares, a community that can lift me spiritually when I’m hurting. Not when I know prayer and good love and vibes work. I have to wake up to the power of my faith.

In the natural I’m frustrated and scared and fighting my instinct to fly. Still my spirit hears his voice – in black and white He tells me He’s able, and in words preached in a school auditorium he finds me in a crowd of 200 and declares He’s the best answer for anything I may be going through. I have to listen.

I’m telling my soul to wake up. Wake up to the only answer I BELIEVE in. I’m making the choice to wake up to the everyday grace of life. Because there’s so much good. So much good. An over abundance of joy is right in front of me – if I choose it.

I want to label this thing, this melancholy covering – I want to cast it away. It’s depressive and gloomy and I want to replace it with the god glory of a smile. Because inside – I’m ready to make the shift. It’s time to wake up to His ability…He makes the hurt…hopeful.

So here I am letting you know I’m in a pit. For now, I’m covered by the full-out glory of a first ballet class. I’m focusing on my princess and her papa bonding after class, I’m savoring sweet kisses from a 4-year-old.  The busyness of life that makes my marriage and motherhood amazing doesn’t end the hurt but it keeps me afloat.  I will defeat this nameless ache…but I need prayer.

Here’s that layer of neutral tones where I don’t share the full story. Here’s where I experiment with highlights and shadows. I’ll brush over the details. Toy around with exposure and saturation. I’m grateful I don’t have to give it all up.  Maybe over a great cup of coffee and my favorite dessert. Maybe not. I guess I’m a line girl after all. God knows and now you know too. You know enough.

Let your handmaiden find grace in your sight #GiveMeGrace

♥

Maybe you’re like me and need prayer too. No demand for details here, just affirm your need in the comments section and we can remember each other in grace this weekend. 

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, community, Facebook, God, hope, prayer, psalm 57:7, soul, wake up

Give Me Grace : His Presence

Sep 13, 2014 41 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
photo: Rhesa Storms our first walk home from church

photo: Rhesa Storms
after our first walk home from church

God said, “My presence will go with you. I’ll see the journey to the end.” – Exodus 33:14 The Message

You will drink from the brook, and I have directed the ravens to supply you with food there.” 1 Kings 17:4

Something about church membership makes us territorial. We dig our heels into the ground and bind ourselves to a building. Clothed in a banner of pride, we lock arms with spiritual families. We think His voice, confined to the congregation of our choosing. His spirit contained in the passionate words of one preacher. Fully immersed in a primal craving to belong, we get caught up in theology and doctrine and pastors and people. We forget God is love and loves ALL his children.

We forget we live under the grace of an all-encompassing, omnipresent God. His presence inhabits a tabernacle of love we take with us wherever we go. And in every step if we’re willing to follow, He leads.

This season finds me accepting his right now provision. And thankfully it’s also literally, right here – an answer to prayer for church made easy. This season I’m following his presence to my neighborhood. It’s up close and personal, confrontational and humbling.

I gave my life to the lord in a church that grew out of a ministry born in the theatre district. Performers of every sort filled the fold up chairs of a second floor music studio every Sunday. After 16 years I left for the offshoot of a mega church. I see Gods providence in every choosing. In the beginning God had to get my attention. He did that in a room of like-minded artists. When I needed to ground myself in His word of faith He led me to a church where I’d learn to believe Him, for myself. Now, I just need to get to church. He’s making that possible.

I attended church in my community on Sunday. Not uptown, not downtown, not a cool service in Brooklyn or the latest pop up in an abandoned theater. I attended church in Harlem USA. Where I live, where my children learn. Where we buy milk from the bodega and stand in line at the post office. We attended church just steps from home. I can’t tell you what that feels like for a family of 6.

No train, no bus, only a 20 minute walk – door to door. We walked there and back. Jesus, the glory of walking down the street with my children after service is only eclipsed by the fact that they’d been fed (and mama properly caffeinated) before service began. Sure the 15 block walk brings me face to face with everything I love and hate about Harlem, but maybe belonging to something in my community besides my apartment will help me reconcile that.

I know they say a church alive is worth the drive but not if the drive further complicates the challenge of getting a family to church. Not if it means a total of 2 hours spent on a city bus or subway or worse, looking for and paying for parking.

For now, my certain brook is in my back yard and as the old folks say “I don’t know what the future holds but I know who does.”

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, 1 Kings:17:4, brook, church, Exodus 33:14, family, God, presence

Give Me Grace : Come Up Higher

Sep 06, 2014 29 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

 

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Come up higher
Come up higher
He’s calling me
Every day
And I will answer
I will answer
My life is in…Your hands 

- Unbroken Chain Church 

I spent two mornings this week looking through the trees. Peering over the dashboard while waiting for legal parking on the street I call home, I sang this song. It’s one of the first songs I learned, one of the first songs I loved as new believer. That was 1989. He called then, He calls now. And the song is familiar and new and old, in a way that feels safe. Like the taste of beet juice (my fathers remedy for everything) or the way my mama taught me not to wander off alone. I can sit in “good for me” boundaries like that forever.

I set my gaze through a mix of green and worn leaves to find it. Justice, something to settle my spirit because the last few weeks have been hard. Holy hard. And sometimes I couldn’t see. But I’m determined to see beyond the filter and anything else that might divide us. Brushed and bruised by thorns, scrubbed clean by dew, my bare skin made new. I want to feel it – I want to be fully awakened by an encounter that transforms. I want to know more of His love. I want to go higher.

I’m the contemplative type, a thinker. But I also crave action. I want to know what I can do – how I can help make things better while I think about change, nirvana, epiphany…Jesus. I’m not afraid to do the hard work, to put my foot in, to get involved, but grace is gritty. And waiting isn’t easy.

Here’s the revelation. I have to come up higher to catch the vision of grace I pray for. The one I believe in. Maybe, instead of focusing on justice, I’ll come up higher and seek grace.

The trees tell me it’s a process. Watching them prepare for change reminds me to hang in, hold on…to shift and drift…to stay loose. Before the fall they’ll lose everything. Before the promise of a bud appears….all falls into grace.

I don’t have answers for the hurt and questions seeking enlightenment in this world presents. Except to do love. Do good.

I’ll come up higher with my belief in love. Love that looks different in every season but is identified by the dirty work we do in the ditch. God promises a holy outcome.

The do good kind of love is hard. And God breathed grace is a gift. In the end it won’t it matter if we agreed, only that we put into action the only answer that offers life. His love. His light.

While I wait I’ll be love and believe love. I’ll answer by hanging my hope on an altar of grace…a tabernacle of love I can take with me, wherever I go.

So come up a little higher, higher, higher, higher, higher
So come up a little higher, higher, higher, higher, higher – Mali Music

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, come up higher, God, grace

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, Ferguson, God, prayer

Give Me Grace : Nothing

Jun 07, 2014 32 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

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Nothing

The One who died for us—who was raised to life for us!—is in the presence of God at this very moment sticking up for us. Do you think anyone is going to be able to drive a wedge between us and Christ’s love for us? There is no way! Not trouble, not hard times, not hatred, not hunger, not homelessness, not bullying threats, not backstabbing, not even the worst sins listed in scripture

I’m absolutely convinced that nothing—nothing living or dead, angelic or demonic, today or tomorrow, high or low, thinkable or unthinkable—absolutely nothing can get between us and God’s love because of the way that Jesus our Master has embraced us.- taken from Romans 8:31-39 The Message

I gave my life to the Lord as an adult. At 22, let’s just say I had developed a few unsavory habits. Like most new believers I struggled with sin…putting off the old man, so to speak. The church I attended then held altar calls at the end of every service – for people committing their lives to God for the first of fiftieth time as well as people like me…people who were already sold out on Jesus…just trying to get it right.  ~ read more ~

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, God, nothing, Nothing Can Come Between Us, romans 8, Sade, trust

Give Me Grace : 18 years

May 31, 2014 27 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

18years

God can do anything, you know—far more than you could ever imagine or guess or request in your wildest dreams! -from Ephesians 3:20

 18 years

I scraped sardine cakes from my favorite pan today. The expensive non-stick skillet couldn’t live up to its differential advantage. My carefully crafted coating is delicious – just no longer part of the breakfast treat I worked so hard to prepare. I’m salvaging what looks more like seafood hash than cake. It’s still tasty but not the cute patty we enjoy when my favorite brand is on sale.

It was after 10 a.m. With scrambled eggs and fruit waiting on dollar store paper plates, I remembered aloud “Debate club starts this afternoon.” Which led to the twisting of my maternal auto focus lens. It zoomed in on the details of my day.  ~ read more ~

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Posted in christianity, faith, Give Me Grace, life, relationships, uncategorized - Tagged #GiveMeGrace, 18 years, Bill Hybels, ephesians 3:20, Fit to Be Tied, God, Lynne Hybels, marriage

Infertility :: Confessions of a Superwoman {guest post by Chelle Wilson}

Apr 26, 2014 5 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson

Chelle Wilson is one of my online sisters. We’re so tight we’ve even talked on the phone…once. She’s one of the girls I go to for advice. Each time I post I wonder what she would say.  And again once, I actually connected with her to find out. She’s always there to drop the wisdom of the word on me. She’s cool like that. I expected a handful of friends to respond to my call for stories of fertility and faith but once the door opened…once one person shared, well that door flung wide as others rushed in.  I’m delighted to add Chelle’s words to the “Last Girl on the Hill” series. In recognition of National Infertility Awareness Week  ( #NIAW ) we’re telling the stories friends. Listen up…Chelle is speaking.

photo: flickr cc /hans van den berg

superwoman
photo: flickr cc /hans van den berg

Leave it to me to quietly manage a miscarriage while hosting a Thanksgiving Dinner Party for 12. I am superwoman (so I thought). I can manage anything (I foolishly believed). I am in control (I never was). This is a lesson in surrender and in faith. This is the path from I to I AM.

I married my high school sweetheart and one true love. We didn’t take a direct path to the altar. We celebrated the sacrament of marriage just ahead of the 14th anniversary of the day we met. We take our time.

By the time my beloved and I wed, everyone expected children. I remember acknowledging our one month anniversary signing consent forms to remove massive uterine fibroids diagnosed weeks prior. We wondered if we’d ever be able to conceive and carry normally.

About 3.5 years into our marriage, we got pregnant. Leave it to me to quietly manage a miscarriage while hosting a Thanksgiving Dinner Party for 12 friends and family. The perfectly composed hostess, the quintessential get-it-done girl, I said nothing until all the guests departed. My husband discovered me quietly sobbing in the bathroom, asking him to call the MD. As we awaited a return call, I clearly remember telling my husband that through sheer force of my will, I would not lose the pregnancy. You see, I relied upon the fallacy that I was superwoman (so I thought). I convinced myself that I could manage anything. I foolishly believed that I was in control. God had other plans.

Of course we lost the baby. I remember the bitter disappointment and the feeling that I had failed. Had I been stronger, wiser, better, perhaps things would have turned out differently. I struggled with anger for months, seeing young single mothers holding beautiful babies as my arms hung limp. I questioned His Plans. I doubted His Promises. I needed to know why.

Through study and through prayer, we began healing. I embraced the wonder of conception, the marvel of pregnancy, the miracle of birth. They had naught to do with my will, my desire, or the illusion of my control. When we conceived again, I was awestricken by the manifestation of creation, that God would show me in love how completely irrelevant my will was. Completely. This was my lesson in surrender and in faith. This was my journey from I to I AM.

My miscarriage, subsequent conception and pregnancy was all about submission; solely about God. I fully appreciated that sustaining this pregnancy, delivering that child would be a blessing. It was one of the happiest and most peaceful times in my life. I was released from so many of the pressures that accompanied my composed, get-it-done girl persona. It was a burden I happily laid down.

So what I threw up daily (at least the first 13 weeks). I faithfully commuted to work for 38 weeks, navigating mass transit so very grateful for our blessing. Mine was a stellar confinement. I only labored from Wednesday until Sunday morning. I was surrendered. I was joyful. I was content. When our daughter was born, we named her Adia, which in Kiswahili (a language of Southeast Africa) means “gift from God.” My journey to motherhood began at surrender and left me with a deeper faith. That was my path from I to I AM.

Chelle Wilson writes at the intersection of life and faith,
not at as theologian, but as a regular child of God
living and loving in the face of confusion.
Exposing the deepest parts of herself, she talks to God
through liturgical dance and words on the page,
sharing lessons learned so that the next traveler’s journey
might not be so hard, or so long. Find Chelle at

http://www.treatmetoafeast.com

this post appears as part of  “Last Girl on the Hill” a blog series on fertility and faith

flickr cc - rob king

blog button courtesy of L. Epperson / image flickr cc Rob King

As we close out National Infertility Awareness Week I’m celebrating with the launch of a new ebook.
The Process, The Promise :: 31 Days of Infertility Prayer

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Posted in christianity, faith, infertility, last girl on the hill (blog series on fertility and faith), life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #NIAW, blog, fibroids, God, I am, miscarriage, national infertility awareness week, superwoman, surrender

Telling Your Story :: National Infertility Awareness Week

Apr 22, 2014 13 Comments ~ Written by Lisha Epperson
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photo: flickr cc – David DeHetre

Life is a moving breathing thing.  We have to be willing to constantly evolve. Perfection is constant transformation. – Nia Peeples

I used to chide myself for not telling my story sooner. A year ago, I watched online – open jawed, as women bravely told their stories of infertility – Mid-Battle. Bearing unimaginable pain and loss…unsuccessful treatments….publicly..in real time and in the moment. I thought I’d failed. I realize now every story, even the story told after the battle is important. Stories told, whether from the trenches or after the Medal of Honor is pinned, are equally valuable.

There are things you just won’t know until it’s over. That’s the perspective I speak from, the voice God graced me with. I tell the story as a veteran. And as such, see the complete picture, things I couldn’t see in the middle.

Here’s a revelation. The body I have now is not the one I began the journey with. Each season marking the completion of a cycle, one broken rotation after another as my body fought to keep up…hit that 360 degrees. I’ll very likely walk many more cycles before my time on earth is up. But I’d say I’m learning the fine art of shape shifting. I’ll transition more easily next time around. Ooze like fiery lava as God pours the next mold.

I see my body then, my body now. From surgeries and losses to a split wide Red Sea miracle birth…I soul-wept from one form to another. I took the journey and now enjoy the peace of a pressed flower between the pages of a long shelved book.

Everything’s quiet now but I couldn’t have told the story in my first body. My current physical state knows both worlds. Living the before and after I see now how my body danced in the spirit realm while the devil watched. A soul battle of “epic proportions”, my new teen would say. A physical death would have been the least of my worries…I needed the win so that my spirit might live.

I couldn’t have told this story with perky breasts and an unmarred belly. Apparently before telling the story I’d need a few gray hairs and a little mild back pain. My body would demand respect. Devotion. Love. That’s what happened, physically, as weeks turned months, turned years. Equal parts breaking down and building up. Healing happened in stages. My body needed time.

I had to be branded first…by holy hot words singed as truth on my soul. I couldn’t write the words without tears.

I had to be branded first.

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photo : flickr cc – judy schmidt

And in this ceremony….this sacred sacrament… scattered pieces of my soul marked mines. I skipped over sections, tried to avoid the many unrecognizable parts of my whole

That I’d be blown away was inevitable.  Christ’s love explosion strewn as a million stars across the sky – So that I might look up and see one… Him…in my darkness.

This is my warrior song. Hand scratched notes of hope engraved on the stone table of His glory. Blood soaked and redeemed…I return to the battlefield with these words…for you.

It’s National Infertility Awareness Week and I’m forming a circle and passing the talking stick. Join me as I open this space for 7 days (Wednesday to Wednesday) for fellow warriors to tell their stories. For the redemptive power of telling to light a fire, free a soul.

And don’t forget there’s space for you. Send me your words. Send me your story. I’ll share it in the circle. *

See you on Wednesday.

* anonymous submissions welcome.

this week Warrior Song is Free for all! click this link to download your copy.

and the winner of the #spiritualmisfit giveaway is Diana Trautwein! Congratulations! 

a post for Last Girl On The Hill : a blog series on fertility and faith

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Posted in adoption, christianity, faith, infertility, life, motherhood, uncategorized - Tagged #NIAW, body, faith, God, hope, national infertility awareness week, shape shifting, soul transformation, women, 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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