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Releasing Life
a Canadian traveler who is on a mission to love God while seeking to create environments for people to encounter Him, understand their value and engage with His heart for the nations.
Friday, September 12, 2014
Friday, September 05, 2014
Two Pillars
Life is spontaneous and plans change. It’s something I’ve learned
to embrace and not running short on any time soon. I grew up making plans and
dreaming up ideas. I have a long list of careers that I’ve wanted to do;
doctor, artist, art curator, drama teacher, marine biologist, French teacher,
social worker, writer, missionary, florist, psychologist, counselor, street
evangelist (those who know me
can start laughing at that one), youth worker… the list continues and
includes countries. However, ideas change and even now it takes getting used to
the quickness that it does in YWAM and the different routes that seem to sprout
in unlikely places.
I attended the ‘Western Europe DTS Staff and Leaders Gathering’ at
a nearby YWAM base for a week. It’s designed for networking, being refreshed
and seeking the Lord for the schools with bases from around Europe. For me, it
meant a week to make a decision.
An opportunity arose to staff the coming January school under the
leadership of one of my mentors. An opportunity to continue being discipled by
people who know me well while continuing to grow in my discipleship of others
in an intentional way. Saying yes would mean saying later to the Biblical Core
Course (BCC) that I was wanting to do in Switzerland and saying no to Christmas
at home and more time with my family. Praying about it and desiring a clear cut
answer, I was quite frustrated by the answer:
‘Both are good. There isn`t a right or wrong choice’.
The idea that this might eventually be simply a decision for me to
make instead of a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer from God freaked me out. What if I chose
the wrong one (despite feeling there wasn’t one)?
The first day of the gathering, we talked about faith. What is God
speaking already that goes past us into the unknown? (There seems to be a theme this past year where I am continually
confronted by the topic of faith and trusting without understanding). As the speaker led us into a time of declarations and standing up
for what God has said, I had a picture come to my mind. Two pillars, two
options. One crumbled, one stood. It was then I knew what they represented.
There was no right or wrong option that I could have chosen. There was
simply the best option out of two. And right now, I've detoured to come back to Harpenden.
As I’ve changed my plans, do I think I’m making the right choice
staffing the January school? No. Do I think I’ve made the best choice? In
faith, yes. Logistics might make me go crazy in these next few months but that will be another story.
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
A Challenge
I was sitting in a coffee shop just over a week ago, having just submitted my biometrics (aka. fingerprints) for
my UK residence permit. In the
weeks before, I had experienced a range of emotions.
I would swing from wondering if I should just go home,
finish my time in YWAM, forget everything I’ve felt like God has said, start
on my degree to being confident in what I was doing, being excited for the vision
God has for this nation and knowing that every step would be provided for as he’s
promised.
But sitting in that coffee shop after finalizing my
application, I felt complete and utter peace over my mind. I didn’t feel
anxious, I didn’t second guess. And that’s when I had my final confirmation.
Extending my time in YWAM for an undetermined amount of time and staying in
England to move to a city in the west: I was exactly where I was supposed to
be.
It was during the last school while I was co-leading an
outreach team to Romania that I felt challenged by God. I was trying to decide
whether or not to stay in YWAM and figuring out the pros and
cons in my usual logical fashion. When I realised my objections were
contrary to what God had promised to be faithful in (my family and provision), I
felt a challenge be put to me:
A challenge to go after what I see and to step out and trust
Him with what I don’t. A challenge of my faith: do I believe God will follow
through on his promise?
In these past few months as I`ve committed to staying in the
UK, I`ve seen his faithfulness already. As I`ve stepped out, I`ve seen him
follow through. And it`s on this journey that I`ve seen what ‘normal’ is.
Normal isn't and shouldn't be dependent on what country I grew up in or what
culture I learn to adapt to. Normal should be listening to God and obeying.
Stepping out in faith, whether at university or in YWAM, should be normal. And
as it turns out, YWAM will be my journey for a while. The only thing I regret
is the photo on my residence card.
Wednesday, July 09, 2014
The Kindness of Christ
I remember my reaction so clearly. During a prayer meeting, someone told me that
they believed that kindness was a strength of mine and a gift to use that God had
given me. Oh, that was nice of them, as I moved my mind on to the next thing. I mentally placed it in the cupboard of encouragements I received that evening but never gave it another thought and wouldn't really till a few years later. I didn't realize the full magnitude of the meaning of the word 'kind' as I had
never given it much credit in the past. It’s often a word that I have
brushed off as generic and slightly shallow as to determining character, or
something I would use to describe someone that I didn't know that
well. Growing up, I
lived in a village that was statistically safe next to a city that was
generally good in a country that was known for being peaceful. It seemed that
kindness meant what was utterly good in action and deed. To me, kindness was
about what you saw on the outside; it didn't have to go too deep. It definitely wouldn't have meant self-sacrificial.
However, in the past few years since that prayer
time, I've begun to realise the intentionality of the kindness of Christ. It came out of seeing the full affect of my unwillingness to prefer others. I found that it was
something I could pretend to be if the need came up… when in reality it was
more of a front to appear nice and to be well-liked. And acting out of that brought frustration and a disconnect in relationship where there should have been joy to give to others. What my face presented was
not what I was cultivating in my character. What I was holding in my heart was
full of self-centered desires to see my wants or tasks fulfilled, not the
willingness to place the needs of someone above my own. I could appear to be
friendly, but in reality my heart was as hard as stone to the idea of
preferring and loving them. Somehow, I had the idea that my time was my own, it
was my duty to protect it and I could spend it how I wished.
When living on a campus like this, it didn't take too long to
discover how I really felt about preferring. Every day I am confronted
with the dilemma of either serving someone or expecting service for myself.
The chance to prefer and give is an opportunity that we all have the choice to step into.
An idea that I've seen this community consistently press into and reflect on is being open to chaos and being willing to be interrupted. While the idea of having chaos doesn't appeal to me whatsoever, it may just need a different use of words. The question I have to ask myself is,
‘How open am I to be kind and giving? How willing am I to lay down my time, skills, and plans to serve others?’
The chance to prefer and give is an opportunity that we all have the choice to step into.
An idea that I've seen this community consistently press into and reflect on is being open to chaos and being willing to be interrupted. While the idea of having chaos doesn't appeal to me whatsoever, it may just need a different use of words. The question I have to ask myself is,
‘How open am I to be kind and giving? How willing am I to lay down my time, skills, and plans to serve others?’
And it’s through the process that I've discovered how it is
really through kindness that we are able to open up our doors and to be
welcoming with arms outstretched. It is through kindness that others feel
appreciated and safe to be themselves. The influence of kindness goes far
beyond the influence of selfishness.
His time, love, and delight are showered upon us without a contract to sign or the look of an exasperated face.
It is through kindness that Christ has given all of himself to us. If you look through the scriptures of when Jesus walked the earth, he was open to stop for people who asked questions and when the Father directed him. He was generous and giving with his time; he was kind and accepted everyone. In his life, he met people at all different sides of the spectrum and yet his capacity to be kind covered all he encountered. And when I look at what that means for my own heart’s condition, I recognize the desire to do the same. To be generous with my time and with the gifts I’ve been given so that others may be built up, strengthened and drawn closer to the Father.
As a community who loves Jesus, it is our mission to be kind to all who
we meet. It doesn't mean just putting on a nice face. Not to put up a nice front or to see our own egos inflated, but so
that his glory and his kindness is evident to
all. At the end of the day, what we do is for his glory to be magnified.
And it is through our actions and heart motives that others would see Christ in
us and be drawn to their creator.
That is strength. To be kind is to have the mind of Christ, if
we are so willing to pursue it.
Friday, July 04, 2014
A Faithful God
As my time at YWAM Harpenden is coming to
an end, I've started to consciously process what it is exactly that I have
been learning here. Of course I've been thinking as the time has gone on;
things have come up to get rid of in my life, skills have been sharpened and
gifts have been discovered. But there’s been an over-arching theme to
everything that has happened. And it’s because of all the ways that I've seen
God in my daily life that I know that my coming here to serve and bless the
nations has not been an accident or just a good idea that I thought of during
my own DTS.
It is because I serve such an adventurous
God that I have been given the opportunity to move overseas, go through culture
shock almost every day (yes, even in England) and meeting amazing people from
all over the world. It is because I am the daughter of such a faithful God that I am able to
do the kind of job that I only dreamed about growing up, that I can be a part
of the healing process for others while I go through my own discovery of who
God. It is because I am known by such a loving God that I could come to
this environment where I can make mistakes, be an absolute emotional wreck
at times and see myself strengthened in the midst of fire while
a community cheers me on.
Because of all these and more, I know
that that it was not an accident for me to come to this small town just outside
of London instead of following the footsteps of many others to university. It is
because of these things that I know that I am a completely different person
than who I was when I started my DTS almost three years ago. Before, I was closed off to others and couldn't speak to a small group without feelings of anxiety, pessimistic and independent. Now, I've spoken in front of people (sometimes thirty,
sometimes hundreds) without shaking and have come to enjoy the
opportunities I get to speak, my faith has been increased to see the positive in
life and, although vulnerability with others is something I struggle with and
find hard to do, I've found the most healing when I've had to squash my pride
and ask others for help.
Because of all these things, I think a
more than accurate description of my time here comes from Revelations 21:5 (ESV).
"And
he who was seated on the throne said, ‘Behold,
I am making all things new.’ Also he said, ‘Write this down, for these
words are trustworthy and true.’"
A consistent promise God has made over these past three years is that beauty would rise from ashes, that I would see the fulfillment of his goodness while I am here and that this was a time to be myself- to be who I was created to be. That was the promise. And I know that His words are trustworthy and true as He is a faithful God and He will finish the good work that He started within me in the days to come.
A consistent promise God has made over these past three years is that beauty would rise from ashes, that I would see the fulfillment of his goodness while I am here and that this was a time to be myself- to be who I was created to be. That was the promise. And I know that His words are trustworthy and true as He is a faithful God and He will finish the good work that He started within me in the days to come.
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