Faith

Hanging Up the Eagle

christmasIt was the Christmas my dad turned into a full bird. My mother and I were in a department store at the Garden State Plaza surrounded by bows, glitter, and faux firs decorated from tip to trunk with lights and glass-blown ornaments. I was eleven, a sixth grader with snaggly teeth, bangs and the patience of a newborn squirrel. But I knew my mission. "Something gaudy," my mother instructed. "It's got to be huge."

"I think we're in the right place," I replied, looking over the sea of drums, meaningless balls, gingerbread men, and fat Santas. I gave my bangs a puff of air with a protruding lower lip. "Does dad know you're doing this?"

"Of course not," she snapped. Turning another carousel of ornaments, my mother laughed. "He's going to hate it."

A Matter of Rank

In the Army, a full-bird grows within a cocoon of service and emerges with two-dimensional eagles pinned on its epaulets. A full-bird is a Colonel—an officer selected to climb to the ranks of the U.S. Army. When the good news came that previous summer, my mother popped a champagne bottle and invited the family to the promotion ceremony that overlooked the Hudson River. All that was done and over, and now it was Christmas and my mother was determined.

"This bird is putting you through college," my mother shouted from across the store. I shrank in embarrassment and rushed to her side.

"No one makes eagle ornaments, mom," I whispered. Why were we looking for an eagle ornament when my father wore two on his shoulders every day? There was no sign of an eagle. Not even a dove.

I didn't understand the importance of that ornament. I didn't understand that removing LTC from the doorstep and replacing it with COL was a feat that required an entire committee to select my father's name and pass over someone else's. I didn't know that if his name hadn't been chosen, it would have meant the end of his 23-year Army career. It would have meant leaving West Point, the cocoon of my own making. I couldn't contemplate that even though my father's career had been extended, there was still an expiration date, and that it was fast approaching.

I didn't understand that when he took the uniform off, the ornament and the memories and the man would be all we had left.

And then I saw it.

"Mom," I shouted across the store. "I found it!"

eagle ornament

Traveling Lessons: When we're worried.

"Do not fear, for I am with you; do not anxiously look about you, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, surely I will help you, surely I will uphold you with My righteous right hand." Isaiah 41:10

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It started right away. We hadn't even left Nashville.

"Did you notice that we land in Chicago at 5:30 and our flight to London leaves at 6?" I ask casually.

"Hm," Patrick responds, rubbing his chin. "I guess I didn't."

"If we're delayed at all we may not be able to make our flight."

"It's okay. We'll be fine."

"You're right," I lie.

We're not fine. The flight is delayed. We land in Chicago ten minutes before our flight takes off. We run fast down the airport corridors, zigging and zagging through unsuspecting passengers. We're sweating. And when we arrive at the gate we yell, "WAIT!"

"I can't believe we made it," I laugh as we take our seat for the 7-hour flight. I feel relieved. Thankful. In control.

We made it, I exclaim internally, wiping sweat from my brow. We are the last ones on the plane.

And then it started again.

Westminster Abbey

"I'm concerned we won't make it to the London Eye," Patrick says checking his watch. "And if the taxi doesn't take cash, then we'll definitely miss it." Patrick eyes the tables in the restaurant. We just need two seats. No one has moved since we entered over an hour ago. We're expected on the other side of town in forty-five minutes.

"We should just go," I say, eyeing a plate of steaming mussels with envy. There's an undertone of blame in my voice. And suddenly, I realize it's a script we've been repeating over and over again since this whole journey began. 

When did we become so worried all the time?

As Patrick and I have started this three-week journey, the first lesson we realized is just how out of control traveling makes us feel. We are incredibly risk-averse* people. We like to manage our circumstances. We want to be on time. We don't want to waste money. We don't want to miss out. We can't imagine losing a reservation or getting kicked out of a cab or heaven forbid looking stupid in a foreign country. I want to look cool, feel cool, and be collected at all times. In fact, I spend most of my energy at home every day making sure that's the case. I've gotten so good at manipulating people and circumstances and money and time that I don't even realize that I'm doing it anymore.

One step in a foreign country, and there it is, rearing its ugly head. Worry.

Why do we want control? Control is a fleeting, misplaced sense of security.

Gibsons in Amsterdam

Today and tomorrow we are touring Amsterdam. The city is surrounded by canals in rings, and the canals are lined by tall, intricate buildings with sculptures, brown stone, and charm. The city was built centuries ago on three layers of sand. Some of the houses teeter to the side in a semi-permanent lean. Locals talk of global warming and rising waters.

We meander the cobblestone streets, over canals, dodging bicycles, and let the cool breeze brush our faces. And I notice a young mother pedal by with a one-year-old son saddled in the front and a toddler daughter seated on the back. None of the three family members are wearing helmets. She wobbles for a moment around a tourist, and the children wobble with her, unfazed that their fragile skulls could hit the pavement, unprotected.

Patrick and I are risk-averse. I think a lot of other Americans are too. We wear helmets. We want to know that we can avert every kind of disaster by willpower, money, preparation, or some combination of the three.

But we can't have that kind of control. It's not ours to have.

 

 

*A former version of this post said we were "risk-adverse". And while adverse and averse are words that sound similar, they have completely different meanings. Many thanks to the friend who helped me find the error. :)

Your Wisdom is Foolishness

I've been sitting here this morning with my coffee, looking out a foggy, rain soaked window and wondering about the day ahead of me. And there's the fact that today is September 11th—maybe that has something to do with it. There are things to do, people to meet with, deadlines to finish. And there's this ever-present feeling that I'll never catch up to... where I'm supposed to be. Or worse. That's I'll never get to where I could have been. But as I turned my eyes away from the world outside and toward the Bible, something slapped me across the face. In a good way.

food

"Do not deceive yourselves. If any of you thinks he is wise by the standards of this age, he should become a fool so that he may become wise. for the wisdom of the world is foolishness in God's sight." 1 Corinthians 3:18-19

Way to turn things on their head, Paul. Way to take everything I'm worrying about and make it seem to be exactly what it is: foolishness.

So, after reading that statement—I started to think. What are the standards of this age? What is the prevailing wisdom of the world? And have I bought into it? I thought about what the world tells me over and over again about how to make my life full of meaning, purpose, and power. And here are the "truths" that came out:

  • The more you have, the better off you'll be
  • Suffer less, gain more
  • Build a following, and success will follow, too
  • Sell something—even if it's yourself—because money is power
  • Everything is secondary to what you want

It's easy when they are on paper to say, "oh no, of course I don't believe those things. Money doesn't buy happiness!" But when you flip them on their head—the way Paul flips wisdom and foolishness in Corinthians—it's easier to feel the rub.

  • The more you give, the more you'll be transformed
  • Suffer more, gain what matters
  • Seek first the Kingdom of God and what's right, and everything else will follow
  • You can sell everything—because Jesus Christ offers real power
  • What you want is secondary to serving others

That last one. That one rubbed me the hardest. What I want is secondary? Least important? That is not what I've been told.

And I like what I've been told.

like looking out for me. And I don't even think it's selfishness because honestly—no one else is going to make my life what I want it to be. That's up to me. Isn't it?

But what if what I thought was wise was foolishness? And what if this "foolishness" is really the Truth?

Well then, that would hurt. And it would change everything.

What Death Does

It's been almost a month since my grandmother, Bebe, passed away. And it's safe to say that today, I am a different person than I was a month ago because of what death does. bebe

Death surprises. No matter how long it takes to get to the moment, death only takes a moment. And that brevity forces me to face the brevity of my life. And facing the brevity of life makes me angry. Because I don't want to live for a short time. I want to live for a very long time.

Death tricks. It convinces me that if I can live for a very long time then there's a greater chance for my life to have meaning. It says I shouldn't be afraid of the end coming too soon, but the end coming before I can do something worth remembering.

Death lies. It tells me that that my grandmother's obituary needed more accomplishments, more accolades, and more anything. It tells me that the achievements and accolades and clips I stack up are what matter. It tells me my life and my name are what I should live for.

Death whispers, "If your life can't be great, then you're wasting it."

But Life tells a different story altogether.

Life persists. Despite generations of death and disease and war, life continues. There is something about the human body that fights to live, even in its last moments. There is something about humanity that continues to push forward toward eternity, because life wasn't made to end.

Life serves. Unlike death that greedily tells me to live for me, life tells me to live for anyone but me. It tells me that true joy comes when I give my life away to other people.

Life loves. Life reminds me that no matter what I do, it is who I am that matters. And who I am and what I do have been fully and forever separated by the work of Life defeating Death in Jesus. 

And if I forget that truth, Life whispers gently to me, "You may be sleeping, but I am here to wake you up."

Excerpts from my journal

Light in the YardEvery morning when I wake up, I drink coffee and open my journal and look out the bay window into our front yard. The first sentence I write is always and never the same. I can hear the whistle and twitter of birds.

I hear birds singing. Is that your voice?

Sun wide in its blaze on green trees.

Across the street, pink flowers bloom on a bush.

Today is today.

I cannot see them, but I hear them.

The monkey grass covers the whole walkway.

It's a wet, blue-lit morning.

A bird bathes in water, flapping and splashing about.

The sun showers light on leaves and blades of grass.

It's a new day, and it is seen.

A thin veil of clouds diffuses light perfectly.

The wind blows and the raindrops make a song.

You create these wonders and drop them by my doorstep each morning. How thankful I am to know the Painter of such varied scenes. Is it mundane, compelling the sun to rise? Are You tired of picking up the brush, filled with weather as paint? Day after day, choosing dark or light, deciding which blades need water and which need heat. 

Is it painting or accounting?

Is it art or is it work?

Only the blades can know.

And only the blades know.