I walk into church and there is a flurry of little kids, much older and maturer than my two-year old self, and they are waving some serious palm branches. And the processional starts and they are singing and swaying and waving those palms and simultaneously...God entered the room. The only way I can explain it, is I heard a feeling. And God whispered..."I died for you". I teared up and then as I made an effort to release my inner toddler, I choked on my tears and started coughing and totally deflected that I was weepy. I think.
Palm Sunday...God stops to weep. He is entering the week that He was sent for. The crowd is screaming Hosanna! Hosanna! - which I learned Sunday means "Save Now". And so was my mantra for the rest of the day...Hosanna! Hosanna!
God's divine timing had me reading the fourth book in a series called Saving Gideon: The Angel Chronicles by Mary May. These fictional books are and about Spiritual Warfare and I had been waiting for another book to be released, so it was no coincidence that I happened upon it last week. Book four focused on circumstances that do not go our way, and without realizing it, we invite in a "bitter heart demon". I could have placed myself in the story. And the ache in my heart told me that I had sent out unknowingly a little one-demon e-vite and I needed to retract that summons ASAP.
Image by Sassy Graphics
I have to apologize to God daily for my humanity - that I continue to tell Him (haha!) to send a burning bush sign. And God said last Sunday...fire and two-year olds DO NOT mix. And He placed 1 Corinthians 10:31 on my heart...Whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God. Keeping to myself hoping my situation turns around sooner than later, is not producing a novel of glory...
So I banished the bitter-heart demon and took the spankin' spoon to my selfish heart. I made a decision that this week would be one of activity that gave God the glory.
I have always wanted to help with the preparation of my church's Annual Thrift Sale, but have always been stuck at work. I suspected I was missing out on fellowship and feel-good goose bumps - and not to toot my own horn - but I was totally right. My fellow Sisters-in-Christ volunteering to sort, clean, and lable treasures this week think I am crazy (I am), but I have had the best week being up there with them. Just the opportunity to laugh and visit with them; to look at the "things" people donate to the event (people we need a "stuff" intervention!), and then to have my heart leap at the thought of the people that not necessarily want what we have...but NEED it. The mission and outreach of the event puts a little lump in my throat.
And I hear the feeling "I died for this". For us to be able to walk in our brokenness, while finding a way to extend mercy, grace, kindness, necessity, and fellowship.
This was the fourth week of being laid off...and I survived. Not only did I survive, God sent friends to check on me with text messages, cards, hugs, outreach of "what can I do to help". People, my favorite part of Psalm 23 is "my cup overflows" - and so it did this week.
Holy Week is my favorite week in the church. Jesus entered the city, was fueled with a passionate urgency, fellow-shipped, preached, wept, prayed, begged God that the cup be removed, shared bread with a betrayer, accepted His fate. What a full week He had that encompassed every human emotion, every human fear, every human effort, and I can't help but think His heart overflowed as He dined with His disciples. All of that...and He still had the energy to suffer for me. If you haven't read it...it's a great book.
I came across a pin a while back by John Piper that said "When you feel like you can't take it any more, look to Jesus, and take it a little more". And from the Blessed Is She blog, "Good Friday is good because it reminds us that the good is often painful; that God's will for our lives demands that we love until it hurts".
I have had a busy week banishing bitter-heart demons, apparently...repelling burning bushes, sorting collectibles, accepting the generosity of others, watching my son play baseball, and crying over the love of Jesus. He died for this - for the plain and ordinary to become extraordinary. Hosanna! Hosanna!
Video Warning - I weep uncontrollably at the Passion of our Christ...if you so choose, grab the tissues!