Sunday, December 25, 2011

Christmas

It is cliche, on Christmas, to say how grateful I am for Jesus and how its time to reminisce about the birth of my Savior... So excuse me for being cliche. Because I am so grateful.

This season, I have really been thinking about what it really means that He was born. He came simply to die. He came only for us. He came because of His love. And this year, I was ok with that just being my gift. I love Christmas for many reasons - family, friends, gifts, food, games, Christmas movies... But this year, I can honestly say that Jesus was on my mind the most... Maybe its because of the Africa trip (I LEAVE TOMORROW), maybe its because this year we weren't able to buy much because of finances... I don't know. But if you really sit and think about what His birth means, there is so much excitement, satisfcation, and joy that comes from that.

Merry Christmas.


"'Don’t be afraid, Mary,' the angel told her, 'for you have found favor with God! You will conceive and give birth to a Son, and you will name Him Jesus. He will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High. The Lord God will give Him the throne of His ancestor David. And He will reign over Israel forever; His Kingdom will never end!'”
Luke 1:30-33




Wednesday, December 21, 2011

American Church

I have struggled quite a bit recently with the "American Church". The majority of churches I find apathetic, lifeless, comfortable, selfish, and often times have strayed so far away from their purpose that it is almost unrecognizable.

Geez, I really need to be more honest, huh?

I am tired of hearing people say things like they're worried about youth being in the building because they might spill soda or get dirt on the pew. Really? That's your main concern?

I don't think if Jesus were around today, He would be allowed in our churches. And if we did let him in, he wouldn't make it out without ridicule, judgment, and some anger from the congregants. How He lived on this earth is so far away from the Christian church of today who is commanded to imitate Him. Funny how that works.

I found this song, "My Jesus", by Todd Agnew. It is ridiculously accurate to how I have been feeling the last few weeks. Here is the lyrics and below, you can listen to it. Do it. Really. He says it way better than I could.


Which Jesus do you follow?
Which Jesus do you serve?
If Ephesians says to imitate Christ
Then why do you look so much like the world?

Cause my Jesus bled and died
He spent His time with thieves and liars
He loved the poor and accosted the arrogant
So which one do you want to be?

Blessed are the poor in spirit
Or do we pray to be blessed with the wealth of this land
Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for righteousness
Or do we ache for another taste of this world of shifting sand

Cause my Jesus bled and died for my sins
He spent His time with thieves and sluts and liars
He loved the poor and accosted the rich
So which one do you want to be?

Who is this that you follow
This picture of the American dream
If Jesus was here would you walk right by on the other side 
or fall down and worship at His holy feet

Pretty blue eyes and curly brown hair and a clear complexion
Is how you see Him as He dies for Your sins
But the Word says He was battered and scarred
Or did you miss that part
Sometimes I doubt we'd recognize Him

Cause my Jesus bled and died
He spent His time with thieves and the least of these
He loved the poor and accosted the comfortable
So which one do you want to be?

Cause my Jesus would never be accepted in my church
The blood and dirt on His feet might stain the carpet
But He reaches for the hurting and despises the proud
I think He'd prefer Beale St. to the stained glass crowd
And I know that He can hear me if I cry out loud

I want to be like my Jesus!
I want to be like my Jesus!
I want to be like my Jesus!
I want to be like my Jesus!

Not a posterchild for American prosperity, but like my Jesus
You see I'm tired of living for success and popularity
I want to be like my Jesus but I'm not sure what that means to be like You Jesus
Cause You said to live like You, love like You but then You died for me
Can I be like You Jesus?
I want to be like you Jesus!
I want to be like my Jesus!






Friday, December 16, 2011

I am scared. And its ok.

This morning, I filled my malaria medicine. I got my medicine in case we get sick. Daimian got his last shot. And I made a very long to do list of stuff that has to get done before we leave.

But last night, I was not feeling quite the same motivation as I did this morning. I laid in bed with my adorable husband sound asleep next to me and I couldn't seem to quiet my mind. This whole journey of planning the trip to Africa, fundraising, getting all the details in place, finding an organization to help, etc. I have been nothing but excited. My enthusiasm has been hard to miss by those around me. But last night was different.

For the first time, I am scared. So very scared.

I have been overseas before, so that isn't the problem. I have ridden on planes before, so that isn't it either. I hate spiders more than I can explain, but even that isn't it. I think it finally just smacked me in the face last night with the combination of the trip and Christmas coming up. I know, weird connection, but allow me to explain.

This trip is more than just a short term trip for the Mr. and I. This trip is the first taste of what our lives will eventually look like. Someday, we will be getting on a plane and we won't return for a lot longer than 3 weeks. It might be 3 months...3 years. And that means that I will miss Christmases. I will miss birthdays. I will miss babies being born, friends getting married... I will miss life.

So although this trip is only going to last me a few weeks, the lifelong implications are much greater, much scarier than what I can wrap my brain around right now.

Don't get me wrong, I am still so excited. I still have a countdown. I still talk about it all the time. And my whole self wants to be there right now, this moment. But the bigger picture is what terrifies me right now. Part of me is so excited for the big picture, for our future in Africa.

But today, in this moment, and last night as I lay awake, I am scared. And that is ok.

10 days.

The orphanage where we will be working





Wednesday, December 14, 2011

This Cause

I have written about Invisible Children before. But I am writing once again because I LOVE this cause. I have been a supporter of it since high school. Now, one of my very good friends, Tessa, is working for them as an intern in California. I love seeing updates from her on Facebook about all kinds of great things that are happening with this organization.

They are working right now to raise 2 million dollars. There is so much cool stuff being set up with the help of the supporters. If you aren't sure what it is or what they are doing, check out the Invisible Children Website and learn more. Seriously. It is worth your 5 minutes.

If you want to donate, click the link below:

http://www.stayclassy.org/fundraise/ic?fcid=120308

Please join me in making a difference for the children of Africa. Somewhere between the loads of Christmas gifts we buy, this can be one where you can genuinely feel good about what you are doing with your money.





Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Mary

With Christmas only 12 days away, my decorations are up all over my house. No tree yet, but that will soon be remedied. My nativity set might be my favorite part, though. I love it. It is front and center in my living room on top of my entertainment center.

I got to thinking yesterday as I was looking at the nativity... I feel bad for Mary. What a responsibility! Mother to Jesus? No thanks.

But there's more.... How did she get chosen? I mean, I know she met the requirements of being in the line of King David, and a virgin. But she couldn't have been the only girl that fit the criteria. What made her special? She had to have been living in such a way, God Almighty knew He could trust her. She had to have been committed, loving, dedicated, unwavering, obedient, not perfect, but tried for it.

Would I get chosen? If Mary and I lived at the same time, and I met all the criteria too, would He have chosen me? I know its a bit of a silly question, but get what I am trying to say here... Is my life one that God would choose? Am I living like her, obedient, unwavering, dedicated, not perfect, but trying for it?

I don't know.

But I want to live that way.

Mary, I do not envy you or the responsibility you had, but I do wish to live like you, so God can choose me....

For anything.





Saturday, December 10, 2011

For Our Freedom
























There is something both heart-warming and heart-breaking about this picture.

I am so sad for so many this holiday season, but today, my heart breaks for the soldiers who will have Christmas together in foreign countries without their families. So when I stumbled across this picture, I took a moment and prayed for the men and women who fight for our country despite the fact that so many in this country could care less about the unselfish who sacrifice for their freedom.

For our freedom.

Friday, December 9, 2011

School vs. Church?

As youth pastors, my husband and I deal with teens. Obviously.

And one of the things that we have found out is that schools don't like us.

I find this odd.

Don't worry. I know all about the separation of church vs. state. And I get it. I understand. But at the same time, don't you think we could kind of work together?

Isn't both of our goals to help the youth of America? Isn't both of our goals to help these kids find their place in this world and to educate them so they can make something of themselves? Don't we both want to see them succeed, grow, and learn?

Daimian and I have tried to get into several schools as volunteers and they won't let us. We have tried to offer support and help to the administration and they don't want it. As soon as they hear the words "youth pastor", "youth group", or "church", they shut down. Automatically, its a no.

If our goals are similar, couldn't we work together better?

Why can't it be school and church, not school vs. church?



Wednesday, December 7, 2011

My Nana

I have the greatest grandmother in the entire world.

Seriously.

This woman is amazing.

We call her Nana. Most people call her Doreen. She raised my father, my aunt, and my uncle to be incredible individuals, practically on her own. My grandfather, for a long time, was not a nice guy. But against his wishes, she took her kids to church, taught them about Jesus, and what really matters in life.

Is she rich? No. But she spends her money on things that matter... things that aren't materialistic. She's anything but lazy. This is a woman who hikes, leads the singles group at her church, goes on photography trips with her sister, sings in the church choir, cooks everything for Christmas, comes to the grandkids' games and plays, and so much more.

She is unstoppable.

If I can be even half the woman she is, half the grandmother she is, half the mother she is, then I will be far better than most women out there.

I am proud and blessed to call her Nana.





Sunday, December 4, 2011

Please Enjoy

My friend Robin just returned from the World Race. The World Race is on my bucket list. It is an intense trip over a period of 11 months in 11 countries. Um, yes please!

Anyways, she posts blogs from some of her fellow racers and I like to read them.. No it is not the same thing as Facebook stalking. Here is one that I read and it spoke to me HARD CORE.

Please enjoy.

http://ruthwilson.theworldrace.org/?filename=i-miss



Saturday, December 3, 2011

A Sense of Belonging

There are some days I really miss basketball. I played all 4 years in high school. I lettered all 4 years. And those 4 years with that team were, to this day, some of the best years of the short 21 I have lived.

Every time I watch a girl's basketball game, I think of the old days. I remember what it felt like to be apart of the team. We practiced together. We lifted weights together. We played games together. We ran lines together.... SO many lines....

That togetherness you feel with those girls is unmatched. When you go through defense week, or as we affectionately called it "Hell Week", and losses and wins, and Coach Steers' anger, happiness, disappointment, and joy, conditioning, traveling, playoffs, pre-game rituals.... There is a bond that is created that never goes away. The girls I played basketball with are the only ones from high school that I really speak to anymore.

And I haven't had that sense of belonging since then. I have never been apart of anything like that since those days at Silverton High.

And it saddens me. Because shouldn't this be how the church is?

Shouldn't we, as the body of Christ, as like believers, be running this race together, training together, helping each other through all the emotions and trials and good and blessings? Instead, we have turned into individuals who happen to kind of doing the same thing. Would that ever work on a basketball court?

Not a chance.

So why do we do it with the gospel?





Friday, December 2, 2011

Last Night

Last night was a humbling experience.

For those of you who don't know, my husband and I youth pastor in a small town here in Oregon. We have al different types of teens. Some are pastor's kids, others have no families. Some have abused drugs, alcohol, and tobacco at the ripe age of 12. Others don't even know what a drug is. We have seniors all the way down to 6th graders.

Last night my husband wanted to discuss issues relevant to the culture, and the kids. So we brought up everything from alcohol to cussing to homosexuality. Our goal? Simply to get the kids thinking. This is stuff that Katy Perry and Lady Gaga and Glee and their friends and their schools all deal with. And for years, the church has been the only ones not talking about it. Why? Fear.

So we wanted to simply do what the church hasn't done - show them what the only person who matters says about these things. I could care less what Gaga says or Glee sings about. What does Scripture say?

And we knew going into last night that the kids were going to have "American" ideas of things, which at this point are far from Scripture. But to actually hear it from their mouths... That was something entirely different. When I hear a 13 year old say, "Well, why not try drugs? My parents could care less. They do it." And to hear another say, "My dad is the one who buys me the porn. If he doesn't think its bad, why should I?"

Sometimes, this job seems a little hopeless... Like we are the only ones fighting this battle. Parents aren't helping. The media isn't helping. Schools aren't helping. Even the church isn't helping. There is this small band of us who are trying to make a difference and show the youth of America that the messages they are hearing that are contrary to Jesus won't get them anywhere... Its simply false.

Luckily, none of this shocked the Lord, nor did it stump him. It isn't hopeless because the Big Guy on our side is way stronger, and cooler, than Lady Gaga.

"Do not grieve, for the joy of the LORD is your strength."
Nehemiah 8:10




Thursday, December 1, 2011

Biggest Loser

I love the Biggest Loser. I am a faithful viewer, every darn week. I have been guilty of eating ice cream while watching, but that is a different story...

Usually, though, after I am finished watching it, I am motivated enough to run a mile. Its given me a lot of tips and tricks and help for my own weight loss journey.

But I think its done some negative. With good always comes bad. When I see these people on the show sweating and doing jumping jacks, and then I see the pounds they lose every single week, I think subconsciously, I think I am going to pull those numbers too. What I forget is that they work out 6 hours or more a day and do not have to work or clean the house or write 7 page papers for school... They weren't limited in their budget, and could buy any fresh produce and ground turkey and everything else that is so expensive at Safeway.

I am limited in my budget. I am limited in the amount of time that I can work out. I am limited in my knowledge, and I do not have a personal trainer.

I have lost weight though. I have lost inches mostly. I have gone down in dress sizes. But it isn't as fast as those on the Biggest Loser, and I have a hard time not getting frustrated with myself. I have a hard time letting my weight loss journey be ok and not comparing it to everyone else's. I am not giving up though. I am on the right track to reach my goal for Summer 2012. I need to just focus on that.

I need to just focus on me. And hopefully soon I will have my own before and after picture.






Monday, November 28, 2011

My Definition

Maybe I am bias.. Maybe I am naive. But I have a hard time around Christmas... Especially this year.

Don't get me wrong. I love Christmas. My Christmas lights and decorations went up on Black Friday. Christmas music is playing and the peppermint candle is burning in my home already. I even got my tree already. Christmas Eve at Grandpa's and Christmas Day at Nana's with all my family is something I look forward to every year.

But I struggle when people ask me what I want for Christmas. Am I really supposed to make a long list of materialistic things that I want today, but in a year might not matter anymore? How can I sit there and ask for things like a Kindle, a CD or movie, new books, gift cards,etc. when poverty covers the world?

Please hear what I am saying. I don't think it is wrong to have things. I have things. I have movies, a laptop, jewelry. And I know that necessity is defined differently everywhere... In America, transportation is necessary. Computers are necessary for college students. I get that.

I think if we were to take a look at the things that really matter in life, our Christmas list would look a lot different. As Christians, if we were truly seeking after God and living out the mission of Jesus, I think that it would like completely different.

My definition of necessity might be biased, but I think its a definition, if it caught on, that could radically change the world.





Saturday, November 26, 2011

ONE MONTH

ONE MONTH.

31 days.

This time in exactly one month, I will be about to land in Washington D.C., the first stop on our journey to Uganda.

Holy crumb.

A few days ago, while we still needed $1,500 for the trip, I became frustrated with God. This trip has taken us 3 years to put together. We've switched countries, been scammed, sent out letters, fundraised, fundraised, and did even more fundraising. I was frustrated that we couldn't get past this $1,500. It seemed so small compared to the amount that we had raised for the plane tickets. But then, God proved again why He tells us in Philippians to not worry about anything. He ALWAYS comes through. A check written for $1,000 came that same afternoon. I cried. I felt so silly. I felt so foolish. How could I question Him?

Darn my humanness.

And so, after the pie fundraiser and other donations from incredible people, we only need $300 more dollars. ONLY $300.

O-M-G!

One month people... ONE MONTH.



Thursday, November 24, 2011

Thanksgiving

Warning: Cheesy post ahead

I have so much to be thankful for. Seriously. I know everyone says this around this time of year, but I love Thanksgiving because it reminds me of just how good I have it. So today, as I sit here smelling the turkey cooking in the oven and the football game on the TV, I leave you with some pictures of what I am thankful for. I hope you have an amazing day.

My unbelievable husband

My family

 My new family

 My youth group

 My Best Friend, Berry

 My Silverton Women

 Jenny and Jeff

Jess :)


 Kyyyyyyyle

 Africa

Above all else, I am thankful for a loving Savior who desires me so much, He died for me. 

Happy Thanksgiving!




Wednesday, November 23, 2011

33

Only 33 days people! Holy buckets, Batman. I am soooooooo anxious.

Yesterday, the -now 5- of us going to Africa made pies all day. Pumpkin, Cherry, Apple, and Mixed Berry. We are trying to raise the last chunk of our funds, and what better way then making peoples Thanksgiving pies? So we baked and baked, and I found out my husband is actually a darn good chef.

Here are some pictures from the day... Thank God we didn't burn the kitchen down.

33 DAYS!









Monday, November 21, 2011

My Heroes

I love Batman. He is way better than Spiderman, although my husband would disagree with me. So Batman is my go-to answer whenever anyone asks me who my favorite superhero is.

But this last weekend, my answer to this question changed. We took 6 of our youth kids to Newport to have a coast retreat. These 6 kids were chosen because they are campus missionaries. What is that, you ask? A campus missionary is a high school, junior high, and even college student who has committed to changing their school campus. The have 5 commitments: Pray, Live, Tell, Serve, and Give. This weekend, we discussed each area and just got to have fun with them, and hopefully showing them that we wanted to recognize them as students that we are so very proud of.

I remember in high school, I signed up to be a campus missionary. I failed miserably. One of my biggest regrets. God could've used me if I had not let fear and worry of reputation or rejection get in the way. But these kids are completely willing to be witnesses for Christ. They have started a campus club, they are planning outreaches. One of them, Kylee.... We had to buy Bibles for her because she had told 20 of her friends in just 3 weeks about Jesus and they all wanted Bibles. 20. Twenty. 2-0. I think that is incredible.

So when people ask me, who my favorite hero is, I will tell them it is no longer Batman, though he is legit, and good looking to boot.... No, it is not Mr. Wayne. It is Dale, Naomi, Gideon, Kylee, Jaydyn, Kassy, and Lydia. Because they are doing what truly matters on this earth - reaching the lost for Christ without anything holding them back.





Sunday, November 20, 2011

Dale

Today, we celebrate my brother's birthday. It was this past week, but Sundays always seems to be the only day we can get the whole family together. I love this kid. He is 17 now. I am feeling old..

Anyways, this boy is amazing. He is so outgoing, incredibly smart, unbelievably creative, amazingly caring, absolutely loving, and completely sold out for the Lord. I am beyond proud to be his sister.