Sunday, March 31, 2013

Resurrection Day



Stop, shattered one.
Still the pounding heart
breathe deep.

Unclench fists
drop the hammer
silence your shouting.

Your heart has had its way
hurled its hate
the force of your fear
fixed flesh upon the wooden beam
the scourge of your sin
stuck fast.

The darkness descended
and you shut your hope
in stone
desperately daring it
to defy your rejection.

Kneel, crippled knees.
Look upon your handiwork.
See the splinters of your fortress
stare into the gaping mouth of death
and find it empty.

Breathe deep.
Drink to the dregs
the goblet of your shame.
Then take My hand
and rise.

Wade In



Easter Sunday


Feet Series, Part 4



Sometimes things are not what they seem.

Sometimes the things that plague us, the arrows that wound and bewilder and grieve, sometimes these are the deaths that lead to life.

There is One whose feet knew a better way.

Who looked down on the sobbing, suffering, sorrow of this wreck of humanity, stitched Himself to human feet and waded in.

His feet walked into all the dark places. They wore the dust and grime and weariness of each aching day. They were weighed by the impossible burdens of our brokenness. And the day His feet felt most the fatigue of His calling, that day He washed the feet of His friends.

And then His feet were broken, driven through by hate and hung with all the hopeless misery of all the ages.

His crushed feet held Him up for each agonized breath, until they could bear no more.

And these wretched feet, they are the most beautiful of all.

There are places my feet will never go. Because His already went for me.  

These are the feet at which I long to fall. To wash with my tears. To touch the scars and remember how they walked the pathways of hell so I wouldn’t have to.

And then, remembering that, maybe my feet will be beautiful too—the beautiful, broken feet that bear His name. The feet that are stitched to His grace. The feet that wade in.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Not for the Hasty



Feet Series, Part Three


Ann Voskamp wrote today, “Lent’s for the messes, the mourners, the muddled — for the people right lost. Lent’s not about making anybody acceptable to a Savior — but about making everybody aware of why they need a Savior.”

This Lent has been an emptying. Not my own choice, mind you. While I tried—and failed miserably—to fast from “some lush little luxury” (Voskamp again), God knew how I needed to get to the Cross.

It seems I am a slow learner. For all my words of surrender, it is the heart that speaks truth. And the way to my heart, it would seem, is through my feet.

My feet still hurt and I still fume with why. All that I want to do has become all that I cannot do. My heart rages as I choke on the fear.

Who am I without my feet?

Oswald Chambers wrote, “No one is ever united with Jesus Christ until he is willing to relinquish not sin only, but his whole way of looking at things.”[1]

I don’t want to look at things differently. I cling fast to the old me, the me who could do it all and loved doing it. I don’t understand this new way, the way of death. The death is too real, too painful.

I stand below my husband the climber and crane my neck as he scales higher and higher, and I long to be up there with him. I married an active, adventurous man, a man who makes a living with his feet. And the fear tries to strangle me as I feel he is getting farther and farther away.

Will I always be left behind?

And isn’t that what we all face—being left behind? When those pieces of ourselves that define us are suddenly removed, we stand here in this naked fear.

I am not enough.

And more. When all the dreams I built my life on seem to be crumbling away, what is left?

“It is not just a question of giving up sin,” wrote Chambers, “but of giving up my natural independence and self-assertiveness, and this is where the battle has to be fought. It is the things that are right and noble and good from the natural standpoint that keep us back from God’s best.”

I liked being strong. (Or thinking I was.) I liked being able. I liked not only fitting in, but conquering.


All that I had was good. But it was not the best.


“Desire without knowledge is not good—how much more will hasty feet miss the way! A person’s own folly leads to their ruin, yet their heart rages against the Lord” (Prov. 19:2-3).

Not so hasty, child. Your feet are missing the way. Your raging heart will ruin you.

Have you forgotten the One who endured the cross?




“And have you completely forgotten this word of encouragement that addresses you as a father addresses his son? It says, ‘My son, do not make light of the Lord’s discipline, and do not lose heart when He rebukes you, because the Lord disciplines the one He loves, and He chastens everyone He accepts as His son” (Heb. 12:5-6).

Hasty feet miss the way.

Hasty feet are quick to run after their own desires. They scale the wrong mountains and seek fulfillment in doing and conquering.

“No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful. Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it. Therefore, strengthen your feeble arms and weak knees. ‘Make level paths for your feet,’ so that the lame may not be disabled, but rather healed” (Heb. 12:11-13).

How do we strengthen what is weak and feeble?

“In repentance and rest is your salvation, in quietness and trust is your strength” (Is. 30:15).

He wants to heal us, give us peace, fill us with Himself, but we cannot be filled until we are emptied of everything else.

The way to my heart is through my feet . . . because my feet are my pride.

“It is going to cost the natural in you everything. Jesus said, ‘If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself.’ Beware of refusing to go to the funeral of your own independence” (Chambers).

The way of trust is not for the hasty.

This slowing is a blessing, God’s gift to me at Lent to show me my need of Him. To turn me in the right direction.

God hasn’t really taken away my feet; He has only given them a new calling. He isn’t interested in a mountain-conqueror. He is cultivating a daughter of the kingdom, one whose feet will approach “Mount Zion . . . the city of the living God . . . to Jesus . . . and to the sprinkled blood” (Heb. 12:22-24).

Do not lose heart.

He is leading you to the holy.

My hasty feet will probably keep seeking this earthly glory. But the One whose voice shakes the earth and makes creation crumble is calling us to more. “Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and worship . . .” (Heb. 12:28).



[1] Oswald Chambers, “The Relinquished Life,” from My Utmost for His Highest, 1935