Still Chasing the Joy?

The joy candle broke a few years back. You can see it up there in the picture. And I keep forgetting to buy a new one. As if a trip to the store could simply replace the broken joy. I believe it was a ball that someone threw or the after-dinner wrestling match that snapped the joy right in half. It doesn’t really matter how it happened; the truth is, joy is barely holding it together.

Walk This Way

Starving. That is how my boys come into the kitchen multiple times a day. And it does not matter how many dollars I might have shelled out to the grocery store clerk, we never seem to have the exact thing they need to curb their hunger. “Mom, there’s nothing to eat” is a lament I hear in my sleep.

It amazes me how these creatures of mine can be surrounded by food and yet still declare themselves hungry. I know that a day of school can leave you empty and longing for fuel. But how can you not see that what you need is right in front of you? Our cupboards are rarely bare. But their hunger is insatiable.

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And I keep telling them that one day they will have to eat celery to keep their girlish figures. They laugh at my ridiculousness.

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Hungry and unable to find anything that will satisfy is an uncomfortable place to exist.

Yet on a soul level, it is where I find myself as we step into the season of Lent. The world seems to be falling apart. The news reels spin on full of innocent people suffering, political leaders arguing, and war escalating. And here in the middle of it all, falls a Wednesday where the Lord calls us to reflect, to repent and to remember that from dust we came and to dust we shall return. But my tired brain wonders how to do this.

“Thou hast made us for thyself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it finds its rest in thee.” Augustine of Hippo wrote this centuries ago, and on this first day of Lent, I find these words stuck in my head. The restlessness that comes from walking through a long hard season leaves me unable to be still.

I attempt to pray and search the Scriptures for the answers while at the same time scouring my phone’s newsfeed for updates on war. I cannot settle. Everything I need to be satisfied is right at my fingertips, yet like my ravenous teenagers, I stand before my Creator and declare that it is not enough.

Skittles, Fruit Snacks or other junk from the cupboard is what my boys will sometimes choose for a snack. They’ll wander away from the kitchen, but then quickly return unsatisfied and anxious for something more. Many times, I am unable to help myself and pull out the food I know is available, making them something real. Meat, cheese, fruit, it’s all right before their eyes, but they are blind to it.

Take and eat, I tell them placing plates of food before them, this is the real stuff meant to fill you up.

And the analogy is not lost on my restless soul. When I come running and hungry and declare before my Maker that nothing is working, it is always the easy solution I am seeking. I want everything made new. Now. The pre-packaged food of quick answers and immediate gratification seem good — until they aren’t.

And I am reminded of this little-known story from the book of First Samuel; a story of David before he was King David. Saul is the king of Israel and as David becomes more powerful, Saul gets jealous. Hoping to put an end to his enemy’s life, Saul chases David and a couple of hundred men out into the wilderness.

David and his men run for their lives, but they have no food and no weapons. Out in the wild, they come upon a sanctuary in the city of Nob and rush into it hoping for protection. They run inside the holy place starving and empty-handed. The priest there claims he has no food except for the Holy Bread which must stay untouched on the altar. And he has no weapons except for a sword from an old giant named Goliath displayed on the wall. The place is holy, quiet, separate and not of much use to these hungry soldiers running for their lives.

But David knows better. David knows God to be a Provider. He knows that the holy place is meant to provide sustenance and strength. He knows holy bread is for eating and ancient swords are meant to protect.

So, he convinces the priest to let him take the bread off of the altar. He gives it to his hungry men. Take. Eat. And he pulls the old sword right off the wall and hooks it into his belt. It will protect him. “There is none like it”, he says.

Then David and his men run right back out into the battle of their lives.

Eugene Peterson writes this about that story in his book Leap Over A Wall,David and his men come into the sanctuary hungry and defenseless, and they leave with bread for the journey and a sword for the fight.”

My boys finish the food I prepared for them and decide that for the moment they are satisfied. “Who knew there was that much food in there,” one of them declares, “it looked like a lot of nothing.”

And isn’t that the truth? I think the same about Scripture and prayer and the Lord’s insistence that we repent and rest. How can they hold the weight of all I place on them or calm that anxious spirit that won’t stop jumping up inside of me? How can repentance and rest help anything? It all looks like a whole lot of nothing. Words on a page, silence in the early morning hours, surrendering to a leading I cannot see. How can that work?

We are so much alike; my hungry boys, David with his ravenous soldiers, and you and me.

We are needy.

We are hungry.

We cannot see what is right in front of us.

Take. Eat. This is my body given for you.”   A carpenter from Nazareth would break the bread and offer it to his band of confused followers. Bread for the journey and a sword for the battle.

“As the Father has loved me so have I loved you”. They would hear the words, but it wouldn’t seem like enough. How could that save them?

And then they would watch Jesus lay down his whole life for the sake of their hearts, and it would change them forever.

Just like it still changes us.

Because you see, here it is: The God of all Creation loves, you.

He. Loves. You. And he loves, me. And he knows how we doubt it all. He knows how we look around this broken world and wonder how we are supposed to fix it. But still, he walks into our empty places and begins to fill them with the only thing that will last.

Come hungry, he seems to whisper, And yes. Expect to be fed. Run desperate, breathless, like hungry men in the middle of a battle, like hungry boys into the kitchen. Turn around and run toward me. 

It’s what repent means. It’s what we are called to do during this season of Lent. Turn. Around. Realize we are not enough.

And it’s often in the turning that we finally see what we’ve been missing. God’s presence was with us all along.

Love and repentance; holiness and earth running right into each other. We are called to walk into this season hungry for something different. Maybe we are a little beat up and battered; tired and fighting the cynic within us that tries to convince us it doesn’t matter. But still we come. We walk toward our Father, and we ask for what we need.

And it’s only then that we find the bread and the sword that we are given are his; his whole life for the sake of our hungry hearts.

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And there we stand, amazed that it is always enough.

“Jesus said to them, I am the bread of life; whoever comes to me shall not hunger, and whoever believes in me shall not thirst” (John 6:35).

Welcome to Lent, friends. May we feel our hunger for something more this season. And may we find that hunger satisfied only in Jesus.

Alleluia. Amen.

Light in the Darkness

They say that the silence of God lasted 400 years; that the prophet Malachi ended the prophetic period where God’s voice was alive and active with his final words and then the darkness and the silence set in. Like the falling of a curtain at the end of a play; these December weeks of Advent remind us that before there was a baby in the manger, there was a world trapped in the pitch of silence. I have always imagined this intertestamental period as a frozen in time kind of scene. The curtain falls and all the people hold their places as the light dissipates. And then they don’t move. They stand perfectly still until the light comes back and their lives begin again. In my mind, the angels sing, and the shepherds rejoice on the just the next page; so the weary world snaps back to life bathed in heaven’s glory almost immediately.

But that’s not exactly how it worked.

Saying Goodbye

My dad slipped from this life into the next on a cloudy Tuesday afternoon just as the month of August was making its entrance. My sister and I sat with him as he passed slowly into the place where mourning, crying and death are no more. With his final breath, he entered his eternal resting place. But, we stayed here; our feet grounded in a world where tears are real and death is shockingly disorienting. I remember looking out the hospital window at the low white clouds; the view of the parking lot incredibly familiar after months of sitting with him, and wondering how the world was still going on as if it were a normal Tuesday. He’d been sick for years, and we were thankful for an end to his suffering, but that thankfulness does not outweigh the heaviness that comes with grief.

My words about him have been slow to come as we have waited for the funeral and the honoring of his life. This weekend we finally laid him to rest in the Memorial Garden of my childhood church where my parents have been members for nearly 50 years. We gathered in the sanctuary where I spent every Sunday of my childhood; where I was baptized and later married; where parts of the old hallways still wind around and lead to rooms so familiar I could close my eyes and watch the memories replay in slow motion. I saw my dad around every corner and the air was thick with the goodness of roots planted so deep. Dear friends came to say goodbye and to show their love for us; ones who even remembered which pew we always sat in and filled it for us so the hole wouldn’t seem so big.

And I stood in that pulpit and said some words I wasn’t sure I’d be able to choke out. Below are the words that I shared; the ones the Lord placed on my heart and then gave me strength to say. I wanted to post them here because Dad always did love to read my blog. He’d laugh and say I got my love of English from him (right …) and that he just couldn’t figure out how I could come up so many words. Me neither, Dad. But these words, well, these are just for you.

Good morning and on behalf of my mom and my sisters and our families we would like to thank all of you for coming today to honor the life of my dad, Bruce Hogg.  My name is Leigh Sain and I am Bruce and Donna’s oldest daughter. Dad was a one of a kind and if he were here today, he would tell me to sit down and to quit being dramatic and making a production out of everything. He would insist that all we needed to do was just raise our glasses in a toast and enjoy a good laugh together and that there was no need to say all of these words. And we will do that. But- as he did for all of my life – he will have to indulge me just a bit here. Because we’ve got a few stories we need to tell. And Dad always was one to love a good story.

Now my dad was one of the hardest working people I have ever known. I never knew him to take a sick day or any more than week or two of vacation. He worked for over 30 years selling lockers and shelving for Scott Equipment company which was headquartered here in Atlanta. He sold shelving and lockers to companies, schools and places all over the Southeast. But growing up, my sisters and I never really knew what he did. We knew that at his office there was the biggest warehouse we had ever seen and that it was full of big trucks and forklifts and dirt – which much to our mother’s chagrin always seemed to cover our lovely white shoes every time we went to visit. I actually thought he drove those trucks and made the lockers. And I’m not gonna lie, It was a little disappointing to learn that he only sold them.

Being a salesman though was dad’s calling. He had the gift of gab and could talk to anyone and tell a story about anything. This was great until I had little boys running around and from the other room, I would hear my dad begin a sentence with “let me tell you a story about this time when I was in college…”  I knew I had to quickly intervene. Dad are we sure this is appropriate for a 10 year old?? My boys always had a lot of questions after G-daddy told a story.

Even in his final days as he endured long stays at the hospital – he kept the nurses laughing with is crazy comments and stories. They would always tell us, “your dad, he’s a funny one!”  I often wonder what kinds of stories he told them when we weren’t around.

But the true story that his life told was one of hard work for those he loved. He never quit working to make sure that we were taken care of. And I think that of all the work he did in his life, raising three girls was probably the hardest.

We were born only three years apart and the three of us were – and probably still are quite a force to be reckoned with. He was always outnumbered and no matter how hard he tried. And he did try. He never did learn the art of putting hair in a ponytail. When we were little, Mom taught him how to blow dry all of our hair and he would do this on Saturday night with the tunes of Hee-haw blaring into the den as he spent hours with a brush and blow dryer — most likely wondering how in the world he became a one man salon. Once our hair was dry though he’d say, Go see your mother that’s as much as I can do. Raising girls is a lot of hard work.

And we needed our hair to look good because on Sundays we came here; to church. Every Sunday of our growing up years was spent right over there in that pew by the window. Furman Bisher and his family seated in front of us and Mr. and Mrs. Hicks behind us. But dad was rarely ever sitting with us. He was hard at work ushering or running the crazy old tape recorder system back there behind that wall or calling Dr. Thorington on the weird phone that used to be up here. Or cooking breakfast. Back in the day, a full breakfast was served here at at 9am every Sunday. Eggs, grits, sausage, pancakes; the whole deal. And cooking breakfast at Northwest was one of Dad’s claim to fame around here. He was trained by the one and only Doug Cook.  And he made sure that all of us girls learned how to do it too.

I have a very specific memory of an early Sunday morning with my sisters and me all dressed in our Sunday best “helping” Mom and Dad crack the eggs into the enormous pot over there in the old kitchen. We wanted to see what 6 dozen eggs looked like in that pot; so one girl pulled one way, another girl another way and it didn’t long before we saw what 6 dozen eggs looked like all over the us and the kitchen. I can’t repeat what dad said when that happened. It was not church appropriate language. But somehow or another he and mom got it cleaned up and breakfast was served. I know that he was always thankful for all of the “help” that my sisters and I provided. Raising girls is a lot of hard work.

We were a part of a group of dads and daughters here at Northwest known as the Indian Princesses. I do realize that that is really not politically correct — but it was 1982. It was a whole thing—we had Indian names, t-shirts and the whole deal. A regular father daughter group. All of the dad’s in the group had one daughter – and our dad, well he had three. This made for some interesting camping trips, water skiing lessons and Callaway Garden excursions. Every dad would do his thing with his one sweet daughter and my dad had a regular three-ring circus he was chasing around all while trying to figure out how to get our hair in a ponytail. He was always thankful when one of the other dads would pitch in to help with us. Because they knew it too –-raising girls is a lot of hard work.

In the book of Colossians, Paul writes to the people at the church in Colossae to encourage them in the work that they are doing. In chapter 3 he writes this, “Whatever you do, work at it with all your heart as if working for the Lord and not for man.” There is no truer statement about Dad than that. He worked at it all with all of his heart. His life’s work was taking care of us.

He did sell lockers, but he built a life. He also built swing sets in the bitter cold of Christmas Eve night for his girls, taught us to ride bikes, taught my sisters how to swing bats and shoot baskets, and when he realized I’d never be able to do any of that, he learned to endure  my ballet costumes, drama productions and chorus concerts. He ran church finance meetings, organized ushers and made sure the pastor remembered to turn his microphone each week. He mowed the lawn, grew lots of vegetables in the garden, told stories and toasted the neighbors over the fence as they cooked out on the grill on the weekends. He loved my mom, was always amazed by all of his grandkids and he loved us, his girls.

Oswald Chambers, Scottish preacher and evangelist sums it up best when he writes this, ““It is ingrained in us that we have to do exceptional things for God – but we do not. Our call is actually to be exceptional in the ordinary things of life, on ordinary streets, loving ordinary people.” This is how the Lord calls us to live. Because the truth of it all is this. All of our hard work is only redeemed through the saving grace of the work that Jesus did for us on the cross. Otherwise it is all for nothing and none of it matters. So we do the best we can with the time that we have been given and we hand it all over to the Lord.

The legacy Dad leaves behind is one of hard work done with all of his heart. Ordinary life lived with extraordinary love. So dad, well done good and faithful servant – cheers to you. You can rest easy now. You did good work.

Amen.

“And I heard a loud voice from the throne saying, “Look! God’s dwelling place is now among the people and he will dwell with them. They will be his people and God himself will be with them and be their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes. There will be no more mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away. He who is seated on throne said, “I am making everything new” (Revelation 21:1-5).

The End

I said I would never drive a minivan. Never. I had one tiny child in my arms at the time. Who needed all of that space? And who wanted to look so uncool in a car like that? Not me. I was going to be the ultimate chill mom and not about to ruin my image with a car like that. I think it was the second boy who stole my cool factor and the third one who taught me there would never be a car big enough to hold all of the stuff required to go to the grocery store with three boys. And suddenly, I was marveling at the way all the seats folded down. Motherhood changes everything about you.

The things we’ve learned

Asynchronous vs. synchronous, virtual learning, online school, social distance, contact-traced, covid positive, quarantine … These are just a few examples of words we have added to our vocabulary this year. At the beginning of March 2020, I had never said or even thought about any of these words. They did not impact my daily life in any way, shape, or form. In fact, I didn’t even know they were actual words. But now? Well now, life ebbs and flows with the rhythm of these words. And I’m kinda over it.

Peace in the going

I registered for my first seminary class this week while eating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, listening to a tutorial on a new computer upgrade for work, and cleaning up popcorn someone had spilled on the floor. It took 5 mins and … click, I was a seminary student. And as if on cue, a kid hollered that the printer was offline again and that we were out of milk. I think I thought the whole thing might be a little more holy.

Repenting lessons

Say you’re sorry and mean it. Look him in the eye and tell him you are sorry. I would stand the angry boys face to face and make the guilty one say it. And it always played out the same way. The offender would kick the dirt and try to squirm out from under my grip on his shoulder. But I didn’t mean to. He started it. It’s not fair. I would persist until I elicited a mumbled, I’m sorry out of the guilty boy. The injured boy would then be forced to say I forgive you. You boys are going to be thankful for each other’s friendship one of these days, I would remind them. They would stare at the ground begging to be released back into the world of the cul de sac. I’m pretty sure this exercise went a long way in teaching them how to say you’re sorry and not mean it. I’m also sure that as soon as my watchful eyes turned elsewhere they settled the argument on their own. Turns out, nothing bonds brothers faster than trying to avoid getting caught by mom. Parenting lesson #1,237.

Making lists and walking on water

I hate making lists almost as much as I hate math. Seriously. I will do anything to keep from having to enumerate life. My brain thinks freedom is found in being untethered, in lyric and cadence but never with bullet points or numbers. It also thinks that I can remember, know, and keep up with much more than I actually can. Turns out, this old brain is rather forgetful.

Reached your limit?

My iPhone is out of storage space. As I try to retrieve some super important piece of information from this handheld device that functions as the second half of my brain, it just refuses to work. You have no more storage space it tells me. And I’m left staring at the screen wondering why I did not know this was a thing that could happen.