Christianity, Recovery, Spirituality

Church Signs

I enjoyed the unusually mild March morning. It’s almost seventy degrees and a t-shirt all that was required to be comfortable as I sipped my coffee. The Rose of Sharon trees are covered in green and the lawn is beginning to change from the brown of Winter to the green of Spring. The weather looks to be seasonal, but dry. Maybe I won’t have to mop up after the dogs for a few days. All is well in the world.

We moved to our quiet little neighborhood about four years ago. To be honest with you, White Settlement wasn’t on our radar, but I think God had other plans. I won’t bore you with the details. Suffice it to say, we saw the house on a Wednesday and closed a week later. The whole process was quick and simple. It seems to work that way with God’s gifts.

There’s this little church and its sign I always look for as I go back and forth to our local grocery or gas station. They always have a message with a play on words, but I think what makes me chuckle a bit is the church’s name: a “full gospel”: church. It apparently isn’t for people who only want part of the gospel. Sometimes I laugh too hard at my own jokes. You know, “I can’t go there because I only want a little taste of Jesus”!

Over the last four years I’ve though a lot about that little church. Not enough to go there mind you, I’ve noticed that most of its members are a lot older than I am. Not that it should exclude me, but I’ve noticed that churches are like people. They can age and die too if there’s not enough youth and vitality left to keep them fresh.

The more I’ve thought about it, the more I realize I want the “full” gospel. The word “gospel” means good news. I love good news. It beats the alternative! The good news for me initially related to my recovery from addiction. It’s come to mean much more as I grow older. Still, there are times I’m resistant to “all” of the good news, to a new way of living and relating to the world. Resistance seems to grow in direct proportion to my comfort level. The more comfortable I am the less I grow in my humanity. Comfort always seems to lead to resistance in its most ugly form: complacence.

I learned a long time ago that one’s spiritual path can take many forms. My belief took a “Christian” form. I make no excuses for my faith as a disciple, a follower of Jesus, because the bottom line is I want to be like him when I grow up. I want to learn how to love others. I want to participate in humanity. For someone who’s life has included the dis-ease of raging self-obsession, that takes transformation. Maybe that’s the other component of the “good news”. Maybe that’s what keeps people from wanting the “Full” gospel. Transformation is scary, and it means letting go and venturing into the unknown. Letting go is never easy. Not everyone wants to. Not everyone is able to. I get it. I can only speak for myself, but I’m ready for the whole thing…

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Sunday Morning

Thoughts From the Porch: It’s a warm, cloudy, but pristine morning on the Porch: a reminder that Spring, the resurrection from Winter, is just around the corner. As I sit here this morning, my thoughts and prayers bring me to this place of deep and abiding peace. It’s a sense of being a part of, rather than apart from. Those moments come much easier today. They remind me of the promise, I’ll have “life, and have it abundantly”, even when I still have farther to walk.
 
I really strive for simplicity in my life today. Most of the time I’m far from it. It seems so much easier for some. I want to drink from the well of “living water” that quenches my thirst on my trek down the path. Sometimes though, I let myself become a little dehydrated. I get caught up in anxiety or worry and forget, all to easily, I have a relationship with the God of my understanding. He’s promised to light my path, even if it’s only to see the stepping stone in front of me.
 
There are times when that’s really scary. I can’t see the destination ahead. So, it requires trust: trust that I’m being taken to a better place. When I look back at my life, it’s no problem to see God’s hand gently (and if truth be known, sometimes violently), and lovingly pushing me in the right direction. I can know this has been true 100% of the time and yet, I still worry if I’m going the right way.
 
Sitting here this morning, I realize such difficulties simply make me human. I’m okay with that today. There’s a lot of joy and freedom in that: freedom to trust knowing I’m on the path. I like that.
We have a busy Sunday planned: dinner with my father-in-law and helping our son with taxes. Our fur babies brought in more mud from the light showers we had this morning. They did that after a thorough Saturday cleaning so we, or more appropriately I, get to mop the floors again.  The list goes on…
 
Right now though, it’s real simple. I’m going to go in, get another cup of coffee, kiss my wife and tell her how much I love her. I think I’ll trust God and simply enjoy the day. The rest will get done. One step at a time…
Relationships, Uncategorized

Happy Anniversary Baby…

The sun is back in Fort Worth after it’s brief absence. It’s Texas Independence Day and it’s my fifth wedding anniversary today. All is well in the world.

I was looking back at the last five years and feeling truly awed by God’s grace. Who would have thought someone like me would be blessed with the marriage I have today? I feel so undeserving sometimes. I’m reminded of the Kevin Fowler song, “I’m a Hard Man to Love”. I’m under no illusions here. I can be difficult at times, but Margaret makes me a better man. Sometimes I think she drew the short straw…

Many of you know the story of the brief courtship prior to our marriage. We dated for a scant ninety-one days before we said “I do”. There are some of you who know, and participated in, the even shorter engagement so I won’t bore you with all the details.  Because so many friends came out of the woodwork saying, “What can I do and what do you need?”, our friends did in eight short days what many couples take a year to pull off: an absolutely beautiful and amazing wedding.

We were older when we got married (although I must admit to receiving “senior discounts” long before Margaret). We were fortunate enough to be in that place where we knew who we were, what we wanted, and what we didn’t. Time and experience often affords that knowledge, although not always. What I truly credit it with is our relationship with the God of our understanding.

One of my sons asked me a while back, “What do you and Margaret have in common? You seem so different”. In many ways he’s right. I remembered a line from a song, “She likes The Beatles, I like the Stones”. Our musical tastes aren’t the only things we differ on. She comes from a deeply conservative, military family background. I’m somewhere to the left of Karl Marx. She likes mild food. Mine needs to be hot and spicy. The list goes on and on…

What we’ve both know is that all of those differences are just fluff. We connected in a much deeper, spiritual way because we share to same core values and because we never try to be something we’re not. We love each other just the way we are: warts and all. Those core values, our faith in God, love, patience, selflessness, honor, integrity, commitment, honesty, forgiveness, humility, and thankfulness (all which she’s so much better at than I): those are the root of our connection. They’re what gives us a firm foundation for an incredible relationship.

I’ve been honored with performing several marriage ceremonies over the last few years. I always like to share Ecclessiates 4: 9-12 where the writer says how good it is to have a partner and being bound together by a strand of three cords, not just two. That third cord, God, binds it all together. That’s how it’s worked for us the last five years. That, and I guess we got married quick enough to keep from falling out of love. She still takes my breath away when she walks into the room…

 

 

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The rain has moved out for a few days. It was no surprise to hear this was the wettest February on record. I have the mud on the kitchen floor to prove it. No matter how often I mop, our fur babies seem to require “outside” duties immediately after I clean the floor. I really hope it dries out soon.

Last Friday would’ve been my Mom’s 88th birthday. I had a moment in that morning. I pulled out my phone to call and wish her happy birthday. Then it hit me: I couldn’t. Grief comes in strange and unpredictable waves. Even though it’s been several months, it still comes and goes. I know it will be the same with my friend Jim. February simply isn’t on the Top Ten list of my favorite months. Thank God it’s over…

I was out on the porch, reminiscing about Mom and Dad this morning. Dad passed in 2002 and I still think of him often. I’ve heard many horror stories of extreme dysfunctional family life over the years: abuse, neglect, and alcoholic or addicted parents. It breaks my heart to hear them. I was adopted and my earliest memories are of my parents telling me how much they loved me and desired me. Such terrible tales simply aren’t my story. Later in life, my memories are of the pain my addiction caused them and how they loved me anyway. In both cases I count myself blessed. Not everyone can say that…

I’m eternally grateful for the two people who became my parents and in many ways, for my birth mother who gave me up for adoption. When I was born in 1958, Eisenhower was President, rock & roll was probably the cause of all societal ills, and good girls didn’t have babies out of wedlock. Abortion wasn’t legal and adoption was the option “good” families chose for their daughters. I know very little about my birth mother. I do know she was 16 when I was born, so it’s likely they sent her off to the VOA to live out her pregnancy. Such things should be hidden from polite society. 

I’d like to think giving me up was one of the hardest things she ever did. I’ve talked to women who have given up children for adoption. They’ve all shared about how they think about them: especially on their birthdays. I’d like to think she still thinks of me. Though Mom and Dad are, without question, my parents, there’s still this lingering question about my biological mother. I guess it hasn’t been pressing enough to do the work necessary for the answers. Yet. However, I sometimes wonder if there are half-brothers and half-sisters out there that share the same DNA…

I suppose there’s a bit of grief in all that as well: a Mom and Dad who loved me and a birth mother I never even knew. Grief knows no time limits. Grief comes in some strange and often unrealistic ways. And sometimes, grief shows up in what could’ve been. No matter how it comes, real or imagined, it has to be felt, dealt with, and walked through. I’m just grateful it doesn’t have to be walked through alone.

 

 

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Another Thought From the Porch

It’s the last day of February. I’m not sure if there’s a technical term for it, but tomorrow is my first day of Spring. They have “meteorological Spring” whatever that is. Then there’s the true start of Spring, the equinox. I’m just going to claim March 1st as my start of Spring. I never was very good at waiting after the long month of February…

The porch was a little wet this morning. I don’t know whether it’s from an overnight storm or just the thickness of the humidity in the air. So, I found a semi-dry spot to rest my feet and, like Margaret likes to say, “I had coffee with God”. I talked with my Higher Power for a bit and really tried to listen, but the day’s “to do” list kept creeping in, making it difficult. I’m better at quieting my mind and listening, but I realize I have a long way to go when it comes to being an active listener, whether it be in personal relationships or spiritual matters.

As many of you know, grace and desperation brought me to recovery rooms a little over twelve years ago. One of the promises given to me was that if I followed the suggestions of those who were farther down the road, I would have a spiritual awakening. My life would be transformed as a result of that awakening because I know longer sought to do things my way and act on my will: which always brought pain, failure, and conflict with others. Instead, I would seek out God’s will, let that Higher Power lead me down the path, and find a degree of  happiness, joy, and freedom. Over the last twelve years, that awakening, that transformation has happened in my life and for that I’m truly grateful.

The deeper the awakening though, the more I realize I suffer from spiritual narcolepsy. I get tired or simply complacent. All the old thoughts creep in and I become hard-headed, unwilling to listen, and difficult to be around. “They” become the problem and I slip back into “terminal uniqueness”. The spiritual naps have gotten shorter but they haven’t gone away by any means. And I still have that rebellious streak…

And now that you have a little background I hope you’ll stick around for the rest of the story. I’m not as unique as I thought, nor does being “awakened” mean I have a better handle on the journey. I just travelling down the road and I hope we can walk together…