Nov

01

Radical

(DISCLOSURE): I am using the word “radical” in this post for a number of reasons. I am referring to the current idea of being a “radical Christian” and living a “radical life for Jesus.” its the idea that our lives are supposed to be extraordinary for Jesus. It has nothing to do with the book titled Radical, except that I think that title has springboarded the use of the word lately. This post in no way was written in response to the book or connected in any way whatsoever. I’ve never read the book, so I really don’t even know what is in there. Just wanted to be clear so as not to offend people who love that book :)

(also…the pictures in this post are long overdue!  they are from our family photo shoot that we did when Berkeley was 10 days old.  they were taken by my sweet friend, Taylor, from Daisy Mai Photography.  you might remember her from here and here.  love her, love her skills, and if you need a photog for a wedding, family shoot, newborn shoot, etc, she is amazing!!)

This post has been stirring in my heart for a long time. I think its because the last year for me has not looked all that much like a “radical life.” My pregnancy…oh man…it did me in, more than I even realized in the moment. I was useless for the majority of my pregnancy! Having a newborn…it can be isolating. My life…it looks a lot different these days then it used to. I haven’t been involved in many grand or exciting things in terms of ministry. I don’t have time to get many things done during the day. I can barely maintain this blog, and sometimes it hangs over me, like i’m letting people down. I live in a wealthy neighborhood (in which I totally don’t belong.) When I think about this idea of living radically like i’ve been hearing so much about lately, and then I look at my life, it seems as if it is anything but radical.

My life for the past few months and for the next stretch of time has and will continue to look alot like this:

Feed baby…Change baby…Wash diapers…Hold baby…Rock baby…Love on older kids…Manage school schedules, sports schedules, dance schedules…Cook…clean…do laundry…do it all over again. As my friend said the other day, its Groundhog Day at its finest!

There’s no mission trip scheduled in there. No inner city work. No Bible study leading. No selling all I have. No moving to a foreign country. No participation in any grand social justice movement. Nothing that looks all that radical.  i’m just getting through the daily responsibilites of being a SAHM.

But as I ponder this uselessness I feel, I have to wonder where in the world do those feelings come from?  Is it from other people?  Do we unknowingly make each other feel this way?  Is it my own insecurities? Is it from Satan?  All of the above?

We currently have a crazy living situation. We are living in an amazing house in a very wealthy gated community, nestled in a very wealthy beach town. And God moved us here. Its crazy. Trust me when I tell you that we don’t fit it here. It doesn’t make sense…my hubby is in full time ministry.  I am a SAHM. We do not come from wealthy familes. We have a small income. I do not fully understand why God opened this door for us, and why He placed us here. In all honesty, I feel loads and loads of guilt over it. “Be radical” is the call I keep hearing over and over again. And I can’t help but to ask myself, how is this radical…my life as a SAHM, just surviving through the day in and day out responsibilties, comfortable in my roomy house, secure behind the closed gates of my wealthy neighborhood?

I’ve been posing that question to myself a lot lately. I’ve been thinking about this idea of being radical, and wondering what it means for me and my family. And I wonder if any of you might struggle with this too.


A few weeks ago, I was awakened by screams coming from the kitchen. So I run out to find my 9 year old standing in the middle of the kitchen amongst an entire gallon of milk that has just been dropped on the floor. (A full, brand new, organic, $6 gallon to be specific.) Covering the entire kitchen floor. When I’ve only got about 20 mins to get them ready for school and to get myself to a doctor’s appt on time.  you know what I wanted to do? I wanted to heap on the guilt and condemnation. I wanted to say I told you so. I wanted to scare him enough to make sure it never happened again. By God’s grace, none of that nonsense came out of my mouth. Instead, we were able to clean it up while laughing and reassuring Canaan that it was just an accident and not to worry one bit about it. I think that was pretty radical.

I don’t know why this is, but it is a really really really big deal to Bella that either Jake or I walk her out to the bus stop in the mornings (and really…her preference for that particular job is me. I think its because if its me, then she knows that means that its Berkeley too.) but this is like a HUGE deal to her. Like she’ll double and triple check with me on Friday after school if I can walk her out on monday morning.  Let me tell you…the VERY LAST THING I want to do in the mornings is show my tired, unwashed, just nursed face and body to my neighborhood. The bus stop is in my backyard, and I can literally watch my kids get on the bus from the couch in my family room. That would be my preference. However, for some reason, Bella feels massively cared for if my rear is not on my couch, but outside with her. So I do it as often as I can. I’m beginning to think that loving her in that way just might be radical living.

Canaan came to me the other night right before bedtime and asked me to sit with him and work through a Sudoku puzzle. It had been one of those days where I really couldn’t wait for bedtime. Berkeley had been up since 5:30 am, my day had been filled with volunteering at school parties, baking Halloween treats, putting the finishing touches on costumes. The only time I had sat down was in the car as I was driving, and to nurse the babe. I was spent. So the thought of using brainpower, as well as any more physical energy to do anything but lay down and go to sleep, was exhausting just to think about. I all too often say no to those kinds of things, but on this particular occasion, I happened to say yes. And then after we worked through the puzzle, and I was minutes from having everyone in bed and my night finally to myself, he asked me to cuddle with him before he went to sleep. And I did. Its not building homes for the poor, or handing out food to the hungry, but I think in that moment, those cuddles were radical.

And my sweet Berkeley…oh my…she is the best baby in the entire world. I tell her that all day long, and I really mean it. Most of the time, she sleeps amazing at night. But she doesn’t really like to nap during the day, unless she is in my arms or she is lounging in her stroller and we are strolling the aisles of Target. That’s wonderful on the days that I need to do that, but its dangerous to have to stroll the aisles of Target everyday, and truth is, momma’s got stuff I gotta do at home! Which means that sweet babe needs to nap…in her crib! But you know what? The days are long but the years are short, and sometimes I just hold her, and let her sleep in my arms. And everything else falls to the wayside, and my house is in complete chaos, and momma gets no down time.  Radical, perhaps?

Would other Christians look at my life and say its radical? Me, just a SAHM, getting through my day…in my gated, golf course, beach community, driving around 2 SUVs (albeit old and handmedowns) but nonetheless, my kids going to one of the top schools in the city, the ability and desire to buy gallons of organic milk? Spending my days wiping spit up, and dirty bottoms, and sandy feet? Probably not. They would probably say that I need to be more radical.

But…what would Jesus say? Would Jesus say my life is radical? As I mop up spilled milk, and walk out to the bus stop in my PJ’s, and cuddle my kids? or lay in bed for a few months with IV’s and a sweet baby growing in my belly?  Or play monopoly for the 10 hundredth time? Or wash out poopy diapers? Or read Harry Potter with my son?  Or fold loads of laundry? or bake rice krispie treats for 21 4th graders? Or nurse a baby for a few hours every day?  or sit on the sidelines of a 9 year old’s early morning Saturday football games?  or braid a 6 year old’s hair and paint her nails?  I am convinced that he would sweetly embrace me and tell me just how radical my ordinary, middle class, SAHM life really is. Because it’s exactly where He’s put me and exactly where He wants me.

I want to cry as I type that because it’s just so freeing. My heart has been held captive in this place for months…but today Jesus offers me freedom from that captivity. Of guilt. And comparison. And striving to be more and do more.

You know the problem with succumbing to the pressures of “go do more…go be radical?” When i’m just trying to survive through the day as it is…just barely keeping my head above water…If I succumb to the pressures to do more I will literally and physically be unable to live the radical life that He has for me right now as “just” a mommy.

I know that we have been called as believers to go into all the world and proclaim the good news.  I am not ignoring that call. There is great great value in that call. i believe in actively doing ministry.  after all, that’s my husband’s full-time job.  But you know what? If I think about it, i think mommas are doing just that too. Do I even realize the privilege I have of forming and shaping and guiding the little lives growing up under my care? If that’s not going into the world and proclaiming the good news, then I don’t know what is. If i’m so busy “saving the world,” and neglecting my role of mom in the process, then I think i’m missing the point.

Everyone is wired differently. In this current season of my life, and with my personality of getting easily overwhelmed, adding anything else in right now is almost impossible. Does that mean i’m useless, and unvaluable, and not radical? The deciever, and maybe even other Christians, would like for me to believe so. But my Promise Keeper, my Truth Teller, is convincing me of otherwise.

what about the radical call to help the poor, widowed, and orphaned?  i completely believe in doing that.  i believe in ministry to the poor and needy.  i believe in missions…going out…leaving home.  i believe in leaving comfort and entering into the lives of other people.  if i had all the money in the world i would support every ministry i could, every social justice movement i believed in, and i would send everyone i know on a mission trip.  but you know what i’m realizing?  There are just as many poor, widowed, and orphaned people in my gated community as there are in Haiti…or in the government housing just down the way.  I know because I’m hearing the stories of my neighbors. I’m dwelling on the front porch as they pour out their hearts and tell stories of heartbreak, abandonment, abuse. Jesus is needed just as much in a wealthy gated community as He is needed in the heart of Haiti.  Simply put, Jesus is needed. And He places us where there is a need. And there should not be guilt if its not in some “radical” place.

Maybe it would be good of us to stop determining for each other what is radical and what isn’t and lets instead embrace the different callings we all have from Jesus. Ministry to God’s people is extensive and vast. Some of you may be called to a foreign country to live amongst the poorest of the poor. Some are called to minister to the inner city. Some are called to be pastors, lead Bible Studies. Some are called to be mommas. Nothing more, nothing less. Some are called to be engineers, teachers, entrepreneurs, Target cashiers, bloggers…

I think it’s so unbelievably honorable that my most important job right now is as a wife and mom. And that is it. No adding to that.

This idea floating around about being radical…it’s guilt inducing. And if I’ve learned anything about Jesus and the gospel of grace over the last 10 years its this: there is no condemnation in Jesus. If you are feeling guilty, it’s not from God, i’ll tell you that much. It’s from that sneaky satan who wants nothing more than to crush God’s children.

Truth is, we cannot be ordinary if we are living as God’s children. Simply dwelling as God’s children makes us extraordinary. So this life I am living as a mom right now…it may seem ordinary. But with Jesus, it becomes extraordinary. And when I believe that is true of me, then the Gospel can spill out amongst the dirty diapers and runny noses, amongst the hurting neighbors and stressed out fellow SAHMs. His love can be proclaimed just as loudly in a gated golf course community as it can be from the pulpit of a mega church.

Yes…many may argue that I could use this as justification to sit in my house all day and do nothing…remain lazy. To seek after the American Dream. To remain comfortable. To never “go into all the world.” To not love. To not engage in the brokenness of this world.

But when i believe that God makes me extraordinary, even in my day to day, then the moving out happens as a natural response of of His love, and not out of guilt to do more and be more.

But…in reality, most days my moving out is with my kids in my home. And that’s not only okay…that, in my opinion, is radical. Some days the moving out might be beyond the borders of my house into a neighborhor’s front yard. Some days it might be out of my neighborhood. Some days it’s to Haiti. But I can only move when God is the one telling me to move. I can only love when I know that i’ve first been loved…and declared radical simply because He is radical!  living a radical life might be more about soaking in God’s love over me and letting that spill out to whomever God has placed around me than going to some crazy place or doing some crazy thing.

my hubs used to be a youth pastor. As we watched our students come to the end of their years in college, we began to see the struggle for the large majority of them. They begin to believe the lie that unless they go into ministry, or move to a foreign country to do missions, or find some kind of job that seems radical enough for Jesus, then they are failing.  They were willing to sacrifice the unique talents and skills and passions that God had given them to pursue the “Radical Christian Life.”  It totally saddens me that our world is set up that way. That the idea of having a secular job, or staying home with your kiddos, or living in the states in a nice neighborhood, can’t be ministerial.

if you happen to be one who is living that “Christian” kind of radical life…the one where you are in the midst of the inner city, or a foreign land, or contemplating selling everything you have to follow Jesus…I am so unbelievably thrilled for you as you enter into God’s specific calling on your own life!  it continues to amaze me to watch people listen for God’s call, and faithfully follow His lead, even if it means great sacrifice.  but I pray that you are moved out because of Jesus’ love over you and His specific call for your life and not because of some pastor or author or church-goer’s demand to be radical.

I would’ve thought that Jesus would’ve moved my family to Haiti before he moved us to our current neighborhood. many days i think we’d actually fit in better in Haiti.  But there is no doubt in our minds that He wants us right here, right now. And that might mean that I just have to ignore the cries of my fellow believers to start getting radical and instead choose to believe the cry of Jesus over me, “my radical child, take care of your children. love your (rich) neighbor. Enjoy your most important job as a mommy and a wife and a friend.”

So lets encourage one another and build each other up as we all enter into our own unique calling. Let’s stop playing God and telling each other what we are supposed to be doing, but instead remind each other just how much we are loved and adored by the King of the universe.

Bella asked me the other day if I thought that satan knows how much Jesus loves him. It is an absurdly profound question…one that I’ve never thought about before. Jesus loving satan? But as I pondered and talked with her about it, i told her that no, I didn’t think satan knows how much Jesus loves him because if he did know, then his life and purpose here would look drastically different.

It’s no different for us. When we know how much we are loved by Jesus, it moves us out. That’s ministry. That’s radical. We love because He first loved us. It doesn’t get more radical than that. And ministry can take on many many forms, and for me right now, my radical ministry just happens to be to the 3 little crazies whom I get to call my children, and  to my new neighbors who I get to call friends!

This post…its been stirring for months. And today I write it more for myself than any of you.  :)  I need to remember this. I need to know that there is value…GREAT value…in “just” being a mommy. That living radically for Jesus can look different for different people. And that God, above all else, wants us to know how radical His love for us is, and wants that radical love to be the motivation for our radical lives. Not to prove something to ourselves, other people, or Him. But to be faithful and intentional in the places He’s put us and with the people that He’s given us. So I hope this frees you the way it frees me, to dwell contently exactly where He’s got me, doing the unique job that He’s given me to do.

thanks for letting me spill.  i would love to hear your thoughts too!

34 Comments

Oct

28

some ideas for Halloween

its Halloween week!
we visited the Pumpkin Patch this weekend, and Berkeley was less than amused by the whole experience!

i am getting so close to finishing our costumes for this year, and since my time is limited, i’ve got to go work on them while Baby B is napping.  but first, i just thought i’d pop in real quick to give you a few Halloween recipes and ideas.   these are from the archives, but in case you haven’t seen them yet, i thought i would share again.

Caramel Apples:
we are making some of these this week!  along with a pumpkin cheesecake, per the Boy’s request, that i haven’t attempted before, but if it works, i’ll share the deets with you later.  but let me just tell you….these apples are one of my favorite treats, take very little time or ingredients to make, and look pretty darn festive too!

 

Halloween Cake Pops:
these are a fun project to do with the kiddos, cause you can let them draw on the faces.

Costume Inspiration:
lots of ideas from over the years in this post.

 Alternative to Pumpkin Carving:
we do this every year now.  its so much better than the mess of carving, and i can take off the faces and keep the pumpkins as decor after Halloween too!

 have a great week!

4 Comments

Oct

04

my thoughts on Halloween

With it being October (that is just plain crazy!), I thought it only fitting to do a post on Halloween! My kids woke up this morning discussing our costume options for this year. We have always dressed in coordinating costumes, and seeing that Canaan is about to reach double digits (oh…my…goodness…seeing that in writing makes me want to cry!!! when the heck did that happen??)…anyway…i probably only have another year or two where he still thinks its cool to coordinate his costume with his little sisters, so i’ve got to capitalize on it while I can! We have a few ideas floating around, but we are open to thoughts, so if you have any ideas for coordinating costumes for 3, send them my way!

Today i’m gonna intersperse (is that a word?) all of our previous costumes within this post for you to see. But while you peek at the pictures, read along on my thoughts on Halloween, and why we choose to participate in the holiday.

Halloween is one of those things, like Santa Claus, that has the tendency to drive a wedge between people. Some people choose to not participate in Halloween because of the evil origins of the holiday. I totally get that! But I thought it might be helpful to explain why, as believers, our family actually LOVES Halloween!

(Winne the Pooh and Pooh’s “Hunny” Pot:
2007)

We are big believers in “being in the world but not of the world.” (John 15:19)  in other words, we believe its purposeful that we live at this time, in this place, in this culture, with these people.  just as Jesus entered the world and culture that He lived in, so do we.  however, we believe that we can still participate in culture and the secular traditions of this world, but not indulge in the “evil” parts of them…the “in but not of” part of that verse.

We believe that God has called us to certainly reject parts of our culture but also to be a part of helping to redeem parts of our culture…to take what has been used for evil purposes and instead use them for the purpose and glory of God and His Kingdom.  kinda like how we use the Elf on the Shelf at Christmas…we can be apart of culture and engage in the things of this world, but instead make them about Jesus…use them as opportunities to shine light in dark places.  although I understand that Halloween has its roots in pagan practices, we don’t see any reason why we as believers cannot overturn that purpose and instead make it about ministry and incarnation with our friends and neighbors….be apart of the Redemptive work that God is actively doing in our world.

(Curious “Georgette” and the Man in the Yellow Hat
2008)

That is why we LOVE Halloween. we view Halloween as one way of engaging in culture, with people.  we see it as missional.  in our experience, Halloween has been an amazing opportunity to be with our neighbors. sometimes, as Christians, in our efforts to be “set apart,” we end up missing great opportunites to relate to and incarnate into other people’s lives. i think we do a much greater disservice to God’s Children in this world when we make ourselves so separate, and so unrelateable, by never engaging in anything secular.

our family has chosen to live in this world, just as Jesus did, instead of living as if we are not apart of this world. whether we like to believe it or not, we are still stuck in the “in between”…the “almost”, but the “not yet.”  in other words, as we wait in great anticipation for eternity with Jesus, we live in the world He has placed us in in the meantime, and we love because He first loves us. we like to believe that we are loving others when we do not live as if we are better than, or so separate from, the rest of the world. we desire for everyone we meet to see Jesus glorified in us, but we believe one of the best ways to do that is to engage with others within the world that Jesus has placed us in right now. afterall, that’s exactly the ministry that Jesus did for us…He came into our world, met us in the midst of where we are, and showed us His great love.

our family’s ministry and outreach mindset is incarnation…we SO desire to enter into the lives of the people we love, incarnate into their world, go where they are.  that’s the kind of ministry that we believe that Jesus did, and we want to love people like that too.  our thought is that we want to use Halloween as a means of engaging with our neighbors, and demonstrate that, as Christians, we can still enjoy traditions and cultures without participating in the evil parts of them….part of the redemption process that we believe is happening right now…Jesus making all things new.

(Peter Pan and Tinkerbell
2009)

(we came out in full force as Captain Hook and Wendy too!)

It’s amazing how there are so many opportunities to use the things in culture as a starting point for discussions of the Gospel with our kids.  i so desire my kids to view the world through a “gospel lens.”  to see everything about our culture and our world as it relates to Jesus and the Good News….to see everything that we do, and every decision we make, as one to advance the Kingdom of God.

too often we try to split the spiritual from the secular. our approach to life is to live as spiritual within the secular. in other words…i don’t believe there is an ounce of this world (secular) that is not in some way spiritual, because i believe God is present in it all. does that mean we indulge in all things secular? absolutely not! but can God show His glory in anything He chooses, even “secular” things? absolutely! therefore, we do try to take things that are secular and mainstream and use them to Glorify God.

The Bible says in Luke 19, that if we keep silent about the good news of Jesus, that even the rocks will cry out. In other words, all of Creation is praising God, at all times, everywhere. It reminds me that God is the Lord of ALL…He is in everything! If God will use even the rocks to cry out the Good News of His grace and mercy, what makes us think that He cannot use holidays like Halloween to do so too? In other words, I think the Gospel can be seen in absolutely everything. That is honestly one of the main ways we teach our kids about Jesus in the day to day…by taking seemingly ordinary, even worldly or secular things, and finding the truth of God’s goodness and grace and mercy within them. (our Elf is an example of that. You can read more about it here.) that, my friends, is an absolutely beautiful privilege that we have as believers.

(Mr. & Mrs. Potato Head
2010)

It makes me think of this verse:

1 Peter 2:

“But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.”

we have been called out of darkness and into light! We know that, trust that, and believe that. Which makes us believe that we have a greater power in us…one that allows us to enter into culture, that in ways is dark and depraved, and bring with us the glorious light of our Rescuer!

(Jellyfish
2011)

(that glow in the dark)

as for Halloween, we do set parameters and boundaries.  we do not allow our kids to dress in scary or evil costumes.  we don’t use evil or scary decorations.  we don’t go to Horror Houses, watch scary movies, etc. for our kids, its just another fun night that we get to participate in as a family, with friends and neighbors. they know that we avoid the evil parts of it, and that it might look different for us than for some of their friends, but being able to participate while avoiding the evil things is a small way that they are a part of that redemption process too.

i read this quote once that i love:

“Perhaps instead of fleeing the darkness in fear, we should view Halloween as an opportunity to mock the enemy whose power over us has been broken.”

we LOVE that thought.  that’s how we feel about Halloween :)

(A Tornado and A Hurricane:
2012)

(and we dressed as Storm Chasers.  pretty fitting description of our lives :) )

as with all things on this blog, these are only my opinions and my explanation of how we operate within our family.  i do NOT believe that everyone has to do things the way we do!   i do NOT believe that you are wrong or incorrect if you choose to do things differently than us!  in fact, i have some very dear friends who do not wish to participate in Halloween, and i totally appreciate and respect that.  i am a firm believer in that God calls each family to different things.  we do not believe at all that our way is the right way or the only way. Can you still love your neighbors, even when not participating in Halloween? ABSOLUTELY!!  can you still be incarnational, and relatable and ministerial while not engaging in Halloween?  OF COURSE!!  can you still be apart of the redemption happening in this world if you choose to sit out Halloween? TOTALLY!  The explanation in this post is just how God has convicted my family’s hearts and how He has opened doors of ministry for us through the celebration of Halloween.  however, i love that He uses us each individually and uniquely.  that’s what makes the work of Redemption that He is doing so amazing…He can use absolutely anything to accomplish his purposes…even if those things look different!

just my thoughts on the subject!  :)  feel free to share your’s too, however i ask ahead of time that all comments stay positive in nature, and are in no way attacking either side, or they will be removed.  this tired momma doesn’t have time to engage in back and forth debates :)

and send your triple costume ideas my way if you’ve got any!

PS:  and if you do celebrate Halloween, then you might like this post here for details on our Alternative to Pumpkin Carving:

 

23 Comments