Dreaming Beneath the Spires

Anita Mathias's Blog on Faith and Art

  • Home
  • My Books
  • Essays
  • Contact
  • About Me

Archives for November 2011

A few belated pictures from our summer holiday in Sweden

By Anita Mathias

Uppsala cathedral ceiling

Is the lady in grey real?

Some pictures from the greenhouse in Gothenburg Botanical garden.

A pitcher plant  or the genus Sarracenia (sometimes called the cobra plant)
Sundew (another carnivorous plant)
Huge pitcher of the tropical monkey cup plant (genus Nepenthes)
Slipper orchid (?)
Some pictures from a sunny day at Europe’s largest lake–lake Vanern.
Warm shallow water
gets cold in the deep
Queen Phillipa
Sunset on lake Vattern

Filed Under: random

Garden pictures on Nov. 20th, and personal Facebook updates

By Anita Mathias

Ragged courgette plants may produce one last harvest
Houttuynia (a variegated herb)
Pigeon’s nest exposed by the falling grape leaves
One last yellow Buddleia
Pepper plant to be brought into the conservatory
Parsley flower/seed head
Duck drying off

A last strawberry
Pak choi (Bok Choi)
Apple mint seed heads (left for the goldfinches)
Medlar (Eastern European fruit)
Raised bed with lamb’s lettuce and spinach
Broad bean (winter hardy I’m told)
Cabbage
What are these lovely berries?
Ducks enjoying fresh water
Ducks about to take the plunge

Herb garden showing plentiful sage

Roy has been working from home since June 2010. He’s become super-organised, and usually has something in the oven for when the girls come home. Lancashire hot-pot today. Beef stew, lamb roast, and roast duck are some of his other specialties. His latest saying, “Men should run houses; we do SO much better!”
Face Book Status 
3 October
Ah, Roy’s latest culinary achievement–pretty darn good homemade, whole wheat bread. And it wasn’t too hard either. Thanks,Klaudia for giving us the idea. I think he is going to go on experimenting until he’s got it perfected!
12 October Looking forward to a quiet family weekend of movies and maybe board games. Thanks to Ruth and Matthew for introducing us to new ones in my first board games evening in years. I also enjoyed having Lesley Crawley, Alan Crawley, Erika Baker and Klaudia Schwenk here for lunch. They motivated me to get my house all picked up and tidy:)
14 October
Cold snap setting in. Grr. And we have booked a beach cabin belonging to Lee Abbey in Exmoor, Devon next week. We are looking forward to a week of some worship and quiet time at the Abbey, along with long walks on the beaches and moors. He leads me by still waters; he restores my soul. In moors of green, he makes me rest, by the quiet ocean.
16 OctoberWomen perform 66 percent of the world’s work, produce 50 percent of the food, but earn 10 percent of the income and own 1 percent of the property!

Enjoying Roy Godwin’s “The Grace Outpouring” about the Ffald-y-Brenin retreat centre in Pembrokeshire. Going there in Dec. Has anyone been?

Irene, 12 who reads and listens to books on tape constantly speaks and writes like a book. She wrote a brilliant essay, & her teacher accused her of copying it from the internet. She didn’t. It’s just how she speaks and writes. She protested & the teacher said, “Of course, dear. Class, I would rather you expressed things badly than copied off the internet. I too, twice, when younger, was accused of plagiarism because my work was too good. Grrr.

The family’s bathroom is full of a dazzling array of haircare and beauty products–NONE of which I have bought or use! Sigh! #motherofIrene!

Enjoyed my Zumba class : high energy mixture of salsa, Latin and African inspired dance. Felt high as a cloud doing it. Now, happy but SORE!

Well-deserved Booker win for Julian Barnes. Still can’t believe his lovely “Flaubert’s Parrot,” lost to Anita Brookner all those years ago!

J B Phillips: “translating the Bible was like rewiring a house with the electricity plugged in.” So too is studying it! Must carve out time!

You know your daughter is doing A level philosophy when you say, “I can’t make myself pack till the last moment” & Zoe says, “Nonsense. That’s a fatalistic approach. Jean-Paul Sarte would be shocked!”

Zoe effortlessly did something on my new MacBook which floored me and Roy. Zoe, I said, amazed, we’re floored. No, you are not flawed, mum and dad, she said in all seriousness. You’re just old.”

Irene stands in front on the mirror, with a beanie hat on, trying to sneer . “Don’t I look really dodgy?” Zoe, “Nonsense. You can’t look dodgy with a dimple.”

We try to hike the Valley of Rocks in Exmoor. I tell Irene, “The First Rule of Mountains: Things change. Be prepared.” I stride off. She joins me 20 minutes later. It is a bright, sunny day, but she has brought 1) an umbrella 2) a coat 3) hat, gloves, muffler, 4) A bag of snacks 5 A book in case she gets bored 6) A torch.
“Don’t be so literal-minded, Irene,” I now scold.

Roy and Zoe get stuck into sorting out our bookshelves, and I fear they will not eat till they are done. Roy was to fix lunch. “We have human bodies,”I remind him. “And human bodies need food.” “You have a human body, but the face of an angel,” he tells me. I wander off, digesting this happily, forgetting lunch.
I hear him say, “They say, ‘Flattery won’t get you anywhere. It’s not true!”
29 October
Zoe’s seventeenth birthday party–75 Indian nibbles, trays of pullao rice and naan bread, 5 curries–balti, pasanda, korma, madras, and tikka masala, kulfi and cake. Think we’re set! To be honest, Roy’s cooking one tray, and we are resorting to take-out for the rest–which should be just as or more delicious than our endeavours, hopefully!!
30 OctoberTrying to eat significantly less. Amazing how clear-headed this helps one feel and how well one can concentrate:)

Grieving for the hour of daylight so soon to be stolen from me. Celebrating it with a bonfire for Zoe’s 17th birthday 🙂 #Hatewintertime.

A bird doesn’t sing because it has an answer; it sings because it has a song. – Maya Angelou

Roy’s just returned from our brilliant small group, which, sadly, I decided not to go to today. A member of the group who spends the meeting sleeping explained why. He’s an early riser. “Christians who want to go to heaven should be asleep by 11.” Lol! Never heard that one. Which gives me 48 minutes to be asleep. Good night, world!
2 November 
Don’t we all need a reference letter from the poor when we meet Christ?
Ann Voskamp

Confused. I wrote and spelled Indian English, then British English, until I moved to America in my twenties, and then wrote and spelled American English for 17 years. When I returned to England in 2004, I used American English, though have slowly begun shifting back to UK English. Thank goodness for spell-checkers, since I have honestly forgotten a lot of British spellings. Realised, not realized. Goodness!
13 November Forgiveness means it finally becomes unimportant that you hit back. It doesn’t mean you have to have lunch with that person. Anne Lamott.
Description: https://fbcdn-photos-a.akamaihd.net/photos-ak-snc1/v27562/23/2231777543/app_2_2231777543_9553.gifFor domestic goddesses: “The true secret of happiness lies in taking a genuine interest in all the details of daily life.” William Morris
Okay, we attend a beautiful baptism and confirmation service yesterday. And you know what Roy whispers to me as we exchange the peace? “It’s like Halloween. The inflatable swimming pool for baptisms. The vicar in fishing waders. The bishop in golden vestments. His dishy chaplain in red vestments, carrying an outsize crozier.” Nope, not Halloween. Just a bit Anglo-Catholic!
14 NovemberLesley Crawley, Alan Crawley, thank for hosting such a relaxed, lovely lunch. Jules Middleton, I loved meeting you at last:)

Surprise gift of an evening! Was about to go out to a friend’s house at 7.45 p.m. when I was overtaken by a paroxysm of coughing. Stayed home. Surprise free evening. Yummy. Odd how happy you are when even things you had looked forward to going to get cancelled. I am so enjoying blogging these days:-)
16 November
 Overheard in our home, “Mum, you need to have an extremely interesting life to be on Twitter.” !!

‎22nd Wedding Anniversary. Roy gives me a gift engraved with, “When I count my blessings, I count you twice.” “Aww,” I say, and he adds, “I won’t say how often I count you when I count my worries and my problems.” 22 years, and we’re still untrained!!

My daughter, Irene, 12. “God should have put evolution in the Bible. If that’s not in there, it makes you wonder what else is not in there!”

A Scriptural mandate to rest!A whole day to rest! Oh how I love Sundays!! (Middle-aged moment!)


Roy has been working from home since June 2010. He’s become super-organised, and usually has something in the oven for when the girls come home. Lancashire hot-pot today. Beef stew, lamb roast, and roast duck are some of his other specialties. His latest saying, “Men should run houses; we do SO much better!”
3 OctoberAh, Roy’s latest culinary achievement–pretty darn good homemade, whole wheat bread. And it wasn’t too hard either. Thanks,Klaudia for giving us the idea. I think he is going to go on experimenting until he’s got it perfected!
12 October Looking forward to a quiet family weekend of movies and maybe board games. Thanks to Ruth and Matthew for introducing us to new ones in my first board games evening in years. I also enjoyed having Lesley Crawley, Alan Crawley, Erika Baker and Klaudia Schwenk here for lunch. They motivated me to get my house all picked up and tidy:)
L14 OctoberCold snap setting in. Grr. And we have booked a beach cabin belonging to Lee Abbey in Exmoor, Devon next week. We are looking forward to a week of some worship and quiet time at the Abbey, along with long walks on the beaches and moors. He leads me by still waters; he restores my soul. In moors of green, he makes me rest, by the quiet ocean.
Like · · 16 OctoberWomen perform 66 percent of the world’s work, produce 50 percent of the food, but earn 10 percent of the income and own 1 percent of the property!

Enjoying Roy Godwin’s “The Grace Outpouring” about the Ffald-y-Brenin retreat centre in Pembrokeshire. Going there in Dec. Has anyone been?

Irene, 12 who reads and listens to books on tape constantly speaks and writes like a book. She wrote a brilliant essay, & her teacher accused her of copying it from the internet. She didn’t. It’s just how she speaks and writes. She protested & the teacher said, “Of course, dear. Class, I would rather you expressed things badly than copied off the internet. I too, twice, when younger, was accused of plagiarism because my work was too good. Grrr.

The family’s bathroom is full of a dazzling array of haircare and beauty products–NONE of which I have bought or use! Sigh! #motherofIrene!

Enjoyed my Zumba class : high energy mixture of salsa, Latin and African inspired dance. Felt high as a cloud doing it. Now, happy but SORE!

Well-deserved Booker win for Julian Barnes. Still can’t believe his lovely “Flaubert’s Parrot,” lost to Anita Brookner all those years ago!

J B Phillips: “translating the Bible was like rewiring a house with the electricity plugged in.” So too is studying it! Must carve out time!

You know your daughter is doing A level philosophy when you say, “I can’t make myself pack till the last moment” & Zoe says, “Nonsense. That’s a fatalistic approach. Jean-Paul Sarte would be shocked!”

Zoe effortlessly did something on my new MacBook which floored me and Roy. Zoe, I said, amazed, we’re floored. No, you are not flawed, mum and dad, she said in all seriousness. You’re just old.”

Irene stands in front on the mirror, with a beanie hat on, trying to sneer . “Don’t I look really dodgy?” Zoe, “Nonsense. You can’t look dodgy with a dimple.”

We try to hike the Valley of Rocks in Exmoor. I tell Irene, “The First Rule of Mountains: Things change. Be prepared.” I stride off. She joins me 20 minutes later. It is a bright, sunny day, but she has brought 1) an umbrella 2) a coat 3) hat, gloves, muffler, 4) A bag of snacks 5 A book in case she gets bored 6) A torch.
“Don’t be so literal-minded, Irene,” I now scold.

Roy and Zoe get stuck into sorting out our bookshelves, and I fear they will not eat till they are done. Roy was to fix lunch. “We have human bodies,”I remind him. “And human bodies need food.” “You have a human body, but the face of an angel,” he tells me. I wander off, digesting this happily, forgetting lunch.
I hear him say, “They say, ‘Flattery won’t get you anywhere. It’s not true!”
29 October Zoe’s seventeenth birthday party–75 Indian nibbles, trays of pullao rice and naan bread, 5 curries–balti, pasanda, korma, madras, and tikka masala, kulfi and cake. Think we’re set! To be honest, Roy’s cooking one tray, and we are resorting to take-out for the rest–which should be just as or more delicious than our endeavours, hopefully!!
30 October 
Trying to eat significantly less. Amazing how clear-headed this helps one feel and how well one can concentrate:)

Grieving for the hour of daylight so soon to be stolen from me. Celebrating it with a bonfire for Zoe’s 17th birthday 🙂 #Hatewintertime.

A bird doesn’t sing because it has an answer; it sings because it has a song. – Maya Angelou

Roy’s just returned from our brilliant small group, which, sadly, I decided not to go to today. A member of the group who spends the meeting sleeping explained why. He’s an early riser. “Christians who want to go to heaven should be asleep by 11.” Lol! Never heard that one. Which gives me 48 minutes to be asleep. Good night, world!
2 November 
Don’t we all need a reference letter from the poor when we meet Christ?
Ann Voskamp

Confused. I wrote and spelled Indian English, then British English, until I moved to America in my twenties, and then wrote and spelled American English for 17 years. When I returned to England in 2004, I used American English, though have slowly begun shifting back to UK English. Thank goodness for spell-checkers, since I have honestly forgotten a lot of British spellings. Realised, not realized. Goodness!
13 November Forgiveness means it finally becomes unimportant that you hit back. It doesn’t mean you have to have lunch with that person. Anne Lamott.
Description: https://fbcdn-photos-a.akamaihd.net/photos-ak-snc1/v27562/23/2231777543/app_2_2231777543_9553.gif
For domestic goddesses: “The true secret of happiness lies in taking a genuine interest in all the details of daily life.” William Morris

Okay, we attend a beautiful baptism and confirmation service yesterday. And you know what Roy whispers to me as we exchange the peace? “It’s like Halloween. The inflatable swimming pool for baptisms. The vicar in fishing waders. The bishop in golden vestments. His dishy chaplain in red vestments, carrying an outsize crozier.” Nope, not Halloween. Just a bit Anglo-Catholic!

Like · · Share · 14 November‎Lesley Crawley, Alan Crawley, thank for hosting such a relaxed, lovely lunch. Jules Middleton, I loved meeting you at last:)

Surprise gift of an evening! Was about to go out to a friend’s house at 7.45 p.m. when I was overtaken by a paroxysm of coughing. Stayed home. Surprise free evening. Yummy. Odd how happy you are when even things you had looked forward to going to get cancelled. I am so enjoying blogging these days:-)
16 NovemberOverheard in our home, “Mum, you need to have an extremely interesting life to be on Twitter.” !!

‎22nd Wedding Anniversary. Roy gives me a gift engraved with, “When I count my blessings, I count you twice.” “Aww,” I say, and he adds, “I won’t say how often I count you when I count my worries and my problems.” 22 years, and we’re still untrained!!

My daughter, Irene, 12. “God should have put evolution in the Bible. If that’s not in there, it makes you wonder what else is not in there!”

A Scriptural mandate to rest!A whole day to rest! Oh how I love Sundays!! (Middle-aged moment!)

Filed Under: In which I dream in my garden, In Which my Blog Morphs into Memoir and Gets Personal

Christ Cries MINE!

By Anita Mathias

Oh, no single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!’

                                                                                                                                                                  Abraham Kuyper

 He looks at me.

 

At my body, which tells of comfort sought

and briefly found in chocolate

and the richest of foods

and says, “Actually,

 

MINE.”

 * * *

And he reads my blog,

which has brought me more pleasure

and blessing than any work I have ever done

and he smiles,

and asks,

 

MINE?

 

And I say, “Oh yes, of course; it’s yours. Would I embark on something so time-intensive, so out of my control, with so large a possibility of failure without you? Would I feel happy or confident if it were not yours?

 

And he smiles and says, “Don’t forget it.”

* * *

 And he looks at my dream of finishing the big, big book on which I worked, off and on, for 15 years before I dropped it

 

And he says,

MINE.

 

And I say,

“Yes, of course. But will you let me finish it?”

 

And he replies,

MINE.

 

And I say, “Okay, Lord,

We’ll wait and see.

MINE, you say?

Well, then, it’s safe.”

* * *

 And he looks at my children, and sees,

My love, dreams, fear, and vicarious ambition all mixed up,

And he says,

MINE.

 

And I sigh with relief,

“Okay, then, you’ll manage them better than I can.

Okay then, have them, but look after them well.”

 

And he replies,

MINE.

* * *

And he looks at my marriage,

and says,

MINE.

 

And I say,

“Well, of course. How else could I do it?”

 

And he looks a little deeper,

Getting a bit more intimate,

and says, MINE.

 

And I say, “That’s a bit personal, you know.

But, okay.”

* * *

 

And so he goes, through my life,

Friendships.

MINE.

 

“Of course, Lord, would I want to have a friendship you hadn’t given me?

I would not.”

* * *

 Travel.

MINE.

 

I sigh. I love travel.

 

Yes, I say, “Yours.”

* * *

 Money.

 

MINE.

 

“What, Lord, all of it?

 

MINE.

 

“What? No scope for frivolity? For self-indulgence?

 

MINE.

 

“That’s going to be a hard one, Lord, but we’ll begin to work it out.”

* * *

And he looks at my day:

How time slips away in trivial

browsing of blogs,

newspapers, facebook, twitter

and the sadness I feel as it does.

 

And he says,

“Your time, Anita;

Actually, it’s MINE.”

 

“Of course, have my time,” I say. “Please. I don’t manage my time that well anyway. Please manage it.”

* * *

And he looks at my garden,

my acre and a half with which I was so thrilled

and now find so hard to maintain

and he says,

“MINE.”

 

And I say,

“Yours? Okay,”

and sigh with relief

because I want so much to get it perfect

and fail so miserably, but if it’s His,

he’ll help me.

 

And he looks at my house and says,

MINE.

And again, I relax.

Oh, that bugbear of mine,

Yes, Lord, you manage it.

* * *

And business done, he looks at me again,

Smiles and says,

“MINE.”

 

And I sigh with pleasure, relief and happiness,

And say, “Yes, Lord,

 

I’m YOURS.”

 

Filed Under: random Tagged With: Abraham Kuyper, Absolute Surrender

Would You Want to Enter your Promised Land without God?

By Anita Mathias


Image Credit

 

In an extraordinary passage in Exodus, after the Israelites have fashioned a golden calf, God tells Moses, (Ex. 33:1) “Leave this place, you and the people you brought up out of Egypt, and go up to the land I promised on oath to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, saying, ‘I will give it to your descendants.’ 2 I will send an angel before you and drive out the Canaanites. 3 Go up to the land flowing with milk and honey. But I will not go with you, because you are a stiff-necked people and I might destroy you on the way.”

So they were promised their hearts’ desire, but not God’s presence or protection

But Moses says: “If your Presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here.

Which pleases God who answers, 14 “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest. I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name.”

(Upon which, Moses, seizing the moment, cheekily increases his ask, “Now show me your glory.”)

                                                    * * *

I first lingered on this passage about ten years ago during a Beth Moore Bible study. I came late, and stood at the back of the room, as Beth, on the DVD, was reading out this passage.

My Promised Land then would have been literary success with the book I was then trying to write–with much difficulty as the girls were 6 and 2.

Did I want to enter my Promised Land even if God was not with me?

I had not thought about it before. I said, bravely, “Lord, I do not want to enter my Promised Land, if you do not go with me.”

And got tearful, because I was not sure if I meant it. I wanted my promised land so badly you see. Just the thought of never entering it made me tearful.

* * *

 Fast forward eleven years. My promised land, I am afraid, still involves writing. It is the great love and interest of my life.

But do I want to enter any writing-related promised land without God? Absolutely not. Couldn’t contemplate it. I wouldn’t survive the work, the stress, the demands.

I would lack wisdom and direction. I might make up my own directions, and then second-guess them. How much better to get them from God!

I would miss having little rest breaks, and checking in with God.  I would miss the flashes of intuition, wisdom, inspiration, guidance that come from prayer.

* * *

Ten years ago when I said, “Lord, I do not want to enter the Promised Land without you,” I felt so noble. But I wasn’t kidding God. He knew that my heart’s desire was really the Promised Land of literary success.

In fact, I didn’t even kid myself. Tears rolled down my cheeks, as I stood at the back of the room saying, “Lord, I do not want to enter the Promised Land without you,” because the thought of not entering my promised land, with or without God, was too sad to contemplate.

I clearly need more time in the desert to learn to put God first.

Now I, of course , do care more for God than for my promised land, because I know that I would not be able to do the promised land without him. The milk would curdle, the honey cloy.

But, luckily, he says to those who want his presence more than the Promised Land,  “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest. I will do the very thing you have asked, because I am pleased with you and I know you by name.”

 

Filed Under: In which I decide to follow Jesus Tagged With: Exodus, Moses, Promised Land

Being in the Wrong Place at the Right Time

By Anita Mathias

 Have you ever been in the wrong place at the right time?
A place of loneliness with few real friends?
A place of barrenness without energy to express the thoughts welling up within you?
A place of sterility which yielded no inspiration or support for your creativity?
A place of tears and stress when living with difficult people drained all your joy and energy?
An overwhelming place, in which the sheer tasks of living—keeping a home tidy and running—required more cleverness and energy that you seemed to possess?
I have lived in all these places.
Have you ever been in church in which you didn’t fit?
A cliquey church, whose cliques had no room for you?
A church-status conscious church, a climb to the top of the anthill, join the inner circle, seek-church-significance kind of church
A socio-economic status conscious church, a perfectly groomed, perfect smile, right kind of house-car-decoration-accessories kind of church, at a time when all this baffled you,
An outward appearance is all church, a pretend you tick the right behavioural boxes church when you and your family were barely holding your act together.
A theology conscious church, when, oops, your theology was a bit more nuanced, couldn’t be articulated in correct, brief sound bites.
Over my 22 years as a Christian, 15 all over in America (New York, California, Minnesota and Virginia) and 8 in England (Manchester and Oxford) I’ve been to all these.
You know, I have spent much of my life being in the slightly wrong place. There were perhaps only 12 years in which I definitely felt that I was in the right place at the right time as far as my creative life went—my three years in Oxford as an undergraduate; two years in Minneapolis, Minnesota as a young married woman; and 7 years in Oxford as a middle-aged wife and mum. My church experience has been varied. I’ve loved most of the churches I’ve been part of, and learned from them all, both those in which I perceived myself as being in the right place, and those in which I certainly seemed to be in the wrong place.
And yet, in a way, I have been in the right place in the right time all my life.
In the same way that the desert was the right place for Moses to see the bush which blazed and was not consumed, like the love and generosity of God.
In the same way that the land of suffering—pits and dungeons—was necessary for Joseph to become fruitful, to move from herding sheep to bringing blessing on two nations.
In the same way that being alone and abandoned in the desert was the right place for David to taste and see that the Lord was good because there was nothing and no one else to taste.
In the same way that being fed by ravens by the Kidron Valley was the right place for Elijah to learn that God always provides, and to trust His protection enough to single-handedly confront the Ahab’s court and the 450 priests of Baal.
In the same way that John needed to be exiled and quiet and still in rocky and arid Patmos to hear him whose eyes were like a flame of fire and whose voice was like a sound of many waters.
Being in the wrong place at the right time turned these men into poets, prophets, and writers. Men who could hear God when he spoke in gentle whispers or in a voice like the sound of many waters.
Suffering is suffering. I am not trying to minimize it, my own or anyone else’s. And I wouldn’t wish it on myself, or anyone else.
And yet, as Scripture says, suffering does yield blessings.
And these are blessings I found from being in the wrong place at the right time.
When I was bored and lonely, I read a lot.
When academics were too easy and not stimulating enough, I got involved in debating and organising things from idea to execution, which gave me useful skills when it came to running a business.
When my marriage went through rough periods, I burrowed into the Bible and Christian literature seeking answers, and scripture became so part of me, that if you scratched me, I bled scripture. Probably still do. I sought counsel and support from older Christians, two of whom became my closest friends.
When I was unhappy, and my writing did not go well, I learned to pray. I initially began praying for my writing—and though the answer was a “Not yet,” I continued praying for the sheer delight of being with God. And I wrote more in desert periods than in periods with many friends and much social life.
When I felt spiritually sick—was comfort-eating, getting angry too quickly, falling prey to malice and irritation–I grew convinced that I needed the great physician, and deepened my spiritual quest to get the fatness of Christ into my own soul
When I felt depressed—didn’t feel motivated to exercise, or do any housework, or do anything but read or write in bed—I remembered that Jesus said unless you eat my flesh, you have no life in you. And I began to learn to feed on Jesus.
When I went through a desert period in my previous church, I began to spend enough time with Christ to hear his voice, and hear his guidance quite clearly. And that has provided invaluable.
You made me fruitful in the land of my suffering,Joseph said. I wonder if enduring fruit only grows in that land.
Not the easy fruit that grows in the soil of one’s natural talent and ability, but fruit that grows in soil enriched by tears of repentance;
compassion born out of suffering;
tolerance born out of failure;
wisdom born from seeing the fruits of one’s own folly;
faith born of the times when all seemed lost, and you were in free fall, and God lent you a safety net, rescuing you from your mad sky-dive.

Filed Under: random

Secret Disciples and Celebrity Christians: Not Necessarily the Same

By Anita Mathias

 These are the best read Christian authors in the world today: Francis Chan, David Platt, Ann Voskamp, Randy Alcorn, Lysa TerKeurst Here are the top 5 Christian bloggers in the world : Justin Taylor, Trevin Wax, the Resurgence, Desiring God, Tim Challies.And the most influential Christians on Twitter according to the New York Times are Rick Warren, Joel Osteen, and Joyce Meyer.

* * *

And are these the greatest Christians now alive?

The most famous Christians are not necessarily the greatest Christians, and the quest for fame is intrinsically at odds with the spiritual life.

When Edith Shaeffer was asked who the greatest living Christian woman in the world was, she replied memorably, ‘We don’t know her name. She is dying of cancer somewhere in a hospital in India.’

Who is the greatest? The disciples were vexed by this question, and Jesus tried to solve it more than once. The one who believes like a child. The one who can serve others.

* * *

The blogosphere can be a noisy place. A clamour of opinion, attack, self-promotion and the trivial, though shot through with gems of insight, wisdom, humour and beauty. And sometimes, even with the divine.

Sometimes, the difference between the echo chamber of anger, finger pointing and “outing” in the Christian blogosphere, and the gentle whisper in which God ultimately speaks to Elijah can be striking.

And just when you despair, you hear gentle voices which are close to God’s heartbeat, Ann Voskamp, definitely, and often, the more polemic John Piper, and you feel better. You realize that even the snakes and ladders world of fame, celebrity, attention, followers, is, of course, under the sovereignty of God. That God is sovereign over the literary world, and sovereign over the blogosphere. That God has an interest in promoting mystics like Ann Voskamp whose heart beats like his.

* * *

We write to be read. When I first began blogging, I worried, because it seemed that controversy, attack and tearing down definitely got more traction, readers, attention and links, than things which might be a blessing, be soul-nourishing and soul-fattening.

But there are spiritual dangers in tearing down other Christians, or other Christian bloggers. It’s the work of “the accuser of the brethren who accuses them night and day before the throne.” Though sometimes, if the views of an influential Christian are harmful, something might need to be said. Or done.

* * *

But there are spiritual dangers too in writing about the spiritual life. The wonderful Norwegian writer, O. Hallesby, said that one’s secret life with Christ in the secret places of prayer is like a cosy, warm Norwegian cottage in a blustery winter. If you talk about your prayer life, you open the door, and cold wintry blasts enter.

The only justification for doing so is that that’s the song I have to sing. One of my deepest interests. I read Christian memoirs and autobiographies as travel dispatches from people who have ventured deeper into the holy wilds of God than I have, and I want to hear the news, the travel conditions, their blog, Facebook, and twitter reports of their travels, so to say. Similarly, by honestly describing my spiritual adventuring, I might be able construct a travel map, a topographical map for those who might be called to follow similar routes.

But we need grace, for writing about the spiritual life has all sorts of dangers—pride, self-promotion, exaggeration, and the dangers of “garden writing:” that one might spend more time describing the fruits and flowers in the garden of your soul than tending them. That one can continue with spiritual “garden writing,” even while the real garden grows weedy, unwatered and unkempt. This happens to many Christian preachers, speakers, celebrities and writers. But may it not be true of me, Lord.

                                                                                                                               * * *

 My hope, my goal in my blog posts is that I hear or overhear what God is saying, and saying to me, and express it. I want to see the world and see reality as he does.

We write to be read. Amid the clamour of many voices and the self-promotion of commercial Christianity, will gentle whispers ever be heard?

Yes. Because if one has sat at Christ’s feet long enough to hear his voice and feel his heartbeat, then he is as interested in having your voice heard as you are yourself.

So, relax, oh Christian blogger. If you do indeed have something to say which might bless the world, you have a friend in high places, a powerful connection, who also wants your voice to be heard, your words to be read, and know the best way to bring about this happy eventuality.

Filed Under: In which I explore writing and blogging and creativity, Writing and Blogging Tagged With: Christian blogging, Christian celebrity, Christian Writing, Secrecy in the spiritual life

The Beautiful and the Useful

By Anita Mathias

 

William Morris, St. George cabinet 1861-1862 - designed by his friend Philip Webb and painted by Morris himself
Image Credit 

Do you want a simple guide to freshen and declutter your house?

Here it is from the Pre-Raphaelite, William Morris: If you want a golden rule that will fit everything, this is it: Have nothing in your houses that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful. 
It’s a really useful guide as one sweeps through the house. Is this beautiful? Useful? Nope? Then out it goes.
The same is true for writing. One of my daughters showed me a short story she had to write for school. I went through it sentence by sentence. Was each sentence serving the larger purpose of the story–character, setting, plot, atmosphere? If not, out it should go unless it was extraordinarily beautiful.
It’s a good rule for creative writing, isn’t it? Everyone should be both beautiful and useful. If it’s not, save the beautiful darling for another post, and coax the useful thought into beauty
Makes me yearn to get back to the rigours of serious writing. Blogging is like a beach holiday compared to serious writing. But perhaps I will be able to combine both which will be like living in San Diego, or New Zealand with both beaches and mountains accessible in a single day!

 

Filed Under: random

Summer Does Come (Rainer Maria Rilke)

By Anita Mathias

Being an artist means: not numbering and counting, but ripening like a tree, which doesn’t force its sap, and stands confidently in the storms of spring, not afraid that afterward summer may not come. It does come. But it comes only to those who are patient, who are there as if eternity lay before them, so unconcernedly silent and vast. I learn it every day of my life, learn it with pain I am grateful for: patience is everything!

Rainer Maria Rilke

Filed Under: random

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • Next Page »

Sign Up and Get a Free eBook!

Sign up to be emailed my blog posts (one a week) and get the ebook of "Holy Ground," my account of working with Mother Teresa.

Join 640 Other Readers

Follow me on Twitter

Follow @anitamathias1

Anita Mathias: About Me

Anita Mathias

Read my blog on Facebook

My Books

Wandering Between Two Worlds: Essays on Faith and Art

Wandering Between Two Worlds - Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Francesco, Artist of Florence: The Man Who Gave Too Much

Francesco, Artist of Florence - Amazom.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

The Story of Dirk Willems

The Story of Dirk Willems - Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk
Premier Digital Awards 2015 - Finalist - Blogger of the year
Runner Up Christian Media Awards 2014 - Tweeter of the year

Recent Posts

  •  On Not Wasting a Desert Experience
  • A Mind of Life and Peace in the Middle of a Global Pandemic
  • On Yoga and Following Jesus
  • Silver and Gold Linings in the Storm Clouds of Coronavirus
  • Trust: A Message of Christmas
  • Life- Changing Journaling: A Gratitude Journal, and Habit-Tracker, with Food and Exercise Logs, Time Sheets, a Bullet Journal, Goal Sheets and a Planner
  • On Loving That Which Love You Back
  • “An Autobiography in Five Chapters” and Avoiding Habitual Holes  
  • Shining Faith in Action: Dirk Willems on the Ice
  • The Story of Dirk Willems: The Man who Died to Save His Enemy

Categories

What I’m Reading

Tiny Habits
B. J. Fogg

  Tiny Habits  - Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

The Regeneration Trilogy
Pat Barker

  The Regeneration Trilogy  - Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Amazing Faith: The Authorized Biography of Bill Bright
Michael Richardson

Amazing Faith -- Bill Bright -- Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
Stephen King

On Writing --  Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Acedia & me: A Marriage, Monks, and a Writer's Life
Kathleen Norris

KATHLEEN NORRIS --  Amazon.com
Amazon.com

Amazon.co.uk

Archive by month

INSTAGRAM

anita.mathias

Writer, Blogger, Reader, Mum. Christian. Instaing Oxford, travel, gardens and healthy meals. Oxford English alum. Writing memoir. Lives in Oxford, UK

Images from walks around Oxford. #beauty #oxford # Images from walks around Oxford. #beauty #oxford #walking #tranquility #naturephotography #nature
So we had a lovely holiday in the Southwest. And h So we had a lovely holiday in the Southwest. And here we are at one of the world’s most famous and easily recognisable sites.
#stonehenge #travel #england #prehistoric England #family #druids
And I’ve blogged https://anitamathias.com/2020/09/13/on-not-wasting-a-desert-experience/
So, after Paul the Apostle's lightning bolt encounter with the Risen Christ on the road to Damascus, he went into the desert, he tells us...
And there, he received revelation, visions, and had divine encounters. The same Judean desert, where Jesus fasted for forty days before starting his active ministry. Where Moses encountered God. Where David turned from a shepherd to a leader and a King, and more, a man after God’s own heart.  Where Elijah in the throes of a nervous breakdown hears God in a gentle whisper. 
England, where I live, like most of the world is going through a desert experience of continuing partial lockdowns. Covid-19 spreads through human contact and social life, and so we must refrain from those great pleasures. We are invited to the desert, a harsh place where pruning can occur, and spiritual fruitfulness.
A plague like this has not been known for a hundred years... John Piper, after his cancer diagnosis, exhorted people, “Don’t Waste Your Cancer”—since this was the experience God permitted you to have, and He can bring gold from it. Pandemics and plagues are permitted (though not willed or desired) by a Sovereign God, and he can bring life-change out of them. 
Let us not waste this unwanted, unchosen pandemic, this opportunity for silence, solitude and reflection. Let’s not squander on endless Zoom calls—or on the internet, which, if not used wisely, will only raise anxiety levels. Let’s instead accept the invitation to increased silence and reflection
Let's use the extra free time that many of us have long coveted and which has now been given us by Covid-19 restrictions to seek the face of God. To seek revelation. To pray. 
And to work on those projects of our hearts which have been smothered by noise, busyness, and the tumult of people and parties. To nurture the fragile dreams still alive in our hearts. The long-deferred duty or vocation
So, we are about eight weeks into lockdown, and I So, we are about eight weeks into lockdown, and I have totally sunk into the rhythm of it, and have got quiet, very quiet, the quietest spell of time I have had as an adult.
I like it. I will find going back to the sometimes frenetic merry-go-round of my old life rather hard. Well, I doubt I will go back to it. I will prune some activities, and generally live more intentionally and mindfully.
I have started blocking internet of my phone and laptop for longer periods of time, and that has brought a lot of internal quiet and peace.
Some of the things I have enjoyed during lockdown have been my daily long walks, and gardening. Well, and reading and working on a longer piece of work.
Here are some images from my walks.
And if you missed it, a blog about maintaining peace in the middle of the storm of a global pandemic
https://anitamathias.com/2020/05/04/a-mind-of-life-and-peace/  #walking #contemplating #beauty #oxford #pandemic
A few walks in Oxford in the time of quarantine. A few walks in Oxford in the time of quarantine.  We can maintain a mind of life and peace during this period of lockdown by being mindful of our minds, and regulating them through meditation; being mindful of our bodies and keeping them happy by exercise and yoga; and being mindful of our emotions in this uncertain time, and trusting God who remains in charge. A new blog on maintaining a mind of life and peace during lockdown https://anitamathias.com/2020/05/04/a-mind-of-life-and-peace/
In the days when one could still travel, i.e. Janu In the days when one could still travel, i.e. January 2020, which seems like another life, all four of us spent 10 days in Malta. I unplugged, and logged off social media, so here are some belated iphone photos of a day in Valetta.
Today, of course, there’s a lockdown, and the country’s leader is in intensive care.
When the world is too much with us, and the news stresses us, moving one’s body, as in yoga or walking, calms the mind. I am doing some Yoga with Adriene, and again seeing the similarities between the practice of Yoga and the practice of following Christ.
https://anitamathias.com/2020/04/06/on-yoga-and-following-jesus/
#valleta #valletamalta #travel #travelgram #uncagedbird
Images from some recent walks in Oxford. I am copi Images from some recent walks in Oxford.
I am coping with lockdown by really, really enjoying my daily 4 mile walk. By savouring the peace of wild things. By trusting that God will bring good out of this. With a bit of yoga, and weights. And by working a fair amount in my garden. And reading.
How are you doing?
#oxford #oxfordinlockdown #lockdown #walk #lockdownwalks #peace #beauty #happiness #joy #thepeaceofwildthings
Images of walks in Oxford in this time of social d Images of walks in Oxford in this time of social distancing. The first two are my own garden.  And I’ve https://anitamathias.com/2020/03/28/silver-and-gold-linings-in-the-storm-clouds-of-coronavirus/ #corona #socialdistancing #silverlinings #silence #solitude #peace
Trust: A Message of Christmas He came to earth in Trust: A Message of Christmas  He came to earth in a  splash of energy
And gentleness and humility.
That homeless baby in the barn
Would be the lynchpin on which history would ever after turn
Who would have thought it?
But perhaps those attuned to God’s way of surprises would not be surprised.
He was already at the centre of all things, connecting all things. * * *
Augustus Caesar issued a decree which brought him to Bethlehem,
The oppressions of colonialism and conquest brought the Messiah exactly where he was meant to be, the place prophesied eight hundred years before his birth by the Prophet Micah.
And he was already redeeming all things. The shame of unwed motherhood; the powerlessness of poverty.
He was born among animals in a barn, animals enjoying the sweetness of life, animals he created, animals precious to him.
For he created all things, and in him all things hold together
Including stars in the sky, of which a new one heralded his birth
Drawing astronomers to him.
And drawing him to the attention of an angry King
As angelic song drew shepherds to him.
An Emperor, a King, scholars, shepherds, angels, animals, stars, an unwed mother
All things in heaven and earth connected
By a homeless baby
The still point on which the world still turns. The powerful centre. The only true power.
The One who makes connections. * * *
And there is no end to the wisdom, the crystal glints of the Message that birth brings.
To me, today, it says, “Fear not, trust me, I will make a way.” The baby lay gentle in the barn
And God arranges for new stars, angelic song, wise visitors with needed finances for his sustenance in the swiftly-coming exile, shepherds to underline the anointing and reassure his parents. “Trust me in your dilemmas,” the baby still says, “I will make a way. I will show it to you.” Happy Christmas everyone.  https://anitamathias.com/2019/12/24/trust-a-message-of-christmas/ #christmas #gemalderieberlin #trust #godwillmakeaway
Look, I’ve designed a journal. It’s an omnibus Look, I’ve designed a journal. It’s an omnibus Gratitude journal, habit tracker, food and exercise journal, bullet journal, with time sheets, goal sheets and a Planner. Everything you’d like to track.  Here’s a post about it with ISBNs https://anitamathias.com/2019/12/23/life-changing-journalling/. Check it out. I hope you and your kids like it!
Load More… Follow on Instagram

© 2020 Dreaming Beneath the Spires · All Rights Reserved. · Cookie Policy · Privacy Policy