Dreamers of the Day
All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible.
T.E. Lawrence, Seven Pillars of Wisdom
We Must Prune Even the Good for Increased Fruitfulness

Every branch that does bear fruit, the gardener prunes so that it will be even more fruitful. John 15:2. Seems unfair, doesn’t it?
In a contemporary interpretation of the Joseph story in Sun, Stand Still, Stephen Furtick refers to the pit of into which Joseph was tossed on his journey from being a shepherd boy in Israel to being Viceroy of Egypt as being a necessary removal of the unnecessary from the hard disk of Joseph’s life to make room for an upgrade.
Yes. That is what pruning is. If the good—branches, twigs, leaves– interferes with the best, out it goes.
For the good is always the enemy of the best.
* * *
I have struggled with this all my life, being the sort of woman who is interested in everything, and wants to do everything, remaining in denial that the many was the enemy of focus.
However, more and more I am realizing my life and my time are not my own. That my call to write is synonymous with my call to follow Christ. For He calls me to write. So I must cut what stands in the way of writing.
At New Wine 2008, the wonderful Heidi Baker launched into a hypnotic, half-sung, half-chanted riff at the end of her talk, where she prayed gifts on her audience. “Has God called you to write? she asked. “Then say, I will do whatever it takes for me to become a writer.”
Can I say it even now? It makes me feel afraid, and stressed.
* * *
I had entered Mother Teresa’s convent and wanted to become a nun when I was 17. I realized it was a mistake after a year, but thought I would look foolish if I left, so dragged on, growing increasingly ill, physically.
While there, I read a book called “Our Father.” A man boards a train going in the wrong direction. He realizes it, but having told everyone that he was disembarking at the last stop, he felt embarrassed to admit that he had boarded the wrong train, and jump off. So he continues travelling in the wrong direction–getting more and more annoyed with the friends who invited him to dinner, exposing him to this hassle.
I left.
If you realise that you are going in the wrong direction, have agreed to something you shouldn’t have, are doing something that is not your call, jump off as fast as you can.
In this phase of pruning, I am jumping off more and more trains I should never have boarded, my French language lessons, gym memberships, prayer ministry, many relationships and friendships, some social events, so that I can more fully focus on the one thing God has called me to do: to write!
Granada, Spain where the hours are longer and sweeter
My Heavenly Daughter
Irene saunters into my bedroom where I am trying to have quiet time. I inform her of this fact.
She wrinkles her nose. Well, she says, “Why don’t you just discuss things with your heavenly daughter?”
Only A Like Button
A question to ask when faced with a dilemma: Which will prove to be a greater blessing?
In those Should-I/Should-I-Not dilemmas of life, a question I would often ask myself was, “Well, what will I gain–or not gain from this?”
It’s not a stupid, or even a selfish question, necessarily. We are responsible for the stewardship of our lives.
I often add an additional question now. If I have a choice between two activities, I ask, which will be a greater blessing to myself and others?
For instance, I blogged yesterday about feeling over-extended and burnt out. I have two choices for this evening. I have been invited to a large literary party at which a group of writers I have known and enjoyed for six years will be at. I know I will have a good time, laugh, learn, come back buzzy.
Or I could stay home, go to the gym, play a family game, watch a documentary on DVD, write, read, blog. Might this be a greater blessing to my family, my body (writers’ gatherings are winey!!) and myself?
Balancing extroversion and introversion, one’s need for healing silences and other people’s companionship: one of life’s great arts!!
On the Surprising Pleasures of Downward Mobility
Life in the Slow Lane
No, not that’s not my life, nor, most likely, will it ever be.
Roy, my dear husband, has chosen life in the slow lane, having taken early retirement this summer, at the ripe old age of 47!!
It’s amazing! We just love it. He was a high-powered mathematician, had a Chair in Maths, has been a tenured full professor since his early thirties. However, when work keeps you so busy that you have no time to live well, you might as well be earning a dying. When the list of procrastinated chores grows and grows! Ugh!
So now we are living in the slow lane; well, actually we are just adjusting to it. Sea salt from France has a sensational taste; it’s green and unprocessed, and full of seaweed and beneficial algae. Roy ground some this morning in our grinder. He made fresh apple juice from our apples, freshened the rabbit’s hutch, read some Scripture, and now is going to do what it takes to keep our family’s publishing company flourishing.
Less money than before? Yes, a bit. More time? Loads more. Less stress? Yes! More time for each other, our children and our friends? Yes! Healthier? Yes! Happier? Oh yes!!!
The trade-down–less money, less prestige, more time, more leisure, more family time, more time with and for people and God was a good move, and I doubt we will ever regret it.
The Comfort of Good Men (and Women!)
The Comfort of Good Men (and Women!)
“It is true, indeed, that good men are seen to be the sources of no small comfort to others in this world. For if we be harassed by poverty, or saddened by bereavement, or disquieted by bodily pain, or pining in exile, or vexed by any kind of calamity, let good men visit us, men who can not only rejoice with them that rejoice, but also weep with them that weep, and who know how to give profitable counsel, and win us to express our feelings in conversation: the effect is, that rough things become smooth, heavy burdens are lightened, and difficulties vanquished most wonderfully. But this is done in and through them by Him who has made them good by His Spirit.” Letter 130 to Proba (St. Augustine of Hippo)
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 191
- 192
- 193
- 194
- 195
- …
- 279
- Next Page »
