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“Laying Out”: A Guest Post by Jennie Bishop

By Anita Mathias

Jennie Bishop, author of
The Princess and the Kiss

 

 
My husband and I are worship leaders—him by position and career, me by example—and thus have come to know the human ego intimately. The best musicians are always those who know how and when to “lay out.” They can step back and let someone else take the solo, or recognize that their particular instrument’s voicing isn’t adding to the song during certain measures.
It’s not always easy to take your hands off a guitar when you’re itching to play a screaming solo, but the results are more satisfying to the audience. All it takes is the willingness to recognize that serving on the worship team is a privilege, not a right. We are instruments of service, and not stars in the making.
I know that I struggle similarly with writing. There have been many times when I haven’t been willing to “lay out.” My identity has been too fiercely tangled with my story making. I published my first compilation on the school ditto machine in sixth grade. I wrote my first (bad) novel in high school. I signed my friends’ yearbooks “Great Author of the Future.”
When I’m not working on a new project, I tend to be anxious. My discipline is worry, and I have a General Anxiety Disorder and medication to prove it. A few years ago, God mercifully exposed my anxiety issues by allowing me into a chaotic, unpredictable life in Orlando. This year He has turned the tables to the extreme by gifting my husband with a wonderful position and our family with a small condo on the beach in Daytona.
You would think life here is idyllic. My writing desk looks right out the window onto the Atlantic. I can count the dolphins or pelicans as they make their way up and down the shoreline. The waves provide a constant, mesmerizing background of music, even worship.
But since October, I’ve barely sat at that desk.
God, in His desire to stretch and form me in yet another direction, made it clear upon my husband’s acceptance of this new position that I was to separate myself from writing for a time to simply be a mother and wife. My tenth grader was making a hard school transition, and my graduate moved home to work and prepare for college. My husband needed my support at home and in his position.
I am aware of the daily need to be willing to scrub floors or sing a solo at a moment’s notice. I concur with Brother Lawrence in the necessity of  practicing the presence of God, in prayer, dish-doing and laundry-folding. But the long season of non-writing became difficult, especially with a finished manuscript on my desk, awaiting a home. I began to ask what all that work had been for. I wondered if I was simply being lazy or my rest was actually a gift of God. I slipped intermittently back into worry, even depression.
One day I discovered a blog from Anita when I was searching for information unpacking the “weaned child” passage in Psalm 131. How I longed to rest this way, satisfied in my Father’s lap, without the anxiety of analyzing every moment of my existence.
Anita’s “Working Restfully” blog spoke deeply to my heart as God assured me, again, that my writing Sabbath was good, that I did not need to push and shove my way into a publishing situation.
* * *
About the same time, Randy asked me to lead a song, one of my favorites, in a coming worship service. I had agreed—until practice, when I tried out the key. I wanted to sing with passion, but instead was distracted by uncomfortable notes in my lower range. I waved the instrumentalists down.
“Um, I think Tiffany should sing these verses,” I suggested. I knew Tiffany had sung the song beautifully at another service when I had been absent.
“But this is your favorite song,” my husband reminded me.
“It is,” I agreed. “But just because it’s my favorite doesn’t mean I’m the best one to sing it. I’m going to lay out.”
Tiffany was delighted, and so was I—the results were so much better. I’ve removed a distraction that would have affected not only me, but possibly our whole congregation. Now the way is open for us all to freely worship.
Godliness with contentment is great gain. This is my quest: not to long for “star quality,” in singing, in writing, in speaking or in homemaking (is that possible?) … but to be fully content to “lay out,” to wait, to relax like a weaned child in my Father’s arms. There is the only place where any lasting satisfaction can really be found. There is the place of constant rest, as I find my identity fully safe and complete in Christ.
                                                                                      ***
Jennie Bishop is the author of the best-selling children’s book, The Princess and the Kiss. She is also the founder of PurityWorks, a not-for-profit that provides resources for the development of good hearts in small children as preparation for them to embrace sexual purity as they grow.

 

Filed Under: Applying my heart unto wisdom

Epiphanies and Revelations

By Anita Mathias

Peacock with its Tail Fanned Out Photographic Print
Well, today, January 6th, is the feast of the Epiphany, or the Revelation of Christ to the Gentiles.
Epiphany, epi-to, phainein—show, reveal, manifest. The word used for the moment when a peacock suddenly unfurls his magnificent tail, and we see the full, hitherto hidden glory.
                                                                                         * * *
Be transformed by the renewing of your mind (Romans 12:2)
How has the ongoing process of transformation worked for me?  Grace and Epiphanies.
How exactly I changed, I cannot put my finger on, but I see that I have. I was vengeful, but now I am not. I was easily angered, but now I am not, unless I grow tired and weary. I was judgmental, but now I am not, particularly, unless I grow tired and weary! I wrote off people rapidly, but now I do not do so. And so on.
Some of this change is because of the grace of God, freely given. God’s invisible loving radiation working on my soul. I spend an hour a day sitting and basking in God’s presence. I sometimes get distracted, sometimes feel bored, sometimes feel as dry and restless as a stick in the wind.
And I sometimes feel strong currents of grace and love and power invade my soul.
Perhaps the change in one’s inner being comes from the process of basking in the sun of God’s love, which warms this dull brown cold-blooded chameleon, turning her all the known colours of the chameleon–pink, blue, red, orange, green, yellow, turquoise and purple!!
·                                                                                               * * *
But much of the change in me has occurred through epiphanies.
I see something, and I see it clearly, and it changes how I think, feel and act.
Reading Ann Voskamp’s One Thousand Gifts has been epiphanic. Live in the present, give thanks in everything. This totally changes your attitude and your emotions.
Two instances: We had a glorious retreat in Wales, filled with God’s presence. And then a peaceful, glorious week at home in Oxford for Christmas. Then we had booked a week in London between Christmas and New Year, to do the museums, and the bright lights, big city thing.
Gosh, after a peaceful two weeks of timeless family serenity, reading, writing, watching movies, hanging out, Roy and I sure didn’t feel like going to London. Couldn’t get out of it–booked and pre-paid, non-refundable!
I was almost feeling resentful about the hammer-beat of the noise and crowds on a pulse and spirit which had SO slowed down, and then I remembered that I had decided to live in the present, and be thankful in all things.
Thanking God that I would get to see the Pre-Raphaelites and Turner and Constable in Tate Britain; the Impressionists in the Courtauld; butterflies and birds in the Natural History Museum, eat delicious Indian and Middle-Eastern food; and take my girls clothes shopping in the Westfield Center changed my attitude from “Oh, I’ve planned too much for a 3 week break,” to excitement.
And we did have a lovely time. Zoe fell in love with London. We enjoyed the centre on stark winter evenings, seeing almost but not the same views as Wordsworth saw in 1802
Earth has not anything to show more fair:
Dull would he be of soul who could pass by
A sight so touching in its majesty:
This City now doth like a garment wear
The beauty of the morning: silent, bare,
Ships, towers, domes, theatres, and temples lie
Open unto the fields, and to the sky,
All bright and glittering in the smokeless air.Never did sun more beautifully steep
In his first splendour valley, rock, or hill;
Ne’er saw I, never felt, a calm so deep!The river glideth at his own sweet will:
Dear God! the very houses seem asleep;And all that mighty heart is lying still!

                                                                                                 * * *
And here’s an example from this week of how the epiphany of being thankful in all things has changed my emotions and thinking.
Oh, had I but learned that lesson of being thankful in all things earlier, how different would my life have been.
The years when I was angry and resentful with Roy for not helping with housework or childcare as much as I wanted him to. The years I was so worried about how little I was able to write that the very worry and anxiety slowed me down further, and caused adrenal fatigue. All could have been different!!
But even for that, be thankful, Anita, because one teaches best, and shares best, the lessons learned in a hard and bitter school. For then, you know for sure, that they are true.
                                                      * * *
So these are some of the epiphanies which have changed my life, and are changing it:
* Learning to be rejoice always, to be thankful in all things.
* Learning not to worry about anything at all, but instead to turn my worries into prayers.
* Learning to trust God, whatever.
* Learning to pray
* Learning to see this world as a love-gift from God, drenched in his grace, mercy and creativity!!

Filed Under: Applying my heart unto wisdom

Change your Words, Change your Emotions

By Anita Mathias

Speed-reading “just this one.”
Jake, the Collie, finds a spot to rest his weary head.
I finally started a massive project —getting rid of all the books from my second-hand books business  which I had for a couple of intensive years, and a couple of desultory years.
Progress, as you can see, was slow.
* * *
But internally, where all that really matters happens, progress has been made.
I’ve worked for 4 days like a Benedictine, balancing ora et labora, work and prayer, thought and creativity.
I’ve always been enamoured by the Benedictine ideal of balance–especially when it’s theoretical. When one actually has to do it: BAH-humbug, the Labora part is highly overrated!! I said to my soul in disgust.
* * *
 Of course, I didn’t really need to do this. But you see, during the years of the business, I came across so many lovely art books, gardening books, Christian books, nature, photography, history, biography, literature, poetry and children’s books, which I would have loved to keep. And so many that I did not want to keep. So I needed to sort them, keepers, givers-away to prevent myself drowning in books.
And I was feeling grumpy sorting through these boxes, givers/keepers because you see what I really want to do is pray, read and contemplate scripture, blog, write, garden, and run. Not sort books.
Then I read this blog by Michael Hyatt which says your mental state and attitude are highly dependent on the language you use. Don’t say “I have to,” Hyatt advises; say, “I get to.”
And so I said to myself, with great truth,
I get to sort through 240 boxes of 50 books each, books I have already sifted and discarded the junk from, and keep whatever I want! How great the love the Father hath given that I get to keep the best of 240 boxes of art, poetry, literature, Christian, nature, history, biography, gardening, children’s books, travel and photography books.
And I immediately felt happier. 
* * *
Whatever dark or desperate situations you face,  there is almost surely a silver lining in them because of the goodness of God. Something positive in them. Search it out. Thank God for it.
And as surely as dawn follows the night, your emotional state will begin to change. It will mirror your honest thanksgiving. You will feel happier.

 

Filed Under: Applying my heart unto wisdom, In Which I Count my Blessings Tagged With: Benedictine ideals, gratitude, Michael Hyatt, Ora et Labora, Thanksgiving

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