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What Is Your Epithet?

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Have you given much thought to your epithet?

Ours is a performance oriented, pressure driven world. Do you agree? Calendars, schedules, appointments, commitments, parties, play-off's all compete for focus and rudely crowd out peace.

I recall a particular season of high-octane life where enough was absolutely never enough—not enough hours in a day, not enough days in a week, not enough weeks in a month. Before one meeting ended, the next began. Before the suitcase was unpacked from one journey, I was off on the next. My calendar’s appetite seemed insatiable. You get the picture. This relentless urgency showed no mercy.

Taking my exhaustion and bewilderment to the Lord, I discovered an oasis in Mark 14:8a. She did what she could. Did I read that correctly? She did what she could.

The Voice of Grace penetrated my thinking and permeated my soul with a Word of supernatural refreshment.

She did what she could. Acceptance

She did what she could. Approval

She did what she could. Affirmation

Pleasing the Savior is the supreme priority for any woman; worshipping Him is the ultimate activity for any century and culture.

Wow! What a relief…I want this to be my epithet. She did what she could.

Living With Eternal Intentionality

How would you like your epithet to read?

The Night Mr. Vice President Came to Dinner

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Pulling back the Iron Curtain for a down to earth view behind that Iron Curtain...

Let’s just get to the bottom of this: the night ended in a disaster. There you have it.

Now back to the beginning…

The Vice President of our organization was coming for dinner! Living behind the Iron Curtain made us deeply appreciative of any visitor, especially one from our global leadership team. Imagine our excitement.

This gentleman’s godly reputation preceded him, and the opportunity to host him in our home afforded a rare privilege. New in his organizational position, he set about traveling around the world visiting our mission’s personnel.

The doorbell rang, and there at our Warsaw, Poland iron gate stood a sight for sore eyes. Dressed in a light brown ultra suede sports coat, Mr. Vice President held a gorgeous bouquet of a dozen pink roses. Such kindness! 

After warmly greeting our children, Mr. Vice President and Larry made their way into our tiny living room. I hastily tucked our three children into bed upstairs and returned to the kitchen to put the final touches on our meal.

Horror number one: the menu was absurd. For some overachieving reason, I planned to serve shrimp creole over rice. Mind you, I shopped in a Communist economy where the only shrimp available were (ahemmm…) canned shrimp. C.a.n.n.e.d shrimp. Why didn't I serve pierogi, barsc, kielbasa or gołabki? Any one of these as an entrée, served with cucumber salad and lody for dessert, would have made the meal a cultural success. But no. It had to be shrimp creole.

Horror number two: Following my mother’s recipe, I added vinegar to the shrimp. She used lemon juice, but I did not have lemon juice. Wouldn’t vinegar work just as well? (If you need an answer for this, no answer will do.)

 Horror number three: Just before notifying Mr. Vice President and Larry— still buried in hushed, clandestine conversation in the living room—that dinner was being served, I privately performed the ceremonial chef’s taste test. Well…the shock to my system confirmed one’s worst nightmare; the concoction tasted ghastly.

Not to be deterred, I casually sauntered to the living room and briefly (nervously) chatted. From the doorway, as I walked out, I turned and commented that dinner would be just a few more minutes.

Back in the kitchen, I desperately went to work in a race against the clock.

Starting all over, with more canned shrimp, minus the vinegar, I desperately needed God to do what I could not do and make this preparation worth eating. I wish I could tell you God worked a miracle, but I cannot. Long overdue, we eventually sat down to a meal I was embarrassed to serve.

I stole a furtive glance at Mr. Vice President when he took his first bite to see if he gagged. When he kept going, I breathed a sigh of relief. However, he declined seconds. (Do you blame him?)

Pulling Back the Curtain for a down to earth view behind that Iron Curtain, you realize the humanness of one family’s household. Allow me to add that The Night Mr. Vice President Came to Dinner offers a glorious rebound, which will be served in another blog post.

Living With Eternal Intentionality

When have you found yourself in an embarrassing situation which called for God's grace to "just get through it?"

 

 

 

T Minus 24 Hours and Waiting

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“So how do you feel?” Grab a cup of coffee and I’ll share my answer.

In less than 24 hours, anyone who chooses can open a cover and read a copy of my soul. Friday, May 11, 2018 The Leader’s Wife, Living With Eternal Intentionality launches.

“Now that your book is published, how do you feel?”

Looking back—well, if only I had known…

Five long years ago, a Friday in December 2012, I wrote the last sentence to this manuscript; I experienced the exhilaration of pounding out The End. Lifting my head from the keyboard, I breathed a deep sigh of relief, and savored a sweet sense of joy. Dashing outdoors into the late afternoon sun, I shoved my hands heavenward, threw my head back, and shouted to the top of my lungs, “ YES! I am FINISHED! Thank You, God. I am FINISHED!”

But, the rocky road from then until now has been a road without a map, a road without a GPS. At least for me, that is.

Thankfully, the journey began with crystal clear guidance from The Lord: “God, if You want me to write a book, I must know this is definitely from You. I do not want any part of lighting my own fires (Isaiah 50:11 NLT). His Word contained my answer, The things I have said to you, put in a book (Jeremiah 30:1).

So, when the nuances of the publishing world remained shrouded in mystery for this neophyte, God’s encouragement kept me plodding ahead. Ongoing rejections of my manuscript provided rich fertile soil for life lessons:

“God is always working while we are waiting.” (Alistair Begg)

Waiting is not the same as inactivity. Waiting is a commitment to continue in obedience until God speaks.” (Priscilla Shirer)

“While we are waiting for a publisher, you need to be blogging.” (Les Stobbe, my sage-of-an-agent) I am glad I obeyed.

Now, while waiting for the first copies to be delivered to my front door, I bow in worship of the One Who brought this book to pass; the only One Who deserves the praise. Not to us oh Lord, not to us, but to You be all the glory (Psalm 115:1).

So, how do I feel? I am overwhelmed with gratitude, I am weak with humility, and I am silly with excitement. It seems as though I am standing under a waterfall of God’s love and grace. In a supernatural way, I am lost in wonder, love, and praise. It is true: A longing fulfilled is sweet to the soul (Proverbs 13:19).

Living With Eternal Intentionality

Oh God, may this be a book with a mission!

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