Monday, November 6, 2017

Just a Little Longer

It's been a long time since my last post.  Eight months in fact.  My absence wasn't due to a lack of words or stories.  In my house the stories are never ending, especially on parenting and how I need Jesus every day, well every second really.  Daily I  pray for patience and self-control.  Thankfully I did today, so I was calm, cool and collected when my nose led me to a burning smell in my kitchen and I walked in to see charred pieces of paper lying on the counter.  Mr. Justice has recently learned how to "cook" a grilled cheese but tends to get in a hurry and doesn't always pay attention to what he may sling onto the stove as he tosses ingredients haphazardly onto the counter.  He totally kept his cool and just looked at me and said, "Don't worry mom.  I blew it out."  Great!  Lord help me!

No, it definitely wasn't a shortage of stories. My absence was because the Lord has been dealing with me and humbling me yet again.  Back in March I wrote a post titled Dash of Crazy.  The whole point of that post was to share a new adventure the Lord was leading us on.  We had signed up to host a child from China in our home for one month and advocate for him to be adopted.  We had our homestudy done and submitted.  We prepared our home to welcome William to the Wilson's.  Everything fell into place and it seemed the Lord allowed it all to happen in just the right time. 

But I need to hit pause on that part of the story and fill you in on one little detail.

Up to this point in time, every blog post I had written was getting an average of 500 hits and one time it hit 1000.  I know this is a small number compared to the big time bloggers but for me this was a big deal and I was a little excited.  I couldn't believe people actually wanted to read what I wrote.  Well when I wrote Dash of Crazy the number quickly went past 1000 and soon doubled to over 2000 hits!  I checked it so many times the day I published it and the days following because I wanted to see if it had gotten any higher.  I was so excited to write another blog post because I thought to myself, "It can only go up from here." (as I silently patted myself on the back) 

I'm sure the Lord was shaking His head as he watched me write that next post because He could see right into my heart.  Yes, the words were genuine but the motive was wrong.  I had forsaken my first love, I was writing not for Him but for the reward and honor of man.  The next post, only had 200 hits.  Talk about eating humble pie.

I know no one else saw those numbers and no one else saw the pride welling up inside of me when I was watching those numbers rise and soaking up every compliment, but the Lord saw and He hates pride.  Little did I know but that post was only the beginning of this humbling season.  About a month later we received word that William's trip was going to be cut short and now he would only be allowed to stay for two weeks.  A week after that we learned the children wouldn't be coming at all.  We still tried to advocate for him but it was official, William wasn't coming. 

"Why Lord? Did we hear you wrong?"

No answer.

Over the course of the next six months similar things continued to happen.  We would see a door beginning to open towards the calling we know the Lord has given to us and each door was slammed in our face.  Every avenue of ministry we tried to pursue we were met with a polite response telling us  we weren't really needed or not the right fit.  After a few of these occurrences you begin to ask yourself some questions. What is wrong with us?  We want to serve.  Why does no one want us?  We love Jesus.  We want to spread the Gospel to the ends of the earth.  We want to be missionaries.  We want to be in Africa. 

"Why God are you holding us back?"

No Answer.

So I didn't write.  Instead the Lord has been drawing me back to the secret place.  He's been whispering to my heart in the early hours of the morning when I just sit with Him.  And slowly He has been showing me why the last eight months He has been taking me on this journey.  A journey of feeling insignificant, mundane and unseen.  A journey of humility, because the Lord disciplines those he loves.  No discipline seems pleasant at the time, but painful.  Later on, however, it produces a harvest of righteousness and peace for those who have been trained by it. (Hebrews 12:6 & 11) 

He's been reminding me how He weighs the motives of my heart.  If my heart seeks the reward and honor of men then that is all the reward I will receive.  But whatever I do whether in word or in deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus (Colossians 3:16) and He who sees what is done in secret will reward you openly. (Matthew 6:6) 

Do I still love your comments? Do I still love to see all the hits on my blog?  Yes!  They encourage my heart more than you know, but at the end of the day I want HIS reward!  I want to lift my hands with a pure heart.  I want to offer every gift He has given me as a sacrifice of thanksgiving.  Because the Word is clear.  All the things we do on this Earth, whether good or evil will be judged.  Not only what we do, but the motives behind them.  I want to build my life and ministry on the foundation of Jesus "because the Day will bring it to light.  It will be revealed with fire, and the fire will test the quality of each man's work... If what he has built survives, he will receive his reward." 
(1 Corinthians 3:13-14)

The only way my heart and my motives can be pure is when I spend time with Him.  When I spend more time with Him than with the opinions of the world.  When I allow Him to have access to every part of my heart and I don't rush in and out of the secret place, just to check it off my to do list.  He loves it when I just sit with Him, with no agenda and no rush. 

I have been falling in love with Jesus all over again.  He is whispering to my heart, you are not insignificant or mundane.  You are mine and I'm jealous for you.  Yes I created and called you to do amazing things in my Name but don't ever trade those things for this, for sitting at my feet and loving on Me.

Just stay a little longer.





P.S.  This is one of my favorite songs and I pray as you listen to the words it draws you to meet Him in the secret place today.  He loves you and He wants to be with you.......just you. 





Thursday, March 16, 2017

Say Yes


Last week I cried my eyes out in a movie theater while I watched Lion.  I love it when movies draw you in and make you feel the characters emotions like you are living what they are living.  This movie did just that.  You felt the fear, the desperation, the hope, the uncertainty, the sadness, the loneliness of a five year old boy lost on the streets of Calcutta, India thousands of miles from his home.  The point in the movie where I totally lost it was when the adoptive parents came onto the scene.  I knew it was coming because I had seen the trailer.  Of course I connected with the excited feelings of the adoptive parents waiting to meet their son for the first time.  It brought me back to both of our first time meetings with our adopted children and all the feelings of joy and anticipation that had been building for years at the thought of finally holding them.

But as I watched the scene unfold on the big screen this time I was seeing it through the eyes of the child.  I watched the adoptive parents' smiling faces but felt the uncertainty in the little five year old boy who had lost everything he had ever known.  I felt the struggle within him to move on with life or hold onto the hope of finding his family again. I wanted to tell the adoptive parents to stop smiling.  I wanted to tell them what happened so they could take him back to his mother.  I was heartbroken because it was a reminder once again that adoption always starts from pain.  But I've already talked about that here and by the end of the movie I was reminded of God's sovereign hand in the whole story and was humbled by the beauty and redemption of adoption.   

What the Lord impressed upon my heart from that movie and from recent conversations with friends is about risk.  I will try not to spoil the end of the movie but when the little five year old boy becomes a man he is faced with the choice. Should he risk the life he has trying to find his birth family or live a life of regret if he didn't try and forever wonder, "What if?"

I've never been much of a risk taker.  Honestly I have envied people who were.  They seemed so fun, so free and I always seemed to be the one who couldn't let go of reason and rules enough to be spontaneous and fun.

I specifically remember a birthday sleepover when I was in fourth or fifth grade.  I walked with a group of giggly girls to the birthday friend's house.  She lived near a park so we decided to go outside to play before it got dark.  It had been raining the whole day but the sun had finally come out.  Those April rains had left some mighty big puddles in the ditches and on the baseball field.  A couple of the girls decided to start running through the puddles.  Well before long every girl in the group, except for me, was sliding, running, and belly gliding through the gigantic puddle. Their hair and clothes were covered in mud and they were soaking wet.  I ran through it a couple times after I had taken my shoes off and rolled up my pants but I remember the urge inside me to slide on my belly right through that puddle.  However, that urge was overtaken with thoughts of; I could get sick if I got wet when its this chilly outside or will my clothes come clean if I get them that muddy?  So I stood by and watched my friends have a blast and wishing I could too.

Recently I was talking with a friend and trying to encourage her to take a risk.  Now the risk I was encouraging her to take involved her heart, a little more delicate and important than my pair of muddy pants.  But as vastly different as the commodities are, the choices are still the same; risk or regret.

When you look at stories in the Bible, especially the New Testament when Jesus called his disciples.  They had a choice when He said, "Come follow me."  It was risky to leave their families and the jobs they had done all their lives.  They could have said no.  I've often wondered if he called others who said no and its just not recorded.  How many did he call before He got twelve to say yes?  I'm no scholar or theologian but any human could dare to wager that if He did ask other men who had said no, that a year or two later when Jesus rolled back into your town with those twelve men and a whole mass of others healing every sick person and casting out demons there wouldn't be a hint of regret in that man.

I have gotten to be a little more of a risk taker since the long ago mud puddle in the park because I realized I would rather risk and fail then live with regret.  Because if I risk something and fail I can still learn from those mistakes.  From regret I learn nothing.  The feeling of regret stings much longer than falling after I've taken a risk.  Because following Jesus is all about risk.  It's about trusting in Someone you can't see or touch.  It's believing in eternal life in a city we can not imagine with our human understanding.  It's stepping out in faith when all earthly wisdom would tell you not to.  Jesus is risky.  His kingdom is upside-down.  But I would rather get out of the boat to walk on water and sink a thousand times than to be the other guys sitting in the boat clinging to the side and regretting I didn't jump up and say, "Jesus, if it's you then tell me to come!"  I want to hear the Lord say, "Come," and my feet hit the water.

Has the Lord told you to come?  Have you given Him your list of reasons why you can't?  I encourage you, take a risk today.  Even a small one.  Because if He has told you to come, then He is going to be right there if you start to sink and He will also be right there to see you walk on water, to do something you never could in your own ability or strength.  Don't sit clinging to the boat because He won't wait forever.  He is building a kingdom and He needs people to do His work.  If we say no, He will find someone who will say yes.




Sunday, February 26, 2017

Dash of Crazy

You know those amazing, soft, delicious rolls your great grandma always made for every holiday and family get together?  I crave them often.  Once upon a time I thought, well I should just get the recipe and make them myself.  Well I don't have a clue what two cakes of yeast are and lard was no where to be found in my cabinet.  And how much exactly is a dash?

Unfortunately I have yet to replicate those delicious rolls but my overall skills in the kitchen have much improved since I first learned to cook.  Back in my momma's kitchen I know she had her doubts when I frequently confused salt for sugar and couldn't quite master how to put an egg in a recipe without including half the shell.  Twenty years later I can somehow manage to feed my family of 7 on a regular basis and not shower my kitchen in flour when we bake chocolate chip cookies.

Now that I introduced every member of my family I wanted to give everyone an inside glance into every day life at the Wilson house.  Don't be fooled.... this is not our everyday reality.


Most days I wear sweatpants, t-shirts and glasses.  Since Christmas I now awake to a dog barking at six a.m.  The second my feet hit the floor an alarm goes off in my youngest child's brain that says, "Wake up, mommy is out range."  As I try to have some kind of quiet time with the Lord, the others trickle down the stairs making their requests for breakfast known.  If the waffles, milk, or cereal are out of stock, there will be moaning, whining and multiple pleas for me to go to the store immediately.

Mostly my days consist of dishes, school, laundry, cooking, playing referee, and cleaning; all with a baby attached to my hip.  I answer questions like, "Mommy do you have any cardboard?" "Can I play the Wii?" "Can I have a snack?" "Do we have to do school today?"  "Mommy, have you seen my _______(typically its the object I've told them to put away when they are done)?  Some of these questions get asked multiple times a day.  Some days I get to shower and Kentucky Boy finally got a door on our master bathroom so at least I can have fewer spectators when I use the restroom.     

We have many people tell us they don't know how we do it.  Or they will say, "Wow, your hands are full."  Yes our hands our full but they are full of good things.  I didn't plan to have five children under eight but I'm glad the Lord did.  When they fight and bicker yes I question His judgement but then He will give me days and moments when they spend all day working together on a project completely derived from their imaginations.

People ask me all the time, "Well, are you done?"  I know they expect me to say YES!  But I can't.  I know how many more children there are in the world who don't have a family.  However, I also know I cannot adopt all 153 million of them.  So He has shown us another way to help.

A few weeks ago I got this email from an adoption agency.  The email was asking for families to host children from China for one month.  I get emails like this all the time and usually I say a quick prayer for the children and delete the email.  Well I just couldn't get this email out of my mind.  There was one boy in particular that the Lord highlighted to me.  It was something about his smile and the joy he seemed to carry.  

I was unfamiliar with the hosting programs some agencies provide, so I finally decided to inquire about it.  I always thought you had to adopt the child you hosted but that is not the case every time.  Yes the ideal goal is for the families who host the children, to become their forever family but agencies also welcome families to host the children and then advocate for the child they host.  We do not feel like we can add another child permanently to our family right now but we can open our home for four weeks.  We can love a child and show him what a family is and we can be a voice for him to find his family!

After a family discussion and prayer, we said, "Yes, Lord.  That is something we can do."  

For four weeks this spring our family will grow one more.  Coming all the way from China, meet William......


We are so excited to have this sweet boy in our home and to introduce him to all of you.  But we need your help.  We are praying for God to connect all the dots, to help find William a family.  Will you help us spread the word?  Will you help us be his voice?  He needs you!

We have created a Facebook Page called Families are Forever where we will post things about William while he is with us.  Go like our page at https://www.facebook.com/familiesare4ever/ and share it with anyone you know who has been praying for a son. 

Yes we are a little crazy.  I think any family with five or more kids has to be a little crazy.  But I'd rather be a little crazy than normal.  Because at the end of the day we found a recipe for family that works for us.

5 cups of Jesus
2 cups of love
1 cup of forgiveness
1 cup of laughter
2 TBSP of perseverance
1 TBSP of humility
1 tsp of teamwork
Lots of hugs and kisses and 
a Dash of Crazy 


Tuesday, January 31, 2017

The Choice



My children have invented a new game at the dinner table.  It consists of dividing the table into geographical locations and then they choose their seats based on what place they would like to eat their dinner.  Tonight two of my children were in “sunny Georgia”, the other two were at “a beach in Florida” and Little Joy and I were told we were in “a mudhole in Iowa.”  

I just had to laugh because for those of you who have seen my car the past two weeks that is the hard core truth.  For the rest of you lucky folks who don’t know what I’m talking about I will give you a little clarity, because a picture is worth a thousand words.


No need to blur out my license plate for identity protection, already done.  Believe it or not my van actually got worse after this picture was taken.  Today there was no red visible; it looked like I drove a brown van.  My headlights did not shine brightly because of the extra layers of mud caked on them.  I’ve never been so excited to wake up to freezing temperatures a few days ago just so I wouldn’t have to drive in mud!  On a side note, my poor van finally got a bath!  It’s the little things in life isn’t it?

The past few days I’ve been thinking about all the times I’ve felt stuck in a mud hole.  I would dare to say I am probably not alone in those kinds of thoughts.  Whether you’re a mom stuck in the mundane routine of diapers and counting the hours until bedtime or living the single life wondering if you will ever be a mom.  Or maybe you’re a business man struggling with finding purpose in climbing the corporate ladder or a man on a ladder, wondering if there is anything more to life than working paycheck to paycheck.  No matter who we are, all of us have had different moments or seasons in our life where we just feel stuck. 

I hate how negative thinking always has a downward spiral affect.  Those thoughts of how mundane and boring my life is lead to thoughts questioning my life’s purpose, wondering if I’m doing enough for my family, my friends, my neighbors, my church, and the Kingdom of God.  They even lead to more selfish thoughts sometimes like why do I not have enough money to travel the world or take my whole family on a cruise. 

What’s the deal?  Do I need a new hobby, a healthier diet, a better workout routine (or maybe just a workout routine period? Ha!), a new book, a different job?  The list could go on and on.  The real question becomes, when most of us live a life that lacks for nothing, “Where is our joy?”

As I was praying about what the Lord wanted me to write next He reminded me of a few times in my life where I felt stuck and was asking myself that very question.  But He highlighted one particular time.

This story I'm about to share with you comes from a time period in my life when I was not a mother, I didn’t have a house to clean or dinner to cook.  I wasn’t even married.  It’s funny how we always think our feelings will change when our circumstances do.  But more often than not, the answer we’re looking for will never be found in a change of our circumstances.

When I was eighteen I started dating a guy I am going to call, Mr. Farmer.  I had had a crush on Mr. Farmer since I was a giggly, junior high girl, with braces who was frequently compared to looking like Olive Oil from Popeye, due to my string bean physic with absolute NO curves.   Mr. Farmer happened to be the big brother to one of my very good friends and our families were also friends.  So when he finally asked me out I thought I was the luckiest girl in the whole world.  We dated through my freshman year of college and I was certain he was the one.  I loved him.  I loved his family.  My family loved him.  Everything was  perfect.

Then at the end of my freshman year of college, Mr. Farmer’s family walked through tragedy.  A few years before Farmer’s dad had became a quadriplegic in a car accident and had gone from full time farmer to sitting in a wheelchair.   Then one day in May as our college classes were ending for the summer, he had another accident in his wheelchair that cut off his air supply for too long and put him in a coma.  I was at the hospital with their family during that week he was on life support.  I still remember everything about it.  I vividly remember the day the family had to make the heart wrenching decision to take him off life support.  I remember what I was wearing and the room and the people who were there and the prayers.  I remember standing outside that hospital room watching Mr. Farmer, along with my good friend, their other siblings and their mother hold each other as they said good bye to their husband and father.

Something changed in me in that moment.  Death and tragedy always leave a mark.  For me, in that moment, I think the Lord was reminding me to set my eyes on eternity and remember my life on this earth is but a vapor.  But when I walked out of the hospital that day I was forever changed.

My freshman year of college I had spent lightly seeking the Lord and finding what my own personal relationship with Him looked like.  But I wasn’t ready to totally surrender my life to Him because I knew that would require something of me.  It would require me to surrender areas of my life I had comprised. It would require me to let go of things I wanted to hang on to. I wasn't ready to do that. 

Thankfully, the summer before I went to college I had gone on my first mission trip.  I loved it so much I had applied to be a summer intern the next year at a camp in Texas.

Three weeks after Mr. Farmer’s dad passed away I was set to leave for my eight week internship hundreds of miles from home.  

I left running. 

I felt a little like Jonah I think.  I had this little voice inside trying to speak but I thought if I just go far away from here I won’t be able to hear it anymore and I won’t have to do what I’m afraid He’s asking me to do.  I didn’t take a phone or a computer.  I didn’t want anyone to be able to get in touch with me unless it was an emergency.  Because you see I loved Mr. Farmer.  I wanted to marry him and I’m pretty confident he wanted to marry me too.  And we would have had a good life and a good marriage and a good family.  But there was one problem.  Mr. Farmer wasn’t a believer.  He had grown up in church but didn’t have a personal relationship with Jesus.  But he was such a great guy so that didn’t matter that much right?  But then why was I running?   Truthfully I didn’t know at the time.  All I knew was that I felt like I was suffocating and I just needed to breathe.

That summer the Lord was so good to me.  He surrounded me with couples and families who centered their lives and relationships upon the Lord.  Especially Carl and Pat, otherwise known as the interns' summer grandparents.  Carl and Pat were the camp cooks and loved by all.  During our summer with them they celebrated their 40th wedding anniversary.  Their anniversary was on a Sunday, July 10th, I'll never forget it.  

The night before their anniversary, Carl had told all the interns his surprise for Pat was a wedding ceremony to renew their vows. He wanted all the girl interns to be her bridesmaids, but we had to keep it a secret.  On Sunday mornings the camp staff would have a church service, with worship and someone sharing a word, before all the campers came later in the afternoon.   The plan was to have the ceremony immediately following the staff church service.  

That Sunday morning started off the same as all the rest, after worship the person designated to share a message would get up and speak for a few minutes and then we would pray together.  But after worship, before the speaker began, Carl spoke up and asked if he could share something.  He opened his Bible and said in his sweet southern drawl, “This morning in my quiet time with the Lord He told me to share this verse with one of you interns.  I don’t know which one of you it’s for but I suspect the Lord will let you know.”  He then proceeded to read 2 Corinthians 6:14 which says, “Do not be yoked with unbelievers….”  That’s all I heard before the tears came quick and hot to my eyes, as the Lord confirmed in my heart that the message was for me. 

As much as I loved Mr. Farmer, the truth was our relationship was not founded on Jesus.  But I had been struggling against the Lord's leading.  So he hadn’t given his heart totally and completely to the Lord.  He was a great person, kind and loving, surely God would want me to marry someone like that.  Right?  But because I had been living my own life in lukewarm Christianity I didn’t see why that one fact mattered so much.  But that Sunday morning after the preaching was done and we all bowed our heads to pray, when I opened my eyes I knew why that one fact DID matter more than all the rest.  We opened our eyes to see Carl, on his knees, in front of his wife of forty years, washing her feet, and asking her to marry him for the next forty years.  I knew in that moment, neither I, or Mr. Farmer had any idea what that kind of love looked like.  The only thing I did know, was that love was what I wanted.  I wanted a marriage like the one I saw in front of me.  A love like Carl and Pat’s.  But I knew that kind of love could only come when Jesus was at the center of it all.

I cried through the entire wedding ceremony.  Most people probably thought I was crying because of how sweet the ceremony was but honestly I don’t remember a thing about the actual ceremony because the whole time my heart was in turmoil.  Immediately after it was over I ran from the chapel and into the nearest bathroom stall to try to gain some sort of composure.  I’m not sure how long I stayed in there but long enough to get my breathing back to normal and the snot to stop pouring out of my nose (yes, yes it was one of those ugly cries).  I took a deep breath before opening the door but as soon as I saw who was standing on the other side of the door I lost it all over again. 

Carl.
 













Carl was standing there with open arms ready to wrap me in the biggest grandpa bear hug.  I can still feel that hug.  And then he told me, “Paige, I lied in there when I said I didn’t know who that verse was for.”  He said, “I didn’t want to embarrass you in front of everyone but the Lord told me it was for you.”  He continued, “I’ve heard you talk about Mr. Farmer and he sounds like a great young man but he is not the one God has for you.”  I buried my head in his chest as the tears came again and I said through the sobbing, “I know.”

I spent the rest of the morning and afternoon by myself, having a conversation with God.  I went from sad to angry.  

Why God?  Why can’t you just save him and then we can get married and have a marriage like Carl and Pat’s?  Why?  I cannot break up with him Lord!  First of all, I love him Lord!  And second of all, it will crush him!  He just lost his dad Lord.  I don’t want to do anything to hurt him more.  Please Lord there has to be another way.  I can’t do it.  Why are you making me do this?  Why? Why? Why?

He only answered me back with one question, “Do you trust me?”

I didn’t want to answer.

But I had a choice.  He always gives us a choice.

Yes.

Yes, Lord. I trust You. 

And then I made a declaration.  It went something like this.

Lord, if You are really asking me to walk away from him then I’m done dating Lord.  I don’t want to do this anymore.  It hurts too much.  So if You ever want me to get married, well then you will have to put him on a silver platter and shove it right under my nose because I’m not looking.

I'm sure the Lord got a good laugh at me that day.  Especially because He knew what was coming next.  It makes me laugh now but in the moment it was not funny.  

That day I knew I had to break up with Mr. Farmer but I still had four weeks left at camp and I was not about to have that conversation through a letter or a phone call.  So I just had to wait until the summer ended.

The crazy part of this story is I met Kentucky Boy, my husband, later that same day.  The timing of it all still blows my mind.  We hardly spoke that first day besides brief introductions because I honestly I had meant what I said to God and I had no interest in dating or meeting someone else.

The first part of that week Kentucky Boy was at camp I was extremely sick and was restricted to the camp while everyone else went across the border to work.  I spent my time resting and talking with God, and dreading what I knew I had to do when I came home.   On Thursday night of that week, after chapel when everyone had free time, I quietly sneaked away from the crowd to sit on a swing on the far side of the campground, away from everyone where I could be alone with my thoughts.  After some time, I felt a tap on my shoulder.  Kentucky Boy was standing there and asked if he could join me.  I was indifferent really but as he sat down he asked me this question, “So what’s your story?”  Evidently my gloomy, heavy heart was clearly worn on my sleeve.  I’ve never been very good about masking my feelings.  For whatever reason, I decided to unload the weight of my life’s problems on this perfect stranger.  I told him all about Mr. Farmer and what had happened at Carl and Pat’s anniversary just days before and I told him how much I was dreading going back home because I knew God was asking me to break up with him but I didn’t want to. 

What I remember most about that whole night is that before we parted to go our separate ways he asked if he could pray for me.  I don’t think my mouth dropped open for real but that is exactly what I wanted to do because I couldn’t believe it. I had never had a guy pray for me besides my dad.  And if the fact that he was praying for me wasn’t enough the content of his prayer totally floored me.   He didn’t just pray for me.  He prayed for Mr. Farmer too. Even though I was starting to get the picture that he liked me at this point and wanted to ask for my number, he didn’t.  He prayed for me and Mr. Farmer and that God would show us the path He wanted for us both.

The rest of those three weeks got even crazier and would make this story way too long but maybe one day I’ll fill you in on the rest of the details.

But when I came home, at the end of the summer, my stomach was in knots for days.  I knew what I had to do, but Mr. Farmer was expecting me to be running back into his arms and moving on with life.  What he didn’t know was that I was about to break his heart and mine in the process.  I know many people misunderstood me.  Many thought, including my own brother, I came home from a summer away, had met another guy, and was moving on without a care in the world.  

Oh that was so far from the truth.  No one knew about the weeks I had wrestled with God and no one knew how God had spoke to me through Carl and Pat.  No one believed me that God had told me to break up with Mr. Farmer before I ever met Kentucky Boy.  For days I didn’t sleep well, I sat up late talking to my parents and I waited.  I wasn’t sure if I could ever get myself to do it.  I did not know how I was going to look him in the face and walk away. 

One night in August I finally got the courage.  I remember the summer breeze and I remember his blue shirt and I will never forget looking him in the eyes and saying, "I have to break up with you."   And him just asking me, “Why?”  I tried explaining but even as I was saying it I was starting to doubt.  The only thing I remember after that were the tears and my own silent prayer, begging God to take care of him, to make sure he was ok and that one day he would forgive me.

I’ve asked the Lord many times since that night why I remember it so vividly.  Especially now, after twelve years.  As I began to write down this story He gave me my answer. 

“It’s because my daughter, that’s the night I first taught you surrender.”

To surrender your heart.  To surrender your plans.  To surrender your loved ones.

You trusted me when it didn’t make sense.  You trusted when it hurt and when it hurt others.  You trusted me with your future and you trusted me with his.  You trusted even when you couldn’t see on the other side.  You trusted when others misunderstood you.  You trusted even though you didn’t know if it was going to turn out all right.  And you obeyed.

It really all comes down to obedience.  I teach my children obedience every day.  I’ve told them over and over how learning to obey is one of the most important things I can ever teach them. It’s much easier telling them about it than actually doing it. Just yesterday in fact I sat across from one of my daughters as we were discussing her latest struggle to obey.  When I asked her why she hadn't been obeying lately, her answer held so much truth.  She looked at me and said, “It’s hard to obey.”

She’s right.  It is hard.  Everyday our flesh, our thoughts, war against our spirit and we have to choose to obey.  The choice is always the same, to obey or disobey.

The Lord showed me how, so often, we think if we obey Him in the big things, the big decisions, than we are good.  But it’s the little choices, the everyday choices we make that lead us towards Him or away.  Those moments or seasons when I feel stuck, is usually because somewhere I made a choice to disobey.  I made a choice to live outside of His will.  I made a choice to complain, gossip, or idolize something more than Him.  I made a choice to hold a grudge rather than forgive, I made a choice to lose self-control in my anger, or I made a choice to watch television instead of getting into His presence.

He calls us to walk worthy of our calling.  I don’t want to just obey Him in the big things.  I want to make the hard choice everyday to obey Him in everything.  I want to obey when it's easy and I want to obey Him when it's hard.  I want to obey Him because I love Him, because He’s a good Father, who loves to bless his children.  I don’t want to miss his blessings because of my selfish pride.  His ways are always higher than ours.  His plans are always better even if they seem painful.  Sometimes He asks us to walk away from things, even things that are good, not to punish us, but only because He has something far greater waiting on the other side.

I don’t know why the Lord brought my husband into my life so quickly after I surrendered, that hot July day in Texas, when I have friends who have waited for years to see the answers to their prayers.  But I do know the Lord is a rewarder to those who diligently seek Him.  I do know that whoever loses his life for His sake and the gospel’s will save it.

Today, whether you find yourself in a “mud hole in Iowa” or at “a beach in Florida” I hope you are seeking the Lord with all you have.  Run in such a way that you will win….run straight to the goal with purpose in every step.  (1 Corinthians 9:24-26)  And if He asks you to lay things aside, even good things, do it!  Do it so you can press on towards the goal to win the prize for which God has called you heavenward in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 3:14)

Make the Choice.



P.S.  For those of you like me who always want to know the happy endings to the stories; about two years after I ended it with Mr. Farmer I got the answer to my prayer.   I got a call from my dad saying that Mr. Farmer had stopped by their house for a visit and to tell them that he had given his life to the Lord and he finally understood and respected me for standing up for what I believed God had told me to do.  Now he is married and has two beautiful girlies. 


And Kentucky Boy and I got married and during our wedding ceremony we washed each other’s feet, just like Carl and Pat. 

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Deserts Will Bloom


Allow me to introduce to you, My Little Fleur.  Fleur(pronounced flare) is the Lingala word for flower(at least that is what my seven year old daughter told us).  When she first came home a year ago we had about a three day honeymoon period before the freak out of the century began.  Not just for her but for all of us.  She knew no English and we knew no Lingala, except for the few phrases and words her escort taught us before we left Africa.  As My Little Fleur learned English we learned many words in Lingala from her as well.  Fleur was one of them. During the middle of a major meltdown as I was holding my screaming daughter I continued to whisper in her ear, “I love you my little fleur.”  And it stuck.

To be completely honest I was telling my soul that phrase as much as I was telling her because in the beginning, loving her was hard, very hard most days.  I have begun to understand why many times David tells his soul to rejoice.  Because in those moments the last thing he wanted to do was rejoice.  I have felt that!  Thoughts cross your mind that you can’t even believe you are thinking.  Thoughts like, “What have I done?” “I ruined my family.” “This girl is going to hate us.” “My kids are going to despise us and her.” This past year our family dealt with some major junk hidden in our hearts.  Things like pride, selfishness, greed and hate.  We all lost self-control, we yelled, we slammed doors, we did things we regret. 

This year we have walked through fire and floods, all while remolding a house.  There were many moments when we questioned our decision making but we believe remodeling our house was just another extension of God’s grace.  He was allowing our hands to physically restore a home to remind us of what He was doing inside our daughter and inside each of us.  What a beautiful picture He gave us of what true restoration is. 


It starts with a mess,




















goes through some ugly stages,
 


































before ending with beauty.














I had a friend tell me, one day as she was driving during the winter, with her daughter in the backseat. My friend said, “I miss all the leaves on the trees, I’m ready for spring and summer again!”  To which her daughter replied, “I like the trees in the winter best.”  Surprised, my friend said, “What makes you like the trees best in the winter?  Her daughter simply said, “Because when all the leaves are gone that’s when you can see where all the bird nests are.”

I love that story for so many reasons.  One is because it’s optimism at its finest but I mostly love the symbolism of spiritual growth.  Bird nests are made to produce life, to protect, to nurture, to grow.  It’s only when all the outward adornments are stripped away, and we are bare, can the fruit of our life be seen.

This year our family was stripped bare.  We were all required to repent of our selfish pride, seek forgiveness from God and each other, and examine whether we were using our life to produce only “leaves” or build as many “nests” as we could.  Today I want to rejoice for all the life I see in our family tree!




This girl grew three and a half inches and thirteen pounds in twelve months!  Not only has she grown physically but we have watched her rapidly mature before our eyes.  She is full of life and truly lives up to her name, Joy and Happiness.  She is sweet, silly and ticklish.  She can’t sit still if music is playing and music only plays on one volume in her world….LOUD!  She is bold, strong and vivacious.  She learned to speak English fluently in five months and now she is reading!  In this year she learned to ride a bike, to swim, eat vegetables, play in snow, hike a mountain, see the ocean, allow strangers to love her as their own and she learned to love them back.


Today My Little Fleur turns eight.  This day is one of not only celebration but of remembrance.  It is a day I remember how much God loves me, how deeply, how intimately, and how uniquely He loves each one of us.  Because you see only a month ago we celebrated our oldest daughter turning eight.  That day is also a celebration and remembering how long I labored and stayed up all night waiting for our precious baby girl to enter the world.  It’s a day we remember and laugh about all the ways and people who have helped celebrate all eight of her birthdays with us.  The birthday we celebrate today of our second oldest daughter is different and special in its own way. 

Even though she is eight today, this is only the second birthday we have gotten to hug her and wake her up singing Happy Birthday!  Only the second birthday we have had cake and watched her blow out her candles.  But what makes this birthday so special is that I’ve been singing Happy Birthday to my sweet girl on this day since she was one!  I know, I know most of you are probably completely confused and trying to do math in your head and thinking I should probably rethink homeschooling my children if I can’t figure out that eight minus one does not equal two.

Allow me to back up to January 18, 2010.  Why?  Because God tells us, “to remember how the Lord your God led you…” 

Seven years ago Kentucky Boy and I and our Little Artist lived in Kentucky.  We attended a wonderful, healthy church, that we still consider our home church.  Our pastors always began each New Year with a corporate fast.  Most of our church body participated because our leadership encouraged, taught and equipped us all to fast and go after the Lord.  During this time Kentucky Boy and I were in the process of adopting Mr. Justice but we had not been matched so we had yet to see our baby boy’s face.  All our paperwork was completed and we were waiting for a phone call saying a baby boy was waiting on us. 

Then on January 18, 2010 in the middle of our fast, I was sitting in my living room praying and reading God’s Word when I heard God tell,"Your child's birthday is today."  I felt His presence and heard those words so clearly I immediately started to cry and sing Happy Birthday to my baby.  Of course in my human wisdom, I thought I was singing to my son I was waiting to bring home.  When we went to church that same night for a prayer service I told a few of my closest friends what had happened and they can attest to my surety my son had been born!   It wasn’t until we received our son’s referral that summer and found out his birthday was in May that I began to question my wisdom. 

I was extremely confused.  My conversation with the Lord went something like this.

“God, why did you tell me the wrong day?” HA! 

“You know I look like an idiot now to all of my friends, right?"

"God I told them I heard You clearly say it was my child’s birthday!”  

“What in the world do I say to them?”  

"God, are you listening to me?"

And you know what God said?

NOTHING.  

He was silent until later.  

THREE YEARS LATER.

After bringing Mr. Justice home from Ethiopia, Kentucky Boy and I knew we would adopt again.  And we knew the next time, it would be an older child.  A child waiting.  

From the beginning we had decided two things about adopting an older child.  One, we were not going to change their name unless it was extremely hard for our American tongue to say or it meant something demonic.  And secondly, we were not going to change their birth date unless it was proven to be way off by doctors and dentists.

In February of 2013 we found our Little Fleur on a waiting children’s page and accepted her referral the next day.  We were told she was four at the time.  Four months later when we passed court and she officially became a Wilson we saw her birth certificate for the first time, which said her birthday was in May and according to the document she had just turned three. 

“Lord did I get it wrong again?” 

“Does January sound like May to You?”

And three years after He first told me January 18th was my child’s birthday He said, “You know when her birthday is because I told you.”

And yes I cried because I finally understood that three years ago I wasn't singing to my son.  I was singing to my one year old baby girl who I didn’t even know existed.

For the next almost three years, we watched her grow in pictures and videos, quietly singing her Happy Birthday on every January 18th that passed.


Finally in December 2015 we got to bring our girl home.  Only four weeks after arriving home it was January 18th and I wanted to celebrate her birthday with the world, but I didn’t.  I hesitated.  After all she was smaller than our daughter who just turned seven.  We debated for months.  Do we keep the birth date given to her by her country’s court system, even though it’s probably a guess anyways, or do we change it, to what the Lord told me?



Over the next six months of doctor visits, trips to the dentist and her physical growth before our eyes it was confirmed she was seven, making January 18th a much more accurate estimate of her correct age than the May birth date given on her paper work.

Last year on this day we didn’t really celebrate.  We gave her a gift and had cake with close family but that was it.  All because I didn’t stand in the confidence of the Lord’s Word.  I won’t be making that same mistake this year!  Happy Birthday My Little Fleur!  I love you with all my heart!  I’ll be singing Happy Birthday on this day for as long as live.  After that I will keep singing it with Jesus.

I am so grateful for all the Lord has done this year.  When I look at My Little Fleur I am amazed at how powerful our God is.  I had a front row seat to God working out restoration in her, in myself,  in my spouse and in my children.  Thank you Jesus for taking our brokenness, our pride and selfishness, and making us into this beautiful unique family, that only exists because of Your Grace.

Whatever desert you may find yourself in today, take courage!  The Lord is with you, He is for you and even when the days seem endless and nothing around you looks like it will ever be good.  Remember this; you serve a God who delights in restoration.  He takes delight in taking the dead, barren, and dry places and making them bloom.

The wilderness and the wasteland shall be glad for them, and the desert shall rejoice and blossom as the rose; It shall blossom abundantly and rejoice, Even with joy and singing.
~Isaiah 35:1-2