Saturday, June 30, 2007

Miracle Workers 1

This week was VBS at Olive Springs. I worked with a team of 4 amazing adults to teach the 5th and 6th grade class. We had about 22 kids each night!

We split the kids up into 5 teams. I was the coach of Miracle Workers 1 (they chose the name!!!). I had a great time getting to know my group of 6 amazing girls. I taught them about Jesus, how to obey God and was able to share my story of coming to Christ with them. It was exciting telling them how God called me to be His child 16 years ago at VBS. Then later that night I got to help a precious girl, Dwymesha, step into God's family. It was an amazing moment. Sixteen years ago Clara Winchester did that for me and now here I am continuing the process. God's kingdom is amazing. He is working.

The really cool thing about all of this is the Dwymesha lives in the apartments where we are doing Kids Club. She didn't know about it, but now she will be coming every week. This gives me like 6 more weeks to continue our relationship and to get to know her family. I am excited to see where this connection leads.

It was an exhausting but wonderful week, 144 kids all total, almost 100 of them from the community. God is continuing to grow my love for the children in this community.

Friday, June 15, 2007

Student Life Camp

Tonight Stacey and I went to visit the Olive Springs youth at Student Life Camp at Covenant College on Lookout Mountain.

Student Life has been a huge part of both my teenage and adult life. This year would have been my 12th year. That's right, I said would have. I didn't go. I didn't get asked. I don't even really work with student's anymore. But it was killing me. Watching them pack up and roll out Tuesday morning without me hurt my heart. So Stacey made a big sacrifice and we went up and spent the day. It was fun. It made me feel apart, even if just for a day.

Covenant is the first place I ever went to camp. It is kind of a sacred place to me for that reason. Even though it is old and really smelly, walking through the halls floods my mind with precious memories of my life with friends and God.

Our youth group is so different now. I don't know very many of the students. Most of the student's that I poured my life into have either moved on or lost interest. There are a few left, my precious Sunday School boys, who I love and adore, even though they have made my life difficult at times. So as I'm sitting there tonight looking at this strange crowd, it's a different group. These are no longer church kids. They are kids with hard lives, big issues and lots of problems. They are hard to get to know, they are different than me, so it's harder to relate to them. They seem to have no respect for anything including themselves. I don't know them. I don't like them. I don't feel the love that I have felt for my students for them. I'm confessing that. God loves them. He created them. I give up on them, and I've known them a day. He continually pursues them and me. They are just as worth the pursuit as I am. So this is where the sermon comes in....

The speaker is talking about Jonah 4 and how Jonah is mad because he doesn't think the Ninivities deserve grace and saving and that the reason for that is the Jonah loves himself more than he loves others. I'm still thinking about how this is true of me in comparison with these students. I like me. I love me. I like God to love me. How selfish. I've got it. I have the grace. I've been saved, not just from death but from the horrible life that many of them face. I feel grateful, that should spur me on to compassion, but yet like the pastor said tonight, instead of caring, we don't care. We don't even care enough to hate, we simply just don't care. We're apathetic. I'm apathetic. I know is calling me out of that, and like Jonah, I don't like it.

I love students. I love teaching them. God has gifted me to do this. I've tried to deny it. I've denied it for a whole year. But I can't deny who I am. So, I think I am going to have to swallow my pride and figure out some way to reconnect with student ministry. That is a huge risk for me. It could be costly. It could get ugly. It will require major humility. I truly don't know if I'm up for it. I could fail. I could get hurt again.

So, I don't know what this means. I guess I'm starting the journey of figuring it out. Somehow, someway my life is going to reconnect with students again.

Student Life....it's more than a camp. It's a cornerstone in my life. It reminds me of who I am, of where I've come from and once again it has helped to point me to where I am going.

Monday, June 11, 2007

homeless man

There is this homeless man that has been hanging around Olive Springs for several weeks. He's just a kid, 19 years old, and it appears that he lives in his car. He's stolen food, scared a couple of people and then last week, he broke in to the church. Last night, he just appeared at a time when no one else was there and all the doors were looked, which confirmed our suspicion that he has been hiding in the church. It was creepy the way he just appeared. Due to the break in we had to call the police. It was a kind of scary and intense situation. No one knew where he was, we just knew he was in the church somewhere. The police searched the building and found him. I have never been apart of anything like that before. I have never felt afraid inside my own church, but last night, we did.

I am struggling with this. This guy, he is not like the homeless people that Shane Claiborne talks about. We have tried to be his friend. He doesn't want to talk, be friends, be apart. Nothing. He just wants stuff from us. He is aggressive when you have nothing to offer and the police suspect that he is on meth. That is the struggle. I want to be an advocate for the poor and homeless. I want them to be able to come to the church when they need help, but I don't want to be stupid and careless with other people's lives and safety. I know that Christianity is not safe. But I am not willing to risk my life over giving this guy a piece of pizza. Maybe that means I don't believe in the revolution the way I thought I did. I don't know what it means really. All I know is I get that feeling of uneasiness around this guy.

Today I feel like I've failed to be different. I still feel like we did the right thing, the only thing we could do, but I still hate it. So the question on my mind today, is how do we handle the homeless in this community? It feels hard to find the balance between caring for them and being careless about others in our church.

Sunday, May 6, 2007

Solution

Brandon played this new song, Solution, from Hillsong United at Lift tonight. The lyrics are striking and reflect the conversation that I've been having with my friends for months. The conversation has kind of dwindled between us, yet I know that the passion is still in each of our hearts. Hearing the lyrics to this song reminded me of that. This song reminded me that this conversation is far from over, that God has plenty more to say on this subject. Many of my friends have put action to these words over the past months. I am still struggling with what action this conversation requires of me. In the struggle I have just kind of moved to this place of doing nothing until I figure out what is next. I know that doing nothing can't be the answer.

You can check out the song on itunes. It's a single, the new CD doesn't release until later this month.

I wanted to share these lyrics with you. Let them sink into your heart.


It is not a human right
To stand afar while broken nations dream
Open up our eyes, so blind
That we might find the mercy for the need

Hey now
Fill our hearts with your compassion
Hey now
As we hold to our confession

It is not too far a cry
Too much to try to help the least of these
Politicians should not decide if we should rise
And be your hands and feet

Singing...
Hey now
Fill our hearts with your compassion
Hey now
As we hold to our confession

Whoa-oo-ooh
God, be their solution
Whoa-oo-ooh
We will be your hands and be your feet
Yeah Yeah

Higher than our circumstance
You promise and your love for all to see
Higher than our protest lines and dollar signs
Your love is all we need

Hey now
Fill our hearts with your compassion
Hey now
As we hold to our confession

Whoa-oo-ooh
God, be their solution
Whoa-oo-ooh
We will be your hands and be your feet

Whoa-oo-ooh
God, be their solution
Whoa-oo-ooh
We will be your hands and be your feet

Whoa Yeah
Only you can mend the broken heart
And cause the blind to see

You erase complete the sinner's past
And set the captives free

Only you can take the widow's cry
And cause the heart to see

Be the Father to the fatherless
Our Saviour and our King

We will be your hands
We will be your feet
We run this race for the least of these
In the darkest place we will be your light,
We will be your light

We will be your hands
We will be your feet
We run this race for the least of these
In the darkest place we will be your light,
We will be your light

Whoa-oo-ooh
God, be their solution
Whoa-oo-ooh
We will be your hands and be your feet

Whoa-oo-ooh
God, be their solution

God is the solution. We are the hands and feet that delivers it to those in need.

God, help me to do something to bring the Solution.

Monday, April 16, 2007

teaching, community and the church

Today is the start of my third week of student teaching in the third grade. It is quite the experience! Most of you know of my struggle with whether or not I really want to be a teacher. The thing is, I'm still unsure. I love teaching, but does that mean I'll be a teacher. I think that I am going to have to try it before I can really know.I had to write this paper a few weeks ago for class. It is probably the most honest thing I have ever written in my whole college career. I'm going to share it with you because I feel like it puts words to what I cannot.


“The great aim of education is not knowledge but action.”
Herbert Spencer, English philosopher (1820 - 1903)

I’ve always wanted to be a teacher. My very earliest memories are of me playing school. Growing up I just assumed that I would be a teacher, I never really thought about why. I’m sure that as a fifth grader I would have said something along the lines of, “well, I like to use markers and write on the board.” However, now I know that teaching is a profession that requires much more that what my childhood dreams included. It’s harder. It’s not always fun. I’ve struggled with reconciling the reality of being a teacher to my childhood dreams of being a teacher throughout my time hear at Kennesaw State. However, as I near the end of this journey I am sure of one thing, I did not choose teaching; teaching chose me. I love teaching. It is natural for me. I do it whether I am in a classroom or not. I also love to read. My friends and I have been reading this book called The Irresistible Revolution by Shane Claiborne. He shares about community and how it is important to our lives. These are some of his thoughts that have helped to reassure me of the decision to become a teacher.

“Vocation comes from the same root as voice, denoting the hearing of a divine call. Beyond knowing that God has a purpose for our lives, most of us (especially non-Catholics) spend little energy seeking our vocation, especially in light of how the needs and sufferings of our neighbors might inform how we use our gifts for divine purposes (Claiborne 138).”“So not everyone responds in the same way, but we must respond. We must seek our vocation listening to the voice of God and the voices of our suffering neighbors (Claiborne 142).”

My family and I have always lived in the same community. The land we live on was the land that my dad grew up on. Back then it was farm land. My mom lived less than a mile away on another farm. Our community has certainly changed over the years. However, the longing for true community with others has grown in me. I feel like being a teacher in a local school is a way for me to be a good neighbor, to be involved in the community and to be able to address and meet the needs that are there. I truly feel like that my gifts can best be used to help my neighbors by loving and educating their children.


Reading this again makes me realize that I am connected to my community in way I've never been before. Some of the kids I teach at school are the kids I see at church. Knowing these kids and their stories puts a face to this community. These are no longer nameless strangers to me. They are the children in my class. Children with hurts and fears and parents that have to work really hard just to make ends meet. These children have made it impossible for me to drive through this community and not care. I have to care, I know them now. And that is the key. I know them, so I care. This is what being a good neighbor is all about. This is what I long to see the church be, a good neighbor.

So for now, I'll go to my classroom, do my best to love and care for these children as I teach them all about the habitats of Georgia. I know regardless of where I end up or what I end up doing that these children have changed the way I view my neighborhood forever. Once again Jesus is using children to stire the heart of compassion in His followers. I pray that I will continue to see this community through the eyes of the students in my classroom.

God, Let me be the hands and feet of Christ to this community.



Monday, March 19, 2007

Birthday Party!!


Saturday my friends and I got together to have dinner and paint pottery to celebrate my birthday. I can't wait to see how our creations turned out!!

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

crying

Today I cried. Not the crazy, loud crying but the quiet tears roll down your face kind of crying. I tried to pull it together, but it was too late. I hoped no one noticed, but they did. It was embarrassing. It was in an awkward situation. When I was back in the safety and privacy of my car I began to think about my tears. A month or so ago I was told that someone said I have a beautiful cry. This comment caught me off guard. Could there be such a thing? It seems like an oxymoron, crying is not beautiful. There is snot and puffy, red eyes and running mascara. Not a pretty sight. I feel lots of things when I cry, but beautiful is never one of them. My friend's statement has stayed with me. These weeks have passed by and I have thought about what my friend meant. Today in the parking lot of the doctor's office, it all came together to me.

I hate crying. I hate it more than just about anything else. It makes me feel so uncomfortable. It makes me feel weak. It makes me feel out of control. I don't like that. I want to be strong and in control. I don't like it when other people see me cry. To me it's an admission, "I am not strong. I am not in control." Reality is, I'm not. I'm weak. I have no clue. I like to pretend. To fake out everyone in my life. But sometimes I just can't. It's just too hard. In those moments I cry. In those moments I am real. I think that is where the beauty comes in. When I cry something happens. This independent, have it all together, don't need anyone or anything woman fades away and my humanity breaks through. I am not always okay. In those moments I need people.

Crying for me equals humility. Tears come to my eyes to remind me of what I am not, who I am not. Humility. I think that is the beauty in the tears. I like to think I'm a humble person, but I'm not. One tear reminds me of that. The fact that I resist that feeling building up in me, the "oh no, I'm going to cry" feeling tells me that I am indeed not humble. Tears push me to that place of true humility, of true humanity. I want to learn to live my life in tears, not literally, but in that place of vulnerability. It's hard. It's dangerous. But it's real.

I've always wanted to be beautiful. The stunning, vain, look at me kind of beautiful. That is not what God is calling me to. God is calling me to be beautiful. REAL beautiful. The kind of beautiful that is only found in humility. I long to practice humility in my life. Not just to be forced into it by my tears, but to live it, to be it.

But he gives us more grace. That is why Scripture says: "God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble." James 4:8

God, give me more grace. Grace to be humble. Grace to be real. Grace to see beauty in my tears and in the tears of others.

Monday, February 26, 2007

letter

Today I went to the mailbox. I usually don't do this, but I was home this afternoon and my mom wasn't, so I went. I opened it up and grabbed the wad of mail. Back in the house I started sorting it out to put it in everyone's personal mailbox (aka: the kitchen table). Some for my parents, some for Amelia, some for Alicia. Then I saw it. I got a letter. Not just any letter, a letter from Kennesaw State University. I live in fear of these letters. Over my extended college career these letter have always been the bearer of bad news. My heart sank when I saw the envelope. What could it be? I'm doing better in school. I'm almost done. Graduation is in sight. I am nervous. On closer examination I see that the letter is from the College of Education and then I really start to freak out. There must be a problem with my student teaching. Oh no. Even though I'm home alone I feel the need to lock myself in the bathroom to view the contents of this letter. I shut the door and stare at the envelope preparing myself for the worst. I begin to tear the seal. I open it up hold my breath and begin to read. "Dear Lindsay: It is with great pleasure that I congratulate you on being a member of the Dean's list this past term." Pleasure. Congratulate. Dean's List. These are not terms that I am familiar with reading in letters from KSU. I look again. It has my name and my address. It is to me. I made the Dean's List!! I have been in college for 7 years and never once have I made the Dean's List. This is a milestone and my education career. It has been hard. I have struggled against it so many times. I have wanted to drop out. I still do a lot of times. I have not done my best most of the time. I have failed. I have withdrawn. I have just stopped going. And now I have made the Dean's List. It has not all been in vain. This unending pursuit has an end in sight. Not only will I finish, but I will finish strong. On good terms. On the Dean's List.

Most days I think that I don't need a college degree. I don't need one. I don't even necessarily want one. But I can have one. I have the option. I look at my parents, especially my dad and know that he would have wanted a chance for a college degree, but he didn't have the option. My dad is so smart and brave. He is a true student. He loves learning. And now at 55 years old going back to school is an option for him and he is going to do it! My dad going to college!! I think that is awesome. I admire him so much. So as I keep walking this road to graduation I will think of my dad. Of the opportunity that I have that he had to wait half his life for.

When I get my diploma, it will be a celebration of so many things. Of the long road that lead me here. Of the countless people who have stood beside me on the way. This letter reminds me of that. This is not something that I have done on my own. You all share a part. This is our letter. Our day to celebrate.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Experiment

I've been silently contemplating this blog experiment for a while now. You see, I used to be an avid journalist. I loved to record my thoughts and my life in a way that I could look back and see where I've been and where I've come to. Something happened though. I just can't do it anymore. It's just gone. I want to want to, but I just don't. I look at my journal and it's just empty. No words. No life. That's how I feel. For the past year, I have maybe 5 journal entries. When I look at that I feel empty and dead, like nothing in my life was worth recording. What is sad is that is true. There wasn't anything in my life last year that was worth putting on paper. That which did happen in my life, I would never want to put on paper. It would be too hard. Much has changed. God has rescued me in a major way. He has filled my life with incredible goodness. With life and love. With friends. With community. That is the stuff I want to remember. But I just can't get it in the stinking journal. Maybe I've just gotten too lazy to actually pick up the pencil and write. I don't know. I just know that I don't want to look back and have no record of this incredible time in my life. So I figure I'll give this a try. I spend so much time on the computer, maybe this will act as a pre-journal journal. It could never take it's place. There is just something about looking at your own handwriting. It's like a time machine. In an instant you can be back to the day you first wrote it, remembering what you were feeling, what was going on. It's good for us to have that record of our lives, our history. So, I'm hoping this little blogging experiment will resurrect the part of my heart that loves to journal, that my life will flow off this screen and onto the pages of my journal.