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October 29, 2013 by Karin 6 Comments

When You Meet James

31 days of Good Deeds 31 Days of Good Deeds

(click here for the series)

~ Day 21 ~

I knew better this time.

I remembered the woman with the worn skin, sunken eyes, and faded flannel.

I remembered the whispers of the Voice that beckoned. The One I had forgotten to listen to a time or two.

I remembered the way she looked at me with her wry smile and the glimmer of gratitude in her eyes before she disappeared into the sea of cars.

I knew better this time and waited in anticipation for the breath of His instruction.

Be prepared. There is someone waiting.

The thing is, there is always someone waiting.  Waiting for a hand, a word of truth… a hope.  There is always someone who needs to hear,

You are not alone. You are loved.

It’s our job, you know. This is what He asks from us. I didn’t want to miss it this time.

I checked my wallet,

Good to go.

Another day of shopping for the small army in our house. Another day of scanning, searching, and surveying the aisles. Another day of hunting and gathering. This time, my view of this mob scene changed.

We’ve got it made.

There is more than enough for every one here. Yet, there are some who can’t get in the front door.

I packed up the supplies and headed for the exit.  The intersection was jammed with cars and the left turn would take me home.

There he was.

Sitting on the right side of the road.

He was different, though. He didn’t even look up.

His face was buried in the back of his rough hands as he held fast to a cane.  A cardboard sign sat propped against his bent legs. It simply stated,

I’ve lost everything, but my faith.

I wonder how much we have to lose before faith fades to memory.

I wonder why he held tightly to faith while sitting lost on a street corner, while I struggle with faith in a truck full of groceries.

I scrambled for my wallet trying to grab anything I could give to him before the light changed. It was too late. The light turned green and the rush of traffic propelled me forward. I had to turn, you know. Can’t keep people waiting.

That’s when I heard it. The whisper I had been waiting for…

Turn around and go back.

My stomach churned and I could feel my skin prickle with the sense of His presence. I peered into the rearview, and thought for just a moment,

It seems crazy to turn around.

A look in the rearview

Hands grabbing the wheel, I turned a U in the road and headed back to where the lost soul waited.

Ok, God, I’m going back. This seems a little crazy, but I’m going back. Please keep the traffic off me while I stop.

I turned and veered through the congested lot as my truck found its way to the right turn lane. A lane that would take me miles off course with no chance of a turn around.

Don’t we just want to get to a place where we can’t turn back?  A place where we have to move forward in this blind faith, following the whispering and urging Voice.

I sat three cars back and saw him. He had not lifted his head from his tired hands. I could see the back of his sign now,

You can at least smile.

The man with nothing but his faith wanted a hand… or at least a smile.

Why do we do that? Drive by, averting our eyes, not offering the slightest smile of kindness. Those are free. Why is it that we greedily hold those close, only to share them with someone who bothers to share first.  Just a smile.

I held up the money in my hand just as he lifted his head.

Then, I saw.

His leg, partially covered in white bandaging, was a mangled mess of broken skin. As if the man had begun to crack wide open, leaving nothing to be seen but the oozing pain that he carried with him.

He shuffled slowly to my truck and stopped short at the car in front of me. They handed him a dollar and he nodded in thanks.

He winced in pain as he proceeded toward the money I held in my hand.  My heart nearly bled as I watched him stumble in my direction.

He was worn and tired. His eyes squinted with each step.  I wanted to get out, but I was sandwiched in this red light place.

As he reached my car, I rolled down the window and handed him the twenty dollars,

I’m sorry. I didn’t want you to walk this far.

He didn’t hear my words as he turned his eyes upward and murmured,

Praise Jesus.

I looked into his blue eyes, aged with pain, and could see that he was not as old as he appeared.

What is your name?

He looked at me, his eyes soft and wet, and replied,

James.

James. The book I have studied twice in the past two years. The brother of Jesus. The man who wrote of good deeds and patience and taming the tongue. The book that convicts us to open hands and hearts to the poor. The book that wrecked me for good. I remember weeping over that study, as my eyes went to the faces of children on my screen. The book that grabbed me by my comfortable shoulders and said,

…faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. (James 2:17)

The book that opened my sleepy eyes and exclaimed,

Wake up!

James. Of course his name was James.

I looked into his tired face,

James, I am going to pray for you.

His eyes lit with understanding,

Oh, yes! Please. Pray for healing and deliverance.

God bless you.

God bless me.  Yes.  He already has.  I smiled at James,

I will, James. I will pray right now.  God bless… you.

The light turned, the traffic pushed, and I drove away.

I am just learning to be bold. Bold in faith, that is. Here is what amazes me. A disheveled and wounded soul sitting on a street corner knows just exactly what he needs from God.  Healing and deliverance.

Too often my prayers are vague, unsure, nondescript, rote. I am learning. This art of conversation with God; it begins with listening. Listening to the Voice that pushes and urges. Listening to the souls who have lost everything, but their faith.

Listening. And responding. This art of a relationship. A dance, really.

I drove away. The sense of His presence overwhelmed me. I felt Him in my breath as I prayed for James. Healing and deliverance.

I prayed the words of James as God enveloped me in His presence. His voice hung in my words as He whispered,

I am here.

And, we danced.

 

James 2:14-16

What good is it, my brothers and sisters, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds?  Can such faith save them?  Suppose a brother or a sister is without clothes and daily food.  If one of you says to him, “Go, I wish you well; keep warm and well fed,” but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it?

Karin signature

Filed Under: Compassion, Faith, Good Deeds, Hope, Love Tagged With: compassion, meet James, obedience

October 26, 2013 by Karin 2 Comments

Create Many Ripples

31 days of Good Deeds 31 Days of Good Deeds

(click here for the series)

~ Day 20 ~

  “I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples.”  ~ Mother Teresa

(if you are reading this in an email, click over to the blog to watch the 5 minute video)

Happy weekend, friends.

Hebrews 13:16

And do not forget to do good and to share with others, for with such sacrifices God is pleased.

Karin signature

Filed Under: Friendship, Perseverance, Together, Trust Tagged With: create ripples, obedience, sharing burden, together

October 22, 2013 by Karin 8 Comments

When We Put Our Feet On The Ground

31 Days of Good Deeds 31 Days of Good Deeds

(click here for the series)

~ Day 18 ~

I can almost see his house from here.

The water snakes just around the buildings, under the bridges, and presses hard against the dam. The trees carpet the landscape. I can’t make out trees from bushes from fields. It all looks lush and quenched from up here. I miss the green in the rugged beauty of desert.

Like a drink of water before entering the parched land of jags and cliffs and red-painted rocks.

I can almost see my brother’s house. And it feels like home.

It’s not my home or my town or my state. But, just the proximity to him feels like home. Funny how that settles the nerves of a pilot’s wife in the air. Funnier still that a pilot’s wife feels oddly misplaced up here though I know this air feels like home to my other half.

Up Above

You can sense the whispers of home in places that aren’t home.

You can feel close to a brother, sometimes even a brother you don’t know.

This story is from a friend. A woman I met by God’s circumstance in the most unexpected place. He orchestrates these meetings, you know. It still blows my mind.

My friend is a musician. She shares her gift with my girls. The music from the piano and the seasoned voice leading the tentative new voice cover the air like white wash over the dull. Music brightens and brings light to the landscape.

She told me a story. A good deed…

They turned into the parking lot of the grocery store and saw him. She and her young daughter. His sign didn’t ask for money. Just food. Strategic positioning right outside this store filled with enough to feed more than enough.  I wonder if our attempts at strategy ever really amount to much… without His positioning?

Her little girl exclaimed,

Mom, we should bring him some food!

She nodded agreement,

We’ll get him a sandwich and a drink.

After checking out, supplies and sandwich in hand, they pulled their truck to where the man had waited. He was gone.

Man, we were all ready for him.

My friend drove to the main road and that’s when she heard it. That Voice that whispers. The same Voice that prompted me to pocket a twenty just weeks before. This Voice, it beckoned,

Go across the street. Go to the Wal-Mart parking lot.

It’s when that whisper comes to you so specifically that you wonder,

Seriously? Am I imagining this?

It’s when the Voice whispers so specifically that it’s most imperative to listen.

My friend listened. She laughed to herself,

I don’t know what the deal is, but ok.

She drove across in anticipation. The anticipation is the best part. And, sometimes it throws us off.

Nothing.

No great sign. No homeless man waiting for his sandwich. Nada.

Really, God? Here I am. I’m not sure where to go.

There was nowhere else to turn, but toward the exit. All prepped and nothing. This is sometimes when it happens. We lose our direction. We question the Voice. We wonder what kind of stuff we are dreaming up anyway.

And, this… this is when we have to keep going. The Voice doesn’t lie. Our doubt just begins to seep into the ear trying to play over the melody of that Voice.

That’s when she saw him. He rolled along in a chair, oxygen tank in tow. He wasn’t the same guy. Not the one she saw at the store. This one was the one she was supposed to see. He orchestrates these meetings, you know.

The older man waved arms at blind passersby. Not one soul stopped as the man rolled and waved and tried to get anyone to see. The best of us can be blind sometimes, can’t we?

She pulled her truck alongside,

Hey there, what do you need?

His voice, gruff and worn,

I just got out of the hospital. I’m a diabetic. I just need something to eat because of my blood sugar.

She answered,

Well, I’ve got your sandwich right here.

City traffic doesn’t stand still for good deeds, so she pulled to the side and climbed out of her truck. This is what gets me. She stopped. And, got out. She stepped feet onto the ground next to the weary soul in the chair.

Feet on the ground

They talked for a short time. The street side conversation went to God and faith.  She told him about the hungry man she had bought the sandwich for, but that God pointed her to him instead.

He responded to her kindness,

I’ve helped people all my life. I’ve always tried to do good for others.

He motioned to his legs and whispered,

Now look at me. I’m wondering, where is God?

Then, you gave me this.

His eyes went to her face,

You’ve got the Spirit. I see it in you.

She hugged the man,

Where are you going to go?

The man in the chair replied,

I gotta get to the shelter before they close. I don’t have any bus money. If they close the doors, I can’t get in tonight.

The good deed kept on giving. My friend answered,

Well I have $5 that you can have for the bus.

She handed him the money and climbed back into her truck.

He called to her by name,

Hey, be good to your husband. Stop arguing with each other. He’s doing the best he can and he’ll never leave you.

Then, he paused as tears welled in her eyes,

From the looks of your face, I can tell that means something to you.

And, he was gone.

We don’t have to go very far to be near a brother. Or a sister. We don’t have to go very far to feel close to home. We don’t have to look around and wonder in anticipation when we will go home again. We just have to get out. Put feet on the ground. Feet on the ground next to our brothers and sisters. He orchestrates the meetings, you know. The Voice whispering in our souls,

Follow me and I’ll show you Home.

 

Mark 10:29-31

“I tell you the truth,” Jesus replied, “no one who has left home or brothers or sisters or mother or father or children or fields for me and the gospel will fail to receive a hundred times as much in this present age (homes, brothers, sisters, mothers, children and fields—and with them, persecutions) and in the age to come, eternal life. But many who are first will be last, and the last first.”

Karin signature

Filed Under: A Day in the Life, Brothers and Sisters, Good Deeds, Hope, Mercy, Together Tagged With: feet on the ground, obedience, stop and get out, together

October 11, 2013 by Karin 2 Comments

This Is What It Looks Like

31 days of Good Deeds 31 Days of Good Deeds

(click here for the series)

~ Day 10 ~

I watched her as she shuffled around the kitchen.

She reminded me of my mom.  I guessed she was probably about the same age.

The kids ran wild that evening.

Tunes from the guitars, keyboard, and drums rang a distant memory of the days my warrior wore his rock star hat.  Voices belted out Three Doors Down, Sarah McLachlan, and Buffett. Food and joy overflowed.  There is just something about music.  Music speaks to hidden memories and connects us without words.  Just the lyrics and the melodies blanketed the room.

I saw her eyes glisten as she smiled into the young exuberant crowd.

Her eyes met mine as I bounced my squirming two-year-old in my lap.  Baby girl clamored for hands full of candy corn.  I obliged.  These nights don’t roll around too often.

She slid into the chair next to me.  As her fingers stroked the strawberry blonde wisps on baby girl’s head, she told me her story.  The music faded to a framing mural as she began,

I don’t have any family.  I was the baby of my family.  They are all gone now.

Her blue-green eyes sparkled with memories of decades gone by.

My birthday is next week.  I’ll be 83.

Yes, just like my mom.  I looked into her eyes and pretended for just a moment that I could have this conversation with my own mom.  Memories intact.

I moved a few times and came here about 15 years ago.

I’ve been alone for a while.

I nodded, sliding closer.  The crescendo of notes wrapped around us as a beautiful voice began,

in the arms of the angel…

Songs catapult us from memory to memory like rabbits scurrying down a hole… only to pop up somewhere else.

My baby found this to be the ideal moment to squirrel candy corn after candy corn.  I was riveted.  How did this dear soul come here?  What story brought her to live with these new friends of ours?

She went on,

I fell one day.  It was a Thursday.  I lived alone, you know.  No one found me… until Sunday.

The doctors told me if it had been any  longer I wouldn’t have made it.  I was dehydrated.

I stared into her alert eyes.  Three or four days.  She lay on the floor in her kitchen for days.  Hour upon hour… alone.  Afraid.  I could only imagine what the scene must have looked like.  I thought again… of my mom.  Four days alone, desperate, and in pain.

She smiled gently,

When I woke up in the hospital there was a beautiful bouquet of flowers and a note.

In this note, they told me I was going to come live with them.  I knew them through church, you know.

I still have that note.

That was six years ago.

That’s what it looks like.  All the stuff Jesus says.  Do good.  Help others.  Be kind.  Give.  Others before yourself. 

This is what it looks like.  It can have so many faces, and stories, and eyes, and hands… but, this, is what it all comes down to.

love the lonely

Our new friends didn’t tell us about her story.  As far as we knew, she was a kindly grandmother who lived with them and their children.  They never told us.  She did.

This kind of giving captures me.  I had to know.  What brought them to this step?  To this offer?

So, we asked.

Our friend, soft-spoken and humble, replied,

Yea, well, that’s what we are supposed to do.

That’s what we are supposed to do.

One step in love gave this one beautiful soul with the sparkling eyes… a home.  No… it gave her more.  The most.

A family.

Psalm 68:6

God sets the lonely in families, he leads out the prisoners with singing; but the rebellious live in a sun-scorched land.

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Filed Under: Compassion, Faith, Family, Good Deeds, Love, Together Tagged With: obedience, the lonely

September 10, 2012 by Karin Leave a Comment

Let’s get specific

We sit down for night-time prayers with our six pack.

We take turns.  Add requests as we go.  Everyone with an opportunity to throw his or her chips into the pot.

cashing in our chips

We go around and ask… each one…

what are you sorry for?

whom can we pray for?

what are you thankful for?

what do you need help with?

The thanks, the praise, the list of requests… roll easily off our tongues.

what are you sorry for?

That’s the tough one… we watch as the young ones squirm in discomfort.  We old ones, squirm a bit, too.

um, everything I did wrong today.

Ok, that sums it up.  Chips cashed in… sorry spoken… slate clean… good to go.  Well, not quite.  More like, squirming avoided.

what are you really sorry for?

Let’s get specific…

Specifically spelling out sin, the things we have done wrong… it is difficult, uncomfortable… we want to throw the chips in… without naming them.  Maybe they’ll just disappear and we can move on, sort of forget about them… and pray that we are covered.  We did say sorry, after all.

Name one thing…

We are all generally a mess… we sinners… we humans.  The gift of forgiveness… in the specific places we need forgiveness… that’s where the humility and the healing live.  Ah, humility, just as soon as her name is mentioned, she darts into the corner… hiding behind pride.  We want to hide behind the generalities…

here are my chips…

can You just get rid of them?

replace them with Your grace and mercy?

No, I don’t really want to pinpoint them… some of them are pretty bad.

Specifically pointing out to God what we have done wrong… although He already knows it… this is a painful thing.  The specifics are where we are honest with ourselves… before Him.  Once we point out the details… the very places we are broken ~ or have broken others… once we point out these details, we find ourselves at a cross-road.  We change… or we disobey.  Obedience is a tough one for our human nature.  The confession, the change, the obedience… they are not about shame.  They are the road to healing.  Healing for our sake, others’ sake, His sake.

You can see God using some lives, but into your life an obstacle has come and you do not seem to be of any use.  Keep paying attention to the Source, and God will either take you round the obstacle or remove it.  The river of the Spirit of God overcomes all obstacles.  Never get your eyes on the obstacle or on the difficulty.  The obstacle is a matter of indifference to the river which will flow steadily through you if you remember to keep right at the Source.

Oswald Chambers

The place we get right with God… this is the place we move the boulder from the river.  Make a clear path for the living water to flow through us.  The water will not be stopped by the boulder, it will find a way around, but the path clear of obstacles is the straightest… clearest path.

I don’t want to be an obstacle to His work… I want to teach my children how to open their road for Him.  The way I know to get to the healing, the clearing of the way, the place of obedience… is by telling Him exactly where I see my mistakes, by asking Him to show me the ones I don’t see so clearly.  Specifically.

Tell Him where you messed up… He knows already.

He’ll get you to the healing place…

If you allow Him into the hidden places.

He already knows.  He is waiting to forgive… as soon as we name our chips.  One.  By.  One.

Great relief.

Proverbs 28:13

He who conceals his sins does not prosper, but whoever confesses and renounces them finds mercy.

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Filed Under: Faith, Grace, Mercy, Perseverance Tagged With: confess mistakes, faith, mercy, obedience

Meet Karin

Hi! My name is Karin Madden. Writer. Warrior wife. Mom of six pack. Homeschooler. German-blooded southerner. Welcome to the place where I explore what it means to grow stronger - spirit, soul, and body. I write to inspire and encourage - to remind you we are not alone. By being bold with grace and speaking truth in love, we can become who we are meant to be. I'm glad you are here.

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