Sunday, January 27, 2013

Tree of Life, updated

At a New Year's prayer meeting ["http://confessionbyainsertidentityhere.blogspot.com/2013/01/2013-aka-year-4-aka-tree-of-life.html"] I received and shared the words "Tree of Life" -- and my vision of a big, fat tree with an abundance of leaves -- in context with what God might have in store for the coming year or at least the coming season. My friend who was hosting immediately shot off the verse from Proverbs 13:12. ["http://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Proverbs%2013:12"]  I copied and pasted four prominent translations of it, and I have it on a wall behind my computer desk.

I gave the most weight to the King James version because it's well-known for its authority. But I soon found I had an issue with the phrase "when the desire cometh," because while other translations refer to a dream or a longing fulfilled, I don't know if it is necessarily what is meant.

I dug through the New Revised Standard Version, a reasonably authoritative translation, and I grabbed it because of its footnotes. Sure enough, it had one, for the "tree of life" phrase at the end. Tree of Life! These were exactly the words God gave me.

Briefly, if you're interested, here is the NRSV of that verse: "Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a desire fulfilled is a tree of life."

OK. In the footnotes, the NRSV directed me to two other biblical passages with those same exact words. Firstly, in Proverbs 3:18, ["http://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Proverbs%203:18"] it says "She [referring to wisdom] is a tree of life to those who lay hold of her; those who hold her fast are called happy." Secondly, in Proverbs 11:30, ["http://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Proverbs%2011:30"] it says "The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life. But violence takes lives away."

So then, my conclusion about the tree of life, the exact words God gave me, is this: it is not only a desire fulfilled, but wisdom, and also fruit of the righteous (which, as of right now, I'm referring to as righteous living).


I have questions, though. I wonder if that was the verse that was intended to go with the vision. Perhaps it was, but right now I'm not entirely convinced about the desire-being-fulfilled part. The wisdom and righteous-living aspects make just as much sense to me. Then again, lately I've been digging and finding desires deeper and longer-lasting than the woman-related desire. All I know is God's word is true and will be true; I just don't know how, and it's so easy to go nuts trying to analyze everything.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

Days like those

Remember the quote where it says a picture is worth a thousand words?


Kevin and Adam take in a game at Wrigley Field during their road trip to Chicago.



No, really, this truck with the cow spots really was a float in the Jesse James Days Parade!



My AmeriCorps group... I really loved being around these guys...



Kevin playing hacky-sack in the parking garage by the IKEA near the Mall of America.



Pat and Adam rolling dice in an intense game of RISK! They look like they were having fun too.

All of these pics were taken between August and December of 2008, one of the best seasons of my life: I was living on my own, I was employed, and I was privileged to spend time with some of my best friends and with my wonderful AmeriCorps fellow service members. This was one of those times I didn't have to work so hard, to fight so hard for my life. Granted, I don't believe I matured much then, given that I seemed to have my own small circle of friends with whom I hung out all the time. I didn't care. I didn't have to do anything. I was happy.


Right now, I'm at a time in my life where I need to do whatever I must to grow up, so naturally I'm going to look back on days like those and long for them. All I can do right now is trust that God knows what he's doing, and to do what I have to do to grow up.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Lessons from the Book of Job

Job has always been a triggering book for me. The basic premise goes like this:


God gives him permission to wreck Job's life, first by taking his children and possessions away, ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job%201:12&version=NIV"]


Job gets angry, and asks why God lets this happen; ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job%209:22&version=NIV"

God gets angry at Job for questioning him; ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job%2038&version=NIV"]


and God gives him back twice the blessings that Job had had before ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Job%2042:10&version=NIV"

The problem was, I processed it a different way: all these bad things happen to Job, Job lets God know how he feels, and God yells at him for complaining. God only is nice to Job when Job says, "I despise myself and repent in dust and ashes." It was hard for me because it meant I had to accept that these things could happen ["http://confessionbyainsertidentityhere.blogspot.com/2006/06/wake-up-call.html"] to me and not "demand … an explanation." Asking "why?" and "what about me?" was second nature to me. Still is. And from reading this book, I was convinced God didn't care about me, except for when I would demand an explanation from him.

But it wasn't until last year that I discovered God really did care about me. It wasn't until last year that I discovered what really happened in my life, thus leading me to ask such presumably selfish things. The bad things that happened to Job happened to him as an adult; I, on the other hand, was in my early childhood when my similar stuff happened. Even though whatever happens to me as an adult is separate from what happened when I was a kid, the latter stuff, when unresolved, reverberates through the rest of my life until it is resolved. God cares about things that happen to me, and a message I've been receiving is that he wants everything restored, everything healed, as much as possible.

I wrote an email to my friends along with whom I am plowing through the Bible this year, sharing my story with this particular book. I won't copy and paste here, but I'll outline the four steps that have helped me see the truth and what God wants me to take away from Job's story:

1.) God did not cause Job to lose everything he had. It's not God's fault, but he did allow it to happen as a time of sharpening for Job, a sharpening of his faith in God.

2.) While arguing with his friends, Job believed some lies about God: that he was unjust, that he doesn't punish the wicked, that he punishes good men. Job had some serious tunnel vision [It is all the same to me; that is why I say: "He destroys both the blameless and the wicked."  Job 9:22].

3.) Even upright people go through trials. God sharpens people to try them, test their faith, at any time, for any length of time. Why? Because he's God, he gets to do what he wants with his creation.

4.) After Job repents, God gives him everything back, twice as much. Last summer when I shared my dream about the blind newborns, one friend suggested the term "double blessing." True, coming to Vineyard after my last exile certainly has been a double blessing unto itself, particularly in that even in the downs of life I haven't left the church. When I was in exile, I couldn't be bothered to commit to a church for more than maybe a month. I would feel lacking somewhere inside of myself, and go to another place to find it.


Job's story still doesn't completely sit well with me, but it sits a lot better than it used to. I think it's just frustrating not knowing what's going on or what will happen, and on top of that I have to trust that something good will happen. My tunnel vision is that a lot of my life has been full of crap, and it's hard for me to understand or believe in something I've never really experienced. It's getting easier.

Monday, January 14, 2013

Aaron Swartz, part 2: death of "decent society"

One of the dangers of getting back into blogging after taking a hiatus is to willingly become sucked into the addiction of needing to put things out there so people will pay attention for me and give me what I think I want or need. I've clearly not retired, and from here on out I need to re-think how I present my intentions to change from relying on addictions (like the internet) to relying on things I actually, really need (Bible-reading, counseling journaling, calling friends on the phone, etc).

There have been things going on in my own life of late that I would have considered blog-worthy a year ago. I have another place for such things, for which I am grateful. Not that I don't want to share important parts of my life here, too, but I need to continue searching for why I blog and how I should.

I've been in conversation about, and read up further on, my former acquaintance Aaron Swartz. I have to be careful, because I didn't know him outside of that 2000-2001 school year. But with such a poignant topic as suicide, it's hard not to romanticize whatever I knew of the man.

My dad shared a piece ["http://lessig.tumblr.com/post/40347463044/prosecutor-as-bully"] with me written by Swartz' friend and temporary lawyer, Larry Lessig. It is poignant. It triggered some of my own responses from when a teenage girl I'd never heard of, let alone met, let alone knew, committed suicide back in October ["http://confessionbyainsertidentityhere.blogspot.com/2012/10/for-i-know-plans-i-have-for-you.html"]. Last post I'd commented about how Swartz never had a chance to grow up. While I will choose to resist patting myself on the back now that I know how right I was about that, it makes it even harder to cope when bullying comes into play.

Pastor Steve at my church (Evanston Vineyard) ["http://www.evanstonvineyard.org/"] is currently in the midst of a sermon series called "Jesus and Culture," and the first sermon ["http://evine.prod2.webenabled.net/assets/podcasts/2013-01-06_faith-exile.mp3"] of the series described ["http://www.evanstonvineyard.org/blog/201301/jesus-and-culture-faith-exile"] about how Christianity is no longer the basis for morality in our culture and how Christian values are pooh-poohed across the board. Steve boldly declared that we as American Christians are in exile in a strange land, though our own. I'm not sure whether to agree with it as of yet, but I do agree that society has changed, that our morals have changed, and that we have lost a sense of how to really treat each other as human beings.

A sentence from Lessig's blog that stood out to me goes like this: "[Swartz] is gone today, driven to the edge by what a decent society would only call bullying." Unfortunately, my first question is: what is "decent society"? Does it still exist? Is there hope that decency could ever again matter in the way it once seemed? Between Swartz' case and Amanda Todd's case, among countless others, even the Jesus-follower in me struggles to have hope and trends towards pessimism in this.

I'd share the following passage from Ephesians 6:12 ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Ephesians+6:12&version=NIV"] "For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms[,]" (New International Version) but it seems our "decent society" would rather punish the flesh and blood along with the principalities involved. At the very least, we're too blind to really see what's going on, and that includes many Christians.

When I went back to my commentary on suicide from October, I closed that post with "for I know the plans I have for you" line from Jeremiah 29 ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=jeremiah%2029&version=NIV"]. I'd forgotten about that. If Pastor Steve is right and we are heading into exile, then that line is prescient to the few Christians who understand what's happening.

Yesterday I went for prayer after the second service and felt the Holy Spirit as I released some pains and sought help. And something that one of my friends who was praying over me said that stuck out: "there is nothing self-centered about asking God to hold you" ... about hogging the attention if I need help for myself. Lessig intimated that Swartz was "unable to appeal openly to us for ... help." Without Christianity playing a central role, we lose our sense of decency and willingness to reach out for help (or give it).

Decency is dead without Christ. So is hope. Swartz died because he lost hope. I just wish that more people would connect the dots. I think Lessig said it best in this post ["http://lessig.tumblr.com/post/40331489608/aaron-rip"]: "We are all incredible sorry to have let you down."


Jesus never would've let Aaron down.

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Growing up, part 1

~ i.e. more than intellect and physical independence; an epitaph for a former classmate ~

I've been thinking lately about what it means to grow up. It seems an ultra-important issue, given that what I used to believe "growing up" meant five years ago was vastly different from what I believe it to be now. Sure, there are the barebones requirements: having a job, having a place of my own, and at the very least being able to financially support myself without needing help from my family of origin (i.e. my parents). There are a few others, like getting married, perhaps owning a house and car… although this is starting to sound more like the American dream than anything else. And I am going to say this outright: accomplishing the "American dream" is not the same as growing up.

But everywhere I look, people of my generation (Generation Y), although independent in at least a few of the ways I described above, aren't as "grown up" as I thought. We still depend on our parents emotionally (and often financially) as if we were children. It seems that whenever we invest in something, whether a house or a marriage or a career, when something goes wrong it's as if it were the end of the world and we need to be consoled. (Unfortunately we often go to the wrong places for it.)

My sense is my generation doesn't have a sense of autonomy like our parents and grandparents did. Granted, in those earlier days it was: "when you're 18, you're out the door" and "figure it out on your own." Our parents and grandparents made mistakes and learned from them. It seems as if we're afraid to make mistakes, or maybe it's more because we're too emotionally underdeveloped to learn from them when we do. (Or maybe we always were.)

Point is, with both parents out of the house working, someone or something less qualified is often entrusted to our care. Because of the lack of nurture our parents gave us, we turn to other things to feed our very souls, often things that teach us lies about the world, about ourselves, about each other, and about life. And my generation's "adulthood" is the fruit of what our parents sowed, for better or for worse.

A common lie we've believed is not persevering. When something goes wrong, I think the best thing to do is to run away to avoid life's problems, conveniently forgetting that life's problems stay with me wherever I go. That's not something I learned in school; what I learned in school was how to analyze numbers and literature and music, how languages worked, and how chemicals behave when they're put together. That's great, I learned something useful, but it really was just a diversion from the dung that was my childhood.

The best thing that ever happened to me was finishing school. Because of all the crap I lived through in the early years of my life, my defense was to block it out and focus on school, focus on grades and pretend like nothing else mattered. It didn't work anyway. I didn't really grow up all those years I was in school, because of it.

Aaron Swartz ["http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/13/technology/aaron-swartz-internet-activist-dies-at-26.html"] was in my geometry class freshman year at North Shore Country Day School. Dude was brilliant. He was already a year younger than the rest of us, and he was already in geometry (all freshmen were either in algebra or geometry for math that year). At the end of the year he left North Shore to go somewhere else, and I never saw him again. Only sometime late in college I heard from him again, when I -- not sure how I did this -- signed up on to an email listing whose focus was to spread the importance of internet freedom.

I'm not going to go into any more of his bio. Swartz was brilliant. It's worth repeating that, because I saw it first-hand. I don't know if I was ever at all jealous of him, particularly given that I was a year-and-a-half older than he, and that he was my year in school and doing better in some areas than even I was. I don't think I was jealous, but I won't blame myself if I were. Point is, he's now dead, having committed suicide. Articles say he struggled with depression for years. To be fair, he was looking at significant jail time for pirating data from J-stor, but in my opinion it doesn't matter.

Swartz may have been brilliant and independent and, legal issues aside, had a good chunk of what he wanted in life. But, all his intellect aside, he lacked in emotional and spiritual maturity. We don't struggle with depression for something stupid like "chemical imbalance." Something(s) happened in Swartz' life that stunted his emotional growth, and to throw in a few triggers, a few lies, I'm not at all surprised that he would struggle with the such. Being insanely smart has no defense against it.

Swartz never had the chance to really grow up. To me, that's the biggest loss in yesterday's tragedy. And I look across everyone I've ever known, I'm very doubtful that even a handful of people my age have really grown up (a once-good friend of mine from the past who married his wife at 23 confided to me recently that they were in counseling, something that caught me off-guard at first but is making more sense now). I just realize how very blessed I am to have a safe place where I can heal and take care of myself.


So then, what is growing up? Taking care of myself (financially, emotionally, etc), for one, but I will also add allowing myself to trust in God and trust in others, in community, to be there with me in times both good and bad. Growing up means being able to handle the ups and downs with budgeting and finances, relationships, parenting (if applicable), and knowing when to risk and when to lay back. This list is by no means exhaustive, but it's what I've been able to figure out thus far.

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

2013, aka Year 4, aka "Tree of Life"?

What's different about this New Year vs. other new years in my life is my approach to it. Yes, it's a clean slate, but for the most part I focus on the big picture (i.e. 27 years down, maybe 62 years remaining if God wills it), rather than a series of little chunks. I have hopes for my life this year, but I also know that I've got a lot of time for whatever God wants to do in my life. I am now more able to say, "OK, God, take however long you want." It allows me to live more in joy and less in worry.

I went to my friend David's house today for a "January for Jesus" get-together for prayer, worship, and discussion. We focused on thanking God for what he gave us in the previous year, and on asking him to show or tell us what he has in store for the coming year.

Here's what I would like to share from this meeting:

1.) What part of God's heart does he want to show or share with me this year?
I didn't get a strong sense of anything, but I have chosen to remain with what he has given me over the last year: his provision and a sense that he is taking care of me, holding me close, and going after my heart. I believe that God wants to continue to show me himself as Provider for everything that I need, and I believe that this will be true until he gives me something clear and different, no matter how soon or how late it comes.

2.) If the next season (either all of 2013, the first month or two, or six months) had a heading, a title, what would it be?

3.) Or, if words don't work for you, what images come?

During this time I received the following: first, a vision of a row of green leaves across a header; second, the words "Tree of Life"; and third, an image of a large tree in the middle among the green leaves.

When I shared this with the rest of the group, David immediately gave me the following Bible verse from Proverbs 13:12, which I will share in four translations:

1.) Hope deferred maketh the heart sick: but when the desire cometh, it is a tree of life. ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs+13:12&version=KJV"] King James Version
2.) Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a dream fulfilled is a tree of life. ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs+13:12&version=NLT"] New Living Translation
3.) Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a longing fulfilled is a tree of life. ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs+13:12&version=NIV"] New International Version
4.) Unrelenting disappointment leaves you heartsick, but a sudden good break can turn life around. ["http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Proverbs+13:12&version=MSG"] The Message


I will say this: I'm continuing to grow, to become more of a man than I was, and to become more of a man than I already am. God has given me much of my life back, and I'm hungry for more.