Saturday, November 3, 2012

after Frankenstorm...



Here's the inside cover and first page. Kind of a mess from a technical standpoint, but hey, I'm learning how the materials behave. For instance, tissue paper when wet with Modgepodge pulls on the paper beneath it. I had to glue two pages of the notebook together to create enough structure to support the first page and it still pulled, bent and wrinkled. I'm not complaining, just observing and making notes. It may be that this quality will be useful in the future. Also some colors of Sharpie Extra Fine Point Markers run when wet with ModgePodge (dark green) and some do not. I think this page has a very childlike quality to it and it was childlike fun to make. I'm excited to see what's next.

So it's November 3rd, and I'm posting on gratitude daily on Facebook this month. It's a good spiritual discipline for me - I've been feeling a little lost and discouraged the past week so it will help me keep it in perspective. We're just a few days out from being pounded by Hurricane Sandy and we had very little damage. Our power was out for a night, internet down for a couple of days and some minor roof damage and leaking at home and glitchy phones and computer service at work. I am so grateful that we are OK. I pray that no matter what people are going through, that God will use this to draw many to Him and to each other. An event like this puts stuff into a perspective that I forget when things are going well. It makes me think of one of my favorite scripture verses from one of my favorite books (and one of the very few I've memorized);

“Fear not, for I have redeemed you;
    I have called you by name, you are mine.
When you pass through the waters, I will be with you;
    and through the rivers, they shall not overwhelm you;
when you walk through fire you shall not be burned,
    and the flame shall not consume you.
For I am the Lord your God, 
the Holy One of Israel, your Savior."               Isaiah 43: 1b-3

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Art journaling for Jesus



After much delay from a variety of sources, here is the front and back cover of my first attempt at Art Journaling for Jesus. The delays were caused by lack of focus, lack of sleep, logistics, time crunch, garden variety artist self esteem issues, and competing responsibilities. I'm not in love with the finished product so much myself, but I enjoyed the process and I love the possibilities. I will definitely continue - now I have to fill it up. I hope He likes it.

I've been thinking and talking about the restoration of the sacred to art. Thinking about re-reading Francis Schaeffer's "How Should We Then  Live" which examines the loss of the sacred in thought and culture, including the arts. And thinking about how so much of what passes for Christian art and music today is commercial schlock - nauseatingly sweet and devoid of power. I'm not saying I'm so great or that I've got the inside scoop from the Holy Spirit on what it should sound like or look like. I do know that there's little out there that moves me into a closer experience of the divine - and much that has the opposite effect - and makes me want to apologize to non-Christians for all those big-eyed figurines and flowery teacups with Bible verses printed on them.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

...on art journaling

I' ve been away from the blog for a while, I know, and a lot has happened. The church went through transition - with the founding pastor "passing the baton" (literally) to the pastor I serve as an administrative assistant. It was a beautiful, emotional and well done. My husband Walt had an appointment with his cardiologist and was discharged, which freed him up emotionally to move on with his life. Our LIFE Leadership business is revving up. I took a week of badly needed vacation time. Well, it was a staycation, and it took me most of the week to unwind with a mixture of rest and activity, mostly aimed at trying to get our badly neglected house back into shape. It'a amazing how bad things can get when you begin in a disorganized state and add a year of serious illness. Although the house is by no means in "lets have company over" condition, I made progress and that was very satisfying.

The biggest reason for my absence has been that I haven't been sure what I wanted this blog to be. And truthfully, my vision for it hasn't distilled completely, but toward the end of my time off I started to feel really antsy about starting to make art again. My space to make art is really limited & there are no funds to rent a studio, which was frustrating to me because I like to work big, really big, and that just wasn't going to happen. And then one day when I was noodling around on Pinterest, I "stumbled across" a bunch of people who are into art journaling. I'm fascinated. Beautiful, thought provoking, awkward, funny, raw and revealing, this art form really struck a chord with me, and it can be done on my dining room table. Here are some examples of pages created by other artists.

 
 
I found these on a fabulous  blog. To visit and see a lot more beautiful and provocative arty contributions, go here.

One of the things that struck me in looking at this stuff, and the many other pages I researched was that there is very little art journaling by Christian artists. The spirituality reflected in the majority of the work is relativistic, and some of it is downright sticking it in God's eye. We've come a very long way from the days when all art was sacred. Art reflects the artist's search for meaning and the culture that she lives in, and lets face it, we're living in a largely empty, status and entertainment oriented world. Looking at most art today simultaneously makes me swoon at the beauty (if it's good) and sad. I remember all of the stuff I made, trying to make sense of the world, yearning for God yet not ever satisfied, until Jesus "found me" and I experienced the peace that passes all understanding. I see that same quest reflected in the hearts of other artists, and I pray that He will find them, too. So that's what's happening in my heart and mind these days when I'm not working on other things.

I've started working on my first journal pages and hope to share them here soon.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Uncool

I'm thinking about how it got to be so uncool to be an Evangelical Christian. Was it always so? And if not when did things get turned around? Was it the Big Haired Televangelists that are responsible, or did it happen much earlier? 


I've been listening to Chris Brady's "So Dark the Con of Man'" among other things and musing on just how uncool we are. And the total irony that I used to be one of the people who thought all Evangelicals were idiots who couldn't think their way out of a paper bag. And then I met some really smart, funny, thoughtful Christians, and I was baffled. I tried to reconcile what I was experiencing with what I "knew to be true". Ha! I had to admit, my worldview was inaccurate, or at least incomplete. How could these brilliant minds subscribe to such an uncool and intolerant worldview? Wasn't it obvious that the only sensible viewpoint was the "There are as many paths to God as there are people", "truth is relative and situational" view that I embraced? 



Besides the fact that I now knew several Evangelicals and not one of them had Big Hair or railed at me about how I was headed on the next train to hell, there was another little fact that was gnawing at me. For all of the stuff I had tried (from Native American sweat lodges to Hindu Goddess ceremonies and a whole lot of other stuff in between) none of it had produced happiness or made me into a better, more compassionate person. I could not discount the evidence that was piling up that I was on the wrong track somehow, despite what my culture told me. 


The crack in my cosmic armor  was widening enough for our friend Dave to drive in the wedge. The conversation went something like this. Me "I don't believe the Bible is true." Dave "Have you ever read the Bible?" Me "Well...no." Dave "Then how can you say it's not true?" Me "Ummm". Then he triple-dog-dared me to read it.

Now since I had quite a bit of pride about being open-minded and all, and also culturally literate and well-read, it occurred to me that I really should read it "Since even though I don't believe it, it's such a huge influence on contemporary Western culture, I probably should". Ha-ha, this just makes me laugh now - I was so arrogant I can hardly stand it. 

It just so happened that many years before, a friend had given me a One Year Bible which had been collecting dust on a shelf. And so I read it. Warning -if you want to hang onto your identity as a cool, tolerant relativist do not read this book with an open mind. It could make you ask questions. It could make you look for a church. It could turn you into an uncool geeky friend of Jesus. 'Nuff said.


Thursday, May 17, 2012

church family

I've wondered why God has me working at a church, and this church in particular. I could say I felt called, and perhaps I was, but honestly there were some pragmatic considerations beside the joy of working for Jesus. Like decent health insurance at a reasonable cost, and a flexible work schedule.

After a short while I began to discover how different this environment is from working in the corporate world. One of the last places I worked (a major player in the cell phone industry) gave lip service to "living a balanced life" and family priorities. They didn't mean a word of it. Work hours were insane, and don't even think about calling in sick. Much of the management was cranky, unskilled and sometimes downright mean.

 Here, family comes first, no kidding. Sick kids  and spouses, and important family events take precedence, and the entire staff juggles if necessary to give the person who needs it the time and space to attend to whatever needs to be attended to. It's so very different.

But the thing that has most surprised me, the gift I didn't expect or see coming (thank you Jesus!) is this. I am working in the midst of a functional family. They're not perfect by any means. But they try, they really try, to be cooperative and helpful and they care about each other. Some of these people have worked together for twenty years, and ten or more years is not uncommon on the staff. They have been through seasons when they were at odds, angry or disappointed with each other. And yet, they are respectful at the least, and loving and generous at the best. They are more transparent with each other than I've ever seen a group of people be outside of therapy. They can afford to be. And when they mess up, they really want to do better - for each other and for God.

I come from a very dysfunctional family, and although my marriage now is very good, for all practical purposes, my husband is my family. My sister and her family live in another city, my husband's brother and his family live in another state, and parents are all deceased. My marriage history is convoluted and would take pages to describe, but let's just say there was a lot of dysfunction there, before I married Walt. I never thought I would experience a loving and functional family in this lifetime - and now I have one. It's amazing to watch people interact with grace and patience, kindness and respect, and forgiveness when things get ugly, which of course they do. We're human after all. Jesus gave me much more than I expected when I went to work for him. Hallelujah!

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

... and awaaay we go

A couple of days ago, as we were leaving a restaurant where we had eaten brunch after church, my husband passed out and hit his head on a slate topped table on the way down. I turned just in time to see this happen. It is one of the most horrifying things I have ever seen - and once seen, cannot be unseen. In that second or two that it took for me to get to him and determine that he was breathing and had a pulse, I thought the worst. Two years ago our friend Greg stood up to tell a joke to a class he was teaching and died instantly, immediately, despite the prompt attention from a doctor who just happened to be there. I can't help thinking about Jan, Greg's wife who kissed him and put him on a plane to Florida and never saw him alive again.

One day we will laugh about this. Walt is a big man, and the fall had a Jackie Gleason-esque, pivoting comedic quality about it. The wonderful guys from the fire department came, then the emergency squad. We spent two harrowing days in the ER and then in the hospital. Tests were done, questions asked, blood taken. We may never know for sure what caused the syncope but we think it was related to one of his heart medications - which he is now no longer taking. He can't drive for two weeks - we can't risk him passing out behind the wheel. Since he's not on the medication, his a-fib is in full bloom. Life just got a little more complicated, a little more restricted.

What was God up to when he made me turn in that moment; why did He want me to see Walt falling like a stone to the floor?

He is beating the self-sufficiency out of me - at least that's what it feels like. I am so hard-headed when it comes to this. As soon as things are going relatively smoothly I think I am self-reliant. I forget that I cannot even take a breath without His full participation and blessing. I lose focus on Him and barrel on full steam ahead, focused on the task at hand. I think about all of the people that He allows to live their entire lives with their illusion of self-sufficiency intact, and if I am grateful for anything in this mess, it is that He has rescued me from that. Like them, I thought I could take credit for my intelligence, talent, success. Wow, that sounds spiritually arrogant, but I don't mean it that way. If I can think of another way to more accurately express how small, helpless and grateful I feel, I'll come back with an edit.

Life can and does change in an instant. Ask my friend Jan. Ask the students at Chardon High school. Ask the apostle Paul, who fell down on the road to Damascus a Christian-hating Jew and got up a temporarily blinded, broken Christian. I didn't lose Walt on Sunday, but I could have. I did lose my self-sufficiency - at least for now. I know myself well enough to know that without an assist from the Holy Spirit, I won't hang onto this brokenness for long. I pray that the vision of my beloved, unconscious husband falling will be a reminder to me of my utter and absolute dependence on God  for every good thing - and every seemingly bad thing - in my life.


Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Wrestling...and Waiting...

I'm wresting with God. I think I am not alone in this. I think that God is pleased that I care enough about my relationship with Him to wrestle with Him, rather than walking away when things are tough. And things are tough.

Walt and I have poured the last five years of our lives into a business and into people that we came to love. It was our life and it defined us - and God was at the center of it. Now there have been changes in the marketplace that are making it more possible than ever for this tender seedling of a business to bear fruit - and Walt has developed a debilitating and apparently capricious heart arrhythmia that makes in impossible to plan anything with certainty.

Our team fell apart - partly because of our inability to lead it, but there was more. It was the perfect storm - Walt's illness, John's illness, David's business reversal and legal problems, Scott and Kelly's mother's illness and death, a DUI for another, loss of a job, marital difficulties. These are all challenges in life, but all of them happening, in a very short period if time to a team of people who are in the process of creating something together - it has been devastating to the business. Even if there are enough pieces left to pick up and start over, and the desire to do so is there, we continue to struggle daily with Walt's condition. So now what? It's so not in my driven nature to wait.

The bible is full of waiting - and being rewarded for our patience. Psalm 37:34 says "Wait for the Lord and keep his way, and he will exalt you to inherit the land; you will look on when the wicked are cut off."
and Lamentations 3:26 "It is good that one should wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord."

There are also copious references to patience, such as Romans 8:25 "But if we hope for what we do not see, we wait for it with patience."

But what do we do while we are waiting, and how long are we to wait? That's a big part of my struggle. What's acceptance and what's quitting? I don't want to be a quitter, but neither do I want to bang my head continually against a door that has been closed by a divine hand. We have been dealing with Walt's illness for nearly a year now, and we have both seen much spiritual fruit as a result of the experience. Being human, I grieve for our losses as much as I celebrate the changes we have experienced; increased patience for me (though it may not seem so from what I've written here) and increased determination and discipline for Walt.

Where does that leave me? I want to trust. I've just finished the brilliant Timothy Keller's "King's Cross." This is some of what he has to say on the subject of waiting.

"God's sense of timing will confound ours, no matter what culture we're from. His grace rarely operates according to our schedule. When Jesus says...' trust me, be patient' in effect he is...saying, 'Remember how when I calmed the storm, I showed you that my grace and love are compatible with what seem to you to be unconscionable delays'. It's not 'I will not be hurried, even though I love you'; it's 'I will not be hurried because I love you. I know what I'm doing. And if you try to impose your understanding of timing and schedule on me, you will struggle to feel loved by me.' "


I believe that this next thing that Keller says is absolutely true:


 "If you go to Jesus, he may ask of you far more than you originally planned to give, but he can give you infinitely more than you dared ask or think."

Arrgh, it's just that waiting....

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

arty.genny.toes

Artigennetos - or as I like to think of it - arty.genny.toes - is a blog just born, kind of like me. Chronologically, I'm a long way down the road from my physical birth date, but I am a spiritual new creation, only about four years old at this point. I'm living proof that God does have a sense of humor. He took a fifty-something card carrying liberal new-age body worker and artist and turned her into a politically independent, born again administrative assistant to the teaching pastor of an evangelical  Southern Baptist mini-mega church. All because I asked Him to "allow me to have more impact and influence and leave a positive legacy in this world".  Be careful what you pray for! My artistic tendencies and  tree-hugging, nature-loving inclinations survived this radical transition. Mostly my pre-cosmic shift friends think I've lost my mind (that is, the ones who haven't abandoned me), which I totally understand, since I recently shared the same attitudes and ideas about the nature of our world.

I officially declare I have not lost my mind, but I am yearning to lose my selfish, navel-gazing nature in Christ.