Fatherless on Father’s Day (again!)

On Father’s Day here’s a post shared awhile back that resonates today…

Cherished and adored, two words that remind me of my father.

And loved.

Although it’s been several years since Papa passed, there’s still a crater-sized hole in my heart missing him. I don’t think that hole will ever get smaller because Papa loomed so large in my life. Center-stage with Mama, the two of them cheered me on with their love to do and be – whatever, whenever, wherever.

Their deep love anchored this redhead through good times and turbulent times: always there, a constant port in every storm.

Papa cherished me (and my 4 siblings) through our growing pains in childhood, the onset of adulthood, and as we muddled our way into middle-aged-hood. He would say, “You are beautiful!” (Growing up with a pimply face and skinny legs, really Papa?)

He pushed us to pursue our dreams. He supported us. He made time for us.

Growing up in a boisterous family with five kids, sometimes it was hard for my younger brother and me to get a word in edge-wise. Papa made space for us to speak through daily “round table” dinner discussions where he asked each of us to share the highlights and challenges of our days.

Round table went like this:

  1. “Did you have a good day (or a bad day?)
  2. “What was the best thing (or the worst thing?)
  3. “Do you have anything to ask, or show, or tell?” (We had to bring our ‘shows’ with us to the table.)

Papa & Mama’s round table (still in use)

Papa spent time with us. He took Section B (what he called my younger brother and me, the three oldest = Section A) on monthly dates for dinner and every Walt Disney movie that came out. (There were many.) When we were a little older it was John Wayne westerns. (There were many of those, too.)

As I grew up these fun outings morphed into more serious encounters – a time set aside to seek his wise counsel and share worries, debacles, hopes and (ever changing) dreams.

An important part of cherishing is encouragement. Papa encouraged me to seek to be all that I can be as his beloved daughter and precious daughter of our Heavenly Father.

When I moved away from home to work in Washington, D.C. and then overseas for many years, Papa and Mama called every week, faxed, and emailed (as technology evolved.)

They were always there for me.

Even when several oceans separated us, I knew they had my back in prayer with their heavenly-hotline buzzing as I dodged bullets, stones, landmines and endured malaria, fractured ankles (et all.)

Papa always said, “The will of God will never take you where the grace of God cannot keep you.”

God dished out grace in many ways and in many places. But a big chunk of “hang-in-there-grace” came through Papa and Mama. Despite incredible challenges, their example of faithfulness – to God, to each other, to us, to ministry – inspired me to keep going.

Papa always said, “When I’m weakest, God is strongest!”

The will of God has now taken me to this place of being father-less on Father’s Day. I pray for God’s grace to keep me when my heart misses Papa. Lots!

I miss his larger-than-life presence, his love, encouragement, cherishment, the twinkle in his eyes, his sense of humor, his joy (even when as a bedfast quadriplegic he couldn’t move anything.)

I miss his zeal for life, his faith in God, and his faith in me.

Cherished.  Adored.  Loved.

All three, a gift from my father to me.

There is a crater-sized hole in my heart, but it’s filled with the legacy of Papa’s love: the love of Jesus in and through him to me. Thank you, Papa!

A blessed Father’s Day to you fathers out there. Treasure the moments.

Cherish, adore, love. See what your children become.

Virginia misses her Papa & Mama so much!!

grace, peace & legacies of Love

Virginia  : )

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The Weight of the Matter

“Keep in mind that even during a pandemic no matter much chocolate (and cheese) you eat, your earrings will still fit.” Anonymous

A comforting thought in these troubled times, especially for chocoholics like Virginia.

Virginia is glad her earrings still fit, but finding a pair of shorts that fit is another matter altogether, a weighty matter.

The weight of the matter is heavy, TEN POUNDS to be exact. The problematic location of these pounds makes squeezing into summer shorts an impossible task.

The other day while trying on 20 pairs of spiffy shorts from the recesses of her closet, Virginia thought: “How could they all have shrunk over the winter?”

It seems unlikely that 20 pairs of shorts would shrink, all at the same time.

Hmmn. Miss Murple in Purple (what my brother calls this avid Miss Marple groupie) made a calculated deduction.

To the scales! Oi vey, not a happy day.

All those coronavirus stay-at-home treats from Virginia the Baker (cheesy biscuits, blueberry cheese muffins, chocolate ricotta muffins…) and Virginia the Cook (cheesy veggie lasagna, 5 bean chili-cheese soup & 4 cheese nachos a little too often) = a weighty matter.

Too much matter in me!

Unless Virginia does something drastic (like, um, a DIET) her shorts won’t fit until September – when it will be time for them to be packed away.

Voluptuous Virginia must get her “well rounded” curves back in the right places.

Fortunately, Virginia’s t-shirts (like this one) still fit

This week it’s back to lettuce and NO MORE CHEESE.*

grace, peace & weighty matters

Virginia : )

*Chocolate still allowed. (Virginia must keep up her strength!)

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Quickie Quote Monday: Fresh-eyed Friendships

“The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes but in having new eyes.” Marcel Proust

“Friendship is unnecessary, like philosophy, like art… It has no survival value; rather it is one of those things which give value to survival.” C.S. Lewis (“The Four Loves”)

grace, peace & fresh-eyed friendships*

Virginia : )

*Here’s to seeing friendships with fresh eyes, not taking our friends for granted as we weather our voyages of discovery together.

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Tired! Tired! Tired!!

One of today’s readings reminded me that even a super-duper saint like Elijah got tired, tired, tired. Just like so many folks today are tired, tired, tired.

Years ago after being a busy Relief & Development worker, Virginia was tired, tired, tired. Taking time out for an 8-day silent retreat, I wrote the following reflection about Elijah. May his example touch tired-out hearts today.

It’s a bit longer than usual, so grab a cup of tea…

Even bears @ Yellowstone Park get tired!

This morning I got to thinking about Elijah. Thank you, God, for his faith going up against the prophets of Baal (I Kings 18-19) and for Your faithfulness when he ran, pell-mell, from Jezebel after that great victory on Mt. Carmel.

Why does Elijah’s example seem so relevant now?

He had faith of immense proportions. Gigantic. Huge. He taunted the 450 prophets of Baal. He not only put wood on the altar of sacrifice, he immersed it with buckets of water that turned the trench around the altar into a small lake.

He believed. His faith said, “God is GOD of miracles that bring glory to God’s name. We will make a water-logged altar so the people will know God’s response is not a lucky fluke, but a miracle.”

Then Elijah witnessed Your blazing fire completely consume the sacrifice and evaporate buckets of water in the trenches. In the throes of Your miraculous response, Elijah wiped out the prophets of Baal. Victory for God, Hallelujah! The saints will now start marching on the palace to root out the evil rulers of the day.

He prayed and You faithfully whipped up a major miracle.

Fresh from victory and miracles, Elijah hears Jezebel is on the warpath to get him. Does he remember Your awesome power? Your faithfulness when he stood one against 450?

No. He turns into a cowardly pile of jelly and runs into the desert to hide. From a Public Relations perspective, it was bad timing to run. After such a huge victory for God he should have filled the Judean airwaves with anti-Jezebel messages and pro-God sound bytes. (The FIRE has come. God wants you: NOW!)

Instead, Elijah runs “in fear for his very life.”

Where is his awesome faith now? The faith that let him taunt the Baal prophets?  The faith that believed in Your victorious triumph over evil? The faith that believed in Your overwhelming ability to respond, not with just a match-stick flame to lightly toast the sacrifice but with awesome power to handle water-logged trenches too?

Unfortunately, Elijah’s “buckets of water” faith suffered a few faith-beats of failure. When he heard Jezebel’s threat to kill him, he didn’t stop to pray, he just ran. (It says something about Jezebel, that she was more frightening than 450 men.)

Yet despite these faith-beat failures, You restored and renewed Elijah.

He was tired. Very, very tired. You let him sleep and provided food.

Then he walked for 40 days and nights with supernatural strength to Mt. Horeb. There, after a bombastic hurricane, earthquake and fire passed by, he heard Your still, small voice.

In the quiet of his heart, Elijah heard Your voice.

What did You say? The record in the first book of Kings doesn’t elaborate much. Maybe Elijah was too uncomfortable to include the private bits of Your conversation. Maybe they went something like this:

“Elijah, I am with you ALWAYS: in victory and in defeat. When you act with courage, I am with you, strengthening your faith. Know also, that when you are afraid – when fear grips your very soul, paralyzing your mind – I am with you.

I will meet your needs. I will cover your back, guiding your steps against the evil pursuing you. I will protect you with the armor of My love and let your spirit soar on the wings of My joy. My peace will permeate your anxiety. My mercy and grace will handle your failures. My wisdom will help clarify what really matters. I will restore and renew your faith. My angels will look after you.

Believe in Me and in My love for You. 

See, you are not alone. There are others faithful to Me. Look around and you will find help in this battle against the darkness.

It’s not all about you, it’s about Me. I AM God of all consuming Light. I will blaze My fire through doubts blocking your sight. Open the doors of your heart wider. Break the chains of fear. Let the brilliant light of My kingdom within you shine for all to see.

You have seen My miracles outside you, now let the Holy Spirit empower new miracles within you. New mercies are available every morning, just turn on the Heavenly tap.

Be infused with sparkling champagne of the spiritual realm: My steadfast love for you.

Let My love transform you. See, I am here with you always.

When you are weak, I am strong. Don’t be dismayed.

Those buckets of cold water you’ve poured into the tired out trenches around your heart, let the spark of My love ignite them back into blazing furnaces of faith: ready for transformation; ready for action; ready to be who, where, and what I want you to be. 

Go now, be my Hands and Feet to the hurting. Be grace. Be mercy. Be peace. Be salt in this tasteless world. Be joy. Be light – brilliant, burning bright – in the darkness.

Be love. Be ME.”

After listening to Your still, small voice, Elijah went back with his faith renewed and followed Your plan. What a lesson from a great saint about faith. But why is this meaningful 5,000 years (or so) later?

Just as Elijah ran in fear, pell-mell, to the desert, I may have knowingly (or unknowingly) done the same thing.

Oh God, even after witnessing countless examples (often miraculous) of Your awesome faithfulness, I have suffered faith-beat failures. The need is too great. The obstacles are too big. I am too tired. My get-up-and-go got up and left. I am stuck in the snow of inertia with fear-bitten feet, too cold to walk forward into the new.

As Elijah’s buckets of water faith weathered the drought of fear and exhaustion, I want to follow his example now.

Please, God, strengthen my faith. Let the warmth of Your love melt my fear-bitten feet. Ignite my heart’s desire to be transformed with the Flame of Your Kingdom: come, Holy Spirit, in the Name of Jesus Christ fill me with Your Fire.

Heavenly Father, fill this clay, earthen pot with the sparkling champagne of the spiritual realm – your steadfast Love for me and all those around me. Let this heart beat as one with Your love, joy, peace, grace, wisdom, mercy and patience.

May You provide a deep well of courage to move forward, one step at a time, to face whatever challenges may come with renewed faith – Elijah’s buckets-of-water kind!

grace, peace & wells of renewal

Virginia : )

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“We Just Want TO BREATHE!!”

As hundreds of peaceful protestors gathered yesterday in the heart of Colonial Williamsburg, this chant resounded: “WE WANT TO BREATHE!”

Remembering George Floyd: “I CAN’T BREATHE!”

Why is it difficult for some of us, specifically African Americans, to breathe?

Racism. Prejudice. A history of slavery and oppression.

Blogger Virginia lives in a region called “The Historic Triangle” that played an important role in our nation’s history: Jamestown, as site of the first English settlement in 1607; Williamsburg, as the first capitol of Virginia, one of the largest states in the colonial era; and Yorktown, where British General Cornwallis surrendered marking the end of the Revolutionary War and beginning of the U.S.A.

This region is also where the first African slaves arrived by ship, a horrific fact of our history.

Yesterday hundreds of people from local faith communities and civic groups turned out to renew the Historic Triangle Covenant of Mutuality, Inclusion and Understanding between representatives of the African American community and local law enforcement in James City County, the City of Williamsburg, and York County.

Heartbreaking realities, heartfelt prayers and calls to action filled the two+ hour rally.

Speakers included activists, pastors, representatives of the NAACP and other civic organizations, elected representatives (Democrat and Republican), and interfaith leaders. Police captains from Historic Triangle municipalities also affirmed their commitment to treat members of the African American community with dignity and respect.

It was inspiring to see over 50 leaders of local faith communities standing in solidarity with Apostle Corwin Hammond, the pastor of CBC World Ministries who struggled for years to bring the Historic Triangle Covenant into being in 2017.

It’s difficult to confront George Floyd’s horrifying death and racism prevalent in our country today. But, by opening our hearts and listening to the pain, maybe we can prevent future senseless deaths by together doing something about it.

Changing hearts with mutual respect, understanding and Love.

Riverwalk in Yorktown, Virginia

Here are a few challenges shared at yesterday’s rally to contemplate today:

“Law’s can’t legislate out hatred, because hatred comes from the heart.”

“When we don’t say something, we say something.”

“We need to breathe without inhaling the pollution of racism and prejudice.”

“We need to breathe so that the message of LOVE may shower upon us.”

“We need to breathe – to cry out for God’s grace to carry us through.”

“We need to breathe that you need me, and I need you.”

“If we stand together, if we respect one another, if we work together:

WE CAN BREATHE!!”

p.s. After the rally I spoke with Shalia, Lanise and Mariah (Women of Vision and Purpose pictured) who are rising juniors and sophomore at Lafayette High School in James City County. They came out because they wanted to do their part. Let’s do our part.

BLACK LIVES MATTER!

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An (inspirational) Song for Saturday

“I want to see the world united and learn to live as one…”

Here’s a powerfully inspirational song that resonates today from Playing for Change, an organization that promotes social change by uniting musicians from around the world. (Email readers, you know the drill, link to the Roses website to view.)

“We have to bring the world together and learn to live as one…”

grace, peace & Unity

Virginia : )

“Without connectedness, we don’t exist fully as our truest selves. Becoming who we really are is a matter of learning how to become more and more deeply connected.” Richard Rohr, OFM

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#BlackoutTuesday #theShowMustBePaused

In response to the deaths of George Floyd and other black lives lost unjustly, today members of the music industry are highlighting the inequality that exists “from the boardroom to the boulevard” by pausing to reflect what can be done to change long-standing racism.

Blacking out our social media feeds (with hashtag #blackouttuesday) is a way to stand in solidarity against racism and inequality.

This initiative also seeks to engender honest and productive conversations about how we can support the black community. Click this link for more information and ways to take constructive action: #theshowmustbepaused.com

You can also click this link for anti-racism resources.

grace, peace & powerful pauses

Virginia

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Martin Luther King, Jr.

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A Prayer for Pentecost (& every day!)

On this Pentecost Sunday may the Holy Spirit fill us with unifying Love and Peace – the powerful peace of Jesus Christ that transcends all understanding.

Breathe in me Spirit of God, that I may think what is Holy.

Drive me, Spirit of God, that I may do what is Holy.

Draw me, Spirit of God, that I may love what is Holy.

Strengthen me, Spirit of God, that I may preserve what is Holy.

Guard me, Spirit of God, that I may never lose what is Holy.”

St. Augustine of Hippo

grace, peace & Holy Spirit power

Virginia : )

“You are God’s Good News. You are God’s love in action.” Mother Teresa

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Peace and Understanding

“Fear cuts deeper than swords.” George R.R. Martin

This redhead understands what it’s like to be afraid. As a survivor of violence (as posted here previously:#MeToo) I experienced feelings of abject terror, even in broad daylight. For years fear fractured my life in Big Ways.

I do understand what it means to be afraid.

But, as a redhead white chick I do not understand what it’s like to walk in a public place and be afraid of the very people who are meant to protect us and our rights as equals under the law (and in God’s eyes, too!)

Those tasked with protecting our most basic human right: to life.

I am mad, upset, aghast, appalled at what happened to George Floyd on Monday night in Minneapolis – a fellow American, a human being who deserved LIFE, not death in the custody of 4 police officers.

But my anger doesn’t hold a candle to what his family and African Americans across this country must feel.

I can try to put myself in their shoes – how would I feel if it was me? my brother? my father? my son? my friend?

But, I can’t understand fully, because I have not walked in public places where those wearing badges are harbingers of fear.

“Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.” Martin Luther King, Jr.

To my white friends out there, here’s a challenge. Let’s raise our voices against this injustice and all others like it.

Racially motivated violence perpetuated by the police (or anyone) is unacceptable!

But understand that we don’t fully understand the depth of fear out there. The frustration, despair, and rage at this death compounded by precious black lives lost previously.

It’s real.

It’s devastating.

It’s cutting through hearts deeper than any sword.

I am so sorry for the senseless loss of George Floyd’s life. May his soul rest in the Everlasting Peace of God.

And may the peace of God somehow change attitudes and calloused hearts everywhere that we are beloved of God, all of us (not just some!)

BLACK LIVES MATTER!!

grace, peace & understanding

Virginia

“God, Thy will be done in father, mother, child in everything and everywhere; without reserve, without a BUT, an IF, or limit.” Saint Francis de Sales

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Wearing a mask (in good company!)

As my brother and I meandered around downtown Williamsburg on Monday we spotted a Special Someone wearing a mask…

Thomas Jefferson!

As one of our country’s founders (he wrote the Declaration of Independence) Thomas Jefferson is highly esteemed in these parts.

Many moons ago he spent time in our town as a student @ the College of William and Mary. Hence his studious portrayal is located in close proximity to the College in downtown Williamsburg.

Masking it on Memorial Day (in Colonial Williamsburg)

Up there with George Washington, Thomas Jefferson is one of the most famous Virginians of the Revolutionary War era. So, if he is wearing a mask, we need to do our part!

Yesterday the governor of Virginia made it official, as of Friday we must wear masks when entering indoor public places. Most people here already are wearing masks inside everywhere, but now “please wear a mask” is “must wear a mask.”

We have been encouraged to be considerate of others (especially the vulnerable) but now we must think of others. That’s kinda nice, actually. What we should be doing anyway…

…wearing a mask in good company!

grace, peace & masks

Virginia : )

“Peace and friendship with all mankind is our wisest policy, and I wish we may be permitted to pursue it.” Thomas Jefferson

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