Excuse Me, What Did You Just Say?

Excuse Me, What Did You Just Say? – Part I

Money is one of the currencies we employ to facilitate the exchange between our wants and needs and the products and services that satisfy them. I purposely use the word exchange rather than “buy” or “purchase”, because often the money we get is compensation for our time and effort. Therefore, for the sake of this blog, we understand that we don’t simply pay cash to buy something or some service. Somewhere, in the lineage of this, seemingly, simple exchange (buying a latte at Starbucks for example) we have brought part of our life experience into the mix. We have become part of the exchange.

In a similar fashion, words are the currencies we employ to facilitate the exchange between our soul and spirit and our, ever-growing, universe. God used words to create the visible and invisible worlds. Our words create bridges between us and our God and others. Our words often facilitate exchanges far beyond our comprehension. With our words we can hurt or heal, help or hinder. With them we express our innermost thoughts and feelings toward others whether they be kind, critical, peaceful or fearful. With them we order a meal at our favorite restaurant with expressions of indifference toward the server or value for the service they are rendering.

One of the people I admire is Randall Worley. I’ve heard him speak on several occasions. He is what many would consider a “wordsmith.” He articulates well, is well versed, practiced in speaking and can say more in a sentence or two than most labor to do with an excess of words that really say little.

Randall once shared that in our church culture he felt that through redundancy and over-use, many of our words had been worn smooth in our excessive use of them. That picture stayed with me for years. I felt that I completely understood what he said but the deeper implication eluded me for years until I saw another, slightly different picture.

I was sitting next to a brook. The water was clear, flowing and I could easily see the stones on the bottom. They, like the words in Randall’s analogy, were worn smooth with the constant flow of the water. At that moment I felt that Holy Spirit asked me what I saw. I recounted to Him exactly what I have just described to you, my reader. He then asked me, almost rhetorically, what was going on. For that moment I was simply absorbed in what I saw in the brook. Then, I realized that outside of the water nothing was moving. The stones were worn smooth so that nothing on the surface of them would catch the power of the water and be moved.

By analogy is the water our words and we the stones? By over-use have we become worn by the same references that by now have become so cliché that they have lost their meaning? Are we constantly engaged in so much small talk that seems, after all, meaningless in contrast with life-giving dialogue between two people who could have so much to say?

Do we have a propensity to talk much and say little? Do our words move people? (And, not with manipulation but with inspiration.) Should they? When we show up do we serve up our typical entrée consisting of either gossip, criticism or, particularly, self-aggrandizement?

On the other hand does our speech make room for others to grow, express, flourish and be free? Do we engage in such a way that we have created an environment for ideas and ideals that can be mutually beneficial? Do others become more alive and energized or do they politely bear with us as we drone on and on about our latest whatever?

Imagine the worlds we can create, in fresh new ways, by being intentional with our words. If our mouths speak what is abundant in our hearts, may we not reap cliché and redundancy but that which edifies every person and situation.

Fruit Salad

I’ve been thinking often about my maternal grandmother lately. She emigrated to America with her parents prior to World War I. They left the Austro-Hungarian Empire to seek their fortune here and ended up operating a boarding house in New Jersey. It was there that my grandmother really learned to cook. I still remember her cooking to be the best I ever tasted. In the 1950’s almost everything was fresh and done from scratch and the fast food establishment was still years away.

There are so many Old World, mainly eastern European, dishes that she was an absolute master at preparing but I want to focus simply on her fruit salad. And she was a master at that, as well. She was meticulous about preparation, freshness, proportion and making sure all of the seeds were out of the oranges, apples, cherries, peaches, plums, nectarines, grapes and all other seeds that needed to be removed from their fruit. She had a particular expertise about making it naturally sweet, using the right combinations of different fruits, without using sugar and cutting the juicy fruits in such a way as to keep the juice in the fruit and not in the bottom of the bowl. She was magnificently genius. But even on her best day she couldn’t outdo the fruit salad of the Spirit. I call it salad because I think His fruit comes with the same balance, flavor and uniqueness that Grandma’s salad did. But it comes with one major difference that makes His so completely unique.

A simple word search reveals different fruits from the heart of God that become available to us through the indwelling and infilling of His Spirit. Most are familiar with the Galatian’s list: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. I’ve heard it emphasized that love appears first in this list as if it is the most important and I get that line of thinking. In fact, I believe that it all flows from love since that, after all, is Who He is. But since they are fruits of His presence in us, would self-control, last on the list, be any less important, available or desirable than the rest?

In Paul’s opening prayer for the church at Philippi he mentions being filled with the fruit of righteousness which comes through Jesus Christ. He declares over the church at Ephesus that now, they are the children of Light and the fruit of that Light consists in all goodness and righteousness and truth. And the author of Hebrews in speaking of discipline says it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness. But the verse that got my attention and seemed to cause this delicious tension between Grandma’s fruit salad and His is found in James.

James 3:17-18 But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere. And a harvest of righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace. ESV

The operative word in that verse that gave rise to this salad story is “sown”. Seeds are sown. Might it just be that the fruit manifested in and through us from Holy Spirit did not have the seeds removed, unlike Grandma’s fruit, so that in revealing Him, we might sow them into the people and circumstances and environments in our world? If so, a harvest awaits.

I’ll have more, please.

Imagine

Before we resume the chronology of “The Cancer Trip” I though I would post something I wrote about 4 years ago. Perhaps it will be a timely reflection for some.

Imagine by Gary Wilson 2/13/13

Imagine the relief you would feel at not having to compete with anyone or anything.

Imagine the freedom of just being you and no one else.

Imagine that God did everything right when He had you in mind and that He would love you just to be you, because He made That you and THAT you has all the unique qualities, the singular qualities that no one else on earth has; and that is the you He loves to love, enjoy, have relationship with and made for others to enjoy . . .

Imagine never looking back again.

Imagine that you are loved and appreciated by others far more than you can imagine right now and they are just waiting for you to open up so they can fill you with what God has put in their hearts solely for you.

Imagine how much you just may mean to others and how empty they would feel without you.

Imagine, in the moments you feel the most insignificant, that that could be precisely the time God is planning to work a miracle in and through you.

Imagine not hurrying anymore to become, but resting content in every day as God transforms you and renews your mind simply because you asked Him to.

Imagine forgiving everyone for everything they ever did to hurt you.

Imagine forgiving yourself, once and for all.

Imagine Father hugging and kissing you right now, looking into your eyes and telling you how much He adores you.

Imagine.

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