Great Calibrators of Faith

Our family has an “unknown” in our life today.  

It’s one of those situations where you have to wait and see, hold your emotions in check, wait some more, take a breath and wait again.  

We focus on the unknown when it’s really time to review what we know.  God is good.  The Lord reigns.  He is able. Lord, have mercy.  Those three-word sentences pack a powerful punch, don’t they? 

I’m thankful for unknowns, not because they make me happy, but because they can be great calibrators of faith.

Unknowns bring our vision into focus and remind us that our help comes from the Lord, the maker of heaven and earth.

We all subscribe in some measure to the myth of personal sovereignty; we all like to be in charge; we all have plans.  We plan for a straight road ahead and all of a sudden there is a curve!  

My husband’s words:  “As you know, the Lord sometimes draws straight with crooked lines.”   

Gift Giving for Book Lovers



Here’s a gift idea for those readers on your list.  If you know your beloved’s favorite author, and know that your beloved has read all the books by that author, don’t throw your hands up in despair.  Give your beloved bibliophile a favorite book of said bibliophile’s favorite author.  If you adore someone’s writing, surely you are curious about who/what shaped his views or molded her style.

My sister Margaret did this very thing a few months ago and I was delighted.  She gave me

and explained that she heard my favorite speaker, George Grant, say that this was his favorite book.  

This might take some research, but isn’t that what we have Google for?  Type in: literary influences “[author’s name]” and see what comes up.  You might get a young C.S. Lewis fan some George MacDonald books.


Or a Tolkien fan Seamus Heaney’s gorgeous translation of Beowulf.

Let’s take an example: Elisabeth Elliot. Your gift recipient loves EE and has all 26 of her books (!).  In the back of this book,

 

an obvious source to research Elisabeth Elliot, one finds a personal reading survey given to Christian leaders. When asked five books which were most influential in her life, her favorite novel, and her favorite biography, Elisabeth Elliot’s answers were:

Note: EE specified Evelyn Underhill’s The Mystery of Charity, which I couldn’t find.  So the image above is representative of Evelyn Underhill.  Also in EE’s list was Janet Erskine Stuart’s Life and Letters.

Is anyone out there salivating?  Welcome to the wonderful world of books, authors, and ideas.  It’s a beautiful life.

Monday Marriage Quotes


The quotes today are from the book A Puritan Golden Treasury.  Enjoy!

Marriage doth signify merry-age.         Henry Smith

First, he must choose his love, and then he must love his choice.   Henry Smith

Affection without action is like Rachel, beautiful but barren.          John Trapp

A greater hell I would not wish any man, than to live and not love the beloved of God.  Thomas Brooks

Of love there be two principal offices, one to give and another to forgive.   John Boys

The Greatest English Classic

If you love the Bible, you love English literature, and you adore words this would be a good book to read. 

I remember a conversation with a friend – a cynic, agnostic/atheist (he couldn’t decide), and a curmudgeon who couldn’t help but be lovable in his crankiness.  We worked together and often got sidetracked discussing our philosophies, viewpoints, etc.  We were opposites on so many issues; but we respected one another and usually had a cracking good time while we debated.  Finally, for efficiency, we restricted theology to Thursdays. 

Once, out of the blue, he asked, “Do you read the Bible every day, [insert last name]?”  

I squirmed and replied, “Well, I try to, but I have varying levels of consistency.” 

“You read the King James Version?” he continued.

“Uh, no.  Readability–vocabulary–not the best choice.”  We often telescoped our sentences when we talked.

“You’re flat wrong, Carol.  You ought to be reading the King James Version.  You will develop an ear for strong, muscular words, for poetry, for cadence, for language if you read the KJV.”

Isn’t it funny that, twenty years later, we now agree on that one?  I’m not an “exclusive KJV” Christian, but I really am enjoying reading through it. 

Cleland McAfee’s The Greatest English Classic (1912) tells the story of translations before the KJV, the making of the KJV, and why it is a classic.  He then outlines the influence the KJV has had on literature and history.

“The Bible is a book-making book.  It is literature which provokes literature.” (p.130)

This interested me:  He divided English literature since the making of the KJV (began 1604) into these groups:
          1. Jacobean Period (Milton, Bunyan, Dryden, Addison, Pope)
          2. Georgian Period (Shelley, Byron, Coleridge, Scott, Wordsworth)
          3. Victorian Age (Arnold, Browning, Carlyle, Dickens, Eliot, Kingsby, Macauly, Ruskin, Stevenson,                         Swinburne, Tennyson, Thackery)
          4.  American Writers (Franklin, Poe, Irving, Bryant, Curtis, Emerson, Hawthorne, Holmes, Lowell,                             Longfellow, Thoreau, Whittier)
 
Remember: this book was written in 1912.  Do you notice who is missing from the list?  Miss Jane!! HELLO!!  And I am heartbroken to tell you I didn’t copy the quote about Austen, so I shall have to paraphrase:

       ~ Austen doesn’t have any lasting influence on the flow of English literature. ~

So that’s what he thought back then.  There was enough other good stuff to atone for this grievous offence, but I did contemplate throwing the book against the wall for one moment.

“There has come about a “decay of literary allusions,” as one of our papers editorially says.  In much of our writing, either the transient or the permanent, men can no longer risk easy reference to classical literature. ” (p. 270)

“The tendency of language is always to become vague, since we are lazy in the use of it.  We use one word in various ways, and a pet one for many ideas.” (p.102)

I gleaned several names of authors I’d like to explore from this book (John Ruskin, Maria Edgeworth, Thomas Grey).  I was also reminded of favorite passages I’ve read in the past that I’d like to revisit (from Eliot, Dickens and Tennyson).

Fine Art Friday – My Brother!

My brother Jim (the physician) is hands-down the most artistic of the seven children in our family.  I adored him as a child (still do) and he tolerated my puppy-dog devotion, willingly sharing his plans for the art project of the week.  He is a master designer and a wonderful executor of his designs.

Six years ago, I saw some small watercolors he painted and subtly hinted implored, begged, eagerly asked for a one watercolor of his to hang on my wall.  To my joy, my exuberant joy, a package came this week with my wish. 

The Adirondack chairs are sitting on a hill on a island which is my brother’s family’s favorite getaway.  It is an artist colony with no automobiles, a lovely public library; an island famous for its remarkable light.  They speak with such love for this place and take every opportunity to spend time there.

I have to share with you one of Jim’s most excellent projects: the cover of the wedding invitation for his wedding.  He drew a chalice.  Anyone who knows them will clearly see the profile of Jim and Kathleen’s faces in the chalice.

Folks, it’s a Fine Art Friday Feast today.  I haven’t gotten to all my usual online haunts but please, please, check these out: Maple Grove  Quiet Life Seasonal Soundings Mental Multi-vitamin .  You will be enriched by these posts, I promise.
                                 
I found the perfect spot for my treasure in our bedroom.  I can look to my right when sitting at the computer and this is my view: 

She’s Not Here, A Short Story

phone

The young girl sat up in her bed, rubbed the sleep out of her eyes, threw her hair off her face in one easy motion, and scrambled out of bed.  It was early Saturday morning. The house was hushed and still.  With the stealth of a burglar she tiptoed down the hallway and carefully descended the creaky stairs.

After some major disruptions in the household, the ten-year old clung to the solid comfort of this familiar routine.  She turned on the stereo, adjusted the tuner, and turned the volume at the lowest possible setting. Grabbing some pillows off the sofa, she plopped on the floor inches from the speaker, flat on her stomach, her elbows in the pillows and her hands cupped under her chin.

The next two hours brought radio programs for children.  Thirsty for story, she drank in the drama while the rest of the house slept. Midway through the last program the jangle of the telephone ringing pierced the quiet.  Like quicksilver she jumped up and grabbed the receiver before the phone rang again.

“Hello,” her high childish voice could barely be heard.

“Hi! Is your mommy there?”  the other voice trilled.

“Mmm…no,” she whispered tentatively.

“Would you leave her a message, please?”

“’kay…,” her voice wavered.

“The chair she had reupholstered is finished and is ready to be picked up at the shop.”

 “Thanks. Good-bye.”

She replaced the receiver and returned to her position on the floor.

~     ~     ~     ~     ~     ~

The liturgy of the next Saturday was the same as the first.  The family slept while the young girl listened to Aunt Bee, Ranger Bill, and Sailor Sam.  She took every precaution  to listen to her radio without waking them.  Once again, the loud ring of the telephone shattered the solitude. Once again, she darted to the dining room side table and grabbed the phone before the second ring.

“Hello.”

 “Hello!  I’d like to speak to Nellie Harper!”

 The girl paused; she finally said, “She’s not here.”

 “Well, listen hon, this is the upholstery shop calling, and I called last week and left a message.  I told her when she brought it in that it would be ready in two weeks, and this chair has been in the shop for a month now, and I really need your mom to pick up this chair.  Would you puh-lease let her know?”   Her voice was a mixture of cloying sweetness and ill-concealed irritation.

 “Hmmm.”  came out in hushed tones.

 “Thanks, hon, I really appreciate it. You have a good day, now.”

~     ~     ~     ~      ~     ~

A week went by.  The light was lasting longer, birds were chirping in the trees, and  school was winding down.  Summer had almost arrived, though the markers of seasonal change were little noted in that house.  Once again, the young girl woke up early Saturday morning, worked her way around the squeaky steps and kept her rendezvous with the radio.

She wasn’t surprised when the phone rang; she answered it as she had done before.

“Hello,” spoken softly, so softly.

 “Hi!”  spoken in the tone of one eager to check off items on her list.

 They both recognized the other’s voice; they both had the script memorized.

 “Honey, look, is your mommy home this morning?” came the coaxing plea.

 “No.”   The single syllable dangled in space with nothing to support it.

 Exasperated, the woman on the other end of the line raised her voice.

“Well, where is she?  I’ve called, I’ve left messages, and still Nellie has not picked up her chair.”

She clipped each word shorter than a buzz cut.

The moment of truth could be delayed no longer.  The words that were stuck in the child’s throat, words that could not be spoken the previous Saturdays, words that were impossible to say, even today, were forcefully dislodged.

 “Ummm………she………well……..ummmm.   She died.”

 “Ohmygosh, she died? She died?  Your mommy died? What happened?  Oh, honey, I’m so sorry, I’m so sorry.  Was she in an accident?  She died?  I had no idea.  Oh, honey, I’m so very, very sorry.  Oh dear.  I–am–so–sorry.”

 “No…..she…….just……died.”

The silence was more uncomfortable for the girl than for the woman.  She sensed the shock, the awkward drop, the conversational vertigo of the voice on the other end.  The ten-year old knew she would have to bridge the gap and end this call.  The girl found her voice.

“It’s all right.  You didn’t know.  It’s okay. No one told you.  I’ll tell my daddy about the chair when he wakes up, okay?  He’ll come to your shop and get the chair.  It’s okay.  You didn’t know… Good-bye.”

She walked back to the stereo, turned the radio off, sat down on the floor and sobbed.

My mistress’ eyes are nothing like the sun;
Coral is far more red than her lips’ red;
If snow be white, why then her breasts are dun;
If hairs be wires, black wires grow on her head.
I have seen roses damasked, red and white,
But no such roses see I in her cheeks,
And in some perfumes there is more delight
Than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.
I love to hear her speak, yet well I know
That music hath a far more pleasing sound;
I grant I never saw a goddess go:
My mistress when she walks treads on the ground.

And yet by heaven I think my love as rare
As any she belied with false compare.

Sonnet CXXX
 ~ William Shakespeare

“And in some perfumes there is more delight than in the breath that from my mistress reeks.” Did you laugh outloud when you read this line?  I did! I love this sonnet, I think, because I could imagine my husband saying these words.  It was his honesty, his integrity that drew me to him, and honest he is.  Even when I have bad breath.  Kind, mind you, but truthful.  He eschews sentimentality and doesn’t particularly care for Hallmark cards. The couplet at the end is essential to the sonnet.  Because his love is also the truth.

My middle son, who is getting married next month, inherited the blunt genes but also the kind ones.  I can count on him to let me know if I have missed plucking a truant hair from my chin.   I value this highly because I hate those nasty female chin hairs!  And I know he loves me, and it is this love and not nastiness that informs those lovely conversations. 

There is Power in the Cord





Oh boy, do I feel sheepish!!  I took our computer in Monday morning and picked it up this afternoon.  The computer wouldn’t even power up causing us dry gulps and sinking stomachs.

It was the power cord.

The gracious technician carried the computer to my car, handed me a new power cord, and didn’t bill me for his time.  Believe me, we are backing up whatever wasn’t backed up.  Gotta catch up on email, blogs, etc.  I need to type my school schedule for November.  I never knew how much we used the web for reference until it was gone.  Whew!  Praise God from Whom all blessings, even impotent power cords, flow.


For Lisa, the dearest of dear friends,

OLD FRIENDSHIP

Beautiful and rich is an old friendship,

Grateful to the touch as ancient ivory,

Smooth as aged wine, or sheen of tapestry

Where light has lingered, intimate and long.

Full of tears and warm is an old friendship

That asks no longer deeds of gallantry,

Or any deed at all – save that the friend shall be

Alive and breathing somewhere, like a song.

Eunice Tierjens, Leaves in Windy Weather

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Our computer at home died.  Dead.  We are hoping for a resurrection and waiting for an Elijah to come visiting.  (Or is it Elisha?)  I’m at the library and have lost this post once already; I’m pushing the 30 minute internet limit, but they like me here!  I had a picture in mind for Fine Art Friday and can’t find it on the web.  Rats!

I’m trying to learn thankfulness in all things.  I want to type: (sigh); but I don’t think sighing is learning thankfulness, do you?  (grin) 

This week has brought a mixture of light fun and heavy interactions.  Have you noticed that emotional work is very exhausting?  I’m getting random – I’d better go.  Happy November, dear reader.