Just ask any of my family and they’ll be the first to tell you: I can’t cook (really, I can’t). I burn toast in the toaster, make hotdogs black on the stove, my eggs are more like edible rubber, and my oatmeal is…. well… I say it’s like oatmeal rice pudding, but no one else can eat it. I’ve even ruined those Maruchan Instant Lunch cups (I thought that cup contained everything needed for the meal. Didn’t realize you were on your own for the water. Victory Christian Academy will forever remember that lunch break). Anything domesticated feels foreign to me.
Read MoreA. W. Tozer once said, “The cross will cut into where it hurts worst, sparing neither us nor our carefully cultivated reputations.” Any brief glance at history and you will find ordinary people whom God called to do extraordinary things — things that did not win them popularity in their day. He gave them tasks and assigned them responsibilities that were cause for concern among their superiors. He laid out paths for them to follow that were ridiculous — courses of action that made no sense to the people they loved the most.
Read MoreTwenty-four years ago right about now, in the living room of the home I’ve grown up in, I took my first breaths in this world. It would be three days before my parents could settle on a name [see, my dad thought I would be a boy and since my mom didn’t go to a doctor or midwife, they didn’t know what I’d be. I was to have been named Merrill Joseph, but with me spoiling there plans and being a girl, they couldn’t decide anything for three days (identity crisis right there)]. The man I was named after went to be with Jesus twenty-four days ago.
Read MoreGuest post by Elizabeth Smith Hamilton. “Every generation must make a rediscovery of the faith” is one of Daddy’s sayings from when I was a child that has come back to haunt me. I’ve realized that this means a discovery of EVERYTHING. Of holy living. Of a separated life. Of what it means to be more than a conqueror. Of which weapons to use. I feel like I’m in my parents’ basement discovering old treasures that they loved, seeing them again with new eyes. Uncle Buddy Robinson said when he heard the gospel message, it felt like the ink must still be wet. It seemed like Jesus had died the week before somewhere in Texas. This is a rediscovery of the faith.
Read MoreFor those accustomed to wild and waste places, a two-week hike through the Absaroka-Beartooth Wilderness in Southwestern Montana is no small feat. For those who don’t make sleeping under the stars for weeks and surviving on peanut butter and wild game a regular habit, such an undertaking might prove fatal. Earlier this summer, a friend of mine made the tedious trek through the Beartooth with a couple of other guys. We break into their story now that they are above the tree line. Steep, rocky slopes hem them in on both sides, giving it a Lord of the Rings feel.
Read MoreShe’d tried for twelve years to find a remedy to her ailment. Medicines and surgeries and oils and spices and diet changes, I’m sure everyone had exhausted their fix-all’s on her. Doctors and mothers and Young Living representatives, they’d heard of her problem, but their extensive solutions proved empty. It probably came as no surprise to them to see her elbowing her way to the Healer, the Jesus Who’d touched so many broken people.
Read MoreEvery generation must make a rediscovery of the faith.
Abraham stumbled to the summit of Mount Moriah and there proved God to provide. A starving Isaac traipsed his family to the Philistine’s Gerar and there the Lord made the same covenant to a second generation. A fugitive Jacob found a faithful God as his head rested on a slab of stone in the plains of Bethel. Moses was startled by a burning shrub and the voice of God on the side of Mount Horeb.
Read MoreHe was a young man at the time, probably in his early 20’s, though we’re not sure exactly. It’s undetermined if the start of the life he buried was a seedling or a sapling. All I’ve been told is that he helped plant trees: trees to provide shade for a campground where he believed his children would one day grow up. He would be an old man before he could enjoy their laden foliage. He planted them, not for himself, but for those who would follow him.
Read MoreNot a one of us can escape the fact that our lives are built on stones. Our very essence is settled on the bedrock of our beliefs, on the slabs of our experiences. When certain foundations we once felt were secure begin to shift and subside it is easy to censure the entirety of our infrastructure. Stone by cemented stone, we look for cracks in ideology, theology, philosophy, or spirituality. We can become quick to dismiss or dismantle any one of them for perceived contraventions or inconsistencies. For each of us the crisis comes in dissimilar ways and at disparate times.
Read More(THE END OF THE BEGINNING)
I’m overwhelmed by the friends and family that surround me: their love, their support, their cheering me on, their belief in me. I’m blessed by you — you who have never met me, yet read what I write, listen to my music, and support my ministry. I’m underserving of the steadfast love (the hesed) and faithfulness of a God who goes before me, preparing the way, opening and closing doors, guiding with His eye, directing with His voice. The road ahead is being prepared by Him. In that I take comfort.
Read MoreMy grandfather (Rev. Lewis Smith) went to be with Jesus one year ago today. I created this video in the weeks between his home-going and his funeral, but never shared it via my blog. I thought it would be fitting to post this today as we remember a man who made it his lifelong pursuit to build bridges and love people.
Read MoreSometimes it is easy to be focused on the prayers he doesn't answer. I'm glad that tonight, Jesus heard me specifically pray the lines to this song as I listened to Fernando Ortega sing them. God proved once again that he is mighty to save, his arm is long, and his pleasure is to care for us. Most of all, I am humbled to remember that he is listening to the requests we make when overwhelmed and the laments we whisper when alone. He is Our Great God.
Read MoreI take a break from a rather tedious evening of studying Hebrew to reflect on my feelings of going back to kindergarten. There's nothing that will make you feel like you know *absolutely nothing* quite like learning a new language. I write out the letters of the alphabet 10 times in a row (right to left of course), going as fast as I can, and try to somehow make it under a minute: "Aleph, Bet, Gimmel…
Read MoreThough in Psalm 91 we find God's promise to protect us and give us power over lions, snakes, and snares of all sorts, this is not what I find most comforting. Maybe if I were living in the jungles of Ethiopia or the rainforests of the Amazon, I would take greater refuge in the literal interpretation of these verses. The greatest dangers that threaten my habitat aren't usually snakes and lions; yet, I rest in the promise that God gives us power over the most menacing forms of evil…
Read MoreI choose to thank Him for the forgotten because I don’t ever want to come to the place when I ask Him only for the pleasant or comforting. I thank Him for the painful and distressing because I know that by drinking from these cups, I will come to know Him more fully. And by coming to know Him more fully, I will be able to stretch out open hands to a world that knows nothing but “forgotten things.”
Read More...I was stirred again at the thought of our Heavenly Father’s perception of his children. He longs for us to be persistent. “He delights in our oft coming to him.” He waits for us to expect him to move. I think that too often, we make our way to the kennel, too downhearted or discouraged to bother standing by the bed; too consumed in our circumstances to expect God to do something about it...
Read MoreMy maternal grandfather turned 91 years old yesterday. I’ve only known him for 21 years of his very active life. In his lifetime, he pastored the church I’ve grown up in for over 50 years, and since “retiring” has visited numerous mission fields. He can boast of ministering in 16 foreign countries, and he is making plans to visit another mission field shortly (he’ll be flying to Australia next month). Grandpa Smith isn’t very educated, has no musical ability whatsoever, and could never be called a great orator. But the heritage he left his family is stunning and priceless...
Read MoreThe story behind Merilee’s most recent album, Treasures of Darkness
From our earliest memories, most of us have known the fear of darkness. We’ve sensed the menacing sorrow that stirs when the sun slips over the western horizon and the blackness of night stills on. We’ve known the whitened knuckles and weakened knees that result from the overwhelming grief that shatters our well-ordered and comfortably predictable lives. We’ve tasted tears in their bitterest state. We’ve buried broken things that could never be made beautiful. And we’ve shuddered under the darkening shadows that shrouded a hopeful sun...
Read MoreAnd maybe more esoteric and less comfortable are the lyrics to the last verse. I recently reworked the lines, but they carry the same message of five years ago. The easiest thing to do when others hurt us is to close our hearts and quit loving… “We grow weary of the loving/ And we fear the grief again.” God was faithful to me and reminded me of the importance of a childlike trust, a childlike faith, and a childlike love.
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