Beyond My View

For my original OneWord post, click here.

It was with a bit of trepidation that I choose “beyond” as my word for 2011. After all, I knew that it would test my self-imposed limitations and challenge my willingness to accept the status quo. It didn’t take long for that to prove true. A week after I posted my OneWord, I went on a retreat with my church’s college group. Some may think that this was a challenge in and of itself, but as I have a special place in my heart for these students, this was a joy, not a stretch for me. It was what happened on the trip that prompted me to act concert with my OneWord.

First a little background – somewhere in my childhood I developed a fear of falling. My sister tells me that child researches think this is the one inherent fear in infants. For me, however, I think it became a limiting principle for me when I fell out of tree at my grandma’s house sometime before age 5. I don’t remember much about the experience but I remember the feeling of invincibility as I started climbing, and the fear I had when I ended up on the ground. I think I my have gotten over this except the years would prove that climbing wasn’t my forte and there would be a number of other, smaller falls awaiting me in the future. And so somewhere along the way, I decided that I would do what I could to keep my feet firmly planted on solid ground.

And then I went to the retreat….where there was a zip line….on a mountain…after choosing beyond as my word.

As I debated whether or not I would go, the word reverberated in my ears.

How could I claim to own “beyond” in 2011 if a perfectly safe zip line would stifle me on the eighth day of the year?

And so I went. I climbed the hill and dealt with loving friends who tried to intensify my fears. I braved the huge rope net that I had to go up in order to get to the zip line (truth be told, the net scared me perhaps more than the actual zip line.) I sat on the platform and waited for the countdown. And then I went.

Soaring through the air, I was mesmerized by my surroundings.

The mountains were breathtaking.

The air was invigorating.

The landscape a testament to the artistry of our Creator.

And I kept thinking – I would have never had this perspective if I didn’t give the zip line a chance.

My view would have been limited to what I had always known.

I would have never seen beyond my accepted perspective.

And the fear I felt was worth it. And knowing that even in a small way I had lived in keeping with my OneWord encouraged me to keep doing so for the rest of the year.

Continue Reading

Taste & See

One of the things I most love about God’s Word is the imagery throughout it. Whether it’s describing the anguish Christ felt in Gethsemane or the idioms of the Proverbs (See Proverbs 26:11 or 26:17), the Bible is full of mental pictures that help us not only more fully understand the intent of the words, but recall them when we need them most.

Recently, one piece of imagery has become especially meaningful to me. In Psalm 34:8a, we are commanded to “Taste and see that the Lord is good.” It’s interesting language because usually you don’t think of tasting another person’s goodness. You might see it, but to taste involves a sense that we don’t usually relate to an assessment of another’s character. Tasting involves experiencing His goodness on a deeper level beyond just bearing witness to it.

It means that you are actively involved in digesting the majesty of His faithfulness.

You are consuming the riches of His mercy.

And you are hungering for more of Him to fill you.

There are times that we convince ourselves that are eyes are deceiving us, but I’ve never heard of someone’s taste buds playing tricks on them. Tasting then helps us realize the reality of who God is and how His goodness is demonstrated in our lives.When we both taste and see the evidence of God’s character, we more fully experience and are more fully aware of the reality of that goodness.

May we taste and see God’s goodness today.

Continue Reading