I’ve hit my limit-But it isn’t God’s

Over the last five years, there have been so many “unforgivable” events that have occurred in my life that I no longer have enough digits left to count them all.

This past week, after a freak accident, a straw has broken the camels back. The aggressor has taken things to a whole new level, a level I thought they never would. Because deep down, I truly thought that they did appreciate what I had done for them in the past. I really believed that at some level they realized my abilities as a mother. But I now have my final message that is absolutely not true. They will stop at nothing.

I really am at my wits end. I have to say that Jesus’s 7×70 command to me is truly being tested.

It has taking every ounce of my energy to even function at basic levels this week. I’m tired. I am so tired.

But this is the thing. This is where God’s promise comes in. We don’t have to live by the laws of this earth. I mean, we generally have to-because God’s Laws are the laws here on earth. But when the laws start to separate-when you have that twinge in your stomach that you know if you do something society wants you to do won’t be what God wants you to do, you don’t have to question it. GOD KNOWS. GOD IS THERE. God is walking with you.

God didn’t promise us perfect lives free from pain, but he did promise us salvation if we believe in him. So GOD is who I am setting my eyes on right now. He is who is getting me through.

The teachings of the Laws and the Prophets were preached until John came. Since then, the good news of God’s Kingdom is being preached. And everyone is trying very hard to enter it.

-Luke 16:16

Obviously we don’t want to go to jail, so we do have to follow the laws of this world. However ANY time the laws of this world cause you to have to question your integrity with God, follow God’s law.

I have hidden your word in my heart so that I won’t sin against you. Lord, I praise – teach me your orders.

-Psalm 119.

10 Commandments:

Peaceful Change

Today we celebrate a man who used the concept of the peaceful protest to enact Change. Born on January 15, 1929, Dr. Martin Luther King used his teachings as a Baptist minister and also teachings that he learned from Mahatma Ghandi as a basis for how he ran his protests. What I find most admirable about this man, is that he not only believed that peacefully providing your message was the way to enact change, he got others to follow him.

Martin Luther King Day celebrates his birthday, honors his legacy, and shines a light on the continued need for civil rights in this country. On November 2, 1983, President Ronald Reagan signed into law that every third Monday in January would be Martin Luther King Day, a Government Holiday.

Continue reading Peaceful Change

Steeples

As I was driving over the main bridge into my town this evening, I looked south down the river. The sun was setting Over the Fox.

It was beautiful.

Do you know what I saw? Church steeples. Now, lots of towns have churches, but my town has an abundance of churches. Historic churches.

In 1836, at the request of a prominent early settler of Batavia, William Van Nortwick, a circuit rider was dispatched to serve the Methodist of the Fox River Valley. In Batavia, classes were held for 16 years in the residence of William Van Nortwick. A street is named after him.

Seeing so many steeples made me think of the following questions…

1. What is the draw of the Church? What do people need?

2. Why are there so many types of churches?

3. What is the answer?

What do we need?

According to 1 Corinthians 13, we need Love. If we give all we possess to the poor, but do not love, we have nothing.

According to Ephesians 6:10, we need to put on the Armor of God. This is in order to stand against the devil’s schemes. We can have all kinds of good intentions, but if we aren’t aligned with God’s intentions, it will be more difficult.

According to James 14, we need both faith and deeds. If you have faith, but let a person in need go, the faith does no good. If you do good deeds, but have no faith, same thing. You need both.

Why so many churches?

Martin Luther, known for nailing his “95 Theses” to the door of a Catholic church on Halloween in 1517, did not like the book of James, amongst lots of other things including paid indulgences in the Catholic Church. No one knows the true reason why he didn’t like the book of James and there are lots of assumptions. First, however, according to one Biblical Commentary, His opinion of the book (written in his preface to the New Testament) was as follows.

“St. John’ Gospel and his first Epistle, St. Paul’s Epistles, especially those to the Romans, Galatians, Ephesians, and St. Peter’s Epistle – these are the books which show to thee Christ . . . Therefore, St. James’ Epistle is a perfect straw-epistle compared with them . . .” (Basic Theology, article “The Canon”)

So Martin Luther basically said that the Book of James was an “Epistle of Straw”. So essentially he was saying that it didn’t show the true character of the apostles.

He apparently rescinded his remark later.

His thesis and protests caused the second major split in the Christian Church. Protestants split off from the Roman Catholics and from there several churches have been formed.

Martin Luther’s attempt to remove James from the Bible did not hold-it is in the Protestant bible. It is an important book-especially for those who are going through difficult times. Short and sweet.

What is the answer? Forgiveness. Forgiveness heals everything. God is behind forgiveness.

The Catholics and Lutherans have begun the healing process. Everything needs forgiveness, because even in his fleeting moments, Martin Luther WAS right. The indulgences that the Catholics were paying for in the 16th Century were wrong. However, his deeds were not in line with what God wanted (as God asks for in Ephesians 6:10) He didn’t listen to God’s will. In his anger and frustration, he went a little overboard and the message got misconstrued for over 500 years.

A major split occurred in the Christian Church due to his boisterousness.

But God fixes everything. This year during advent, my Catholic Church did a special Lessons and Carols with a nearby Lutheran Church because the two corporate churches are trying to repair the rift.

So yes. God can heal the deepest wounds and fix the worst situations. He can bring anything back together.

Helpful Quote From An Unlikely Place (At Least for Me)

If you get the man or woman right, you get the world right. Such a simple message – yet we seem constantly obsessed with things we have no influence over, rather than focusing on where WE have the most impact, which is our own thoughts, words, and actions. It is our own thoughts, words, and actions that are at the epicenter of our circle of influence. The further we get away from them, worrying about what other people are thinking and saying or doing, the weaker our influence and impact becomes. Focus on effecting what you can affect and you will have the most effect. It all starts with you. – Matthew Kelly

Forgiveness Comes in Waves

Merry Christmas everyone. Last night, I celebrated Jesus’s birth in choir at a Catholic Church. It was Magical. Anyone who knows me really well is probably in shock. I grew up Catholic, born and raised. I was baptized, first communion, and confirmed. The Only sacrament that I did not complete in the Catholic Church was marriage.

I swore up and down in early adulthood that I would never be Catholic again. Things that I just didn’t understand, along with things that happened in the Catholic Church in the late 90’s, tainted me. However, over the last few years, several events have sent me on a path back home. My great grandmother died in February 2015 and it was at that Funeral that I told my father about discovering things about my ex and our impending divorce. That day, my dad committed to sending me an encouraging email everyday day moving forward. Without fail, every day forward, he has followed through on his promise and restored my faith in his love for me.

They say that grief is like waves crashing, sometimes it is like a tightrope that isn’t taught. At the beginning, the waves are all encompassing – they overcome you and knock you down. Then they subside, then they come back. If you have done your work and have allowed yourself to FEEL your grief, hopefully the next wave won’t be so intense. I think that you can say the same thing about anger. The hardest part about anger is that sometimes you find it hard to leave a situation that maybe you should. That maybe was a catalyst of the anger.

It has been very hard for me to realize that a large part of my anger comes from the fact that I have realized that I was putting my emotions and efforts into activities, people, and places that just didn’t think I was valuable enough for them. Or maybe, the issue I was going through wasn’t “socially acceptable” in those circles so I had to struggle through my issue on my own. Or, as I have been told, my emotions were “too much”.

To make matters worse, I felt judged. I felt judged about the loss of my marriage and then later on, when I was struggling with some insidious bullying, and I needed compassion, I didn’t have any clue who I could trust to reach out to. That is a bad feeling when you know you have been somewhere for over 10 years and you still don’t know if you can trust people with your soul. When I lost my children, for a period due to cracking from pressure, I felt an overwhelming sense of judgment.

I haven’t posted on here in a while. I think it is because I went though a necessary period of anger that just didn’t allow me to talk about forgiveness. I think I had to fully process the anger I felt toward my fellow members of a previous group for not being there for me when I needed them so much. I put my money, my heart, and my soul into them in the early days of my first marriage. I was so excited about the prospects of making new friends there.

However, over the years, I never really became a permanent member of any group there. I didn’t really make any significant friends. I would participate in really meaningful prayer groups, but once they were over, the social benefit was over too. I was a busy working mom – I didn’t have time to keep up with trying to figure out who was in charge of all the social activities. And those people certainly weren’t including me. After a while, I just gave up.

After I lost my children (I have them back) a couple of people were there to help me; however, I found myself wondering if I was supported when I was there.

The fact is that when you admit that you can’t blame anyone or anything else, you begin to blame yourself. The human mind gives up trying to find an executioner, but still must blame someone. Anger that is not expressed tends to turn inward and, instead, attacks the very one who feels it. You move from anger into guilt or depression. – Kate McGahan, Return from Rainbow Bridge

In his book, the Untethered Soul, Michael Singer says that we all create mental models in our mind to make sense of the world and others. Essentially, our internally dialogue decides how we think others should act in certain situations. When people don’t talk and act the way we would expect them to, in a certain situation, we struggle. We begin to experience grief. Because the outside world is not meeting our expectations. We become hurt.

Through prayer, I have slowly begun to heal. But it has been a VERY slow process. Writing this post is a necessary component of my journey, I feel.

I don’t feel that I can go back to where I was before. I certainly can’t move back to Michigan because my children are here.

Too much hurt has occurred and not enough “I’m sorry’s”. But God wants us to forgive despite the lack of I’m sorry’s. The forgiveness is here. In my heart the people in my past are forgiven even when I don’t enter the doors. But going through those doors is like pulling off a band-aid of pain. Of 100’s of unmet expectations of how the other humans should have treated me when I was going through the worst time in my life. I saw them treating others with that kindness, why not me?

So – I will say a Prayer that I forgot for 20 years but that has now given me immense peace over the last couple months:

Hail Mary, Full Of Grace, The Lord is with thee. Blessed Art Thou Among Women and Blessed is the Fruit of Thy Womb Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother Of God. Pray for us sinners. Now, and at the hour of our death, Amen.

A few weeks ago, I lost my coat. It ended up getting left at my child’s school during his book fair. So when I was searching for another coat to go out, I saw something sticking out of the pocket Of the coat I wore a lot in 2015. They were the prayer cards from my Great Grandmothers funeral. I had kept them all these years. I think that God intended for me to have the journey I did all along. I may not have been perfect or normal, but it was mine.

May the Joy and Peace that Jesus is with us follow you every day. And may you also remember that you can call on Mary, his mother, for comfort in your times of need.