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Author Archives: Janell

Foot Washing

26 Thursday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in Soul Care

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Soul Care

I’m bedeviled by dust in this season of Lent. 

 

It began on Ash Wednesday, with a cross of dust traced on my forehead.  It continued in a lament on Dust-Keeping, where I pondered the resilience of dust and how difficult its complete removal can be.  And now its dusty feet and another dusty cross. Is this circle of dust now complete?

 

The cross where Christ was crucified was a dusty wood surface.  He got there by making enemies of men in high places.  He only spoke truth, but sometimes the truth is hard to hear, especially for a spade who is called a spade.  And while he’d made a few friends too – what he graciously called disciples –some deserted because his teachings were too hard, some followed with little understanding, and one understood all too well.  The disciple of this third kind betrayed Jesus to the king of spades.     

 

The Gospel of John tells a story about that night he was betrayed, when Jesus removed his outer garment and wrapped a towel around his waist and on bended knee, and with a basin of water, washed the dust from his disciple’s feet.  He treated his betrayer no different.  

 

Only Peter wished for different treatment. This disciple known to speak without thinking—with flashes of brilliance and dashes of denial—outright refused the gift Jesus was offering.  But when he heard that a ‘no’ to foot washing was a ‘no’ to Jesus, he shifted past reverse and offered his entire body for washing.  In all ways, Peter wished to remain in control, whether it be feast or famine. 

 

This disciple who’d won the key to the city for confessing Jesus as the Christ was about to learn a new lesson.  He was not in control of this or any other gift Jesus wished to offer.  Like everyone, Peter would be given a choice: He could accept the offered gift without conditions–or he could reject it.  Peter humbly accepted.  I imagine Peter crying uncontrollably as Jesus washed his dusty feet.  Because Peter saw he was no better or worse than the eleven who preceded him;  Jesus washed away all their dust in the same identical way.  He gave each the same gift without regard to merit. Some may have had more dust, while others less.  But they all ended up with clean feet.  Jesus met each where they were, just as they were.  

 

When Jesus said he would build his church on Peter’s confession, he was thinking more about foot washings than building funds or church committees. He envisioned a church built on the undying rock of humble love, with the kind of people who would swallow their pride and allow others to wash their dusty feet.  Like Peter, for instance.

 

As for the dust buried in deep places like the heart, Jesus prayed folks would simply trust him to make the impossible possible.  Like fairy dust, the gift of Christ crucified on the cross defies rational explanation, though many have developed doctrines in an attempt to do so.  

 

For me, it’s easier to understand the mysterious work of Jesus and the cross through the signpost of a simple foot washing.  I begin with one and end up at the other, and it doesn’t matter whether I begin with dusty feet or a dusty cross.  I bet those first disciples saw this too, with the hindsight offered by dusty feet nailed to a dusty cross. 

Wicked

25 Wednesday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Mesta Park

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Mesta Park, Oklahoma Gardening

“Someday I’ll wish upon a star
And wake up where the clouds are far behind me.
Where troubles melt like lemon drops
Away above the chimney tops
That’s where you’ll find me.”

                       — Lyrics from Over the Rainbow

 

I’ve raised the white flag.  But make no mistake.  I’m a dreamer, not a quitter.

 

I will have gorgeous gardens in my backyard – someday soon– once the poodle stampedes stop.   If only Maddie and Max could tip toe through the tulips.  But no–these dogs of mine were born to run—they prefer Bruce Springsteen to Tiny Tim. 

 

Maddie runs like a graceful gazelle—she flies through the air like Rocky, the Flying Squirrel, leaving Max, her faithful sidekick in high jinx, with the part of Bullwinkle the Moose.  It’s a part he was made to play, as there is nothing dainty about Max–when this moose runs, he lumbers full speed ahead, felling small trees and bushes along the way.  Timbeeer!     

 

All this destruction drives a master garden wannabe to wicked measures.  After loosing a once gorgeous Oakleaf Hydrangea, a Carl Whitcomb Crepe Myrtle and an antique rose that was suppose to one day climb over my garden shed roof, I’ve called in the white flag reinforcements from Invisible Fence. 

 

The garden flags are up, the dog collars are on.  I’ve split the yard in two – one part for me and the other for the dogs.  And being the smart poodles they are, Rocky and Bullwinkle are catching on quick to the new ground rules.  So far, they have no shocking powers in their collars – when they cross over to my part of Oz, their collars emit a little unpleasant noise and vibration.  All my yelling did nothing.  But a buzzing collar… now that’s poodle scary.  It’s just a tad ironic that my employees once dubbed me their Wicked Witch of the West – W3 for short — and my poodles fear a buzzing collar more than me?    

 

When you have a postage stamp front and back yard, like most homes in Mesta Park, every square inch of garden counts.  Thanks to John Fluitt – the wizard of Oklahoma gardening who is regularly featured in Southern Living magazine—I’ve got a black and white color palette in the front gardens.  But in the backyard, I want the gorgeous colors of the Land of Oz:  Peonies, hollyhocks, roses, wisteria, daisies – a veritable grandma’s cottage garden.  It will offer the best of The Wizard of Oz— black and white to represent everyday Kansas and riotous color for the Land of Oz, where witches reign and poodles don’t.  

 

Somewhere, over the rainbow, there’s hope for all my gardening dreams to come true.  And if those white flags and collars fail to stop those poodle jets, I may have to resort to sending in winged monkeys. 

Sacred Souvenirs

24 Tuesday Mar 2009

Posted by Janell in Far Away Places, Life at Home, Prayer, Soul Care, The Great Outdoors

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Grand Canyon, Soul Care, Travel, Writing

It’s been over twenty-four hours since my last confession.    

 

I mostly read yesterday.  I had no desire to write, as other days of our road trip.  And while I read the words of another, I let my subconscious work out my own nagging thoughts.

 

I am drawn to write a primer on Christian spirituality.  And I realize, now more than ever, I am not equipped to do it.  How can I point the way to God when I cannot even put into words my own experiences of recent sightseeing in the Painted Desert or the Grand Canyon?  I am bereft of words in all directions.

 

Maybe this is why we pick up souvenirs from our travels.  Or even why we send postcards back home or take photos of where we’ve been and what we’ve seen.  We need props to help us show and tell the story of our journey.  I feel a little like I’m back in kindergarten.    

 

But, no.  I’m home sorting laundry and picking up the pieces of my life.  And in the back of my mind, I’m sorting out puzzle pieces.  Maybe I should have picked up one of those giant puzzles of the Painted Desert at the park gift shop.  It would have been good busy work, a whole lot easier than working out my own, while my hands keep busy with the comforting rhythms of daily chores.  Busy work keeps me sane, while my mind is off somewhere on the brink of eternity.      

 

On our return trip, I hoped to shoot a photo of those Albuquerque rock formations I’d been so taken with on our way out to Las Vegas–that in a fit of fancy, I imagined were a directional road sign pointing to eternity–but, by the time we crossed paths again, it was too dark for photos.  A metaphor if I can puzzle it out.    

 

Photos and words on a postcard are poor souvenirs.  I wonder if God doesn’t feel the same about the Painted Desert and Grand Canyon – perhaps these natural wonders (to us) are but a poor souvenir of eternity (to God).  And all the souvenirs in the world – those made by man and those made by God—are just signposts, pointing to something more.    

 

I am but a poor signpost of God.  I cannot tell anyone what God is like, just as I can’t describe what the Grand Canyon is like.  But, maybe if I give away a few souvenirs from my travels, or send a few postcards, it will be enough to inspire others to seek God on their own.  God knows I have no roadmaps to give out.  I get lost easily.

 

But, maybe that’s the whole point – to get lost in something bigger than ourselves–to feel poor and bereft against the backdrop of the Sacred–and then to stumble our way out with souvenirs of the Sacred to share with others.  And pray it will be enough.    

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