The Prayer: God’s Promise

I will be with you, that’s my promise
I will shine when you can’t see
Everywhere you travel is everywhere I’ll be
Trust me for that first step, leave the journey up to me
I will be with you,
I’ll shine when you can’t see.

You are with me, that’s your promise
You shine when I can’t see
Everywhere I travel is everywhere You’ll be
I’ll trust you for the first step and leave the journey up to you
You will be with me
You’ll shine when I can’t see

You will be with me
You’ll shine when I can’t see

God’s Promise written by Ron Mills, ©2002; 2nd verse adapted by Ruth Jewell,  ©2011

The Eagle

Walking the rocky shore
Cold wind from the Baltic Sea washes over me
On a rocky outcrop she sits
Mysterious black, white crowned head
The Eagle watches me
Follows me as I search among shoals
Calls to me as I
Hunt through blueberries and arctic orchids
Day after day she comes to see what I have found
We have become friends
Talking to each other as the sea rolls nearby
I tell her my time to leave is soon
I tell her I will miss her company
Suddenly, she flies over my head and …
With a final call offers me a gift
A gift unbidden, un-expected,
All the more precious
A gift to remember …
The Eagle who followed me

Ruth Jewell, ©May 25, 2011

Close the Door

I stand alone
the room now quiet
only stray memories left
drifting like wisps of fog

… I pronounce you man and wife …
in the name of the father …
are you God …
prayers, joy, tears now echoes of past life

Soon this place of faith will be
home, not to me but,
to new life , not shadow but,
vibrant, laughing, joyful life

The memories of past residents
will merge with those made new
in words not quite like mine
but with faith just as strong

Leave the memories behind
take the love and grace gifted
offer blessings to those who follow
and close the door

Faith doesn’t stand still,
Faith moves me forward
Faith offers new doors
Today new memories are being made

©Ruth Jewell, December 16, 2010
 
 

 

Waiting …

For some reason the word “wait” has been cropping up and standing out like a light bulb in a dark room.   Why should such an insignificant word suddenly have significance?  That is what I’ve been trying to figure out for the last couple of weeks. 

In scripture the word ‘waiting’ has two different connotations.  The first of course is “waiting on the Lord” and the second, more sinister one, is to lie in wait to commit some act of violence or evil deed.  Which one is meant for me this time?  As I looked at how the word “wait”  is used in both Hebrew and Christian Scripture I did notice a difference.  In Hebrew scripture it seems to be relatively equally split between the two uses while in Christian Scriptures it leans more heavily towards the positive use of waiting on G-d and Christ.   Waiting has such weight to it (pun intended) and I started writing the same old platitudes we always write at this time of year but I think today I need to be honest.

I have spent a lifetime waiting for something.  I would hate to add up all of the time spent waiting for I’m sure it would be way more than the time spent living my life.  I dislike waiting; I want things to happen NOW, not wait for them.  I don’t want to wait for Christmas to come, although I don’t mind waiting for presents because I rarely get anything I want or need.  I don’t want to wait for this quarters grades, I want to know NOW, not that I would do anything particular with them, I just want to know.  I am getting tired of waiting for G-d to explain what she wants me to do.  I am after all 63 and there just aren’t that many more years to do what she wants.  So if you don’t mind G-d, please tell me plainly so I can finally quit guessing and wasting your time and mine, sheesh.  

Of course everyone has to wait, Moses had to wait for G-d to give him the stone tablets (Exodus 24:12), the Israelites had to wait for Moses to hear from God (Numbers 9:8).  The women disciples had to wait for the Sabbath to be over before they could anoint the body of Jesus (Luke 23:56) and all of the disciples had to wait for the coming of the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:4).  So maybe waiting isn’t such a bad thing.  Good things do happen, most of the time anyway. I am reminded of the little story of an elderly woman who was planning her own funeral.  She told the undertaker to make sure she had a spoon in her hand when she was put in her coffin.  The puzzled undertaker asked “why?”  And, she told him that when dinner was finished her mother always said, “Hold on to your spoon, there are good things coming.”  She just knew there were more good things coming.

However, all too often in my life waiting has meant not good things coming but hard times and struggles.  I waited at my father’s bedside for him to die from cancer.  I waited in a hospital waiting room to hear that my mother had died on the operating table.  After being laid off I’ve waited for someone to hire me, sometimes that was a long time coming and I’ve waited for others to do what they promised and waited in vain.  Disappointment is part of living, for it is in those hard moments of my life that I learn to appreciate the good ones.  I know that, or at least intellectually I do, but it is always hard at the time I experience it and I always think the worst.  My life hasn’t been all roses and watercolors, I don’t think anyone’s life is, but this is my life and it’s the only one I really know so of course it is the most important to me. 

Maybe that’s the point of hearing and seeing “wait” so often.  Maybe I’m to stop looking at my life and let other lives into mine. Maybe all that waiting has been because I’ve isolated myself from those that would expand my being.  I’ve been stuck in my own culture and own thoughts for too long and now my waiting is not to wait on the Lord but to wait for others to bring the Lord to me, or, at least show me the way.  Maybe I am in some ways handicapped by my own shortsightedness and unwillingness to extend my life into new places.

This quarter I have been volunteering at the Chief Seattle Club and I must admit it’s been in the last 10 weeks that I’ve found the word “wait” sticking out at me.  I am wondering if the connection is my amazement at how so many of the members have wormed their way into my life.  I am finding just how important the concerns of staff and members are becoming to me and I don’t mind.  I am feeling the pain of an elder who was injured due to the thoughtlessness of some young kids and joyful at the aid he received from strangers.  I am angry at the pain First Nations Peoples have experienced because of others who think only they are “right.”   I am learning that each culture that makes up the human race is important to the whole and any culture that is denied their dignity harms us all.  I am learning that when I “wait” to act with compassion then someone will be harmed.  I am learning that someone one is actually waiting for me is the person I’m supposed to be.  I am not to use my time waiting as an excuse to do nothing, I am to prepare for tomorrow or the next minute, I don’t know which.

So while my days of waiting may not be over, they are taking on a new significance.  Instead of waiting for someone else to come to me, I must go ask what is needed.  Waiting time must become preparation time to follow the path that opens up for me.  So I’m exchanging preparation, prepare, preparing for the wait and waiting, for that is what it should be. 

Jesus told his disciples to wait on G-d’s promise but he didn’t tell them to sit still.  They still had a mission to accomplish and while they didn’t know what G-d’s promise would be they had a job to do.  This is just me but, I think when the angels asked the disciples at the ascension why they were standing there looking at the sky they were really saying “quit wasting time, you’ve got a job to do, go get ready.”

© Ruth Jewell, December 8, 2010

Meditation on Matthew 10:34-39

Matthew 10:34-39

34‘Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth; I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.
35For I have come to set a man against his father,
and a daughter against her mother,
and a daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law;
36 and one’s foes will be members of one’s own household.
37Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; 38and whoever does not take up the cross and follow me is not worthy of me. 39Those who find their life will lose it, and those who lose their life for my sake will find it.

Ok, so Christ said he doesn’t bring peace but a sword, but, what kind of sword?
He tells me I am not to love my family more than him, not that I’m supposed to abandon them just that Jesus’ and the Spirits will comes first.  I’m to let the spirit take care of my family and give over control of my life to the spirit.

It is not easy to let go of my control of my life.  I keep wanting (and do) to snatch back the reins that I only partially have given to God. So, I am to keep my family life in tension with my faith community life and the faith part comes first.

God how does that work, I have a husband who wants my time, I have school work to complete; do I drop those when I know that you have given those to me?   Or, are they the responsibilities you talk of, the cross I am supposed to bear?

Where does the balance come from?

Does letting go of my control of the situation mean I am to just stop worrying but not stop attending?

Hmmmmmm, now there is a thought,  Hmmmmmm, Now that is a thought, take care of those things but without concern for how . . . Hmmmmmm

©Ruth Jewell, November 13, 2010

Memories

Thanks to Christine of Abbey of the Arts Poetry Party for bringing forward memories of people long ago!

they come like ghosts
floating in my
memories
like autumn fog
misty, gray,
cold, intangible

father, friend,
mother, teacher
death separates us now
all except the memories
holding them in
static lives of yesterday

in their gray world
a universe apart
each lives
as close as thought
within
a gray fog box

©Ruth Jewell, September 13, 2010
While I love fall and all that it brings, fog, changing leaves, and cool sunny days, the memories of times past also come, which can be both lovely and sad all at the same time.  So many of my friends and family have passed away in fall and early winter and they often come like the fog to present themselves in a ghostly parade to remind me of times past, both the good and the not so good.  As I watch them enter my mind’s stage I am surprised to find that most of them are women, strong, defiant, and determined to change the world they lived in.

There is my maternal great-great grandmother who was determined that her family would stand with President Lincoln in the great fight against the south and my paternal great-great grandmother who wanted only to live with her family in freedom, so she left Georgia to travel north while the rest of her family made the terrible trek to Oklahoma on the “Trail of Tears.”  Then there is my maternal grandmother, the first woman to complete college in my family, a Suffragette, proud of her role in getting women the right to vote. And, I can’t leave my mother out, who, during WW II, worked in the steel mills making rivets for air planes.  I am the inheritor of all of their strength of will, their courage to get things done, and their desire to leave this world in better shape than they found it. 

One other woman has a prominent place in my memory, my first grade teacher, Miss Wooster.  She was a teacher of great courage and compassion, two traits that go well together.  Even though she had one arm paralyzed from an accident she never gave up her dream of being a teacher and for that I am eternally grateful.  I started school the fall after a devastating accident that left me scared and timid.  I was still wrapped in bandages when I started my first day of school and to have this kind, tall woman reach down with her one good arm, hold me and tell me that we were going to have so much fun that day meant more to me than anyone could possibly know.  Her example of never giving up became the model for my life.  Miss Wooster taught me to hold my own against the inevitable onslaught of teasing, ridicule and insensitivity that I would face all of my life.  Without her I wouldn’t have survived my childhood whole in spirit.

There are a few men who hold special places in my memories, like my great-uncle Charlie who was an itinerant preacher of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ).  His circuit was the triangle that made up the coal mining fields of southern Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Northern West Virginia and in a strange stroke of fate he baptized by father, unknowing that dad would marry his favorite niece 12 years later.  It could not have been an easy pastorate for great-uncle Charlie, mine disasters, starvation, and no health care would have meant more funerals than births and weddings.  But the stories of great-uncle Charlie say he taught and comforted those that needed both and celebrated when he could. 

There is also my Father who was one of the most spiritual people I knew.  He taught me to respect all of creation, to be open to the words of other faiths, and to treat all people as brothers and sisters in the Holy Spirit. Even though he never made it past 6th grade he taught me the value of reading good books, to never let someone else make up my mind for me, to never let anyone tell me that their way of understanding the scriptures was the only way.  Dad told me to read and study and make up my own mind, but to be open to the changes that come from growing in the world.  To dad I owe my Disciples Faith; a strong sure faith that is open to a world of ideas and beliefs and how they influence me, helping me to grow stronger in my own beliefs and faith.

Each and every one of those ghostly memories is a part of me, my grounding in this world and the rocks of my path to the next.  If even one of these amazing individuals had been missing from my memory I would not be who I am today. Each memory is a thread in my own fabric of life, albeit a cloth that has a few holes and loose threads but overall beautiful and strong.  I owe that beauty and strength to those who have gone before me, those I follow, and those I have inherited so much from. 

As I try to see into the fog of the future, I wonder who I am passing my legacy onto.  Am I, will I, play a role in someone else’s life.  That is an awesome responsibility to know, and maybe not know, what you do and say may influence another life.  Doesn’t that thought just want to make you crawl into a corner and not be seen for fear you will cause someone harm?  But, what I have to remember is that when I choose to do nothing someone is still watching and learning just as much as when I act and that means the choice to act or do nothing is always fraught with “what ifs.”    Life is just one big IF, and strength comes from boldly stepping out with faith and not looking back. 

©Ruth Jewell, September 13, 2010

Farmers Market

As I round the corner
a palette of wonders spread out before me
the smell of fresh bread drifts toward me
A line up of vegetables and fruits
 delight the eye
plump peaches, nectarines, and apples
 line up in a juicy chorus line
 Lettuce graces the tables in their varied frills of green
 bright orange carrots with dark green tops call to me … take me home
huge green watermelons compete with golden cantaloupe
to see who wins the trip to my table
Golden Jars glisten with the hard work of Bees,
 Olive oil, fresh fish, homemade cheese, jam, pastry,
all vying for my attention, all longing to be taken home

Suddenly
I am aware of a joyful cacophony of sound and color
fiddlers playing country music
 farmers calling out, …  flowers, fresh apples
“here, taste my candy, once you tried it you can’t turn it down”
conversations overlap … “come you must try …
oh that is the cutest scarf how much is ….  this melts in …
you have the best potatoes, do you have any red …  OH George LOOK …”
dogs  bark, children shout,
two young women playing Mozart
food for my table,
sounds to lift the heart,
smells to savor and remember
OH the lovely sounds, sights and smells of Edmonds Farmers Market

©Ruth Jewell, August 29, 2010