Sunday, March 27, 2011

African Violet Theology

Naming the Darkness. I wrote about that recently. (Click here.) I believe it’s an extremely important and valuable part of our spiritual and emotional growth process. The person who doesn’t KNOW herself and the ways she struggles on the journey toward freedom in Christ can flail with great discouragement in the face of forces she doesn’t understand. I know this firsthand! And yet, it’s not enough.

To illustrate this, I want to tell you a story. Everyone loves a good story, right?

Milton Erickson, a now deceased psychiatrist, once went to the home of a friend in Milwaukee. His friend had an aunt there who was very old and very wealthy. She lived in a huge Victorian home with incredible antiques, but his friend was concerned because she was depressed. And so Dr. Erickson went to the home at his friend's request to visit this aunt.

The aunt took him on a tour of her entire home. All the blinds were closed. It was dark, gloomy, and depressing. The last place she took him to was bright and cheery room full of gorgeous African violet plants. It was in stark contrast to the rest of the house. Standing in the beautiful room Dr. Erickson felt compelled to speak, "I can see what your problem is," he began.

"What do you mean?" said the old woman confused.

Looking deep into her eyes he simply stated, "You are not really a very good Christian."

Completely insulted, the depressed woman finally managed to ask, "What do you mean?"

"Here you have this great gift for growing African violets," Dr. Erickson gently explained, "And you keep it all to yourself. If I were you, I would get your church bulletin, and whenever someone had a birthday, or a death, or a wedding, or an anniversary, or whatever, I would take them one of your beautiful African violet plants as a gift."

After that advice, Dr. Erickson left and never spoke to the old woman again. As Dr. Erickson told this story to a group of students, he pulled out an old yellow Milwaukee newspaper article. The headline read: "African Violet Queen of Milwaukee Dies... Mourned by Thousands." As usual, a curious student raised his hand and asked, "Why did you have her give out plants instead of treating her depression?" After a short pause, the wise teacher explained, "I decided that it would be easier to grow the African violet part of her life than to weed out the depression."

Dr. Erickson’s simple story reflects an often neglected part of our Christian Theology: God’s good and glorious CREATION came before the ravages of the FALL. We can err in the direction of ignoring the harmful distortions of sin in our hearts and our world. But we can also err in the direction of failing to call out what is God’s created glory within and around us. We must hold onto both.

Perhaps the sin struggle in your heart is overwhelming. You are naming the darkness, and it’s flat out depressing. But there are African violets in your heart! I know this, without knowing you, because He put them in every human. Perhaps you see this in a love for the arts, or nature; maybe it’s an inclination towards justice for the oppressed; maybe it’s a satisfaction you feel with serving a practical need; or a love for learning about science, growing a garden, creating quality clothing or fixing broken things. These are reflections of His goodness, beauty, order and creativity which He has placed uniquely in YOU! So go ahead and grow the African violets. Not only is it refreshing to your heart, but it’s also worshipful to the One who made you to reflect His Light in a unique way.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Underground Treasures

On Monday we took the girls to another Missouri first-- the Meramec Caverns, whose apparent fame is due to the discovery of Frank and Jesse Jame's hideout in the 1870's . The girls had never seen an underground cavern, so it was pretty fun to watch their reactions. Before we went, Ellie wanted to make sure there were going to give us towels so we didn't have to get our clothes dirty crawling through the cave. Hee-hee :) So fun to introduce them to God's treasures underground!

















Kathryn was pretty ticked at me at this moment, but she forced a smile!













We met a Korean family along the way that we visited with during the tour













Ellie was delighted to find her "birthstone" in the gift shop... for sale for about 400$!

















And now onto God's handiwork--
Crystal Lake...






































This spot was one of the most amazing sites...

















Kind of makes you wonder how many breathtaking masterpieces are hidden in the earth that only He yet knows about!

















It was a gorgeous day-- about 75 degrees! Perfect picnic weather!













Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Long Overdue Update-- Part I

OK, I'm drowning a little bit.

This is the season of the semester where tests and papers are cascading upon each other. I love what I am studying. But I'm not doing so well, juggling my life as wife, mommy, student, and human person--or at least THIS human person! (And the blog shows it!)

Any of the rest of you out there feel like that?

I LOVE my Adv. Marriage & Family Class. The books are FABULOUS! Failure of Nerve by Edwin Friedman. Looking at large-scale leadership from a family-systems counseling perspective. Awesome, ingenious book, ahead-of-his-time thinker. Also The Family Crucible. Fabulous case study from start to finish, with so much insight about how families relate! I especially love how this counselor describes HIS own interpersonal process, alongside the counseling insight. And Couples In Conflict. This guy is SO insightful! The only bummer about this class, is that I'm auditing it, and there is so many other books that I'm supposed to be reading.

Surprisingly, I'm also really enjoying Psychological Disorders... At least on this score-- the human brain is fascinating! (I was reminded that when I was in 3rd grade, I decided to be a Neurologist. That didn't happen. Another story for another day. But I've always been amazed by the brain!) To understand more about the physical links with all kinds of mental/emotional/phsycial disorders.... to understand how the brain reacts to trauma... mind-boggling. I love seeing how wonderfully cohesive and connected the human person is-- mind, body, spirit, emotions... Feel like I could spend weeks just posting fascinating new research facts about the brain alone!

Also loving Crisis and Transitions. It really should be named "Human Personality and Development." It occurred to me when I asked a former student what they thought of this professor, and he reported how it bothered him that our prof. never followed his syllabus, that some might not like his style. But I guess my brain works in a kind of convoluted, disorganized way, because I feel like everything that comes out of his mouth is golden, and my friend's assessment had never occurred to me before. What I love best (this being my 2nd class with the same guy), is how he weaves the gospel into everything... emotions, families, the church, the counseling room, psychology, neurology, etc... Another fascinating, thoroughly readable book-- Mindsight. Check it out.

The other 3 classes.... Well, these above are my favorites!

Thankfully, this week is Spring Break. What do we have in store?? First on the agenda, REST. And so, I'm not picking up a book until Tuesday!

Part I implies a Part II. There MIGHT be a Part II coming later this week, but I'm not making any promises.