Learning to Love

This is a continuation of Daniel’s and my story. Click on the “Our Story” tag for context.

Biweekly calls became our standard and I looked forward to Wednesday night and Saturday afternoon conversations with Daniel. We talked very candidly about a wide variety of topics-from legalism and judgmentalism to childraising philosophies to evangelism to personality tests to how to discern whether a movie or a book is worth seeing or reading.

We continued writing one another and I’d shared my thoughts on a few controversial doctrines one Tuesday night-and then sat on tenterhooks all through the next day waiting for our evening conversation.

These topics-or specifically my stance on a couple of these topics–had been dealbreakers in previous relationships with men. Would Daniel think, like the others, that I was a heretic? Would he decide he didn’t want to talk to me anymore?

By this time, I was starting to confess to myself and to Cathy that I thought I liked Daniel.

I asked Daniel that evening what he’d thought of what I’d written-and was much relieved that he didn’t consider me a heretic. I was so relieved that I rather monopolized the later part of our conversation, going on and on about my views on some of those tricky theological points.

We wouldn’t be talking that Saturday, because Daniel had planned a camping trip/retreat so he could spend time with God. I knew this was important to Daniel-he’d mentioned some of the shopping and other preparations he’d been making for his trip.

I’d not realized exactly how big a deal this trip was to him until I saw his Facebook status update:

“Driving up into the Rockies with a manual, one of the funnest things ever. I can’t imagine how much less fun it would have been with an automatic.”

You see, I’d just assumed his retreat was a weekend thing and that he’d be camping right around where he lived. This status told me just how much I’d underestimated the scope of his trip.

I was still in 1 John and God had been speaking to me about walking in love and how love for the brethren is a sign that one is truly born again.

When I saw Daniel’s status, I realized how much I’d failed to love Daniel by not asking about his trp-a trip that was clearly very important to him.

We had communion at church the next day and I seriously considered letting the elements pass me by. I had sinned against my brother in my self-interested failure to ask about his life. I was torn up inside over my selfishness.

Once home from church, I knew what I should do. I wrote a quick message to Daniel:

“I’m wondering how long this retreat of yours is slated to last… I’m eager to hear all about it, but don’t want to interrupt your actually retreating. So pay me no mind until you’re done, but know that I’m interested in learning all about your camping and communing with God. :-)”

The moment I sent the message off, I was at peace again. I was in the process of rectifying the situation, learning to truly love my brother.


I hate phones

This is a continuation of Daniel’s and my story. Click on the “Our Story” tag for context.

Is it not just the nature of God to not allow us to become comfortable or complacent in any season of our lives? Just when I came to a peace with the correspondence between Daniel and I, things changed.

Daniel asked if he could call me.

I agreed and we arranged for our first phone call.

He called and we talked for a little less than two hours. When we hung up, I drew my bathwater and cried.

It had been awkward, uncomfortable. I’ve never been a phone person, and this had been awkward on so many levels.

Sometimes he couldn’t hear me. Sometimes I couldn’t hear him. We had to ask each other to repeat what we’d said several times. There were awkward silences while we tried to figure out what we should say next. I was pretty sure I’d been an awful conversationalist, failing to do my part to keep the conversational ball rolling.

And I realized, somewhat to my surprise, that this really bothered me. I knew the odds of his being romantically interested in me after that conversation were slim-but I worried that now that he knew that, he wouldn’t want to correspond with me anymore. And that prospect was heartbreaking.

I loved corresponding about books and philosophy and science and the sovereignty of God with Daniel. And now I had ruined it.

I considered writing Daniel, apologizing for not having told him in advance how terrible I was at phone conversation. I wanted to salvage whatever I could.

But God urged me to trust Him, to let Daniel lead. So I told God my thoughts and did nothing.

You can’t imagine my elation when I received a message from Daniel two days later asking if he could call me again.

I had not lost my new friend, this man with whose mind mine had so connected.


Walking in the Light

This is a continuation of Daniel’s and my story. Click on the “Our Story” tag for context.

I was actively at war against idolatry, but it was a private war. I hadn’t told anyone. At least, not in any detail. I had told Daniel a little about the Timothy Keller book, and had said “Even now, weeks from reading the book, I’m still thinking and praying about what I learned about idolatry, especially about idols in my own heart.”

Daniel had probed about my idols, and I was suddenly shy.

So far, we’d been writing lengthy messages back and forth, covering the usual get-to-know-you stuff and some more weighty intellectual topics. But we hadn’t entered the realm of the heart. This seemed a rather hefty topic on which to enter that realm. I hesitated.

At the same time, I was reading through 1 John daily. Just then, 1 John 1:7 began to stick out to me.

“If we walk in the light as He is in the light, we have fellowship with one another, aand the blood of Jesus His Son cleanses us from all sin.”

I realized that I needed to confess my idolatry to another, that I needed to walk in the light regarding my longstanding sin. But I wasn’t sure Daniel was the best person to confess to.

I went to my friend Cathy to confess and ask for her advice.

After hearing me out, Cathy asked whether I thought it was wise that I was writing to Daniel just as God was working in my heart to overthrow the idol of marriage.

I confessed that I didn’t know, couldn’t decide. I didn’t feel that I was making Daniel my focus, didn’t think I was making marriage an idol again in my interaction with him. But I feared that I would, feared I’d been rash in accepting the introduction.

Cathy listened and agreed to pray with me about that decision. And so we did. For the next week, I earnestly entreated God to show me if He didn’t want me talking with Daniel just then. Cathy prayed too.

When we got together the next week, neither of us felt we’d received a definitive answer from God. In the absence of any word from the Lord otherwise, I continued writing Daniel.

Over the next couple of weeks, God confirmed through many sources the work that He had done in my life in overthrowing the idol of marriage. At last, I came to a peace with the fact that Daniel and I were getting to know each other.


Mixed Emotions

This is a continuation of Daniel’s and my story. Read part 1 for context.

I had mixed feelings about Jeremy’s offer. Here I was learning how to enthrone Christ and dethrone marriage–and God sends temptation my way in the form of a setup. I don’t want to lose the ground I’ve been gaining, learning to make Christ my supreme treasure. At the same time, I am acutely conscious of how often I have whined that people don’t understand how to set others up–and commented that I wouldn’t at all mind being the recipient of a setup done right.

Jeremy did the set-up right. He got the idea and mentioned it to the man (to Daniel). Once Daniel had assented to the idea of being set up with me, Jeremy had approached me about arranging an introduction. Everything was just the way I’d described “the proper way” to set someone up. I rather felt that I’d be a hypocrite if I refused the setup after all my whining.

I sent Jeremy a message that evening saying that I would be okay with a Facebook introduction, but that I wasn’t sure how much time I’d be able to spend on a relationship since I was pretty busy at work (which was very true.)

I spent the next couple of weeks second guessing myself.

Was this wise? I hadn’t spent much time praying about it-had kinda responded on impulse. I was still choosing to delight myself in Christ, wasn’t obsessing over Daniel. But the fact that I’d just agreed to the introduction before I knew for sure that I should troubled me.


Dethroning Marriage

It started when I picked up Timothy Keller’s Counterfeit Gods
from the library bookshelf. I’d read books by Keller before and knew that I enjoyed his writing style and respected his theology. It would be an easy read.

What I didn’t count on was how God would use that book to change my heart.

“Idols capture our imagination, and we can locate them by looking at our daydreams. What do we enjoy imagining? What are our fondest dreams?”
~Timothy Keller, Counterfeit Gods p. xxii

When I read those words, I knew exactly what served as my most prominent idol: marriage.

For years, marriage had been my fondest daydream. What’s more, it had become what Jerry Bridges calls a “functional savior”. When times got hard at work and I was stressed, I thought “If only I were married I wouldn’t have to work a job like this to support myself.” When I didn’t have time to pursue the domestic tasks I so enjoy, I thought “If only I were married and could be a stay-at-home wife.” I considered marriage to be the answer to whatever problem I felt I had.

Life would be perfect if only I were married.

And then God flashed the word “idol” with neon lights above my daydreams.

Keller’s book was just what I needed, both to identify my idol and to give direction for overcoming it. Keller emphasized that idols couldn’t just be dethroned, Christ had to be enthroned.

By God’s grace, I began to dethrone marriage and enthrone Christ at the center of my heart.

Then I got the Facebook message sent to my phone.

“Rebekah
I want you to know that I have a policy against doing what I’m about to be doing…”

I was at my parents’ house for the weekend, there for my niece’s first birthday party. As a result, I really didn’t have easy access to the internet. I mused on the strange intro a bit, but figured that Jeremy was going to ask for nutrition advice.

When I logged on to the internet the next morning, I discovered just how wrong my assumption had been.

Jeremy was asking for permission to set me up with a friend of his–who happened to also be his sister’s brother-in-law.

To be continued…


Each New Day

Can I just say…

that each new day amazes me

with the goodness of God

and His completely unanticipated grace

I could never deserve

I certainly never expected

the abundant gifts I’ve received

yet each new day amazes me

with the goodness of God

and His grace


Where you go…

You know that verse people always pull out around wedding-times?

“Where you go I will go, and where you lodge I will lodge. Your people shall be my people, and your God my God.”
~Ruth 1:16

Obviously a romantic and wedding appropriate Scripture, right?

But the context of this verse isn’t a wedding at all.

Actually, it’s a funeral.

Ruth’s husband has died, as has her husband’s brother and father. Now only she, her sister-in-law, and her mother-in-law remain, destitute widows in Moab.

Naomi, Ruth’s mother-in-law, urges Ruth and Orpah to return to their fathers’ houses, to remarry and to be happy.

Ruth protests, saying that she would rather be a foreigner in a foreign land, would rather work to support her helpless mother-in-law, would rather adopt a foreign God than leave her beloved mother-in-law.

A far cry from modern mother-in-law stories.

So many women are at odds with their mothers-in-law. Or if they aren’t at odds, they don’t protest at the profusion of mother-in-law jokes.

This saddens me.

That’s not what I want my relationship with my mother-in-law to look like. I don’t want to roll my eyes at her and forever be competing with her (whether actually or just in our minds) for my husband’s affection.

While I certainly don’t want to be in Ruth’s situation, I would love to have the kind of relationship with my mother-in-law that I would respond as Ruth did.

Of course, I have on good authority that my soon-to-be mother-in-law is a wonderful woman and a fantastic mother-in-law.

When Daniel and I were visiting his brother and sister-in-law before my trip to Philadelphia, Katie shooed her husband from the room so she could give me the down-low on the family. (She must have seen the writing on the wall–we got engaged, much to our surprise, only days later.)

Katie had only good things to say about her mother-in-law, a woman who I had not yet met.

Now, having met Paula, I can say with certitude that I am inclined to like her and am very much looking forward to having her as a mother-in-law.

Of course, this week I have extra incentive to repeat Ruth’s words:

Where you go I will go
since she’s going to Wichita

and where you lodge I will lodge
actually, I’ll be staying elsewhere, but we’ll both be spending a good amount of time at the home of her son, my betrothed

Your people shall be my people,
That is, her son shall be my husband (!)

and your God my God.
I am so thrilled that my future mother-in-law is a woman of God who will pray for Daniel and I and encourage us in the Lord.

This weekend, I have the delightful opportunity to travel with my future father- and mother-in-law to Wichita (9 hours roundtrip) to see Daniel.

While I won’t lie and say that I have no apprehensions, I am overwhelmingly excited for this chance to get to know my in-laws better (and maybe to learn a little more about the man I love.)

Where you go, indeed.


Thankful Thursday: His hand upholds me

Thankful Thursday bannerThis week has been filled with sharp ups and downs, with bliss and woe, with hope and desperation.

Every part of it has been exhausting.

Yet in it all, His hand upholds me.

This week I’m thankful…

…for a lovely morning meeting the rest of Daniel’s family

…for a great afternoon relaxing with Daniel and my family

…for a car ride that included (among other things) getting our story straight

…that we got our story straight before a public interview in front of the entire church body (Yeah, I’ll definitely be telling that story for years to come.)

…for a lovely lunch introducing Daniel to my Columbus friends

…that God is my strength when I had to work in the kitchen

…that God is my peace when my heart struggles to war against an employee

…for desperate-crying overwhelmedness with wedding planning

…for God’s sufficiency when my sister hits a deer which scraps her car and leaves us as a one-car-household again

…for God’s sufficiency when I have to take two hours out of my day to pick up my sister whose car is now incapacitated

…that my landlady didn’t blink when I told her we’d want to vacate our house by the end of the year

…for finding a potential reception site that just might work

…for getting a bit of sleep on a sick day before I have to go in anyway because STATE SHOWED UP

…for strength when I’m working sick

…for grace when I start crying at work

…for a consultant who tells me I need to get some sleep

…for a sister who reminds me that everything is not my fault

…for getting residents fed

…for a call from a job in Wichita, just enough time to call them back, and an interview scheduled

…for onions that needed chopping, which meant I could cry again today at work without losing face

…for a Clinical Services Consultant who is kind (even if it meant I almost cried publicly at work–without an onion in sight)

…for grace when I cry, yet again, privately at work

…that I didn’t black out at work today (even if I did “gray-out” pretty regularly)

…for state leaving early today

…that I had just enough time to make it to the NE District Nebraska Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics event (I’m on the board and this was rather an important event)

…that there was cheesecake and dark chocolate

…that I found an unexpected sister in Christ who affirmed my fiancee’s and my resolve to honor God in our relationship

It sounds like a crazy jumble, with no unifying theme. And truly, it has been a jumble of a week. Great things, horrible things, all very stressful things.

But there is a unifying theme.

Through it all, His hand upholds me.

And for that I am so very thankful.

“O God, you are my God; earnestly I seek you;
my soul thirsts for you;
my flesh faints for you,
as in a dry and weary land where there is no water.
So I have looked upon you in the sanctuary,
beholding your power and glory.
Because your steadfast love is better than life,
my lips will praise you.
So I will bless you as long as I live;
in your name I will lift up my hands.

My soul will be satisfied as with fat and rich food,
and my mouth will praise you with joyful lips,
when I remember you upon my bed,
and meditate on you in the watches of the night;
for you have been my help,
and in the shadow of your wings I will sing for joy.
My soul clings to you;
your right hand upholds me.

But those who seek to destroy my life
shall go down into the depths of the earth;
they shall be given over to the power of the sword;
they shall be a portion for jackals.
But the king shall rejoice in God;
all who swear by him shall exult,
for the mouths of liars will be stopped.”

~Psalm 63 (ESV)


Me and my beloved

While we were in Lincoln spending time with our families (and announcing our engagement), we asked for a volunteer to take some photos of the two of us together.

I hope you’ll humor me as I show Daniel off. I’m rather fond of him :-)

Daniel

We actually tried to look at the camera, honest. But I find it awfully hard to keep my eyes off of him.

Daniel

I love to see Daniel laugh, to hear him laugh, to laugh with him. Even if they’re not traditional “engagement” pictures–and even if I’m completely throwing back my head with my mouth wide open–I love that Grace managed to catch these next couple of photos of us laughing together.

Daniel

Daniel

This is my beloved, my Daniel. I am so excited to be marrying him!

Daniel


Praying for my future husband

“Dear Future Husband,

I turned 16 today, and I know it may seem weird writing this to you now, but this letter is sort of my way of making a promise to you in writing…

So begins the fictional Christy Miller’s first letter to her future husband.

Reading this in Island Dreamer at eleven, I was more than a little impressed at the romantic idea of communicating with the nebulous future husband.

I began writing my own letters–and started praying for “my future husband”. The letters tapered off and were mostly forgotten–the prayers have continued.

I was in my mid-teens when our youth pastor got married. People made a big deal about how his wife had prayed for him (that is, for her future husband) for eight years before they got married.

She was considered *the* example of a woman who’d waited long, who’d waited prayerfully.

I loved it–and thought I could maybe handle eight years of praying.

It’s been 16 years since that first letter. Sixteen years since the first prayer.

I have waited, sometimes patiently, often very impatiently.

I have fretted and stewed, and sometimes I have experienced the sweet peace that comes with trusting God.

I am not a paragon of patient waiting. It has been a difficult sixteen years. My heart has not always been pure, my eyes not always focused on Christ. Even my prayers have not always been right. Making marriage an idol, I have bargained with God for a husband. I have given God deadlines, ultimatums. I have sinfully demanded a spouse.

More often than I like to admit, my prayers have been demands for a husband. But God resisted my bargaining, my demands, my desperate attempts to be content enough to earn myself a husband. In His grace, God worked in my heart to overthrow my idol of marriage and to enthrone Christ as my supreme treasure.

As I’ve grown in my walk with Christ, my prayers for my future husband have changed.

I began praying that he would seek God, that God would direct his paths, that God would lead the two of us together at just the right time.

I started praying for myself, that the God who knows my future husband intimately would make me into just the right woman to be his helpmate.

In the last week, my prayers have changed again.

Now I pray for my future husband by name.

I pray for my beloved Daniel.

I’ve prayed sixteen years for my future husband, but now, in five short months (unbearably long), I will drop the “future” and he will be simply “my husband”.

Will you join me in praying, for my future husband and for myself? Now that his name is known, will you pray for Daniel and I as we begin our life together?