Monday, April 20, 2009

Let Me Tell You About my Garden!

“I like the way you have it decorated for Easter”, Ethan commented as he dashed from room to room examining the several bunnies, chicks and, best of all, real eggs I had put around to help us celebrate the most joyous of holidays coming up in one week.

Ethan and his mom, Becki, had been able to free up 3 days from their busy spring break week. And they would spend them with us.

Ethan likes all the “real” things that Grandma usually decorates with and he always races from room to room when he first arrives to see what is on display. He likes to look at the real birds’ nests and the real eggs that I have found over the years and tucked into them, while not necessarily the nest they came out of. He likes the shells, pine cones and other seed pods and so on.

We have a container of toys, a basket of books and a modest collection of puzzles, play dough, etc. but this 5 year-old would rather play with “real” stuff most of the time.

He gets very excited in the summer when we can go to the local farmers’ market and he gets to play with the real fruits and veggies that are in season. To substitute for when the season isn’t right, I have found, over several years, a number of pretty realistic artificial fruits and veggies, but nothing is as good as “real”.

On this week before Easter, after looking through the box of shells, Ethan rejected that idea and asked if we could get down some of Grandma’s rather extensive collection of artificial flowers. “Sure”, I said, a bit puzzled, and we headed to the shelves where most of my seasonal flowers are stored. Soon we were heading up to the living room with armloads of blossoms. In fact, it took us about four trips to get them all upstairs.

“We are going to make a potpourri garden”, Ethan announced to Mom and Grandpa and, with permission, began to stick the various stems into the crevice between the couch cushions and the back, as well as into all the chairs in the room and into several baskets. He spent a happy hour carefully arranging the stems of flowers by size, color, and fullness -- all the while extolling their value as an eventual part of a variety of potpourri mixes.

Soon there was no place to safely sit in the living room and we had to move the dining table chairs into position so visitors to the garden could sit and gaze at the breathtaking beauty before us. Every adult who entered the room was subjected to an informative lecture on the variety of blooms before them and which potpourri they would be good for.

At one point an AT&T man arrived to check some wiring and he got the full lecture. Well, as much as he was willing to stand still for.

When bedtime came on Sunday evening Grandma got to read The Potpourri Garden to Ethan as his bedtime story. Now the obsession with flowers became clear. As always, I was amazed at how much of the information in the book Ethan had retained and could recite back to anyone who would listen.

The next day we drove about 45 min from our house to spend the day with Aunt Deb. Our route takes us past an outlet mall and Becki wanted to stop and pick up a few new garments for Ethan. While he was once delighted to go shopping with his mom, he is quickly becoming a typical boy about looking at clothes. He wanted to know if Carter’s sold silk flowers because we needed a few more for our garden.

When he was told that Carter’s probably didn’t sell flowers of any kind, he didn’t want to even stop at the mall, but he was somewhat appeased when I told him I thought we might find silk flowers at one or two of the other stores.

Unfortunately the store I thought would be the best possibility has closed and is no more. And the other store we tried had nothing that would be suitable for our garden. Needless to say the five-year-old gardener was very disappointed.

Then I thought of Michaels.

Grandpa agreed that we could stop at the Michaels near our house on the way home and, when Becki was done her shopping, we headed south. Ethan had been a bit impatient getting to Aunt Deb’s, now he could hardly wait for every mile to pass. I began to worry about What if….

We parked close to the entrance and kept the eager gardener in check while we crossed the drive lane. I suspect most Michaels are laid out the same way - the bulk of the artificial flowers are just inside the front door.

We walked in the door and Ethan exclaimed, loud enough for everyone in the store to hear, “Mom, look at all the flowers!” He grabbed my hand and steered me over to them, his face effused with joy.

Becki gave him some money to spend and then went off to do her own shopping in a quieter corner of the store.

Ethan gets an allowance and is beginning to understand the concepts of price and expenditure. We spent several minutes pulling stems from containers, examining the price tag and then adding that amount to what he already clutched. It soon became evident that he would only be able to purchase a few stems with the money he had stuffed into his pocket. Grandma began the internal debate about how much she should add to his fund.

Then I spied the seasonal aisle and suggested that those flowers might be on sale. Sure enough! Most things were half price or ever better. Soon Ethan was clutching a giant bouquet of daffodils, iris and small bunches of four other flowers. He was filled with joy.

Now we were racing through the store, flowers bobbing in hand, to find Mom and show her what we had found for his money.

Like most exuberant 5-year-olds, Ethan cannot contain his joy. As soon as he saw Becki he yelled, “Mom, look what we found.” I watched as heads turned and people either smiled, or frowned.

On our way back to the check-out several people commented on “that little boy holding all the flowers.” Whenever they were close by Ethan would joyously explain to them that we needed these for our potpourri garden. Either Becki or I would follow up by explaining that our living room was a riot of flowers. I suspect only a few folks had any idea what we were talking about.

At the check-out he carefully counted out the money Becki had given him and the clerk dutifully exclaimed over his choices. She also got the full explanation of what the flowers were for. The woman behind Becki in line seemed rather enchanted with this excited little boy who would rather play with flowers than… As we exited the store together she asked if her kids could come over and play with Ethan, maybe something would rub off. “Sure”, I said.

On Tuesday I joined the ladies of one of my discussion groups and could hardly wait to tell them about Ethan and the potpourri garden. I guess I was almost as excited as he was.

Bill took a bunch of pictures which we emailed to family and I posted on my Facebook page.

I shared the story with a group at church. Ethan told Daddy all about it over the phone and not only told Aunt Deb about his garden, but gave her advice on replanting her garden (at her invitation). Her comment was that she was now going to have to rip up her whole garden and start over.

If I could pick only one word to describe our three days together, I would choose “Excitement”.

Excitement: enthusiasm, joy, exuberance that could not be contained. It had to be shared with whoever would listen. Some people listened patiently, some joined in the excitement, even when they didn’t fully understand what it was all about, some turned away because, perhaps, they believe that children should be seen, but not heard.

I have to admit that I added my own joy to Ethan’s. It is wonderful to have a grandchild who shares one’s passions. And I did my own share of exuberant telling, with similar reactions to those Ethan got.

One of the things that Ethan has yet to learn, and perhaps I am still learning, is how to judge who wants to hear what he has to say, and who would be better just left alone.

It is often like that when we are sharing our faith. Sometimes we are so filled with joy at what we are discovering about God that we just can’t contain it. Our excited sharing seems to spill out to everyone we encounter. And we get the same reactions that Ethan got; some people listen patiently, some join in the excitement, even when they didn’t fully understand what it is all about, while some turn away wishing you would just be quiet.

I hope as Ethan matures that he NEVER loses his ability to express his joy. I know he will need to learn to judge whom to share with and how to share that enthusiasm, but may he never be so rebuffed that he stops sharing with anyone.

And I pray that we will never lose our joy in our discovery of who Christ is and who we are in relation to Him. May we always find someone with whom we can let that joy spill over, even when they might not fully understand, they will just accept us, even feel some of our joy themselves.

Let’s Pretend

Roar !

Growl !

Woof woof !

Howl !

Scream !

I was glad that our house is as well insulated as it is. Not just to keep the cold out and keep the heat in, but also to help with the soundproofing. Otherwise a neighbor might be tempted to call 911 about the terrifying noises next door.

Roar !!

Scream !!

Uproarious laughter!!

We were playing one of Ethan’s favorite games, “Let’s pretend…” “Let’s pretend we are raccoons, Grandma…” “Let’s pretend we are sharks, Grandma…”

On the way to our house he asked if we could pretend that we were all adults and talk like we were adults. Bill and I barely suppressed our laughter as we agreed to this request.

Now we were down in the basement pretending that we were dogs (specifically Teddy and Mia, imagined after Aunt Deb’s dogs) and the dogcatcher was chasing us.

For awhile we were running all over the basement while the dog catcher (Grandma) was trying to catch Teddy (Ethan) in a net (a sheet). When she was able to catch Teddy she was supposed to throw him into a cage (a swivel rocker) and lock him in place (with the sheet tucked over and around him). The problem was that Teddy kept escaping and the dogcatcher could only keep up that pace for a short time.

When Teddy realized that the dog catcher had run out of energy (although he still abounded with the stuff – why can we bottle and sell it???) she was allowed to stand in one place in a matador stance while Teddy charged and ran past the outstretched sheet.

We were having an uproarious (literally) time and were only willing to slow down when the dog catcher suggested we go upstairs for a snack of fruit to refuel our energy.

Later in the weekend we were playing some other pretend game which also involved Grandpa and making noises. At one point Grandpa turned to me and whispered, “I didn’t even know I could make those noises.” Bill was too busy trying to go to school and teach at the same time when the girls were Ethan’s age so he missed most of this fun earlier. He is making up for lost time now with his grandson.

Child psychologists would tell us that “Let’s Pretend” is a child’s way of practicing; trying out what is like to behave as an adult. Perhaps it is practice, but they sure have fun doing it and they love it when we play the game with them.

I suppose that these same psychologists would say that this also allows the child to be in charge of the adults. And that is certainly true. Ethan loves it best when he is in charge, when he is telling us how the game is to be played, even if those rules change frequently throughout the game.

The game is only really fun if we participate. Children can certainly pretend on their own. They can easily pretend with other children. I remember the hours my sister and I played “dress-ups” when we were kids. But kids seem to thoroughly relish when adults pretend with them, when adults enter their pretend world.

This weekend Ethan was having fun because Grandma and Grandpa, and later in the weekend, Aunt Deb, were coming down to his level. We were entering his world and playing in his game.

In some ways, for us adults, playing “Let’s Pretend” was exhausting. It also meant, for a brief time, we were setting aside our adultness and becoming like Ethan. It meant shedding some of our inhibitions and making strange noises, running around the basement, waving our arms and sometimes collapsing on the floor (or when we could get away with it, the futon) not like an adult, but like a child.

Is this perhaps, a bit what it was like for Christ, as a part of the trinity of God Himself, to become one of us? To set aside his godness and become human? How limiting must it have been to “run” around as a human, to limit his language to ours, to diminish all of his creative energy to move solely in the realm of the created ones?

Unlike my time with Ethan, Jesus becoming man was not a game, it was deadly serious. But like my time with Ethan, he chose to do it. He did not have to become a man. God surly could have found another way to redeem us. When Jesus chose to become a human, he limited himself to our level, that he might enter our experience, that he might relate to us on our level, in order that we might move toward his level.

Ethan will not fully appreciate “the sacrifice” adults make to become a child like him until he is an adult and his own joints are growing stiff and his own sense of what is appropriate, mature adult behavior has developed. Hopefully he will remember and hopefully it will encourage him to do the same with his kids and grandkids.

I know I don’t begin to appreciate what Christ has done for us, but after this weekend I have a little better idea of what it means to limit oneself. I am struck anew with the wonder that God Himself became human for me.

Sunday, April 19, 2009

What Are You Thankful For?

“Ethan, what are you thankful for this day?” The question was met with complete silence.

We were seated around the dinner table and, following the routine set a couple of years ago, we were going around the table and saying what we were thankful for that day, before we began eating.

It was the day after Christmas and Ethan had received his share of wonderful and thoughtful gifts, several of which met the requests stated in his letter to Santa. He had just been with his father’s family, where he is loved and gets lots of attention. Now he was with his mother’s family, where he is loved and gets lots of attention. In front of each of us sat plates filled with some of our favorite foods of the season; second helpings waited on the buffet.

“Can’t you think of anything to be thankful for?” Again, complete silence, this time accompanied by a stubborn look that told the rest of us, he was NOT going to respond. I don’t know where he gets that streak of stubbornness. Certainly NO ONE in OUR family has that tendency!

His grandmother (me) found the incident just a bit amusing. His grandfather’s look said ‘let’s just move on.’ His father was a bit disconcerted that his son could think of nothing to be thankful for in the midst of such plenty. His mother’s look told me she knew he was a bit tired from several days of high energy.

And still there was silence.

Sometimes, I have to admit, I feel a bit like Ethan. I try to start each day with some time talking to my heavenly Father. I have an ever changing list of things I talk to Him about concerning many of my friends, my family, and my own personal list.

But there are some mornings when I just don’t feel like praying.

Some days the list feels overwhelming.

Some days the list feels so repetitive. I have a friend who sometimes begins his prayer with, “God, you must get tired of hearing the same requests time after time.”

And once in awhile, I am just feeling stubborn and I just don’t want to talk to God.
The amazing thing is that He is ever patient with me. He waits until I am ready. God is ever ready, even if I am not. David tells us “Each morning you listen to my prayer, as I bring my requests to you and wait for your reply. “ Psalm 5:3
There was a pause as we waited for Ethan to respond. And that stubborn look became more and more pronounced.
Then someone else said what they were thankful for, and we went on around the table. There has been so much to be thankful for, in spite of the economic times. Perhaps we are more grateful because we are more conscious of our gifts during these tougher times.
Eventually we circled back around to Ethan and without a pause he joined us with his own list of things to be thankful for. We always end this time of spoken thankfulness with a hearty AMEN and then dig in to the food.
Like Ethan, sometimes I need to hear the thoughts of others before my heart is ready to chime in with my own list. Most of us can be feeling very sorry for ourselves…until we hear the troubles of others and then we have to send up a word of thanks that our own troubles are so small.
But also like Ethan, being in the presence of God’s people can often change my mood from one of stubbornness to one of rejoicing.
I believe that we were designed to “live in community” and when that community is functioning as it should, “loving one another as ourselves”, “in honor, preferring one another”, “rejoicing with those who rejoice and weeping with those who weep” it is a glorious experience and we can’t help but add our list of things to be thankful for.
In the presence of God’s people, especially when they are rejoicing from their heart, eventually my mood changes from one of stubbornness to one of thankfulness.

Ethan and I each have a lot to learn about being thankful; rehearsing around the table at least gets us started.

What are you thankful for this day?

Exuberant Joy

They arrived right from a 4 year-old birthday party in Chicago which might explain part of it, but Ethan was filled with exuberant joy almost his entire recent visit.

He was filled to overflowing with happiness; he was with four of his favorite adults. Of course, having four adults paying attention to you most of the time might have had something to do with it too.

There were moments when it seemed he couldn’t contain his joy and he would throw his head back, as only four year olds can do, and crow with happiness and excitement.

His joy filled me with happiness. I wanted to throw my head back and crow too. His energy, running all over the yard helping Grandma weed, or gathering grass and pine needles to “build us a nest” energized me as well.

It was about then that the other adults cautioned us to “settle down” and reprimanded Grandma for getting Ethan too excited.

One of the memories I want Ethan to have about coming to Grandma and Grandpa’s is that this is a place where he can be free to express himself with joy. I want him to be able to crow with excitement, but I also understand the need for boundaries.

Later that weekend we all went to the County Fair and watched the demolition derby. I don’t know why this so appeals to sedate, normally somewhat inhibited Bill and me, but we love to watch these old wrecks crash into each other. We yell ourselves hoarse, we laugh with uninhibited loudness right along with everyone else in the stands.

At first Ethan was worried that the drivers would get hurt, but after his daddy explained how the cars had been modified to make them safe, he yelled and laughed right along with the rest of us. Once again he was filled with joy.

When we left the stands later that day, we were tired but it was that good tired from freely expressing ourselves for a few hours.

I can’t help but contrast that day with one just a week or so earlier when Bill and I had gone to a Christian concert. I had anticipated an opportunity to express joy, to be able to let out my emotions without the usual restraint, but it never happened. The performers (usually exuberant) seemed to be too tired (perhaps too many days on the road) and the audience was quieter and more subdued than we expected. Oh some people tried to express themselves, but it seemed forced and artificial to me.

God created us with the full range of emotions and I suspect He longs for us to express them all. Some of my best “quiet times” with Him are when I let my emotions loose. Times when I can cry from either deep sorrow or deep joy. Times when I can laugh from deep within because I cannot contain my joy and delight. I think God even wants us to rage from time to time, and then be open to His teaching us the way out of our rage.

My times of uninhibited emotion with God are all too few. They can’t be artificial; God only wants the real thing. Too often I hear the voices telling me to “settle down”, to not get “too excited”. While there is certainly a time and a place for our free expression, I need to find those safe places where I can be alone with God and express myself, just to Him.

May all of you find a place of uninhibited joy this week.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Words, Words, Words...

“But, Mommy, you said I could….”

“Ethan, I want you to…”

“But, Mommy, that doesn’t make sense….”

I sat below the balcony of our time-share condo and listened as my four year old grandson argued using logic to convince his mother that he should not have to do what she wanted him to do.

“My word (pun intended)”, I thought, “if he can use words like he does now to try to persuade his parents to see things his way, what will he be like at 12?”

And then it struck me! I had a sudden flash, a snapshot of what the boy Jesus must have been like.

Remember the story in Luke of the 12 year old boy Jesus who stayed behind on the family’s annual trip to Jerusalem to discussing Scripture with the teachers? They were “amazed at his understanding and his answers”. I suspect the boy Jesus loved words as well.

Can you imagine being Jesus’ mother? I imagine that conversations with her son left her amazed and probably exhausted as well.

By the time the boy Jesus becomes a man, words become His trademark. Just as He did as a boy, He amazes all who listen to him. He speaks with wisdom, not as the scribes and Pharisees. He uses words to heal, words to teach about the kingdom, words to tell about His father.

Ethan loves words. Life with Ethan is a litany of non-stop words from the moment he awakens until he goes to bed at night, with a brief pause for a nap.

He loves the sound of new words, and he always wants to know their meaning… and then he tries them out. He loves the sound of words, but even more he loves the way he can use words to describe things, to define his conversation, to enhance his word pictures.

He comes by this interest naturally. Both his parents earn their living using words. His grandpa was/is a wordsmith. His aunt and his grandma use words pretty effectively as well.

Words - the use of words - is one of the things that separates us from all other forms of life. Many animals communicate with sound, but only humans have this breadth and depth of communication. We use words to describe, to define, to enhance.

Remember what John says when he introduces Jesus, the Christ? John calls Him the Word made flesh. Jesus is the Word of God.

Jesus is God defined. He is God articulated. He is the Word picture of God become man.

As we move through the Thanksgiving season we use words to express our thanks. Sometimes we don’t feel very thankful, but during this season most of us summon up the words to at least sound thankful. And sometimes the sound of our own words reminds us to really be thankful.

Soon we move into the season to anticipate and celebrate God become man. God articulated. The Word become flesh.

As we enter this season of celebration may we hear in a new way the words of God. May we come to understand better God described in the person of Jesus.

Telling Grandma What To Do

Ethan and his parents stayed with us recently.

It was one of those lovely spring afternoons when the temperature was just right. There was a gentle breeze, the birds were just fledging their first crop of babies and deciding if the nest could be used again, or if a new one had to be built.

We four adults and one exuberant four year old moved onto the patio behind our condo and were enjoying a rare time of just relaxing, visiting, and enjoying the spring around us.

For awhile Ethan and I were playing at being robins and were gathering nesting material from the edge of the field behind us and piling it up under the tree where our “nest” was. He was having a great time running all over the place pulling dead grass from the edge of the field, gathering dried needles from under the pines and looking for other material that would make a good nest. Soon his “playground” voice was calling out, “Grandma, here is some good material for our nest. Grandma, come over here and help me get this material.” He explained to me why each handful of material would be good our “our nest”.

When he grew tired of being a bird he decided we should do some weeding. We got Grandpa’s new dandelion weeding tool, a weed bucket and began searching the yard for dandelions, and even more important thistles, to dig up. Fortunately, or unfortunately, it did not take him long to find many plants to remove and soon his shrill voice could be heard, “Grandma, come and dig this one. Grandma, here’s another one to dig.” We zigzagged all over the yard with Grandma using the pronged tool and Ethan filling the bucket.

After awhile I grew tired and told my little slave driver that I was going to take a rest with the other adults on the patio. He could keep looking for weeds to dig out and when I was rested we could continue.

When I joined Becki, John and Bill at the table I told them I didn’t know which of the many fields of interest Ethan would choose for his life’s work, but I knew he was going to be a supervisor!

Becki gently told me that I didn’t have to let Ethan boss me around so much. And I assured her that I don’t always let him boss me around. But it is a Grandma’s privilege to let him be in charge when it is appropriate and building nests today was a time appropriate.

Does God let us “boss” Him around? We certainly try.

Listen the next time you are in a place where group prayers are being offered and listen for how many times God is “told what to do”. Listen the next time you pray.

Along those same lines listen for all the times we, WE, tell someone else what God wants for them!

I think we are often as bossy with God as Ethan is with me.

God is even more patient with us than I am with Ethan. Scripture says He never slumbers nor sleeps, I think that also means He never gets tired as we humans do. But we are also told in the Old Testament that He wearied of the Israelites complaining, He wearied of their not keeping Him first in their lives. He wearied of them telling Him what they were going to do, rather than asking what He wanted them to do.

Just as there are times when Ethan has to be reminded that the adults in his life really do know what is best and he needs to respect and obey their directives, I need to be reminded that God knows what is best for me.

Our reminders to Ethan are to help him grow into a strong, healthy, wise and caring adult. God’s reminders to me are for all the same reasons and even more.

Some days I think God indulges me, maybe even with some amusement, building my “nests”, but when the time is appropriate, He disciplines me and reminds me that letting Him be in charge is best.

Thursday, April 16, 2009

God's Perspective

“Don’t get me any more books, Grandma,” Ethan directed me on his last visit. “I have too many books.”

I can understand his sentiment. Some Children’s Centers would be overwhelmed to receive all his books - good books, excellent books. There is everything from Hop on Pop by Dr. Seuss to a cookbook with excellent photographs of all of Ethan’s favorite vegetables.

I confess, however, that my heart sank just a bit at this pronouncement. I like to shop for books for Ethan. I anticipate sharing with him some of my favorites and discovering new favorites yet to come. In fact, I already have a stack of books in my closet anticipating the day when he will be old enough for each of them.

Books are important to me. They are important to Bill. They are an integral part of Becki’s and John’s and Aunt Deb’s lives. I wouldn’t say we can’t live without books, but life would be a lot less enjoyable with no reading material to escape into, to learn from, tomake us think and wonder and often debate.

Later that day I hesitantly offered Ethan the cute book I’d bought at the library book sale. He accepted it graciously and later in the day assured me he liked his new book.

I suspect that Ethan is sated with too many books for 3 year olds.

I am pretty certain he will be ready for books for 4 year olds, and books for 8 year olds, and books for 12 year olds, when the time comes. But he isn’t ready for them yet.

Perhaps we have overwhelmed him with too many books.

Fortunately all of us will keep looking for those great books that will teach him and whet his appetite for more. Fortunately we also know better than Ethan right now and we won’t quit just because he is sated for the moment.

Do we ever tell God, “Enough of this good thing! I am full up, overwhelmed with your generosity”?

Perhaps not directly, but I think we often do when we ignore His gifts at the end of a beautiful summer with more pleasant days than unpleasant. How many of us hear people remembering such a summer with, “It was too hot!” “There was too much rain!” “It was so dry!”

Or we complain that we are overweight – because we have too many good things to eat (ouch!)

We complain that our taxes are too high – because our income is too great.

We complain that we’re bored with our wardrobes, our house décor, our car model – because we have more than we need.

I have several friends who talk about their “cumber” and how to get rid of it. They are encumbered with too much stuff. “Please, God” they in effect say, “don’t give me anymore. I have too much already.”

Fortunately God doesn’t listen to us. He already has more to give us just waiting on His shelf for the right time. Days filled with light and moments of revelation. I’m glad He knows better than I do when to give me His good gifts.

For Ethan, this might be a good time to sort through all those books, perhaps some need to be put away for awhile and then taken out when they will be fresh and “new” again. Perhaps some of the books for 2 year olds need to be packed up and given away (actually, they do that regularly) and some books need to be left on the shelf because we never know when we will need to reference them again.

For me, there is a time to sort and pack up and give away what I don’t need anymore. But some of my stuff and some of my experiences need to be packed away so I can take them out again later when they will be fresh and new. And some things needs to be “left on the shelf” because I never know when I might need to reference it again.

No More Books

…“Don’t get me any more books, Grandma,” Ethan directed me on his last visit. “I have too many books.”

I can understand his sentiment. Some Children’s Centers would be overwhelmed to receive all his books - good books, excellent books. There is everything from Hop on Pop by Dr. Seuss to a cookbook with excellent photographs of all of Ethan’s favorite vegetables.

I confess, however, that my heart sank just a bit at this pronouncement. I like to shop for books for Ethan. I anticipate sharing with him some of my favorites and discovering new favorites yet to come. In fact, I already have a stack of books in my closet anticipating the day when he will be old enough for each of them.

Books are important to me. They are important to Bill. They are an integral part of Becki’s and John’s and Aunt Deb’s lives. I wouldn’t say we can’t live without books, but life would be a lot less enjoyable with no reading material to escape into, to learn from, tomake us think and wonder and often debate.

Later that day I hesitantly offered Ethan the cute book I’d bought at the library book sale. He accepted it graciously and later in the day assured me he liked his new book.

I suspect that Ethan is sated with too many books for 3 year olds.

I am pretty certain he will be ready for books for 4 year olds, and books for 8 year olds, and books for 12 year olds, when the time comes. But he isn’t ready for them yet.

Perhaps we have overwhelmed him with too many books.

Fortunately all of us will keep looking for those great books that will teach him and whet his appetite for more. Fortunately we also know better than Ethan right now and we won’t quit just because he is sated for the moment.

Do we ever tell God, “Enough of this good thing! I am full up, overwhelmed with your generosity”?

Perhaps not directly, but I think we often do when we ignore His gifts at the end of a beautiful summer with more pleasant days than unpleasant. How many of us hear people remembering such a summer with, “It was too hot!” “There was too much rain!” “It was so dry!”

Or we complain that we are overweight – because we have too many good things to eat (ouch!)

We complain that our taxes are too high – because our income is too great.

We complain that we’re bored with our wardrobes, our house décor, our car model – because we have more than we need.

I have several friends who talk about their “cumber” and how to get rid of it. They are encumbered with too much stuff. “Please, God” they in effect say, “don’t give me anymore. I have too much already.”

Fortunately God doesn’t listen to us. He already has more to give us just waiting on His shelf for the right time. Days filled with light and moments of revelation. I’m glad He knows better than I do when to give me His good gifts.

For Ethan, this might be a good time to sort through all those books, perhaps some need to be put away for awhile and then taken out when they will be fresh and “new” again. Perhaps some of the books for 2 year olds need to be packed up and given away (actually, they do that regularly) and some books need to be left on the shelf because we never know when we will need to reference them again.

For me, there is a time to sort and pack up and give away what I don’t need anymore. But some of my stuff and some of my experiences need to be packed away so I can take them out again later when they will be fresh and new. And some things needs to be “left on the shelf” because I never know when I might need to reference it again.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Why, Why, Why?

We were sitting in a local ice cream shop enjoying great decadence. I watched a young mother introducing her 18 – 24 months old daughter to the joys of ice cream.

The child watched her mother spoon the dripping, gooey stuff into her mouth, close her eyes, savor it for a moment and then swallow. Then the mother put a small amount on the spoon and reached toward the child who opened her mouth, baby bird like, and tasted the ice cream offered to her.

The child shivered slightly as the cold sweetness began to melt on her tongue. You could almost see her processing this presumably new food and deciding whether or not she wanted to add it to her list of favored foods. She must have decided “yes” because she edged closer to the table and leaned her little head forward anticipating another tiny taste.

My thoughts flew backward to the previous week and a visit from Ethan and his continuous litany of “whys”. He is at that age…when a child can eventually drive every adult within a certain proximity to insanity with the constant repetition of “why”.

Being a grandmother I can take one step back and watch the process between my daughter or my son-in-law and their child.

I remember that process when I was a young mother and getting to that exasperated point when you want to (or do) blurt, “because I said so” or “because it is!”

Now I can remain detached enough to see that the entire world is new to a child. Some of their “whys” are genuine because they don’t know why the street has to be dug up before it can be blacktopped again. They don’t know about germs and why we have to wash our hands so often. They don’t fully comprehend the needs of our bodies and why we have to go to bed at a certain time.

I watched Becki and John patiently (most of the time) answer Ethan’s “why”, followed by another “why”, followed by another “why”. It suddenly struck me that his little mind (little but still so awesome) is growing each day. He is constantly taking in information, processing it, adding much of it to the memory of that wondrous computer we call a brain. But he is young enough that there is always another “why”.

At the same time, while Bill and I are amazed at what his brain can retain (he can tell you the correct names of ALL of the streets they must travel to get from their house in Chicago to Grandma and Grandpa’s) I suddenly realized that there are a whole lot of things he doesn’t know and we would not dream of telling him. He knows NOTHING of politics, even though this is a big part of the news right now. He is learning a lot about fruits, veggies and even fungi, but he hasn’t a clue about genetics (yet). He can tell you the names and destinations of all of the elevated trains in Chicago, but he couldn’t tell you the name of a single constellation.

He is rapidly learning about the world around him, but that world is still confined and controlled mostly by the adults who care about him.

As he is able, Becki and John introduce new ideas, new books, new conversations into his world and his knowledge and understanding grow. There are still an endless number of “whys”, but the scope of the whys is ever changing.
And so it is with us and God. We too, in our own way, at least many of us, are forever asking God “why”.

“Why did this happen? Why do I feel this way? Why didn’t you answer that prayer, or at least answer it the way I asked? Why do people treat each other the way they do? Why can’t other intelligent people see life the way I do?” Well, you get the picture.

Does God ever get tired of our “whys”? Because I often think of God in human terms, I suspect He gets tired when it is the same “why” over and over. There certainly seem to be times in Scripture when he says to various people, “because I said so”.

But most of the time God is so patient with us. Answering our “whys” in a great variety of ways. Sometimes He asks us to wait till we “are a little older” and can understand it all better.

I can imagine if that little girl at the beginning of this story had asked her mother “why should I taste this new food? ” her mother might have answered, “Just taste it, trust me, just taste it, you’ll like it.” Sometimes I think God says that to us as well, “trust me, it will all turn out for your good. You’ll like it.”

The world in which Ethan lives is bigger than he can imagine; there is so much more for him to wonder about, so much more to learn. His grandpa prays every day that Ethan will never lose his wonder. Too many of Bill’s students (especially in the later years) seemed to have lost their wonder. But the adults who care about Ethan carefully shield him from what he is not ready for or capable of learning just yet.

Our world, God’s world, is also beyond our comprehension. Like a perfect parent God knows what we are capable of understanding and only exposes us to what we can learn today. We have hints of the more that there is to learn, but He only unfolds that as we are ready.

As a student of Scripture, and a student of this world, I am amazed at how I keep learning year after year. I was pretty certain when I finished Bible School that I knew it all. Each of you also understands that you know less and less the older you get. That’s because you realize there is ever so much more to know, to learn, to understand.

I find the unfolding of Ethan’s mind a great delight. Every time I see him I am amazed at how much more he “knows”, how much more he understands. I am so honored that I can participate in his teaching process; that I get to answer at least a few of the “whys”.

I think God too wants us to be filled with wonder. Wonder not just about Scripture, but all of life. I think He wants us to be asking a continuous stream of “whys”. Not the same “whys” over and over, but ever new “whys” based on our growing comprehension of who He is and His creation – all of it.

When we ask a new “why”, He also expects us to stop and listen to His answer, to think about it and when we’re ready, ask the next “why”.

When we are ready, God answers our “whys”. And once in awhile He says, “just trust me, you’ll like it.”

Monday, April 13, 2009

Unless You Become Like a Little Child

I lay on the futon in our lower level waiting for sounds from upstairs. I was savoring those last few moments before the day really began.

It was about 6:30 am. Bill had been up for at least half an hour. He was in his study working on the next Sunday’s sermon.

There were the usual sounds – the refrig turning off and on, the water pipes making their soft clanging, a little creak here and a soft groan there as the house shifted and settled. But I was waiting for a special sound. I was waiting for seven zero zero when Ethan was allowed to come out of his room and the day would really begin.

Ethan and his parents (our daughter Becki and our son-in-law John) had arrived the day before for a half week vacation with Grandma and Grandpa.

As he has done the last several visits, Ethan went right into “his room” to check to see that everything was in order. To see that Grandma’s birds (and therefore his as well) were still on the shelves and the dishes of interesting acorns, seed pods and pine cones were still nestled among the (artificial) pine boughs. Satisfied that everything was where he had last left it, he bounded into the living room.

He had greeted both Bill and me with an enthusiastic “We’re here” as soon as they arrived; now he wanted to know what “we are going to play with this time, Grandma?”

I had brought up a bag of blocks, his bag of “real working” tools and a few other things. He glanced at those things, and then looked around the room again.

“Your bowl of fruit is still on the shelf over there.” I told my three year old grandson. He bounded over to the baker’s rack and carefully pulled the basket of artificial apples, pears, banana, and grapes, with a couple of real dried oranges thrown in, off the shelf. He carried it to the open area in front of the couch and dumped it onto the carpet. Then he ran to the basket of birdhouse gourds and added them to the pile.

“Grandma, let’s go downstairs and see what else you have for me to play with.”

As we reached the top of the steps, Ethan looked back into the living room of adults watching this scene play out and announced, “Just Grandma and me. I want to go downstairs with only Grandma.”

As I lay there waiting for Ethan sounds I was remembering with delight the joys of yesterday. The utter joy he expressed when we opened Grandma’s “Fall” box and he was allowed to carry upstairs the basket of yet more dried gourds, and the sprays of artificial berries and acorns. I remembered the enchantment of his imagination as he “cut up” his fruits and veggies with the plastic knife I gave him and made all sorts of exotic dishes which he served to any adult who would participate.

When we went outside to enjoy the cool of the patio, Ethan exclaimed with joy that the fish were still in the pond, looked at all the flowers growing and pulled all the weeds that Grandma pointed out to him.

At bedtime he wanted Grandma to help him with his bath, Grandma to read him the first story. Grandpa was allowed to dry him off and allowed to read him the second book.

As I lay on the futon I laughed out loud and then wiped a tear as I remembered the several times when Ethan would suddenly stop in the midst of play, look up at me and say, “I love you Grandma. I love you very much.”

And then it struck me. This is exactly what God wants from us. This is (at least in part) what it means to become like a little child.

God longs for us to be excited about being with Him again. He wants us to exclaim with wonder at the creation He has put all around us. He wants us to want to be with “just Him”, telling Him every little thing that is on our minds. He delights when we look up and just say, “I love you, I love you very much.”

No fancy buildings that we have to be in, no intricate service that we have to participate in, no ritual that must be followed. Just unbridled, uncomplicated joy at being in His presence. Simplicity, uncluttered, childlike.

No doubt Ethan’s relationship with us will become more complicated as his own life becomes more complicated. That’s just what happens. But…

The most wonderful, the most beloved person I can ever think of was my own grandmother. She always had time for me, even when she was very busy, I was allowed to “help” her sew and “help” her make a pie, or weed, or dust. I just wanted to be with her, to be in her presence and she honored that.

I don’t know if I learned great truths from my Grandmother, but I certainly learned about unconditional love and acceptance and the joy of just simply being with that person you felt safest with.

All of my life I have hoped, longed for, prayed that I could someday be a grandma like my grandma. To my great joy and deep delight God seems to be allowing this wish to become true.

As Ethan’s life becomes more complex, and it will even this next year, I hope that these times of just being with Grandma become embedded in his memory to be pulled out when he needs them.

I hope he will continue to burst into joy when he gets to Grandma and Grandpa’s house. I hope he will always, even when life gets tumultuous and unsettled, think of our home as a place of refuge and acceptance.

And I hope, beginning even now, Ethan will see God, at least a part of God, as the loving father he sees in Grandpa and the nurturing mother he sees in Grandma.

And finally, because of Ethan, my own relationship with God has taken a step backward! Yes, backward, back to that place where I just delight in being in His presence. That place where I can exclaim with delight at the creation He has surrounded me with (for at least a time not worrying about Global Warming etc.), to be able to ask Him why 100 times and then some and be content with His answers, and to spontaneously just look up and say, “I love you, I really love you.”