Thrilling Guest Thursday: Bold Warrioress

I look for your deliverance, Lord.
Genesis 49:18
 
 
Who is this bold warrioress, you wonder? Her name is Kelly, which means “war, strife or bright-headed” according to the baby name books. But I have seen it translatied as “warrioress” or “bold one”
 
 
 
 
Her battle cry is “Ain’t No Mountain Too High!” I invite you to click over to Kelly Greer’s blog today to read a truth wrapped up in an acronym poem. A victory cry: “God Delivers!”
 
 
 
I would also like to reccomend the book Bold Love by Dan Allender and Tremper Longman III. Especially the chapter titled: “Resume of a Warrior: Qualifications of the Heart.” Challenging reading, but good for the heart and soul.
 
 
 
Linking up with:
 
 
 
 
 

 


Thrilling Guest Thursday: A Theme

Why are you cast down, O my soul,
and why are you in turmoil within me?
Hope in God; for I shall again praise him,
my salvation and my God.
Psalm 42:5-6a ESV

This morning I was talking with Kelly Greer from Ain’t No Mountain Too High. She reminded me that she wrote a post (“Falling in Love” with Change) that went along with a recent theme that we’ve been noticing…

God is calling his daughters to “Let Go!”

Just this week Lynn D. Morrissey wrote about the topic over at Redemption’s Beauty in a post titled: Letting Go-In Her Words.

As a matter of fact, Shelly Miller from Remption’s Beauty is writing a whole series this month on the topic: 31 Days of Letting Go.

And a couple weeks ago, Jennifer Dukes Lee from Getting Down with Jesus, saw those words in San Francisco and wrote: Why It’s Safe to Let Go

I received an email from a friend during that same week, and she shared with our “band of sisters” that a little birdie told her that some of us were needing to “Let Go” of some things that were holding us back. (I paraphrased, a bit there, Kathy 🙂 She recommended a book, she is reading, by Sheila Walsh…Let Go: Live Free of the Burdens All Women Know.

I am listening.

But the real question is will I let go? Will I surrender? Will I release myself and others from unrealistic expectations? Will I forgive?

Dear Jesus…Help me to “Let Go!”

While at the same time, You promise to never let me go! Thank You!


Thrilling Guest Thursday: Rachelle Parezo

This week I would like to introduce you to my friend, Rachelle. She is a woman seeking after God’s heart like you and me. She’s a wife and mother, who wants to love boldly. She reflects on her life through journaling and occasionally gives glimpses of her heart through notes on Facebook.

Here is an offering she wrote last fall:

Epiphanies or “Aha” Moments

I’m probably seeing the last of the hummingbirds this week.  It’s supposed to get cold again soon.  The one I just watched drink from the feeder and fly away looked different than the ones with the red and green that I have watched often all through the summer.  Maybe hummingbirds are already migrating and this one was getting a little nectar to take him a little farther?  Once they are gone, it will easily be May before I get to enjoy their flitting flying patterns, their fierce battles for reign over the feeder and their high little chirping noises they make to one another.    
The flowers are all fading, and one season is coming to a complete end soon.

I didn’t sleep much last night – it happens more and more often.   Also, Dennis & Jonathan had to head out very early this morning for a Weeblo-Ree event with cub scouts.  They left here at 5:30, and that was on my mind to get up early enough to get them out the door with all their reminders, their stuff, the hot cocoa and coffee and microwave breakfast to eat in the truck. 

Since I was fully awake and had also had my morning coffee, I decided to head out to enjoy the morning before the sun rose.  I love the quiet and peace of the very early morning.  I love the cool dew of fall mornings – seeing it rise in a mist as the sun comes over the horizon.  As I walked and listened to all the morning songs of the birds, I heard a honking and looked up to see the V formation of geese flying … north?  Curious! 
The pear trees have various shades of fading green, orange and bright red.  The maples are beginning to be more and more orange.  The morning rays of the sun reveal these colors best.  Then as I got to the bottom of the hill, the sun’s first rays were casting their light on the steeple of the little church next to our fire station.  All the while, my heart was singing “Holy Holy Holy is the Lord God Almighty, the whole earth is full of His glory.”  I breathe deep, I listen hard and I look for the places where God’s hand is evident. 
Ann Voskamp’s wonderful book One Thousand Gifts  is challenging me to look for beauty more and more.  As I enter the rays of the sun, and see my shadow become evident, I also notice that the air is still crisp enough that I can see my breath in the light.  When things feel hard, I remind myself to breathe in and breathe out and relax myself this way, it is easier when you can see your breath!

I got a chance to visit with my mom on the phone awhile the other day and she was telling me things she had told me before about how God never gives us more than we can handle and how hard things make us stronger. 

I suddenly had an epiphany while talking with her (that I usually refer to as “aha” moments) that God indeed has consistently given me way more than I can handle.  Yet, He’s never given me more than He can handle. 

Also, much of life has buckled my knees at times, but His Word says that when I am weak, He is strong.  So, yes, life has made me stronger in some ways, but only so much as I’ve learned to lean into the only One who is strong, and allow Him to fill in all the gaps created by my many weaknesses.  Yes, lots happens that is more than I can handle, but as long as I run to Him with the difficulties, and practice and learn to rest in Him, then I can watch Him resolve the issues that may trouble me at that time.

Thrilling Guest Thursday: Lynn D. Morrissey

 
Lynn D. Morrissey, is a Certified Journal Facilitator (CJF), founder of Heartsight Journaling, a ministry for reflective journal-writing, author of Love Letters to God: Deeper Intimacy through Written Prayer and other books, contributor to numerous bestsellers, an AWSA and CLASS speaker, and professional soloist. She and her beloved husband, Michael, have been married since 1975 and have a college-age daughter, Sheridan. They live in St. Louis, Missouri.

You may contact Lynn at words@brick.net.

Please feel to comment on this post, as she will be checking comments. As all writers do, she appreciates feedback and your responses to her work.
 
 
The first time I met Lynn, she was sharing her passion for the written word at a Women’s Retreat. I reacquainted myself  with her many years later, when I recognized her at a local Christian bookstore. She has been encouraging me ever since with her journaling passion and love for all things writing, but most of all her rich, extravagant love for Jesus. Here’s a beautiful tribute written about a beautiful woman by another equally beautiful friend and woman of faith.
 
What a Friend
by Lynn D. Morrissey
 
Myrtle was dead. The shriveled brown body encasing her generous spirit let go at God’s command. Like autumn’s last leaf, thin and brittle as parchment, it drifted effortlessly to its final resting place.                                      
I met Myrtle years ago. What an unlikely pair we were, our backgrounds and temperaments as variegated as fall’s foliage. Myrtle was a venerable octogenarian of African-American descent–gracious, humble, and gentle. Yet her soft-spokenness was peppered with crisp humor and laughter that tinkled like a flurry of wind chimes. Her diminutive ninety-pound frame housed a prayer warrior who regularly conferred with her Captain and best friend, Jesus, whom she claimed could fixanything. And He did!
I was a thirty-something Caucasian with an impetuous nature. I loved God and His Word, but was frustrated by my faith that seemed to fluctuate like a round of Simon Says—two baby steps forward, three giant steps back. Solidly standing with feet firmly fixed on her Rock, Jesus Christ, Myrtle’s faith simply was.
I stuck close to Myrtle, hoping to absorb her faith secrets, and she was only too willing to share them. Every Sunday, we met in our church’s tiny chapel. Myrtle always left the doors open so people could join us for prayer, but few ever did. Myrtle, whose arthritis might have dictated otherwise, insisted we kneel at the altar rail. Inch by inch, she pleated like a weathered accordion, and with one heavy sigh—shooo—finally dropped to her knees. I preferred my comfortable pew seat, but knelt out of respect for Myrtle. She knelt out of respect for God.
Myrtle prayed like she talked, simply and sincerely. I, who had struggled with prayer for nearly ten years as a Christian, was amazed at the effortlessness of her petitions, as if she were chatting over the breakfast table with an intimate friend. One knew that when Myrtle prayed, Jesus knelt alongside us, His presence palpable.
Myrtle didn’t just pray to Jesus, she sang to Him, too. Her favorite hymn was What a Friend We Have in Jesus, and that was no surprise. She sang to her friend Jesus while she baked, washed, dusted, or tended the generational dozens of children entrusted to her care over the years. She told me that singing gave her spiritual strength. Myrtle sang most heartily in church, where she shone like polished piano ebony among mostly white keys.
Sometimes it disturbed me that Myrtle demonstrated what I considered to be a subservient attitude towards her Caucasian counterparts, calling each lady by Miss or Mrs. and her surname. Myrtle is just as good as they, I thought, and knows her Bible better and can pray rings around them!
In retrospect, although I believe Myrtle hailed from a generation plagued with societally imposed racial distinctions, I learned that her personality was characterized by subservience to Christ. His humble servant, she showed deference to others. Herhumility humbled me, and I longed to be more like her.
What a friend I had in Myrtle. I called her day or night, asking endless questions or relaying uncontrolled fears. She patiently listened, never criticizing, never minimizing my wrestling. She’d offer a Bible passage to enlighten, a prayer to uplift. “Jesus will fix it, Lynn,” she assured and I was soothed, though not always persuaded. My faith needed to grow.
Sometimes trials loomed larger than life, seemingly insurmountable. One morning at work, I made a desperate call to Myrtle explaining that some board directors thought I was negligent in raising critical funds for the agency for which I was executive director. Some wanted me fired. “Jesus will fix it,” she insisted. “Let’s pray.” We did and He did! I had never been one to toot my own horn, but at the next board meeting, I had an opportunity to explain that I had personally been responsible for generating a large percentage of support in both cash and in-kind donations. A naive young woman, I had done my job without reporting it. In response to Myrtle’s prayer, the Lord gave me courage to speak, and He gave me favor with the board.
Another call to Myrtle was even more desperate. I was forty and pregnant! This was a circumstance that couldn’t be fixed or altered by any amount of praying. And yet, in the ensuing months, as I confessed my anguish to my faithful, non-judgmental friend, Myrtle, Jesus answered our prayers by fixing my attitude. When my daughter was born, how proud I was to be her mother. And how proud Myrtle was to be included at Sheridan’s baptism as her great-godmother.
Certainly arrogant pride was not one of Myrtle’s characteristics. “Why would you, a college graduate, ask advice from me?” she sometimes queried. I thought the answer was obvious. Myrtle possessed the God-given wisdom that I needed.
Yet near the end of her life, Myrtle’s wisdom was harder to discover. Her quick mind and quicker wit were overshadowed by the ravages of Alzheimer’s disease, scrambling her language into a kind of verbal Morse-code gibberish. She could no longer talk to others or to Jesus. 
One afternoon, in what was to be our last visit, I pulled her dusty hymnal from the piano bench, asking her daughter-in-law for permission to play for Myrtle. As I played the old familiar hymn, with tears streaming down her cheeks, Myrtle began to sing, “What a friend we have in Jesus…” Although she could no longer talk to Jesus, she was singing to Him just as she had throughout the years. While Myrtle couldn’t tell Him, she knew He was still her best friend.
Several days later, Jesus fixed Myrtle good as new. And now she’ll never stop singing!
 
(Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Lynn D. Morrissey)