Sunday, March 25, 2012

Faith

Good morning. It is spring--a time of renewal. A time of joy for me. The green and the sunshine I need, the warmth so that I can be outside, go for walks, and enjoy it. I feel a sense of calmness and peace at this time of year.
I read a blog post by Glennon this morning over at http://www.momastery.com/ that compelled me to write here. I have realized recently that I am good at sharing some stories, but not all. And I need to share some of my stories. I want my children to know. I want my friends and family to know. So soon there will be more of those posts. And today Glennon inspired me to share a post about my faith--watch out this is a long one.


I have a strong faith in Christ/God/Holy Spirit...always have always will. I need my faith. It gets me through. It helps me focus on what is important. It leads me to do the right thing and share love. It gives me hope. For me, it is not there as a group of answers, but as a leading course.
My faith is mine. It is a part of my past, present, and future. It is not a faith like everyone else, for I really am very little like everyone else. Never did fit in the box, never will, and I not accept and embrace that. And my faith does not fit in a box either.

I believe in ONE GOD ONLY, three in one, ominipresent. I use the names interchangeably. I like to think that the creator God is the same in all cultures, just with different names and background stories that work with those histories. But I do believe that Jesus was the part of God that makes the big difference--its the part where God puts it back on us to believe and accept.
I still like to think of God as non-gender--as too big to need that label. But I also understand, now, in my older self wisdom, that the majority of society prefers and more readily accepts a male. But the feminist part of me that questioned this, and every other piece of patriarchal society in college, still prefers the Native American beliefs of Spirit that is all encompassing.


I am thankful for the classes in college that taught me the history of the Bible, but also human's role in that history, for the classes that opened my eyes to other denominations and faith traditions. They made me question my religion--not my faith--and how I related to religion, and in the mean time, strengthened that core faith. I am thankful for all of our moves that introduced me to other faiths and denominations through friends, visiting churches, attending other denominations. They have helped shape me. They have helped me be more open to the idea that everyone has different needs and comforts within their own religion. It has led me to discover what I need from religion. I believe that God doesn't really care about religion--I think FAITH and a relationship are more important to Him. Religion is our comfort level for faith and relationships.

For you see, when you don't fit in the box others have a hard time seeing and understanding. So Christians and non have been very judgemental of my faith, of my religion. They question it, they judge it, and they try to change me. But as I just mentioned, I have finally come to an understanding that everyone has a comfort level. Some need hard and fast answers and rules in religion, faith, and life in general. Some need societal norms and rules. Some not as much...this is where I fit. And part of the reason I am there stems from my own artistic self,from my own studies, but also from the judgement.


My wise husband once told me, "You don't know my heart and my faith. No one can ever really know any other person's true relationship with God--only God and that self." Wise.


Because of the judging, because I am adamant that respect of other people's beliefs is absolutely necessary--from my own experiences, because of how Jeff taught me to apply it, I am not always good about sharing my faith. I sing in the band at my church, I am the director of the Sunday School program, I am the director of our vacation Bible school--and I write the complete curriculum. But some of you may not know those things. Notice how I feel comfortable sharing my faith--through musical worship (and yes I dance and raise my hands-- I dance everywhere. God made my feet and body to move--I never have been good at holding still. And with children. I love their openness. I love that they feel Spirit and that they see God. I love that they talk to Jesus. And religion doesn't matter. I share faith with them and love leading them in the teachings of God to create their own faith.


I am a Lutheran Christian--grew up that way, feel comfortable that way . **You should know, too, that I come from an awesome family of Lutherans. My parents and aunts did a great job in being faithful role models for me.** The church I attend now has five guiding principles rooted in Lutheran tradition that I find perfect (italics is from church, the rest is from me):
1. Jesus is Lord. I believe with my whole being that He created me, came to save me, and loves me. I believe He is the greatest teacher ever.
2. EVERYONE is welcome. Faith and salvation is intended for every single human on this Earth. God wants us all--no matter what your gender, sexual orientation, color, disability, intelligence, dress style, whatever. God made us all, perfectly, and we are HIS.
3. We have what the world needs. Jesus gave us the tools we need. Love one another. God is the only judge. If we listen to what God is telling us, how Spirit is filling us, and how Jesus is leading us, we will share the Good News in quiet or loud proclaiming ways. Some people do it silently, some need specific wording that make them comfortable. But the world needs LOVE, and GOD IS LOVE.
4. Everyone has something to offer. Each and every one of us has a gift and we can use that gift to praise and thank God. It doesn't matter what that gift is, it doesn't matter where we do it, because Jesus/God/Spirit KNOW. He is in us, He is leading that gift. He is waiting for every single one of us to realize that. And I wholeheartedly believe that He rejoices when we get it.
5. Love changes everything. How true. It changes us from our core out.


More reasons I am Lutheran:
I need the group confession and communion--ALL the time. I have decided that for me, it is like being reborn EVERY single week. Every week I love that as a church we proclaim that we are human, that we need Christ, and that we remember that Jesus saves, forgives, and loves us.

I find my comfort in the blessing, in the creed, in the liturgy. That being said, I no longer have the patience or the focus for the traditional liturgy every week. But I still enjoy it. I like the thought that in any Lutheran church around the world we are speaking some of the same things.

I love that Lutherans believe GRACE is ENOUGH. We just need to accept that grace. Now, we should honor, respect, and praise that grace--but in the end, it is all about God's Grace.


Now, some not so Lutheran things...there are always renegade thoughts/ideas. Otherwise there would only be one Christian way of doing things. :) (And for those of you who might worry, I don't talk about these beliefs often, and never with children. Just the basics for them friends, just the basics.)
I believe in Hell, and I think it is right here on Earth. Bad stuff happens, we struggle, we hurt. God gives us glimpses of what Heaven can be like. But we don't have the answers in this life. That is hard. I think Heaven will be all the best of love and what is here. And I believe there could be no greater punishment than being sent back to do it all again--potty training, being a teenager, the losses and struggles--and not being allowed to be with God in that beautiful place of love until we get it right and believe in Christ and follow those teachings.


I believe like the Native Americans that Holy Spirit is in us all, and in every piece of nature that God creates. Our world is too complex, science does not explain it all, I don't want those hard rules. I don't really care how long it took or how God did it. What matters is that He did. I love looking at the four or five different greens in bushes, trees, and flowers next to each other and knowing that God created that for us to notice. I love seeing the sky change, the different textures of the land. The artist in me recognizes His genius and is enamored with and in awe of His work.

I prefer to worship. I love the music, the fellowship. I need to help, and know that God is using me--I have found He makes that decision a lot for me. Some people don't. Some are so sick of all the religion that they can't get past that to the faith at a church. I understand. Finally. I'm okay with that. But I do hope that faith is growing and showing itself in other ways.

I like that other religions are so open and serious about real intuitive prayer. Just listening for Holy Spirit to whisper to you. Not just recitations.

I don't want to indoctrinate my children. I want to teach and share. But not force. I will never force. I will not judge their faith needs. I hope that that openness will give them the freedom to have the strongest faith ever. I think my parents did a good job with this. Look at moi.
So there it is. Out there. Thank you Glennon for pushing me to share, to witness in my own way (and knowing God lately He had a lot to do with this too.) Now you know, my faith is deep inside me and never going anywhere. I have made intentional decisions and thought a lot about this. It may grow and change, as all good things do since they are flexible. Now I have a record for my children when they want to know.

And now I can share this with those who come to my door and question me.

I believe in God/Jesus/Holy Spirit, my creator and savior.

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