Tag Archives: gods girlies

In yesterday's post "Pillow Fight: A Shared Blog" I shared the purpose in beauty.  Though I used decorative pillows to show that purpose, I know full well that true and lasting beauty comes from within. The pillows I've used to adorn my home will quickly grow ragged and dull. But there is  God created beauty all around you; beauty that remains. It is when we attempt  to create beauty with our own hands that we find beauty unlasting.

Charm is deceitful, and beauty is fleeting, but a woman who fears the Lord is to be praised. -Proverbs 31:30

It is when we live in awe of almighty God that we truly become beautiful.  It is when we know Him that we have a beauty that remains.

But let your adorning be the hidden person of the heart with the imperishable beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which in God's sight is very precious. -1 Peter 3:4

To stay beautiful-Stay in Him

Subscribe to receive posts automatically.

Connect through email www.godsgirlies.com

					

2 Comments

Jason is a great husband.  And after seventeen years of marriage we see eye to eye on most things.  This does not apply to decorative pillows.  Our living room and bedroom are adorned with pillows.  I see great purpose in them.   Jason despises them saying they’re not comfortable.  I think they bring color and beauty to the room.  Jason argues that they’re in the way; that they have no purpose.  When he wants to sit on the couch or go to bed, he throws them with disdain.

I despise Kristi’s decorative pillows.  They serve no purpose but to impede my comfort while reclining on my own couch.  When I am tired enough to try to use one as a pillow, I’m reminded how uncomfortable they are.  The fabric is either rough, or crackly, or the pillow is an odd shape.  They frustrate me.

Some decorative pillows are just dangerous.  I’ve seen pillows covered with pheasant feathers.   Feathers are supposed to be inside the pillow, not on it.  You can lay your head down to rest and come up with a quill stuck in your ear!

They come with sequins, too.  Can you imagine the comfort that comes from laying your cheek down on a bed of sequins!

Most have this little zipper whose pull tab always seems to be poking out.  You can’t have a pillow fight with zipper tabs sticking out everywhere.

You can’t have a pillow fight at all with these decorative pillows!

I don’t want to fight about pillows.  I don’t even want to fight with pillows.  But if we were fighting, I would want to be able to have a pillow fight!

 

But I argue that beauty is not always comfortable.

Comfortable is not always good.  Jason picked out the couches.  People have commented on how difficult it is to get up once having sunk into the thick cushions.  And though I want our guests and Jason to be comfortable I suspect that if the pillows weren't there, Jason might not ever get up.

Comfort invites you to stay.  Beauty invites you to go.  After sitting within the comfort of the couches, there is a silent urging from the pillows to move along in renewed strength; that is unless you've chunked them onto the floor.

As a Christian I often get comfortable in my walk, and I like it.  I will remove any obstacle that stands between me and my comfort.  I think of times that I have not wanted to approach people in pain.  Those who have faced tragedy.  It can be uncomfortable not knowing what to say.

I remember anxiously approaching one lady who had lost her four year old son.  Without words I held her hand and we cried together in a crowd of people.  That beauty has stayed with me.

There are other times I know I should invite someone to church or share what God has done in my life, but it can be awkward—similar to laying your head on a pillow with pheasant feathers.  It's easiest to cast those things which bring discomfort aside.  Choosing not to deal with those things that make us uncomfortable often cause us to miss out on beauty intended.

I remember a few times where I was faithful to have that awkward conversation with someone upon the prompting of the spirit.  There are times I have walked into a hospital room or a funeral home anxious and uncomfortable but willing.  It is in those times that God displays his beauty.  It is in abandoning comfort that beauty soothes my soul.  And as comfort from a couch quickly evaporates when my feet hit the floor, beauty often remains in my sight traveling down to the depths of my heart.  Beauty is worth it.

In spite of hating her decorative pillows, this is one area that I have come to have a deep appreciation for Kristi.  Can you imagine what the house would look like if the decorating were up to me?

Let me draw you a mental picture: One big cushy couch in the middle of the room.  One 80” TV on the wall.  One large wire spool picked up from the side of the road to set my feet on and to hold my bag of potato chips.  No art.  No decorations.  No pillows.  No Beauty.

I’m getting sad just thinking about it.  I think I can put up with a few snazzy pillows

This is just one area where we have found compromise.  There is an artfulness to compromise in relationships.  Neither one of us has to give up our preferences.  I still have my cushy couch.  She has her pretty pillows.  The house has beauty and functionality.

“And the two shall become one flesh.”

Life is full of that delicate balance between comfort and aesthetics.  Between conviction and convenience.  Between action and hesitation.

Compromise.

One of the keys to an artful life is finding that compromise, that balance, between what we know and what we feel.  Finding that place of agreement with what we want and what we need.  Arriving at the spot where form and function meet.

Do you find compromise easy or difficulty?

How do you arrive at that Just Right spot in your decisions?

Are you more for functionality or style?

Check out our past Shared Blogs:

A Blog Shared: What Did You Say?

A Blog, Shared.

Don't Miss A Post. Subscribe By Email.

6 Comments

Since then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, not on earthly things................

Therefore, as God's chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.  Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone.  Forgive as the Lord forgave you.

And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity.

-  Colossians 3:1,12-14

Love;

 the nectar that brings us together in sweet unity.

Thankful for peaceful days; days watching the kids enjoy each other.  Thankful for sisters having "sleepovers" with each other.  Thankful for Hayden and Hallie learning the joy that comes from working together.  Thankful for more hours of daylight-lengthened evenings to spend with Dad.  Thankful for the temporary ceasing of practices.  Thankful for summer.

6 Comments

Hayden and Hallie are getting along.  It's horrible.  Usually they antagonize each other then go back to their separate lives, watching TV or talking to friends.  When they're not getting along and need intervention I come on the scene , in control, and appropriately put them in their place.

Jason bought tools this weekend so that Hayden could do much-needed yard work.  Hayden is weeding the flower beds and getting rid of old mulch.  He talked to Hallie about being his assistant.  She gladly agreed.  They started working together yesterday.

This morning as they came in for a quick water break I made a contentious comment to Hayden.  I wasn't surprised when Hayden disagreed, but the look I got from Hallie......  She looked at me in disapproval, silently saying "Don't look at me, I'm with him".  This is the first time this has ever happened.  I am still in disbelief.  When Hayden left the room, Hallie plead his cause. They're ganging up on me.

In the midst of this turmoil, my sister texted me and asked how things were going.  I told her how terrible my morning had been and that I thought might rather have Hayden and Hallie fighting.  When they stand in unison I don't hold the same sway as when it's me and one of them. Today I felt defeated and without influence.

I wonder what influence we as Christians have in the world when we're divided. I have observed certain groups lately in our nation who have rallied together under common purpose.  Even when the purpose is wrong, they have influence. Those around them stop and take notice.  As Christians we hold a common purpose for good.  We have a mission to share the love of Jesus even to those who hold nothing but contempt for us. They might rather us fight.  We are misguided to think they will listen when they don't  see us loving each other. It just might make a difference if we come together; in work and in love. Today I encountered something new and quite astounding-

I found what can be accomplished when brother and sister work together.

Subscribe to get posts through e-mail.
Connect through email www.kristiburden@gmail.com

					

Every vacation we have ever taken has included a visit to the gift shop. Last summer we visited a gift shop in Galveston and came out the proud owners of two hermit crabs.  Jason's parents laughed recently remembering a trip where they took Hayden and Hallie to Yellowstone several years back. They were steps away from a moose, ate like kings and queens and saw Old Faithful but  Hallie announced that her favorite part of the trip was the gift shop.Gift Shop in Galveston

 We're about to make our yearly trek to a resort in Colorado.  This will be somewhere around my twenty-eighth time to go to Fun Valley. I have visited the gift shop there at least twice as many times.

There's just something about being in that gift shop that I adore. For as long as I can remember there have been wind chimes gracing the rafters in front; a welcoming tune. Rows of new t-shirts are stacked neatly on shelves. And there's a candy section with chocolate covered raisins and saltwater taffy. I'm no shopper, but at the gift shop there's usually something just for me and a little something for the ones I love.  I could go there a thousand times, and still there would be things I somehow missed. And even when I leave seemingly empty-handed I know that there was joy having simply been there.

I take my children there.  I go there with my mother and sisters.  My nieces and nephews go with me too. They go with rolled up dollar bills and coins jingling ready to give what they have to leave with more than they came.

Though absolutely nothing compares to the Bible, the Bible -like my favorite gift shop- is a place worth visiting time and time again. It's words always welcome me. It's words are always new through the Spirit.   I can go to its pages and find words just for me.  For the loved ones on my mind, the bible has words of comfort, peace and direction. Through meditating on its lines, I bear the gift of love its words have placed in me.  There have also been occasions where I have been reading and the clarity of  scripture brings to mind someone who needs prayer or encouragement.  Even when I spend time in God's word and I go on seemingly empty-handed, that is not the case.  I may not receive revelation every time I visit its pages, but I know that time spent is sacred. I may not leave with a bag of treasures, but a bit more of the Spirit in me.

It is a precious gift, both to those who read it and to those we encounter as we live out its words. But I don't know its value.  Shamefully I have treated God's word like one of the many coffee cups bought at the gift shop; something to be used on occasion. It has been treated like a refrigerator magnet a proud symbol but nothing more.  Like a Fun Valley t-shirt I often try to make it fit me. I've hardly ever invited my children, much less my sisters, nieces and nephews into its pages with me. Thankfully one of the greatest gifts I find in my Bible is the gift of grace.  And even as I approach the words with small expectation, I believe the Spirit has greater things in mind.

My thought?- The more I visit the more I'll know.

If you remain in me and my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be given you.  This is to my father's glory, that you bear much fruit, showing yourselves to be my disciples. -John 15:7-8

 

6 Comments

Why?

We hear questions roll from the lips of a three-year old. You may be going to the store, or to the bathroom and the curious little mind wants to know why.  I encountered a sweet little four-year old recently who had already experienced some difficulty in her short life.  Her mother was simply asking her to eat some of the food on her plate, and she answered aggressively "Why?"  It was more of an exclamation really.

Don't we do this as adults?  As adults and believers?  The first time my world was shaken was on December 17, 1990. My cousin and best friend Leah was on her way home from school.  She was going to come and get me; I was going to her band concert with her.  She had earned first chair.  I kept calling and my aunt kept answering, growing in her own concern.  We received a phone call that she had been in a wreck and that things didn't look good.  My mom and I took my aunt to the hospital; we arrived shortly after she died.  I remember clearly my aunt screaming "Why!"

Only my cousin's car was involved in the wreck.  It had been lightly raining. It is suspected that Leah swerved to miss a dog in the road and lost control of her car.  I know we all wanted answers.  We found later that her seatbelt had been faulty; she always wore one. But the answers helped no one.  She was still gone.

What causes us to ask questions?  It's not mere curiosity as it was when we were young children.  Maybe we think it will help if we understand why; like we have a bit more control of the situation.  Maybe we are trying to fill in the blanks. Maybe we don't know what else to do as life as we know it has ceased.

But even if we get answers, it doesn't lessen the pain.

If you listen to the news, there would be reason to ask why time and time again. You have your own personal pain.We hear of children dying. Abuse. Broken families. Senseless death. Cancer.  I know my world was shaken again when my mother was told she had cancer.  We have all had quakes in our lives, times we wanted to know why.

My mother called yesterday with tragic news.  A young lady very dear to my heart drowned.  I taught her in Mission Friends, Vacation Bible School and in second grade.  We wrote letters to each other as I moved away.  I'm heartbroken; for myself and for her friends that were with her, and most of all for her family.  I know there will be an investigation to try to sort out exactly what happened.

Knowing won't be a consolation.

Only knowing and holding to God will get her parents and her brother through something devastating like this.

On this side we may find little comfort, but we still won't understand.

Now we see but a poor reflection as in a mirror; then we shall see face to face.

Now I know in part; then shall I know fully, even as I am fully known.

And now these three remain: faith, hope and love.  But the greatest of these is love.

-1 Corinthians 13:12,13

Hayley now knows God in his fullness while we're still here broken.  Any answers or even wise words will not comfort her family. The love of God, in part by us will be the answer. The answer isn't in the reason.  In faith and in love we should pray for Hayley's family and for others burdened in sorrow.  We have to pray that they will trust even though their faith has been shaken. And instead of looking for answers, let's pray that these hurting souls will hold unswervingly to God.

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.

Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea,

though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging.

There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy place where the Most High dwells.

God is within her, she will not fall; God will help her at the break of day.

.......Be still and know that I am God.

-Psalm 46: 1-5, 10

Connect with me through e-mail www.kristiburden@gmail.com

 

If only I could be that person that sees a burning bush;

       a sign that with Christ I am free.

I know burning bushes are still around. 

And as I find one, may I not rush on unphased.

 May I, in awe,

 remain with the one who fans the flame inside of me.

As Moses encountered the burning bush, he was commissioned to go and bring the Israelites out of Egypt; out of bondage. It was through the bush that God announced he would deliver his people. Moses asked God what should I say is the name of the one who sends me.  God replied,      I AM WHO I AM.

 God.

He was.

He is.

And He will be.

The great I am, who always is, sent Jesus as our deliverer.  We have been delivered from death.  But he doesn't stop there.

 In our going too much and in our going astray, we must be looking. 

 There is a burning bush in our midst. 

 A burning bush with a declaration of deliverance and an invitation

to stand in awe of the I AM.

Connect through email- www.kristiburden@gmail.com
-Picture taken in Kenya

5 Comments

 

It just so happens that I had seventeen beautiful sunflowers waiting for me when I got home this morning. 

 It wasn't the first time my guy has given me sunflowers and I hope it won't be the last.  We are celebrating our seventeenth anniversary, but he's been giving them to me for longer. I once got sunflowers from him while he was away in Africa. I remember summers in High School and when we were first married.  He would pull off the highway, jump out of the truck and grab a handful of giant sunflowers from the side of the highway (or someone's pasture).

They always brightened my day, even if the ants had decided to come along too.

 

I have always found it delightful that sunflowers, as well as other flower types follow the sun.  This is called heliotropism in case anybody wants to know.  Some heliotropic flowers are known to be fourteen degrees warmer than the air around them.  This warmth of course attracts insects which generate no heat on their own. -Never thought about it before, but I read that if you see a bee in the morning it will appear to be slothful as it has a dependence on heat from another source. Naturally bees and other insects find their way to an inviting stay in the warmth of the sunflower.

My point?   What smart flowers.  They spend their days bowing then reaching to the heavens taking in the sun.  Their warmth is attractive to those with none. The sun is so central to who they are, they even look and move like the sun.

Bring me the plant that points to those bright Lucidites swirling up from the earth.  And life itself exhaling that central breath!

Bring me the sunflower crazed with the love of light!

-Eugenio Montale

Crazed with the love of light.....If I could be any flower I think I'd want to be a sunflower.

 

9 Comments

You've heard it said; "Don't take it personal".

I admit there are circumstances where someone has said something unnecessary, hurting me or someone I love.  In those instances, it is definitely in our best interest to not take it personal.

But I like personal.  Hayden had pages of stickers with his name on them when he was younger.  He proudly stuck them on everything.

Hallie received an award for her DARE essay.  It makes her, and her dad and I proud to see her name written on that certificate.

Hallmark cards are great, but there's nothing like a hand-written sentiment.

I remember traveling on vacations as a child looking in souvenir stores.  Stores had the turning rack with personalized license plates and key chains.  I always wanted something with my name on it, but either they didn't have it or it was misspelled.  If my name wasn't spelled correctly, it wasn't meant for me.

Rylie received an end of year" personalized towel at school. It brought back to mind seeing towels in Jason's house with the names "Jason" and "Ann".  Someone was making an effort to say "This is just for YOU".

Of the million things that could be said about God, pretty high on the list is the fact that he is personal.  He created time and space the earth and everything in it.  He makes the ocean foam, the bird sing, and the heart beat, and he specifically cares for me.

I don't often shop there, but when I go to Pier 1, I usually see things there that make me think "that has my name all over it".  There are books that seem to fit my interests or needs.  There are people who share my taste and those who have had similar life experiences as mine.  But what I get from them isn't personal like God is personal.

He knows me.

From knowing the number of hairs on my head- to knowing my every thought; he knows me.  He knows my insecurities, my failures, and of my unfaithfulness to him at times....  He knows me.  And he still loves me.

Stop and watch that sunset.  It may have your name on it.

 

Delight in the bird that needed your rescue.  It may have been no accident.

Listen to that song on the radio.  It may be just for you.

Stay in that hug; the very arms of God may be around you.

Take it personal.