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A Word in Season

A Story to Tell

His life tells a story.

Unexpected business caused the lawyer to stay home in Chicago a few extra days instead of joining his family on the trip across the ocean. A companion of the famous evangelist D. L. Moody, the Presbyterian layman and his family planned to join Moody in England for one of his crusades.

Tragedy befell the steamship S.S. Ville du Havre, when struck by an iron sailing vessel. 226 reportedly died because of the accident, including Spafford’s four daughters. Annie, Maggie, Bessie, and Tanetta – ranging in ages from two to eleven – all drowned in the waters of the Atlantic on November 22, 1873. Spafford’s wife Anna survived the trip. Arriving in England, she sent a simple telegram to her husband that read “Saved Alone.”

Spafford took the next ship to England, asking the ship’s captain to alert him when they came to the spot of the previous accident. Bertha Spafford, a daughter born later to the couple, shared that it was at the tragedy’s location where he penned these famous words:

When peace, like a river, attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
It is well, it is well with my soul.

It is well (it is well),
with my soul (with my soul),
It is well, it is well with my soul.

 

As he looked over the cold waters, a tomb that held the bodies of his beloved daughters beneath, he wrote a piece that would become one of the church’s most treasured songs of the next century.

It is impossible to guess the thousands and perhaps millions of believers touched deeply by the words of that hymn. Their words, birthed in great sorrow, became ones of hope, strength, and comfort sung by countless worshipers for many decades. Did this heartbroken father ever expect Christians to still be singing his writing more than 140 years later?

God often brings purpose out of pain. He offers comfort out of chaos. And he births blessing out of brokenness.

The apostle Paul thought so. Describing a terribly difficult season of life, he remarked, “We were under great pressure, far beyond our ability to endure, so that we despaired even of life. Indeed, in our hearts we felt the sentence of death. But this happened so that we might not rely on ourselves but on God” (2 Corinthians 1:8-9).

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God has someone to touch through your words. You take classes, read books, and work to perfect your craft. But there are deeper lessons that you can’t find at a writer’s conference. The Lord takes you through difficulty, heartache, and impossible circumstances. He leads you through the valley. And in that experience, he gives you a story to tell.

Allow God to continue shaping that deep work within. And remember that there is someone waiting on the other side of that trial who will be strengthened, equipped, and inspired by your words.

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A Word in Season

Eyes Wide Open

Writers can walk through life with our eyes wide open.

Poet Robert Frost said, “How many things have to happen to you before something occurs to you?”

The experiences of our lives provide rich fodder for our writing endeavors. The people we meet, the hurts we endure, and the occasional victories we enjoy offer material worth pondering.

If we write fiction, relationships through the years offer inspiration for potential characters in our works. That weird habit of a co-worker, the unusual personality of a cousin, or the favorite pastime of a parent may resurface in people we create in our writing years later.

As we write nonfiction, a wealth of experiences can present valuable jewels to help our readers. Maybe we worked with a person with a deep rejection issue. That experience helps us write to people dealing with rejection. We may remember the pain of losing a pet as a child and be able to communicate that in an article to help children. Perhaps we moved several times as young adults and can produce copy with practical suggestions on how to prepare for a move.

Here are five ways to mine the experiences of our lives and keep our eyes wide open:

1. Make a list of at least thirty people from your life. Write one to three specific qualities about them – positive or negative. Maybe your uncle Joe always chewed Juicy Fruit, or your first grade teacher was always sad because she was going through a divorce, or your grandfather listened to Billy Graham at night on his alarm clock radio?

2. Write down the ten most enjoyable experiences of your life and the ten hardest ones. What did you learn from each one?

3. What are the ten most significant books that have changed your life? Write down one sentence for each one about what you learned.

4. Consider what are the ten most life-changing conversations you ever had. Where were you? Why did it change you? It may be when your father took you out to lunch alone and told you that he and your mother were getting a divorce. Or you talked with a college professor in his office, and endless avenues seemed to open up in your brain about possible careers to pursue. Or a friend affirmed something very deep inside of you over coffee one day.

5. Remember seven distinct places that had seven distinct smells. What comes to mind as you remember those places and smells. Your college dorm room? Your grandmother’s kitchen? Your father’s workshop? Your favorite restaurant as a teenager?

As you answer these questions, hopefully new wine will start pouring forth to inspire possibilities for writing. What can you learn from these people, places, and memories?

Henry Ford said, “The only real mistake is the one from which we learn nothing.”

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A Word in Season Uncategorized

Cracked Pots

Sometimes we feel like cracked pots.

An old story tells of a water-bearer in India who daily carried two pots on a pole carried across his neck. Between the master’s house and river he walked back and forth for two years. One pot was cracked and slowly leaked water along the path. Each day the water-bearer arrived at the house with only one and a half pots of water.

After two years, the cracked pot, feeling embarrassed and undignified compared to the other pot, apologized to the man.

“I have made your work more difficult. I am not as good as the perfect pot. I am ashamed that my flaw increases your labor.”

The compassionate water-bearer, replied, “When we return to the house, notice all the pretty flowers along the side of the path.”

As they journeyed that day, the pot realized that beautiful flowers of many colors adorned one side of the dusty path. But, the pot saw, the flowers only grew on one side.

Returning to the master’s house, the water-bearer explained, “I have always known that you were cracked, and I chose to use you for this purpose. I planted flower seeds of many varieties along your side of the path. Every day as we walk back from the stream, you water them. For two years I have picked these flowers and decorated the master’s table. This saved me time from having to water them myself.”

The water-bearer then said, “You see, it was because you were a cracked pot that I could use you for this purpose.”

We live in a world that idolizes seeming perfection. Photo-shopped magazine covers and internet ads show so-called perfect bodies. Television and movies are able to present flawless scenes. When enraptured with the art of such scenes, we forget that the actors and director may have spent all day filming that one scene, making dozens of mistakes in the process.

Our facebook world allows people to portray the social-media image of their choosing. The person who boasts of the perfect marriage online forgot to tell you about the argument he had with his wife last week. And when your friend posted her pictures from the perfect vacation, she failed to mention that she felt jealous when you went to the beach last year for your anniversary.

God wants to use cracked pots. He designed it that way. Our flaws, though they may never make it to a photo-shopped screen image, do not limit the Creator from working through our lives.

Brennan Manning writes, “Despite our physical cracks, intellectual limitations, emotional impairments, and spiritual fissures, we are providentially equipped to fulfill the unique purpose of our existence.”

The Lord stores His gifts not in Lennox china but in jars of clay – common, earthenware vessels.

As we write, we can resist the urge to compare our writing to others.

“I will never write like John Jakes or Donald McCaig!”

But God does not compare us to the other pot. He wants to use our cracked ones. And as substance seeps out of our pen, it waters countless seeds along the way, producing a harvest of beauty to be enjoyed and shared.

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A Word in Season

You Have a Work to Do

We all sometimes wonder why we write.

Nagging doubts and questions invade our minds:

“No one wants to read what you write. You are a nobody.”

“You will never be as good as John Grisham, or Jerry Jenkins, or Alton Gansky.”

“The time you spend writing and learning to write could be spent in more beneficial ways.”

Similar thoughts bombarded Susan about her singing. Bullied as a child and called “Susie Simple” at school, she knew the sting of rejection. Her homely appearance and humble beginnings caused many people to question her worthiness. But Susan knew that she could sing.  She dreamed one day of singing for the Pope and the Queen of England.

For years, she practiced her scales, took singing lessons, and sang at local Scottish pubs and her local church’s choir. She repeatedly and unsuccessfully auditioned for radio and television gigs. Thinking she was too old to begin a public singing career, she almost gave up.

Thankfully, she did not.

In April 2009, at age 47, Susan Boyle shocked the world on the television show Britain’s Got Talent by opening her mouth and singing I Dreamed a Dream from the Broadway hit Les Miserables. With the first line of the song, the world knew this woman could sing. Applause and cheers erupted throughout the aria, resulting in a standing ovation before Susan finished singing.

An overnight world-sensation, Susan’s world changed. Her debut album I Dreamed a Dream sold over 3 million copies — more than any CD in the world in 2009. Since then, Boyle performed for the Pope, the Queen of England, and numerous venues around the globe.

What if this never-married and never-kissed woman who lived with her cat in a small Scottish village listened to the negative voices? What if she believed, “Susan, you are a nobody. You will never be as good as Elaine Paige. You are wasting your time chasing pipe dreams.”

The world would have missed a phenomenal reminder that God uses faithful people hidden in obscurity.  He finds and selects normal folks who dutifully prepared themselves for their moments of opportunity.

The Bible says that “we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:10).

The word “workmanship” comes from the Greek word poeima, which gives us our English words poem and poetry. In essence, you are God’s poem. You are special. He has gifted you with talents and experiences unique to you.

Susan Boyle may have felt many times like just another homely woman. But God had a different plan. She embraced her God-given gifts, developed her skills, and refused to quit trying. And it finally paid off.

So can you. When the voices of doubt and fear come knocking, remind yourself that you are God’s poem. You have a work to do.

Get busy honing those skills and learning how to write.

One day, the world may be waiting.

 

Categories
A Word in Season

You Have a Work to Do

We all sometimes wonder why we write.

Nagging doubts and questions invade our minds:

“No one wants to read what you write. You are a nobody.”

“You will never be as good as John Grisham, or Jerry Jenkins, or Alton Gansky.”

“The time you spend writing and learning to write could be spent in more beneficial ways.”

Similar thoughts probably bombarded Susan about her singing. Bullied as a child and called “Susie Simple” at school, she knew the sting of rejection. Her homely appearance and humble beginnings caused many people to question her worthiness. But Susan knew that she could sing.

For years, she practiced her scales, took singing lessons, and sang at local pubs in Scotland and her local church’s choir. She repeatedly and unsuccessfully auditioned for radio and television gigs. Thinking she was too old to begin a public singing career, she almost gave up.

Thankfully, she did not.

florida-state-university-86197__180In April 2009, at age 47, Susan Boyle shocked the world on the television show Britain’s Got Talent by opening her mouth and singing I Dreamed a Dream from the Broadway hit Les Miserables. With the first line of the song, the world knew this woman could sing. Applause and cheers erupted throughout the aria, resulting in a standing ovation before Susan finished singing.

Susan was an overnight world-sensation. Her debut album I Dreamed a Dream sold over 3 million copies. It sold more copies than any CD in the world in 2009. Since then, Boyle performed for the Pope, the Queen of England, and numerous venues around the globe.

What if this never-married and never-kissed woman who lived with her cat in a small Scottish village listened to the negative voices? What if she believed, “Susan, you are a nobody. You will never be as good as Elaine Paige. You are wasting your time chasing pipe dreams.”

The world would have missed a blessing.

The Bible says that “we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:10).

The word “workmanship” comes from the Greek word poeima, which gives us our English words poem and poetry. In essence, you are God’s poem. You are special. He has gifted you with talents and experiences unique to you.  You have a work to do.

Susan Boyle may have felt many times like just another homely woman. But God had a different plan. She embraced her God-given gifts, developed her skills, and refused to quit trying. And it finally paid off.

So can you. When the voices of doubt and fear come knocking, remind yourself that you are God’s poem. He has good works for you.

Get busy honing those skills and learning how to write.  You have a work to do.

One day, the world may be waiting.

 

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A Word in Season

God Has Your Number

Do you know that God has your number?

Discouragement tries to rob us of the reminder of the nearness of God. We don’t win a writing contest we entered. One of our friends experiences writing successes that we don’t. We read our own words and feel dumb. We may even be tempted to think, “This is ridiculous. I am wasting my time. My little writing does not matter to the Lord.   He is too busy with Charles Swindoll, Beth Moore, and Jerry Jenkins.”

In such times God may feel 1000 miles away.

But He isn’t, he has your number.  He still has those theological qualities I learned as a boy in church.  God is omnipresent.  He is everywhere.  God is omniscient.  He knows everything. Ken Gaub, an itinerant evangelist, shares an amazing testimony in his book God’s Got Your Number: When you least expect it, He is there!

FDSCN8216eeling forgotten by the Lord, Gaub stopped his Silver Eagle bus at a Dayton, Ohio, exit for his family to get lunch.  Walking outside he heard the continual ringing of a payphone – yes, long before cell phones.  He finally answered it and heard, “Long distance call for Ken Gaub.”

Wondering if he were on Candid Camera, Ken was dumbfounded.  Responding to a persistent operator, he accepted the call.  The caller, Millie from Pennsylvania, told him that she was about to commit suicide.  She remembered seeing Gaub on television and thought he could help her, but she did not know how to reach him.  While writing her suicide note, several numbers spontaneously popped into her head.

Picking up the phone and dialing the numbers, she thought that it would be a miracle if she were calling Ken Gaub’s office in Washington state.  He explained to her that he was standing inside of a phone booth in Ohio.

The woman gave her life to Christ over the phone and began mapping her life in a whole new direction.  Gaub writes, “I walked away from that telephone booth with an electrifying sense of our Heavenly Father’s concern for each of His children.”

God sees you.  He knows.  You trust Him and be faithful. He will use you and your writing for His glory.

He’s got your number.

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Image: Michel take a number | by Christopher.Michel

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A Word in Season

Words for the Weary

We can share life-changing words to weary people.

I love it when God packs a whole sermon into one Bible verse.

The prophet Isaiah wrote, “The LORD God has given me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in season to him who is weary. He awakens me morning by morning. He awakens my ear to hear as the learned” (Is. 50:4).

What a word for writers.

God wants us to be learners. We keep growing, reading, and learning. If our well runs dry for long, we won’t have anointed words to share with others.

God gives us words to share with weary people. It’s amazing how one word from the right source can change our lives. My shelves are filled with books and magazines that God used at specific points in my life to speak life into me. The Lord knows how to connect the right word with the right person at the needed time.

As we write, we ask God to use our words to encourage weary people – people who need a word from God through our pen.

God wakens us in the morning. Here is a tremendous verse of why DSCN4765God wants us to start the day with Him. Beginning the day in praise, in Scripture meditation, and in prayer, we position ourselves to fix our eyes on God. Sometimes we are the weary ones who need a word from the Lord to encourage us. We start our day with Him, knowing that having words to share with others begins by allowing His Word to soak into our hearts and minds.

God wants us to be listeners before we are writers.  We are to “hear as the learned” or “listen like one being taught.” God wants us to develop listening ears. The Holy Spirit walks through life with us. Pay attention to that voice inside. He may give you ideas for future projects, promptings on where to submit your work, or ways to encourage other readers and writers. As we allow God to teach and train us through the winding pathways of life, we grow in our understanding and ability to have words to share with others.

He gives us words in season to share with fellow pilgrims. Let’s stay on the journey together.

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