Friday, April 18, 2014

Resurrection rested

Good Friday. Easter. 
I have this morning to myself, the light, and a pile of books. In my attempts to be profitable I will try to read through all of them, soak up all the wisdom I can extract, and walk around today feeling righteous. 
Admittedly pathetic, but watch. 

Wayne Muller wrote this in his book titled Sabbath. 


" Soon enough Jesus rests in death. Like a seed planted in the fertile ground he must die to bear fruit. Unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone, but if it dies it bears much fruit. And so Jesus dies, and lies dormant for three days.
 Without this dormancy, the resurrection of new life would be impossible. If God raised Jesus in three days, surely he could have been raised in two, or one, or even have been made invincible. So why sentenced him to death for three days? Because everything, even the anointed of God, must rest, even in death.
Unless the grain falls into the earth and dies, there will be no harvest. These three days are the necessary dormancy of a Sabbath, an emptiness in which Jesus may be reborn, and take on a new form. All the form is either a rising or falling away. And between falling away and rising again, there is an inevitable dormancy, the ein sof, the emptiness of God."


So much work is put into becoming righteous, or holy, or whatever it is that you seek to become. But there is a time when dormancy, rest, and death, will show themselves to be your most trusted allies. 
Like a bear knows he will be his strongest if he hibernates the winter away.
Like a seed huddled beneath earth, leaf, and twig, awaiting warmer weather, when her bloom will be brightest. 

Do I even allow myself the season of dormancy to become what I'm clamoring towards. Do I sleep so that I can awake refreshed? 


Today I realized that the resurrection had another thought to it I had never picked up on. 
Rest.
Sabbath.
Jesus's death was just as much about him catching his breath as it was about propitiation for our sin. In waiting the three days, he was telling us, yelling from the grave, "you have to die! I promise you will be more fully whole and effective if you do." 

So this Easter I closed all my books and devotionals.
I made the bed.
I made the coffee.
I sat in the sabbath and prayed for spring to come. 

Friday, February 14, 2014

The Process


I don't often get to bake the way that speaks to me. Baking can be a quick batch of cookies on a snowed in night, or an apple crisp that is easily thrown together for a moment of weakness. 
But baking in its purest form, to me, is to labor. 
To begin in the morning and finally have a completed masterpiece by the time the sun turns gold. You measured as if your life depended on it, you paced  anxiously while the oven burned away at your begotten, peering through the glass every few minutes to check on the thing that stole, or rather was given willingly, your entire day. 
Your back hurts a bit, your hands feel soft and warm from handling so much butter, and you whisper little prayers that whatever it is doesn't fall, crack, or scorch in it's final moments. 

This is the kind of baking that impacts me. The kind I wish I was able to do on a weekly basis. I learn, and release, and revive after so many hours in the kitchen. With every time I punch down the dough I remember what a process all good things can be. The best of life needs to be hovered over and tended to for hours. It's hard to be patient, and obedient to a recipe, or to the laws of yeast and gravity. But when you know that at the end of every process lies an Irish Farmers Cheese Tart... Well, you labor. 



I found this recipe a long time ago, and thought... "Someday." 
It was daughnting, and the blogger even admits herself that it is not for the faint of heart. If you want to make this tart, make sure you have a whole day of nothing else to do, and commit to it with heart. I promise you, you will NOT be dissapointed! It is like a little bit of heaven come to earth. 
Not your typical cheesecake, this is the original Scandinavian version. Back when they made their own cheese, from their own cows, on their own genius. The sweet, rich, and rustic cheese filling is embraced with a buttery pastry which has been coated in applesauce before baking. 

Divine. 


You can find the recipe here: 

http://farmette.ie/2013/01/17/sweet-farmers-cheese-tart/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed:+marriedanirishfarmer/skIi+(I+Married+An+Irish+Farmer.)




Piebox is a Christmas present from my beloved who knows me well. It is a lifesaver, and sold online. :) 



Saturday, February 1, 2014

A box of matches in a dark wood

Since being engaged things between us have changed. Only because love starts to take on a whole new meaning, turning and morphing like a pearl inside a clam. It becomes a forever kind of love, sacrificial, binded, protected. 

While reading a children's book (which I tend to get the most meaning out of) called The Rooftoppers, I read something that deeply resonated with my new and changing love for Jeremy. 
Katherine Rundell writes of a little girl alone in Paris, searching for her mother with only a single strand of music to go on. When she is confronted near the end of the novel, having sacrificed everything, on whether or not loving a person can matter this much she realizes this...

" perhaps that's what love does? It's not there to make you feel special, it's to make you brave. It was like a ration pack in the desert, she thought, a box of matches in a dark wood. Love and courage, two words for the same thing. You didn't need the person to be there with you, just alive somewhere. It was what her mother had always been. A place to put down her heart, a resting stop to recover her breath. A set of stars and maps." 

I realized too, along with Sophie, that my love for this man was no longer about feeling good or special... Even though at times it has that effect. It is a strong object, making me brave, and making me see God in times when I would rather hide. It is a guide to my own heart, a convicting love that will not run from depth. What a gift to have been given a "box of matches in a dark wood."