7.15.2015
College Grad, Christian, and Single - How I Really Feel
6.21.2015
10 Things Tom Merante Has Passed Down to Me.
5.24.2015
10 Greatest Trips of College
5.15.2015
10 Funnest Things I Did in College
5.10.2015
Blessings
What a ride.
Four years. Only about a twentieth of our average lifespan,
but I kind of think it’s one of the most important “twentieths” we’re gonna
have. For most of us, it’s the stage of life when we pick our life-long
friends. When we travel to our biggest adventures. When we somehow get the
longest and shortest amounts of sleep we’ll ever experience. When we spend the
most money that we don’t actually have on food. When we fall in love and when
we get our hearts broken. When we decide what we’re for and what we’re against.
When we choose what we may want to spend the rest of our lives doing. When we
try great things and make grave mistakes. When we begin to solidify the core of
our character.
This is supposed to be a blessings service. I don’t really know
what that means. Cuz blessing in my mind probably translates a bit differently
than it does in yours. And I have a feeling blessings in God’s mind are
sometimes wayyyy different than any of us picture. It’s funny what God’s
blessings sometimes end up looking like.
When I first came here all I wanted was to learn how to work
in a children’s ministry in the Bible belt, find an attractive husband, and be
married by the time I was twenty. That’s literally all I remember wanting. Now
I’m graduating, discovered I don’t even really like kids, want to move to
Europe, and still haven’t even kissed a boy. It’s funny what God’s blessings sometimes
end up looking like.
Abraham became a dad when he was almost a hundred years old.
That had to be confusing, but because of that blessing the Israelites became
God’s chosen people. Baby Moses was put in a basket and sent down the river by
his mother. That must have been lonely, but because of that blessing the
Israelite people were freed from generations of slavery. Joseph was sold to the
Egyptians by his own brothers. That had to feel like betrayal, but because of
that blessing an entire nation and his
entire family were saved from starvation. David was the baby of the family, was given the cruddy job of taking care of sheep, and played musical instruments while his brothers were warriors. Those things may have been humbling, but because of those blessings, he ended up being king. Ruth became a widow at what was
probably a young age. That must have broken her heart and left her hopeless,
but because of that blessing we ended up with Jesus. It’s funny what God’s blessings sometimes end up looking like, don’t you think?
We’ve all been given blessings, and there are plenty of
blessings up ahead in our future. James says, “Every good and perfect gift is
from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not
change like shifting shadows.” Some of those blessings have been and
will be obvious. Some of them have been and will be masked by confusion, by
loneliness, by betrayal, by a broken heart, by humility. But all of them will
be ordained by a God whose love for us knows no bounds.
I think for the vast majority of us, Milligan has been one
of those blessings. My freshman year I was seriously considering transferring,
and there have been 18 thousand reasons that have proved my decision to stay to
be a blessing. Dennis making Thai bar. Professors inviting me to have dinner at
their homes with their families. Strangers offering to drive me up Sutton hill
in the rain. Belting the Gilmore Girls theme song with my friends after quiet
hours. Holding my residents when their hearts were hurting. Happy hour Sonic or
Dunkin runs when I should have been studying. Dr. Jackson pushing back paper
due dates (which he does every single
time, yet we’re always surprised and overwhelmed with gratitude). Cringing
when Jeff defended the infallible honor of our athletes with every blow of the
whistle. Dr. Charlene Thomas grading our humanities exams within 4 minutes of
us taking them. These are blessings. Sunrise hikes on Roan Mountain. Theater
performances that made me laugh and cry and forced me to evaluate every part of
my life and belief system. Watching Brad Wallace chase a dog through here in
the middle of chapel. It’s funny what God’s blessings sometimes end up looking
like.
Most of us are getting ready to head out into a world of
unknown. Where we’ll have to come up with our own food. Where if we skip work
it’ll mean more than just a mark on the attendance sheet. Where when our light
goes out or our shower leaks or our living space becomes a home for stink bugs
we won’t be able to just tell our RA and have Bruce come and fix it the next
day for free. Where our responsibilities will be much greater than writing a paper
or making sure we go to enough chapels. Where we’ll be able to park anywhere we
want. For the first time in many of our lives, we’ll be entering into something
that we can’t see the end of. It’s a time of beginnings with no set ends. It’s
a big world of unknown.
But there is one thing that is known. Only one thing that
is for certain. And that is our Jesus. He is the same yesterday, today, and
forever. His mercies are new every morning. He is faithful and gracious and
just and loving and jealous and oh so sovereign. And the truth of the goodness
of who our Jesus is includes the continual presence of his blessings. They may not always seem like blessings, but his plans
are perfect. Romans says, “And we know that God causes all things to work together
for good to those who love him, to those who are called according to His
purpose.” If we commit to the Lord whatever we do, he will establish our plans
(Proverbs 16:3). Whenever you are confused or full of joy or lonely or content
or humbled, remember - it’s funny what God’s blessings sometimes end up looking
like.
3.22.2015
Week 3 of "7" - Media
3.08.2015
Week 2 of "7" - Clothes
3.01.2015
Week 1 of "7" - Food
7.21.2014
Dear Future Self in Ministry...
5.29.2014
Love ≠ Tolerate
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