Saturday, September 29, 2007

Seasons of Life

Up you wake for your winter sleep,
As from under the snow spring flowers peep!

While colorful butterflies flit and fly,
The sun glows brightly in the summer sky.

The days grow shorter as the leaves turn to gold,
Oh, the splendor of autumn is a sight to behold!

Now back to restful sleep you must go,
To slumber and dream 'neath winter's blanket of snow.

Cycles and spirals, around they spin,
The seasons of life ever renew and begin...

An original poem by Vicki C. Schofield.
(c) 2002 Vicki C. Schofield

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I have always enjoyed a good discussion with the girls. Last Thursday was no different and yet very different in every way. We worshipped with songs that were too difficult to sing. We laughed but not heartily. We discussed but not about anything really. We took turns answering the question, "What do you do when you receive bad news and very bad news ... about yourself and about those around you?"

Most said they would cry.
Another said she would assess whether it's something she can say or do to help the victim feel better. If not, she would just pray for that person.
Yet another said she once had a boyfriend who cheated on her. Needless to say, she cried when she found out the bad news. And then, she would get angry (at herself) for crying and not being be strong. She questioned God as to why this had to happen. When the initial shock passed, she found herself quiet before God. She sought for insight and what she could learn from the suffering, the betrayal, the rejection.
Most alluded to the importance of knowing "why" we go through difficult times or receive bad news about our families and friends whom we care about.
We all seemed to recognize the importance of trusting God even in bad times, knowing that at the end of the day, our lives are in God Almighty's hands.
Even Job (a man who was devoted to God) went through the most difficult times of losing everything that belonged to him, except his wife and his own life. He lost all earthly riches, possessions and his children. In his physical suffering, his "holier than thou" friends tried to help him identify his sin so as to repent and be restored to God. Back then, they believed that such calamity could not befall a righteous person.
Job could not think of anything that he should repent of. And when the bad times didn't go away, Job began to question God. Why this and why that, assuming that he had every right as a human being to question God's motives and judge the actions of God. After all, he had not done anything wrong that could be considered as "sin" before the eyes of man.
As we read on, Job was eventually silenced by God:
Who is this that questions my wisdom with such ignorant words?
Brace yourself like a man, because I have some questions for you,
and you must answer them.
Where were you when I laid the foundations of the earth
Tell me, if you know so much.
Who determined its dimensions and stretched out the surveying line?
What supports its foundations, and who laid its cornerstone
as the morning stars sang together and all the angels shouted for joy?
Who kept the sea inside its boundaries as it burst from the womb,
and as I clothed it with clouds and wrapped it in thick darkness?
For I locked it behind the barred gates, limiting its shores.
I said, "This far and no farther will you come. Here your proud waves must stop."
...

After the long challenging discourse, Job surrenders:
I know that you (God) can do anything, and no one can stop you.
You asked, "Who is this that questions my wisdom with such ignorance?

It is I - and I was talking about things I knew nothing about,
things far too wonderful for me.

You said, "Listen and I will speak! I have some questions for you,
and you must answer them."

I had only heard about you before, but now I have seen you with my own eyes.
I take back everything I said, and I sit in dust and ashes to show my repentance."

The beauty of the "ashes" in our lives is our ability to seek out God and know the God whom we had only heard (or read) about before. Through the tough times, when we are silenced and brought to humility, when we find ourselves hopeless, betrayed, and rejected, we are quieted and ready to hear God out.

In humility, we are suddenly able to hear God's voice clearly. We experience God and can then truly say we have seen God with our own eyes.
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Vicky Schoefield writes,
Now back to restful sleep you must go,
To slumber and dream 'neath winter's blanket of snow.
It feels like winter eventhough I reside in hot, sunny Malaysia. In stressful times (for no particular reason), I find myself sleepy at early hours of the evening. Is it really a time to slumber, to hibernate and to be left alone?
Shall I put a sign on my door that wards off bystanders who are curious of my apparent lack of enthusiasm?
DO NOT DISTURB!
Winter in session
Hibernation in action
- Words of wisdom from the angry bear inside room
I laughed at the thought of having to put up a sign. We all laughed. Laughter is indeed a good medicine for the soul and for all seasons.
Sometimes communicating one's period of unsettledness helps lessen the misunderstanding when one unintentionally snubs others. Well, not on purpose anyway but as a result of being preoccupied!
The thought of winter overwhelms me. It's a time when there's no growth. And everything seems doom and gloom. A time when there's no apparent progress. A season of plateau-ing ... now that's unsettling ... yet, I know is necessary to usher in spring and be able to once again see new life, growth, and beauty!
Regardless of how I felt, it was certainly good getting together with the girls!

Sunday, September 9, 2007

Christians@Work, 24-7

Glorious Sunday. The singing of a prayerful song that being a Christian is not only about attending Sunday worship celebrations or prayer meetings or baby dedications or funerals or Easter and Christmas, but being a Christian is about being a follower of Christ. It is allowing God to be apart of every aspect of our lives, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

Here's the song that was so beautifully sung by Huey and team today:

GOD IN MY LIVING
There in my breathing
God in my waking
God in my sleeping
God in my resting
There in my working
God in my thinking
God in my speaking

Be my everything
Be my everything
Be my everything
Be my everything

God in my hoping
There in my dreaming
God in my watching
God in my waiting
God in my laughing
There in my weeping
God in my hurting
God in my healing

Be my everything
Be my everything
Be my everything
Be my everything

Christ in me
Christ in me
Christ in me the hope of glory
You are everything

Christ in me
Christ in me
Christ in me the hope of glory

Be my everything

Tim Hughes Copyright © 2005 Thankyou Music

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Somewhere over the rainbow ...

Life continues to be full of challenges. Despite having come back from a dive trip at Bali over Merdeka holidays, I continue to feel a heavy burden in life. I am the sort of person who normally thoroughly enjoys holidays, new adventures, and living life to the fullest. But somehow, I must admit, life has been tough ... including my holiday in Bali.

For the first time in a long time, I actually didn't achieve what I set out to do. The Bali dive trip happened because I wanted to see the ocean sunfish Mola Mola. The fish, about 3-4 meters tall, are usually spotted at the Crystal Bay dive site. We braved the huge swells of ice cold waters (16 to 24 degrees celcius), strong currents with upward and downward drifts, and depths beyond 30 meters hoping for a glimpse of this rare fish that only comes around to Bali in August. Instead, the few memorable dive moments were the graceful manta rays gliding at the choppy surface, blue spotted rays and stingrays at sandy bottoms of the Manta Point dive site.

Sunset at Lembongan island, Bali

I left Bali, though happy to have met great people and eaten the best Balinese foods (Babi Guling & Bebek Dengil), with a tinge of disappointment ... of dreams unfulfilled! Now, I would have to go back to Bali, brave the huge swells and icy cold waters for another opportunity to meet with Mola Mola.

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Tonight, I had the privilege of enjoying the Latin Jazz music of dramatic conductor Jacomo Bairus and Latin grammy award winning flautist Nestor Torres at the Dewan Philharmonic Petronas at the Petronas Twin Towers. I fell in love with the rich Latin Jazz rhythms with differentiated renditions of Besame Mucho and Over the Rainbow. Music from the flute awakened my imagination and evoked emotions deep within.

The final Nestor Torres rendition of Over the Rainbow was breathtaking. As an introduction to the song, Torres talked about the significance of Malaysia due to the difficult times the nation has been through and how thr growth and maturity of the nation was dependent on the "stormy" decades and refreshing light rains. Coupled with the sun rays, Malaysia is today like a rainbow of hope to others.

I recognized the stormy season and burdensome journey I am undergoing, when everything seems to be doom and gloom. It is a time of growing pains. A time of new challenges. I was reminded of how absolutely necessary it is for me to cling on to God in whom I trust and embrace everything that he is doing, and allow him to carry me through this time so that I may one day see that rainbow of hope and acknowledge how great God is and how far he has brought me.
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Wikipedia gives further insight into the classic Over the Rainbow, popularized by Judy Garland:
"Over the Rainbow" is a popular song with music by Harold Arlen and lyrics by E.Y. Harburg). It was written to showcase Judy Garland's talents in the star vehicle movie The Wizard of Oz, and it became her signature song. She would forever be called upon to sing it in all her public appearances.

The song's plaintive melody and simple lyrics depict a pre-adolescent girl's desire to escape from the "hopeless jumble" of this world, from the sadness of raindrops to the bright new world "over the rainbow." It expresses the childlike faith that a door will magically be opened to a place where "troubles melt like lemon-drops".



Many years have gone by since Judy Garland sang Over the Rainbow. The song continues to be a favorite that evokes a sense of hope that there is indeed something great at the end of a difficult journey.

Here's another voice as if angels were singing a song of hope to the downtrodden ...