David C. Hughes, Writer

“For the LORD your God will bless you in all your harvest and in all the work of your hands, and your JOY will be complete." –Deuteronomy 16:15

Archive for the tag “Inspirational”

The Epiphany of Joy, Chapter 11: Joy in Serving (1 of 3)

 

 

Once you experience the thrill of being God’s hands and feet to someone in need, you will look for more and more opportunities.  Your reward?  Indescribable joy. 

–Caroline Barnett, Willing to Walk on Water, “Chapter 1: Willing,” page 16

 

Do not forget to show hospitality to strangers, for by so doing some people have shown hospitality to angels without knowing it.

–Hebrews 13:2 NIV

 

I often traveled to Buffalo, New York, for my engineering job, and from November through April the work occasionally gave me the opportunity to re-experience one aspect of life growing up in the northeastern United States: cold and snowy weather.  And western New York in the winter can deliver some of the coldest and snowiest.

On this particular trip, the Delta Airlines MD-88 I flew in transitioned into the Buffalo-Niagara International airspace on a quiet February afternoon, with temperatures hovering around freezing.  In any given year the area gets about 94 inches of the white stuff, and during February the typical monthly total is a bit over 17 inches.  But this particular year the snowfall totals had been significantly lower.  So as the jet skimmed over the dairy farms and neatly-packed suburbs on approach to the airport, I noticed the area was not blanketed by snow as expected, but covered in the flat brownness of a worn-out winter.  Threads of discolored slush huddled in the shadows of the naked woods, and dirty piles of it stood hunched around the perimeters of parking lots.

That night the thin cloud deck drifted out, unveiling a crisp full moon and opening the stage for temperatures to fall below freezing.  The next morning when I peeked out the hotel window I saw the cars in the parking lot covered by a patina of crystalline frost.  Lucky for me, the rental car I drove came equipped with the one piece of standard equipment all cars in upstate New York need: an ice scraper.  Unfortunately, not all rental car companies ensure their customers leave the airport with this critical piece of hardware.  After I left the hotel and started the Ford Fusion, I began to attack the ice on the driver’s side window.  That’s when I noticed the car next to me was running, steam wafting out of the tail pipe, windshield wipers occasionally stuttering across the ice-covered windshield.  The driver, a young woman, tall and bundled in a long coat, swung open the door, rushed out of the car, and hustled into the hotel.

“Well, that ain’t gonna cut it,” I thought as I worked on skinning my Fusion of its coat of rime.  Obviously the young lady didn’t have a scraper, and I wondered if she had run back into the hotel to see if she could borrow one.  At that moment I determined I would scrape her windows when I finished mine.  I’m not going to pass this up, I thought.  What better opportunity to do a kind deed for someone?  So after I finished the Fusion, I started scraping off the windshield of the young woman’s car.  Suddenly the passenger side door opened and another young lady peered over the car roof.  “Thank you,” she beamed.  “Thank you so much!”

“No problem,” I replied, and kept scraping.  The first woman hustled back down the sidewalk from the hotel entrance, hands in the pockets of her long coat.

“Thank you,” she called as she climbed back into the driver’s seat.

“You’re welcome,” I answered.  “I saw your windshield wipers moving and I thought ‘That ain’t gonna cut it.’”  I worked my way around their car from driver’s side windshield, around the back, and finished on the passenger’s side windshield.  The passenger cracked her window to again express her appreciation as I finished up.  “Are you going to the airport, or going to work?” I asked.

“We’re going to take the bar exam,” the woman replied.

“Awesome!” I said.  “God bless.  You’re both going to do well!”  After saying goodbye, I climbed back into my car with a smile on my face, a light in my heart, and joy in my spirit.  That felt good!  Real good!  And as I pulled out of the parking lot and headed to work, I actually got choked up with joy: a kind deed, even something as simple as scraping ice off someone’s car windows, had made my day.  Literally.  I thought of the verse in the Bible where it says to be kind to strangers because, who knows, you may actually be serving angels (Hebrews 13:2).  To me, those two young ladies were angels because they unknowingly provided me an opportunity to serve, even in a seemingly insignificant way.

The rest of the day I was charged up–I worked with confidence and assertiveness, and with a clarity and alertness that lasted the whole shift.  Man, I thought, if doing a simple kind deed does this, I need to keep my eyes open for every opportunity I can find!  What a disproportionately huge reward for such a simple act.

Recently Fred Chapman, a fellow church member at New River Fellowship and an active volunteer for the Parker County, Texas, branch of Kids Against Hunger, invited volunteers to show up one late afternoon at the distribution facility on the west side of Weatherford.  The goal for the evening was to load two trailers with enough bags of food to provide over 100,000 meals for people in Mexico.  I jumped at the chance to bring Hannah, then five, to participate in this roll-up-your-sleeves service project.  She squealed with excitement and anticipation.

After we arrived at the distribution center that hot North Texas summer evening, I set Hannah to one side and told her to stand clear of the line of volunteers wheeling out pallets and passing box after box, bucket brigade style, from the pallets to the trailer. Each box contained a dozen bags of rice and soy mixed with vegetables, vitamins, and minerals.  Hannah never complained as she watched, despite the glaring sun and shimmering heat.  “Are we volunteering, Dad?” she asked.

“Yes we are, Sweetie,” I assured her, sweat dripping off my forehead.  “This is what we do.  We help each other.”

After we finished stacking boxes in the trailers, and the crew distributed the loads evenly over the axles, the volunteers hugged and said goodbye to the drivers as they started their long overnight journey to the border crossing into Mexico.  Fred then picked up Hannah and visited with her for a few minutes, holding her and talking to her eye-to-eye.  Hannah smiled and nodded, perfectly comfortable in the arms of this strong leader who still exudes continuous joy despite experiencing tragedy several years ago.  Knowing Fred, he poured as much encouragement and excitement into Hannah about serving as I had, most likely more.  I then collected my daughter and whisked her to off to get a dish of ice cream for a job well done.  “When can we volunteer again, Daddy?” she asked as we headed to Chik-fil-A.

“We’ll have lots of opportunities to do this again,” I assured her.

“Yay!” she cried.  Her joy in volunteering is just getting started, but for that day, her joy was complete.

 

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Copyright ©2014 by David C. Hughes

A Change in Perspective (2014-03-06 Daily) [1 of 2]

We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.

–Abraham Lincoln

 

Hannah recently had a gymnastics meet in Rockwall, Texas, about 80 miles east of the Hughes farm in unincorporated Parker County.  As has become pretty common this winter, the weather forecasters predicted a good chance of freezing rain and freezing drizzle the day of the meet, despite the 84 degree weather we enjoyed the day before.  And as the arctic cold front roared through the area, driving the mercury below freezing, the National Weather Service issued a Winter Storm Warning.  This is why I moved away from New York, I told myself as we pulled out of the garage into the freezing rain, sleet, and gusty 30 mile-per-hour winds.  To get away from this mess!

We arrived at Rockwall High School on time, glazed with a light coating of rime, but as we sat through the meet, the harsh north winds carried with them an increased torrent of rain which, at 27 degrees, froze to the cars, the sidewalks, the parking lot . . . and the freeway home.  When I nudged the Traverse onto westbound I-30 and joined the other tentative drivers on the 80-mile long linear ice skating rink, I prayed for safety and patience, hoping our drive back to Aledo wouldn’t turn into an expensive bumper-car thrill ride.

As we inched along, rubber-necking at the aftermath of several accidents and witnessing countless flashing emergency lights, I began to relax when I realized my nervousness, my drama, my judgmental attitude about the idiot drivers in their fishtailing pickup trucks, and my glass-half-empty outlook were clouding my ability to actually enjoy this extended time together with my family, participating in an adventure that doesn’t happen very often in North Texas.  I finally gave into my wife’s much more joyful attitude about the situation, sat back, and rode out the rest of the almost three-hour sled ride in my 5,000 pound all-wheel-drive bobsled with acceptance rather than a selfish sense of inconvenience.  That drive did something wonderful: it helped change my perspective about being in a situation I didn’t have much control over.  Besides, adventures like these always give me something to write about!

The outcome, or even the moment-by-moment experience of any situation, is determined chiefly by how we process and act on the thoughts we have about that situation; we all have the ability to reframe our experiences, no matter what they are.  As such, isn’t all of life a matter of perspective?  Isn’t how we look at the world the chief determiner of how we function in the world?  Doesn’t how we handle our thoughts lead to how we handle the situation producing those thoughts?  After all, we always have a choice about whether or not to believe the thoughts flying through our heads, and how we subsequently act on those thoughts.  “We take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ,” the apostle Paul advised in 2 Corinthians 10:5 (NIV).

By taking each thought captive and holding it up to the Truth of God’s Word, the reality of any situation can be brought into sharp focus.  Mourning truly can be turned into joy, weeping can be restored into laughter as we allow God to transform our minds and change our perspective.  As image-bearers of the Most High God, we were created to create, to imagine, to produce order from chaos, to bring into reality those things that first existed in our heads.  “Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven,” Jesus said (Matthew 6:10 NIV).  It’s how we choose to handle those thoughts which can raise us to the pinnacle of our potential, or crush us under the tank treads of depression.

So, life is a matter of perspective, and it’s up to us to change that perspective as necessary to align it with not only our hopes and dreams, but with God’s will.  Sometimes that takes an epiphany.  Sometimes a eureka moment.  Sometimes a smack on the back of the head with Wisdom’s rolling pin.  The answer to a prayer may be a shift in perspective; instead of thinking outside the box we need to take the box off the shelf, dust it off, disassemble it, and rearrange the parts into a nifty two-story birdhouse with a reflecting pool and an outdoor shower.  Instead of seeking the 40,000 foot view of the forest, we need to hack our way through the trees with a machete and a conquering attitude.  “It is the obvious which is so difficult to see most of the time,” wrote Isaac Asimov in I, Robot. “People say ‘It’s as plain as the nose on your face.’ But how much of the nose on your face can you see, unless someone holds a mirror up to you?”  Sometimes it’s God holding up that mirror.

In the Book of Isaiah, the prophet quoted God as saying, “’For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,’ declares the Lord. ‘As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts’” (Isaiah 55:8-9 NIV).  Thank God He doesn’t think like we do!  Thank God He sees the big picture, not only across space, but across time.  He’s got it all worked out, and as I mature in my Christian walk, and as my spiritual eyes and ears continue to open to the Kingdom of God at hand, I realize He’s the Master at changing my perspective.

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Copyright © 2014 David C Hughes

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