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 “Spiritual”

The Epiphany of Joy, Chapter 1: The Search for Joy [1 of 3]

All of us are coming to Joy.  Life, in confronting us with our fears, will see to that.  The more vigorously we take on life and gather experiences, the more quickly we learn the lesson.

–Todd Evan Pressman, PhD,

Radical Joy, page 18

 

There is no wealth better than health of body, and no gladness above joy of heart.

–Sirach 30:16 (NRSV)

 

When I first set out to write this book, I had no definite idea what joy was.  I mean, I sorta kinda had an inkling, like the first time I rode a thermal up to cloud base in a Schweizer 1-26 sailplane and scratched the misty gray belly of that fat cumulous as it hugged my glider and wrapped itself around my spirit.  The intense thrill, the pounding heart, the shout of thanks to God–in that moment a window flew open and joy flew in on a favorable wind.  It was a little taste, a little crumb, that, once experienced, remained on the tongue of my soul ever since.

Or when I’d walk into a bookstore and inhale the comforting smell of books, the scent of ink and glue and paper and hope, the aroma of dreams realized and purpose secured.  The same feeling which rose in my heart when that fat gray cloud enveloped my sailplane would again erupt from deep in my gut and choke me up.  The feeling was so heady, so enticing I’d tell people I could drop my engineering job and work in a bookstore just to be close to the books and the people who read them.  Another nugget, another crumb.

Or the moment my baby entered the world, my wife, Mary, under the blue sheets, her round belly painted amber with Betadine, her scared eyes searching mine as the doctor made the incision to pull out our stubbornly-breached child.  “You can look now,” he called to me as the moment arrived.  I stood up and peered over the cloth barrier just as the doctor grabbed hold of our baby’s feet and tugged.  Before I knew it he cradled that long, chubby, surprisingly clean baby in gloved hands.  “Okay, Dad, tell everyone what it is.”

I was overwhelmed.  Mary and I had made the decision months earlier to wait until the baby was born to find out what the sex was.  Somehow along the way the nurse midwives began using “he” and “his” during our weekly checkups, so we were convinced they’d let the baby out of the bassinet.  We just knew it was a “he.”  So as Mary’s tear-filled blue eyes grew wider over my wordlessness, and as I looked down at this purple and pink life covered with a bit of cheesy yellow vernix, I had no idea what the swollen thing was between its plump legs.  “You do know what it is, don’t you?” the doctor implored.  And in that moment of emotional overload, joy slid in and coaxed my voice into action as I realized God had playfully answered my prayers.  “It’s a . . . girl!” I cried.  I turned to Mary.  “It’s Hannah!”  Thus God delivered Hannah Elizabeth Hughes into the world, a little brown-eyed mirror reflecting my looks and Mary’s attitude, a reminder of God’s grace, love, and sense of humor, joy wrapped in an eight pound three ounce package of pure dependence.

But like I mentioned earlier, joy does not come naturally to me, so I have to be willing to accept it supernaturally.  I experience it in little nuggets: a shooting star on a morning walk, my wife’s touch, my daughter’s belly laughs.  I have a tendency to wallow around in the muck of my woes, to drag through the quicksand of depression, to slump through the mire of sadness, to loll in bouts of low energy.  I’m as inflexible as a piece of rebar, and I don’t respond well to changes in plans.  Instead of savoring each moment God gives me, I analyze my present reality against a backdrop of the past and the what-ifs of the future; I have a hard time living God’s commands in Isaiah 43:18-19,

 

“Forget the former things;

    do not dwell on the past.

See, I am doing a new thing!

    Now it springs up; do you

       not perceive it?”

 

or Jesus’ imperative delivered during the Sermon on the Mount:

 

“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”

–Matthew 6:34 (NIV)

 

I can slip in and out of self-pity as quickly as my daughter can slip in and out of her entire wardrobe of dress-up clothes.  But maybe my ignorance of joy’s reality has skewed my experience of it.  Maybe it’s a matter of perspective.  Maybe, just maybe, I do live joyfully; I just don’t fully realize it.  I’d heard the word “joy” all my life, but when it came right down to it, I couldn’t tell you exactly what it was, couldn’t describe it concisely, couldn’t wrap it up into a comprehensible analogy.  I know what depression is.  I know what sadness is.  I know what frustration is.  I know what boredom is.  But I don’t know what joy really is.  Is joy different from happiness?  Is it an emotion?  A feeling?  A state of being?  Is joy something to strive for, or is it something innate, something we’re born with?  Or does it fully manifest only after being born again?  Can everyone experience joy, or only those with a well-developed spiritual foundation?  Or no foundation at all?  Can only children experience and demonstrate consistent joy, like my memories of childhood testify to, or can adults loaded down with baggage and histories and conformity and material desires and “stuff” experience it too?

 

Copyright ©2013 by David C. Hughes

Worship on a Morning Walk (2013-08-19 Daily)

WORSHIP ON A MORNING WALK

Being raised in a small-town Catholic church, I never knew worship, or at least I didn’t recognize it.  I learned the traditional prayers, the ups and downs of the Mass, and the discipline of being an altar boy.  I faithfully went with my family on Sunday morning, a compulsion which followed through my college years and into adulthood.  It wasn’t until I met my wife and we started dating that I had to embrace a new way of looking at and experiencing church.  You see, she was raised sort-of Baptist, and after we got engaged I asked her if she would be willing to convert to Catholicism.  She agreed to start the process, but when it came time to start filling out the paperwork to get an annulment from her first marriage, she slammed on the brakes.  “God and I talked about my divorce and He still loves me,” she emphatically told me.  “I’m not taking this to a panel of people I don’t know to judge that reconciliation.  What business is it of theirs?  This is between God and me.”  From that moment I had to give up my regimented thinking about what church was and open my eyes to a different way of experiencing God.  As a result, we started going to a non-denominational Christian church.  What an eye-opener!  I quickly discovered that, for me, this is what church was meant to be: fresh, unbridled, Jesus-centered, Bible-based, accepting, built on relationships with God and other believers serving each other and the community at large.  I fit right in!  I was home!  But worship is one aspect about this new way of doing church I still struggle to get my arms wrapped around.

One Sunday evening last spring, my wife, Mary, and I attended New River Fellowship’s “First Sunday,” a monthly night of worship and digging deeper into the Word.  An integral part of service which Spirit-filled churches like New River Fellowship in Hudson Oaks, Texas, have in common is a half hour or so of praise involving talented singers and musicians to set the atmosphere prior to the message.  Typically I listen to the music, sing the words . . . and let my mind wander all over the place.  Even after eight years of attending non-denoms, I have to admit I still don’t fully get it.  But that night something shifted.  It’s happened before, to a degree, but that night I lifted my hands above my head and closed my eyes during one song—and started crying.  I was overwhelmed by the Spirit as He poured into me, embraced me, loved me.  I stood there, hands held high, and received.  Soon after, the Spirit told me to pray for the guy sitting in the chair in front of me.  So, in unquestioned obedience, I knelt down and prayed for him.

The next morning I got up before sunrise, as is my habit, to take the dogs for a walk.  The pre-dawn morning embraced me in stillness and mid-spring warmth as I led the dogs out the front door and onto the sidewalk.  Something—movement, a flash of light, a disturbance—caught my attention and I turned toward the western sky just in time to catch the green-white streak of a meteor sacrificing itself in the atmosphere for God’s glory, a good morning kiss from Daddy.  Then I really noticed the sky: cloudless, black, painted with countless stars and the streak of the Milky Way running southwest to northeast.  The sliver of a waning crescent moon hung in the eastern sky.  The Milky Way glowed softly against the inky backdrop, more pronounced than I’d seen in recent memory, reminding me of those photos you see from the Hubble telescope of nebulae and galaxies.

I walked with my face pointed toward the sky and my head stuck in the clouds, barely glancing at the road, hardly checking on the dogs.  I Surrender All played over and over in my mind.  The flashlight was useless that morning, as I walked by faith rather than by sight. The immensity of God’s creation increased the awesomeness of my reality a bit, expanding my view of the infinite vastness of the universe by the arm of an immense galaxy.  I could feel God’s presence, palpable, real, alive.  I walked in peace, I walked fully loved, I walked aware of His Spirit.  “How could a God that created all of this take the time for me?” I wondered.  “But He does.  He does!”  A great horned owl called out a lonely hoot, hope cast into the darkness, waiting for a reply.  A bullfrog harrumphed its own hope across the pond still wrapped in quiet darkness.  I looked up into that depthless spiral of a billion stars and asked “God, teach me how to worship You.”  “This is how,” He seemed to reply.  “This is how.”

I may not “get” worship fully yet.  I may stand unmoving except for the pumping of my right leg to the beat of the music on Sunday morning.  I may look around in wonder at the folks who jump and wave their arms and shout at the ceiling, eyes closed, tears streaming down their cheeks.  But, as Mark Driscoll, Pastor of Mars Hill Church in Seattle, says: “worship is not merely an aspect of our being, but the essence of our being as God’s image-bearers.” (theresurgence.com, Worship and Idolatry series)  We worship because we’re made in God’s image, we pour out because God pours out.  Our life is one of continuous worship, whether of God or of something else.  It’s what we do, it’s who we are.  King David described in Psalm 22:3 that God is holy, “Enthroned in the praises of Israel.”  God dwells in the praises of His people!  God’s presence is real in the hearts of those who exalt Him.  I may not get worship fully yet, but as I continue to walk in His presence, even on a dark road with the Milky Way flowing over me, as I reach up to Him, hands open to receive, He opens my heart a little more with each encounter.  Who knows, someday you may see me turning cartwheels in the aisles at church too.

8/19/2013

Copyright (c) David C. Hughes

Post Navigation