A Girl Walks in to a Barnes and Noble...

I’m sitting here on a Friday morning, the first in months, for a designated writing time. I’ve perused the shelves, grabbed Charles Martin’s new nonfiction book to accompany me through Holy Week, and eaten at least 3/4 of an oatmeal raisin cookie from the store cafe. Scanning the tables, i recognize we all have a job to do, whether for pleasure or for work, through calling or obligation, a dozen strangers sit staring at computer screens, thankful for the silence. And the free wi-fi.

The pink flowers of spring upon the trees contrast starkly against the fast-paced movement of the darkening clouds. We’re in the part of spring where you could wear a winter jacket in the morning, and throw on shorts in the afternoon. But the weatherman has called for rain today, so a few of us have ventured out for a front seat view of the storm coming in, reminding us that the sunshine of summer is coming, but not before we’re shrouded in thunder and lightning.

Storms brew before the flowers can grow.

This lent has been eerily quiet. In my mind. In my social calendar. But I can feel a bubble under the surface telling me it’s almost go-time, as if the resurrection of our Lord will be the green flag to make my way around the track at full speed. But I don’t think that’s what He wants from me…. This slow burn has been a long time coming, and now that I’m in it, He’s asking me to linger. To keep listening. But to begin a different kind of pouring out. Out of my soul, into the needing hands of others. To sit in the conversations without an agenda. To listen more than I speak.

What if I wrote as if my only audience was that of the angels and saints, who are seated at the right hand of the Father, all of them listening with rapt attention and a loving gaze? What if my words were a blessing such that the hosannas belt down upon us?

What if we lived our lives that way? What if the actions I took were a direct reflection of the love and honor I wanted to bestow upon the Father who loves me regardless of my many faults, and not a reflection of the fear that tears through my soul as I think of what others may view of me?

My voice has been silenced by fear, but not only by the fear of those who judge me here on this earth. There’s a fear deep within telling me that I’ll never be able to honor the Lord in a way I would feel is enough. And knowing that fear isn’t from Him is all the more frustrating and heartbreaking. Because I won’t unclench the fingers from the control of which I cling to. The one that says if I let go there will be a freefall. The fear says all I write and think and feel could not be more cliche, so I choose to stay silent, to hinder the gifts He’s bestowed upon me. The desires within my heart struggle. Sputter. Threaten to die out.

But like a pot with boiling water within, you can only keep the lid on for so long. The angry overflow will happen; it’s only a matter of time. So I control it by intermittently taking the lid off, only to slap it back on once things have settled a bit. How long can I keep this cycle going?

*

There’s a couple sitting across the cafe from me. Both with glasses, both with Macbooks. Quiet whispers intermittently between the two, they’ve done this before. Sitting next to one another instead of across from each other, the slightest touch between their knees. I used to roll my eyes at couples like this. But now I see the tender space between them, and in one moment my heart longs for it, but in the next I’m reminded that it already exists in the space between me and the heart of Jesus.

He’s sitting closely today. I can feel the brush of his knee against mine. He leans in close and whispers into my ear.

Life and peace. Life and peace. Life and peace.

If I gave you the option without any context: Life and peace vs. death and sorrow. It’s a no brainer, right? I mean, death and destruction is a pretty big downer, and I just wandered through a whole section of self-help books offering to guide you to finding your best self. It’s not really a question worth asking, given its drastic nature, but how often do we inadvertently choose death without realizing it, by not accepting the grace-filled gift of life with eyes closed, hands open wide?

*

A new woman strides in, wearing all black. She’s taller and a bit plump, and has accessorized her ensemble with silver necklaces and earrings, her hair buzzed into a mohawk, the majority of her silver strands intertwining with black. The look on her face is both peaceful and fierce. I can see by her smile lines and wide eyes, the way she holds a book, that she’s lived well. She chose life. And peace. I wonder if she ever felt herself gripping so tightly to the control she felt she needed that she could almost feel her fingertips bleed, the actual holding on hurting her so badly. Or if it was easier for her, the grace that is given, to open her palms and accept the gift that is so readily given, but so seldom received with the openness that’s necessary.

This choosing to be open, but also allowing freedom to wash over you, with no control over it whatsoever. That’s the fear bubbling within my soul. When we grip tightly to the control we have over our lives, it may not be our best lives, but at least it’s one where we know what’s coming. Letting go means not knowing where our feet will land… we’ve been so focused on what we’re holding onto, right in front of us, and it seems just fine and dandy thankyouverymuch, that we don’t ever consider that the soft landing below won’t be an isolating cavern, but rather the open arms of those who have gone before us.

I’d like to think that someone in another time has done this very thing: written about what they saw in a cafe somewhere in Boston, or Atlanta, or DC. I wonder what she saw. Did life and peace live behind my eyes? Did the delight of our Lord come out in front of me? I like to think about that, too: God’s presence coming before me, demonstrating his love and light before I even get in the room. Not my glory but His. Not my life, but His.

*

You ever hear a quote or a verse or a song so much that you just can’t get enough of it? I keep finding different versions of Romans 8:6. It’s been my companion this week, as my heart prepares for Holy Week this year, giving me pause, giving me life, giving me new breath in something I’ve read dozens of times before:

The mind governed by flesh is death, but the mind governed by the Spirit is life and peace. NIV

Obsession with self in these matters is a dead end; attention to God leads us out into the open, into a spacious, free life. MSG

So letting your sinful nature control your mind leads to death. But letting the Spirit control your mind leads to life and peace. NLT

For the mind-set of flesh is death, but the mind-set of the Spirit finds life and peace. TPT

Finds life and peace. Find life and peace in the releasing of control. The releasing of my soul into the arms of a perfect and loving Savior who’s making the walk again, flesh torn, face unrecognizable, to a cross He knows He will bear for all. Not just for the ones who let go, but also for the ones clinging tightly to their lives as they know it. He does it anyway, fully aware that some still won’t turn their eyes upon His, fearful of what they’ll find, not realizing the cliff they’ve been clinging to was only a step. And it’s safe to let go, because the fall wasn’t there in the first place. It was just a step, hand in hand with the Father.

Life and peace.

The two words resounding in my mind, over and over, echoing off the walls of my heart, my mind, my soul, reminding me that I have a choice. And I can make it every day, every moment. Just as He chose on that one dark day once and for all, I get to choose to accept the gift with each breath, each decision, each knowing smile across the cafe.

Life and peace to you as we enter into Holy Week, sweet friends. I pray you enter into relationship with the Lord in a way you never have before, whether it’s for the first time, or if you and Jesus have been at this thing for decades. We may not do this relationship right every time, and we may not always choose life and peace in the face of hard things, but I’ll tell you what. He chooses you every. Single. Time. No doubt. No wavering. He chose you upon that cross, and He will never back down.

Love,

Kristin

Why I Went to Confession (and why I'll go again)

Full stop; I’m a cradle Catholic, and can only count on one (maybe 2?) how many times I’ve gone to confession.

I’m going to let that one sink in for a bit, because even typing it makes me cringe a bit.

But why? Why on earth do Catholics go to confession? For the past decade, Jesus has wooed me back into His loving arms, and the work He has done in me and in my life has been nothing short of miraculous. He changes my heart daily, and I have often wondered what it is about the Catholic Church that keeps me coming back. I’ve been leading a nondenominational Bible Study for years at this point, and I’ve seen the fruit of the Spirit working in every single Christian denomination I’ve observed.

And my heart continues to ask, But why the Catholic Church for me and my family?

Because sometimes I feel it would be easier to just walk away. Too many ‘rituals,’ too many public hurts, too many weird insence-y smells in the sanctuary.

But yet.

I somehow found myself at our parish’s hour long Eucharistic Adoration last Thursday night, which is also one of the times of the week that we are invited to confession with the priest. It’s been years since my last confession. I always get nervous because I’m not sure what to say, and am worried I won’t say the “right” prayer. And honestly, I think this is where a lot of my Protestant brothers and sisters get caught up with us Catholics: Jesus’ death on the cross and His subsequent gift of the Holy Spirit removed our need to repent to a priest! We have direct access! Confession to another isn’t necessary! Just say it aloud to Jesus right now and you will be forgiven!

Yes! Agreed! Jesus wants us to come to Him. Daily. And profess our sins and our inability to do anything aside from His provisions, grace, and mercy.

But yet. (again)

I printed out an examination of conscious I found online — because remember, I had the deep desire to follow all the rules. I wrote my sins down, I contemplated my current and ongoing sins, and asked the Lord to show me anything I wasn’t seeing that needed to be confessed. I talk to God daily, and confess my shortcomings just as often, but I was committed to this sequence due to the one fact that I’m trying to figure out why I’m Catholic in the first place.

So I went. And I cried. Because there was something both beautiful and crushing about speaking the words aloud to an unassuming man of God who demonstrated such grace-filled compassion, which I felt oozing through the fibers of the confessional curtain. His tender heart reminded me of the heart of Jesus — as my tears fell, I could see the compassion of Christ descend upon me, and healed me in a way I’d never felt before.

And then I knew: Catholic penance isn’t about a rule or a dogmatic anarchy intending to control us all. It’s not about all of the ‘shoulds’ and ‘need tos.’ It’s about abundant grace, perfect forgiveness, and relationship to Christ. It’s not about the priest on the other side of the curtain, it’s about the temple’s veil being torn once and for all, and the blood of Christ washing my heart anew. It’s keeping my heart accountable to the words that have passed through my lips, and the promise of salvation as we confess Jesus as Lord who died a horrible death, was buried and resurrected for the sake of all of the brokenness we carry.

The peace it brought, y’all. And the revelation! The Holy Spirit has poured. some. stuff. out. y’all. I continue to feel more of his presence, day by day, the more I open my heart to him, one torn up layer at a time.

I’m a Christian. I’m a Catholic. And oftentimes I feel the world sees those as two entirely different things, but the further I travel down this path alongside the loving heart of Jesus, the more I tend to believe that we’re all one in the same. Today I’m just throwing out gratitude that my heart has been opened to all of those who follow His Word, with the understanding that we all worship differently, just as God has intended.

There is one body, but it has many parts. But all its many parts make up one body. It is the same with Christ. We were all baptized by one Holy Spirit. And so we are formed into one body. It didn’t matter whether we were Jews or Gentiles, slaves or free people. We were all given the same Spirit to drink. So the body is not made up of just one part. It has many parts.

You are the body of Christ. Each one of you is a part of it.

1 Corinthians 12:12-14, 27

A lot of times, I’ve heard these verses used in reference to how the Lord has uniquely gifted each of His children, so that they collectively work as the full body of Christ. But the more I contemplate it, the more I see the other meaning: there are many ways to worship the one True God, and the universal Church — all believing churches focused on God’s Word and the saving power of the Gospel — THAT is the body of Christ. We’re all made differently, made to worship differently, made to pray differently, made to confess differently. But we’re all the body of Christ. And God made each of us on purpose, with a specific design.

The more I think of it, the more I realize that I don’t have to choose. I don’t have to decide if I’m Catholic or Protestant; I can love the church I attend while also loving the Church of God’s people. And I’m willing to set aside our differences to learn from one another, grow more holy with one another, and run the race set before us — running after the eternal promises made — hand in hand with the brothers and sisters created for their own individual giftings to glorify the name of the Lord, regardless of what kind of buildings of which they spend their Sunday mornings.

I pray this encourages you, sweet friends. I pray that when you drive by a different kind of church, that your heart begins to wonder if maybe those differences are just another way of expressing the love of Jesus. Not wrong. Just different.

So, honestly? I’m going to go to confession again. Probably this week. The revelation of the Holy Spirit is contagious! And if this is one more way to show holy reverence to my Lord and Savior, then I’m going to do it. But I want to know your thoughts… Are you Catholic? Protestant? Somewhere in between? Or maybe not even claiming any type of church? What are your thoughts on formal confession? I’d love to hear your heart.

Kindness and blessings,

Kristin

Info overload nerd like me? Check out the catechism of the Catholic Church here to read more about Catholic penance.

Snap Judgments

This post was originally written in 2015 — way back before we were a family of five! But as a nod to the #hopewriterslife prompt “draft” for today, I thought I’d actually take an old draft, finish it as best I could, and post it. Check out my Instagram feed for more details! Enjoy!

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As Mr. Kuda and I sat down to dinner the other night, I got a glimpse of this mid-thirties bombshell with perfectly placed hair, a stylishly cuffed blazer, and pearls as the perfect accessory. She lit up the room and engaged enthusiastically with all of the dinner guests: a perfect mix of self-deprecation, a sense of humor, and perfectly white teeth.

I immediately despised her.

When it turned out that she would be sitting next to me for the next three hours that night, I cringed. One fifteen second interaction had told me that we would not be friends, we had nothing in common, and she would likely judge me for what I didn't have, whether it was the big house, the cute clothes, or the perfect family.

And I was right.

And for some reason, I cannot get this girl off my mind. On the exterior, she was perfectly lovely, but I did get the sense of judgment. Long after the night was over and she returned to her estate, I continued to find myself reeling over this woman's attitude: her extravagant negligence to those around her, her talking over me when she asked me a question, her blatant discussions of how much money they had and what they spent it on. Her complete obliviousness to the world around her threw me so off-course, my head has been spinning for the past three days.

And then? God.

In Romans 12, our dear friend Paul talks about Mutual Love. For some reason, my insecurities immediately gave attributes to this woman in which I had no right to give. Whether or not her motives, thoughts, or words were in love toward me, I am not called to love that way in return. Here’s what Paul says:

Bless those who persecute you, bless and do not curse them (v14), Do not repay anyone for evil; be concerned for what is noble in the sight of all. If possible, on your part, live at peace with all (v17-18).

He doesn't tell us to be a doormat, but God does require a love from us to all others, regardless of their iniquities. Not only does He require this special love of us, but He gives our hearts the ability to do so.  Godly hospitality means that we pattern generosity after God's: we give to those who couldn't possibly give in return. Sometimes this means financially or with material items, but this woman? She needed grace. I needed to give her grace, even if she couldn't possibly give that in return. Further, the next time I come across someone I want to immediately judge, I need to ask myself two questions:

  1. What is the reason behind my reaction? Insecurity? Pride? Fear?

  2. How would Jesus respond in this situation? More, how can I shift my focus from how this person affects me, versus how God sees him/her?

Thinking back my heart hurts in light of my gut reaction, but I do know this... It starts here: Love. Love when it doesn't make sense. Love when it hurts your heart. Love when you want to turn to anger or bitterness. Love when you don't think the other person deserves it. That last one stings. Because in my own selfish and insecure mind, I made a quick decision that another human being did not deserve my love. But friends, there’s only one perfect Judge, and He is truthful and merciful, full of compassion. While I know I won’t always respond perfectly, I do know I can rest in His forgiveness as I bow down before His throne, with another dawning of understanding in the may ways I fail.

And He will always respond in truth, in love, and compassion.

Have you ever made a snap judgment on someone? How did it affect you in the long run? Was your mind ever changed?

At His Word

So if you’ve ever been around toddlers, you know they’re basically drunk little humans with no frontal lobes, wielding their power like the little dictators they are. At the Eight Year Old’s basketball game on Saturday, eyes of the crowd were diverted from the game in a display of mental strength and fortitude as the Two Year Old slyly looked behind him, mischievous grin in place, inching his toes toward the boundary line of the basketball court, daring me to make a scene.

“One…” in a low growl, masked behind the smile of my clenched teeth.

Bigger grin.

“Two…” There may have been slight hysteria breaking through the growl.

Toes are mere millimeters away.

“Thr…”

He runs back to me, laughing hysterically, fully aware of the power he holds, but jumps into my arms despite the tone of my voice just seconds ago. All have returned to their desired places; knowing parents giggle with understanding nods, with their attention slowly returning back to the game. Ah, the life with toddlers, y’all. Never a dull moment.

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In today’s readings, Hebrews 1 starts off reminding us how God has spoken to us in the past (through the prophets), and how that responsibility has now shifted to the Son, “whom he made heir of all things and through whom he created the universe (v2).” Y’all, we now have front row access to God’s Word, through the saving power of our Savior, God’s Son, “who is the very imprint of His being (v3).” This is indeed, very good news!

We head to the Gospel reading, which for today is Mark 1:14-20. John the Baptist has been arrested, and Jesus’ ministry is officially starting in Galilee. Jesus passes by the Sea of Galilee, where Simon and Andrew are casting their nets.

He says to them, “Come after me, and I will make you fishers of men.” Then they abandoned their nets and followed him.

Mark 1:17-18

And then, in the very next verses:

He walked along a little farther and saw James, the son of Zebedee, and his brother John. They too were in a boat mending their nets. Then he called them. So they left their father Zebedee in the boat along with the hired men and followed him.

Mark 1:19-20

Can you imagine if these first disciples reacted like my sweet and spicy Two Year Old? I can just hear Jesus, “I’m going to give you until the count of three. One… Two... Thr…!” While the image in my head makes me giggle, their response is a beautiful example of how we should respond to Jesus’ call. He said Come, and they immediately obeyed at His Word.

Come after me…Then they abandoned their nets.

He called them. So they left their father.

There was no hemming and hawing. There was no inching their toes toward disobedience.

But isn’t that just it, friends? We have full access to the One True God’s voice—through His Word, through prayer, through the Holy Spirit—yet when we hear his voice, how often do we balk in hesitation? Disobedience is disbelief, y’all. Disbelief in His grace, in His power, in His mercy, and in His unending provisions beyond what we could ever imagine.

So today I call you, just the once, to seek His voice, hear it, and react upon hearing: without the count to three, without the warning signs, but in the one Word He speaks, I implore you to listen the first time.

Come…

For me? We’ve talked about it enough that your ears may start to bleed: it’s the call to write, to share, to embark on a creative journey I’ve no clue as to where it takes me. But the call to write is a beating of a drum, in my heart and in my soul, and I know the call matches closely with His Word: the one beckoning me to sit at peace in His desire for my life. So I sit here and type, His Voice echoing in my mind, sharing the love He desires all of us to experience. Just His Word.

At His one Word we are obedient to his call, basking in His Glory, living in His peace. At His Word, strife and pain cease, not forgotten or erased by the things of this world, but transformed into healing and calm due to the saving grace of His love.

So I challenge you today: What are you hearing, deep in the caverns of your heart? What puts a fire in your belly reminding you of the true desire God has placed within you? What has God asked you to obedience today? Are you willing to say “Yes” without the need of a countdown?

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I’m joining hope*writers for 12 days of prompts to kick start my writing in 2019! Follow #HopeWriterLife over on Instagram for more beautiful writers of all types. Join us!

Aligning Our Hearts

There’s been a slow trickle of movement in these here parts, mostly because my vision for why I’m writing has slowly slipped through my fingers like grains of sand. However, during this slow trickle has been an ever growing light of the Holy Spirit moving my heart in a different direction. If you can believe it, He’s been talking to me, and I’m going to let you in on what I’ve heard.

But before I do that, let me tell you how I hear God. Because it isn’t the crazy dream, angel come down on a cloud, booming thunder of God’s voice speaking to me you might have heard of in the Old Testament. It’s been a quiet pull of the heart, frustrated scribblings in my journal, lots of questions without answers, lots of answers without my questioning. It’s been trusted friends sharing their hearts, thoughts popping in my mind that won’t go away, and Scriptures coinciding with my heart, too connected to be coincidence. God speaks to each of us differently, but when we seek out His Word, His Heart, and identify His Character, you can be sure that at least some of the time (none of us are perfect at this, amiright?), He will speak to your heart in a variety of ways. And I’m sitting here in my quiet chair with overwhelming gratitude that God has revealed a few things to me these past few quiet months, and I’d love to share them here, with you.

Quiet. Peace. Family. Holy Spirit.

These are the handful of words coming into my heart over the past few months. The quiet of Advent - decreased phone/screen time, increased Bible reading time, less talking, more listening - has slowly brought a concept that has been hard to wrap my head around: LESS. LESS. LESS.

Less striving, less shame, less arguing, less talking. More God. More relationship. More intentionality. Less loud. More quiet. Less frustration. More patience. You see where I’m going here? Less of me. More of God. Less of my words. More of His.

Each year I change up my quiet time routine to keep things fresh in my relationship with Jesus. Some years I choose to read through the Bible. Other years I’ve chosen a daily devotional, or several daily devotionals to direct where my heart goes. But in this hearing of “LESS,” part of that has meant “less of what others have to say, more of what HE has to say.” So I’ve decided to use the daily readings according to the liturgical calendar to guide me this year. And sometimes I’ll share what I’m hearing from the Holy Spirit, as it relates to those readings and otherwise, right here.

And look at that segue!

The first reading of today is from 1 John 3. Now, we’ve been trotting through 1 John over the past few weeks, and I just love the heart of Saint John in this letter - it’s all about love, y’all! In Chapter 2, we’re reminded that striving is not how we receive the love of Jesus, and today we’re reminded of it again. I love how God’s love story (read: The Bible) is an ongoing building upon and layering of His love for His children. It rocks my world - in such an amazing way - every day.

But I’m going to pull just a couple of verses to reflect on today, and I hope they bring some joy to your hearts as they have mine:

Beloved, we receive from Him whatever we ask, because we keep His commandments and do what pleases Him: believe in the name of His Son, Jesus Christ, and love one another just as He commanded us. 1 John 3:22-23.

Y’all! Do you see that? It doesn’t say: “you’ll get everything you want when you try really hard and do your best to conquer all things on your own.” It says “believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another just as He commanded us.” Believe in Him. Love one another as He does. Period. End of story. Remaining in Christ Jesus means we believe He is the Son of God and the saving power of His death and resurrection on the cross, we read His word, we talk to Him, we ask the Holy Spirit into our hearts. Another way to put it? We abide in Him. When we do this, our hearts slowly change to receive the desires of His heart for US. Not the other way around. And that right there is how we receive everything we want.

Because when the desires of our hearts align with His, we have everything we need—it shifts the focus to “I want what I want” to full contentment and gratitude for what we have. And that’s something I can get behind.

So my prayer for you today, sweet friends, is this: That the desire of your hearts yield to our kind, forgiving and gracious God. That you, however slowly you need, begin to turn your eyes on Him, whether through prayer, reading the Bible, or seeking a friend with strong faith in Jesus to direct you toward Him, so that He may begin to do a new work in your heart, aligning yours more and more with His desire for your life.

Until next time!

Love, Kristin