Monday, June 30, 2008

The fullness of His blessing


It might sound like an echoing of one favorite preacher's most recent quote but, like Jerry Savelle, I do want to have the fullness of God's blessing. My small mind doesn't naturally dwell on what "fullness" means. I assume I already know what full is, as opposed to what is not full. But this is probably where the actual smallness comes into play: we assume that we know what God has in store for us; we believe that we, in our boxed concept of human intelligence, know the boundaries that fullness satisfies.

The amazing revelation is that, apart from supernatural understanding, we can have the whole thing, the beyond-every-imagination kind of God's fullness. When we come to know and believe that He is who He says He is and that His Word is alive and real and as faithful as He is, then we will know that the fullness of His blessing is already here even before our mind can conjure its depth and meaning.

When I experience His light in the same arena as that of some of our own time's honorable men and women of God, I thank Him for such a wonderful blessing and for the chance to know more about Him. Even a brief glimpse of His blessing stirs up faith in my heart. It is a spiritual privilege to know Him in the same light as our precious leaders, to see the magnitude of His love for us, to believe that His purpose is to abundantly bless us beyond any measure.

I sometimes think: Why is it that He leaves it up to us to lean on faith so strong, to not even doubt that everyday brings immeasurable, limitless, surpassing blessings? It is up to us to receive, and not doubt. When His Handiwork in our faithful hearts becomes the wide-open door to His blessings' full manifestation, His Glory shines...

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Turning another digit towards a long life



We all have birthdays every year, unless you're a leap year celebrant; which means that another year older takes a lot longer than the usual. My turning another digit happened just recently. I distinctly heard the drop of another number, much like New York's countdown annual ball drop; another move of the hour hand to declare the end of another history or another beginning; another statement: I am not my old age anymore. As a matter of fact, I represent another digit, a new and higher number.

And in fact, I refuse to use the word "old" anymore. What is "old" anyway? Your pair of old sneakers might be old to you, but looking good to me - well-cared for, had a lot of miles to it, developed some character, a vintage. So when I wake up from now on, I decide not to be old, but to move healthy, blood-pumping digits toward a long life: to be well-cared for, gain more mileage, insurrect character into anything lackluster, be all the vintage I can be!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Irreplaceable



It's funny how we all have those little quirks and ways about us that become like our own seal or brand; this same brand that sets us apart from anyone else. I wonder sometimes if, from the time I was in my mom's belly, these same quirks had already started to grow to become a permanent part of my dna.

I already knew that God created my inmost being and that He knitted me together in my mother's womb. What fascinated me was that He made me so different from my own family, from my own friends, even from strangers that there is not one person in this world that could be identified as my own self. Just me. And then this singular person developed quirks and nuances that added more layers and fabric to my being, to say the least.

I am enamored and awed and completely out of words.

Saturday, May 31, 2008

beyond anything imaginable


Last Sunday at church, the preacher spoke and brought a tug of joy right at my heart. He said his remarkable success in everything that he has done and is doing can only be because of God's grace. Through his recital of all his accomplishments, he never hinted at anything but gratitude towards a God that created him and breathed such an adventurous life in him that everyone noticed. There was not a chord of pride in his speech and litany of his life's events. It was like God just led him to the podium and dictated all that He had gifted him: "My boy, get up and say all those things..."

The preacher spoke with burning steel and passion that clearly set him apart for His purposes:

Ephesians 3:20 (New King James Version)

20 Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that works in us...


A living proof that God is able to do above and beyond anything that we can ever ask or think or imagine, Barry C. Black shared about the power that works in him, a faithful instrument of Almighty God. Barry C. Black is the 62nd Chaplain of the United States Senate. He was elected to this position on June 27, 2003, becoming the first African-American, the first Seventh-day Adventist, and the first military chaplain to hold the office of chaplain to the United States Senate. He previously served for over 27 years as a chaplain in the United States Navy, rising to the rank of Rear Admiral and ending his career as the Chief of Navy Chaplains. He officially retired from the Navy on August 15, 2003.

There is a power that works in us, according to the preacher. He stated simply, that the secret to the power is unlocked by staying humble and letting God be who God is in us. He also went on to say that we should take our problems to Jesus. It's the kind of faith that says Jesus can handle this. Lastly, he said that we ought to have a robust faith; the kind of faith that overflows from our love for God. We ought to know Him, read His love letter which is the Bible and trust in Him completely.

As I listened intently and took to heart what the preacher said, I asked myself: When have I completely and totally trusted Him? When did I honestly believe that He is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that I ask or think?

Admittedly, I am still a babe; not in worldly terms, but in spiritual matters.

I just went down the road back and reminisced my outdated jaunts and other dead, old days when I was not even born again. Too often I lived days and nights when I thought like the world thought, acted like the world acted, spoke like the world spoke and, obviously, carried a heart like the world did.

I did not have any gumption to give to Jesus what, ultimately, is His: My life. I did not believe enough in His being able, in His exceedingly abundantly all, in His love for me.

I repent. I give to Him what is His. I believe.

I thank You now for everything and anything that is beyond my imagination!

Note: On another event: Featured guest in the tv show, The Evidence, the host asked Barry C. Black when he first gave his life to Jesus. He said that he now daily give his life to Jesus. What a revelation to me that I could actually do the same thing!

Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Birth of King's Rose

There was this day when I just thought: What will I do when I don't do what I do now? Will I write to get paid? Or will I do portraits and legal stuff with my hands?

Then I discovered the joy of making personalized greeting cards. And I labeled it at the back of the card, just like Hallmark cards do them, "King's Rose" and then drew a mini-rose just for effect.

With my bare hands I started cropping old cards, photos, even used an old nail polish over the photo of my diva dog, a.k.a. Bootchick, and then assembled them in a way that betrayed mental gravity. I even thought that my old, missing sequined, pieces of cheap, costume jewelry now serve some sort of purpose: they could spend some unknown duration glued to cardstock paper, prettied up and perfectly in place, or not, and yet learn to live with newfound meaning. Oh, and my dusty-old, silly elementary exercises I called "poetry traffic whilst rush hour" will have an exit ramp, finally. Nevertheless, some kind of purpose incarnates.

But then who's to know? So unless I give them a reason to be, then nothing is as nothing does.

Ergo, the avenue of artistic possibilities could be limitless, in a pseudo-simplistic sort of way. Prolific, possibly or accidentally, but just ordinarily extraordinary in nature. No pressure. Just being collaged or pasted or taped or stapled in a way that makes a remarkably unique presence to a particular heart. May I say it could very well be very organic in a sense and deeply orgasmic in another esoteric level of some kind?

But then again, who's to know unless we do what needs to be done? And give what must be given, in order for another to receive the pleasure of having one's own personalized card.

It's free anyway. But it's best given, best received, best done!


Special Note: Incoherence displayed here has nothing to do with the joy of birthing King's Rose. It's a process. Deal with it. So did I. Still do.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Only what's done for Christ will last


My heart has been asking the Lord to lead me to His purpose in and for me. But what does that really mean? It seems so magnanimous a chore, even a concept, to visualize it in a few words. Then I realized that it was because I thought I was the driver and the one ultimately responsible for the purpose.

I am not the maker of my purpose, nor am I responsible for my creation. I am His and His will resides in me. When He gave me His Son, Jesus, He set me apart and cleansed me. He showed me how much His love can carry me through. I know that there won't be any time when I could say that I have had all of His love. In my limited capacity, I will not be able to perceive nor measure the magnitude of this love. In my baseness, He is still the perfection of my weaknesses. And yet, because of His love, He allows me to become the character that He has designed for me. He refines. He forgives. He loves like no other.

Recently, I have understood clearly what Paul meant when he said, "For the good that I will to do, I do not do; but the evil I will not to do, that I practice." I struggle like Paul and I imagine that I am not the only one going through this. Because I live in this temporary world with temporary promises, I have this tug-of war in me that craves to go the opposite direction - where I was and had long left - and pursue deceptive sweetness in its organic state. The 'temporary' part is an issue, because it becomes more a rarity or some kind of wonderful-now and perhaps-goodbye-later that is absolutely exciting to the senses. But the bigger issue is that I am no longer that temporary kind of gal: I choose the eternal promises assigned to my new nature. This tug-of war between the old and the new is so difficult for me. I know what I need to do and where I should derive my strength. I know, too, that only what's done for Christ will last.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Thursday, November 02, 2006

Teach me Love


"Pursue love..." resonates loudly and clearly in my mind. I came upon this while studying one of Kenneth Copeland's teachings. This time I was not 'thinking' in my natural state of mind. It was the kind of mind-perusing that goes deeper into my spirit. God has been showing me what I need to focus on right now: Pursue Love.

Have you had that experience when you felt like your knowledge of a particular matter took several layers of unraveling and discovering by the time you get to the bare-bottom truth? Well, this is exactly what is happening to me right now.

Actually, my 'right now' began maybe two years ago when I asked God to explain to me what Matthew 6:33 really means. How do I seek first His Kingdom and His righteousness? What does that mean in action?

The seeking takes more than a lifetime. The action takes today.

Friday, March 31, 2006

God at work


Photo: View of Deception Pass in Whidbey Island

Excerpt from "The Soul tells a Story" by Vinita Hampton Wright:
"This is God at work. It may be divinity at its finest, because the whole point of the incarnation was that we understand finally and with clarity who we really are -- made in God's image and possessing gifts with which to express God's very self to the world."

I am now reading this book "The Soul tells a Story" by Vinita Hampton Wright. It is a book about writing which I bought from a Christian bookstore. I am filled with hope and belief that it would speak God's message to me about writing.

For years and years, I have been wrestling with the spirit of fear and rejection of writing. I remembered when I was around nine years old, I clearly uttered that I would, one day, be a "great" writer. I was so proud, even then, and too spiritually immature to know that my Creator is the Source of everything that I have. Yes, including any gifts that I have ever possessed, still possess, or now have acquired and still acquire. Maybe it does not make sense much; it did not register to me at the time that there is the One and Only Source of all things. My pride arrested me and convinced me that writing is just for my own edification; neither did it have to be published nor read by anyone else. It was just for my own good. I loved myself too much to expose my gift.

And then again I remembered when at around eighteen, I begged my mother to buy me a typewriter. She was already in America, while I was then in the Philippines. Sure enough, one day I got my wish: periwinkle, brand new Brother typewriter. I tapped on that thing almost every night. My neighbors used to joke that I kept them up at night with the noise of my typewriter. My Brother echoed its cries and laughter most nights while I grew up having acknowledged that insomnia was truly a writer's good friend. But because it was just for show and tell, those pages and pages of nonstop writing and collaborating with my own prideful mind ended up either being crumpled or stored and collected dust and yellowed edges. It was an attempt at practically nothing but pure self-proclamation of "great" even when it was more like "wait." I didn't allow too many friends to read them either. Those pages were precious to me. Those pages were just too good for just about anyone outside of my own selected readers to even peek. In fact, those pages were nothing close to being good! They were created by a soul that idolized the shallow crevices of its own mind; a soul that was hungry for love and attention; a soul that deeply cried for grace and mercy; a soul that laughed at truth and embraced lies; a soul that longed for reconciliation with its Maker but, sadly, didn't know the way.

It was a long journey from my memories of those sleepless nights, hearing voices, seeing things, tapping fingers on my periwinkle typewriter. I stopped writing after I had approached a Literature professor and asked her to read my poem. I was in college and she was one of my idol teachers. In her own words, "it was elementary." She never explained how it could be better. I never pursued it any further. I was too crushed and too humbled to even bother. No, it could have well been pride - again - that made me turn my back on writing. I just stopped and did other distracting things that satisfied my time alone with insomnia.

One time I even dabbled on pointilism. It was during those formative, creative years when I drew portraits and some landscapes with colored and charcoal pencils. But this pointilism idea led me to using a sewing needle as my paintbrush on my drawing board. I used red and black and thought it would be an amazing creation. I drew without any forethought as to what I would put down on paper. Pretty much how I did most anything then - without any thought. I let my fingers and hand do the creative move. I finished the "art" and laid down my needle for the first and last time. The picture turned out to be a stick figure of a red man with his hands heavenward, while other stick figures in black floated mid-air. It was a picture of stick figures of one man down on the ground, looking upward and other stick figures hovering up above, then there was the black moon and some red clouds. It didn't occur to me until the next day that it was an eerie art. The following day, I found out that my uncle passed away. Pointilism with a needle quickly became history. And so did much of my art.

Since I am now reading this book about writing that brought me back quite a long way home and years when I didn't know God as my Friend, I now thank Him fully. I thank Him for how I came to know Him, how I am knowing Him more and more each day, and how He has revealed so much of Himself to me. I now know Him and accept that as I seek Him, He will replace - and He already has - those deceiving spirits with that of His Spirit, His Power, His Mercy, His Grace. This newfound power, embedded in my heart, knows that glorifying God in everything is key. It is key to the kind of prospering that God's Hand allows; the kind of prospering that God knows will last; the kind of prospering that is for the eternal kingdom of God. Though I should remember: A key is an opener, so that glorifying God opens doors to God's creative opportunities that unleash the kind of power that prospers our hearts, minds, bodies and souls.

Now I write for the pleasure I see in God's eyes when I do. Now I write for Him and only Him.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Power, Love, Sound Mind


Photo: Sunset along Amalfi Coast

Timothy 1:7 "For God has not given us a spirit of fear, but of power and of love and of a sound mind."

A sound mind has self-control, discipline, calm, balance. God gives us the "spirit of power and of love and of a sound mind." Never fear! Through Christ, we can do all things because He strengthens us. His love perfects us. His might carries us through all trials and tribulations. He never fails and His promises are real.

I had created a semblance of a sanctuary for depressed hopefuls. At least that was how I justified much of my down moments. It was not really a foolproof ploy to convince myself that I was not responsible; but the circumstances, the others around me, the weather, the day-to-day stuff just sounded right and felt even more right at the time. I used to lament over that, till I got tired of myself. I opened doors to the adversary of our mind, heart, body and soul. I did not know how to fight then. I was strong in the Lord, or so I thought, but I really wasn't. My walk with God was like the immeasurable, uncontrollable heaving of the tides: I walk when I walk, when I thought I should walk, when I needed to walk, when I had to walk. There was no consistency, nor the urge to be consistent. I went with flow. I was not sowing when I should be a sower. No wonder I was weak when the storms came. No wonder I easily drowned over the bits and pieces of daily agonies. No wonder I had no harvest to show for. Because I had nothing to reap!

What changed then? Knowing who is in control changed that. Knowing His promises changed that. God never gave us a spirit of fear! So why, in our littlest of worries, should we even interact with fear? Fear of not being able to go through? Fear of not being able to get up? Fear of not being like everybody else who are able? It doesn't matter now how that fear looked like. God changed that for me. I embraced His Love and His Promises, for they are real.

Monday, February 27, 2006

A Love that is Real


Photo: Sagrada Del Familia, by Gaudi

God's Love is real and He refines us to heal and deliver us. To make us shine. To make us so luminous that our heart becomes pure. Just like when we were in our mothers' wombs, our hearts were unblemished with old hurts, unclogged of imagined pains, unfazed by the harsh realities outside their bellies' walls.

God's Love gave us Jesus Christ, His one and only Son, whose death on the cross shed blood for our sins. That we are able to breathe and have a choice - follow Jesus or choose another - shows how much God loves us. With His Omnipotence, He could make us do anything, our own choosing or not. But because He gave us free will, He let us choose. To love God is to know that He gave us Jesus so that we can have eternal life, not apart from God, but with God.

Do we walk and tread where God wants us to go? Do we seek Him and His kingdom with all our heart, mind, body and soul? Do we say, "Jesus, you are my way, my truth, my life?"

How much of God's Love do we need to know that it is real?

Monday, February 13, 2006

Walk the Light

Today I realized that my attempt at being godly deters me from doing everything based on a perfect oneness with the Lord. I checked my own motivation to be godly and, I must say, they are tainted! The humanness of "being good" creates its own course of self-deception and the conviction that it is up to us to judge what is good and what is not. If this is so, then we are basing everything upon truth that is relative only to my version of the truth. But truth has only one version. Not yours or mine, but only on a single one and the same truth. I shouldn't trust my own interpretation of what is and focus on what the Lord says about what is.

Ephesians 5:14 Therefore He says:

“ Awake, you who sleep,
Arise from the dead,
And Christ will give you light.”

basically Yours

Convivially, I should attend to all the comments and e-mails that I get when I tell everyone my most private thoughts and, oh, my weaknesses even. But there is a small chance that a lot of people will bump into my own quiet place.

Simply, I don't advertise it, I don't really share it with just anyone, I don't even tell my immediate family about it. I don't even talk about what I really do on a day-to-day basis, or what, quote-unquote, achievements in the bubble-world out there I snag, or how much I do for this and that which, ideal-worldly, merits accolade and, yes, some kind of vertical trophy or something thicker than a cardboard to stuff into some Office Depot certificate frame.

So what is the purpose of this? At first it was just my way of exercise: a sort-of platform to air out what bogs my head when I think, or when I want to say something to someone close but couldn't because it's not appropos at the time or that it's simply immature to even utter, or when I feel like the flow is within me and I want God to be in the know like I am in the know of what's going on in my head, or just to be in the same page with God, because as we all know we aren't always in the same page with the Almighty. It is my own quiet place to be me - suddenly, internally, vocally, artistically, whimsically, stupidly, spiritually - from all adverbial vantage points thesaurus has already, previously factored as a word.

Besides I just am done with the ex-crap, for lack of a better noun, that came with my in-and-ex-baggage I now refer to as pride. It was the stupidity of pride and the ingenuity of embellished prejudice that prevent one's lowest self to be thrown in the air and left to be picked up by a Power stronger and higher than itself. Holding tight to a configuration of self, or the idea of self, is plain stupid in my spiffed-up notion of wisdom, which happens to be the kind that originated from my Maker.

See, I am nobody special to a lot of human beings, but I am special especially to my Maker. This alone, now, gives me peace. He knows what I am doing at all times. I don't really have to announce to Him what my heart's desires are, because He knows me inside and out. But when I blog here, when I use this platform to cry out to Him, it's as if He is right there, ready with His keyboard, ready to respond and comment, or not respond and comment, ready to understand everything I say, ready to forgive me for the foibles that I say in-between-the-lines, ready to decipher the in-between-the-lines before they even come out of here. He is ready for me at all times. He always says, I'm basically yours, my love.

Many times I ask myself: Why do I bother or not bother? Why is it that I am compelled from the deepest recesses of my heart to talk to Him? I don't even seem to exist for any other reason, but to exist for Him. But there is where I could be wrong: He made me for something and that something is so close to me now, just as far as I could stretch my arm. I could smell the purpose. I could even feel the static that creates a whizzing noise when the thin spark implodes. It is here, my purpose. Tapping on my heart, it is here. I am to do what I am supposed to do.

You know what I say to my Maker? Now I say, I am basically Yours, my Maker! Do with me what You will for me to do.

--June 11, 2008, Year of New Beginnings