Another
quieting fog has descended upon my misty brae this first day of 2013. It’s a
fitting backdrop, really, for these types of musings. My day is quiet because I
choose for it to be. And because the drifting fog muffles every noise so that
even hollering goats are shushed into pensive cud-chewing.
When I began
to think about 2013 a couple of days ago, I got out some paper and began to
write words. Single words. I was looking for a signpost . . . a theme . . . to
define the tenor of my heart as this new year’s journey unfolded. I perused
Facebook to see what other people where posting. I Googled a few things. I
opened my Bible and re-read Psalm 107 . . . the cornerstone scripture for our
East Tennessee farm. I prayed. But nothing “real” came to mind.
Nothing fit.
Nothing
seemed “right.” So I took out a fresh piece of paper, uncapped my pen, and wrote this:
Nothing.
An empty
sheet of paper with an uncapped pen.Waiting for inspiration.
I will not
be spending 2013 fighting invisible specters of resolutions and declarations. I
don’t need a fresh vision or a renewed annointing to walk this new path. There
will be no thematic prophecies leading me into miraculous sunsets.
I will
simply be journeying.
I will start
each day clean and fresh because of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ.I will walk freely because He has broken every bond . . . and I choose to throw them aside.
I will stride expectantly because that is the true nature of journeying.
And I will wait.
It’s not the
kind of waiting that stops life from happening.
It’s the
kind of waiting that shushes your soul from meaningless chatter and transforms
walking into listening.
And God will
write.
. . . from
His Word. . . from His Heart
. . . from the very depths of Love itself.
He will give direction and craft signposts and speak whisperings that emanate from eternity.
It’s a bold
journey.
A courageous
leap of faith.An open-ended invitation for the Maker of the Universe to embark with me on a very intimate adventure.
So it’s time
to don my coveralls, slip on my muckers, trek up to the barn, and see if any
heifers are in labor.
Astounding,
isn’t it, how the most amazing journey can begin by simply putting on your
boots . . .
and taking
God’s Hand?