Over The Fence: Seasonal Passage

 



Hello dear...We can sit on the porch if you can tolerate the flies that want to 'stick' as Granny used to say.  We keep having little pop up showers but the sound of the rain on the tin roof of the porch is very pleasant.  Or we can slip indoors and I'll offer you your choice of tea or coffee.  I'm offering warm drinks today because if we sit near the windows it looks more autumn than summer out there and a warming drink feels like the right thing.

We were out this morning driving along the back roads and highways and there was golden rod tipped with palest yellow.  Not quite in bloom but definitely showing it was in readiness to be on time for the seasonal change.  The trees in the swamp along the River road were varying shades of color.  Not quite colorful but definitely changing.   The grasses that wave at roadside just now are the grasses of the autumn.  And yesterday morning, for a spell, the sky overhead was the blue of autumn.  It soon filled with big old cumulus clouds all over again but there was a promise of a new season in that sky.  I think I'm ready for a new season.  As always, now that I am older and aware of how the distance between where I started and where I'm headed has closed, I find I am sorry  to tell summer "Goodbye" for another year.  The fruits are done.  The season has pretty much passed.   Now we can only look ahead to what the new season has to offer.


I love autumn.  It has always been my most favorite of seasons, not because of Halloween but because of the fullness of harvests, of the cooler more energizing air, the anticipation of the best holidays of the year.   And there are things that for me are unique to the South and which proclaim Autumn loudly.  Peanuts boiling at farm stands, and piles of collard and turnip greens. Pumpkins and piles of Sweet potatoes.   I love the colors of the leaves and the autumn mums, spider lilies and flowering kale in yards, golden rod and waving grasses at roadside..  

I love the variety of apples available most years and the idea of a hot buttered biscuit with a smear of heavenly spicy apple butter appeals to me as strongly as the first jam or jelly of summer.  I love the cool crisp air and the feeling that I can work for hours without flagging.  I love acorns hitting the tin roofs at my brother's place and sounding like gunshots as they land.  I love the bristling squirrel busy storing up nuts for winter.  I love the sounds of deer rutting in the fields beyond my enveloping trees.  I love watching the distances appear as the leaves fall and open up the views once more.  I love sipping hot tea on a clear bright cold morning as I watch the sun rise.  Yes, there is much to admire about Autumn in all it's glory.  

I sound as though it's all about food...I think that's just because this season brings an emphasis on new seasonal favorites, just as spring is all about asparagus and strawberries, and summer is full of glorious fruits and vegetables.   It is true that food centers memory for me.  

But so does the feel of walking through silken fields of broom sedge, and the glory of scuffling feet through crisp fallen leaves.  There are the days when the cold wind rushes in from the northwest and takes your breath away.  The scent of smoke hangs upon every breeze reminding me of warmth awaiting.  

But for all that, I have learned to grieve a little over the passage of summer.  

I've been thinking of fall décor.  In the past I've wanted to do neutral colors or unusual colors but this year, I'm thinking long and hard about traditional autumn colors.  And somehow, I want tradition.  I want traditional foods and aromas around me.  I want orange and brown and creamy white and bright blues.  I want maroon and bright yellow.

I think what I really want is a token of the past to cling to, things I remember from long ago before farmhouse gray and white took over the world.  Before the strange and crazy took over life as we know it.  I want the peace and security and sweet memories of bygone days.   So give me tradition please.  For this year at least, give me the peace of tradition!   And the full enjoyment of the season we're in...I want to savor it.  I don't want to rush it.  I want to be fully present in it.  

I've been attending a Bible study on the prophet Elijah by Priscilla Shirer at my church.  We have the work books and are watching a video each week.  

Last week our lessons was about the widow of Zarephath (1 Kings 17).   This is the passage where Elijah appears in her village and finds her gathering brush to build a fire.  He has been in the wilderness for 18 months or so at this point and I can't imagine what that poor widow must have thought when he appeared and asked for a 'little water' in the midst of a three year drought... 

I know what she thought when he asked for food as well, because the Bible tells us.  I'm paraphrasing of course,  but she told him, "I've just enough flour and oil to make a small cake for my son and I to share and then we will die."   What came across most strongly to me at that reading was how weary she must have been.  Hungry, frightened, tired beyond words, worried.  It wasn't just the flour barrel that was running on empty!

The widow's son was not yet old enough to help his mother.  He was a mere child, one who still required care.  And she was living in a time and place that had little use for widows.   A woman without a husband and a son old enough to work on her behalf was almost certainly relegated to poverty if they had little property and had had only a little income from a man's work.  With no husband, there was likely no income.  In the midst of a drought, an economic crisis was bound to occur anyway.  How weary she must have been of trying to stretch what she had, trying to get just a bit more.  All the work of the household and livelihood of the family was on her shoulders.  With a drought she couldn't grow any grain and there was none to be gleaned in the fields.  We might assume that any small livestock holding she had were long gone.  One by one, she'd watched as every single thing that might constitute some security in her life were subtracted from her.  No husband.  No income.  No livestock.  No water for a garden.  No grain to glean in the fields.  No more provision.   She must have been working  tirelessly for quite a long time and now this strange and dirty man asked to have a share of the last bit of food she had.  

Can I tell you something?  I identified strongly with that widow at the beginning of this week's Bible study.  I'm supposed to be figuring out how this season of life is my Elijah moment, but it wasn't Elijah with whom I identified.  I felt kinship with that widow!   

No, my life is not hard as hers, not like what this young widow was facing.  My life is stressed at the moment in various ways but it's normal life stressors,  the sort that come and go in season.   But it seemed that with the world at large out of control, and alarmists raising the call for us to prep, and the world within my little family circle all struggling  at once for my time and attention, that I simply hadn't an ounce of energy to do a thing more to improve, help, or restore my personal situation much less anyone else's.    I wasn't sleeping well and how many of you know how wearing not sleeping enough is?  There were constant demands upon my time, my finances  and my person to provide something more and I had a handful of flour and a bit of oil worth of myself to give to all those asking.  It. was. not. enough.  Not for me and certainly not enough for anyone else!

So yes, I fully identified with the widow at the beginning of last week's study.   When we were reading the passage of I Kings 17 and the group leader read, "Then we shall die," I sensed the soul wearying tiredness that the widow felt.  I also sensed that death was not the worst thing she had faced.  In fact, death looked a lot like freedom to her in that moment of time.   So much so that when Elijah told her to not be afraid but to make a little cake for him also, she did it.  No argument.  It only meant that death was that much nearer if she shared and had even less,  so she did it.  Freedom was just around the corner for her and her son.  Her struggle was nearly over.

That's the part of the study we went through this past week and that's where my own head was as I read the beginning passages for the study this past week.  I actually wrote in my booklet that I simply didn't see what God was trying to show me about Elijah and I asked God to help me see why this study module was even important at all in my own life.  "But this widow...God I know this woman!"  

One thing the widow had was fear.  She had to let go of the fear she'd been living with for so long.    Fear had been her companion, the partner in her bed at night, the one who walked beside her when she was gathering what brush she could find, the one who peered over her shoulder when she looked into that flour jar and jug of oil, the one who whispered constantly in her ear... 

And that was what I'd been walking with for far longer this year than I want to share.  Fear had become bigger and badder,  as this year went on,  when I didn't see how what we were required to do could be done, nor where the resources were, and fear has been loud in my ear like a drill sergeant every step of the way since. Fear had become attached to my spirit and I was so caught up with it, I didn't even know how deep I'd gone.   But  Monday when I was reading that last module and started reading the multiples of verses given in which the first words were "Do not fear", "Don't be afraid", "Be courageous", I felt something in me start in recognition.  

I'd grown afraid.  I'd grown afraid of what might happen to further bring down our finances.  I'd grown afraid of who else might need a portion of my time.  I'd grown afraid of  not sleeping at night.  I'd grown afraid of not having enough of any thing required.  And as I read those verses and continued to read them, I felt something rise in my spirit that wasn't fear.  It was the knowledge I'd been focused in all the wrong places.  It was the acknowledgement that fear had become such a familiar that I'd no longer fought against it but just accepted each new fear as it came upon me.  

Instead, I needed to look at what I had and trust that it would be enough.  I needed to trust that I was already given all I needed for this moment.  For now.  And that tomorrow, I'd have enough for that day, as well.  Enough money, enough food, enough time, enough sleep, enough love, enough patience.  I already had enough.

That's something the widow learned as well. After feeding Elijah and her son and herself, she found she had more flour and more oil.  It didn't run out.  There was enough.  And when she went back to the bowl the next day, there was enough flour for that day as well.   

I'm going to ask a few questions here that might seem unusual but only because they do apply to me so very much at present...  

Did the widow see the blessing in that additional bit of flour and oil?  Did she see provision when she looked at the strange man the next day?  She had no way of knowing her supply would last until the drought ended and new crops were in the ground.  So did it look like a blessing to her at first?  Or was it merely that it looked like one more day to struggle through?  

At what point did it occur to her that the flour wasn't running out?  That the oil continued to flow?  That sharing food with this stranger didn't bring death closer but somehow kept pushing it further away?   Did she find freedom in the idea of living as much  as she'd found freedom in the idea of death as day after day went on and she was able to feed her household?   

Let me ask another question:  At what point did the widow suddenly find hope had taken root deep within her?  Because  at some point she had to acknowledge that the season of despair and hopelessness had passed.  

I have to ask these questions because, you see, there's more to the widow's story.  There came a day when her son died.   The last remnant of her husband's genetic line.  Her only child.  The child she loved deeply and dearly. The son she had without a doubt pinned all of her future hopes upon.   Because a son was salvation, in a way.

Elijah was known as a man of God to this woman.  God had commanded her to take care of Elijah.  And even though this woman didn't know God before Elijah, God knew her.   She saw the provision God made because of her care of Elijah.   Something in her soul had begun to stir.  Something like hope must have begun to grown within her. 

But when her son died, she was more than grief stricken.  She was soul stricken.  Had she truly come out of the deepest poverty she'd ever known, had she actually allowed herself to believe she and her son were safe, saved, only to lose the one thing that had true value to her, the child?  You can almost hear the despair in her wail, "You have come to bring my sin to remembrance and cause the death of my son!"

 Her son's death was no punishment for her past. God hadn't used her past against her when He called her to serve Elijah.    God had provided food.  He had sustained her life.  Now He used Elijah to bring back her son from the very depths of death.

 I've felt at times as though I were being tested beyond my endurance.  I've wondered if somehow my past sin has caused a difficult season.  Then I remember something that has settled deep within my soul:  In His all transforming love, our sins are so far cast away that it is truly that they not only no longer exist, they never were.  We might recall what we were before God came to us in the midst of our sin, others might be all too willing to remind us what we were once upon a time, but not God.  God was only sealing the widow's future testimony in her present situation.  It's true that my current season of life, my few trials, are minor compared to the circumstances this poor widow faced.  But I don't mind saying that I have been angry at times at the situations I must go through as part of my future testimony. I, too, have questioned God.  

And it's okay.  God isn't going to go off in a snit and quit.  He knows we're going to doubt and struggle and that fear is sometimes going to sit down with us and stay for a long while before we remember we don't have to live with fear.  We can throw it out and close the door in its face.

That's what I've done this week as I concluded this study.  I'm pushing fear out of the door. I'm going to remind myself that God will provide.  I'm going to remember that this too is a season and there are things to savor.  There's no rush to go through this time, just take it slowly and let it be what it is, even in it's unabashed messiness.  And somehow, in doing that, I hope that Grace will grow within me.  

And there we shall end our lovely little chat.  It's time to hurry home.  The sun is setting now in the most glory I've seen in months, all flame and deep purple and breathtaking.  It's well worth seeing.  It's well worth stopping here and just gazing in wonder as we say goodbye until next time.

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

I just simply want to say Thank You!!
You have captured my feelings of the past few months. I too can identify with the widow woman. But I also know that My God is the God of the oil did not run dry and there remained flour in the barrel.

Debra B. Gunter

Chef Owings said...

I have been a widow with the flour and oil running out. I read this also back then. Read Ruth also.

I have learned to sit "fear" down for a cup of coffee, tea what ever and let "fear" tell me why it's "visiting". I tell "fear" to leave it to GOD and it will be okay. GOD's time, GOD's way, in GOD's hands.

Blessed be

Not quite fall here yet but it's closing in with the gardens slowly dying

Donna said...

This excellent post has touched my heart today. I will reread this scripture with new eyes. Our Elohim provides for us, whether physical things like flour and oil or spiritual blessings.

I've enjoyed my visit with you on the porch and low and behold, the flies left us alone!

Lana said...

We had a lake park breakfast on Tuesday and I saw the dogwoods changing around the shore and the grasses changing and the goldenrod almost open. It is indeed nearly time for the weather to change and it was cool this morning. I could love fall more if it did not come with the holidays and all that stress.

Fear is huge right now and somewhere I have been, too. For our kids who are in turmoil right now, it is a mess of their own making. I am determined that they need to fix this for themselves no matter how upset it has made me. I am pretty much past the upset though and seeing their need to just pull up their big girl panties and deal with it. Yes, it is the girls. If we bail them out they will not learn and mature and that is key. We will not always be here and parents who are retired and on a fixed income do not need to bail them out in a crisis unless it will be repaid. But, the emotional part is harder. I have to keep reminding myself that I did not make the choices and I am not the drama queen here. This is not only me but several of my closest friends as well with their girls. One even decreeing that the parents cannot come to her wedding in October unless her demands are met.

Like I always say, you cannot out give God. He just blesses and blesses. I have no reason to fear! How many times have I fed unexpected guests with so little food it did not make sense? My late Great Aunt Bonnie recalled a time that they were out enjoying Christmas lights with her sister's family, my Great Aunt Grace. With out even thinking she invited them to come over to the house for supper and then remembered that she did not have enough of anything to feed everyone. Then she remembered a small bit of cheese and that they had plenty of bread so she went home and made grilled cheese for everyone by cutting that cheese so very thin. For years everyone raved about those delicious sandwiches that she served on that cold night and she could never understand how they all ate on so little. (But, she always smiled when she told that story!)

There are a lot of YouTubes with scripture being read aloud. You can search for the subject you need such as fear or healing and I have found them very helpful. You have to find one that you can enjoy the sound of as in the background and the voice. I often just get one started playing in the background even if I am doing other things and my mind soaks in those scriptures and they work wonders for my troubled soul.

terricheney said...

Debra thank you for taking time to comment. I'm so glad this post resonated with you.

Juls, God bless you...I love the idea of having coffee (or tea) with fear to find out what it's all about! I myself wasn't even aware it was fear that was tracking me but simply felt weepy and out of sorts. It was that final portion of last week's study module where all those verses spoke of peace and not fearing that I recognized it for what it was.

Donna thank you! To be told that you'll see the scripture with new eyes means a great deal to me. I so enjoy digging deep and getting to know people in the Bible.
P.s. Glad the pesky flies didn't bother you at all, lol.

Lana, A park breakfast picnic sounds so nice!
And yes, yes, yes on helping grown children. We too have come to the conclusion that much as we have enjoyed helping at times, we are no longer in a position where we can help pay for another's procrastination or vagaries about money. It does hurt and at the same time I remember telling my children as they grew that part of my job as mom was to insure that when the time came they were able to stand on their own. And now I must make good on that and let go of their hand.
John teases me constantly about how God stretches my bits and pieces in the kitchen. You go out with just a little in your basket, make a meal of it and then there are leftovers enough to feed even more.
I'll have to look for the you tubes with verses. Our Bible study teacher actually took all the verses from the last module and printed them out for us each one so I'll have those posted where I can read them over and over again, too.

Liz from new york said...

Very thought provoking post!

Anne said...

Yes, ladies, the "helping" of the grown children has to end sometime. I had a friend, and she and her husband just threw cash at their youngest daughter. The daughter drank heavily, bought drugs and made $140,000 a year but could not seem to live on it. My friends even remortgaged their house to keep feeding money to their kid. Unfortunately, the husband died suddenly, at 70, leaving a heavily mortgaged house, and his wife didn't have anything to live on. No more money to give to the 40 year old "kid." Guess what? The kid finally HAD to grow up and began to turn her life around.

Peggy Savelsberg said...

Thank you for this post! Fall is my favorite season, and your words captured so much of what I love about it. I’m recuperating today from outpatient cancer surgery yesterday, and your “let go of the fear” and trust God, speaks so strongly to me. There is a very good chance I may need more surgery. I, too, am wondering about the situations I must go through as part of my future testimony. Trust is my word right now! Thank you for brightening my day.

terricheney said...

Liz, thank you.

Lisa I'm well aware of Christ from Genesis through Revelation. There are powerful lessons to be learned in ALL the books.

Anne, We're in agreement with that!

Peggy, I am praying for you and haven't forgotten your husband either. I'm glad that this post spoke to you in your time of fear. Hugs to you my dear friend.

Lisa from Indiana said...

I am truly sorry. I did not mean to offend you. I only mean to say that many modern teachers make Bible stories mean whatever they want them to mean...whatever applies to their lives at the moment. When really we should be looking for Christ, and Christ alone, in these stories. That is what it is about. That is what the prophets came to announce. Christ...How he is the bread of life. God let the widow's son live...but let his own son die. I know you read your Bible daily and know a lot about it. I did not mean to criticize you. I am sorry. I just know there are probably people reading your blog who need to hear what Christ did for us...and that every Bible story eludes to that. Again, I am sorry for offending you.

terricheney said...

Not every teacher is for every one. There are some evangelists and pastors who do not appeal to me at all. I disagree with their spin on things but they speak to someone who needs to hear what is said. I fully believe that to be true.

Having never heard Priscilla Shirer teach before, I find her compelling and she appeals to the student in me that likes to know Hebrew origins of words and to understand better the scriptures that I read. In this set of videos she moves easily back and forth between the New Testament and the Old, between Elijah and Christ and draws the parallels that you are quite right to point out are so vital to those who are seeking and need salvation.
I apologize for deleting your last remark which was done accidentally. It had shown up twice in my email. I did not realize you had already removed the duplicate yourself. So please allow me to apologize for any misunderstanding there.

Please understand when I share these old Testament stories I am not forgetting that Christ is implicit in every one. My goal in sharing what I do is to reach anyone who has never thought of the Bible in human terms, to realize it is FOR THEM. I hope that I might reach someone for Christ, if only to pique their interest enough to pick up the book or listen to a sermon for themselves. My only intention is to be the bridge between where they are and Christ.

The Long Quiet: Day 21