dual personalities

Tag: trust

From our fears and sins release us; let us find our rest in thee*

by chuckofish

‘Twas the week before Christmas and all through our neighborhood…city workmen are starting a new street project which involves numerous large earth-moving vehicles and trucks moving earth in our own side yard.

Last week a row of mature trees was removed. Also very noisy and disruptive. We knew this project was coming, but, you have to admit, the timing is really special. C’est la vie.

I am not going to let this disrupt my happy Christmas mood and you shouldn’t either. Don’t let whatever is going on in your life that is annoying and causing you to sleep badly take your focus from what it is we are celebrating–the incarnation of our Lord and Savior!

Here’s an old reminder from Frederick Buechner to hang in there and trust God:

I REMEMBER SITTING parked by the roadside once, terribly depressed and afraid about my daughter’s illness and what was going on in our family, when out of nowhere a car came along down the highway with a license plate that bore on it the one word out of all the words in the dictionary that I needed most to see exactly then. The word was TRUST. What do you call a moment like that? Something to laugh off as the kind of joke life plays on us every once in a while? The word of God? I am willing to believe that maybe it was something of both, but for me it was an epiphany. The owner of the car turned out to be, as I’d suspected, a trust officer in a bank, and not long ago, having read an account I wrote of the incident somewhere, he found out where I lived and one afternoon brought me the license plate itself, which sits propped up on a bookshelf in my house to this day. It is rusty around the edges and a little battered, and it is also as holy a relic as I have ever seen.   

–originally published in Telling Secrets

And this made me laugh. Now I want to go see Santa at the Bass Pro Shop. (Who knew that was a thing?)

*Charles Wesley

Into the wild blue yonder

by chuckofish

Daughter #2 is flying home today on Southwest Airlines. Following the news that a passenger had been killed on a Southwest flight when an engine blew, I was heartened to read about the pilot who had saved the day and landed the plane.

Tammie Jo Shults, with her flyover name and bumped up pony-tail, is my kind of gal.

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She is a true pioneer in the aviation field–a woman who broke real barriers to pursue her goals and was among the first female fighter pilots for the U.S. Navy. She did not just talk the talk, as so many feminists do. She walked the walk. I mean, a fighter pilot! She flew F-18s!

The Wall Street Journal attributes her incredible calm in the face of this emergency to her military training and this is doubtless true. However, at the end of the article, she is quoted as saying to her former track coach, that sitting in the captain’s chair gives her “the opportunity to witness for Christ on almost every flight.”

This suggests another reason for her calm. Tammie Jo Shults trusts in the Lord. There is no calm like that of the true believer.

Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make your paths straight.

(Proverbs 3:5-6)

I can say from experience that the more I have turned things over to God in my life and the more I trust in Him, the calmer I become and the more impervious to the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.

Well, Tammie Jo, we’ll toast you tonight. God really is your co-pilot! And as I said, you’re my kind of gal.