Hearts United – Father Daughter Weekend

Sunday morning...beach was empty.  Hopefully they were in church!

Sunday morning…beach was empty. Hopefully they were in church!

“I will always love you.  I will never lie to you.  Always listen to my voice.”

Those three statements where whispered in my daughter’s ear as we began our trust walk.  Sarah Mac, my 16 year old daughter, was blindfolded and it was my job to help navigate her through the woods near the Satilla River.  The first third of the walk I could put my hands on her shoulders to guide her and give her direction.  The middle of the walk I could only use my hands on her shoulders to guide her…I couldn’t speak.  The final third of the walk I was not allowed to guide or speak.  I could only assist IF Sarah asked for help.  When she would ask, I could answer her questions.  Along the way, some of the leaders would try to encourage Sarah to go the wrong way.  She would ask if they were telling the truth.  They weren’t, of course.

At the end of the walk, we debriefed.  We talked about our fears and feelings.  As I reflected, I quickly became aware that the trust walk in the woods near the Satilla River really wasn’t very scary at all.  If Sarah ran into a tree (as horrible as that sounds) we could simply clean her up and put a bandage on her scrape.  The real fear came in knowing that as a father I won’t always be there to guide or even answer her questions when she asks.  If she is confronted with a challenge in life, will she stop and take time to call me and ask.  Not always.  I know that and you do too.  That’s why its so important to take seriously each and every modeling moment in life.  They truly matter!  We always wonder, have we done enough?  Have we given her enough resource, knowledge, and direction?

There are many hard parts of parenting.  As we move into the final two years of high school, you look back over the past 16 years and wonder, “Have we done enough?”  This requires a tremendous amount of trust.  I’m not sure many parents don’t wonder about the same thing.  Even if we are concerned, the reality is we can’t make up in two years what we haven’t done in 16.  Not only is it nearly impossible to impart that knowledge in that time frame, the biggest obstacle is that your 16, 17, or 18 year old is not as receptive to those lessons now as they would have been at 7, 8, or 9.

Our girls.  We were the Rosie Riveters team.  Don't ask...

Our girls. We were the Rosie Riveters team. Don’t ask…

Our weekend together was special and it really helped us to see how important our bond is.  No matter how strong our relationship, there are always struggles.  The Hearts United Father Daughter weekend reminded me of two amazing and invaluable lessons:

  1. There is no substitute for intentional time set apart in relationships.  The old debate of quality vs. quantity is very simple.  It is hard to achieve depth of quality without time.  We must be intentional about the time we carve out with our children.  I know there are situations that prevent us from sharing the time we would like (for example, several dads on the weekend are divorced and only see their daughters once per week or every other weekend).  We have to do whatever we can to make that time happen.  There is no substitute for time.  The greatest gift of the weekend is that it forced me to carve out my entire weekend and devote it to my daughter.  I wouldn’t have traded it for anything!
  2. Children need encouragement.  Our children long for encouragement from their parents.  My daughter longs for encouragement from me.  I realized that I need to do a better job with my words of encouragement.  The Losada Ratio proves this to be true.  If you want your family to flourish, you must speak 5 words of encouragement for every word of criticism.  This ratio leads to a flourishing life.  Less than that leads to a languishing life.  More than anything, I want my daughters to flourish!
Sunday morning on the beach.

Sunday morning on the beach.

God’s Will and Messy Faith

Colossians 1:9-10
9For this reason, since the day we heard it, we have not ceased praying for you and asking that you may be filled with the knowledge of God’s will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, 10so that you may lead lives worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, as you bear fruit in every good work and as you grow in the knowledge of God.

This past Sunday, I announced that our family will be moving this summer to serve as the next Senior Pastor of Chapelwood United Methodist Church in Houston, Texas.  It was an emotionally difficult day announcing we are leaving Wesley at Frederica.  We love Wesley.  We love the people of the church.  We love the community.  Ministry together over the past five years has been deeply rewarding, encouraging, and powerful.  As I shared with the congregation, I am better because I have served Wesley.  Wesley made me better than I ever thought I could be.

I shared Sunday the difficulty of the decision.  How do we discern God’s Will when confronted with two wonderful opportunities?  Deciding between the clearly right and the wrong things should be easy (although, I recognize sometimes it can be a hard decision as well), but how do you go through the process of discerning between two great choices?  Is there only one right path?  Will God only bless the one and not the other?  I didn’t do as good a job explaining Sunday as I hoped to due to the nature of the day.  But let me explain a little more how I believe discernment between two good choices works.

As Wesleyan Methodists, we don’t believe in “determinism” – that God scripts every action, every step, and every move of our lives.  Determinism says we don’t really have choice, we just have the perception that we choose, but God scripts everything.  We see this in language when we say, “It’s all God’s Will,” or “God knows what He’s doing,” or “it’s all in God’s plan.”  This understanding is rooted in a different strand of theological thought than Wesley’s theology.

Others believe God creates the world, sets it in motion and stands back never involved in the creation.  It just operates like a clock that has been wound up and let loose.  Called deists by some, they understand God to be the great Clock Maker.  God is not involved in our lives.  We have total freedom and we can choose any path we want.

A more balanced approach is rooted in our Wesleyan theology.  We believe God is actively involved in our lives.  But we also believe give gives us the freedom to choose.  Freedom of choice can sometimes disrupt God’s purposes for us, but choice also allows us to love God more perfectly.  After all, how can it really be love if have no choice?

Thomas Merton wrote, “A [person] who is afraid to settle their future by a good act of their own free choice does not understand the love of God.  For our freedom is a gift of God given us in order that He may be able to love us more perfectly, and be loved by us more perfectly in return….He Who loves us means to leave us room for our own freedom so that we may dare to choose for ourselves, with no other certainty than that His love will be pleased by our intention to please Him.”

And that is the key…when confronted by two great choices; we are given the freedom to choose.  I truly believe God is involved and can work with us in either choice.  I believe God is pleased by either choice as long as it is our desire to please God.  We use a lot of factors to make our decisions…meditating on scripture, prayer, contemplative listening, listening to wise counsel, watching for opportunities, and sometimes miraculous signs!

The hard part in my decision to leave Wesley and serve Chapelwood is that I had to choose.  That can cause anger and hurt.  This is why in the Methodist Church we Methodist preachers like to have the Bishop simply appoint us.  That way we don’t have to accept any responsibility for moving.  We can let all the anger project on the Bishop and Cabinet.  It is also easier to talk with “deterministic” language about this decision.  God desires this and God led me and it is God’s will.  After all, you can’t be mad at me if God is the one pulling all the strings!

The complexity of discerning God’s will when we face good choices is evident.  My counsel to you is to spend time in prayer, spend time in God’s scriptures, talk to those you look up to and admire spiritually (seek those who are on both sides of the choice), spend time listening to God, and listen to your family.  Then, when time comes…make a decision, know God can work in and bless either choice.

This has been a difficult decision, but I truly see God in it.  I am excited about going to Texas to serve with the wonderful people of Chapelwood, but I am also grieving at the thought of leaving behind the wonderful people of Wesley.

This is a part of the journey, my friends.  As my friend Samuel Ghartey used to say, “I am struggling peacefully, my friend.  I am struggling peacefully.”