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13 December 2025

prayers

 I am just barely keeping my head above water. I've got lots to reflect on and it's going to have to mostly happen later.

Two things: tomorrow Nora and Ben are being baptized along with a slew of other really special people, and at the last minute Martin and Sharon got on a plane to come and join us for that. Neighbors, dear friends, all are gathering around tomorrow, and I am so touched and blessed to have family come out of the woodworks, and also to have two passionate, independent kiddos saying they want to outward show their inside hearts for following Jesus. 

Imma be a mess.

Also, we are needing extra prayers for my brother. Many of you have been praying for a long time, some longer than I have. Please keep on.  I am praying that the current dark awfulness is setting the stage for answered prayers.  Lord, please come and honor the long-suffering prayers of my parents. 

I am thankful for you.



06 December 2025

not well-enough alone.

Matt's mama was sick the whole time she was with us for Thanksgiving, and Matt got it hard the morning she left. Dear man has been out for the count this week...which didn't work as well as needed with so many things on the church calendar. A few he missed, a few he pushed and a few he preached (including just a powerful and sacred funeral!), and the Lord met us. 

As the whole family participated in different parts of the Madison Christmas Parade in the cold this morning, representing Wellspring Church and Jesus, the Lord reminded me that our weakness isn't to be avoided, despised or skipped.  It's often where He shows up...it's often where He is WAITING. 

If He's waiting in our hard places, I'm trying to stop avoiding them.  I'm trying to simply meet Jesus there.

There have been some hard anniversaries this season. Sometimes they hit you without you even expecting them, don't they? You're not even THINKING about the date and suddenly painful memories of it years past hit you...or memories of sweet things no more. One of them just about physically hit me in the face this morning, so clear I had to laugh out loud at the Lord, always working to redeem and heal our circumstances...never leaving well-enough alone like I wish He would.

Mind your business, I tried to tell Him.

I am, He reminded me better.

He's not after our well-enough, is He?

Our God isn't content with our shoved-down, our buried, our hidden bruises, our tiny seeds of bitterness or lack of forgiveness, our broken anniversaries, our markers of loss.

He wants to make them new. He wants to make them sweet. He wants to back-flow His redemption into these days, these places. HOWEVER broken or dead or gone.

If it's still painful, or fearful, or bitter, or sarcastic, or stabbing...it's not well-enough. And it is His grace and tender mercy that won't leave it alone. 

I'm thankful. 

This past Wednesday in Bible study, Matt taught on my mom's favorite end-of-life chapter of the Bible, Isaiah 40.  Ah, she read it SO many times those last weeks.  Often out loud. Often to my bitterness as I watched her suffer and fade and her skin peel to pieces and her cry out in agony all the while joyfully announcing renewed strength and eagle's wings.

It wasn't until she was long gone that I realized I was the one misunderstanding...not her.  She knew exactly what she was believing in, the Lord strong and mighty, strong in power. She waited on the Lord and He met her and the truth of Isaiah 40 she lives fully in.

When I got to pray for our church family after the study, I couldn't help but share the preciousness of this chapter to me.  And I know to some, my tears as I shared probably seemed like something must be unresolved, or still stabbing, or that I miss her. 

And of course I do. But I grinned with my tears as I shared because He has truly TAUGHT me there, God has MET me there...in that place...that little incubated hospital room that once made me shudder and now has a heavenly glow in my mind and memory and calendar. He's met me in that room so many times the last 20 years...healing, unpacking, reframing, replaying, restoring. Redeeming. Backwards.

I can go there now and full see Him. I can grin with good tears because He met my mama there forever and meets me there still. 

There are more places in my story I wish weren't a part of it.  Maybe you too. Maybe especially around Christmas it hits you extra heavy.

May He MEET us there, may we be brave enough to meet Him there...and take what was dark and cold and weary and thrill His HOPE into it.

I love you friends.





29 November 2025

the Lord is near

Thanksgiving is not a liturgical holiday. 

But it could be.

For, what could be more faithful than breaking bread with family (and foes) knowing that Jesus spent his entire ministry doing the same?

And yet, there is a sense in which what happens around the Thanksgiving table is more determinative over our lives than the One who gives us life. Rare is the family that is immune to the political pandering that happens over turkey and mashed potatoes. Gone are the days we could sit back and rejoice without worrying about who will say what and ruin the holiday mood. We, then, approach the table of blessings without feeling like it’s much of a blessing at all.

But what if God is the one calling us together for the explicit purpose of redeeming our Thanksgiving tables? What if this is the year to let forgiveness reign over judgment? What if we took seriously the claim that, as Paul put it, “The Lord is near,” even at the holiday table?

There’s no guarantee that anything good can come out of our Thanksgivings this year, save for the fact that we worship the God of impossible possibility! So keep your eyes and ears open, let your gentleness be known, and rejoice! The Lord is near!

That good word blessed me this thanksgiving! And, the Lord carried it over.  After Thanksgiving dinner with all the kids, Matt's parents and a good friend, Matt and I headed over to the house of a dear church member, on his deathbed. 

We pulled up to the house with the whole street full of cars, and the porch and house was FULL of their children, grandchildren, great-grandchildren...grandparents and chubby babies and teens and pie...all the  richness of Joyce and Harry's lives was pouring out of that house. 

As we met people and gathered around Harry's bedside, I kept hearing echoes of "the Lord is Near." Keep your eyes and ears open. Let your gentleness be known.

We read Psalm 23, we anointed his precious head with oil and the forehead of his beloved wife of 74 years...we prayed over his dying bones and lifted our voices in the benediction and my heart was so full of the sacredness and holiness of it all it poured down my cheeks. 

You could sense we were standing at the gates of heaven. You could see we were surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses, both there and to ahead. In the tears of all around us, 40 people crammed in a sacred space, you could see hope and heartbreak and the THANKSGIVING.

Every dying and broken and pain,
the Lord is NEAR,
and He is EVERYTHING He says He is. 
There is ONE thing that has never disappointed, never abandoned, never let me down...
and He is NEAR. 

What a gift, this Thanksgiving



25 November 2025

a great reminder : prayer


If you didn't grow up around mangoes like the entire 11 million population of Haiti, you might not know.
You might think, when you see trees full of them, branches heavy and swaying, that the large, green fruit is surely the right size for picking! But with mangoes--some kinds small as apricots, some large as dinner plates--size has nothing to do with their ripeness.
Long after they are full and green, they are still hard as rocks, hanging by a long thread of a stem. If you pick them now, force one off impatiently, it will remain hard and white and never soften...only sit on your table to shrivel and rot.
You have to leave them and let the invisible do it's work...let the sun warm their skin, let the drip...drip..drip of sap seep through those narrow stems and slowly soften and ripen the fruit.
When they are sweet and warm and golden and juicy on the inside, they fall...and it is from the ground, not the trees, that you gather mangoes.
All night long you here them thump and thwack, and with the earliest rays go the men, women and children with baskets and bags and five-gallon buckets. Get them before the goats and chickens do, huge baskets of fruit every day, more than everyone can eat, more than you can sell!
Those days, mango season, even the most serious business man quickly smudges off traces of orange from his chin, toothless babies and grannies patiently suck every fiber from the huge flat pits, students stash a few unflawed fruits among their notebooks, and everyone who goes to visit takes a few mangoes as a gift, even if every host already has a yard full of them.
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There are many who wonder what to do for Haiti in this hard, hard time. How do you pray for so many baskets full of problems?
Does prayer even matter? Surely you have prayed many times before! What does prayer even DO?
Does prayer make it always mango season and feed the hungry? Does prayer clear the roads, calm the storms, supply the fuel so sought after, does prayer force peace down the throats of chaos and smudge out all traces of corruption and evil?
Not always.
But prayer DOES always drip...drip...drip grace.
The prayers of His people, lifted from well-worn knees and faithful hands, slowly and surely deliver grace to hard hearts, trickles warmth into stone-cold situations, seeps His grace upon grace through narrow stems and slowly softens and ripens.
God uses our prayers—our steady, invisible prayers—to drip grace into the lives of those we love, into the hearts of those we pray for, into the situations that look from the outside like they will never bear fruit, will NEVER be sweet.
It is not TIME that sweetens stony mangoes into delectable, nutritious fruit. It is that deep water, coming up from many roots, climbing strong trunks and spreading through a thousand stems, pouring slowly into each fruit, turning it golden!
Do not simply wait for your brother or aunt or co-worker to finally soften to Jesus...do not wait for your difficult community or your strained marriage to change. Do not wait for something to shift in Haiti, do not wait idly by and hope that that hard prayer request sitting on the counter will somehow sweeten!
It is not by patience, but by PRAYER His grace pours out...the deep-rooted prayers of many, lifted up with strong and faithful hands day-in-and-day-out that CHANGES the hearts of men, that softens the broken situations, that takes what was hard and usless and makes it sweet and GOOD.
Pray on for our dear Haiti, ushering grace into the hearts and lives and situations of many.
Pray for that which is bitter to miraculously turn sweet, and bring your baskets.
As we wait and watch and pray...it is with hope.



19 November 2025

faithfulness

We got home Monday morning at 2 am utterly wiped, but THAT was a wonderful wedding weekend...not only celebrating Elisa and Chris, but celebrating all of God's faithfulness. 

There was a time when Craig and Deb, Elisa's mom and dad, came to Haiti to teach a class for us at Emmaus University, and had asked us to please be praying for them and their three adult children....for spouses, for grandkids, for God to move. We prayed together with them then, and we have prayed, many years, and my most emotional moment of the weekend was at family pictures, seeing Craig and Deb beautiful and surrounded by their sons and daughter, daughter-in-laws, son-in-law, grandson, granddaughter. Every prayer answered and beautiful and in His time.  

The richness just totally overwhelmed me. In Him is richness and work and redemption and good. 

There will still be hard days, shadows, challenges. But His faithfulness just abounds. 

Elisa was just gorgeous. 

Having Lily and Sofie with me to celebrate Aunt Elisa was extra fun. 

Most of these friends I have gotten to know over the years, and it was extra fun getting to spend the weekend with them! Elisa has some incredible women in her life!


I am not going to lie that I felt old...and my girls felt old to me. Like, they fit in. They're not little girls anymore. They are gorgeous. 

I'm not ready.

Between the cruise, the sickness, and the fun weekend away...I am very content to stay home forever and never get back in the car :). 

Keep on praying!

14 November 2025

Wedding Weekend!

The Lord gave me in Elisa a rare and precious friendship that has stood the test of time and life!...We have each been through a LOT in the last 22 years, and after being in my wedding in 2005, this weekend I get to be in hers! I am SO thankful for this gift, and for ALL the prayers the Lord has heard and seen and blessed these years of lifting one another up.

Pray for Matt and Hannah as they hold down the fort this weekend, and for Lily, Sofie and I as we celebrate Aunt Elisa and Chris!

My dad, who adored Elisa, would be SO happy.  (He is so happy. So I guess we're good.)

So thankful for this good gift, for which I have prayed!







09 November 2025

manna

Grab a cup of cinnamon tea and sit with me. 

It's been a wild week, literally to the Bahamas and back again, full of so many little sweet gifts and so many hard things.

After church Sunday the kids and I drove as long and as efficiently as we could to Ocala, and then woke up early the next morning to book it to Ft. Lauderdale. We unloaded the party bus and quickly overheard the parking attendants speaking Haitian Creole. Lily had friends in ten words, and we finally broke away from that little family to fall into the arms of sweet cousin-family...just in time to board Royal Caribbean and set out on our first ever cruise. 

All the work of travel, all the work of making up a week of school, all the work to earn the money even for the cheapest week of cruising of the year...it would be worth it for precious family time and a Bahamian vacation!

We woke up the first day at Coco Cay, known for "the perfect day."

And it was. It was beautiful, the cousins all had the most precious time together swimming and playing beach games. The food was bottomless and "free" and the water was surreal. 

Not long after we re-boarded, I was seasick...I thought. Emma was wobbly and emotional. And as Ben, Nora, Emma and I packed into our tiny, dark cabin, I started to be violently ill.  Between trips to the bathroom, Emma started throwing up, and by morning...it was ugly, violent food poisioning. We were exhausted. Every towel and sheet was rancid. I sent Ben and Nora to breakfast with Aunt Lisa, and when I bent to clean Emma again, my throbbing head spun and I blacked out. Emma was bawling and filthy and I was on the well-worn carpet, unable to help her, unable to lift my head, unable to push.  I'm not sure I've ever been that sick. 

That was the high and the low...and the following days were sweet precious memories of watching the eight cousins play on the pool deck from a chair in the shade with Emma...of cheering for Ben as he played basketball, shakily cheering for the cousins as they scaled the rockwall, of taking another excursion our last day and I finally felt good enough to get down in the sand with Mayah and to catch up with Uncle Adam on the boat. And that night Lisa started throwing up, and the next morning we piled back into our van with loads of terrible laundry and cried through goodbyes....and as we drove Lily started to throw up...and Emma, to this moment, still hasn't bounced back.

As I drove the 13 hours all in one swoop, passing bags to sick kids, watching Emma grow weaker and more lethargic still, and hearing stories of the big bellyflop contest...I thought of manna.

The Israelites thought because they were no longer in slavery, the dessert would be paradise...and turns out, the paradise was hard, too. I get thinking that vacation, Bahamas, Coco Cay the Perfect Day should be blissful and perfect and I've deserved it and relaxing and turns out in the sweet, there is still hard. Till heaven, it's still broke. Unlike Him, the BEST places and the best experiences still don't satisfy.

But when I needed help, recovering and driving sick kids 13 hours, He provided exactly what I needed for that specific situation, just like manna. They were hungry, and His hand was not short. God cared more about their hearts and about mine, too, but also...He saw and met their everyday, tangible needs. Simple, sweet manna. 

They had nothing to do with its production. They simply had to gather it up. Exactly what they needed, exactly how much they needed, and His provision even accounted for Sabbath rest! 

God provided. For real. He met them. There was no lack. His hand was not short. There was no waste. 

And then He replaced the bread from heaven with the bread of life from heaven, and though I've had nothing to do with its production, I have and keep receiving the free gifts of His salvation and grace and love and joy and peace. 

When I needed His help and protection on the impossible, 800+ mile road, He truly helped and protected me and us. When I needed help in that dark cabin, He sent Lily in a sunshine yellow t-shirt, who patiently cleaned and carried and found us a quiet chair in the shade with fresh breeze and brought us water and tea, and when I had four kids and couldn't be mom, my most precious sister swooped in and loved them and adventured them well. 

When we got back to our van, now 3 adults and 9 kids, our new Haitian friends had a giant platter of Haitian food they had made us for our return. 

Haitian women who had never met us, who work for minimum wage in a parking garage, while WE were on a CRUISE, kept track of the days and hours, bought meat and vegetables and plantain of their own money, cooked it, and when we struggled around the corner, they provided our family's sweetest comfort food. 

Manna.

As I drove that late night, trying to make sense of all the hard in our lives and the lives of those we love, especially in the pockets that were supposed to be perfect and pampered and restful, He asked me if I saw His manna, "given that he might humble you and test you and do you good in the end" (Deut. 8:16) as His sweet provision, or if I would "complain in the hearing of the Lord about their troubles" (Numbers 11) like Israel. If my children would hear me complain about the meat of Egypt or point out His provision and tender loving care. 

And so, as much heavier things surround me and I battle on my knees for many...I am hungry for SO MUCH. Until we are living in that true, perfect day...I am hungry. And when I am hungry and tired and out of options...praise...the Lord takes care of us. 

Lord, give us today sweet manna in the places we are waiting on You for things that have yet to resolve. 

Amen!


















26 October 2025

good gifts

Our precious week with Aunt Sharon was matched by Matt and Sofie's precious last week in class...Matt can hardly talk about his students without getting choked up. The challenges, persecution, violence and hardships that are a part of their daily lives and ministries are overwhelming, and their joy in the middle was more so.  That has touched Matt and Sofie for good, forever. 

Sharon extended her trip an extra day so that I could join one day of Elisa's bachelorette trip at the beach. This is the way Sharon is. Not just making it possible for my good, but doing a lot of good with Nora and Ben and Lily and Emma so that I could, and they didn't feel it. 

While Matt and Sofie headed home, I drove 6 hours to the beach, had 24 beautiful hours with a lotta good women, and when they got home I headed back and she headed to the airport :)

I listened to a lot of worship and the entirety of Comer's "The Ruthless Elimination of Hurry" on the way there and back, and between that a whole day in His creation with dear women and some priceless solitude, I feel ten times free-er.  A lot of ways of living and thinking just kind of join us little by little, and taking a ruthless step back and realizing, "This isn't how I want to be doing it" and setting out on a better course -- a more "Christ apprenticeship" course, is so freeing.

If you haven't read it, dooooo.  If you want to hear about Matt's trip, he couldn't help but preach it today...I was so blessed by that. https://www.facebook.com/wellspringms/videos/1121355200205866

One of my shifts is getting my time off FB and IG and back into writing, here, which is what I love and how God meets me and helps me process.  It is less instant, less hurried, and more focused....and if I MISS writing, and it brings me joy and edifies my faith...why aren't I?

Grateful for these good gifts....






 

20 October 2025

joy

After Matt's class sent a precious video greeting to our church to thank us for sending Matt, we sent a greeting back and took a minute to pray for the church in Nigeria. 

I knew there was persecution in Nigeria against Christians. But I had NO idea it is THE most violent place in the world for believers...or how to pray.  This article helped me navigate...and has me PRAISING the Lord that He has Matt and Sofie exactly there, exactly now, teaching the most targeted people group--pastors and Christian leaders--from across Nigeria. 

Matt continues to say that the time, conversations, and questions with his students has been the sweetest, deepest time.  I can't wait to hear more of what he means, but I can only imagine how this is stretching and molding their perspective.  

Yesterday in church, our dear friend Scott preached about Joy for the Journey from Phillipians, and I continue to be humbled by the supernatural joy Matt and Sofie are walking in through our Nigerian brothers and sisters.   

https://www.opendoorsus.org/en-US/stories/10-things-you-need-to-know-about-violence-in-nigeria/?fbclid=IwY2xjawNjhCZleHRuA2FlbQIxMQABHgqwl-AqbDcXR2VssElkmrThNU2BKNKAUmuIhWKUXgv62PLgo51SuRF17YX9_aem_6BNfCyODubvNQkgDqZEHMg


Meanwhile, Aunt Sharon has come to hang with us for the next few days, and we're all cherishing that sweet time!  She is GOOD family.


15 October 2025

a big week!

 A week ago today we were at the notary overnighting passports and more permission forms to the Nigerian Embassy in Atlanta, and tonight Matt and Sofie have wrapped up their second full day at West Africa Theological Seminary and when I spoke to them last, Sofie was off with a student who's wife was in labor and Matt was bragging on his students. 

I am so thankful for this opportunity for them to share the Gospel.  It is reminding them both so much of Haiti.

Here's a note Matt wrote to our church...

Dear Wellspring Church Family,


Warm greetings from Lagos, Nigeria! I wanted to take a few moments to share a quick update and express my gratitude for your prayers and encouragement as I teach this week at West Africa Theological Seminary (WATS).


It has been an absolutely wonderful experience so far. My class has over thirty students—pastors, evangelists, and ministry leaders from across Nigeria and neighboring nations—and they are hungry for teaching, training, and discipleship. Their eagerness to grow in God’s Word and be better equipped for ministry is both humbling and inspiring. Every lecture turns into a deep exchange of ideas, questions, and testimonies. They are soaking up Scripture with open hearts and a clear sense of calling.


The warmth of their hospitality has been remarkable. From the moment I arrived, I have been met with generosity, kindness, and genuine Christian fellowship. Even in a context where roughly half the nation identifies as Muslim, I have encountered a people filled with the Holy Spirit, steadfast in faith, and overflowing with joy. Their worship is vibrant, their prayers are fervent, and their love for Christ is contagious. I am constantly reminded that the Church is alive and flourishing in places that often face great challenges for the gospel.


Every day brings moments that renew my sense of mission. I see the Spirit of God at work in these students—men and women determined to lead holy lives and serve their communities with courage and compassion. They remind me that the kingdom of God is advancing in every corner of the world, and it is a privilege to play even a small part in strengthening those who will continue to carry that light forward.


Please continue to pray for Sofia and I—that my teaching will be effective, that the Holy Spirit would give clarity and power to every lesson, and that I would have the physical and spiritual strength to finish the task well. Pray also for these students, that the seeds being planted in their hearts would take deep root and bear fruit in their ministries across Africa.


I miss you all deeply and carry you in my heart. Know that your support, prayers, and faithfulness make this kind of ministry possible. Wellspring is a sending church—your love and commitment to the gospel are having ripple effects far beyond our local community.


I look forward to being back with you soon, full of stories, testimonies, and renewed vision for what God is doing among His people around the world.


With love and gratitude,


Pastor Matt