The Magic that calls me to the Garden

When I was a little girl, I was exposed to a religion that my mother didn’t agree with. My babysitter had influenced me in a way my mother strongly opposed and I wasn’t even old enough to understand what the problem was. A few years later a little friend at school said she was going to catechism classes and invited me to church. Again, my mother opposed and firmly told me that I was a Christian. I had no idea what a Christian was or why I was a Christian. I figured it must have been something passed down to me through my family.

garden lady by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

I vaguely recall upsetting my mother one Sunday morning and her sharply informing me that it was important for me to be good on that particular Sunday, because Jesus, the Son of God, had died for me on a cross.

I suddenly felt very sad. I began feeling responsible for the death of God’s son.

I didn’t have much religious training nor education, even though I attended different churches with neighbor kids. I have no memory of my mother taking me to church while I was a child except for when she married my step-father in a chapel.

Church culture was completely foreign to me and while I continued to attend church occasionally as a teen, the teachings of that church never did get a chance to influence my life.

I have a memory of having cards in my hands and not knowing what they meant, but I knew they were magical…somehow. I wasn’t sure, really. I recall my mother telling me that a relative of ours had a friend who was a real witch and I remember inquiring of that relative about this friend of hers. She told me that I “wouldn’t want to have that kind of influence in my life, but that it’s real, very real.”

The lawn in our back yard was well kept and the flower beds were always blooming with flowers and green plants. My mother had frequently taken me out to help her plant and weed the garden. Gardening wasn’t my favorite thing to do, but nonetheless I spent the day on my knees with my hands in the dirt. She taught me how to tell which were weeds and which were flowers. She taught me how deep to dig and how to plant the flowers, cover the roots, and then water them. My favorite thing about the garden was watering. Many afternoons I would go outside and hand water the entire garden and lawn with the hose.

One evening, I opened the back door that lead to the back yard garden. That evening I felt magic calling me. This call intrigued me, yet spooked me too. I closed the door and didn’t inquire about it again.

When I started dating the man who is now my husband, he took me to church with him. I had questions about God and so we began attending a small charismatic church together. It was different and although I didn’t understand a lot of their practices, I found it interesting enough to keep going back.

I was 19 years old and living with my biological dad at the time and tried inviting him to join us, but he politely declined. He took me outside to the garden and explained that we didn’t need a church building to communicate with God. He said we could be in nature and hear him on our own. He asked me to close my eyes and listen. He asked me what I heard, “birds chirping” was my reply. He asked if I could tell how many birds there were and how many different kinds of birds based on their singing. It was a short conversation and I didn’t quite understand what he was trying to teach me. I assured him that no one was making me go to church, but that I was truly interested in it. That was the last time, and only time, he ever spoke to me about spirituality.

I know my grandmother, his mother, believed in some kind of spirituality. My step-mother explained to me that my grandmother believed in prophesies from another woman and that my grandmother read tea leaves and did chanting that made my step-mother uncomfortable.

There’s a lot of mystery in my childhood that I still don’t understand.

My husband and I spent nearly two decades in churches and I gulped down as much knowledge about the bible as I could from the pastors we’ve had. I’ve heard plenty of sermons depicting magic as dark and evil along with threats of what God would do to us if we ever dabbled in witchcraft. We were told that witchcraft was about powers that harmed people, especially Christians. We were taught that the devil would steal our hearts from God and that we were to abstain from anything dark or evil or we would suffer unimaginable pain.

We were convinced, through the preaching of pastors, that if we stayed in church, faithfully attended, gave money, and raised our kids in the church that we would be safe from evil.

That promise began to unravel as we saw more suffering and evil in the church. A teen girl was violated by a youth pastor and prominent leaders in the church would leave suddenly without explanation and without a goodbye. We tried to remain true to our church attendance out of fear that the devil would ruin our lives. Then a registered sex offender began riding the church bus to Sunday School, along with all the other children that were picked up. Other registered sex offenders started attending the church and although I knew that resisting people from hearing about God would be wrong, we felt increasingly uncomfortable and unsafe.

We finally made a decision to leave that church, but jumping into another church so quickly made us uneasy. We wanted to be sure of what we were getting into before allowing our children to be involved in another church.

The next few years of studying the history of the bible and the institutional church made us even more uncomfortable. Although we had learned a lot after we departed the church culture, we both had experiences with God that we could not deny. No matter how many lies we were uncovering in church history, we knew that experience could not be dismissed.

So what were these experiences about? Why would God allow us to go through all that we endured?

He closed doors on our past and opened new doors to walk through.

We began seeing a spirituality in the bible that we had not seen before, nor were we ever taught while in churches.

He kept bringing us back to the garden in the book of Genesis. We felt the pull in our souls to raise our kids closer to nature and to glean what we could from the Spirit as we spent time in the local park and while hiking the hills near our home. By that time, we had been homeschooling for just over a year and we wanted to have our children learn more about this earth God placed us on. I found a local ministry that took good care of the park and taught others about the native plants.

We took a step of faith to take our children to a scheduled event that ministry was having to pull up invasive plants from the park’s natural landscape. Many years ago, a variety of plants were brought to the park, but took over the native landscape. We learned a lot that day about the plant life, but we also learned a lot about the people who led their ministry.

pastel floral 2 by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Who would have thought that one day of putting my hands in the earth would give me the discovery of why my soul has felt called to the garden for so many years.

The last couple of years has been quite a discovery for me as I studied about the ancestry of my father’s lineage. Doors were opening for me to see into a different culture of people that has been demonized by many Christians throughout history. I have gotten to know people from different cultures and who follow different beliefs. I’ve learned about their beliefs first hand. These people who love the earth, who know the healing power of nature, and who meditate in their gardens are not evil. Being in touch with the Spirit through nature is not evil nor of the devil. And while Christians don’t want to be judged based on the abusive actions of Westboro and various other cults, I pray they no longer misjudge people of other religions based on a few bad examples from their history.

There have been many atrocities committed in the name of God and the church, too. The same so called Christian leaders of the past who would demonize an herbal medicine woman from the forest would also lead their own armies to pillage other lands and shed blood all in the name of their kings and God. The abuse of people in the name of God has always been a travesty and they falsely accuse and demonize people for praying in a forest while burning sage and incense. Do they forget too quickly that the priests from their Old Testament also burned incense to God? They also made sacrifices, shed blood, murdered men, took their wives and daughters and made sex slaves out of them, all in the name of their God. But they condemn people who find spirituality among nature, away from the piety of religion. They’ve accused witches of being evil, but their religious conquests and forced harems are holy?

church pastel by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Why is a church building better for humanity than spending time learning how nature speaks to us? Why do many religious leaders scoff at saving the whales, hugging trees, or getting in touch with nature in a spiritual manner? Why do we need to spend so many hours every week hearing what those leaders have to say and ignoring what the Spirit says to us when we’re away from that building?

Even when I read and meditate on the scriptures, the Spirit always leads me back to the beginning. The Garden. The Garden is where it all began. The voice that deceives always wants to separate us from the Garden. Why does this deception not want us in the Garden? The place where we hear the Spirit speaks to us is a threat to the lie.

In hindsight, I am beginning to see why magic called me to the garden. In school, my favorite subject was earth and life science. During the news every night, my favorite part was the weather report. On the weekend, I loved laying in the warm sunlight and spending long days at the beach. I loved camping and swimming in the river. Being outdoors has always been a part of my soul’s desire and has given me the happiest memories.

lady at beach by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Learning more about nature has given me a profound look into how the Spirit speaks to me. Quieting my mind to hear from deep within my soul as I pull weeds, breathe in the fragrance of roses, and even in the act of tilling the soil. I feel the strength of the wind blowing across the sea and cooling my face with mist while digging my bare feet into the sand warmed by the sunshine. Hearing the magical music of waves crashing on the shore and witnessing the glimmer of sunbeams on the surface of the ocean. All of this beauty and the Spirit speaks to me.

Many Christians believe that Science is at war with faith, but I believe Science teaches me faith. And yet faith is continually attacked by many religious leaders. They attempt to lock it away from us by keeping us locked up and separated from nature where the Spirit speaks most naturally. I’m not saying the Spirit can’t speak elsewhere, but the many noisy voices in the world can be a distraction.

My friends from the park knew things about nature that I never learned in school or in churches. They taught me which plants were for eating, healing, and which ones to avoid for the safety of my own health. They showed me how to love those who are different from myself and gave me freedom to hear the Spirit for myself. They never tried to control me, dictate to me, or threaten me with afterlife punishments of torture like the churches did. I began to see the Spirit with a different perspective and the stories from the bible began unfolding with a message very different from the one I had been taught before.

The freedom to hear the Spirit as I spend time in nature has been nourishment for my soul. This kind of communication is mysterious and magical. The voice of God speaks to me in ways that benefit my own mind and soul. I am quieted in my soul in a way no church leader was ever able to give me.

Adam and Eve communed with God in the garden. That is where I have been called back to. You can call it spiritual or magical, but whatever you call it I know who speaks to me and I plan to listen carefully.

sisterlisa

Managing Depression

Depression. That cloud, though invisible, is dark and murky. The experience of feeling lost, alone, rejected, and falling into a pit that has no bottom. Sometimes a person never escapes, while others find temporary reprieve only to experience it again in the blink of an eye and many times, unexpectedly. Some can sense it drawing close to them a day or two in advance, but rarely find ways to avoid it. Managing depression can be daunting!

scenery by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

The smallest things can bring it down upon me, like a spoken word by a relative or even a news clip scrolling through my Facebook newsfeed. Sometimes it’s just a flashback to a dreaded memory I’ve tried to bury in the back of my mind.

Hiding in the bedroom with the curtains closed, shutting out the light and hiding from humanity will never stop it from haunting me. Minutes turn to hours, hours turn to days, days turn to weeks as I try to recall when it first started affecting me. I’ve been through countless heart breaks, but none of them inflicted me as much as this shadow creature does.

I’ve marked my journey by counting how many good days I can have in between the nightmares that haunt me in broad daylight. Some nights it wakes me up and robs me of much needed sleep and it drags me down throughout the day.

Hours of crying uncontrollably while my family feels helpless to save me.

A dear friend experienced severe emotional and mental trauma for all of her life. Doctor visits, prescriptions, psychiatry, pastors, religion and caring loved ones could not free her from her turmoil. She felt her only escape was to leave this world. She found her way out, but left a path of devastation as loved ones and medical professionals try to make sense out of such a senseless tragedy.

Many Christians have tried to find their answers in the Bible only to heap more condemnation on those who suffer. They claim their faith wasn’t strong enough, the devil is blamed, and sometimes they shake their fists at God while adorning a casket with yellow gladiolas.

My personal journey with depression has been a long arduous road of discovery. A discovery of who I am, who I’m not, and the power God has given me to fight this battle.

Acknowledging that I suffer from depression was not so clear. It took me many years to realize that I suffer from this mental plague. I’ve never seen a doctor for it. We don’t have medical coverage for me to be able to do that. I wonder how many other people suffer and don’t have coverage to get help.

After being condemned by twisted scriptures for 15 years, I could not find peace in any verses or passages in those 66 books. Some stories resonated with me like Jonah running away and willingly taking the plunge into the deep turbulent sea and King Saul falling on his own sword while suffering from panic, fear, and jealousy. The sadness King David expressed over his unwise decision to lay with Bathsheba, murder her husband, and hold their dead son in his arms. The condemnation one feels over stupid decisions can be quite unbearable.

However, I wasn’t obligated to travel to a foreign country to preach, I am not a King fighting for my throne, nor a King tempted by overactive testosterone. My battle was over not reading the Bible enough, not living up to the expectations of mankind, not being accepted as spiritual enough to serve God in a ministry. The weight of condemnation those men must have felt, so heavy they wanted to die. I have felt heaviness. I have felt death in my heart. I have experienced darkness that would rejoice to see my life end.

Who would notice?

All those I was sure would never care if I died, weren’t the ones I needed to think about. As much love as I had in my heart for them, they did not have that love for me.

Admitting it was painful.

Dwelling on it was bringing death to my soul.

I noticed the cloud was always looming when I was weak. If I lacked good sleep, nutrition, or had too much on my plate then the darkness would strap itself on my back for quite a bumpy ride.

The cloud was most especially dark during one week a month. It wasn’t your average PMS gloominess. This was downright hateful darkness that plagued my mind and soul. During that week, all the losses of life seemed so overwhelming to me that I often wanted to crawl under my bed and cry myself to sleep. If I could have slept the whole week until it passed, well …that is what I would have wanted. I needed to escape it, or so I thought.

But there was no escape.

When I felt rejected, alone, hated…I somehow began to accept that I was rejected, alone, and hated. The mind does crazy things with thoughts like that. The mind starts to believe it. I began rejecting myself, hating myself, and choosing to be alone. I was sabotaging myself. I could feel my soul dying inside and my mind deteriorating.

Depression.

I had to recognize it for what it was and prepare myself to face it head on. I had to learn to suit myself up for battle and charge at it with my sword and shield.
Once the cloud lifted, after the week was done, I began strengthening myself. I knew I couldn’t face the losses in my life while I was at my weakest. I started with better nutrition and more water. I began setting up healthy boundaries to protect myself from harm I knew would come from certain areas of life. I avoided triggers that would infect my mind.

I even had to avoid certain people. I stopped reading blogs that condemned people. I stopped reading politics. I stopped taking calls from anyone negative. I avoided any television shows that instill fear and violence.

I started watching comedy. I started taking essential vitamins, eating raw vegetables, and taking long walks at the beach. I started gardening.
I hugged my husband and children more.

I wore bright colored clothing, lit scented candles, and applied scented lotion and oil to my skin.

For some, my actions look selfish.

For me, my actions are to save my mind and soul.

Though, I couldn’t avoid all stressors, life just keeps happening and sometimes negative people still come at me full force.

I knew that my healing was something I needed to seek after, with the little strength I had. I couldn’t lay down and get beat by depression, waiting for God to work his magic for me.

I began studying about depression, health, and spirituality. For me, it was all connected somehow and I knew I needed to find my balance. I began sorting out each loss I had experienced. Each loss was examined, prayed over, and sorted through individually. Anything major in my life that took from me has been a loss. Loved ones who have died, those who have betrayed me, those who inflicted harm on me and my family. All of it is a loss.

Many years of toxic religious brainwashing had me convinced that everything was somehow my fault, a curse of some kind. No matter how much ‘right Christian living’ I pursued, it was never enough to set me free from the pain. No matter how much Bible I read, no matter how many scriptures I memorized, no matter how much I served God with my life, the dark cloud was always there to convince me of how awful I was.

Every time I searched the scriptures to find an answer to this darkness. Religious leaders would always point to the forbidden fruit that plagued mankind. Fault was always placed on the woman.

I’m a woman.

It had played out in my head that all our problems must be my fault, the woman’s fault, for so it was with Eve (or so they say). King David’s sin was translated into Bathsheba’s fault. Abraham’s quick pursuit of Hagar was interpreted as Sarah’s fault. The woman about to be stoned to death was her own fault.

Interesting how the blame is always shifted onto the women and done so by men.

And women have eaten that lie for thousands of years.

But the Spirit brings all things to remembrance. The Spirit reminds me of the garden, of how my true nature is not sin. My true nature has always been perfection. It’s the lie that robs me of the joy of my created purpose.

I was created to love.

But what about those days when I don’t feel loved? When the thoughts of rejection come back, when someone does less than loving things to me, says less than loving words to me, what then?

The answer is and has always been, to love.

I realized that someone’s lack of love for me did not mean I was less than worthy of love. It just meant that they have issues they need to deal with.
Giving love will never leave me empty. It’s not like giving away all my cookies and being left without cookies. When I give away love, I develop more love. It comes from within.

The more love I give, the more I have to give away.

Love isn’t something I need to look for elsewhere. It’s inside of me. It won’t be found ‘out there’.

To get love flowing, I just need to give love, even if it’s in cuddling a kitten, watering my garden, or snuggling with my children or spouse. Give love.
These are easy ways to start the flow of love, because they are the most likely to receive my love and love me in return.

When I spend time loving my garden, I really focus on the love I’m giving to the plants as I water them. I pay close attention to how pulling weeds is a loving action in order to protect the plants. I’m careful not to overwater them. I don’t want to turn my plants into victims of drowning. I also don’t want to be forgetful to water them and make them victims of neglect. I need to balance my love by giving my love elsewhere too.

I spend time brushing my cats and dog, keeping the cat box clean, making sure they have dental bones to help protect their teeth. I pet them and tell them how much I love them.

I spend time with my husband and children. I make their favorite foods, help them with homework and give them hugs.

But I could not find the strength to love my garden, my pets, and my family had I not first learned to love myself.

There is so much pressure to avoid being selfish that I ended up putting myself last and rendering myself helpless. I end up overworked and left feeling like a slave.
There is nothing wrong with loving myself. I’m not talking about giving in to selfishness where I toss everyone aside for my own desires. I’m talking about protecting myself and tending to my basic needs.

When I love myself and those around me, I am building up love and the strength to love others who are less than loving toward me. I’m not sure I’m cured of depression, only time will tell. However, I will keep working on building up love in myself by protecting myself and giving myself what I need to overcome.

Again, I’m not under the supervision of a doctor, but I’m doing everything I can to make life happy and joyful through educating myself about having good mental health, proper nutrition, taking herbal supplements, getting good rest, pursuing spiritual growth, giving love, and avoiding triggers that would steal my peace.

Depression doesn’t have to rule my life.

Related Articles:

Healing After Abuse

Love Your Enemies

sisterlisa

Spiritual Abuse Awareness Week

My friend Joy is hosting a link up for you to share your stories of spiritual abuse. Although we have January set aside as Spiritual Abuse Awareness Month, ANY time of year is just fine for raising awareness. In our effort to raise awareness, we aim to see the congregations become healthier. It’s not an opportunity just to bash those we have ill feelings toward, no matter the amount of abuse. The point is not to abuse back, but rather to inspire and promote healing and growth. We want to see healthier relationships.

My story of spiritual abuse is a 15 year trek of my life (plus 2 more years of hard core sorting-out-of-my-baggage) and is found throughout this blog. However, in this post I simply want to address the questions Joy posed in her post.

How has your experience affected you? Although my experience has left me with a deep amount of pain and betrayal, I learned a lot by going through the toxicity. I’ve always been hopeful that any negative experience I go through could be used to help someone else. So I turned my pain around and began the Spiritual Abuse Awareness page on Facebook and have written about it extensively here on my blog, our Spiritual Abuse Awareness blog, and as a guest blogger at Quivering Daughters. The overall experience left me feeling beaten down, feeling worthless, in deep depression, and incredibly alone.

What has it done to you emotionally, mentally, physically, spiritually, etc.? The toxicity of spiritual abuse affected me in several areas. In this post I share a video of a pastor interviewing me about spiritual abuse as well as a link to a study I wrote on the physical affects spiritual abuse does to a victim.

What has your journey been like? My journey to healing and freedom has been a long and arduous one. The thought of writing it all out again in one blog post for this link up leaves me feeling exhausted. I read a lot about spiritual abuse and keep as up to date as possible with the new stories being published online every day. My heart aches for the many victims out there and I do my best to comment wherever I see the topic come up in an effort to simply offer a ‘hand’ and say “You’re not alone.” But the topic is so overwhelming that I usually end up in a depressed state over the few days following anything I read. I have had to take breaks from it all so I can focus on the good things in life.

How have you gotten where you are today? By pushing through it with all my strength. By having the support of the other survivors. By unpacking my toxic baggage and cleaning house in my mind and heart. By blogging about my journey.

Do you feel you’ve healed? I do feel that I’ve healed in a lot of ways, but spiritual, emotional, and mental scar tissue still hurts from time to time.

What do you still struggle with? Currently, the thing I struggle with are some people who pushed me away when I began blogging about spiritual abuse. These people who have been either uninterested in my story, afraid to face the truth of my story (and others like mine), who have ‘rebuked’ victims and survivors for speaking up…only to see them finally admit it but yet STILL ignore those of us who had the courage to speak up about it before they did. To see them garner positive attention for speaking up, but not acknowledging that they too have spiritually abused others along the way. This is still yet another form of spiritual abuse that they perpetuate.

     ”I can’t link to HER story. She doesn’t believe the ‘gospel’ the same way I do.”

     ”I can’t acknowledge HIS story, he’s an atheist now.”

     ”If I link to her story or his story, I could lose my blog following.”

     ”I can’t admit that I’ve been abusive too.”

Well, yes you can! You see, spiritual abuse victims HAVE been spiritually abusive before. Because that’s what we were programmed to do. If we fail to tell this truth then we fail to really teach what spiritual abuse does to people. Spiritual Abuse is a very twisted toxicity that plagues the mind, soul, and affects the body. It alters our thinking, our emotions, and our health suffers. That is bound to manifest in our words and actions (or lack thereof). Sometimes the lack of support or speaking up in an effort to protect victims or halt the abuse IS abusive.

Silence furthers the abuse.

We would still be in denial if we attempt to claim that we’ve only been victims and never been abusive in some degree. Part of healing is admitting all of the awful truth..if not to a group of people, closest family, or even a therapist..at least to ourselves.

Confession is good for the soul. Even if that confession is just between us and God. Then the true healing can begin.

I know that Rachel and Joy understand spiritual abuse, although I’m not sure how in depth they have suffered. However, they have a large audience and I’m thankful they have dedicated their blog space to raise awareness of this very important problem. I know the depth of my experience and that of several others, whose stories made national news. Just when you think you’ve heard the worst, trust me…there are even worse stories out there.

Many of us can spot spiritual abuse in it’s beginning stages, whereas others might not recognize it until a teenager gets raped or molested. Sadly, some still don’t recognize it even in the face of undeniable evidence.

But don’t let that stop you from speaking up, becoming more aware, and offering support to the millions out there who still suffer in silence.

Please join our Facebook page for more support. You’re not alone.

Related Articles:

When it’s your former church that hits the headlines

Spiritual Hostage Syndrome

sisterlisa

Catholic Church gets New Pope, but Christ is still King

So the world kept watch for the smoke to inform them if the Catholic Church had a new leader yet. The statuses on Facebook have been interesting, to say the least. It’s interesting to witness so many changes in religion these past few years. From the debates about Harold Camping’s additional false predictions of the Lord’s return, the massive failure in moral fortitude by pastors in various churches, Evangelicals removing the cult label from the Mormon Church to help a Mormon Republican get into Office, to Pat Robertson’s atrocious display of idiocy and now to the retirement of one Pope and the ‘crowning’ of yet another.

altar by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

Where are the witnesses who cry in the wilderness?

I get the feeling they are mystified and not sure what to do with all the arrogance they’ve spread around all these years.

I guess the previous Pope wasn’t really ‘the anti-Christ’ after all?

He never made any attempt to put a mark in our hands or foreheads forbidding us to buy, sell, or trade.

He didn’t create a ‘one world order’ nor a ‘one world religion’.

I honestly have no problems with the Pope as a human. I don’t even know him nor do I need to.

I just find it odd how silent so many Protestants have been on this world wide event.

I guess they’re trying to figure out where to go from here?

Many evangelical pastors claim we don’t need a pope, yet they have created themselves into Protestant popes.

It makes no difference to me whether someone wants to have a gathering place to get together every week. They’ll need someone to oversee the facility and it’s finances. I get that. It doesn’t bother me one bit.

I just think it’s important to understand that we don’t need a king, pope, or pastor.

At least not in the Kingdom that Jesus ushered in.

This physical world has authorities that are needed for organization, protection, and justice. I do believe God works through many of those authorities to make our lives on this earth a bit better in a lot of ways.

Just don’t allow yourselves to be put back into bondage again. We are set free by Christ and so walk in the freedom that is yours.

No matter what this Pope, or any Protestants pastors, say about the world’s problems we have the Holy Spirit working in us already.

We can think on our own, continue to question, and enjoy our journey without a religious leader to dictate to us.

The Catholic Church gets a new Pope, but Christ is still King.

“Call no man father, for you have one Father who is in heaven.” ~Jesus

sisterlisa

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Love Wins for Teens by Rob Bell

When I saw a popular Christian blogger write, “Love Wins for Teens? No thanks.” I knew that was code for “It’s going to piss off a lot of Christians”. So I knew I just had to get it. Reading ‘Love Wins for Teens’ by Rob Bell is bound to deliver you into the path of a ‘heresy’ hunt.

You see, I find it very odd that Christians, who claim to follow the God who loves us so much that he sent his only begotten Son, would be so downright critical of a book about God’s love, especially a book that tells teens how much God loves them.

LoveWins-Teen-Edition

I get the feeling that Rob’s 20 years in ministry has given him some insight into the kinds of questions teenagers are asking about God. He presents those questions throughout his book and they are the same questions my own teens have asked.

Our kids have legitimate questions about God and about how some Christians are representing misrepresenting him.

In generations past, kids were told they could be seen but not heard. I think that is a dangerous way to approach raising teens in the era God has placed us in.

Regardless of whether or not you agree with Rob’s answers in this book, it behooves you as a parent to read it anyway. It will give you a clearer idea of what goes through a teens mind about the God you serve.

Rob unpacks the importance and responsibility we have with our free will. He paints an alarming picture of what happens when we “go out and do whatever we want” as well as what happens when we think we’ve “lived exactly as God tells us to”.  He parked it in the story of the prodigal family and reveals how we can be like one brother or the other, but uncovers the beauty of the most important person in the story, which is the father.

I found liberty through the pages of ‘Love Wins for Teens’ and wish I would have had this book when I was a curious teen asking questions about Jesus, heaven and hell. Along with that liberty, I found responsibility.. a challenge about what one naturally does once they know and experience the power of God’s saving grace.

‘Love Wins for Teens’ is now required reading for my teens. It’s not a book that promotes religion, it’s a book that inspires faith.

*Disclaimer: I did not receive any compensation for reviewing this book and I purchased the Kindle version myself. 

Other Reviews:

I believe Love Wins

Raising Hell

Hellbound?

 

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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There’s No Competition in God’s Kingdom

Somewhere along the line a terrible plagued has infiltrated the Christian community, it’s the plague of competition. We’ve allowed leaders to create an Us vs. Them competition where they rank one another in order of importance in the Kingdom, yet Jesus was diametrically opposed to that idea.

Matthew 20:20Then the mother of the sons of Zebedee came up to him with her sons, and kneeling before him she asked him for something. 21And he said to her, “What do you want?” She said to him, “Say that these two sons of mine are to sit, one at your right hand and one at your left, in your kingdom.”

I can just see Jesus now as he resisted the urge to roll his eyes. Humans are so bent on being the best and sitting in high places.

I love how he refused to answer her question by directing her to the Father.

Matthew 20: 22Jesus answered, “You do not know what you are asking. Are you able to drink the cup that I am to drink?” They said to him, “We are able.” 23He said to them, “You will drink my cup, but to sit at my right hand and at my left is not mine to grant, but it is for those for whom it has been prepared by my Father.”

She, and her sons, probably had no idea what it meant to ‘drink from his cup’, but remember in the garden when Jesus prayed with sweat drops of blood

“If it’s possible, let this cup can pass from me.”

Do we REALLY want to drink from THAT cup?

His own disciples didn’t like the conversation, but Jesus responds again with a spiritual message,

Matthew 20: 24 And when the ten heard it, they were indignant at the two brothers. 25But Jesus called them to him and said, “You know that the rulers of the Gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones exercise authority over them. 26 It shall not be so among you. But whoever would be great among you must be your servant,c 27 and whoever would be first among you must be your slave,d 28 even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.”

He taught them to be equal and in doing so he encouraged them to serve one another.

And yet many fellow Christians become sidetracked with pomp and fame while continuing to build their own towers of Babel.

It’s either a war over which church has the largest congregation or which Christian blog is in the top 10!

Not sure how you feel about this, but I can’t find anything in the scriptures about being God’s favorite due to our Alexa Rank or Feedburner subscription numbers.

I understand that it feels good to get to a place where your teachings, ideas, writing style, and public speaking becomes popular. It feels good to get attention.

I’m not opposed to getting attention and feeling good. What I am concerned about is what happens in our spirituality.

I know God loves us all regardless of how popular we are. Jesus taught us to be equal and to serve one another. He plays no favorites, but mankind does.

Sometimes we can become so tied up with wanting attention from our fellow man that we forget that we’re already fully loved and accepted by God just as we are.

Man judges the outward appearance. So what happens when mankind changes their minds and we lose that attention?

What happens when we become criticized?

If we aren’t steadfast in our faith in His perfection in us all, we can easily be trapped in the bondage of man’s acceptance.

Jesus said the way would be narrow and few would find this way.

A person who thrives on the acceptance of man won’t want to travel the narrow path.

They seek the broad way, the popular path, and they want to lead the pack.

They need a pack to follow them.

Any teaching that truly conveys “come out from among them”, in it’s proper spiritual context, is not going to be favorable.

It’s not an attractive path and oftentimes it can be quite lonely.

lady walking park by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere

The nature of mankind doesn’t want to take this kind of journey.

There’s no “In crowd” on this pathway.

There’s no name in lights.

There’s no such thing as a Google Rank in His Kingdom.

There’s no such thing as an “outsider”.

No one can keep you away from this journey, whereas plenty of folks can push you away from their pack.

If it’s possible to be pushed out of the “In Crowd”, then it’s not His Kingdom.

The Christian Culture has allowed this competition in for far too long and it has corrupted the intended work of the ministry of the Gospel.

 All scripture quotations are from ESV.

 

 

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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I become all things to all people

We spent 15 years in a strict fundamentalist church environment where men were encouraged manipulated to wear suits at every service. For a man to show up at church without a suit was almost as bad as a woman showing up in pants or a short skirt. Unless, of course, the man had just got off work and drove straight to church, then he was praised for being so dedicated. A man like this had a reason to not wear a suit, but the rest knew what was expected of them in order to be considered a good church member.

So when the first time I saw my husband preach at a recovery mission in shorts and a baseball jersey, I was a bit squeemish. The fear of being seen out of uniform had taken it’s toll on me, but my husband directed my attention to the apostle Paul when he said,

“I become all things to all people.” ~Paul

And when I became the director of the women’s home I was faced with making a decision about the uniform in order to really connect with the women. They admitted to me that they didn’t feel like they could relate to me because I was “a good Christian lady”. Up until that day, they had never known that I once used street drugs too. Sharing my testimony with them opened the door for me to be able to minister to them and for them to receive it.

I spent some time in prayer, study, and reflection about this dilemma of the Christian uniform. I believe there’s a time and place for such a uniform and I think there’s a time to wear clothing that gets you in the door. If you want to minister to people at the beach you wouldn’t wear a floor length dress, nylons, and heels. This is just a simple example of what many missionaries know to be true. When they go to Africa, China, or the Philippines the best way to connect is to blend in with the culture. They have to study the culture, their mannerisms, their etiquette; and respect it.

God never commanded the entire world to dress like church going Americans. Making villagers in the jungles of South America dress in suits and ties is ludicrous. I always thought it was funny to see church folk go on missions trips only to come back dressed in the villager’s cultural clothes and show a slide show of the villagers wearing white collared shirts with ties.

Evangelism isn’t about converting people into Americans.

It’s also not about converting people to the modern church culture.

Evangelism is loving others.

We don’t have the power to convert people to God. We aren’t the Holy Spirit and should not attempt to do his work in their lives.

God simply invites us to love people.

Sadly, many church folk have been pummeled with fear mongering stories of how ‘evil’ the world is that they can’t even bring themselves to have a conversation with people who are different. They can’t fathom speaking to a homeless man, a prostitute, or even a member of the GLBT community.

Whoever has been discipling these kinds of Christians has done an incredible disservice to God and to them.

We are to build up the faith in one another. If we aren’t building up each other’s faith then how can we possibly show our faith to the world around us? Why would anyone want to believe in a God of such fearful people?

Many religious leaders go directly to the Law in order to condemn each other about having fellowship with those in the dark. They’re very much misguided. How can we shine the light in a dark world if we’re too afraid to go into the dark? Even Jesus dined with the gluttons and sinners. Do we lack faith in God to keep us close to him while we’re there? God sent his people to walk over the Red Sea, to walk in the wilderness, and says he will be with us in the valley of the shadow of death. He most certainly calls us to walk into the darkness and carry to the light with us.

If it frightens you to see fellow Christians walking in the dark and loving those in the valley then please, for God’s sake, remain in silent prayer. When you start shouting from the rooftops that ‘such an such Christian’ is “living in sin” or “dabbling in the dark” you are not only making yourself look foolishly faithless, but you are condemning your own brethren. It’s the enemy who stands at the gate daily accusing the brethren. Whose side are you on anyway?

Even Joseph lived his life in Egypt, among their culture, wearing their clothing, and still loving God!

You may not agree with how a missionary is evangelizing, but it’s not you who is reaching those people. Just because you aren’t called to serve in a certain capacity doesn’t mean no one else is. Making yourselves look foolish isn’t helping the diligent and patient work of a missionary. It might be best if you just reserved your quick and lashing tongue and try prayer instead.

“I just can’t support what you’re doing!”

You can’t be supportive, even in prayer, for the people I’m loving? For the work of the Gospel in my life and in the lives of the people I’m call to love and serve?

“But those people are in sin and you should have nothing to do with them!”

And the passages I see tossed around are from the LAW!

“Do not be entangled again with the yoke of bondage.” ~Paul

The Law doesn’t save anyone! Condemning people isn’t how you win them.

Is that how you and your spouse fell in love? By condemning each other? By calling each other evil?

It’s love that reaches people. If you can’t bring yourselves to love each and ever single person in this world then at least embrace your right to be silent.

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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Christians are the worst tippers in the world.

Although we spent 15 years in a legalistic congregation, one of the things we came away with is the importance of leaving a good tip. The pastor we had was adamant about tipping well and making a waitress’s job as pleasant as possible. I think part of his feelings on that was due to the fact that his mother was a waitress whose life was tragically ended one night after work. Her husband (his step father), was violently abusive and she chose to leave for the safety of herself and her children. He wasn’t thrilled with her leaving and arrived at her work one night to ask her to come back. When she denied his request, he shot her in the chest. He then turned the gun on himself. The family was left without a mother.

restaurant by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere
free photo source for bloggers Pix-O-Sphere

I am willing to bet his mother was a good waitress to her patrons, but not all waitresses are good at what they do. Sometimes you get really bad service from a waitress (or waiter), but do we ever stop to consider why? A grouchy waitress might just be one who has to deal with an abusive man in her life. But for the most part, waitresses do a pretty good job at serving their guests. 

As any waitress will tell you, Sunday afternoons are the worst days to wait tables. Sadly, the reason is due to stingy Christians who mistreat them and tip badly or not at all. I knew a woman who was a waitress for many years. She was a Christian and every Sunday her co-workers had to put up with bad treatment from Christian patrons. This woman was so embarrassed by the continual behavior of her fellow Christians every week that she decided to volunteer to handle their tables. None of the other servers wanted to go anywhere near the Christian guests. She would serve them well and put up with their griping and demanding requests. She never complained about the lack of tips. Yet, she was disgusted with their behavior. Although they would never know it, because she was gracious. She smiled and served with humility.

Last week, we observed the dark and sinister behavior up close and personal when we logged into Facebook, Twitter, and our email in-boxes to discover the incident at Applebee’s. The nation gasped as they saw the audacity of a pastor scribble the condition of her own heart on the receipt.

“I give God 10%, why should I give you 18%?”

The social media firestorm blazed hotter than hell as the pastor’s name flooded the Internet. This isn’t the first time a Christian has been rude to servers (or anyone else for that matter). But this time the world held this Christian accountable for her poor actions. She behaved like the self righteous religious leader who refused to help the beaten up man in the Bible. Thank God there are Good Samaritans out there who are compassionate to lend a hand.

This is an area of Christian living that is in dire need of proper teaching.

Thou shalt not be rude to your servants!

Somehow there’s an awful lot of Christians who think it’s permissible to be belligerent patrons in restaurants nation wide. They seem to be under the impression that mistreating servants is their “God given right”. Although the scriptures tell us a different story. The word used in the Bible is ‘slaves’ and I take these passages and apply them to anyone who serves another whether it’s a waitress, a nurse, or your postal carrier.

Colossians 4:1 “Masters, treat your slaves justly and fairly, knowing that you also have a Master in heaven.” ESV

Ephesians 6:8-9. “ 8 Remember that the Lord will reward each one of us for the good we do, whether we are slaves or free. 9 Masters, treat your slaves in the same way. Don’t threaten them; remember, you both have the same Master in heaven, and he has no favorites.” NLT

The pastor in the hot seat went back to the restaurant demanding that the entire staff working that day be fired.

I wonder if she knows that a pastor is not to be a brawler, given to violence?

1 Timothy 3:3 “…must not be a heavy drinker or be violent…. must be gentle, not quarrelsome, and not love money.” NLT

I know some argue that a pastor should be a man, not a woman, but that’s besides the point here and I’ll leave that topic for another post.

Regardless of whether a pastor should be a man or woman doesn’t change the fact that pastors in general (and all Christians for that matter) are to be kind and gentle. We must be ready to forgive and make amends. The Gospel is reconciliation and thereby we must always be aimed at reconciling.

To our knowledge, the server that day did nothing to deserve such treatment from the pastor. She served the table and should have been given her tip.

Giving God 10% of your entire income is not the same as giving a waitress a tip for one meal. 

The arrogance of that pastor is a crying shame! She should not be presiding over the souls of people, period!

But this matter raises a much bigger question for the Christian community.

It’s a travesty that servers across the country testify of bad behavior by Christian patrons.

This must cease!

Pastors, I plead with you. Teach your congregation to be generous to their servers. Teach them some manners!

“When you give unto the least of these, you’re giving to me. When you don’t give to them, you’re also not giving to me.” ~Jesus

Your example to the world will either represent God well or not at all.

It’s a shame that it’s said that Christians are the worst tippers in the world.

Many pastors will preach about the importance of being a giver, but in reality they rarely practice it.

Religious folk seem to have taken on this idea that they’re better than everyone else and forget this;

“The greatest among you is a servant” ~Jesus

 

 

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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Megan and Grace Phelps-Roper, We Understand

It’s been a handful of years since we left the cult. I still miss some of the people who were deeply involved in our lives. I still cry over severed relationships. I feel a phantom pain in my soul, longing for a hug from some of those friends I had for so long. It’s so hard to walk away from people you deeply love. Fear sets in and you begin questioning everything you learned. Part of that is questioning the sincerity of the friendships. I hate the idea that some of them didn’t really truly care. It hurts to entertain those thoughts. I think a select few really loved me, perhaps they still do. I honestly don’t know. I’ve spoken up so much about the IFB movement that it’s probably really difficult for them to muster up the courage to even talk to me, especially if they’re still there.

There are days when I feel like falling off the grid, throwing all of this away. Deleting the blog, closing my Facebook page and so on. Talking about spiritual abuse is hard core stuff. There are days when I have to totally turn away from it all to catch my breath. Today, I went for a walk at the beach to breathe in some fresh salty air. I needed to feel the sun on my face and feel the cool ocean breeze on my face. I was determined that I would come home and shut it all down.

Then I come home to find comments like this:

Kimberly, “Keep talking. You are doing the right thing and you are not alone.”

Alice, “do not cease to expose this travesty, please!”

Lauren, “ just remember, satan tries to spread his darkness wherever the light shines the brightest.”

Andi, “Keep exposing!! I never would have guessed the I credible depth of hurt that those who have endured spiritual abuse go through until I experienced it myself. I am struck daily with how it has affected every aspect of my life. The feeling of solitude and alone-ness in the midst of it is crippling. I am so thankful for sites like this that let me know a.) I am not crazy. And b.) I am not alone. I don’t interact much yet, but I know I will. For now I read and deeply appreciate that you all are here!”

Sue, “Keep exposing! Keep sharing!! Keep talking about spiritual abuse/ toxic faith. hugs”

Charles, “stay the course bravely.”

Tammy, “Keeping talking. No it isn’t pretty what you are exposing but it is real and happens. It has hit our family and I am thankful you are speaking for my child.”

Not only did these comments spur me on to continue my writing, but I also discovered that two young ladies (sisters) left an abusive church. It was all they ever knew. Their church is run by their family so leaving the church means a disruption in the family. Two sisters, Megan and Grace, raised under the headship of none other than Fred Phelps and Westboro Baptist Church. I read their story and my heart broke into a million pieces all over again. I shared the link with my friend, Anne, who confessed to me that she began to cry. Anne and I know all too well how hard it is to walk away from a highly controlled environment.

I shared the link with several friends on Facebook who also feel the same phantom pains ringing through their souls as they read about Megan and Grace Phelps-Roper’s departure from Westboro Baptist Church. Megan wrote her thoughts here.

My friends echo the same thoughts I have and we all wish to extend to these young women.

Megan and Grace,

You’re not alone. We understand.

And so if you were to find this and want to join a group of supportive people to walk with you through your journey. We’re here. We’re all over various Facebook groups helping one another through the journey of healing and restoration with loved ones. You are loved.

Recommended Pages

 

A word from my friend, Anne.

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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Tyranny Reigns When We Remain Silent

Fellow blogger and Christ follower, Jackson Baer, posted his coming out proclamation. His coming out announcement is about his faith in an all inclusive God. A bold move in Christianity, since the term ‘universalist’ is still so widely controversial. Rob Bell wrote about the wild concept of God’s love winning and was excommunicated by many in the Evangelical community. It seems the Evangelical church is quickly and boldly looking and sounding a lot like the government control Catholic church that Martin Luther fled from. Rachel Held Evans has made valiant declarations of what she sees wrong in Evangelicalism and has also been on the end of constant attacks from other Evangelical leaders.

field by sisterlisa, on Pix-O-Sphere
free photo source Pix-O-Sphere

In all the years I was in fundamentalism and in a relatively small town, I naively believed there was just a few denominations of Christianity. After leaving and studying outside the control of the leaders I discovered there are over 35,000 denominations. The discovery made me laugh! How dare any church and it’s leaders think they have the golden truth of truth when there is obviously a wide variety of disagreements about what the stories in the Bible actually mean.

We’re often taught in Christianity that we need to judge others by their fruit and many are pointing out the fact that some doctrines are producing rotten fruit that leads people to be abusive. In many churches that teach God’s wrath, curses, and judgment we see more testimonies of spiritual abuse that often leads to sexual abuse. With all this chaos going on, I can understand why people have had enough and are running from the church doors with no desire to go back.

But there is hope.

Jackson said,

“I am still a Christian in that Christ is my Savior though I don’t limit that saving power to only a select few.”

I shared my thoughts with several people, including my daughter who had to endure her life in strict fundamentalism. I have spoken to her many times about this since our departure and again just the other night. Even in the depths of my fundamentalist Baptist indoctrination, I held to the hope that God’s will truly was that ‘not one would perish’. My beliefs and faith included the hope that even in the last second of a person’s life, that the Holy Spirit comes to beckon them home and a God who has amazing grace, as the hymn teaches. I believed in a love so abundant and miraculous that no human would reject such a love. I believe God’s love is that powerful.

If God’s love isn’t powerful enough to win even the most sinister and cold-hearted of humans then he’s not strong enough to save anyone. If the power of the blood of Jesus really changed the maniac of Gadara then it’s powerful enough to save all. Yet, even though the Baptist tradition teaches a finality of our chances, we still get the message that God is a God of second, third, and fourth chances. As many chances as we need. He never withholds his grace for reconciliation.

Until you die, then forget it!

I just don’t believe that. Even though many Evangelicals believe in a literal tormenting fire pit, where even the most loving people will go if they don’t ‘ask Jesus to be their Savior’, I always held the hope that those Evangelicals could be wrong and God really does receive us all back into his arms.  God wanted this so much that he allowed his own Son to die to pay the price for all of humanity.

For these reasons, as well as numerous others, I understand Jackson and embrace faith in an all inclusive God.

When I ponder the history of Martin Luther and the persecution they suffered in departing from the Catholic church, I can understand why it was important for them to be bold enough to not only depart, but to say why they did.

I sense the urgency in the declarations Rachel Held Evans makes. She believes in a loving God and is re-thinking the traditional teachings of the patriarchy. Yet, she still calls herself an Evangelical, as does Rob Bell. Imagine had Martin Luther spoke so boldly and freely while staying in the Catholic church. My husband and I tried making our declarations while staying in a fundamentalist church. It didn’t go over so well. Even though we were taught that Martin Luther was brave to take a stand for what he believed, we were called rebellious for standing for what we believe.

So here’s the truth that many don’t want you to know. You don’t have to stay in a community where you’re falsely accused, belittled, or abused. No one is required to stay loyal to an ideology from tradition. None of us need to live under a label. And all of us have the right and freedom to demand a change of definition of some words.

Evangelical isn’t a word that’s owned. If you believe being an Evangelical doesn’t involve abuse, patriarchy, hierarchy, slave wives and silent children then say so! I am a firm believer in the Indwelling Christ and I reject the abuse we see in Christianity. I reject a lot of the traditional teachings of the Christianity we have seen grow here in America. When Westboro Baptist Church and Mark Driscoll says God hates us I have no problem saying, “That’s not my God!

The doctrine of eternal torment is an atrocious teaching and the fruit of following such a teaching causes people to grow arrogant and depressed. That’s not good fruit. It’s often heralded as being good for behavior modification, but behavior modification isn’t the kind of fruit that lasts. If it was, then the corrected behavior would remain solid when you tell people there is no eternal torment.

What I’ve often seen is this; people who change behavior based on eternal torment only to find out it’s not true go out and live destructively again. Sometimes that destructive lifestyle gets worse than it was the first time. A lack of belief in hell doesn’t ‘make’ people live badly. It’s what’s going on inside the person that leads them to make bad choices. The belief in hell just contains a person in double bondage. A two fold child of Gehenna. You can’t free a person by putting them in more bondage. The chains in the cemetery didn’t cure the maniac of Gadara.

Putting people in bondage is not the Gospel!

The Gospel frees us!

So why do people live destructively even when they’re told the Gospel is all inclusive?

Because they haven’t confessed the bondage they’re in. In their attempt to claim the freedom of the Gospel, they refuse to see the beam in their eye, the chains on their feet, and the straight jacket they’re still wrestling with.

Living a riotous life of drugs, alcohol, and irresponsible sex is not freedom. It’s bondage.

It doesn’t mean they aren’t loved or forgiven by God, it just means they would rather live in bondage.

They’ll live totally and truly free when their soul leaves their body, but they will have wasted their only chance at life on earth. An experience we only have one opportunity to have.

Even though many Christians despise us when we disagree with their beliefs, we have the freedom to do so. Be free to state what you believe. If you live in fear of speaking up, you’re still in bondage.

Tyranny reigns when people remain silent.

Related Articles:

When Hell Cries at Night

Julie Ferwerda Raises Hell with Orthodoxy

Hellbound?

Some thoughts on Christian Universalism

Hell is not THAT clear, or is it?

sisterlisa


Failure of the Mega Church

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