Beatitudes Community

Narnia: The Lion The Witch and the Wardrobe

As a child a favorite book of mine was The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S Lewis. It is an exciting, imaginative story set in another world which deals with trust, betrayal, hope, courage, sacrificial love and life after death. C.S Lewis created a world of talking animals, full of allegory and metaphor, which whether you hear the story as a child or an adult, offers us all insights into the nature of God.

Join us Monday June 4, 10:00AM in the Life Center when we will be showing the wonderful film adaptation of this tale. If you haven’t seen the movie, we hope that you will join us, and even if you have- come and see it again!

The film adaptation helps us to understand that God is not in our pocket, and God does not wait simply for us to make requests or commands. As people of faith, we believe in a God who is active and at work in our lives. At the end of the story, one of the characters watches Aslan the Lion (an allegory for Jesus) walk away into the distance and asks if she will ever see him again. She is told,

He’ll be coming and going. One day you’ll see him and another you won’t. He doesn’t like being tied down – and of course he has other countries to attend to. It’s quite all right. He’ll often drop in. Only you mustn’t press him. He’s wild, you know. Not like a tame lion.”

Although within, God is also set apart from our comparatively safe world. God works in ways beyond our sight and comprehension. C.S Lewis has a wonderful way of taking complex theological points, and speaking to them in ways which we can all appreciate. When the children in the story first hear that Aslan is a lion they are concerned and ask, ‘Is he safe?’

Safe?” said Mr. Beaver; “don’t you hear what Mrs. Beaver tells you? Who said anything about safe? ‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good, I tell you.”

God is neither tame nor safe, but God is good, and in this tale we are given many other insights into our relationship with God and the nature of God.

As we look around our world and see the darkness of war, areas of poverty and other world-wide problems – this tale reminds us to trust in our God who is good, our God who is neither ‘safe’ nor ‘tame’. We are reminded to look forward, in the hope that we have the courage to take risks, to make changes, to show God’s love and so to bring forward God’s kingdom in this world.

Fearfully and Wonderfully Made

fearfully-quote-psalmThere is nothing like turning to the Psalms to find eloquent, beautiful verse.  Psalm 139 is one of my favorites and the line that always rises above the rest is where the Psalmist says: “You created my inmost being; you knit me together in my mother’s womb. I praise you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14).”  Do you know that you are fearfully and wonderfully made?  Do you know the profound worth of your soul and that there is an astounding splendor in you?  Our world is populated by people of every race, status and age, all yearning to feel worth and value.  Whether an orphaned, poverty-stricken child in Africa, a prostitute in Thailand, a military officer in Russia or an executive on Wall Street – every soul searches for true significance.  Often times, however, our search leads us to all the wrong places.  We try to find our worth in economic status, acceptance by peers or a sense of special accomplishment.  Inevitably, we discover that net worth does not produce self-worth.  Acceptance by friends does not equate to well-being within.  Comparing favorably with others does not produce peace with ourselves.

St. Augustine said, “Men go abroad to wonder at the height of mountains, at the huge waves of the sea, at the long courses of the rivers, at the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars; and they pass by themselves without wondering.”  Isn’t it incredible that of the 7.4 billion people in the world, not one of us is exactly like any other?!  Some are tall. Some are short. Some are wide. Some are narrow. Some have thick hair. Some have thin hair. Some have light skin. Some have dark skin. Like snowflakes, all are unique and have been fearfully and wonderfully made by God.  Unfortunately there is a lot of money spent on changing what God has fearfully and wonderfully made. In 2015, Americans spent an unprecedented $13.5 billion dollars on cosmetic surgery.

American pop singer, Lady Gaga, says, “Baby, you were born this way.” Each and every one of you was born fearfully and wonderfully made. You carry within you something ineffable, something that Christianity names being made in the image of God, and which Buddhism names the potential Buddha-nature of all people and which is expressed in the Hindu greeting, Namaste–that which is divine in me honors what is divine in you.  Know your profound worth and recognize the divine spark in each other. *

Mother’s Feathered Friends

Dosia Carlson

Dosia Carlson—Educator, minister, and community organizer— earned a Ph.D in religion, higher education and counseling from the University of Pittsburgh. After fourteen years on the faculty at Defiance College in Ohio, she joined the staff at Beatitudes Campus. Dosia has authored several books and numerous articles. Throughout her life she has written poetry and composed hymns, many of which appeared in hymnals of various denominations. She also enjoys leading journal-writing retreats.

Just as the sun rays started breaking through my bedroom window, I heard mother calling excitedly, “Girls, get up; get up.  We have a pair of indigo buntings in the garden.”   Sister Kathy, four years my elder, and I stumbled out of bed.  In our p.j.’s we headed for the back door as quickly as our half-awake feet could carry us.  Mother was already outside, inhaling the cool air of that April morning.  Pointing her finger toward the freshly turned dirt in the garden, she  called out, “There they are.”  Kathy and I blinked at the handsome  birds. Mother explained, “The brighter one is the male.”

That sunrise experience, one of my favorites from childhood, happened in Mason City, Iowa, when I was about five years old. However, it was only one of a flock of stories related to mother’s love for birds. Often she recalled memories of being married in the garden of an Oberlin College professor.  Throughout the ceremony, a cardinal serenaded the wedding scene.  Mother had just completed a course on ornithology, so she had in-depth knowledge about many birds.  But always cardinals had a special place in her heart.

Father enjoyed telling us children about mother’s distressing experiences with pheasants.  Father was serving a church in Huron, S.D., my birthplace. During those dreadful days of dust storms and the depression, fresh meat was a luxury.  Many men of the church hunted pheasants, sometimes presenting their kill to our family.  Reportedly mother groaned when she saw friends proudly offering their gift of a dead bird.  One by one, mother removed feathers.  Only years after leaving South Dakota did she learn that there is a simple way to remove feathers and skin in one simple action.

My childhood memories of traveling in an old Ford through country roads include frequent stops to view feathered friends: meadowlarks resting on rail fences, red-wing blackbirds sitting on telephone wires, sometimes woodpeckers perched on tree trunks. “Hand me my field glasses,” Mother would request.  Satisfying smiles on her face told us children how grateful she was to see these gifts of creation.

When we moved to Toledo, Ohio, in 1938, Mother was quick to install a wren house out by the clothes lines.  Vacations at our cabin on Long Lake, Michigan, provided grand opportunities for bird watching.  Mother kept a notebook of bird sightings, always noting the date.  Her book included gold finches, many varieties of warblers and sparrows, plus dozens of other species, and Mother’s favorite, the great blue heron.  On days of calm water, Mother would  get in the boat, row into a neighboring bay and wait for her blue heron.  What a catch for her to see that giant bird plodding along the shore.

Wherever my parents lived, Mother kept her field glasses handy.  In the late 1980’s Mother and Dad moved to the Beatitudes Campus of Care.  Macular degeneration gradually destroyed her eyesight.  However, she frequently went outside, listening to surrounding sounds.   When we were together, she would enthusiastically exclaim, “Listen, I hear a mourning dove.”  And with her inner vision she was probably reviewing other feathered friends, enjoying a bird’s eye view of her life.