Sunday, December 27, 2015

Prayer for Word-Hunger

A blogging lull, I know. My writing will be revived in time.

For now, I will share with the public a letter I just wrote to my church.  I hope it is helpful to you, too!

Thanks, Brother Trent Senske, for preaching the Word today, for stoking the fires of passion to be engaging with the Word! 

I need prayer, and we all do, that we will stay hungry for the feast of the Word.  One reason I struggle with taking in the Bible is not that I don't know how to read it, but that it is a spiritual battle for my mind and heart.  Something else is always trying to pull my desire away from the Word.

So let's fight in prayer together, brothers and sisters of Coram Deo!  Let's fight the temptation to become Word-anemic, and let us pray together that we will gorge ourselves on it daily, even hourly.  (Recall Clatterbuck's excellent sermon from Isaiah 55:  "How to Feast Well").

I have been so refreshed and blessed by two excellent resources.  I can't hold myself back from sharing them with you, church family.

One is "An Approach to Extended Memorization of Scripture" by Dr. Andrew Davis.Click Here

Last year some of us memorized Titus upon Pastor Bob's steak challenge, which is only 3 chapters.  I commend to you this form of meditation on God's Word, which is useful for moms like me, who don't have as much time to carry a Bible around or to look at an app on the phone.  Memorizing has been the hardest but richest discipline I have ever done, and oh! the rewards God has returned to me in timely moments!

The little booklet is only 99 cents, and it is a quick read to inspire, to motivate, and to teach you to memorize scripture.  If you have never memorized scripture, begin by taking the assignment to memorize Psalm 1.  It is just like training for a marathon, you actually work up to longer parts by starting with the shorter.

Second, I must share with you "Praying the Bible" by Donald S Whitney, a seminary professor in KY.Click Here

This is worth a quick sit down for one hour.  It is such a helpful and powerful way to engage the Bible and to bring vitality to my prayer life!  Ever since I read this booklet I have been praying daily through five Psalms, using the helpful method he gives.

The author quotes "the godly nineteenth-century godly Scottish pastor Robert Murray M'Cheyne...when he said, 'Turn the Bible into prayer...this is the best way of knowing the Bible, and of learning to pray.'"  Through praying the Bible we use God's language and keep our minds from wandering in prayer.

Pray that we will be a church packed with people in whom God's Word dwells richly and who delight in and meditate on His Word day and night.

Your sister,
Jessica Becker

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Parenting A Painting

"Browsing" by Terry Redlin: https://www.redlinart.com
While I rested on the peaceful grounds of the Terry Redlin Art Center in Watertown, South Dakota, I listened to an "Ask Pastor John" podcast with guest speaker Paul Tedd Tripp (episode #627).  

It was no coincidence that I soon stood captured by this painting of two deer, "Browsing", by Terry Redlin.  

Inspiration for this poem hit me hard, as the podcast and painting merged in my mind.

PARENTING A PAINTING
by Jessica Nell Becker

Parenting is a painting, a portrait of grace
Each mundane task reveals more light from Christ’s face

A child drips a blot or blemish on the canvas
A mother strokes her brush to point to what God’s plan is

Her tone of voice, her touch, her face the child to see
Displays the sovereign beauty of God’s authority

Each day, a dab of color unfolding mystery
Artwork not a hassle, but rather opportunity

An artist’s masterpiece is never finished in one day
But seizing little moments to add more strokes of grace

A tool in the Master’s hand, I form my children’s hearts
The Father dearly loves these kids, they are His work of art!

(copyright by Jessica Nell Becker 2015).


Thursday, May 28, 2015

Virtual Cars and a Verdict

“Mom, can I buy this car?”  My 7-year-old son held up the ipad to show me the fastest, most expensive race car on his virtual racing game.

“Elijah, you have to win that car; I don’t want to use real money to buy virtual cars.  They don’t even exist!”  He went away sad, and kept coming back to ask, even offering to use his birthday money to pay for it.

It boggles my mind to think of wasting real money on virtual cars!  What true pleasure is there in having the fastest and best of something so nonexistent?!

Yet, the heart of my son should not confound me, since it is the same as my own: the heart of pride.

In my last blog post, I gave myself a reading assignment:  "The Freedom of Self-Forgetfulness" by Timothy Keller.  Today, I finished the brief three-chapter booklet and was profoundly impacted.  Please add this to your reading list as well!

Using 1 Corinthians 4, Keller digs into the problem we all have: the overinflated, swollen human ego.

“Then you will not take pride in one man over against another.  For who makes you different from anyone else?  What do you have that you did not receive?  And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?”
1 Corinthians 4.6b-7

One aspect of the human ego that stood out to me was that,

“it is incredibly busy--in other words, it is always drawing attention to itself.  It is incredibly busy trying to fill the emptiness...doing two things in particular--comparing and boasting.” (Loc 149).

That is so true, isn’t it?  How often I pass by a person in the store or on the bike trail and immediately, without even thinking, make a quick judgment by comparing myself to that person.  “Am I better? thinner? more good-looking? better-dressed? less stressed? easier to like?” 

And that only takes a second.  Think of all the other time wasted by comparing ourselves to people in social media or even in church!  The time I don’t spend internally comparing myself, can be wasted in externals as well by trying to compete to make myself better in any area that I judge myself less acceptable.

This should boggle my mind!  Yet, I should not be surprised either, knowing the condition of the human heart as taught in Scripture.  

“The heart is deceitful above all things
and beyond cure.
Who can understand it?
‘I the Lord search the heart
and examine the mind' ”
Jeremiah 17.9-10a

Keller quotes C.S. Lewis “In his famous chapter on pride....
It is competitiveness that is at the very heart of pride.

‘Pride gets no pleasure out of having something, only out of having more of it than the next person.  We say that people are proud of being rich, or clever, or good-looking, but they are not.  They are proud of being richer, or cleverer, or better-looking than others” (Loc 158).

When I read this, that image of my son wanting virtual race cars popped into my memory.  It is such a picture of the human heart.  My son was not content with the basic race car, though it was fast.  He could not take pleasure in virtual racing just for the fun of it, but only unless he could have the fastest and the best.

A few weeks ago, Elijah competed in his last track and field meet.  During the previous meet he proudly won two 1st place ribbons.  Of course it is fun to win, but we all know the saying, “Winning isn’t everything.”  We may tell our kids that, but do we tell ourselves that?

When Elijah got a 2nd place and a 3rd place ribbon in the last meet, he came unglued.  He moaned in a crumpled mess on the black track completely oblivious of the fact that some kids got 4th and 5th place ribbons!  Nope, all that mattered was that he was not first. 

This perfectly portrays Keller’s point that “the ego is fragile.  That is because anything that is overinflated is in imminent danger of being deflated--like an overinflated balloon” (Loc 178).

Was Elijah trying to prove that he was someone (guys: think Rocky... “Go the distance”)?  Even though he already won two 1st place ribbons, they were not good enough, because every day the race to prove we are best starts over again.   

How can we find freedom from this prison of pride?

One man named Paul has found the secret:

“I care very little if I am judged by you or by any human court;
indeed, I do not even judge myself.
My conscience is clear,
but that does not make me innocent.
It is the Lord who judges me.”
1 Corinthians 4.3-4

Keller unpacks this profound passage:

“When he says that he does not let the Corinthians judge him nor will he judge himself, he is saying that he knows about his sins but he does not connect them to himself and his identity.... He refuses to play that game.  He does not see a sin and let it destroy his sense of identity.  He will not make a connection.  Neither does he see an accomplishment and congratulate himself....We could not be more different from Paul” (Loc 259).

I love this vision of freedom!  Paul knows he is the “chief of sinners”, and yet he knows he is not condemned, nor does he give himself any credit.  He doesn’t look to others for approval, and he doesn’t even set his own standards by which to judge himself.  Instead, he looks to the One, who is the True Judge:  the Lord Jesus.  

How is Elijah going to learn how not to come totally unraveled at getting 2nd place?  How am I going to teach him not to find his identity in his performance but to find freedom from congratulating himself for being the fastest?  Am I going to say, “Virtual cars are silly!” or will I seize the opportunity to plant Gospel seeds in his soul?

I use the illustration of Elijah because it is so much easier for me to identify sin in my offspring than in myself!  Yet when I observe these dynamics at play in a child, my own sin makes more sense.  I need to preach this to myself and to my son:

“For it is not the one who commends himself who is approved,
but the one whom the Lord commends.”
2 Corinthians 10.18

It is worth quoting Keller again, because this picture of the courtroom struck me so profoundly.  I hope it does the same for you, and even motivates you to read his whole booklet.

“What we are all looking for is an ultimate verdict that we are important and valuable.
We look for that ultimate verdict everyday in all the situations and people around us.  And that means that every single day, we are on trial.
Everyday, we put ourselves back in a courtroom....

Some days we feel we are winning the trial and other days we feel we are losing it.  But Paul says that he has found the secret.  The trial is over for him.  He is out of the courtroom.  It is gone.  It is over.  
Because the ultimate verdict is in.

He knows that they cannot justify him.
He knows that he cannot justify himself....
He says that it is the Lord who judges.
It is only His opinion that counts.
....
[In other religions] performance leads to the verdict.  Everyday you are on trial.
But Paul is saying that in Christianity the verdict leads to performance....
(Photo credit: oldbaileyonline.org)

Paul is out of the courtroom and out of the trial.  Because Jesus went on trial instead.  Jesus went into the courtroom.

“Self-forgetfulness takes you out of the courtroom.
The trial is over.
The verdict is in” (Loc 319).

“Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus....”
Romans 8.1

If I have a reader who has not looked to Christ Jesus in faith, I invite you to consider letting Him go into the courtroom on your behalf so you don’t have to endure the prison of pride or the duty of defending yourself every day.  

If you are like me, already in Christ, but you still struggle with self-forgetfulness, I invite you to pray with me:

Jesus, 

Teach me to preach the Gospel to myself every day and in on the spot moments.  When I am tempted to defend myself or compare myself to others for a verdict or to judge myself by my own standards, please remind me that You are the Judge.  Holy Spirit, I give you permission to ask me: “What are you doing in the courtroom, Jessica?  You should not be in here!  Court is adjourned!”  Thank you, Jesus, that you have gone into the courtroom on my behalf for defense of my sin and so that I can be free from condemnation and self-congratulation.  Help me think of myself less and exalt you more, Jesus!

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Chasing Rabbits

Of our 4 kids, Emily loves dogs the most.  Since she sleeps with a stuffed cow, fondly called “dow”, she thinks all dogs are the same as cows.  After all, dogs, like cows, are cute and furry with four legs and a tail!  The other boys like to point out dogs to her, “Emily, oohh--ohh!! Dow!”, and if we see a dog at a park, Emily must meet him!

Today Pastor Bob told about his own dog, and how he trained his dog from the early years to “sit”, “stay” and “heel”.  He pointed out the beauty of a self-controlled dog like his, who can walk obediently beside him through the neighborhood without a leash.  

There is only one problem with his dog’s desire to heel beside Pastor Bob: his love for chasing rabbits!  
What rabbits are you chasing??

If there is even one rabbit, suddenly the lesser desire of obeying his master gets overruled by his greater desire to chase that bunny.

This is a picture of us when it comes to self-control.  

“Self-control is easy when displayed against lesser desires, but hard when tested against greater and stronger desires” (@bobthune).

Proverbs 25.28
“Like a city whose walls are broken down 
is a man who lacks self-control”

The question:

“What’s the rabbit in your life??”

Woah!  This is a hard one, Pastor Bob!  

What am I tempted to chase after?  

What desires do I have that should be secondary to my desire to glorify God?

Is it gluttony? exercise and body image? consumerism and shopping?  work? leisure? entertainment? lust? fame? power? influence? significance and being known? pleasing others? being in control?

As I consider these possibilities, my awareness of my sin gets deeper when Pastor Bob points out:

At the root of all “rabbits” I am tempted to chase after, is one thing:
SELF

Why do I struggle with self-control so much!?  Because the problem is not control....it is self.  

The problem with trying to suffocate my desires by myself is that my power of will alone falls short.  

“We don’t need greater control, but less self” (@bobthune).

Oh no!  How am I going to think of myself less and desire God more?

“All the will-power in the world can’t ‘un-self’ you.  Only Jesus Christ can do that” (@bobthune).

“What a wretched [wo]man I am!  Who will rescue me from this body of death?  Thanks be to God--through Jesus Christ our Lord!”  Romans 7.24-25

The good news in the Gospel sets me free from this idol of self, and points me to the source of true life: our Lord Jesus.

How do I disempower self??

Answer:  

“Trust in Jesus!  Jesus came to un-self us...to invite us out of ourselves and INTO HIM!” (@bobthune).

Jesus gives us the power of a greater love, the power of new primary desires.  

Whereas my primary desires are usually self-motivated, Jesus gives me a new desire to love and worship Him that surpasses anything else.

“You have made known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand.”
Psalm 16.11

Jesus,

I confess that I have often turned to pleasures other than you, and I have not turned to you to find the path of life.  

I am grieved at my sin of self-focus and self-righteousness, self-interest, and self-will.

I repent that I have too often tried to detour away from You on “bunny trails” rather than in contentedly walking the narrow road beside my Master.  

I admit that I run to false idols in order to find a savior and refuge, and yet I know these do not free me and do not fill me.  They promise me what they can’t deliver.

I declare that there is no other God besides You!

“No, there is no other Rock; I know not one.

All who make idols are nothing,
and the things they treasure are worthless”
Isaiah 44.8-9

I embrace the truth about you, Jesus, that you are a better Savior and you can do what all the other idols fail to do.

Thank you for freeing me to indulge less in myself and more in You, Jesus!  


Oh Lord, help me to delight in obeying you and walking beside you more than any competing desire or distraction!  

Thank you for changing my desires to love You supremely as my Master, and weakening my desire to chase rabbits so that I can "heel" by your side no matter what bunnies of this world try to attract my heart.

I walked down the aisle to receive the bread and wine for communion.  As I dipped the bread, reminding me of the body of Christ broken for me, the brother said these powerful yet simple words:

“Christ’s blood sets us free from idols.”

May this be my life prayer:

“He must become greater; I must become less”

John 3.30


Thursday, April 30, 2015

Weeding and Work

I lived with a cement yard, cement walls, metal gates and barbed wire for nearly a decade.  Of course there are positives: no mowing, the kids can ride bikes and draw chalk, and we are gated in for safety.

Now, however, I am blessed with a huge green yard with wonderful plants and beautiful flowers.  It is so refreshing not to look up at the sky through barbed wire, and not to feel closed in and trapped with cement walls.

I even enjoy weeding the dandelions that pop their yellow heads up.  It is therapeutic for me to work my hands in the soil and to be in God's peaceful creation.

One problem with my love for weeding is when I drive by other people's yards with TONS of dandelions!  I get almost a compulsive urge to jump out of the car and start weeding all that I see, until I realize that I still have not finished my own yard!

Last week at church, Chris H preached a sermon on Titus 2.9-10 regarding work.  

Work:  Mundane, average, boring work.

I applied his sermon to my role in the home and in mothering, though we all have various areas of work  we are responsible for.

I sometimes struggle with that feeling of insignificance and boredom, thinking that nurturing small kids is mundane and unnoticed work.  I also struggle with comparing myself to other women, especially now that I am in the USA.  

When I lived overseas, I never had the option of earning money outside the home or pursuing a career in something that I could gain a name for myself.  But now I definitely feel the strong pull, both from the culture and from within myself, to try to find my worth and significance in something outside the home.  This is the first time I can decide, "Maybe I should get a job that pays," or "Maybe I could do something else that I like more than wiping oatmeal and syrup off the table…" or "Maybe I should be doing something more meaningful like writing books!"

None of those things are bad (working outside the home, getting paid, or writing books).  

But what IS bad is if I am trying to find my identity and significance in what I do, rather than in WHO I am and WHOSE I am.

Identity first: 
"So God created man in his own image,
In the image of God he created him;
male and female he created them…"
Genesis 1.27

Work follows:

"The Lord God took the man
and put him in the
Garden of Eden
to work it, and take care of it…"
Genesis 2.15

Preacher Chris H. asked: "Is my motivation for work to find my identity?"

Tough question!  Scary to consider honestly.  

I remembered the dandelions.  

When I see other people's yards full of weeds and wish to pull them out myself, it is the same as when I compare myself to other people's assignments.  If I want their job, or their kids, or their life, or their career…then I am not content with the assignment God gave me.  

I am reminded that God gave me my own little piece of the earth to cultivate and make flourish: not just my yard, but these 4 kids and this particular husband.  This is my assignment from Him, not something else.

I want to find motivation to work faithfully as a wife and a mother from my identity as a worshiper….so that my work is my worship offering to the Lord.

The Gospel frees me to bring glory to God in my work, and not to compare myself to others.  

The Gospel frees me to find my identity in Christ as a daughter and an heir of the promises, not in what I do (or don't do).

The Gospel frees me to cultivate the plot of garden God has given me, including our home and our children, for flourishing, not frustration.  

"Let us not become weary in doing good,
for at the proper time
we will reap a harvest
if we do not give up."
Galatians 6.9

Thursday, April 23, 2015

2 Messengers: A Snake and A Cardinal

We had another conflict.  Some sinful patterns of the past were creeping back in to our Sunday morning routine.

I decided to drive to church alone with the kids.

A providential "prophet" slithered past Nate's gaze as he put his shoes on downstairs.  How could the timing of this snake be so precise?  Just when sin was creeping around, so was this messenger.

The irony was not missed by Nate.  He hastened to shut the door to the laundry room and block the crack, so the snake wouldn't escape during church.  Similarly, our conflict was put on hold and shut into a vault as a holding pattern during church.

"Be self-controlled and alert.  Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion [or a slithering snake] looking for someone to devour.  Resist him, standing firm in the faith."  1 Peter 5.8-9a


It was hard for me to sing.  I sat alone in the back corner of the service, pouring my prayers and heart out to God.  How would we get through this day?

The sermon was on Titus 2.3-5, which I had recently memorized.

"…younger women…love [your] husbands and children…"

Just when I was wanting to fly away from my nest…
Just when I was struggling so much to care for my children, when I needed someone to care for me…
Just when I was fighting against not wanting to love my husband…

Pastor Bob set me free when he reminded me of my identity in Christ:

"Before you're a woman, you're a worshiper."

"Husbands and children: the raw material for discipleship."

These marital conflicts are opportunities to see God's grace at work, to be refined in faith, and to worship Him more deeply.

Our church community walked with us through that struggle.  A pastor, an accountability partner, a friend….they met us there in the halls of grace.

Hours later, Nate went home on a mission…determined to hunt and kill that snake...

"that ancient serpent called the devil, or Satan, who leads the whole world astray." Revelation 12.9

"For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God….Put to death therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature…" Colossians 3.3 & 5

Amazingly, that same afternoon I lifted the curtain to my bedroom window and discovered a female northern cardinal had built her nest in the branches of the shrub!

Was that just a coincidence?!  Certainly it was another messenger sent to teach me something beautiful.

A loving mama bird, huddled down in her nest, covering her baby eggs...content and singing.

"How often does that mama leave her nest?"  I wondered.  "What makes her sing?"

I knew God was reminding me that He called me to this family, to this nest, and to loving my husband and children.  He had made me first a worshiper of Jesus, and in that identity I can sing his grace.

"Forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. 
Forgive as the Lord forgave you…
sing…
with gratitude in your hearts to God."
Colossians 3.13 & 16

The red cardinal, my mate Nate, flew to me, and together we sang God's praise.

*This post was published with Nate's approval & permission =)

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

A Tulip In Bloom


I was a tropical flower, cut down and wilted.

I was shipped to a new country, where I could not be transplanted.  This tropical flower would bloom no more.

"BUT because of his great love for us,
GOD, who is rich in mercy, made us alive…"
Ephesians 2.4

Summer of 2014, I was a lone foreign flower in a sun-scorched land.  I felt like I would never find roots, never bloom again.

"The Lord will guide you always;
he will satisfy your needs in a sun-scorched land
and will strengthen your frame.

You will be like a well-watered garden,
like a spring whose waters never fail."
Isaiah 58.11

God's Word was the rain, and I was a new bud.

"As the rain and the snow
come down from heaven,
and do not return to it
without watering the earth
and making it bud and flourish…
so is my word that goes out from my mouth:
It will not return to me empty,
but will accomplish what I desire."
Isaiah 55.10-11

The Gardener tilled the soil of my heart, and planted something new within.

Seasons changed.  Summer.  Autumn.  Winter.

Then, suddenly something green began to emerge from the bare brown ground.

Evidence of Grace.  Life Renewed.

A tulip bright and colorful bloomed, bringing hope.  A testimony of faithfulness, of healing.

"But blessed is the man who trusts
in the LORD,
whose confidence is in him.

He will be like a tree planted by the water
that sends out its roots by the stream."

Jeremiah 17.7-8

Prayer of my heart:

Faithful Gardener,
I give you thanks that "a bruised reed you will not break" (Is. 42.3).
Thank you for life and hope, despite darkness and winter.
Thank you for healing and renewal, in spite of brokenness and hurt.
Thank you for strength and faith, in the midst of pain and trials.
Thank you for your Word, which watered my soul.
Make me a well-watered garden that bears much beauty for your glory.

"I am the true vine, and my Father is the gardener….
every branch that does bear fruit, 
he prunes so that it will be even more fruitful." John 15.1-2

Post-script:

I blogged for nearly a decade, from 10.02.04 to 05.13.14, at Beautiful Becker Feet.  That blog remains as a history book for reference and reflection.

A college professor once said to me: "When you are in the middle of something, be slow to put out words during that time."  I took his advice, and refrained from blogging lest I hurt or harm others in my pain.

My passion for writing had begun to burn inside me again, but I had been waiting until I had it "together" to begin blogging again.

Then one day my counselor said to me:
"Let them see your cracks, so God's glory will shine brighter."

I am still not all sorted and together.  I am still on the journey.  But perhaps at this point I can invite you in to what I am learning.  Maybe someday I will go back to retell what God did during those 11 silent months on the blog.

But for now, I offer you my cracks, and a chance to bend down and smell…
A Tulip in Bloom!

"But we have this treasure in jars of clay to show that this all-surpassing power is from God and not from us."  2 Cor. 4.7