The Parable of the Teacup

My husband’s mother was diagnosed with breast cancer when Charles was a teenager.  She underwent a radical mastectomy that affected the nerves in her arm and hand and she lost sensation and mobility enough that she was always afraid of using or handling the fine china and crystal stemware she had collected from the time she was a young bride for fear she would break them.  When I met her in the late 70’s, one of her only regrets in life was the fact that she had not utilized her fine dishes more.

Today, I began my feeble attempt of spring cleaning (as I do every year), and one of my dreaded chores is pulling all my fine china out of my display cabinet to dust them.  Unfortunately I have not taken the advice she gave me those many years ago to use the dishes.  “Don’t worry if you break a piece!” she said.  “You can replace it, just use them all, because one day when you really might like to have tea in one of those beautiful cups, you won’t be able to…like me.”

After my father-in-law’s passing last year, a few of Laura’s china teacups were passed on to me and as I lovingly but carefully dusted them, I thought about how amazingly durable these “fragile” cups actually were.  They had survived numerous trips across Canada.  My father-in-law was in the air force so the family had moved many times before settling in Comox.  My husband and his brother were known for their rough-housing and that china cabinet had on more than one occasion been bumped into and dishes rattled from boys at play.  They had survived yet another move last year, jostled and jolted in the back of a trailer through the Rockies to our home here in Cochrane.  Even as I was pondering on that, one of the cups slipped from my hand and bumped on the table.  Gasping, I feared the worst, but surprisingly the delicate cup was intact.

It reminded me of my young friend who got a very interesting tattoo many years ago.  Not that I’m a fan of tattoos in general, but as she explained why she got a small teacup tattooed onto her hip, I couldn’t help but be intrigued.  “The teacup,” she said, “symbolizes “womanhood”…delicate and fragile but also strong and durable.”  She wanted to remember throughout her lifetime that she not only wanted to be treated with respect and sensitivity because of her natural feminine nature, but to remember that she had strength and durability to overcome any trials and hardship that may come her way.

My mother-in-law, Laura was the epitome of that analogy.  A Proverbs 31 woman in every aspect,  she had a delicate nature, yet she had outstanding strength and durability to battle cancer bravely.  She led many people to the Lord right up until her passing in 1981.  She left a Godly legacy to each one of her three children and her Godly influence continues to impact our family today.

So I am taking a little break right now doing something I have not done in years.  I am brewing a pot of tea and I’m using one of Laura’s teacups.  It’s about time.

I Peter 5:7  “Casting all your care upon Him; for He careth for you.”

He is the Potter, I am the clay.

The Parable of the Teacup“.

There was a couple who used to go to shop in beautiful antique stores.  One day the woman saw a beautiful china teacup.  She picked it up to admire it and was startled when the teacup suddenly spoke to her.

“I see that you admire my fine china quality and rich design.”  Notice the intricacy of my pattern, the gentle curve of my handle.  I am indeed a treasure but you may not fully understand how I came to be this beautiful teacup.”  It said.  “I wasn’t always a teacup, in fact there was a time when I was just a red clay ball.  My master took me and rolled me and patted me over and over and I yelled out, ‘Let me alone.’  But he only smiled, ‘Not yet.’

“Then I was placed on a spinning wheel,” the teacup said, “and suddenly I was spun around and around and around.  ‘Stop it!  I’m getting dizzy!’  I screamed.  But the master only nodded and said, ‘Not yet.’

“Then he put me in the oven.  I’d never felt such heat!  I wondered why he wanted to burn me.  I yelled!  I knocked at the door!  I could see him through the opening and I could read his lips as he shook his head, ‘Not yet.’

“Finally the door opened, and he put me on the shelf and I began to cool.  ‘Ahhh, that’s better,’ I said.  Then he brushed me and painted me all over.  The fumes were horrible.  I thought I would gag.  ‘Stop it!  Stop it!’ I cried.  He only nodded, ‘Not yet.’

“Then suddenly he put me back into the oven, not like the first one.  This was twice as hot and I knew I would suffocate.  I begged.  I pleaded.  I screamed.  I cried.  All the time I could see him through the opening saying, ‘Not yet’.

“Then when I thought I knew there wasn’t any hope.  I thought I would never make it.  I was ready to give up, the door opened and he took me out and placed me on the shelf.  One hour later, he held me in his strong hand and he smiled as he handed me a mirror and said, ‘Look at yourself!’ and I did, and I said, ‘That’s not me, that couldn’t be me!  It’s beautiful.  I’m beautiful!”

“My master held me delicately as he explained, “I know it hurt you to be rolled and patted, but if I just left you as a red clay ball you would have dried up.  I know it made you dizzy to spin around on the wheel, but if I had stopped, you would have crumbled.  I know it hurt you and it was hot and disagreeable in the oven, but if I hadn’t put you there, you would have cracked.  I know the fumes were bad when I brushed and painted you all over, but if I hadn’t done that, you never would have hardened.  You would not have had any colour in your life, and if I hadn’t put you back in that second oven you would not have survived for very long because the hardness would not have held.  Now you are a finished product.  You are what I had in mind when I first began with you.”

“Then the master heated a cup of boiling water and put some tea leaves in me, and as he poured boiling water into me, the splendid aroma wafted up to him and he smiled, and I could tell he was well pleased with me.”

 

Posted in Family Life, Inspiration & Devotion, Proverbs 16:9 - Journey Thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Just Making Excuses

no-excusesI thought I’d heard everything.  I was wrong.  Yet another Hollywood couple bites the dust but instead of calling it what it really is, Gwyneth calls it a “conscious uncoupling“.  Ahhhh…so that’s what the politically correct term for divorce is now.  I learn something new everyday.

Then there’s the sudden about-face at the World Vision headquarters.  First they’re okay with hiring gays and then they’re not.  Huh?  For an organization that claims to be founded on Biblical principles why did they even wade into this kind of controversy in the first place?  Oh, I know why…money!  Call it what it is.  Being pro-gay is big business right now.  However, when the backlash from their biggest supporters…conservative Christians… threatened the financial bottom-line of the organization they had no choice but to overturn the decision.  They would have lost more money than they would have gained.  It was a simple business decision not a return to Biblical principles.

I wish people would just be open and honest.  Call it what it is.  When a marriage falls apart it’s because two people have given up on their relationship.  It’s a tragedy.  It’s a heart-wrenching decision that will have life-long ramifications not only for the couple but for their children and other family members.  Don’t make light of tragedy or make up every excuse in the world to lessen the impact.  It’s divorce!

It’s this callous approach to ending what is supposed to be a life-long commitment to one another that is causing young people to abandon marriage entirely.  More and more young adults including Christian young adults are saying “No” to marriage and “Yes” to living together.  Why?   It’s easier to leave when there is no formal covenant made.  They can just walk away from relationships.  It’s the easy way out.

Are you kidding me?  It is just another excuse to turn their back on God.  Talk about a “conscious uncoupling”!  Call it what it is.

When another “Christian” organization bows to societal pressure to abandon it’s principles to make sure its “bottom-line” is stable, we should cry out in indignation.  It is a “conscious uncoupling” of a different sort.  I wonder how many other organizations who once claimed to be founded on Biblical principles will “consciously uncouple” from obeying God’s Word so they will be more politically correct (and more financially stable) in society?

Let’s face it.  We’re just making excuses.  Call it what it is.  It’s SIN.

Don’t sugar coat the word: SIN.

One day we will all be called to answer for our SIN.

We won’t be able to make up excuses then.

John 9:31 “We know that God does not listen to sinners. He listens to the godly person who does his will.”

Here is another great article on the topic: http://mikeblackaby.com/2014/03/27/conscious-uncoupling/  Well said, Mike!

 

 

 

 

 

 

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My Current Work in Progress

567532_14597581-prn01_lzI came into this blog hop a little late.  Seems like I’ve been doing things a little late for quite some time now.  I’ve been behind “the 8 ball” for most of this past year and that’s why I just had to add my two cents to this blog hop organized by some amazing writers from InScribe.

I don’t have a current work in progress…I AM the work in progress!

This past year I’ve learned that there is so much more to being a writer than actually writing.  Did I actually say that?  It’s true.  In 2010 and the three years that followed, all I thought about was writing and publishing my Wounded Trilogy books.  I was so all consumed with that project I forgot I had a family who needed my attention more than my novel needed another edit.  I forgot that I needed to eat and get much needed sleep…instead of the unhealthy snacks I munched on while I tap tapped on the keyboard in the wee hours of the morning, causing my son much grief because my office was right next to his bedroom.  If I didn’t sleep, he didn’t either.  Sorry Brett.  I forgot that I had a life away from a computer.

I stopped volunteering.  I stopped going to Bible Studies.  I stopped being productive in anything else except what I was accomplishing on my manuscripts.  I loved what I was doing but at what cost?

So this past year, I have made a concerted effort to NOT take on another book project.  I blog.  It’s fun, it’s rewarding and though at times time-consuming, I’m on my own deadline and I write when I can (and not in the middle of the night) and I try not to create pressure upon myself to meet certain deadlines.  It’s been wonderful to write about what I’m truly passionate about: my faith and my family!

This past year:

I’ve hugged on my grandbabies…a lot!

I’ve spent quality time going on shopping trips and lunch dates with my children.

I’ve talked to my husband and not laced every conversation with wanting his input on another plot line or character development for another one of my stories.  I’ve enjoyed our being empty nesters and going away on trips together and going “media free” and not being guilty about not connecting and marketing every day on social media.

I’ve gone back to teaching Junior High, and spending time with students who challenge me and bless me every single day in the classroom.

So, I AM my current work in progress.  Oh, I still write, but I’m not making it the priority this year.  I have to keep working on this current project (me) a little longer.

 

 

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