Skip to main content

IKEA Furniture & a Bible

I set all the pieces out in an organized fashion. I pulled at the infamous allen wrench that IKEA offers to put anything and everything together. Allen wrenches are the duct tape of IKEA: they can fix anything. So, there I sat with all my piles of pieces and then I opened my Bible for the directions.

Say what?!?!

Who would open their Bible to find directions for a piece of furniture from IKEA? I feel like this is life right now. With all its chaos and racism and craziness, I feel like I am trying to put together a piece of furniture from IKEA using directions from my Bible.

I want to beat my head against the wall. I want to throw all the pieces in the air and walk away. I want to give up. I want to yell. I am immensely frustrated while deeply committed to figuring it all out. But, the directions don't match the situation.

As Christians, we believe we should be able to open our Bibles and have all the answers. Unfortunately, God doesn't always work that way. Yes, the Bible is a road map. Story after story teaches us how to do things in a way that can elicit peace and it definitely teaches us how not to do things. I believe God allows space for us to figure it out: to make mistakes and do the wrong thing in order to learn, guide us, and grow deeper in our faith.

Oftentimes, our Bibles will not have the black and white answers for our predicaments. We don't always need the answers. We just need the love.

We are trying to put an IKEA desk together using directions from the Bible and it's not working. We need to gather our piles and listen to our friends and neighbors setting down the allen wrench. It is NOT our job to fix everything. Let me say that again, it is not our job to fix it. It is our job, however, to love.

While Jesus did perform many miracles (see: raising Lazarus from the dead), he didn't walk into every situation and fix it or put it back together. Instead, he led people to discovery. He helped open their eyes to see another side of things. He guided them to view life in a completely different way.

I think that's what we are missing these days. We are so quick to pick up that allen wrench and put things back together and that's not what's needed at the moment.

If you've ever put a piece of IKEA furniture together, you know the directions are laid out quite simply. Well, they are typically clear as mud, but, for the most part, they consist of very few words and pictures. I guess IKEA knows we are all kindergartners when it comes to putting something together. What if our current situation, the current state of our country, while immensely complicated can move towards reconciliation and healing in a simple way? I deeply believe we can and it all starts with love and listening.

We don't need to slam down a huge book of directions. We can set our allen wrenches down and stop trying to solve all the world's problems. Instead, we can pick up our hearts and open our ears to love and listen to our neighbors. We share this world. We don't stay in neatly organized piles of pieces forever. That doesn't make great furniture. Instead, all the pieces have to come together in order to create something useful.

Set down your allen wrench. Mix up your beautifully organized piles. Stop forcing the directions to match the project and just love. Listen and love. Give more grace than you can fathom because its necessary remembering you need just as much grace as the one you despise.

This world is a mess. It's difficult to understand just like the directions from IKEA. But, you have all you need right inside of you. Start with love. Start with listening and the directions will follow...naturally.

Love & Blessings,
Meg

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Notoriety

Teenage Mother A donkey owner Simon of Cyrene Who are these people? I am sure you can figure out the first one: Mary the mother of Jesus. Who are the others and what do all three of these people have in common? They all did extraordinary things but, for the most part, went unseen. Do you ever feel unseen? Undervalued? I do. I try not to get caught up in that space, but I find myself there too often. While Mary is infamous today, she wasn't when she brought the King into this world. She was a teenager who gave birth in a barn. She was an outcast who was pregnant but not married. She told of an unbelievable story involving an angel, a Spirit, and a Savior who was going to save the world. Could you even imagine? It's easy for us to be in awe of Mary. We know the whole story. She didn't. And neither did the people around her. She had to live it. To top it all off, she had to watch her beloved son die a gruesome death. Talk about feeling unseen and undervalued. She faithfu...

Holy Holy

I can't stop singing, "Holy, holy, holy is the Lord Almighty." Scott and I went to the "big" ultrasound today where we tested to see if our baby had Down's, one of the Trisomy disorders, or any neural tube defects. I must admit the palms were a little sweaty and the heart was racing a bit. As surreal as this pregnancy is, I don't want anything to be wrong with this precious life inside of me. Well, holy is right. The Lord is not just good; He is awesome! Our little baby instantly began moving and grooving for us showing off fingers and toes and a great heart beat! Even though I am on my third, watching the miracle of life on that screen NEVER gets old! It truly blows my mind every time I get to see our precious angels developing inside of me! The scan came out wonderfully. We got all positives on all the scans the doctor (who was absolutely INCREDIBLE) could do. Now we just wait for some blood work to confirm that everything is okay with our little boy. ...

Don't Lose You

When Jackson was a baby, I would hop into my car on my lunch break and rush to his day care to see him. I had thirty minutes with my baby and I needed every last second. I was a mess of a new mom and had a really hard time leaving him everyday. I was caught in the conundrum of loving teaching with all that I was and loving being a mom desperately wanting to stay home. I established a neat relationship with Jack's care-takers. They were a little older than me and much wiser. They will never fully know how appreciative I am for their advice and comfort during those beginning moments as a mama. When I decided to leave my teaching career and move halfway across the country to do so, they gave me a piece of advice that I didn't take seriously initially but now hold dear. They told me I had to find something for me. They watched me finish my master's that year and knew I was the type that needed to be doing. They recognized that I was about to enter a season where I had to hold...