Mary DeMuth
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Jesus: homely, yet irresistible?

Jesus: homely, yet irresistible?

by Mary | Find joy today, Kingdom Uncaged

This morning I read Isaiah 53, one of many, many times I’ve read that passage. But this time, one verse struck me: “My servant grew up in the Lord’s presence like a tender green shoot, like a root in dry ground. There was nothing beautiful or majestic...

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I’m painting my 2024 calendar over the next two I’m painting my 2024 calendar over the next two weeks with the theme of healing. The passages come from my devotional with @harvesthousepublishers entitled Healing Every Day. It’s my hope that these scriptures and images create metaphors of healing from the past pain you walked through. 

Sometimes I need a picture to help me think of what life can be like after I’ve walked through a season of healing. 

God will bring fruit from hard times. The land of grief is dark and difficult, but God does his best work through decay and pain. 

This scripture comes from Joseph’s naming of his second son Ephraim, which means fruitfulness in grief. Joseph endured betrayal, abandonment, slavery, wrongful imprisonment, and grief, and yet God used all of it to flourish him.

I pray that for you, too, friend.
When someone hurts you, you can't control what the When someone hurts you, you can't control what the person will do or say (or whether they'll threaten or abandon), but you always, always have access to God. 

Remember, God IS a relationship. He is Father, Son and Spirit in one person. He created humankind because of the beauty and glory of relationship. Who better to come alongside us when our relationships sour than the One who perfected relationship in Himself?

This throne we approach is a throne of grace, not condemnation. 

If you're particularly hurt by a condescending person, you can run to the One who understands and offers affectionate grace. You have complete access to God, and you have the power to pray at any moment, even quietly under your breath during an argument. Here are some of the prayers I've prayed during relational difficulties.

Jesus, help me listen better and not react with a mean spirit. Keep me from retaliating in kind.

Jesus, I need to know You see me in the midst of this conflict. Am I going crazy?

Jesus, I choose to forgive again. Empower me.

Jesus, show me whether I should pull away or pursue reconciliation right now.

Jesus, I'm hurting. Can you bring new bits of healing to my heart?

Jesus, I don't know what to say. Give the words I can say that will bring the most understanding.

Jesus, I'm confused. Bring clarity.

Jesus, help me to see the long view of this.

Jesus, help me to hold my tongue.

Jesus, help me to hear what is being said behind my friend's emotion.

Praying rightly puts the burden onto God's capable shoulders. Your heart and mind aren't meant to carry all that heartache around. 

I worry that many who are reading this are carrying something God never intended them to carry. 

Let go. 

Place your broken relationship in the hands of Jesus. This is the one thing you CAN control.
In my book, The Most Misunderstood Women of the Bi In my book, The Most Misunderstood Women of the Bible, I had the privilege of highlighting many women who had been seldom preached about, preached out poorly (Bathsheba is not a temptress), or never ever studied. The Bible is populated by extraordinary women—something I learned when I started the practice of rapid reading the Bible in two or three months.

But even more neglected, it seems, are women in church history. Most likely this is because a great majority of writing on these histories comes from Western men. (We also don’t hear a lot of non-Western church mothers and fathers as well).

As you know, I teach a writing intensive outside of Geneva at @YwamBurtigny every year, and each year we do a Reformation Tour in Geneva. When you come to the reformation wall, you see these gigantic Sarumen-like statues of the reformers looming over you. After seeing them several times, I began to feel lonely. Were there only men in this movement? 

And that’s when I discovered Marie Dentiere on a random monolith many paces away from the looming stares of the reformers. She’s the only woman in this garden. She came from Belgium, married a young priest, and preached about the tenets of the reformation. Apparently, she even spoke of the importance of women playing a role in the church (something that was not popular, unsurprisingly). 

So I snapped this shot. Marie et Mary, both hoping, no doubt, to make a difference in the lives of others. 

I believe we’ll be very surprised in the New Heavens and the New Earth. Those with platforms or statues may end up paling in comparison to those who quietly carried out the work of the gospel. I think it will be much like Jesus’ upside down acknowledgements—he went out of his way to dignify and platform the marginalized, the broken, the unseen, the hurting—many of whom were women. 

Women do matter in the kingdom of God. And our contributions are seen by the One who matters.
Sometimes we need reminded of good news, of restor Sometimes we need reminded of good news, of restored relationship, of sins forgiven. I know I do. Here’s a prayer for you to start your work week with intention and joy.
For those new to following, here are some random f For those new to following, here are some random facts about me:

I hate coffee. Blech. 

My 47th book releases this fall about reading the Bible in 90 days. 

I have three amazing adult kids, @sophiedemuth @aidandemuth & @juliademuth24 

I have (barely) climbed one fourteener. 

I overthink (ruminate) when a relationship breaks. 

I love Jesus. 

I have dreamed of opening a bakery!

I love vegetable gardening. 

I am a literary agent of 35 authors. 

I have a girl cat named Boo Radley. 

I wanted to be a singer when I grew up. (I did lead worship when we lived in France). 

I speak French-ish. 

Despite the carbs, I still really love spaghetti. 

I’ve done sprint triathlons and a half marathon (all were hard, and I was happy just to finish). 

I love to pray for others. 

I am a survivor of much, including sexual abuse, neglect, trauma, parental death, and too much to articulate. 

I make a lot of mistakes. 

I watch true crime because for whatever odd reason, I am trying to figure out the mind of my deceased father. I still haven’t had an Aha about him, though. 

Relational wounds are so hard for me to get over. 

I’m growing disillusioned about the mega church model. 

I have never taken an art class. 

I am happily married to Patrick for 32.5 years. 

I keep watching Hillsong documentaries, and I keep getting angry on behalf of the broken. 

I’m 56 years old. 

I love to preach. 

Raspberries off the vine delight me. 

I wonder if I am making a kingdom impact. I think about this often. 

I don’t like conflict, and I default to fawning (apologizing even when I didn’t do anything wrong) to keep the peace. I’ve lately learned this is a common trauma response.

I enjoy cooking for others. 

I am humbled you’ve read this weird list, and I am so grateful for you.
“Should I write that person a letter?” I aske “Should I write that person a letter?” I asked my husband.

“Why?”

“I feel bad that we are estranged. Maybe there was something else I could do.”

“You’ve done all you could,” he said. “They are unsafe. Do you really want to open yourself back up to someone who doesn’t really like you?”

He was right, of course. 

I used to measure the efficacy of my forgiveness with whether or not reconciliation happened. That made me do all sorts of emotional gymnastics, even apologizing for things I didn’t do just so there’d be “reconciliation.” Except that when I did that, I became more doormat than friend.

There are some irreconcilable relationships—even if you’ve done the hard work of forgiveness. If the other person places 100% of the blame on you, never owns what they said or did, and acted harmfully (consistently) toward you, if they continue to harm others without remorse, if they demonize you, if they relentlessly judge or demean you, it’s simply not wise to enter back in.

Choose to forgive, but in that forgiveness, don’t turn off your discernment or wisdom.

If in doubt, ask a very close friend what you should do. They see the situation more clearly, like my husband did for me.

When you choose forgiveness, you simply open the door for the possibility of reconciliation, but it is never a guarantee.
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