Shepherds Mustn’t Over Protect Sheep

Some time ago I found myself debriefing a couple who were working in a southern African country. He is a doctor and servicing a small hospital in a remote area.

After they had shared some of their experiences with me I asked him to tell me what a day at the hospital looked like. This is how he responded:

“Into the hospital around 7 or 8. Dead baby. Dead baby. Woman with AIDs, infected by her husband or another man, who knows. Dead baby. Triage for a number of people in a car accident. Maybe a scheduled surgery. Then maybe home for lunch around 1 or 2. I would sit down for lunch and then I’d hear wailing from the hospital and think, ‘Bed number 3 must have died.'”

I was stunned, though did not show it. He shared how he used to come home at meals and the evenings (their home was on the hospital grounds) and he would sit in a chair and just stair into space. After a while he knew he needed help and his organization did a marvelous job of getting help to him. He found he was depressed and had been working to address that the past year. He was definitely in better shape when he came through the debriefing, yet their life was demanding. With a young family and ever being on call, margins were slim to none. The wife was an absolute gem,  she loved Africa, loved her life, and her marriage. They are a stellar couple.

After we had processed life and the impact over several days we began to speak in terms of a more sustainable model of life and work. At one point he began to cry. I let him sit with his tears for a while. Finally he said, “I am so afraid someone’s going to tell me something is wrong with me and I cannot go back. There is nothing else I want to do than serve those people in that place.”

What was I to tell him? That his life is way too broken and the demands way too unrealistic and the flow of dead babies would never end and he will eventually crash so he is crazy to go back? Of course not. This is where God sends his people – into broken places with broken systems and oppressive elements to proclaim Him and lay their lives down for others.

My responsibility as a shepherd was to not tell him it was too hard. My responsibility is to offer guidance that would help them consider ways and means to grow in resiliency and personal vibrancy as they follow God in a profoundly demanding and sacrificial work.

And so it is for all of us. I tell this story briefly, leaving out many elements of our conversation to simply make a point. One of the roles of a shepherd is to protect the sheep. But that must not move into over-protection. The fact remains God calls his people to harsh places that will cost them much, sometimes their very lives. Jesus told us that in a number of places in the Gospels and the Apostles affirmed it in many of their writings. No, shepherds are to care for sheep, resource them, guide them, equip them to live and serve well in such harsh places. And we shepherds must be willing to go after the sheep to provide care for them on-site in such harsh places as well. Of course, I do not mean to over-simplify, there are so many variables and nuances to every single story. But in general, we want to guard against over-protection.

How are you running into this tension in your care of others?

Posted in Shepherding Well | 1 Comment

Rest Revisited: What Does it Look Like?

“Ya, Jesus is our rest, that’s all good. But what do I do?”
This might be a common response to a post like a previous one on rest. If you have not read that post, please do so.

As I stated in that posting, rest is a Person. Jesus is our Rest. This is about relationship not merely an experience nor a removal of yuck stuff in life. A more tactile question might be: “How do I experience rest?” Which is to ask, how do I grow in my communion with Jesus?

Spiritual Practices Come into PlayIMG_6480
We have to keep first things first. Our habitual response when life is not going well is to ask, what is wrong with me (or God)? What do I need to do? I’ve got to figure this out!

All such questions and statements place our gaze firmly upon ourselves and breed fear and doubt. And so we resolve once again to pray harder, try harder and believe more. However, we will struggle to find rest in our best efforts, for rest is found in a Person not our efforts. Jesus is our rest. He rests in us. He invites us to enter into his rest.

“Come to Me.”
Jesus says to all of us weary souls, “Come to me.”

Spiritual practices are our responses to that invitation. They facilitate permitting the Spirit to draw us deeper into communion with Jesus. The key is the focus is not on my efforts, but allowing these practices to turn our gaze toward Christ. Here are a few examples.

Taking Sabbath seriously is a way of accepting the invitation to come to Jesus. One day a week we cease and desist from anything that even smells of work. This is not a day off after a hard week’s work. No, it is the day of the week we delight ourselves in the Lord which will inform and shape the next 6 days of the week. As I allow Jesus to teach me to rest in him on Sabbath, he will teach me to carry rest (i.e. him) into my demanding work days.

During each of those work days, I maintain a sabbath-posture by responding to his invitation to come to him through other practices. These vary for each of us. We must have alone time with him (solitude, silence, stillness) each day. For it is there we are taught to rest in him. Occasionally, like monthly, we seek more extended times of solitude with him (this emulates Jesus’ modeling to us. See Luke 5:15-16). We linger in his word – no hit and run snacks here – true lingering on a regular basis to be fed by he who is the Bread of Life. We make time to enter into small groups of community. All such practices make space for us to be receptive and responsive to him.

Back to the Beginning Again
So yes, our spiritual practices do play a role in rest. But what I do is not the rest, Jesus is my rest. My spiritual practices are merely deliberate choices on my part to come to him.

Caution in Shepherding
As shepherds we want to pay attention to what we direct others to do when they come to us with their struggles. We want to avoid “casting them back on themselves again” (a phrase I learned from James Torrence). We do not counsel people to double down in their efforts. We bring Jesus to them and direct their gaze from themselves back to Jesus.  It is wise to be mindful that others may need some coaching or spiritual direction in how this looks in the specific context they find themselves in.

What are you seeing in your shepherding work regarding the place of spiritual practices amongst global workers?

Posted in Living Wisely, Personal Vitality, Shepherding Well, Spiritual Vitality | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Shepherd’s Shout Out: Velvetashes.com

A FANTASTIC RESOURCE FOR WOMAN WORKING CROSS-CULTURALLY

FullSizeRender

Velvetashes.com is a creative, attractive site packed with resources, encouragement, and ways to connect with others.

Head on over and check it out.

Well done Velvet Ashes Ladies!

Posted in Resources | Tagged , , | 2 Comments

What is the Rest that Jesus Offers?

Familiar Passage, But Clearly Understood?
A few weeks ago I spoke at the annual Mental Health and Missions Conference. I was asked to speak on the integrated life of the care giver. In my preparation I learned that the English word for integration is sourced in the Latin integratio which means “renewal, refreshment.” I found that fascinating. My reflections led to a familiar passage in Matthew 11.  Matthew 11:28-30 is an oft quoted passage, especially Eugene Peterson’s more recent swing on the text:

“Are you tired? Worn out? Burned out on religion? Come to me. Get away with me and you’ll recover your life. I’ll show you how to take a real rest. Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace….” (Mt 11:28-29 MSG)

Yet, when I read commentary on this text in various spiritual formation books, I am not sure I am any clearer on what the rest is Jesus is offering. Usually I am encouraged to take more time in silence and solitude or something along those lines. Are the spiritual practices themselves the rest? Does rest mean that the chaos of my personal life will ease? And what is it I am to learn of Jesus – simply to work smarter? Or to work less?IMG_0213

Interesting that Matthew 11:28-30 is but the second half of a paragraph. The section actually begins in verse 25:

“At that time Jesus said, ‘I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little children.Yes, Father, for this is what you were pleased to do. All things have been committed to me by my Father. No one knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the Son and those to whom the Son chooses to reveal him. Come to me…..'”

Obviously Jesus is very excited about something the Father is revealing. Jesus tells us that no one has known the Father except the Son who comes to make him known to us. Jesus has come to reveal the Father. Not just that the Father exists, but who he is and wIMG_0212hat he is like. By watching and listening to Jesus, we come to learn what this Father is like. He is a kind and benevolent Father. He is a fountain who never ceases flowing love, life, goodness and every sort of blessing. He has loved his Son for all eternity and is eager to have more sons and daughters to lavish his love upon.

This gives a glimpse of what Jesus is inviting us to. It is a Trinitarian reality that has been opened to us by the Son. We are being invited by the Son through the Spirit to join into this eternal communion; to open ourselves up to be lavished upon by the God of love.

Now that sounds like rest.

Rest is A Person, Not Merely a Removal of Unrestful Stuff in Life
The reality is that in this world bad stuff happens. We work hard and briers grow up where we toil. We get sick. Stress happens. We live amidst many unresolved tensions.

What Jesus is inviting us into is communion. He invites us to come to him. He is our rest. My world may be rife of unresolved tensions, yet I can still have rest because I have Jesus and he has me.  Further, Jesus invites us to learn of him for during the entirety of his life Jesus live amidst tensions and pains – from the childhood genocide to oppression amongst the pharisees. Yet he walked in the rest of his Father.

IMG_0253Rest is a Person.  Jesus is our rest.

Two questions to reflect upon:
1. How is the Spirit inviting you to respond and receive Jesus who is your rest?

2. As a shepherd, how are you leading others to the rest that is theirs in Jesus alone?

Bring people to Jesus and Jesus to people, for he is our rest.

Posted in Living Wisely, Personal Vitality, Shepherding Well, Spiritual Vitality, Thinking Well | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Traveler’s Bag-o-Tricks

This time, a little more light-hearted.

I like to travel light, as light as possible. It is rare, no matter the length of trip, that I check a bag on. The airlines can’t lose my luggage if I don’t hand it over, right?

Regardless of how you travel, here is a gaggle of ideas I have learned that go with me globally.

Recharge!
I  learned from my friend Bob to travel with a small power strip. That worked for years. Then I found an even smaller version. This way I can plug in all my widgets even if the grungy Kolkata hotel room has only one outlet hidden behind the noisy, rusty air-con unit. A single unit outlet adaptor covers every version known to mankind (do electricians not talk to each other across international lines???). That gets me charged up for the day. Now if I can only sleep and get truly charged.

FullSizeRenderFullSizeRender

TUSH CUSH!!!!
I am sure you are way too familiar with the 1/4″ padding that airlines generously put in their seats. I can handle that for about 2 hours before physical and emotional distress sets in. Then I found a fave travel friend that I lovingly dubbed the “tush cush.” In the U.S., REI sells this little gem for about $15. It saves my you-know-what when I venture on trans-oceanic flights. It also comes in handy when I am looking for a clean seat in Bejing where every inch of ground is covered in ancient gunk. When in use, I tie the supplied little stuff sack to the outside of the my shoulder bag to remind me in my jet-lagged state to not leave my beloved cush behind. There is a similar lumbar pad that can be had too.

FullSizeRender

Be Prepared
In a tiny pouch I have safety pins, a couple of rubber bands, band aids, a little tube of anti-bactorial cream, anti-inflammatory of some sort and my favorite head cold medicine, and some Tumms for stomach stuff.  Oh, ear plugs for sure. Lots of ear plugs. I’ve scavenged thread and needle from hotel bathrooms – those really tiny ones that are free.  This stash usually covers close to any minor emergency.

GIANORMOUS Shoulder Bag
An averaged sized Cambodian tuk-tuk can easily fit into my shoulder bag. Seriously, its bottomless. Its usually pretty empty. But when needed, I can cram my laptop, coat, books, water, whatever stuff I can’t live without at the market, and still have piles of room.  If I need extra space in my roller on the way home, my beloved bag swallows it. Mine is a very large version made by Timbuktu. It is built like a tank and keeps the rain out.  If it gets heavy in the airport, I set it on top of my roller and let it do all the work.

Maybe those are common sense items. They seemed brilliant at the time.

What are your global travel tips and tricks? Pray do tell.

 

Posted in Traveling Tips | Tagged | 14 Comments

An Annual Season of Renewal

Calm After the Storm
As I write this I have just concluded a very full fall season of travel, speaking at conferences, organizational leader team meetings, debriefings – you know the drill. Note I did not say I was busy. Years ago I determined to no longer live a “busy” life. There will be IMG_9512intentional seasons that are full and demanding. We are indeed called to give our lives away. I seek God specifically for how, where and for whom he asks me to do that. In my walk with God there is a big difference between full and busy. Full is by design and intention. Busy, for my heart, is distracted, mindless, and numbing. By design, this full season has left me feeling emotionally thin, physically tired, and longing for spiritual refilling. This is a good tired having done the work God has asked me to do.

A prolonged full season is then  followed by a short time of backing off for renewing, reflection, evaluation, and preparation for the next full period.

December is one of the periods where I back it off a few notches. This is not a holiday time of no work. I am still available to people and doing normal office work. But it is a different kind of work that personally allows God to refill my tanks so I have him to give away in the next full season. I am seeking him to fill me so that he might overflow through me in the months ahead.

Principle: Repeated Times of Renewal
Research has shown that one of the life patterns of those who finish well experience repeated times of deep spiritual renewal throughout their life. Each of us are different, so renewal comes to each of us differently.

One way God recharges me is when I have time to read, think, reflect, evaluate, plan, pray, study Scripture in depth, and pray and ponder some more. I also take a day or two to get immersed in creation beauty.  Every year, in December, I am given a deep drink of Living Water when I change up my routine and wait on him. This is an active waiting.

When are your annual seasons of creating time to allow God to provide you with deep renewal? These times are crucial to walk and finishing well.

Reflection is a Key Way of God Teaching US
I have written on reflection before. December is a time when I relook at my calendar, the meaningful books I have read, the direction I have received from cherished counselors, and  read the past year’s journals. I am intentionally slowing down to reflect. What I am seeking are themes and patterns to discern what God is teaching me and where he is at work in my journey. I am also seeking clarification on where he wants me to invest in ministry.   I desire to be receptive and responsive to him. This is one way I make space to allow that guiding and clarifying and renewing work to happen. The themes that emerge become prayers for the next year:

Show me your ways, Lord, teach me your paths. Guide me in your truth and teach me, for you are God my Savior, and my hope is in you all day long.
Psalm 25:4-5

How do you seek regular seasons of renewal? What do you do during those times? Maybe your practices will be a fresh path for someone else. Thank you in advance for encouraging me with your own wisdom and for sharing with others.

Posted in Living Wisely, Personal Vitality, Spiritual Vitality, The Shepherd's Health, Thinking Well | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

To Be a Master Caregiver, Be a Practiced Receiver

 

“A person cannot receive even one thing unless it is given him from heaven.”
John the Baptist in John 3:27

“Whoever abides in me, and I in him, he it is that will bear much fruit. For without me you can do nothing.”
Jesus in John 15:5

What Others Need Most in Me
I often remind myself as a care provider that what others need is the Person of Christ. He is our bread; our wine; our living water; our very life. He is who we need. We have more information than we can assimilate; more tools than we can often utilize; more books than we can read. The workshops, presentations, debriefings or whatever I provide are each platforms to bring Christ to people and people to Christ.

Yes, these platforms are important and it is wise to master them. Yet, we are invited to master another priority practice.

Care Givers as a Care Receivers First
What I have to offer to another must be more than just my own best effort or ideas. I want to be a conduit, my life an overflow of Jesus.

In order for that to happen though, I must receive from him. His invitation to me is a constant sort of reception. Jesus infers this when he invites us to abide as a branch to a vine. That branch is always receiving nutrients from the vine, day and night. So too for us.

Why Do We Struggle to Receive?
It intrigues me that we caregivers are far more comfortable being the one who is extending care as opposed to being the one who is receiving care. Am I afraid of being weak? Out of control? Seen as being a mess and incompetent to handle life? Honestly, yes, yes and yes. The reality is that I am weak, I am out of control, and I am a mess. Period. I need God. And I need others to shepherd me to God. And I love it when Jesus overflows from another person into my life.

Thus, in order for me to be able to tend to others, I first ask God to teach me, show me, shape me into being a constant receiver of himself – all of his life, blessing, goodness, love, and mercy. That is the fruit I will have to extend to another. I’ve learned to remind myself that life, blessing, goodness, love and mercy are all a Person. These elements are not to be objectified as if some sort of commodity. They are a “who”, not merely a “what.” I am constantly invited by the Spirit into communion with the Father and Son.

When I am privileged to extend care to another, Christ is the One I have to offer.

Personal Practices: A Means of Reception and Overflow
Taking time to linger in the word, sit with my God for extended times, Sabbath, reflection, fasting or any other practices are all means of communion in Christ. AND he is the one who in-fills me as I commune with him that he may overflow from and through my life to others.

Thus, we caregivers are invited to become master care receivers from God. How are you being receptive to God’s continual movement in your life?

Posted in Living Wisely, Personal Vitality, Spiritual Vitality, The Shepherd's Health | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

A Reader’s Question: Responding to Extreme Exhaustion in Others

I began this site with a series looking at five different themes I have experienced while shepherding cross-cultural workers.   One of them was titled Five Themes Facilitating Ill Health and Ineffectiveness Amongst Global Workers: Theme #2 Total Exhaustion

A few weeks ago a reader commented on this entry with a question:

“This. is. so. true. I wonder how you would respond to the question of what to do to address that total depletion, if things have gone that far?”

This is a great question. My response would be limited to my own personal experience. It would be extremely helpful if a number of readers would chime in on this question. There must be medical, psychological, emotional, physical, spiritual, and relational elements to be addressed here. What is your experience? Please leave a comment.

Here’s an initial thought of my own.

IMG_9969

A Time of Disengagement?
Deep exhaustion that leads to break down is usually from an accumulation over years. A two week vacation is not going to rectify the issue. Prolonged disengagement from normal life activities is required. This might sound like a drastic suggestion. Most organizations do not even have this practice as a policy. Yet….

One of the ways forward I would explore with someone who manifests deep exhaustion is a sabbatical. A sabbatical is an extended time of disengagement from “normal” activities so that different activities can be engaged. This usually means an extended time away from work routines and roles and responsibilities to engage in activities that allow for healing, renewal, a healthier perspective on life and work, and an opportunity to reenter normal work responsibilities with different expectations and rhythms.

People seem to be able to handle the idea of a time frame of around 3 months for a sabbatical. My experience, however, is that it can take 6-8 weeks to regain a sense of equilibrium sufficient to allow for intake. If I have been driving hard for 20 years or more, what makes me think I can learn to cease driving hard in 2 weeks or a month? 4-6 months is usually a better starting framework. Step of faith? For sure. If I step away from my role will it be given to another? Possibly. Will supporters cease to support me? Maybe. But where did I get all those in the first place? God does provide. Period. The question is, will I trust him? And, is life in my work or is God my life?

If someone has been in ministry a few years, say 2-3 years, yet find themselves in such significant fatigue, a sabbatical would not be my first suggestion. Likely, a resident care center (Link Care, Alongside, etc.), might be a better option to explore how one got to this place so quickly. Then again, there are those working in traumatizing settings, such as human trafficking or refugee work that is another situation entirely. I have tended to some of these workers who are simply spent after 3 years of such harsh work. Trauma debriefing, rest and the design of a sustainable model would be an ideal conversation.

Of course,  there are too many potential variables to cover in such a brief article.

Please Comment
A sabbatical is merely one possible response to one who is manifesting deep exhaustion. Please add your thoughts to this discussion. Collectively we can come up with a rounded list of ideas and resources that could guide us as we engage those who are profoundly weary. Thank you in advance.

 

 

 

 

Posted in Shepherding Well | Tagged , , , , , , , | 10 Comments