Sunday, April 21, 2019

Easter in the Graveyard




The alarm went off at 5:30 a.m. this morning. On a Sunday. A holiday. Anyone who knows me knows I am NOT a morning person. I don’t normally even think of dragging my body out of bed before 7:00 a.m. But this morning, I got up joyfully as it was time to worship our resurrected Savior.

A year or two ago, my friend Gail told me about a radical Easter sunrise service she attended. They worshiped—at sunrise—in a graveyard. I told my husband about it and he thought it was a terrific idea. This year, due to work and other obligations, we were not spending the holiday with family, so we decided it was a perfect time to do it. And we couldn’t have asked for nicer weather on April 21!

So, a little after 5:30 a.m. (come on, you didn’t really think I leapt out of bed right on the dot, did you?), we threw on some warm clothes (it was still about 35 degrees when we left the house) and we drove a few miles to a little graveyard near our house. There were no houses or buildings nearby, so it was just us and a slew of birds singing to us in the small woods behind the cemetery.

Dave had drawn up the service with parts taken from Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary Radicals by Shane Claiborne and Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove and the Revised Common Lectionary. We found a good spot where we could spy the sun rising and started with “Christ is risen!” “He is risen indeed!”

The first song we sang was “Come People of the Risen King” by Keith & Kristyn Getty & Stuart Townend. The playlist Dave had spent an hour or two putting together last night didn’t play for some reason, so we improvised. I told him he could probably find the songs on YouTube. It worked! We sang along with the Gettys as the sun came up over the horizon:

“Come people of the risen King
Who delight to bring Him praise
Come all and tune your hearts to sing
To the morning star of grace.”

It was glorious!

A prayer refrain we repeated several times as part of the liturgy was, “Just when I thought I was lost; my dungeon shook, and the chains fell off.” It was a great reminder of the resurrected life that begins when one trusts in Christ as their Savior!

From there, we read Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24, reading alternate lines back and forth. Then it was on to the song “Famous One,” written by Chris Tomlin and Jesse Reeves. The line that struck me while in that place was,

“The morning star is shining through
And every eye is watching You
Revealed by nature and miracles
You are beautiful, You are beautiful.”

Revealed by nature indeed! All around us, birds were chirping, the sun shone brightly as the moon reflected its light, and fresh fallen dew drops sparkled in the sunlight on the grass. It was so easy to see the image of the Lord reflected in His creation.

Then Dave read Acts 10:34-43, the Apostle Peter’s concise gospel presentation to the Gentiles in Caesarea. I couldn’t help but think about how Peter’s obedience to preach to the Gentiles eventually, over centuries, led to me trusting in Christ as my Savior—another resurrection!

Dave had me read the resurrection account of Jesus from John 20:1-18. There are so many things to love about this account. John telling the story and mentioning that he outran Peter to the tomb. Is that a loving ribbing between friends? They saw the strips of linen and what is now known as the Shroud of Turin lying there in the empty tomb, and it says John “saw and believed.” What was it about the position of those things that caused him to believe? Did he remember at that moment that Jesus told them He would rise again?

What I really love is that Mary Magdalene, one of Jesus’ most devoted followers, comes to the tomb and thinks the risen Jesus is the gardener. Did she not recognize him through her tears of grief? She says, “Sir, if you have carried him away, tell me where you have put him, and I will get him.” (John 20:15) What does she think she’s going to do with Jesus’ body by herself? Obviously, in her grief, she was not thinking too clearly!

And then Jesus simply says, “Mary.” Instantly, she recognizes Him and though she tries to cling to Him, He instructs her to go instead to the disciples to tell them the Good News. When she gets to them, she likely shouts joyfully, “I have seen the Lord!” What an incredible moment given their days of crushing heartbreak. Jesus is alive!

We completed our singing with “Fairest Lord Jesus.” It was fun to sing “Fair is the sunshine, Fairer still the moonlight,” as we could see both from our vantage point. We prayed the Lord’s Prayer and inserted our own spontaneous prayers, including one for all those who died at the hands of slaveowners and lynch mobs over the years. (We’ve both just completed “An American Lent,” a Lenten devotional from www.repentanceproject.org, which we wholeheartedly recommend. It’s definitely worth your time. And there will be more on that in a future post.) We finished with a simple benediction that included the words, “May He bring you home rejoicing.”

We did rejoice throughout the day, but as we left, I noticed the grave of three children, born in the late 1800s. The first lived a month, then died. The other two were twins. One lived six days, the other lived two. I thought about the tragedy that family faced. The heartbreak. Did they have any more children? But then the glorious thought occurred to me that even now, those children are with Jesus in glory. I hope they are also reunited with their parents.

So that was how our Easter began in a graveyard. What a fitting place to be to celebrate our Lord’s resurrection! Later that morning, we joined our church in singing, “Glorious Day.”[1]

“You called my name
And I ran out of that grave
Out of the darkness
Into Your glorious day.”

More than 25 years ago, Jesus called me to Himself and I ran out of the grave of sin, despair, and emptiness into His glorious, illuminating presence. I have not regretted a single day with Jesus. Those days have not always been easy, but He has walked alongside me the entire way, healing me, rebuking me, encouraging me, and always loving me. It is my prayer that if you don’t yet know Him, that you would earnestly seek Him and then you too could be released from your “grave.” Then one day, you will spend eternity with the lover of your soul.

How did you spend your Easter?


Copyright ©2019 by Cherry Lyn Hoffner. You may not reproduce this post in any form without permission. However, linking to this post is encouraged.



[1] Songwriters: Jason Ingram, Jonathan Smith, Kristian Stanfill, Sean Curran

Monday, March 4, 2019

My 90-Day Bible Adventure: Part 2


Lessons Learned from Reading the Bible in 90 Days
Here are the three lessons that stood out for me from reading the Bible in 90 days. 

   Sin and its Devastating Effects — When I read the Bible in 90 days, I saw just how awful humans are when left to our own devices. “There is no one righteous, not even one.” (Romans 3:10) One example is the exile. For some reason I never fully understood just how devastating it was to the Israelites. This time, I saw it as a precursor to the final exile—for those who don’t know Jesus—in eternity. God had removed His glory from the people and gave them over to their sin after years and years of mercy and grace, but also warning that disobeying Him would lead to their abandonment forever. It was so sad to read Jeremiah and Lamentations after reading Exodus and Joshua. The Israelites had worked so hard to get their land only to lose it all by abandoning the one true God for empty idols.

   God is Awesome! He is love. He is merciful. He is full of grace and truth. He is so incredibly patient! He is sovereign. He is holy, holy, holy. He is just. He is forgiving. He knows all things. He is powerful. He is strong. He is a refuge in times of trouble. Getting to know Him in His Word has caused me to love Him more than I ever have before.

   I Can Read the Bible Daily—I used to think there was no way I could fit Bible reading into my life (which is not the right way to look at it!). But God is not a leftover. He wants all of me and He wants me first. Doesn’t He deserve that after all that He has done for me? Challenging myself to do this proved that I could. Now a “normal” daily reading is easier because I have made it a daily habit. I can spend more time meditating on it and really absorbing it. Sometimes, you just need to set what seems like an impossible goal to force yourself to step up to the challenge. Rest assured, the Holy Spirit will help you along the way.

Have you ever read the Bible through in its entirety? If not, why not? If so, did you do it over a year or a couple years? What did God teach you through that time?
Copyright ©2019 by Cherry Lyn Hoffner. You may not reproduce this post in any form without permission. However, linking to this post is encouraged.

Monday, February 25, 2019

My 90-Day Bible Adventure: Part 1


I recently published my first article in a long time and several people have asked where they could find it. The first part of that article is what you will find below (I'll post the second part next week - hey, that guarantees me three posts in my blogging reboot). It was originally published in Just Between Us Magazine (Spring 2019 issue; www.justbetweenus.org). I've been a volunteer Editorial Assistant for them for almost 20 years now and I would highly recommend you consider subscribing to this fantastic magazine for women in ministry. 

My 90-Day Bible Adventure: Part 1 
read the Bible in 90 days…and you can too (really!)



   How’s your devotional life? Did you make a resolution to read your Bible in a year? Did you leave it behind in Leviticus or ditch it in Deuteronomy? I have good news for you: you can still keep that resolution this year. Yes, you read that correctly. You can read the Bible—the whole thing—in just 90 days. I know because I’ve done it. And it was one of the best things I’ve ever done to boost my faith.

   Before you dismiss me as some super Christian who spends two hours a day in her Bible, that is not me. In fact, to be honest, I have been a Christian for 25 years, but I am ashamed to say I have never been consistent in my Bible reading. I have read the Bible through before twice—once in four years and once in two. I love studying the Bible, but reading it is not my forte. I think it stems from my dislike of reading anything more than once. I know that the Bible is living and active and new every time I read it, but it still takes great effort for me to read it consistently day in and day out.

   So, when the idea popped into my head to read the entire Bible in 90 days, I thought I had lost my mind. If I couldn’t do it in a year, how in the world was I going to do it in three months? Yet I couldn’t shake the Holy Spirit’s prompting. If I could stick to such a rigorous plan for 90 days, wouldn’t that make Bible reading a lot easier? Spoiler alert: yes!

   How can you possibly do this with a job, kids, and your crazy, busy life? Try the YouVersion Bible in 90 Days Plan created by Ted Cooper. The plan is to read approximately 12-15 chapters a day, which takes about an hour. Most of us can’t do that all in one sitting, but we can read portions throughout the day. For example, I often read a chapter or two in the morning, listened to two or three chapters on my way to work, read a chapter or two on my lunch break, listened to two or three chapters on my way home from work, and then finished it off before bed. Were there nights when I didn’t finish? Yes, but I made myself catch up the next morning or on the weekend.

   Why should you do it?

   It will give you a hunger for the Word. I found when I got to Psalms and Proverbs, I really wanted to stop and meditate on the passage, but I couldn’t do that and reach my 90-day goal. I did pick out a verse or two each day to meditate on, but my objective with reading it so quickly was to grasp more of the overarching themes of the Bible. Not being able to stop and meditate gave me a hunger to come back and read those passages more slowly the next time and incorporate them into my life.

   It will help you in teaching, mentoring, or discipling others. The whole Word of God was still fresh to me as I prepared to teach on a specific passage of Scripture that fall. It helped me plug that piece of Scripture into the greater context of the whole Bible as I taught, mentored, and discipled others.

   It is your only offensive weapon against the devil and his schemes. In Ephesians 6, we see that we have many defensive weapons: the helmet of salvation, breastplate of righteousness, shield of faith, belt of truth, and shoes fitted with the gospel of peace. But we only have one offensive weapon: the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of God. It’s pretty hard to wield a weapon you don’t have! When trials come and Satan whispers in your ear, it’s important to know the verses that match your situation.

   It will help you connect the Old and New Testaments better. I was recently studying the birth narrative of Jesus and His name—Immanuel—God with us. The Holy Spirit brought to mind that God’s presence was with God’s people in the tabernacle. He was with us in the physical person of Jesus as a human being. And He is with us now – indwelling His children. I had never before realized that God has been with His people throughout time in every person of the Trinity. What a glorious thought!

   It will enhance your worship of God. Now that the totality of Scripture is more familiar to me, my soul resonates with Scriptural truths and they come to mind more frequently. I can worship Him more fully and completely because I know Him better. And isn’t that the whole point of Scripture?

   What are you waiting for? Jump into the best spring read ever—the Bible! 

P.S. Let me know if you decide to embark on this adventure! You won't regret it! 
Copyright ©2019 by Cherry Lyn Hoffner. You may not reproduce this post in any form without permission. However, linking to this post is encouraged.


Sunday, February 17, 2019

Heeding God's Call


“I would recommend not putting off writing 
if it’s something you feel called to: 
if you put it off, then the writing can’t do the work 
that it needs to do to you.” 
(Linford Detweiler from the band Over the Rhine)


Photo by Kaitlyn Baker 

I found the above quote in a mass email sent to me in April 2009. At the end of that same email Linford wrote, “Maybe a writer will find [this], God help her.” A writer has found it. And she does indeed need God’s help…to deal with the wave of regret raging like a torrent through her life. That email hit me right between the eyes at the time and yet I still filed the dream away for another three years without touching a keyboard. I did eventually start this blog. It lasted about 6 weeks. A year later, I restarted this blog one more time...for a month. Here I am again—more than five years later (gulp).

To be honest, I can't really give you a good reason for my long absence. Partly, it’s because I have not been following God’s call on my life. I know that we are always called to use the gifts and talents we have been given in order to build up the body of believers. For me, that call, at least in part, involves writing. Yet, nearly every day I find an excuse not to do it. I’ve been cupping my hands over my ears saying, “La-la-la-la-la-la!” and running 180 degrees in the other direction like Jonah. What’s funny is that I thought God wouldn’t notice that I had booked a flight to Tarshish.


The first whisper of this call came to me in 6th grade when I got my first A+ on a writing assignment in English class. It was a limerick about a toad crossing the road. It didn’t end well for Mr. Toad, but that A+ did something in my soul. Something came alive. Someone heard my voice…and liked it. I was the youngest in my family by ten years, I was bullied regularly, and I didn’t have a lot of friends. I felt invisible. Writing gave me an outlet; an alternate universe I could thrive in. I started writing poems in my room at night. I wrote about clouds and rainbows, a crush on Robert Redford, and kicking the butts of those bullies. I continued to pursue writing through high school and college, taking writing course after writing course, even majoring in English with a writing emphasis—yet I didn’t really do much actual writing.

Why not? The simple answer is fear. Fear shows its fangs in my life mostly through catastrophic thinking. Psychology Today defines this as “ruminating about irrational worst-case outcomes.”[1] Can anyone out there identify with that? It’s easy to write a first draft. I have about 50 blog post drafts sitting in a folder on my computer. Editing is where my perfectionism and tornadic thoughts kill them. Which word is best? Should I really keep this sentence? Does this one get my point across so that you truly understand it the way I meant it? What if I offend someone? (How can I NOT offend someone these days?) How do you perceive me? What if you don’t (gulp) like me? 😯

That’s one side of my catastrophic thinking. The other side goes something like this: if God has given me this gift, then surely He will bless it, right? So, my blog will gain attention. I’ll be so widely read that soon I’ll be laughing on the couch with Savannah Guthrie and Hoda Kotb on Today. Then Jimmy Fallon will call—personally. Publishers will line up at my door begging me to write a book—no three! Soon the blitz of media coverage and the demands to do book signings and speaking engagements will become so overwhelming I can’t breathe and then…. It. Will. End. No one will want me anymore. Someone will take my place as the “it girl” and I’ll be cast aside like an empty pop can.

Sigh. Welcome to my brain. I apologize for not giving you fair warning. But this is how I sometimes think. I have trouble staying in the moment. I am a chronic overthinker and it sometimes paralyzes me. And that’s at least partially why you haven’t heard from me in a while. I’ve let the enemy win this ridiculous battle.

Except that he hasn’t won the war. I’m not dead yet! It’s time for me to start fighting back. My heart is full of words that must be shared, even if it’s just among friends. I want to “mind my matters” with you because I believe we all process the world we live in far better if we do it out loud in the company of friends. So, this post is the start of “writing” that wrong. (My love of word play hasn’t gone anywhere!) I am recommitting myself to you and to this blog.


So here I am. If you’re new, it’s nice to meet you. If we’re old friends, bring it in for a (((hug))). Let’s process this crazy world together, shall we?

But before I sign off, this isn't just about what God is calling me to. What is God calling you to? What’s that nagging feeling you can’t shake? Does he want you to serve the poor? Forgive someone? Mentor a teen? Does He want you to drop something from your schedule so that you can help get your kid through a difficult phase in their life? Is it time to complete your college degree? Start a new business? Read 12 books in a year? Fast for 24 hours? Fix a bad attitude? Let me urge you as one who has ignored God long enough, DO IT TODAY.

You may feel like Indiana Jones in the Last Crusade walking off the edge of a cliff, but rest assured, if you’re in the center of God’s will, there is solid ground beneath you. And if you’re reading this, I just walked right off that ledge—but amazingly, I find myself standing on a more than solid Rock.

See you again soon!

Copyright ©2019 by Cherry Lyn Hoffner. You may not reproduce this post in any form without permission. However, linking to this post is encouraged.




[1] Ron Breazeale, Ph.D., “Catastophic Thinking,” Psychology Today, PsychologyToday.com, accessed 5-2-16