Tuesday, August 9, 2011

7 things I learned about spray paint today.

A few thoughts that I happened to be mulling over while painting my bedroom furniture today.

In no particular order:

-There should be a 24-hour waiting period for impulsive people wishing to buy spraypaint (but manufacturers know this would drastically reduce their sales, so they quash all attempts at reform). I may lobby for this legislation to protect myself from future projects.

-There's a reason they warn about proper ventilation on the can. Seriously. And not just for breathing. When the particles are aerosolized in a place with no wind (ie my sunken patio), they are automatically attracted to living things. At least now I look like I have a tan for the first time in my life.

-Spraypaint acts like superglue, cementing large quantities of dirt to the soles of bare feet. But the bare feet are black with paint and look more like bear feet anyway. The problem is how to get across the white carpet to the bathtub...

-Spraypaint makes the inside of your nose feel crinkly.

-Spraypaint reacts with chemicals in boogers to render them rock-solid and immovable, no matter how hard you blow. (Normal Kleenex or toilet tissue is not sufficient for rigorous excavation... you'll need Bounty paper towels or napkins)

-A fan helps with the air movement problem, but only if pointed AWAY from your project.

-No matter how wonderful of a job you do on the other surfaces, the top (or most visible) will look splotchy. This problem cannot be solved by tilting or rotating the surface; the paint KNOWS which side you most want to look nice and purposely avoids it.


Friday, July 15, 2011

Church signs, Calvary Road, and a lot of Love

Driving past a little church today I smirked at their marquee-lettered sign: "God is love, love is of God." But that little sign did what it was supposed to do. It made me think about the verses it was based on, and in a flash I understood something I had never quite understood before.
Beloved, let us love one another, for love is of God, and everyone that loveth is born of God and knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God for God is love.--1 John 4:7-8
I have always had a problem with these verses. I mean, not everyone who loves is born of God. Most people have at least one person they love; does that mean most people are born of God? No, surely not. Can an emotion really identify who is born of God? I don't really think so. What about all those people who say they love someone and then change their minds? Was that really love that was "of God?" I think we'd agree that the answer is no. But then what do these verses mean?
To begin with, is love really a feeling? Is love the mushy-gushies? The skipping of your heart when a certain person walks in the room? The combination of physical and personal attraction? Most of us would agree that movies and television may not be the best guides to living life (except the totally realistic shows like MacGyver, right?), but whether we realize it or not our ideas of love are influenced by scriptwriters, actors, and actresses. One thing that can help counteract all these unhealthy influences is a healthy family. I am very blessed to have a Mom and Dad who not only told us about what love is, but showed us. One thing Dad always said was that love is a choice. You make a choice to love someone and then you do, whether you feel like it or not, whether it's easy or not, no matter what happens or changes in your life. He pointed out to us from a very young age that "falling in love" was a temporary feeling; that we needed to guard our hearts until we found the person that God wanted us to choose to love forever. My brother Daniel even incorporated that idea into his wedding vows. So while the motion picture industry continues to bombard us with the idea that mushy-gushy love leads to happily ever after, the truth remains unchanged: love is a choice.

But what does it mean to choose to love?

Our community group is going through Roy Hession's book Calvary Road. It's only 107 pages as a mass market paperback (not including the appendix), and the average chapter is around 10 pages. But it is chock full of spiritual truth about personal revival, with an emphasis on rooting out the sin in our lives. This past week we discussed chapter 6, Revival in the Home. Mr. Hession says the second biggest problem we have in our homes is failure to love.

Love is not just a sentimental feeling, nor even a strong passion... The famous passage in 1 Corinthians 13 tells us what real love is... Love is long-suffering [patient] and is kind. Love vaunteth not itself [does not boast] is not puffed up [is not conceited]. Love does not behave itself unseemly [is not rude], seeketh not her own [is not selfish], is not easily provoked [does not get irritated], thinketh no evil [does not entertain unkind thoughts of another].
Love is a choice. But it isn't just a one-time choice, it is a thousand choices a day, hundreds of opportunities where we can choose to act in love or in selfishness. Will you choose to be patient when you find your husband's socks in the middle of the floor? Will you choose not to boast/rub it in that you yourself always use the hamper? Will you determine not to be easily provoked? Will you choose not to entertain unkind thoughts about him? Love is coming to this crossroad hundreds of times a day and choosing to take the unselfish, un-self-centered path. Love is this action of choosing.

Driving home today I suddenly realized that this is the kind of love that is born of God, and everyone who loves this way is born of God. It's not easy. It's not just a diet of depriving yourself of what you want every once in a while; it's a lifestyle change. It's something we can't do without God's grace and empowerment. Actually, the apostle John explains a little bit further, making it pretty clear:

This is how God showed his love among us: he sent his one and only son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.
And whether you're single or married, on your own or living at home, the next verse is a challenge for all your relationships. With co-workers, friends, neighbors, in the context of love as the million choices we can make in a day:

Dear friends, since God so loved us, we also ought to love one another.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Zacchaeus was a wee little man...

If you grew up in church, or watched Larry's Wonderful World of Autotainment, you have heard this song:

Zaccheus was a wee little man, and a wee little man was he
He climbed up in a sycamore tree for the Lord he wanted to see
And as the Savior passed that way He looked up in the tree
And He said, "Zacchaeus, you come down! For I'm coming to your house for tea...Yes I'm coming to your house for tea."

(Thanks to my mom, in our Sunday School we learned the British version; "for tea" rhymes with "tree" and fits better than "today.")

Until this morning, I never really thought much about Zacchaeus. Growing up, I thought it was funny to hear a story about an adult climbing up a tree so that he could see. Today, reading in Luke 19, I started thinking about him more. What was his story? What was he thinking? What was he feeling?

In our Monday night community group a couple of weeks ago we talked about thirsting for God. Jeremiah 29:12 says:

You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.

Scott shared a story he'd heard about a young man and his mentor who were discussing the beatitude, "blessed are they who hunger and thirst for righteousness." The young man wanted to know what it was to really thirst for God. They happened to be walking by a lake while they talked, and the older man suggested they stop and get a drink. The young man bent over the water and reached out his hand, when suddenly his mentor grabbed him by the head and thrust his face under the water. The young man struggled but the older man was stronger. The young man thrashed wildly, his eyes bulging, his lungs bursting, strength draining from his limbs, until he felt he must give up and take a breath, even if it meant breathing in the water. The mentor suddenly let go and the young man sprang to his feet, dripping with water and scowling with indignation. "What on earth was that for?!" he demanded. The mentor smiled. "You were thirsting for air like we should thirst for God; not a little discomfort, but the urgent, pressing need for God and the knowledge that we will die if the thirst is not quenched."

Zacchaeus must have been thirsting that way.

This is a bit of what I imagined:

A boy growing up smaller than everyone else, getting picked on by everyone, learning to get even through his cunning rather than brute strength. Short man syndrome? Maybe. But surely people would respect him once he had money. But how to get it? The best way to get protection and wealth was to align himself with the Roman government as a tax collector. Under the Roman standard he grew rich, but at the same time alienated himself from his own people. Instead of elevating him to a position of honor, his wealth was only evidence that he was the lowest kind of traitor, in league with the occupying forces and adding to the tax burden of his countrymen. He lived in a sort of no-man's-land; to the Romans he was only a Jewish dog, their tool and vassal. To the Jews he was a symbol of the corruption and oppression of the invaders. He had placed his hope in wealth and found it a cold comfort.

He remembered his days learning the Torah and hearing of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel. He recalled his pride in being one of the chosen people of God. But had God also rejected him? It was no good going to the synagogue; he had tried. On the occasions when he had not been asked to leave, the stony stares of the congregants had been enough to send him on his way.

Just as he began to despair, he heard stories of a new rabbi. One who did not dress in fine clothes and keep himself aloof from the common people. A rabbi who blasted the scribes and Pharisees for their hypocrisy while he welcomed little children into his arms. A rabbi who did not preach dry messages but told stories, wonderful stories, about God and the Kingdom of Heaven: a father who welcomed home his wayward son; beggars and cripples who were invited to a king's wedding feast; a Samaritan (even a Samaritan!) who was the hero of a story as he became the rescuing neighbor to a poor, beaten traveler. And this same rabbi, this Yeshua, had power from God to show that he was a prophet. He had even raised the dead! But what brought hope to the poor, rich tax collector was that the rabbi had reached out to the outsiders: he had healed a Samaritan leper and cured a centurion's servant. One of his close followers had even been a tax collector if the reports could be believed. Would the rabbi have a word from God for a wayward son of Israel? But Zacchaeus could not leave his post in Jericho.

The Passover pilgrims began to stream through Jericho on their way to Jerusalem; at first a trickle, then a steady flow, then suddenly the streets were flooded with Jews who had to stop in the city to stay the night or replenish their supplies. The throngs packed the streets and it was impossible to move without being jostled and shoved by dusty, travel-worn strangers or their animals. It was a particularly bad time to be Zacchaeus; his short stature was always a nuisance, but now it became dangerous.

In his home one day Zacchaeus stared at the food on his table and sighed. He hated eating alone, with the servants in the kitchen whispering behind his back. But who would come eat with a tax collector? It could hardly be worse if he was one of the lepers outside the city gates; at least they had other lepers to share their lives. He picked up a loaf of bread to break off a portion, then stopped and stared at it a moment. In sudden frustration he threw it against the wall. He laid his head in his arms and closed his eyes, trying to keep back the tears that he knew would cause the servants to gossip.

"Yes, he's coming down the road right now," came a faint whisper from the kitchen. "He's headed to Jerusalem just like all the rest and he's going to pass right through our city!"

"Are you sure? When did you hear he was coming?"

"I just got back from the market and I heard from a merchant whose caravan passed the rabbi on the way here. He said that the rabbi had healed a blind beggar right there on the road!"

Zacchaeus sat up suddenly. The whispers continued, but they didn't matter. He had heard the important information: a rabbi, a healing rabbi, was coming to Jericho. It must be Yeshua! Who else could it be? He stood quickly, almost knocking over the table in his excitement. He would see Yeshua. He had to.

He left the house without the fine cloak he usually wore and made his way through the busy streets to the main road that wound its way through the city. It was painfully slow going and every moment that passed made him wonder if the rabbi had already passed through Jericho and gone on his way. Zacchaeus shoved his way through the crowds of strangers, thankful that they, at least, did not know that he was forsaken and outcast from the fellowship of his people.

At last, he reached the road. There was a hum of excitement that exceeded the usual hubbub of the market. He heard snatches of conversation all around him. "Yes, he healed the fellow, you know, Bartimaeus, that used to always sit by the road..." "He's coming, all right, my sister's husband's aunt says she heard it this morning.." "I wonder which of the leaders of the synagogue he will visit! What an honor to have the rabbi..." The road was packed more tightly than any of the side streets had been. Besides the out-of-town strangers, the whole city had turned out to see the famous teacher.

Zacchaeus felt dismay creeping in. Among so many, how could he ever find the rabbi? He could only see up to the shoulders and heads of the people in the crowd around him. He started to push his way through, but met with so much resistance he made little headway. He made a little better progress by angling his approach instead of pushing straight toward to road, but he was still a long way from being able to see. Suddenly there went up a great shout. Yeshua had entered the city! He was coming down the road right now, and somehow the throng was making way for him.

Zacchaeus felt his heart pound in his ribs, his stomach, his temples. The rabbi was coming! The tax collector could not explain it, but he felt with every fiber of his being that he must see the rabbi today. But the more he tried to push through, the more the crowd pushed back. Instead of moving forward, he was moving backwards, more and still more, until he struck something hard. He turned and saw it was the huge, ancient sycamore tree that had always dominated the square, reaching its leafy branches almost to the buildings across the road. Across the road! He could climb the tree and see Yeshua that way!

But he couldn't possibly climb the tree. Not in public. His enemies, which comprised most of the city, would never let him forget it. Smiles of ridicule would spread across their faces as they gossiped about the cruel tax collector who made a fool of himself by climbing the tree in the main square.

The shout of welcome was getting closer, showing that the rabbi and his followers would soon be passing underneath the tree's spreading branches. Zacchaeus just couldn't climb the tree. But... he couldn't bear to miss the rabbi's coming either.

In a flash, he made up his mind. He reached for the broad, gnarled trunk.

It was surprisingly easy to make his way up the tree. He had found a good vantage point and could see the throng as it roiled below him. He could also see the procession coming down the road. He assumed that the one in the front was the rabbi. What if the prophet did have a word for Zacchaeus, but it was of condemnation? What if his gaze held only fire and judgment for the one who had cheated his fellow Jews out of a fortune? Or what if the rabbi saw him but only pointed at him and laughed at the short little man in the tree?

The rabbi and his disciples continued on the road. Suddenly they stopped, so close that Zacchaeus could have dropped a leaf and hit any one of them. The rabbi looked up. Zacchaeus knew immediately that he had been found. Not just seen, but found. Instead of looking past him, or through him, the rabbi looked right at him and smiled, lighting up his dark eyes. "Zacchaeus, hurry and come down, for I must stay at your house today."

Later on, Zacchaeus could never remember how he got down from that tree. He didn't remember the long walk back to his home, or how much the feast he prepared had cost. He did remember the promise he made that day to give away half of his wealth and restore all of the money that was his because of fraud.

But what he remembered most was talking with the Master. The love that shone from his eyes. The gentleness in his voice. The assurance that God did still want him, and had chosen him as one of his own.

"Today salvation has come to this house, since he also is a son of Abraham. For the Son of Man came to seek and to save the lost."


Zacchaeus was thirsty for God. He was willing to give up his dignity, his reputation, even all his fortune to quench his thirst. The promise remains for us, too.

You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart.


Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled.

Monday, April 25, 2011

Legislative action required!

As you may or may not know, I am in school to become an advanced practice registered nurse (APRN), in the concentration of Family Nurse Practitioner. There's a bill in committee right now in the Tennessee Legislature that would limit our scope of practice. This bill would decrease competition, inflate costs, and reduce patients' access to non-narcotic pain management. Tennessee has a problem with narcotics anyway... this bill would make it worse. Contact your Senator and let him/her know you oppose SB1935.

PS. Alabama, I think, tried to make a law like this and it was struck down by the FTC for limiting competition.

Honorable Senator Stacey Campfield
301 6th Avenue North
Suite 4 Legislative Plaza
Nashville, TN 37243

Senator Campfield;
I am a registered voter in your senate district and active in the Knox County Young Republicans. I am a registered nurse and a student at the University of Tennessee, pursuing my master’s degree in nursing. I would like you to vote against SB 1935, Nurses Engaged in Interventional Pain Management (now in committee).

What if a doctorally prepared supervisor were required for every workman who nails down shingles? Small roofing businesses who could not afford a full-time supervisor would be forced to close. Costs for completing a roofing job would go up, so that people who could not afford a larger company would not get the repairs they needed. Roofing is a skill; a workman does not need a high level degree to learn how to do it correctly. Requiring an architect to supervise would drive up costs and reduce access to a needed service. Unnecessary regulation would ultimately hurt everyone, but that is precisely what some are trying to do with interventional pain management.

Interventional Pain Management is a broad term that covers several procedures. These procedures block the nerves that conduct pain but leave other nerves intact so that the affected area, i.e., an arm or hand, can still be used. Some procedures block regional nerves, such as nerves in the shoulder, or central nerves in the spine.
At this time, properly trained and qualified nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) can perform these procedures; indeed, they have been performing them for years. To this day there is no evidence that physicians conduct these interventions more safely or effectively, yet SB 1935 would prohibit NPs and PAs from helping patients control their pain through nerve blocks without direct physician supervision. The proponents argue that medical school and residency are necessary in order to properly perform nerve blocks, but is that really true?

Though great precision and accuracy are required, proper performance of a nerve block is a skill; there is no new knowledge of biology, biophysics, pharmacology, or anatomy required. Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetists (CRNAs) are specifically trained for this skill, and indeed are required to perform a certain number in order to graduate (though graduates from the UT program routinely exceed the requirements by 200%). Other NPs and PAs receive training from physicians. They are directly supervised until their training is deemed sufficient. Even after completing their training, NPs and PAs report to a supervising physician who is always available for consultation and who reviews the work they do. At this time many clinics share supervising physicians, but a requirement for direct supervision would prove too much financial strain. What makes the situation worse is that these small clinics are often in rural areas where there is no other help available.

In conclusion, there is no evidence that patients would be better off if NPs and PAs were directly supervised by a physician when performing interventional pain management. Or, to rephrase, why increase government interference and take away their freedom to practice and patients’ access to needed care? If this bill comes to debate, please vote NO.

If you have any questions or concerns, please contact me. I would also appreciate hearing your thoughts and opinions regarding this bill.

Sincerely,
Rachel Farmer

gr8brady@gmail.com

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Is your life built on lies?

One of my favorite movie moments is when Buddy the Elf (who grew up in Santa's workshop at the North Pole) confronts a department-store Santa for being an impersonator. "You sit on a throne of lies," hisses Buddy, moments before ripping off "Santa's" beard in front of a crowd of kiddies.



Yesterday I was forced to confront some lies that have wormed their way into my own life. I didn't exactly build a throne on them, I guess, but I was doing something worse: building my marriage on them.

See to it that no one takes you captive by philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to Christ.--Colossians 2:8


When I read that verse, I started thinking. Paul presented a contrast: "The world according to human tradition/philosophy" vs "The world according to Christ." The world's philosophy and tradition are nothing but "empty deceit." That's pretty clear.

What hurts is when you start thinking about the things in your life that are not based directly on Scriptural principles. According to what we read above, if it's not based on Scriptural principles, it's empty deceit. Lies.

What started to hit home was that some of my expectations of my husband have absolutely no basis in Scripture but only in human tradition, and that my expectations of myself and my role in marriage were lies as well. I was comparing myself to the world's idea of a wife's role, adding a few "Christianized" requirements, and saying to myself that I was doing pretty well as a wife. At the same time I was basing my expectations of my husband (how embarrassing to have to admit it!) on what I had seen on TV, read in books, or observed in other couples.

Sometimes it was as innocuous as who takes out the garbage. In my experience, and, I admit, on TV, usually the guy takes out the trash for garbage day. And even though it's not really a big deal for me to take out the trash, I was irritated at Scott for not doing it because "he's supposed to." Where is that in Scripture? Nowhere. It was a lie that the Enemy wanted me to believe so that I would be frustrated with my husband.

Lots of similar things were bugging me. But when I started meditating on Col. 2:8 I started realizing how they were all lies, empty deceit. And when I started thinking about Scriptural principles, I saw how far my heart was from where God would have it.

...whoever would be great among you must be your servant,and whoever would be first among you must be your slave, even as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.-- Matthew 20:26-28


Wow. Ouch. Convicting! And that's not even mentioning Proverbs 31. So instead of thinking about ways I wish Scott would serve me (and in the process not appreciating what he does already) I should be looking for ways to serve him, above and beyond what Scripture lays out as a wife's role.

But I don't think that this lesson is limited to marriage, or even to relationships.

We all have certain expectations and goals in life that direct our daily decisions. But what if those expectations are not based on Scriptural principles? For example, "The American Dream:" doing well in business, owning a nice home, raising your family and being able to buy plenty of "stuff," whatever your preferred brand of "stuff" may be. Is that based on Scripture? Is it based on anything but selfishness? It's a lie! And when times get tough and the dream crumbles: the house gets foreclosed, your business folds, and you can't buy your stuff anymore, there is nothing left but the lie, the emptiness that mocks you for building on such a foundation.

But if your goal is to glorify God and pursue Him, whatever your circumstances, it changes the meaning of everything. Sometimes you can still have the nice house, good business, etc, because God wants you to have those resources to serve Him. But because the goal is to serve God and others, if you lose everything material you have not lost your purpose. Even if you never regain your possessions, you can still glorify God and serve others. Not that it would be easy, but at least it wouldn't be empty.

--------
Lord, what are the areas I need to tear down and rebuild on the true foundation? Show me. Show me the truths in Scripture that are strong enough to hold up my life. Help me fix my eyes on you, and build my life on the Rock.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Where do you live?


Dreams can be funny things. I mean while-you-sleep dreams, not the goals/wishes/aspirations kind of dreams. Once I had a dream where part of it came true. Twice I've had dreams where I was singing and I remembered part of the song when I woke up (and each time ended up writing the rest of the song to go with it). Last night I had some strange dreams, but when I woke up this morning I was only thinking about one of them.

It was about a prison camp. For some reason they had statues and beautiful works of art there, things that people would pay a lot of money to own or even to view in a museum. But the thought that I woke with was this: the people there were still in a prison camp.

In that twilight of thought where I wasn't quite asleep and I wasn't fully awake, I started to explore that idea.

What I felt instinctively was that, like our world, the prison camp had some really neat and interesting stuff in it. But there was so much more outside the fences of the camp: a bigger world, a freer world, a more beautiful world.

I imagined people picking up rocks from the gravel pathways, collecting them, becoming absorbed in them and not noticing when the liberators tore down the walls to free the prisoners. So many people, even Christians, are completely wrapped up in the making of money and acquisition of STUFF, as worthless in God's eyes as gravel. They have great collections, but they're still living in the prison camp of this world, abiding by its rules, slave to its whims.

That's as far as I got before the alarm disturbed my thoughts and jerked me all the way into reality as I whacked the clock, vainly trying to find the snooze button.

Now, obviously, I don't think making money is bad. I don't think having stuff is bad. But when lifestyle choices mean we have to work extra hours to pay for things we don't really need, we are moving our priorities away from Biblical priorities, choosing to follow the world's prison rules instead of God's. God puts a huge priority on people. Not stuff.

It's not just people with lots of money that can stay trapped in the prison camp collecting gravel instead of enjoying the beauty and freedom outside. Folks without much money (even Christians!) tend to think that having more money and more stuff would make life easier, and therefore, better. Maybe that's partially true. But this group can start coveting the gravel that others are piling up for themselves, and feel deprived and discontent because they can't have as much gravel as someone else. Or, which is just as bad, start to say, "Ok, God, look at how wonderful I am for trying to be content with what I have! I'd better be racking up the brownie points!" They, too, are living by the prison camp rules instead of God's.

Here in the States we have so much. We who are students or struggling because of other reasons may think we're poor, but we have more gravel than most of the world can afford. But maybe that's a good way of thinking of it: gravel.

Uh-oh, now I have an idea. And I'm going to try it. When I see some stuff I want, I will try to go one step farther than "can I afford it?" to "is this something I need or is this gravel? Do I want it because the prison guard (aka Everyone Else) says so?"

Jesus purchased our freedom, tore down the walls of the prison camp, and showed us the way out, but we still choose whether or not to live inside or outside.

Where will you live?

Friday, November 12, 2010

Need a shower?

No thanks. I had a shower once when I was 11 years old, I don't need another one. Ever.

Grace isn't a one-time event either.

Scott and I are part of a newly formed small community group, and our first study is set to be Ephesians. I thought I'd start through a study book I have for Ephesians to help me prepare for the discussions we will (hopefully!) have. It's not an expensive book, not a Beth Moore book, just a little pocket-sized book that starts with a big chunk of Scripture on Day 1, then breaks it down into one or two verse study chunks for each of the rest of the days of the week, tying in the verses with other passages throughout the Bible. I got a fresh, clean journal for my birthday, and I thought it would be good to jot down the answers to the study questions and any other thoughts that came along. I was glad to have it Wednesday; I just kept writing and writing as the thoughts kept coming.

The study byte for the day was Ephesians 1:6-8. The study question was: "How is God's grace described here?"

Well? What's the answer? Dontcha know? :-) Okay, okay, I'll post the Scripture for you here.

to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves. 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace 8 that he lavished on us. With all wisdom and understanding,


Here's another version that sounds a little more like a self-contained byte:
So we praise God for the glorious grace he has poured out on us who belong to his dear Son.[b] 7 He is so rich in kindness and grace that he purchased our freedom with the blood of his Son and forgave our sins. 8 He has showered his kindness on us, along with all wisdom and understanding.


Those are some pretty amazing words.

Glorious: marked by great beauty or splendor. Delightful. Wonderful

Poured: to cause to flow in a stream; to supply or produce freely or copiously; to give full expression to.

Freely: of one's own accord; with freedom from external control; without restraint or reservation; without hindrance; not strictly following a model, convention, or rule.

Riches: things that make one rich

Lavished: expending or bestowing profusely. Expended or produced in abundance; marked by profusion or excess.

Showered: To rain or fall as if in a shower; to give in abundance.

Now go back and read the verses again, this time putting in the long definition of each word:

to the praise of his glorious [delightful, wonderful, marked by great beauty and splendor] grace, which he has freely [of his own accord, with freedom from external control, without restraint or reservation, without hindrance,not strictly following a model, convention, or rule] given us in the One he loves. 7 In him we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, in accordance with the riches of God’s grace 8 that he lavished[produced and expended in abundance, bestowing it freely, marked by profusion and excess] on us.


Overflowing. Excessive. Rich. Deep. Thick. Overabundant. Inexhaustible.

Like a hike. A particular hike.

You're hiking in the mountains and you somehow lost your way. What was to be a pleasant morning excursion has turned into a day-long tramp. You finished your water hours ago, and the only thing you have to keep hunger at bay is salty trail mix. With chocolate. That only makes you thirstier than you already were.
You try to make your way across the mountain; maybe you'll find the trail again. But you're so thirsty it feels like you've eaten the Sahara for lunch and wool socks for dessert.
After what seems like forever and a half, you find some water! Bad news is it's a barely discernible track of a few drops at a time, like the ones that form those tiny icicles on the slate hillsides in winter. You put out your tongue to corral a few drops, but there's so little water that your tongue can't even feel the dampness.

That's our idea of grace, I think. Yeah, it's there, we can see it, but we have to work for it. Really try hard. And when we see it, it's not really enough to change anything about us, so it's not really worth the hype and bother of it all.

Back to the hike. You're still lost, and your failed attempt to get some water has magnified your thirst about five million times. You shoulder your pack and start trudging on again.
The sun has been high overhead for way too long, beating down through the green canopy above, soaking you in rays of heat. You're soaked with something else, too: your own salty sweat as you hike across the mountain.
Then you hear a sound like a strong wind moving the trees. But there's no wind. Can it be true? You rush toward the noise, stumbling over roots and briers, till you come to a rocky gorge. You look up to the mouth of the gorge, and there it is.

A waterfall.

The sun sparkles from the falling droplets like it's a cascade of diamonds. And at that moment you would trade all the diamonds in the world for a drop of that clear water on your tongue. A mist hangs over the pool at the base of the falls, and you can see that the pool overflows into a very wide, very shallow stream. You hesitate only a moment, then start climbing over the rocks to get closer.
The closer you get, the higher the falls look. Close-up the water looks furious rather than friendly. You turn away to head downstream for a taste of the slightly muddier water in the stream, when suddenly something catches your eye.
The falls are roaring, pounding the rocks at the bottom, except in one spot. There a slanted rock ledge breaks the falling water into a gentle, pouring stream. It's just right.
So you stand there and look at it for a couple of years, right? You study it, maybe compose a song about it, get your notepad out of your backpack and start to write a book about it.

No. I don't think so.

You kick off your shoes and practically jump from rock to rock until you come to that ledge. You reach out your hand and the shock of the cold mountain water races up your arm and brings out goosebumps on your skin. You smile as you run your hand through the water. You cup your hands and drink; the water is more refreshing than you could have imagined: clear, but with the slightest hint of earthiness. You drink till you can't hold any more. But it's not enough.
You step forward into the water and feel it coursing down your head, your neck, soaking your clothes and cooling your tired feet. As the endless stream pours around you, you grin and revel in it.


And that is grace as God gives it.

So we praise God for the glorious grace he has poured out on us who belong to his dear Son.[b] 7 He is so rich in kindness and grace that he purchased our freedom with the blood of his Son and forgave our sins. 8 He has showered his kindness on us, along with all wisdom and understanding.