Right from the very start, this place has been such a blessing to me. Challenging? Yes, but rewarding none the less. My God, when He promises something, He keeps that promise and fulfills it with an overflow of His unending grace and mercy. "At the same time that the dusk is gone, the dawn will come. It is a new day for you."
Through the tears and the struggle with homesickness during the first couple of days, I still managed to experience divine appointments within only my first few hours on campus. Meeting Erica in IT was definitely one of them. I had been worrying about visiting a new church for the first time all by myself, but no worries. Five (+) people have asked ME if they could come to church with me sometime. What a testimony. Also, more times than one, God has woken me up to pray and seek Him and I just know all the potential I have here is through Him. Once I figured that out, I was set. I feel so much peace being here, so much peace.
Tonight, I joined a group called "Girls 4 God." It was started by a communication major, who has a real issue with the way media identifies women, and a big heart to get across the falsity of that. The mission of the group is to be a safe haven for any girl who has ever felt insecure, and to spread the love and truth of Christ through various encouraging projects. Our first project? We are going to write encouraging little notes and messages in all of the girls bathrooms on campus. On post its, mirrors, etc. Eventually, its' going to branch out and become noticeable not just in bathrooms, but everywhere. We are going to change St Rose and the inevitable insecurity that the media sends off to girls all over campus.
Tuesday, August 28, 2012
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Would you rather...
Would you rather be packing for college or drool all over the place the next time you're in public?
I totally hate packing, I'm sick of it. So bring on the DROOL!!!
I totally hate packing, I'm sick of it. So bring on the DROOL!!!
Monday, August 20, 2012
Summer Vacation.
The first day: I took what seemed to be the
longest train trip in the entire world. We kept stopping for no reason, but I finished reading the Hunger Games, and I just
love travelling. When I got there, my boyfriend and his parents greeted me at the
train station with hugs and food. The best things. We played Apples to Apples at the youth group party and after we cleaned up, there was still
music playing so Andrew and I danced in the church basement, and then
stargazed and talked in the grass in the backyard. Then we
all got coffee and went back to their house
to watch Batman.
The second day: We went to a minor league baseball game where my boyfriend's little brother and each kid on his team got to walk out and be introduced with the
player that played their position. I went in a bouncy castle obstacle course and a slide with Jason and Lianna, and stuffed my face with cheese fries. Yum.
The third day: Lots and lots of vacation prep. Then our girls day consisted of: manis and pedis, and black raspberry icecream
with strawberry and pineapple topping for me. The evening was topped off with a massive thunderstorm.
The 4th day: We got a late start on the drive to Jersey. My boyfriend's car
doesn’t have AC, and it was 101 degrees, so that was quite an adventure in itself. We didn’t get
to Six Flags till about 5PM but because of the storm the night before there
weren't any lines. We were able to do absolutely everything we wanted
to do before the park closed. I finally went on King Da Ka, but El Toro was my favorite. We had pizza for dinner and stayed at a wicked fancy hotel for the night.
That weekend: After checking out of the hotel we drove to Ocean
City, MD. There was a ton of traffic that added extra time onto our drive. The first night in OC we spent swimming, getting caught in the rain, singing "What Makes You Beautiful" in Apple Bee's, and falling asleep watching the Olympics.
Then on Sunday was Carissa’s birthday. We basically spent the entire
day at the beach, in the ocean (me getting pumbled by waves), and discovering the
most delicious pretzels in the entire world. We went to a really fancy place
for dinner that night and sat outside on the patio by the ocean, watching the
sunset. Then we spent the rest of the night walking along the boardwalk and
going through all the different shops.
Monday we spent the day in the pool, eating stuffed pretzels, and being awed on our double date at the Ripley's Believe It Or Not museum. For our date night, Andrew and I went to Fager’s Island: the best restaurant I have ever been to, which really shouldn’t
have worked out as well as it did. Basically, when Andrew tried to call and set
up reservations the night before, they told us that the type of dining we were
looking for was not available to be reserved – so it was basically just go and hope you can find a table. So we get there, not as early as we had hoped, and there wasn't ANY available parking spaces. We had to wait
in a huge line of cars just to get into the parkinglot, but fortunately when we
drove around the lot for a little bit, a car pulled out of a parking
space right in front of us that we were able to snag. Then we went inside and
the hostess told us to find a table. The back deck was packed. A lady that worked there saw us standing around looking lost, and spotted another couple that had just left. She hurried up and cleaned the table and we
ended up with one of the best views of the sunset. We sat on the corner of the deck, facing the bay and the dock and the gazebo and the
sunset. AMAZING. There was music blasting and they set off
streamers into the ocean at the end of one of the songs – it was lovely. The
deck was decorated with strings of lanterns. We
had such a nice time. After our dinner, we walked along a bridge to see the view and we were surrounded
by the bay/ocean and partly lit hotels. Then we went to the fair and walked the boardwalk for a while.
Tuesday we spent the morning on the boardwalk, eating more
pretzels, and the afternoon boogie boarding in the ocean/laying on the beach
again. We went to Crab Alley for dinner, watched the Olympics, and there were
fireworks over the marina from the beach. Then we went back over to the
boardwalk for our last night there. Bittersweet.
Wednesday began summer fest. We drove from Ocean City to
Elkton, had breakfast at a nice café, got stuck in a storm at Starbucks, and
stopped at Chick Fil A for the appreciation day. It was my first time there and
there was literally no space left to move – it was amazing. Jabin Chavez spoke
that night about being on God’s mind, and how Jesus was alone when he
preached/taught, so that when we feel alone in the natural it’s just a moment
of redirection where we have to pick up our cross and stand alone with God. He
said “Choosing a season alone will lead to a lifetime with Jesus.” This message
really spoke to my heart and the way I’ve been feeling since I came home from
Ithaca. After service, we went into the cafeteria for desserts and then back to
our rooms for curfew at midnight. I stayed with Jenel, Sam
and Carissa so we basically just spent the whole night awake and talking –
filling each other in on the important parts of our lives that we had yet to
talk about. It was good for some real girl bonding time. For some reason though, I
remember this night the least.
For whatever reason I was the most amped for the morning
services this year. Something about getting up early to praise God brings me
joy. Joey was on camera crew video taping the worship services all weekend and
he said he got a good close up of me praying and crying out to God. I was praying so much Thursday morning, about every little thing I could think of. God’s
presence was so captivating that I started laughing hysterically, and I just
couldn’t stop. I just had the biggest dumb grin on my face, glorifying our
amazing God. Jabin Chavez spoke again that morning and this time he gave us 5
points to keeping our destiny: Make the bible a priority, pray, stay
passionate, marry the right person, and forgiveness. I really like
Jabin. He’s a good mix of funny and sticking to the point during his
sermons. He never goes too far off topic with his jokes but he keeps everyone,
especially the youth, paying attention. Those are qualities of a great youth
pastor. That afternoon we spent playing volleyball. I hadn’t played in years so it was a lot of fun. Thursday night Dr. Jay LaRue preached and he is so passionate
and knowledgeable of the word that I barely have any notes. I was too focused
on what he was saying. He paints a very detailed picture of the scriptures he uses
when he preaches, and has a style sort of like slam poetry with his hand
motions, movements and the way he presents himself and speaks. It was kind of
difficult to follow at first, but amazing once I caught on.
Friday was basically the same thing: morning service,
volleyball, night service. Dr Jay preached during both services which made me
really happy because I decided he’s my favorite preacher I’ve ever heard at a
conference. He’s older which generally means he contains more wisdom – but the passion he
exhibits for God through his messages is just incredibly liberating. He preached on John 4:10-14 and John 7:37 and the rivers of life flowing
through our bellies. That night, Jay LaRue preached again and it was the most
powerful service yet. When we went back to our seats after worship, we never actually stopped worshipping… on our faces, in our seats, and nearly everyone’s arms were
raised. Then Dr. Jay had an alter call for people wanting more Jesus and
everyone ran to the front of the church. We were all kneeling down and praying
and worshipping and Dr. Jay started preaching with all of us there sitting up
front on the floor right under his feet. It made things a lot more personal, I
think. Then he had all of the people who were above the age of 20 stand up in a circle around the rest of
us, and told them to pray over us. Then he started prophesying again, and he prophesied over me this time.
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