Showing posts with label Call. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Call. Show all posts
Monday, 5 December 2016
Keep on Writing
I was getting ready to leave for the Omega Writer’s Conference in October when I saw it - a call for submmissions for a Children’s Picture Book Writing Competition. They were looking for “creative, winsome charming picture books that help parents instill an open-hearted, transformational, lifelong Christian faith in their children”. I did like the sound of that. Better still, the first prize was $5000.00. Whew! Not an amount to be sneezed at. There were no entrance fees either. I knew I must give it a go when I returned from conference.
Would it herald my big writing moment?
A week later, I came back refreshed and revitalised after a fabulous time in Sydney, having caught up up with those of like minds, learning an abundance of writerly wisdom, being inspired by people and places and best of all, filled with God’s joy. Unfortunately, as it often occurs, a week of intense fibro pain and weariness followed my energetic week away, so it was only a few days before that all important deadline that I had sufficient energy to sit down to create my story.
My dear friend Melissa popped in on the Friday before and spotted our family's pet giraffe (yes, he’s alive …or so we like to think). She suggested I write a story about Raffy - what a brilliant idea! The day before the story had to be submitted, I sat at my computer, concentrating hard. It took hours to craft and refine my award winning picture book. The next day was a busy one. My body felt weak and weary but I persevered, working also on my author bio and the story’s synopsis. Finally, close to midnight and exhausted, I was ready to send in my three documents. Just before I pressed the submit button, the competition’s terms and conditions popped up.
It was then my dream was shattered - a crystal vase smashed into a million shards.
The very first clause had my mouth open, while my jaw dropped a few kilometres downwards. Apparently, the competition was open only to US residents. I could have cried. I’d read the competition details many times over—but for some reason this vital fact had not been publicised. I could hardly believe it. How foolish I'd been!
I wonder what your writing year has been like. Was it filled with instant success, millions of books sold, a plethora of fan mail, TV appearances, a bulging bank balance and a celebrity lifestyle? If you are like many of us Christian writers, you are presently plodding away on your current story, a few drops of hope glistening in your heart, but perhaps also a wee bit discouraged about those writing dreams yet to be fulfilled.
In a few weeks, the curtain will fall on 2016 and we will be left with our memories of the past year. Whatever it brought you in your writing sphere and whatever the future holds for you, let me ask you three questions:
1. Has God called you to write for Him?
2. Have you strived to walk with Him?
3. Have you sought to be obedient to His call?
If you answered ‘yes’ to all three questions, let me shake your hand. Let me celebrate with you. Success for us comes not from the world’s yardstick of accomplishment. It’s simply getting up each morning and doing all that God calls us to do. Persevering. Learning from failure. Not giving up. Perhaps like me you've made a few blunders? No matter - God can redeem them all. He's good at that! So permit any discouragement to fly out of your window like a captive pigeon set free. Congratulate yourself for all the writing you’ve done these past 12 months. Celebrate your conquests with a smile. And let your heart be quick to hear the sound of God’s ‘Well done’.
And now ... put on your writer’s shimmering cloak of joy.
And Keep On Writing.
“Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus.”
Philippians 3:13-14
Anusha Atukorala is a writer and speaker with music in her heart and a message to proclaim. The abundant love of a faithful God is her theme song. God’s call to writing in 2007 led Anusha on a Grand Adventure which continues to surprise and thrill her. Anusha loves to build the body of Christ and to encourage others through the written and spoken word. Her first book ‘Enjoying the Journey’ is comprised of 75 little God stories. She has twelve short stories published in Anthologies and plenty more books in the pipeline. Do drop in to say G’day at her website Dancing in the Rain. She’d love to meet you.
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Monday, 15 August 2016
'The Artist' - A Blog About Time
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The Artist: Oil on canvas by Avril Thomas. Used with permission |
My husband, Marc, and I recently celebrated our tenth wedding anniversary. We booked a gorgeous B&B at McLaren Vale and snuggled together in the warmth as the wind blasted rain against the windows. It was great to spend quality time together in this cosy retreat.
When we checked out on Sunday morning we decided to look at some art galleries. We considered a list of local galleries but in the end we only braved the weather to take in one exhibition, that of South Australian artist, Avril Thomas, at Magpie Springs winery in Willunga.
Avril’s works are striking. I immediately liked the large portrait of South Australian politician, Alexander Downer, and a series of paintings commissioned by the Flinders Medical Centre. These are unusual: Oil paintings of medical professionals, including doctors and nurses working in an operating theatre. I enjoy Avril’s ‘tonal realism’ style and the humanity that seems to imbibe her work.
But there was one painting that stood out for me. The Artist (pictured above) depicts a woman in the act of creating. Colours on her palate stream onto brushes and onto the canvas as the woman paints an image of herself in the act of painting. On first impression I thought it a passionate, unusual work, but then I saw the small hourglass in the lower right quadrant of the painting.
The beauty of art, whatever its form, is that it can pierce us in that place which is the core of who we are. It doesn’t matter whether the medium is oil paint or music or words, art can get inside us and bring conviction. The small hourglass in the painting suggests that time is passing. The notes to the side of the painting explain that the hourglass symbolises the finite nature of time – the artist only has so many days to do the things they’ve been made to do.
As I looked at this painting I sensed that God was speaking to me. ‘Are you doing what I made you to do?’
The conviction didn’t come with judgement. There was no, ‘Come on Susan, you need to do more. MORE!’ It came instead with a sweet sense of grace. I’m in the middle of my life and God has spoken things over me along the way: A call to ministry, a call to write and I think to visual art as well. He has given me some wonderful promises that have budded but are yet to fully flower and fruit. Am I tending those promises as fully as I can? God reminded me that the time available to do that is finite. I need to seek his face and make some tough decisions.
In Ecclesiastes 3:1 it says there’s a time for everything under the sun. So I don’t think Jesus wants us to drop everything and make our art the sole priority. There’s a right time and place for everything. But I sense that for some reading this, like me, God is saying, ‘You’ve been patient, you’ve waited, now it’s time to do the things you've been made for.’
What things has God put on your heart to do?
Sue Jeffrey was born in Scotland but moved to
Brisbane, Australia with her family when she was just a wee lass. After a
childhood spent reading, drawing and accumulating stray animals, Sue studied
veterinary science and later moved to Adelaide where she worked as both a vet
and a pastor. After a sojourn of several years in the Australian Capital
Territory, Sue returned to Adelaide with two dogs, a very nice husband, and a
deepdesire to write. Sue has a MA in creative writing and her short stories and
poems have appeared in several anthologies including Tales of the Upper
Room, Something in the Blood: Vampire Stories With a Christian
Bite and Glimpses of Light. Her e-book Ruthless The Killer: A Short Story is
available on Amazon.com. Sue also
paints animal portraits.
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Monday, 14 March 2016
Is Writing Your 'Calling'? (Sue Jeffrey)
As Christians we use the word ‘call’ a lot. Does God have a calling on our life? Has he called us to write or is writing a distraction from the important things in life such as earning money for our retirement or serving the Lord in a mosquito infested third world country? If writing is part of our calling, what are we called to write?
I remember having this
conversation with God almost ten years ago. I was newly married and my husband
and I had recently moved to Adelaide from Canberra. I was doing a veterinary
locum and I had a couple of hours free in the middle of the day so I decided to
go for a walk and talk to God about writing. I’d heard from a friend that the
Graduate Diploma in Creative Writing at Tabor-Adelaide was a great course. I
wanted to do it, but I wasn’t sure I was meant to. God had given me a clear
call to ministry when I was 25 and I’d worked as a pastor for a few years. Was
I meant to write fiction? Surely it was more likely that God wanted me to go an
above-mentioned mosquito infested country.
I walked through the Payneham
streets talking to God about this.
‘I want to do this Lord, but I’m
not sure I’m meant to.’
Then God spoke to me by a strong
impression in my spirit. ‘Go back to your car, drive to Koorong bookstore, pick a book off the shelf and open it. There you will find your guidance.’
I checked my watch. I had just
enough time, so I drove to Koorong and walked inside. The first book that
caught my eye was Max Lucado’s, Cure For
the Common Life and I opened it (randomly) to page 28 and read:
I was stunned that the Lord would
answer me so quickly and so clearly. He wanted
me to write? I was amazed. I enrolled at Tabor the following year and dived
into the delight of honing my craft.
Do we all need a story like this
to convince us that we have a calling? I don’t believe so. Recently a friend of
mine spoke at my church on this subject. Hoa Stone felt called to go to Vietnam (a mosquito infested
country!) to set up an orphanage for abandoned, disabled children. Hoa
made these points in his message:
· Your calling/life purpose is already within you.
It’s part of your DNA. Look at your life and the special passion you have and
that will be your calling.
· Your past is your qualification, not your
hindrance. Hardships often prepare people for an extraordinary destiny.
· We need to take steps of faith in God. Tiny,
mustard seed steps may be all we can do, but God will honour us.
· The church is about partnering with God for the
healing of the world. Together we can make a difference.
If God has put writing on our
hearts I believe he will use us as part of that world-healing process. We may have a
heart to encourage other believers or our passion might be to write for the
mainstream and ‘build bridges’ between God and the lost. We might have a
passion for social justice and write spec-fic with a prophetic edge. Whatever our heart, I believe the
Lord is saying, ‘Go for it!’
What is your calling? What is your
passion as a writer? Please let me know in the comments below.
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