Shannon S. McKee

musings and moments

Making the Most of Your Time

March 19, 2019 by Shannon Leave a Comment

Today marks the last day of our church’s women’s Bible study through the book of Genesis. Among other things, we have made lists, looked for repeated phrases, watched the genealogies, studied the history, noted the characteristics of God revealed in that history, highlighted key words, and looked up the meaning of words like “covenant”. Three hundred women on an adventure through these 50 chapters of this, the “Book of Beginnings”.

Fifty chapters of seeing God’s patience. His sovereignty. The way He keeps His promises. His love, mercy, and justice mingling together. His scarlet thread of redemption that started in chapter 3 and kept on throughout the book. His constant foreshadowing of Jesus. His provision for His covenant people.

I have loved watching our women go after it. Making time to read and study their Bibles. In fact, I was so inspired that when they posted on social media, I started downloading their photos to make this little collage. I love that they didn’t wait for life to slow down or their circumstances to change – they seized the time they already had. Reading and studying on the go if they had to.

I share the photos here now, because I hope you’re inspired and encouraged too. We can do this. We can tend to our inner souls and let our worldview be transformed in the small, ordinary moments of our days. A prayer breathed as we change a diaper. A verse of truth internalized while we wait at our kid’s swim meet. A big thought about God pondered while we take our lunch break at work. A moment alone with our journals before the chaos starts and everyone else wakes up. A chapter read while kids or pets climb on us. A choice to read over our letters from God while we travel (for work or pleasure). Honestly, I wonder if it’s in those spaces that God is most honored because of the intentionality and desire that goes with all those interspersed moments.

It reminds me a little bit of Brother Lawrence who learned to practice the presence of God as he went about his day. He even penned a prayer that started, “Oh Lord of the pots and pans…”

He is the God of Creation. He is the God of Covenant. And, yet, He is also the God of our ordinary moments. What a joy to know Him!

Sitting with Grammy

December 29, 2018 by Shannon 5 Comments

My sweet Grammy’s 95-year-old body is finally starting to really falter. Always active and self-sufficient, it hasn’t been easy for her to be forced into a position of depending on others and questioning if life still has value when you can’t DO much. Who among us doesn’t try to avoid those questions with every fiber of our beings? 

I remember clearly the first time that I realized that she wasn’t invincible. It was the day she told me she couldn’t golf anymore because of the arthritis in her hands. I remember being both saddened but also sort of pissed off by it. What was this thing called aging that was stealing away her abilities? 

I’ve watched her give up driving. Give up getting her hands in the dirt to plant flowers every Spring. Give up running her own errands and doing the laundry. Give up cleaning her own house the way she wants to. Give up getting her white hair done every other Friday. Give up seeing her pal Ella at church every Sunday. Give up writing letters to her bajillion grandchildren. Even give up being able to get her own dang glass of water. At every step it has been a mixed bag of emotions for me. Grief, joy, anger. 

She is so dear to me that I have often wondered what God is doing in this season. She has been ready to go “home” to be with Him for a couple of years now. Ready to be free and in His presence, fully known and loved without the shackles of sin. A few days ago, I sat with her in the stillness of their den. We didn’t talk much. I mostly held her hand and fed her ice chips. And I reflected on the whys of this season, asking the Lord not to tarry too much longer in taking her. 

Why does He keep letting age take things she loves from her? Why doesn’t He just come for her? Why does He wait when she is so ready? 

I don’t know His mind or pretend to understand the orchestrations of the God of the Universe. The One who is both preeminent and yet intensely personal. I don’t understand His timing. And, frankly, I don’t need to because I can trust His character. I trust what I know to be true about Him. His love and mercy and grace toward a broken and rebellious world. His tenderness toward the weak and forgotten ones. His creative attention to detail. His ability to always judge rightly. 

So, I’ll leave being God to Him. But, even in the midst of my questions, I will certainly admit that I can see some of the beautiful things He has been doing since my Grammy started getting more frail – little clues to remind me that He’s got this. 

  • I can see it my grandparents’ marriage. My Grandad has always been an impressive man, worthy of respect and admiration. But, my love of him has grown exponentially over the last couple of years. The way he is serving my Grammy in this season … it’s breathtaking. He is being so like his Lord right now. I think maybe even moreso than when he was teaching church history and reading Sproul (though he does those things well too). As for her part, she is reveling in his care for her.
  • I can see it when I slow down to sit and just hold her hand. In the stillness. The other day, I was sharing with her about my advent readings from that week – about how Christmas is just the beginning and that Jesus will come back as our Bridegroom. How He’ll scoop up His Bride and have a great feast for her. Grammy hadn’t spoken much that visit. But, the smile that played across her face in that moment… well, I would have missed it in my usual busyness. But, today, I was still and quiet and reflective. And I joined her in a powerful moment of anticipation. 
  • I can see it in the way my aunts who live in the area have taken to caring for her so that she can have her wish of staying at home as long as possible. It’s been something I have treasured as I have watched it play out. A WW2 nurse, wife, mom, grandma and great-grandma, she has spent a good bit of her life caring for others… now, her children rise up to call her blessed and spend their hours caring for her. 
  • I can see it in the way she prays. A year or so ago, she told me that she couldn’t do much anymore, so she’d turn her attention to praying more. I know she prays faithfully for all of us and that her prayers are like incense to our Lord. How He must delight in hearing from her as she cares for all of her people! 

I’m sure there are other things. Things that God is doing at this very moment to bring beauty to this phase of our story as we all prepare to send her home. Things unseen that He is working. But I will take these few things and ponder them, rolling them over in my mind until they are like a smooth stone that I can use to raise my own Ebenezer. All the while trusting the One whose promises are always Yes and Amen. 

Of Time and Tasks and Being Overwhelmed: Finding a Better Way

December 7, 2018 by Shannon 6 Comments

Do you ever feel like you’re barely keeping your head above water? Like managing life and being the person you are called to be is overwhelming? In his book The Bullet Journal Method, Ryder Carroll describes this feeling like a “hellish game of whack-a-mole” where we are just flailing around to keep up with all the things that keep popping up around us.  

I don’t know about you, but I have felt this discouraging phenomenon deep in my bones. As well as the accompanying disappointment and frustration that comes with it. Disappointment because nothing is getting the attention it deserves – which means that much of what I am doing is not done well. Frustration because I’m letting other people down, as well as myself. A people pleaser, I find myself moving from this point of frustration into a spiral of shame and hiding. There’s nothing healthy about the whole cycle! 

For much of my adult life, my approach to fixing this cycle was either to try to try harder or to beat myself up and wish I was just more of the “type A” kind of person. At first, I was all about the try harder approach. I read books on time management. I bought a new planner. I reorganized. I made lists. I cobbled together different plans and approaches to keep it all together. When I was on staff with CRU full-time and swimming in waters where I felt confident, this worked pretty well actually. On the surface. But eventually our little McKee life raft slid into unfamiliar waters – first in having and raising kids and, then, in shifting to church ministry where Rick was the pastor and my role was way less defined than it had been with CRU. Sometime during the years that my kids were elementary-aged, I just sort of gave up. I mean, I didn’t sit around watching soaps and eating Bon-Bons all day! I did what I HAD to do. But I also kind of just resigned myself to the fact that I was never going to be a real go-getter. If I ever had been, it was a fluke. I embraced the idea that some people had “it” and some people did not. My husband (aka Ultra Type A Man) had it. I did not. Why fight it? So I mostly did what I HAD to do (kind of close to on-time), a little bit of what I WANTED to do, and fudged everything else (often hiding from it). 

Even during that season, I still embraced the idea that the key to it all was trying harder and employing better time management. I just needed to dig myself out of this hole I was in, drum up more motivation, and work my lists. I hated myself for not being more like Ultra Type A Man. I wondered if it was possible for me to change. (Cue self-loathing, forgetting about the Spirit-filled life, and other unhealthy stuff.) 

If you’re still reading and can relate even a little bit, I want to tell you that over the last year I have discovered a better way. 

And it actually doesn’t start with better time management or audacious life goals. It starts with discernment. I know, it’s not very glamorous, is it? What exactly do I mean by “discernment”? Often times when we talk about discernment, we refer to it like it’s some kind of gut feeling or mystical mojo or sixth sense. But this is not a helpful (or accurate) way to look at discernment because it means that some of us have it and some of us don’t.

In truth, discernment is actually more like wisdom. And wisdom is something that can be learned. In her book, Hannah Anderson defines it this way: “Discernment simply means developing a taste for what is good. It’s developing an instinct for quality, a refined sensibility, an eye for value – to know the difference between what is good and what’s not in order to partake of the good.” 

And how can we develop this instinct? Well, friends, it’s not a quick, easy fix. We acquire taste not by accident, but by spending time training our palates and learning how to make good judgements. It’s a process, a learned skill. One that comes most comprehensively from feasting on God’s Word. Intentionally taking His precepts in day after day, bit by bit. Savoring the flavors and lingering over each bite. It reminds me a little bit of Paul’s words to the Roman Christians in the first century: “…be transformed by the renewal of your mind, that by testing you may discern what is the will of God, what is good and acceptable and perfect.”

While discernment has always been important, I feel like it has become even more of an issue in this current culture. In the last few decades, we have transitioned from an industrial culture to a knowledge-based culture. With the internet, our available sources of said knowledge have grown exponentially. There is really no way to escape from the constant barrage of voices telling us how to think or what to do. (And, yes, I do realize the irony of me saying that here on my blog where I am one of the voices!) We are more connected than ever, move more easily than ever, and have information coming at us constantly. The options before us seem endless. I’m not saying that it’s necessarily bad or good. It’s probably a mix of both. It just is. It IS our reality and we need to acknowledge it. 

And this is why discernment is more than just an intellectual exercise. Or a luxury left to a few people with some mystical sixth sense. It’s insanely practical for every one of us. 

Because whether we realize it or not, we are being influenced by these voices. There are subtle messages we have assumed into our view of the world without running them through a grid of discernment. Guess what? Those assumptions and influences directly affect how we are spending our time. 

Remember the “overwhelmed at managing life” feeling I mentioned in the first paragraph? It’s directly related to our ability to discern. Part of the reason our lives look like a game of whack-a-mole is because we’re just running around responding to all of the messages and priorities that we’ve assumed into our worldview without critically examining them. Without really looking to see if they are good.

Before we head into a new year, I’d like to ponder that some more here in this little space on the internet. During the month of December, I’d like to take a step back and lay down the mallet. I’ll be looking more closely at the priorities I’ve assumed and thinking with more intentionality about my time, my purpose, and my motivations. 

Because the whack-a-mole thing doesn’t do healthy stuff in me. Rather, I want to partake of what it good. Join me? 

Books worth Considering

November 6, 2018 by Shannon Leave a Comment

Next week (November 12th thru the 17th) at the Lifeway store in Fairlawn, OH, Redemption Chapel gets an extra 20% off nearly everything in the store. This led our RC women’s Bible study teaching team to consider some of favorite books for recommendation. I thought I’d share it here as a resource from four women who love God, His Word, and His people. It’s not exhaustive by any means but it’s a solid list of books that we really love. (Several of them appeared on more than one of our lists.) The four of us are a little nerdy about books. We probably have issues. So, take it with grain. We like other fiction and/or non-Christian books too but these are the ones you’re most likely to find at Lifeway. Anyway, it’s something to consider if you’re thinking about heading over there to take advantage of the 20% off. (Don’t forget to think Christmas gifts, while you’re at it! And Bibles. Twenty percent off a new Bible is a good deal.)

 

For Advent:

  • Unwrapping the Greatest Gift: A Family Celebration of Christmas by Ann Voskamp
  • The Greatest Gift: Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas by Ann Voskamp
  • Watch for the Light: Readings for Advent and Christmas
  • Come, Let Us Adore Him: A Daily Advent Devotional by Paul David Tripp
  • The Dawning of Indestructible Joy: Daily Readings for Advent by John Piper

For Children:

  • The New City Catechism for Kids (edited by Tim Keller)
  • My ABC Bible Verses by Susan Hunt
  • Egermeier’s Bible Story Book
  •  The Biggest Story by Kevin DeYoung
  • The Jesus Storybook Bible
  • The Beginner Bible 
  • The Story of Me book series by Stan and Brenna Jones (age appropriate books about God’s design for sex)
  • God Made All of Me (a book to help children protect their bodies) by Justin and Lindsey Holcomb
  • God’s Very Good Idea by Trillia Newbell

General for Adults:

  • The Hiding Place by Corrie Ten Boom
  • Shadow of the Almighty by Elisabeth Elliot
  • None Like Him by Jen Wilkin
  • The Holiness of God by R.C. Sproul
  • Knowledge of the Holy by A.W. Tozer
  • Women of the Word by Jen Wilkin
  • Visual Theology by Tim Challies and Josh Byers
  • The Search for Significance by Robert McGee
  • A Shelter in the Time of Storm (meditations on God and trouble) by Paul David Tripp
  • Reason for God by Tim Keller
  • Crazy Love by Francis Chan (Subtitled Overwhelmed by a Relentless God)
  • Made to Crave by Lysa Terkeurst
  • The Gospel Comes With A House Key by Rosaria Butterfield
  • Soul Keeping by John Ortberg
  • Changes that Heal by Henry Cloud
  • Epic by John Eldredge
  • The Furious Longing of God by Brennan Manning

Motherhood: 

  • Loving the Little Years (Motherhood in the trenches) by Rachel Jankovic
  • The Mission of Motherhood by Sally Clarkson
  • Missional Motherhood by Gloria Furman
  • Becoming Mom Strong by Heidi St. John

Marriage:

  • What Did you Expect by Paul David Tripp
  • Sacred Marriage by Gary Thomas
  • Finding the Hero in Your Husband by Juli Slattery
  • Intimiate Issues by Linda Dillow and Lorraine Pintus

Also, don’t forget to consider the resource page on the Redemption Chapel website. Our staff team has recommended some great books on that site.

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Time to transition from Thanksgiving to Christmas Time to transition from Thanksgiving to Christmas over here… I love marking time and seasons. It has its own kind of beauty and comfort. #seasons #advent
Happy Thanksgiving from part of the McKee clan. (M Happy Thanksgiving from part of the McKee clan. (Miss you Rach and Caleb!) Reminded once again that we have lots to be grateful for. #givethanks #thanksgiving (credit to Xavier for the video)
What is something you tried or learned recently an What is something you tried or learned recently and want to carry forward? 
My answer is here on my latest substack (link in the profile).
Happy Sunday friends! May you find moments of wors Happy Sunday friends! May you find moments of worshipful rest and room for your soul to breathe. Sunday is my weekly, embodied reminder that my little world and its accompanying responsibilities aren’t dependent on me but on the God who holds all of it. I can rest because I am IN Him. His mercies are fresh for today!
Such a joy to walk with friends in support of this Such a joy to walk with friends in support of this dear one. We’re big fans of the whole Kaufman-Knabe-Hall clan.
“You, however, continue in the things you have l “You, however, continue in the things you have learned and become convinced of, knowing from Whom you have learned them; and that from childhood you have known the sacred writings which are able to give you the wisdom that leads to salvation through faith which is on Christ Jesus.” - Paul to his beloved brother in the faith, Timothy (And to me as I am preparing for our study of the ancient wisdom book of Proverbs this Fall. Join me? There are just a few more days left to register.) #proverbs #fallbiblestudy
Porchrokr could have been a bust but we made the b Porchrokr could have been a bust but we made the best of it!! Fun to see a bunch of our peeps there to support TJ, @andrewcappuzzello , @brath3 , and @rath.brian in Shelby Olive’s band. #lifeisanadventure #porchrokr
It was a magical afternoon dining al fresco on the It was a magical afternoon dining al fresco on the homestead of my dear friend Carla. Surrounded by beautiful flowers and bounty from her gardens, we ate good, nourishing food, laughed hard, and shared a bit of life.
 
These are the staff women and the wives of the men in our Redemption Chapel staff family. We all love being together. I can’t get over the things God does in our midst. Earlier in the day, I listened to person after person tell a newcomer to our team how much they feel loved and cared for on this team. How different it is from anything else they’ve ever experienced because we really care about each other beyond the tasks at hand.
 
My heart feels full as I look back on all of it.  
 
#grateful #redemptionchapel #sidedoorfarm. (photos taken by me, Kelly Mabee, and Crystal McCann)
When your baker friend makes you a birthday treat When your baker friend makes you a birthday treat and you’ve been saving them all day. And it’s finally time. Oh the anticipation… And, also, how sad will it be when they’re gone? Sigh.
We’re in our wedding era… attending all of our We’re in our wedding era… attending all of our kids’ and friends’ kids’ weddings.
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