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Peter Claver

Legacies lie in history, waiting to be unveiled. This guest post by my pastor-husband, Tom Gaddis, unveils the spiritual legacy of Peter Claver (1581-1654).

The Ships

The smell is what hit him first—the stench of death and unmentionable filth, then the heat. Soaked in sweat and descending into the humid dark, the moans of the dying and those sick with dysentery made him imagine what it must be like to be in the bowels of hell.

By the brief flicker of his oil lamp he could now see images—men, women, the dead-shackled together—lying in the slime and squalor built up during the two-month voyage from Africa to Cartegena. Some shrunk back in terror at his approach, while others glared menacingly. But the majority, weakened by the ordeal, just lay uncaring and limp.

Peter Claver, moving through the fetid hold, found the suffering—their bodies bleeding from the lash, emaciated from dysentery, and riddled with scurvy. He did what he would do for the next forty years. He ministered tirelessly—washing and tending their wounds, clothing their nakedness, lessening their hunger with lemons, bread, rum, and jams, and burying their dead.

The Streets

Herded off the ships, Peter would continue his mercy ministries, joining the slaves in the holding pens awaiting auction. Later, he would visit and care for them on the surrounding plantations. In time, with the help of interpreters and pictures, he regularly shared with them about God’s saving love through Christ.

While Peter could not abolish slavery, he did become a nuisance to the city officials and unpopular among the plantation owners by advocating for the rights of slaves to have Christian marriages and forbidding the separation of families.

The clerical authorities often misunderstood Peter. After all, this young Jesuit from the finest college in Spain and a well-to-do family, could have had any number of comfortable ministries among Cartegena’s Catholics. But instead, he chose to minister to slaves, even sleeping with them in their quarters when visiting them at the mines or plantations.

The Shadows 

Though not dynamic or gifted with a charismatic personality—he was known as shy and reticent—Peter Claver was amazingly fruitful in his forty years of ministry. It is commonly estimated that he instructed and baptized some 300,000 slaves. Then after four years of sickness, which forced him to remain inactive and largely neglected, he died on September 8, 1654. He was 74.

He always felt that this fruitfulness was about love. He would say to us today, as he did to his generation, “We must speak to them with our hands before we try to speak to them with our lips.”

Now it’s your turn: Today there are some very miserable slaves in our world—slaves of sexual desires, drugs, alcohol, anger, or selfishness.

What are you doing about those who cross your path daily? How is the love of Christ flowing through you to make a difference? Share with us in the comment section below.

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

Photo of Debbie Fuller for Holy in the Daily blog

The amazing Debbie Fuller

Really—I’m not kidding! Your hobby can become a way to communicate your spiritual legacy. My mother-in-law gave us a handmade quilt when Tom and I married. She had created it from scraps of clothes once worn by members of the family. Each scrap had a story to tell, and I wish I had written the stories all down, but I didn’t. My bad. I still have the quilt, but I only remember a few of the stories.

Not everyone is as shortsighted as I am. My friend, Debbie Fuller, took her hobby of collecting keys and turned it into a creative means of communicating part of her spiritual legacy.

Debbie and her husband, Foch, live in Vallejo, California. She’s the mother to 3 young men, mother-in-love to three wonderful young women, and grandmother to three gorgeous and brilliant grandchildren. She and Foch have co-pastored North Bay Foursquare Church for the last 22 years.

Besides serving Jesus with an amazing bunch of believers, Debbie says, “My personal passion is photography. I’ve always been our families’ historian. I think I may have taken the job a little too seriously over the years. We have thousands of pictures documenting every birthday, celebration, and accomplishment!”

I recently interviewed Debbie about using her passion for photography and her key collection to create a beautiful, new book titled Unlocked. Welcome to Holy in the Daily, Debbie, and thank you for doing this interview.

What inspired you to write a book about keys?

“It wasn’t my plan to start collecting keys. Years ago I purchased a key as a reminder of my grandmother’s house which held for me many wonderful childhood memories. After that, whenever I came across a unique key I found that I wanted to keep it.”

“God always spoke to me about a specific aspect of the authority He entrusted to us with each key I collected. Over the years people have given me keys knowing I collect them.”

How would you describe this book project?

“I wanted to do something with these keys that would treasure the lessons learned upon receiving each unique key. So I set out to photograph and write about them.”

Who do you hope reads this book and why?

“People who want to grow in their personal relationship with God will glean from this book. The pages beckon the reader to action. Our walk with Jesus is not simply an escape from hell’s fire, but rather it is a growing vital relationship. God has entrusted the keys to His kingdom to us! We need to know what they open and how to use them.”

What do you hope people walk away with after reading your book?

“I hope people walk away feeling personally challenged to use the keys that have been entrusted to us. I also hope the reader will do away with fear and intimidations that keep us living small and hesitant to take risks.”

How does someone approach a particular hobby as a way to communicate a spiritual legacy?

“God places desires in our hearts. I think those desires are given to reveal more of who Father God truly is. He’s more personal than we realize. In every little aspect of life, God is speaking to us. We just need to tune in and listen to Him.”

“I would suggest that you ask God to open your ears to hear what He’s saying to you through your personal passion(s). He will speak to you the way you hear—in your language! Enjoy the journey of growing in love with your creative Creator.”

Thanks Debbie for sharing. You’ve combined your passions for photography and keys to create a beautiful book that leaves a legacy with your children, grandchildren, and the folks you serve.

UnlockedClick here to preview Unlocked, Debbie’s beautiful book. Once you have landed on her Unlocked book page, click the bottom right corner to enlarge the book for better viewing of each page. The appealing photos give a face to each key and story of Debbie’s message. (Unlocked is also available for purchase, just in case you were wondering.)

Now it’s your turn: What hobby do you enjoy that might become a means of communicating something of your spiritual journey? Have you shared it with others and if so, how?

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

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Eternal Foundations logo

Eternal Foundations logo

Everyone builds a spiritual legacy even if they don’t plan to. Each of the twelve disciples built their legacy as they walked and talked with Jesus and spent the remainder of their years spreading the gospel across the known world. Even Judas left a spiritual legacy; negative, yes, but a legacy we note and from which we learn what not to do.

A positive spiritual legacy is made up of things we do and say that make a difference in other’s lives and draw them closer to Jesus in some way. The people we influence may only meet us one time, or they may be folks we live and work with for years. They might remember our name, which is important if they are family, but our name may not be something that impacts them at all. We know we’ve made a difference if our words and/or actions leave a small imprint of Jesus in their hearts.

Saint Paul said it this way when he wrote to the Corinthians:

You yourselves are our letter, written on our hearts, known and read by everyone. You show that you are a letter from Christ, the result of our ministry, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone but on tablets of human hearts (2 Corinthians 3:2, 3 NIV).

Usually years are needed to build a spiritual legacy because so much of that legacy is made up of the impact we have on people as we slowly change into the image of Jesus. Folks watch us. How we interact and respond in life circumstances, how we spend our money, where we hang out, the way our time is used, the kindnesses we do in Jesus name, and the way we treat the people around us–all these are things that impact those we love and those we stumble across.

What to expect in 2012

This year you will be seeing more posts that relate to building your spiritual legacy. It’s what I do with my life: help people build their spiritual legacies. The post categories will remain the same as we explore how to grow in Jesus, how to make a difference, and how to laugh and enjoy the life entrusted to us by the One-Who-Gave-His. I hope you continue to hang around and grow with me.

One addition to this blog will be a monthly interview with someone who is building an inspiring spiritual legacy. This month we’ll be hearing from Debbie Fuller who has found a unique way to use her key collection to communicate part of her spiritual legacy. She’s an amazing woman, and I look forward to sharing her interview.

I’d love to get to know you better this year. I have so enjoyed connecting with those of you who have made yourself known to me, and I look forward to building a relationship with so many more. You can always leave a comment on one these blog posts, or you can join the conversation at one of my following haunts:

1. Monday through Friday I share a daily tip on building your spiritual legacy and a quote to help you find the Holy in the daily on my author Susan Gaddis Facebook page. Just click “like” when you arrive on my page to receive the tips on your home feed. It’s also a good place to hang out and dialogue with others who are building a legacy.

2. If you frequent Twitter, I share tips and links that help you build your spiritual legacy @susangaddis. I use the hashtag #buildalegacy. Mention that you found me at Holy in the Daily and I’ll follow you back so I can get to know you.

3. If Linkedin is your kind of place, I’ll look forward to connecting with you there.

4. You can sign up to receive my monthly Building a Spiritual Legacy newsletter via email here.

5. And finally, if you’re looking for resources and haven’t checked out my books yet, visit Eternal Foundations. There you’ll find details on:

Ebooks to help you deposit a legacy within your children or grandchildrenEternal Foundations for a New Generation

A book to help you leave a legacy through prayerIntercessors, God’s End-time Vanguard: How To Pray Effectively for the Things That Matter Most. Available in paperback ($9.95) or ebook ($2.99) at Amazon.comApple, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, Sony, Kobo, Smashwords, etc.

A book on how to leave a legacy through healthy relationshipsHelp, I’m Stuck With These People for the Rest of Eternity: Christian Advice on Healthy Relationship Characteristics and Making Relationships Work. Available in paperback ($9.95) or ebook ($2.99) at Amazon.comApple, Barnes & Noble, Smashwords, Sony, Kobo, etc.

So there you have it–what to expect in 2012. I look forward to the journey together.

(And Oh, I almost forgot–I’m going to be doing some remodeling of my website and blog design soon. So please be patient when you find things a little messy. Thanks.)

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

Happy New Year! How will you be Jesus with skin on in 2012? Will you make a difference in someone’s life? This short Monday’s Moment clip shows how easy it is to change the way you see the needs of others.

 If you received this post via RSS or email and cannot view the clip, please visit my Holy in the Daily blog to get your New Year’s inspiration.

How have you changed in the way you view the less fortunate? Share your story with us in the comment section below.

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

It is the day after Christmas–now what? This short Monday’s Moment clip brings it all home. Pass it on.

If you received this clip via RSS or email and cannot view it, please visit my Holy in the Daily blog to find out “the rest of the story.”

Are the people living in darkness around you seeing the light born at Christmas? If not, what are you going to do about it?

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build a spiritual legacy

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Nativity art painting

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com

In order to have a meaningful Christmas, my mother had us four children memorize the Christmas story from Luke 2 when I was about seven years old. We stood on the big platform in front of the crowded church and recited that long chapter from memory. Mom was proud. I was so scared I thought I was going to pee my little girl panties. Except for the fear of embarrassing myself in front of our church family, the simple story of the birth of Christ from Luke 2 wrapped me in the warmth of a perfect Christmas.

Childhood is a long ago memory for me. I’ve grown up and discovered that I live in a broken world. I can’t solve the problems of my life, let alone the problems of the homeless or the broken. In reality, the world seems too complicated for the simple story from Luke 2. So it was definitely a Holy Spirit nudge when my advent devotions connected with Henri Nouwen’s words this morning:

Somehow I realized that songs, music, good feelings, beautiful liturgies, nice presents, big dinners, and many sweet words do not make Christmas. Christmas is saying “yes” to something beyond all emotions and feelings. Christmas is saying “yes” to a hope based on God’s initiative, which has nothing to do with what I think or feel.

Christmas is believing that the salvation of the world is God’s work and not mine. Things will never look just right or feel just right. If they did, someone would be lying . . .. It is into this broken world that a child is born who is called Son of the Most High, Prince of Peace, Savior.

The story is so simple, so crystal clear, so unpretentious. I do not have to do anything with it. I do not have to explain or examine these events. I simply have to step into them and allow them to surround me.

I like that–stepping into the story and allowing it to surround me. The story, of course, is bigger than Christmas. But at Christmas I remind myself that walking forward into the New Year, I walk with the One who is living the story through me. I can face a broken world once again.

What are you surrounding yourself with this Christmas? Is it making your Christmas meaningful? Why or why not?

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

Christmas Bible text

Photo courtesy of ©iStockphoto.com

Are you avoiding Christmas this year because you aren’t in the mood? Is busyness or financial troubles making Christmas seem like too much of a hassle? I have a friend who doesn’t decorate for Christmas because she feels there is no one to enjoy it. The kids have all left home, and her husband has passed away. Another friend just isn’t in the mood for Christmas and plans to ignore it this year.

I can relate to sorrow invading the Christmas season, limiting our joy. I lost my mother a week before Christmas a few years ago, and it was a very sad time. The Christmas gathering at my house gets smaller every year as the kids marry and get involved in their extended families. Loneliness, sorrow, and depression are all valid feelings and shouldn’t be ignored during the holidays. But Christmas shouldn’t be ignored either.

Christmas isn’t about us. It is about the celebration of the coming of our King to planet earth–God becoming man. We call this season Advent, which means “arrival.” Christmas sets us up for the Christian’s main celebration of Easter–the death, burial, and resurrection of this God Man so that our sins could be forgiven. Without Christmas, there would be no Easter. In my book, celebrating Christmas is a form of worship.

Are you avoiding Christmas this year? Too busy? Financially strapped? Have sorrow, loneliness, or depression robbed you of the opportunity to worship the King?

Here are five tips for how to celebrate Christmas when you’re not in the mood:

1. Get yourself over to a senior citizen facility and ask the receptionist for the names and room numbers of those who have no family in the area to visit them. Then visit each senior and listen to their stories, pray with them, and leave a Christmas card or plate of cookies. If you have children still at home, get them involved in the baking and visiting.

2. Give a gift of value to those you love–a heart felt letter of appreciation for how their lives have touched yours, a pretty plate that belonged to your grandmother, a box of family recipes you’ve copied, or that set of teacups that are gathering dust in the china cabinet. Some things shouldn’t be left until you are too old to enjoy giving them away.

3. Plan a day to make Christmas crafts or cookies with your kids, grandkids, or some of the children from the church whose mother works and has little time for this kind of special activity. Play Christmas music, serve hot chocolate, and share with the children your memories of Christmas and how Jesus has impacted your life. Let them tell you their stories of Jesus.

4. Call your local homeless shelter or soup kitchen and find out what they need during December. Choose one avenue in which to help serve those less fortunate than you. Then do it.

5. Visit Ann Voskamp’s blog, A Holy Experience, and download her free Advent Jesse Tree book. For many years, our family has enjoyed the story of the coming of the Messiah as a December daily devotional. The kids enjoy putting the symbols of each Old Testament promise on the special tree as we slowly work our way up to December 25th, the day of the birth of the King. We use a traditional small fir tree, but my friend Vickie always finds a bare branch that she sprays white and sets in a weighted pot for her family’s Jessie Tree. Even though the kids have all left home, Vickie and Dave still celebrate Advent with their Jessie Tree.

What have you found helpful in keeping Christmas as a time of worship to our King? What brings Advent alive for you? I’d love to have your input.

Susan Gaddis, Helping you build your spiritual legacy

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Would you take the parachute if you were told that you had to jump out of a plane? This Monday Morning Clip with The Skit Guys make the jump of salvation a choice that each of us must make.

If you received this post via RSS or email and cannot view the clip, please visit my Holy in the Daily Blog for your deep thought of the day.

What is your experience with “The Parachute?” Comments, questions, or opinions? Click on Comments below to leave your input.

If you enjoyed The Parachute Monday Morning Clip, please pass it on with one of the Share and Enjoy buttons below for Email, Facebook, Twitter,Linkedin,and more.

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

My life message is all about preparing people for eternity, so this clip captures much of my heart. You are an eternal person–live like it!

If you received this post via RSS or email and cannot view the short clip, please visit my Holy in the Daily blog to view it.

What are you doing to invest in eternity?

For more on how to leave a spiritual legacy, sign up for my Living a Spiritual Legacy newsletter.

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

Do you always remember to take the name of Jesus with you? Sometimes we need to be reminded of how powerful the name of Jesus is. His name is not a magic wand, but all the authority of Heaven stands behind that name. This Monday’s Moment clip is a true story from the pages of history that will warm your heart.

If you received this post via email or RSS and cannot view it, please visit my Holy in the Daily blog to receive your inspirational clip for the day.

I have seen the name of Jesus disarm attackers, send demons fleeing, and restore relationships. In what way have you seem Jesus move through the speaking or singing of his name?

In Him together, Susan Gaddis

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