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Erin Lucie

  • Storm

    November 1st, 2025

    All day, storm clouds have bubbled and billowed beyond my window, thundering and flashing, before rolling on, revealing swatches of blue sky.

    My soul often feels like that sky. Turbulent, unsettled, yet not without moments of respite.

    And it is endlessly frustrating to me how unstable it seems to be human.

    I can wake in the morning with giddy contentment, filled to the brim with happiness and gratitude, yet by nightfall find myself somber and ponderous, at odds with the world and all its injustice, or worse still, at odds with myself and my many failures.

    This emotional pendulum swing feels like a theme park ride with no end and an undercurrent of exhaustion sweeps through the rhythms of my life.

    And when I’m carried off into that current, I find myself wondering: how can God love one so changeable? So moved by mood and circumstance?

    Then I recall a story. A story of Jesus and a storm.

    In the story, I see Jesus at rest — assured of His Father’s goodness — on an ancient fishing boat in a tumultuous storm on the Sea of Galilee.

    I see his disciples — the very friends who had watched Him preach of the Kingdom of God and witnessed His miracles — cry out in the fear of losing their lives: ‘Teacher, don’t you care if we drown?’

    Their words rouse Him. He rises up and speaks first to the wind and the waves.

    “Peace, be still!”

    The storm immediately subsides.

    I find it beautiful that Jesus calms the physical storm first. He provides the conditions in which His friends can truly pay attention what He has to say. Only then does he address the storminess inside the hearts.

    “Why are you so fearful? How is it that you have no faith?”

    This gentle rebuke was not meant to shame them for their faithlessness. These words pulled their focus to He who is always faithful.

    In resting in the storm, Jesus demonstrated His steadiness.

    In silencing the storm, Jesus demonstrated His sovereignty.

    In being Jesus’ friend, it is His steadiness and His sovereignty, upon which I can always rely. It is He who quiets the storms around me, and more importantly, He quiets the storms of my soul.

  • Spoken in song

    April 22nd, 2025

    Feeling disappointed and brittle as I reverse my car out of the garage, I press shuffle play on my ‘Favourite Praise’ playlist, a mix of 27 songs that I’ve collected over the years, songs that speak to me deeply about the character of God and encourage me in my relationship with Him.

    I raise the volume to the point where a distorted crackle vibrates through the car speakers, and David Phelps’ rousing rendition of ‘No More Night’ reminds me that a future is coming in which disappointment will be non-existent. The desires of my heart will align with God’s desires for me, and I will find them all fulfilled.

    Then the soaring voice of Steve Green encourages me with the lyrics of ‘Find Us Faithful’. Reminding me that a life of faithfulness to God isn’t for the purpose of reward, but rather to bear witness to the beautiful character of God.

    These powerful songs give way to a gentle guitar introduction of ‘Give Me Jesus’, and the warm tone of Fernando Ortego sings the truth into my soul that there is nothing in the world that can offer me that which is found in Jesus.

    Even with all this lyrical affirmation, I still feel bereft and lonely, and as the final chorus of ‘Give Me Jesus’ began to play, I raise a somewhat pitiful petition:

    Jesus, please let ‘Be Still and Know’ be next, then I’ll know that you are listening to me and that you are near.

    ‘Give Me Jesus’ fades away and there is a beat of silence as the track changes, and in that fleeting pause, I unreliably feel that all my hope of reassurance hangs on the notes I hear next.

    The familiar sounds of the mandolin introduction of Steven Curtis Chapman’s ‘Be Still and Know’ echo through the car, and the tears come instantly.


    Be still and know that He is God
    Be still and know that He is holy


    Fat drops of praise roll down my cheeks.


    Be still, oh, restless soul of mine
    Bow before the Prince of Peace
    Let the noise and clamour cease


    A messy sniffling of surrender.


    Be still and know that He is God


    An overflow of deep gratitude.


    Be still and know that He is faithful
    Consider all that He has done
    Stand in awe and be amazed
    And know that He will never change
    Be still
    .


    And in this moment I am still. And I surely do feel awe and amazement that God would grant me so small a miracle as to direct probability in my favour, desiring that I instantly feel His love and attention.

    The song fades to its conclusion and in a moment of doubt I weakly ask for the song to repeat. But God knows best what to say and when, and Sandi Patti’s ‘In The In Between’ began to play.

    In the lyrics, the ‘in between’ refers to the seasons of everyday life that stretch out between the highs of life. The waiting seasons, the seasons of routine and rote. The season that has me feeling sore as the bituman passes beneath me.

    The song finishes at the very moment I park my car.

    God has a final word:


    Jesus,
    He’s still a faithful friend…
    Yesterday, today, and forever.
    And in the in between.


    My heart retunes to a frequency of abundance, not absence.


    And I refocus on Jesus,

    my faithful friend,

    who speaks to me in song.

  • A weary prayer

    April 12th, 2025

    The sky is grey and my mood is grey as I try and wrestle out some insipid piece of writing about the properties of granite and stony hearts and God’s promise of hearts of flesh.

    I open a fresh blank writing field, muster all my honesty, and try again.

    My frustration comes from the fact that some metaphor about what my stony heart is, doesn’t cut quickly enough to the why my stony heart is.

    That is, most days, I am so immensely wearied by the world.

    I’m not angry, or indignant, or offended by the evil that closes in around us as I should be.

    I am simply weary.

    And in my weariness, all I find is a desperate hum of a prayer underlying the comings and goings of each of my days:

    Yes, Lord, I know my heart is stony. Can’t you see why? I’m too tired to feel anything. I’m exhausted by the onslaught of information I’m presented with day in, day out. My eyes and ears are assaulted all day long by images and videos of politics and politicians, and content creators making jokes, and house renovations, and travel vlogs, and cats being pranked, and parenting advice, and celebrity drama, and, and, and, and, and …

    the information keeps coming and coming and coming and never ends.

    And yes, I know it comes by very own hand, swiping next, switching apps, swiping over and over again.

    And the day ends, and I am numb. I have no capacity to feel anymore.

    And I know You call me into relationship, relationship with You and relationship with others. But the thought of spending one more ounce of energy in Your Word, or on my neighbours, or friends, or even my family, seems only a promise to drain me of what little energy I have left. So, I hoard it for myself and enter the cycle of scrolling mindlessly once again, heart hardening a little more.

    But my thoughts don’t always tell me the truth, and I need You correct my wayward thinking.

    I need you to remind me that You do promise a heart of flesh (Ezekiel 36:26), one that is warm and alive and feels and cares deeply for the sorrow of the world.

    I need You to remind me that though the internet never sleeps, neither do You (Psalm 121:3-4). I can reach for You as often and as frequently as I do my phone and You will be there.

    I need You to remind me that You promise to renew the strength of those who place their trust in You (Isaiah 40:31) and that Your plan for your beloved humans is a life filled with the abundance of Your goodness (John 10:10).

    I need You to teach me how to give my time wisely, so that it can be given generously to the flesh and blood lives in my day to day life, not squandered on self-serving activities that will ultimately drain me.

    My prayer halts, suspended in the frenzied list of I need Yous.

    Having printed my petition onto the page, I wish I could say that all becomes cured, that my world weariness evaporates. But it does not. This prayer is not a magic wand, but more a magnet, and in the uttering I am pulled closer to the heart of God.

    Here, in proximity to the warm and beating heart of the Creator of the Universe, the Spirit adds an epilogue to my troubled prayer. A simple line from an old hymn. A statement of what is true and what can be relied upon in this time of constant noise:

    There is a place of quiet rest, near to the heart of God.

  • Return

    April 10th, 2025

    I skim over the headings and the words I have posted in this little online space from 2017 to 2023. In many ways, they were years of immense change. I lived far away from my family for a time; I changed jobs; I moved house; I was in a relationship for a time and I experienced the end of that relationship; a global pandemic came and went. It seems that writing anchored me during those years. It gave me a way to discover myself during that time.

    We are well into 2025 now and apart from a few poetic lines attached to an Instagram post here and there, the idea of writing has been relegated to a corner. It sits there loudly, mind you, questioning, demanding, longing. I have glanced to it often over the past twelve months or so, promising that one day it will have the chance to run forth, to scatter ideas and musings onto blank space once more, but I have always found more excuses to leave it in its place.

    Today though, I have beckoned it over and invited it to make a return.

    I return to writing with more questions than answers, more doubt than assurance, more clutter than clarity. This is a noisy world and I hesitate to throw more into the fray, but I have been pondering the importance of quiet lately — inner quiet — and have been encouraged that maybe, just maybe, I can be a voice that amplifies peace, magnifies beauty, and points towards the surest Hope I know.

    And the more voices to that end, the better.

  • Reflections on a Wednesday in September

    September 27th, 2023

    I sit at a desk in an AirBnb in the Southern Highlands of New South Wales. I gaze through white shutters to the pale purple wisteria crawling along the rail that gives the porch its boundary. Beyond the wisteria is a beautifully landscaped garden underneath a blue and grey patchwork sky. Despite the slight ache of loneliness that has accompanied these past few days, something tells me that this is sacred time.

    Next to me sit a white plate and mug. The plate has a streak of chocolate left from the biscuit I ate to accompany the tea I purchased from a local store in a day of solo wandering. I switch on the lamp that stands like a sentinel on the corner of the desk. It’s light deepens the shadows in the room. Despite the longing that pushes gently on the walls of my chest, I sense that this is hallowed time.

    I don’t often admit to being lonely, because I don’t often feel it. When the pain of a great heartbreak, now some years passed into my history, subsided, I found deep peace in being alone.

    But there are times when the loneliness that usually lies dormant, awakens. Like a meal being prepared, a unique set of ingredients combine to draw that particular emotional flavour to the surface. A dream-come-true wedding; time spent with married friends; a vague relational prospect that never eventuates; a love cherished and true but not meant to be more; couples dancing among the tulips; a table for one; a cosy, but silent, cottage; a cold side of a queen-sized bed.

    The loneliness simmers, and I realise I have a choice.

    Do I push it away? Lock it inside a vault made of apathy and bury it in distraction? I’ve done this many a time before.

    Or do I gaze at it? Do I rest my mind’s eye on it as thoughtfully and as gently as I gazed out of the window at the pale purple wisteria? Do I observe and marvel at this holy emotion?

    I become aware that as my fingers have typed out this reflection I have made my choice.

    I’ve stared into my loneliness, and see it as something beautiful. A beautiful reminder of a deep truth of the universe. A truth woven into the fabric of reality by a loving and relational Creator:

    You are not meant to be alone.

    I fix my eyes on the scene outside of my window. The sky has become grey with storm clouds; the air has cooled. Thunder rumbles as I notice that the room has become dark save for the steady, symbolic lamplight.

    This lonely day has become a lovely reminder:

    You will not always be alone.

  • Thirty Days to Thirty

    June 25th, 2022

    The day is rapidly slipping away. 

    I am searching for what I want to say before the clock strikes midnight and my neat little plan to memorialise my thirty years in the thirty days until I turn thirty turns into the proverbial pumpkin. 

    And I type and retype, trying to acknowledge the indulgence that such a plan seems to be. Trying to acknowledge that yes, the world is cracking and crumbling around us, yet all I feel impressed to do is tell my story. It’s a tension I feel pull tight whenever I sit down to a keyboard.

    But this is my corner of the internet, my small sphere of influence, and if the words here can bring any light, any levity, or any goodness into the brokenness then I will write what’s on my heart, and I will write with all my heart.

  • Happiness

    May 8th, 2022

    I am happy.

    Words I’m scared to say out loud. Scared that if they leave their home inside my mind they’ll be attacked along the road and exist no more. Scared that happiness only lasts as long as I keep it safe and quiet.

    But this happiness has been long in the asking and hard in the wrestling. And such a thing demands celebration.

    I’m celebrating the unadulterated joy of games nights with friends; school camps and the company of my students; late nights with my cousins; afternoon naps; watching live musical theatre; croissant sandwiches on slow Sunday mornings; and the perfect peace rooted deep in my soul that my life is held safe in the hands of a loving God.

    I’m celebrating because I’m not so naive to believe that this feeling will be constant – this world is a little too broken for such assurance. I’m letting this happiness leave loud from my mind, so I can come back to it during the inevitable days of sorrow and be reminded of the hope I have beyond the boundary of this life:

    Happiness is coming to stay for good.

  • Reflections on a Tuesday in April

    April 11th, 2022

    I gaze upon the humans suspended in the blue of the afternoon. Some in hang gliders, others in paragliders, all wafting through the air above those of us traversing the solid surfaces of earth, concrete or metal. In a way I envy them their flight, wishing myself to be removed from the ground to see things from a different perspective.

    And isn’t that so often the way of humans? To long to experience life from a different angle, another perspective.

    What would life look like if I stayed in Victoria instead of moving to Queensland?
    Or if I said no instead of yes, or yes instead of no?
    Or if I’d never had my heart broken?
    Or if I chose to quit my job, or move towns, or travel, or study?

    It’s easy to live life with the ifs, and I confess to often lingering with them a little longer than is productive. But there is contentment to be found when I allow my ifs to guide me into appreciation.

    I moved to Queensland and I am so grateful to be close to my family.
    I said yes and I am gaining a wealth of experience. I said no and gave myself time to rest.
    I had my heartbroken and now I have a deeper, more intimate understanding of love and He who is Love.
    I am wondering about the future and isn’t it marvellous to have options and hope for what comes next?

    I raise my eyes to look into the sky at my fellow human beings gliding through the golden afternoon and think: how grateful am I to be sharing the same setting sun over a beautiful city.

  • Reflections on a Monday in April

    April 11th, 2022

    There is a certain magic in wandering the city alone. A certain wonder in walking streets that are brimming with the untold stories of such a vast number of people.

    The kind woman who massages my work-weary body into a state of relaxation has a lilt in her voice that hints towards a life before or beyond Australia. Where has she come from? Does she like it here? Has she made good friends? What are her ambitions for the future?

    A young man holds up a book to a friend standing behind an iPhone camera in the Dymocks on George Street. The way he interacts with the book and the camera suggests that he is the author. How did he become a writer? What challenges did he face to get a book published? Who inspired him?

    In the Lush store in Sydney’s QVB an employee with a friendly face enthusiastically compliments my autumnal dress as I search for a bath bomb. His brief kindness warms me and makes me wonder who has shown him kindness so that he passes it on with such generosity. Or does he give out kindness to spite the unkindness shown to him in his life?

    In the Fantasy/Sci-Fi aisle of Kinokuniya Books I overhear a conversation between two friends who are discussing the complexity of attracting a romantic partner. I would love to jump into the conversation and ask: where do you think the desire for love comes from? What is the best love you have known in your life? What made it good?

    I catch the train home – yet another vessel filled with stories unknown to me – and allow my unanswered questions to sink me deeper into empathy and love for my fellow humans.

  • Reflections on a Sunday in April

    April 10th, 2022

    The day dawned bright and blue. The music of my mother and sister filled my small unit, later to be added to the music of more women – beautiful women – gathering together to celebrate a birthday of another beautiful woman.

    What makes women beautiful? Let me tell you that it is not their hair or eyes or teeth or fingers or figures.

    Women are beautiful when they laugh together, turning autumn to springtime with the warmth of the sound.

    Women are beautiful when they hold each other in strong, capable, gentle hands. Each embrace, or shoulder squeeze, or twirl of hair around affectionate finger, a monument to the loveliness of community.

    Women are beautiful when they speak – with stories and affirmations spilling out of open hands and hearts and minds. There is beauty in their authentic example of the power of passionate and animated storytelling.

    Women are beautiful when they share. Selflessly giving of time and money and gifts to bless one another with no expectation of return.

    Women are beautiful when they pray. When they ask God to be present as they gather. When they acknowledge the immense Love under Whom we all live and laugh and love.

    What a wonder to sit at the same table with so many of the women who have shaped me, and also women I have only ever seen at a glance. A wonder to know that we are bound together by the Love that makes all women (and all humanity) wonderful.

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