Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Running Home

Today I removed the dusty down comforter from our bed -- the one that’s giving Mark allergy attacks every time his nose gets near it. Although putting it in the wash doesn’t sound like a huge undertaking, it’s one that I’ve avoided for months. Sitting in the living room I hear the washer spinning wildly in the background giving me a sense of accomplishment. Just outside the window, lines of clothes flap effortlessly in the breeze on the roof of a nearby building. Someone else carved out time in their busy day to carry them up flights of stairs and carefully secure each one.
Life is about doing the things that aren’t always glamorous. As a stay at home mom for fourteen years I spent a gazillion hours doing what would be considered mundane. When the girls needed me, I was there. That was my job, my joy, my calling. No one had to remind me that spending time with the children would enhance our relationship. Through instinct and experience with others I knew it. 
Most of us discern by the time we’re adults that if we want to have a strong relationship with another person we have to make time to spend alone with them. Getting to know someone is relatively easy, but maintaining a healthy, thriving relationship requires energy and determination fueled by love. Even when we love a person intensely we still find ourselves facing commitments that are sometimes just plain inconvenient. The most caring wife and mother doesn’t always get chill bumps when her husband walks in the door or warm fuzzies when she’s around her children, but part of her commitment is walking in love even when she doesn’t feel it. We listen when we’re tired, cook when we’d rather not, stay up late talking because someone we love is hurting.
While we seem to understand this need for loyalty and sacrifice in our human relationships, we have a propensity to forget it when it comes to God. He doesn’t need us, we reason, and if anyone is going to get the short end of the stick it may as well be him. He’s all-knowing, all-powerful and complete in himself. Our relationship has no way of transforming him or meeting any of his needs. Yet there seems to be a long line of needs outside our door that far exceed what we’re capable of giving. Our inclination and temptation is to put these first, to cast aside our quiet time and get to work. Logic tells us that with so much to do, we don’t have time for prayer and reflection.
We forget that we're dependent upon God’s daily grace in order to walk in the Spirit and bear fruit. Time spent in prayer and in the word enables us to see life like he sees it rather than just a mass of tangled events that don’t have any eternal relevance. As we draw near to him, he opens our eyes to understand the spiritual in the physical and cultivates within our hearts a longing for his kingdom, rather than our own. His agenda for the day encompasses our plans and we’re able to place people, problems and passions in perspective.
I began learning some of these truths the hard way, and they didn’t become a reality for me until I’d been through a long season of suffering. I’d been a Christian for about eight years when we had our first daughter. Once she was born, my energies were spent feeding and taking care of her. Over the course of the next six years I greatly neglected my relationship with the Lord, though it wasn’t intentional at first. I woke up each day thinking I’d find time to spend in prayer and in the word, but cries from the end of the hall dictated otherwise.  Days blurred together as I traversed from one dirty diaper to the next, and my Bible lay unopened on a dusty shelf nearby. Sometimes I’d pick it up for a few minutes and say a quick prayer as I transitioned to what seemed an endless series of chores.
Changes took shape in my heart in such a gradual way that I hardly noticed them. God became increasingly distant, so I started making decisions based on my own judgment instead of relying on his guidance. My hunger for spiritual growth diminished, while tension in my marriage greatly increased. Instead of allowing the struggle to drive me closer to God, I followed my emotions which resulted in bitter arguments and further alienation.  Before I knew it, I was conjuring up ways to escape my marriage while fully justifying my decision.
Meanwhile, God was at work. I developed pneumonia, followed by mono which over many months gave way to what the doctors diagnosed as Chronic Fatigue. As if this wasn’t enough, I’d injured both feet through intense exercise which rendered me bedridden for almost two years. Just getting up each morning to drive the girls to school was enough to exhaust me for the rest of the day. 
 In desperation, I began crying out to God for help and going to his word for comfort and relief. I knew from past experiences that unless I made an appointment with him each morning, he’d quickly be forgotten again. So after taking the girls to school, I entered a quiet place where I could be alone with God. Out of need and longing I declared the time sacred and jealously guarded it. Slowly, the relationship that I’d avoided and neglected for so many years began showing signs of life. God rekindled love in my heart toward him, causing it to overflow into my relationship with my husband. With this came healing and restoration.
As I woke from a season of spiritual darkness, I saw with clarity the gradual decline which had taken place. The frog in the kettle analogy took on an entirely new meaning as I reflected on my own slow but progressive hardening toward God and others. I’d discarded once treasured convictions for new goals that met my selfish desires. And though I’d been on the road to rebellion for almost six years, until this point I was completely blind to my heart’s condition.
Eight years have passed since God brought me through this trial. While I’m certain I was a Christian then, I’m still shocked by my pride and the darkness I'm capable of walking in. God showed me and continues to teach me that abiding in his love is essential to a Spirit-filled walk of faith. Spending time in his word and prayer each day keeps me grounded on his truth, confessing my sins and asking for grace to change, to heal, to move forward in his strength and power and wisdom. Without the constant reminder of his love, I’m unable to give love to others or live victoriously in Christ.
Many people, like me, are tempted to believe that the Spirit’s work in regeneration is enough. They go to church, maybe attend a weekly Bible study and occasionally go to a conference or take part in a women’s retreat. Aside from these activities, they don’t spend time alone with God each day, delving into his word seeking to know him better.
Some resist this spiritual discipline by saying they're interested in a relationship and not a practice -- that expressing themselves freely when they're so inclined is what's important to their spiritual life, that knowledge about God is intrinsic while a systematic study of the Word would be merely academic. They claim they’re interested in a personal relationship with God, not just head knowledge. Yet if a person doesn’t know the truth about God as he’s revealed himself in his word, then there’s no way they can ever really become intimate with him. Additionally, it’s impossible to have an effective and powerful prayer life when we aren't praying regularly and we don’t know how to pray according to his will.
No matter how far we’ve wandered from these truths, the road home is always open. I still remember the first day I was alone with God with nowhere to go, no noises to drown his gentle voice beckoning me to come. I was scared of owning up to what I’d done, to admitting that I’d gone my own way for a long, long time. I dreaded the silence, the conviction. Like the prodigal, I made my journey back with little to offer but sorrow and regret. I was greatly surprised to find him waiting for me -- not with a frown and disapproval but with an abundant measure of mercy and grace. 

“…the LORD longs to be gracious to you, And therefore He waits on high to have compassion on you.” Is 30:18

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

A Call to Surrender

     What if. What if I left everything I knew and loved, all that was familiar, to follow a God who isn't real or powerful or good? What if I packed up my house, moved all my belongings into storage, got on a plane and traveled across the world following a call that wasn’t real or a God who does not exist? What if twenty five years ago the God I surrendered to was only a god of my imagination and all these years I’ve been creating my own sense of spirituality? What if nothing I live for is true; what if nothing I’ve been willing to die for is real? What if I can actually make and shape my own future by pursuing my needs and desires without regard for a sovereign God?
    Surrendering to Christ's Lordship involves allowing him to restructure our entire belief system upon the truth of his word, rather than the lies of the world and our own flesh. This entails coming face to face with the greatest fears lurking inside -- the what if's that bind us and hold us back from giving ourselves fully to God. Surrender isn't a minor step of trust but a giant leap of faith, not only when we first put our hope in him but each time he calls us to the impossible. We, like the apostle Paul, ought to be so invested in following Christ that if, in fact, God doesn't exist we're to be pitied above all people (1 Cor 15:19). Counting the cost means realizing that we "walk by faith and not by sight", and we trust in a God we cannot see.
     He calls out to us daily to release the things we deem valuable in order to pursue the plans he has for us. The cross he requires that we carry is indeed a cross. Otherwise, he may have told us to take up our hobby or our desires or our love or our dreams and follow him. Instead he gave one of the most shocking alter calls known to evangelicals. He stood at the front of the sanctuary of life and basically said, “Today is the day of salvation. If you want to live, you’re going to have to die. If you follow me, you'll daily have to take up this cross be willing to suffer the loss of dreams and desires of your flesh. You’ll have to be willing to go through intense persecution at times, to leave your family and friends for my sake and go where ever I ask you to go."
     Jesus’ alter call in no way resembled the “God loves you and has a wonderful plan for your life” version that we’re all too familiar with. He knew nothing of a self-indulgent gospel whereby God's purpose is to serve our needs and add to our already swelling treasure store of possessions and goals. No, Jesus’ gospel is one that costs a man everything. No holes barred. Nothing held back. Wait, you say. This is too much; it can’t be true. No one would require of me to give up everything, to forsake even my deepest dreams? Jesus says yes, "If anyone comes to me and does not hate his own father and mother and wife and children and brothers and sisters, yes, and even his own life, he cannot be my disciple. Whoever does not carry his own cross and come after me cannot be my disciple....So, likewise, whoever of you does not forsake all that he has cannot be my disciple" Lk 14:26-27, 33.
     The watered down, luke-warm gospel of many American churches doesn't resemble the real gospel at all. Instead it's the call to "believe what you want to believe and live like you want to live."  It's taken root in my heart at times so that when suffering, persecution or sacrifice comes I often feel cheated and angry. As a result, my mind clings to these lies that God exists to make me happy and give me everything I want.
    I don't know about you, but I want to know and live by the truth, to follow the one who is the Way, the Truth and the Life, to lose my life daily so that I find it in him.  The cost is great, no doubt, but the reward of knowing him far surpasses anything we'll ever be called to surrender.

"If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself, take up his cross daily and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will save it." Lk 9:23-24

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Who We Are In Christ

     As I wake up each day and remind myself who I am in Christ, God is giving me great joy and much needed grace to get through a difficult season of being separated by a vast ocean from our daughters. He’s encouraging me to find my life in him and who he says I am rather than in my circumstances. 
     The foundation of God's redeeming love guarantees that we won't drown in sorrows and reminds us that we’re loved with an everlasting love, even when we can't see it, sense it or feel it (Jer 31:3). We’re not alone. Christ is in us, with us, he’s gone before us and he’s endured every temptation so that he's able to sympathize with our weaknesses (Heb 4:15). We can go to him in our pain, ask him for help, and cry our eyes out if we need to. He knows what it feels like to be abandoned and lonely on this earth and he understands. He hears all our cries and sees our tears (2 Kgs 20:5).
     If we’re Christians, we are children of the King (2 Cor 6:18) – we’re valuable, cherished, deeply loved, significant, gifted, created with a purpose. We’re completely forgiven of our past, present and future sins; we’re declared righteous (Col 2:14). He’s given us a new heart (Eze 36:26) and a new purpose and has established plans for our life that no one can destroy (Jer 29:11). We can’t be removed from his presence by any situation or circumstance (Rom 8:38-39). Our future with him is secure. NO ONE can snatch us out of his hands (Jn 10:28). We’re forever loved, forever forgiven, forever saved. We can rejoice in these wonderful truths in the midst of our sorrows (2 Cor 6:10). We're in a fallen world that's bound to disappoint. But we belong to a faithful God who will never fail us or forsake us (Heb 13:5). And to that we can shout hallelujah!