Always Content, Never Satisfied

Strive
Image by bowtoo via Flickr

I know far less after 18-plus years of teaching than I thought I did right out of grad school.

The same is true in my walk with Christ. I felt a whole lot smarter and wiser as a newborn Christian than I am today. Though I know that I must learn to be content with my provision, my gifts, and my circumstance, I can’t get complacent and be satisfied with where I am.

I hope I never get to the point where I think…

  • I understand God or His Word
  • I have accomplished God’s purpose for my life
  • I have achieved all I can achieve for God
  • I know Christ as well as He can be known
  • the torch has passed to a younger generation
  • there’s no one left for me to reach
  • God has nothing left to teach me
  • I’ve dug as deeply as there is to dig
  • I have nothing left to confess
  • I no longer need to bear fruit…or my cross
  • I’m already where God wants me to remain

If I’m on the path, there’s still path left to travel. If I’m no longer moving, I’m no longer on the path.

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What Would Church Be Like?

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of thinking of it as an event on a checklist

we thought of it as family

and Sunday morning was just a reunion of cherished cousins.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of acting like

church is the place that

once a week

we can shove life aside

sort of

and reconnect with God

kind of

we believed that it is a place

that once or twice or three times a week

we can connect with souls

and share with them the same God

who lives and breathes inside us

twenty-four/seven.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of noticing everything that’s wrong

and demanding that the church leaders fix it

soon

or I’ll have to find another church

we fixed our eyes on Jesus,

the Author and Finisher of our faith,

Great Physician,

Bread of Life,

source of Living Water,

Prince of Peace,

the Beginning and the End,

the embodiment of Love,

the Great I Am.

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of walking in and saying

“I made it, Pastor, now fill me up…”

we said

“Here I am, Lord, I pour myself out!”

I wonder what church would be like

if instead of wondering

 

I just did it.

 

 

 

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The Way Out of the Desert

Atacama, the world's driest desert
Image via Wikipedia

I can see the way out of the desert. I know which way to go. And some days I head in that direction.

The problem is there are other days I go back the other way. Or walk in circles. Or meander aimlessly.

What I wanted was for the desert to miraculously evaporate when I found the way out, or for the oasis to spring up in front of my face.

Here’s the thing about deserts. To get out, you have to travel at least as far as you did on your way in.

The only way to make progress, the only way to keep the journey out from taking even longer, is to stick with it, day after day.

Do what you know you must do to survive and thrive and get closer to the end.

Even while things are still dry.

Even when you can’t see the destination past the dune.

Even as it seems like it can never end.

Even if it feels pointless to keep going.

Keep going.

Just remember that God is walking alongside, even as He’s preparing the pool and the shade that will greet me once I find my way out.

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An Open Letter to God

When I Ran Into A Brick Wall...
Image by cobalt123 via Flickr

I heard you, God.

I’m not getting it all right yet; I’m still learning. You keep finding ways of getting my attention, and of steering me in the right direction, whether or not it’s where I want to go. Well…where I think I want to go anyway.

I heard you this morning when you asked me when I was going to start getting serious about you, God. My first reaction was, “What do you mean? I am serious about you!”

Then you reminded me that for a long time I said I was serious about my marriage. And I was. But it wasn’t where you wanted it to be. I wasn’t growing and I wasn’t keeping the right priorities. You tried to get my attention more than once, but I brushed you aside, gave you lip service, or ignored you. It took a crisis for me to realize where I was heading and to really get serious about my marriage and my priorities.

It’s still a work in progress, but you knew that. I’m still getting things wrong sometimes, but I’m learning, and I’m working diligently to grow and strengthen my marriage every day.

“See?” I said to you. “I’m serious about my marriage. I listened to you. What makes you think I’m not serious about you?”

Then you reminded me that for a long time I said I was serious about my job and my career. But in reality I was stalled. You gave me talents, and instead of investing them, I buried them. I coasted instead of developing and honing and building those talents to fulfill the potential you put in me to become the best teacher I was capable of being. It took some serious challenges before I looked up and noticed how you were trying to get me to pay attention.

I still have a long way to go, but you know that better than I do. I still make mistakes, but I’m working on them and I take seriously the responsibilities you have put in my hands.

“So, God, what’s your point?” My self-righteousness began rising as I talked to you. “You got my attention. I listened. Twice! I turned things around and I’m moving forward now. I do take you seriously.”

Then you reminded me that my relationship with you is not about fixing my mistakes or becoming a better person or even being a great teacher, father, or husband. It’s first about knowing you. The other stuff comes afterwards.

So much of my thinking still needs adjustment. How many times have I treated you like you’re an afterlife insurance salesman? Pay the regular premiums, pray the prayers, confess the sins. But who thinks about their insurance in between the annual payments? How often have I acted like serving the church or serving my family is the same as serving you? I see now that I’ve just been wading ankle deep at the shoreline instead of diving into the ocean.

So finally you asked me a simple, pointed question: “Do you really want to wait for the catastrophe to strike before you finally start to take me seriously?”

Well, I’m still learning, so I can only promise you that while I’m going to take you seriously now–really take you seriously–I’m also going to mess this up at some point. Probably more than once.

But God, I hear you.

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The Meaning of Life, IMHO

Philosopher in Meditation (detail) by Rembrandt

Philosopher in Meditation. (Image via Wikipedia)

In case you aren’t up on Internet slang, the acronym in the title of this post means “In My Humble Opinion.” It is often used in conversations to mark points that are (a) already obviously opinions and (b) just as obviously not humble. Users of this phrase generally recognize that they are pontificating and making a pronouncement beyond the scope of their expertise and experience.

Such is the case with this article. I’ve made some observations and come to some conclusions about what is important in life, at least in mine, and felt they were worthy of sharing here. This is my (current, changing) explanation of What Really Matters. Of course, the purpose of this blog is more for me to have a place to hash out ideas and wrestle with aspects of my spiritual journey than to enlighten anyone else about anything. I just find that the hashing and wrestling are more effective when done in conversation with other people than within my own head.

So you get to hear me pontificate and make pronouncements beyond the scope of my expertise and experience. But feel free to tell me how wrong I am and where I missed the boat. Besides, nothing I’m thinking here is really new. Others before me have expressed it better than I. It just happens to be my turn this week to recognize them.

Here are the things I’m realizing matter most in life. For now, just a list (in no particular order). A more detailed reflection on each one will have to wait for another day.

  • Trust God
  • Love (both the noun and the verb)
  • Learn
  • Have integrity
  • Take pleasure in small things every day
  • Lift someone else up every day
  • Care
  • Simplify
  • Build relationships not walls
  • Don’t run from pain or obstacles
  • Embrace change
  • Use your gifts and chase your passions–they come from God

Nothing earth-shattering here. But these are things I didn’t know twenty years ago, and don’t really fully understand now. Not only that, but I also fully recognize that the list isn’t finished. I’m not so arrogant as to believe that I have it all figured out. But for now, for today, these are the things that I believe God is showing me about how to live my life, and the things that will make my life satisfying and relevant.

In my humble opinion.

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