Tag Archives: Change

Falling in Love with Scripture Again

Reading scriptures

For the last couple of weeks, I’ve been working on getting my work life under control. Teaching in three buildings means that, for one thing, something I need is frequently not where I am. It’s also a significant challenge keeping track of all the various things I need to take care of, since in many cases I can only work on certain things when I’m in a particular school.

I began reading a book that has been on my list for a while: Getting Things Done, by David Allen. Within a week, I have already begun to change my habits and routines at work, gathering all of my “stuff” into one place, figuring out the most efficient way of storing and maintaining it, and how to keep track of my projects and to-dos in a way that will work despite being in a different place every day.

It struck me as I reflected on the last week how easily my mindset and routine started to shift into new patterns. This is hardly an established habit yet, but I can already see changes in my thinking and the way I see many of the things that come across my desk at school. It’s even starting to seep into my activities at home.

So why is it so hard for me to establish new patterns in my spiritual life? Why when I start a new habit of daily prayer and Bible reading does it only last a few days before drifting back to nearly non-existent? I think it’s because, like all of the prior “organization systems” I’ve tried to use, these habits were simply laid down on top of the rest of my life. Nothing fundamentally changed inside me—I simply tried to add a new system or routine to the existing ones.

Our small group has been going through The Truth Project. Its tagline is “Do you really believe that what you believe is really real?” One of the things I think I believe is that I want to get to know God and grow more like Christ every day. But do I really believe that this is really something that can happen, or do I just say it because it’s what good Christians say? I think perhaps my failure to make this habit work is because I’ve been trying to fit it into my life instead of rethinking my life and building it around a relationship with God.

Photo Credits: Reading scriptures by Amanda Bills Photography, 5/17/07

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Effort Matters

When we’re growing up as a young Christ-follower, one of the things that we learn is to begin building spiritual disciplines into our lives. It’s where the word disciple comes from. Scripture includes many of these disciplines, and I’ve read more books and articles and heard more sermons on it than I can count.

So here I am adding once again to the volume. Why do people need to keep hearing it over and over, though? Because it takes work, and we want things to be easy.

The problem is that our lives have been designed so that it takes effort to get results. Certainly God gives us gifts, but he expects us to use them. Even secular writers recognize the need for effort in order to accomplish something. Seth Godin, a popular business writer, talked about this recently. He advocates deleting two hours of “spare time” each day which you currently devote to unproductive activities, and instead spending them doing things like exercise, learning new things, and writing thank you notes. He suggests spending one day a week just being with people you love, and for one year spending money only on things you absolutely need.

He is of course talking about discipline. The discipline to focus relentlessly, to use his word, on things that matter, things that will make a difference and move us towards success.

The Christ-follower must do the same thing, but look at it through the lens of God’s plan and purpose for us. Every choice we make, everything we decide to do with our gifts (among which are our time and resources), should somehow further God’s kingdom. We need to discipline ourselves, at least for a while, to assiduously reflect on everything we do. If it doesn’t further God’s kingdom in some way, change it or eliminate it. This doesn’t mean there’s no down time. If we are renewing and refreshing ourselves, then it’s productive time. Recreation can and should be re-creation. But we have to be absolutely transparent with ourselves about whether our activities are productive or if we’re justifying something worthless in the name of “relaxation”.

There are so many things that I wish I had more time to do. The only way I can make them happen is to eliminate the waste in my day and start doing them. Easier said than done, of course, or it would already be happening. But that’s what discipline is about. Plan the week, stick to the plan, and reflect on how to make the plan better for next week. And when I fail, don’t quit, but learn from it and keep trying. And when I fail again, get back up and learn some more. And when I fail the third time, find the new lesson in the failure. And again, and again.

Sherman Finesilver once said, “Keep these concepts in mind: You’ve failed many times, although you
don’t remember. You fell down the first time you tried to walk. You almost drowned the first time you tried to swim…. R. H. Macy failed 7 times before his store in New York caught on. Babe Ruth struck out 1,330 times. Don’t worry about failure. My suggestion to each of you: Worry about the chances you miss when you don’t even try.” I know I will fall if I try. It’s a guarantee. My prayer is simply this: that at the end of my life I will have arisen one time more than I fell.

How Not To Change

HidingWhy is it that during the most challenging moments of my life I put God on hold? I’m supposed to turn to Him, run to Him, jump into his arms and let Him guide me through it. I’m supposed to lean harder and let Him help me carry the burden.

But I always press pause. And I always end up digging myself a deeper hole.

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No More Clover

You’d think it would be simple. Just get out the mower, run it over the lawn, no more clover. Right?

Not exactly.

On Saturday, I finally decided to overcome my inertia and go at the lawn. At first glance, of course, it now looks great. All the overgrown clover is gone, and all that’s left is some nice, green (well, a little yellow in spots) grass. Problem solved!

On closer inspection, though, I can see that I’m in for a very long haul with this lawn.

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