Monday, December 27, 2010

"Me-Time"

Something has struck me about this constant cry to have "me-time" I hear. Jesus said that anyone trying to hold on to their life will lose it while those who give it away will keep it (paraphrased). I have had a week's worth of "me-time" and it's as though the days have not even happened. What do I have to show for them? Had I been taking a Sabbath day all along through the semester as is instructed, then I probably wouldn't have needed to unwind like I had to this time around. I was pretty up tight, let me tell you.

That's another thing. This semester....oooooh, this last semester. I don't know what it was. It was such a challenge. Praise God, though, for again I have top grades an I'm still relatively sane. But many things surfaced in me, I feel as though I've strayed from faith in a lot of ways, and I'm trying to get back to the right way.

Anyhow. May the cry for "me-time" be replaced by a cry for "God-time" - a time of refreshing in His presence, drinking Him in, that leaves the drinker fully satisfied.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Withstanding the Fire...

Turns out that what I wrote about that verse in Corinthians a while ago was really a promise about the semester.

I do feel like I've been put through some fire. Fire reveals infrastructure. It reveals what we're made of. God and I have both seen my infrastructure, I feel. Flaws? Definitely. I've found out that I'm not necessarily a person of my word, and I want to be. I think this has been a part of me for a while, but it has (in my mind and observation) come more apparent this semester.

I'm also a bit of a liar. And that was disappointing.

But may those things be burned off. May all that is left be that which will withstand fire.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Getting what He Paid For?

This semester has been challenging. Lots to balance and keep up with. Some of the negative aspects of myself as a person have shown up this semester. All I have found myself wanting to do is to go and curl up in bed and sleep it all away. I know this is anything but a solution. I know. I have also noticed myself (as though I am somehow removed from my behavior) slacking off.

"Just once won't really matter..."
A grain of rice is small, but yet it is a staple food for most of the world.

This morning, I confronted myself (again, it seems as though I have two sides and one is removed from the other).

Being a Christian, I believe that Jesus's death atoned for my imperfections, and brought me from out of the depths and the grave and into light and life. He paid a huge price for me to have life, and I accepted the deal.

Though it sounds harsh and material, is Jesus getting what He paid for out of me? Does the way I live my life day in and day out reflect well on the label I bear: "Christian" or "little Christ"?

A friend of mine blogged about the notion of being set apart, and it lines up with what I realized this morning in many ways.

As I decide what to do with my life, is it worthy of the label I bear?


Thursday, November 4, 2010

Hope: (noun) confident desire

On a late night round with one of my fellow Resident Assistants, I was asking him some typical "get to know you" questions. One of these questions included the inevitable "What are three things that are very important to you?" Long story short, that question was turned back upon me.


Initially, I would have spit out the typical, "God, family, friends" answer. But instead, and I forget the first two things mentioned, I included hope.


Why? What is hope? This intangible, warm, fuzzy word. Why is it important?


Recently, I got hung up on my own mortality. There is something so frightening about realizing that one day, I will die. I wonder what that will be like, to have life leave my body. To have the world go dim. Is there hope? When I thought about this all, I found myself wondering "Is this whole Christianity thing real?"


All of the eggs into one basket. All of my hope into one man.


Is there something after death?


Hope was brought up on a Sunday morning recently by my pastor. Hope gives substance to faith.


Hope is vital. Without the hope that Jesus was who He said He was, then what hope is there?


A few more reflections on hope. One is from Romans 5:1-5.


"Since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ, through whom we have gained access by faith into this grace in which we now stand. And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because god has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom He has given us."

Hope does not disappoint us. It helps us to finish the race.


A final thought, from Glenn Hatcher's book Why God Thinks He Can Use You, hope is open-eyed dreams. He pulls in this magnificent quote from T.E. Lawrence -


"All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds awake in the day to find that it was vanity; but the dreamers of day are dangerous men, for they may act their dreams with open eyes, to make it possible."


I'm afraid I don't have much of a conclusion to offer. Just thoughts.

Monday, October 25, 2010

Foreshadowing.

Time with God today was really cool. I was able to connect some dots that He had been lining up in my life, beginning over the summer.

I realized this summer how much of a quitter I can be, how if I am faced with a challenge, rather than rise and meet it with steely resolve, I am much more apt to shrink back into the shadows. Granted, I learned this lesson while rock climbing up and out of a cave; in that situation, there is no quitting. I had to get over it and climb on out of there.

Anyways, I am seeing that whole idea resurface, and I find that perhaps I was being primed to face some deeper challenges over the year. I recently felt like I hit a road block with my life at school. Books that I needed to study for tests didn't look like they were written in English. I couldn't pay attention to what professors were saying in my classes (again, it was like a foreign language). The scariest part was that I became an impartial observer to all of this mental mayhem, making comments to myself along the lines of, "Wow, I can't function anymore. Isn't that odd...oh well."

This, as my Resident Director pointed out, was a great sign that I had burned out and that I needed a break. I heeded this advice and retreated home for a while. And I really, really just wanted to stay there. If nothing else, I considered the fact that all I need to do is pass my classes and I would be set to graduate next spring.

But then, the dots were connected. Am I going to be a quitter? Or am I going to finish this race, and finish strong?

Courage has returned. I will finish this race of being an undergraduate college student, and I will do it in a way that reflects my God.

Fin.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Deep Seated Desires

As I explained the difficulty I was having with thinking about the future, and explaining how I was thinking that God was saying "You choose," a wise (and incredibly wonderful) woman told me, "As you were saying that, I got a word from the Lord that He gives us the desires of our hearts. As you seek Him, He will reveal what you desire, and then you'll know which way to go."

And it has been true.

What do I desire?

I desire to work with college students.

I desire to be near my family, to build up our relationship, to encourage each other.

I desire to serve God with my life. All of my life. Not just tithing and showing up to church. Not just praying that God would give me a job. No. More. MORE MORE MORE. I want to be instrumental to my Lord. I want to please Him. I want for the world to know who He really is.

Today, I realized how strongly I desire to be re-connected, and deeply, to my church family. I think I had to be removed from it for a time, from the thick of things, because there was much for me to learn outside of the church (gasp). But now, I want to be a part of the body of Christ not for my own sake, but for OUR sake. Not for me, but for we.

I desire for Jesse and I to follow God together, if that should be His will.

I desire to live by faith. I desire to follow God's will unswervgingly.

I'll never make "the world" happy. It will only suck me dry and leave me for dead. But not God. Yes, He requires that we pour our lives out. But He refills. Like today. He is refilling me today. My refuge.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

Connecting Gandalf and the Holy Spirit

Knowledge puffs up. I have realized this over the course of this semester through experience.

As such, I don't want this to be a demonstration of knowledge. This blog, this site. Thoughts, revelations, ponderings, but not a demonstration of knowledge. Not a hollow recitation of Biblical facts.

Anyways, this morning, I was reading through parts of 1 Samuel. The Israelites were at war with the Philistines, and they decided "hey, let's take the Ark of the Covenant with us for protection."

Over the course of the sermon at New Life on Sunday, PK talked about presumptuous faith, the kind of faith that masks human initiatives with spiritual language (Oh Lord, I pray for a Harley, because you can make something out of nothing for those who love you...).

Looking at the way that the Israelites brought the Ark of the Covenant (where the presence of God was enthroned between the two cherubs, if I remember rightly) with them to battle was like they were treating it as a magic trick.

In the beginning of The Fellowship of the Ring, Gandalf scolds Bilbo, saying "Do not take me for some conjurer of cheap tricks!" I got to thinking about the things that Gandalf did on the journey of the Fellowship, the ways that he used his power. It was constructively. Sure, in the beginning, he brought enjoyment to the little hobbits by a firework display, but the true power of Gandalf came out while he was on the journey, on the mission. In Moria, he provided light in the dark; he kept the Balrog at bay, away from the rest of the fellowship. When he returns as Gandalf the White, he drives the wraiths away from Faramir. Power. Not cheap tricks.