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Satisfaction

August 7, 2011 in Devotional Thoughts, Thoughts of the Day

I was reading the account of the Samaritan women at the well recently. One of those well known passages in Christianity. But I was struck by several verses:

The first:

“If you knew the gift of God, and who it is that is saying to you, ‘Give me a drink,’ you would have asked him, and he would have given you living water.”

John 4:10b

I was struck by this verse because Jesus seems to say to her: “if you knew who I am” in a way that–to me–sounds like he thought she at least might have a chance to figure it out. Maybe even a little provocative: “duh! c’mon, can’t you figure it out?” In other words, it isn’t as though he excuses her from being blind to his true identity; she had at least a chance of figuring it out. I suppose its mostly interesting to me because I have been thinking a lot about what it means to see Christ lately. I’ve written about it before. I realize that I arrogantly assume that, because I am a “good” Christian, I of course would recognize Christ in the flesh if I saw him. The more I am reading the gospel accounts, however, the more I have doubt in my real ability to see Him. Most people, including this Samaritan woman, really seem to have no clue when they saw him. I doubt I could have done much better in their shoes, really. (Not that I think it is impossible either, I just realize that I must not “lean on my own understanding”)

But really more interesting is that this is his response to her question, of basically, “why are you, a Jew, even talking to me?” Jesus doesn’t just come out and tell her. Why? It seems like it would have been so much easier to say “because I’m God” or something like that.

The other verse that struck me was the disciples prodding Jesus to eat some food:

Meanwhile the disciples were urging him, saying, “Rabbi, eat.” But he said to them, ”I have food to eat that you do not know about.” So the disciples said to one another, “Has anyone brought him something to eat?” Jesus said to them, ”My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work…”

John 4:31-34

Simple enough, his disciples are concerned about him. Earlier, at the beginning, it said he was tired from his journey. But he gives them a strange response: “I have food to eat that you do not know about.” They, of course, take him literary, which just completely baffles the disciples. Then, Jesus gives an explanation: ”My food is to do the will of him who sent me and to accomplish his work.”

What a picture of true satisfaction! Can you imagine being so immersed in God’s will, that you considered that food? Life? Can you imagine be so concerned about the concerns of God, that you  forget the needs of the body? No, I don’t wish to promote aestheticism, but I do wish I were more focused on doing the work of the Kingdom rather than promoting my own interest–which is, I’m pretty sure, what 90% of my time really ends up being about: me.

Anyway, the entire passage is beautiful, in my opinion, and probably could feed an entire series of writings. But I’ll leave it there for now. May you and I seek to recognize Christ as he is, be satisfied in the work of the Father, and may we be open to his leading.

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Recentering

July 6, 2011 in Thoughts of the Day

I came across a great quotation today that I thought would be worth sharing, especially in light of my post yesterday. Currently, I am reading Making All Things New: An Invitation to the Spiritual Life, which is a fantastic book. Nouwen begins the book talking about our modern, busy lives. I’ve had many conversations about the modern life, modern busyness, and balancing the spiritual life with “secular” life; so I found this quotation thought-provoking:

It is important for us to realize that Jesus in no way wants us to leave our many-faceted world. Rather, he wants us to live in it, but firmly rooted in the center of all things …. [Jesus] speaks about a change of heart. This change of heart makes everything different, even while everything appears to remain the same.

Jesis asks us to move our hearts to the center, where all other things fall into place. What is this center? Jesus calls it the kingdom, the kingdom of his Father.

{ Making all things New, page 42-43 }

At first read, it’s just a restatement of the familiar “be in the world but not of it” idea that Christians often (rightly) parrot. But I think Nouwen captures an essence of this delicate balance of Christian life in this world very well. We are to refocus on the Kingdom, just as Jesus did.

This is the freedom Christ offers: death to self and life in Him. When we refocus on that kingdom, and that reality, we experience true freedom. Christ does not call us to forsake all things earthly, rather we are called to refocus so that we are no longer concerned primarily with the physical kingdom around us, but the kingdom of the Father.

May you and I find the strength and the courage to recenter our lives on that kingdom.

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True Freedom

July 4, 2011 in Christian Life, Thoughts of the Day

Independence day. Undoubtedly, many of us are celebrating today by enjoying time off and spending it with family and friends. Today is a reminder of our country’s heritage and freedom. I would like, however, to offer something that I have been thinking about a lot: what is true freedom for the Christian? I would like to suggest that the freedom we celebrate today, on July 4th, is at best a pale shadow of the freedom Christ offers to us, and at worst an idea that lures us into a false conception of Christ’s freeing work on the cross.

Let me start out by saying that I by no means wish to “bash” our country or its principles. As a historian, I recognize the uniqueness of our country’s founding, and our ideals; we are indeed blessed with a freedom that many people today and throughout history have not been. I am glad that I can choose my own government—that our government in theory works for us and not the other way around, that I can worship as I please and where I please, live my life as I please, and so on and so forth. But the problem with that list, for the Christian, is that word I.

Christians believe they have freedom in Christ. But what is this freedom? Is it to do as we wish and live as we please? No. Paul tells us in Romans 6:6,7 that “our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be destroyed, and we might no longer be enslaved to sin. For whoever has died is freed from sin” And the more I see the power of sin in my own life, the more I see how the word “enslaved” is so appropriate. But Paul does not end there:  (verses 17 & 18) “But thanks be to God that you, having once been slaves of sin, have become obedient from the heart to the form of teaching to which you were entrusted, and that you, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.” We are dead to self and alive in Christ. We are all familiar with Galatians 2:20: “I have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me. And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.”

Freedom in Christ, then, is fundamentally about far more than little old me. In fact, Paul goes so far as to say that he is no longer living his own life—he is dead to self, but that it is Christ living in him. I should no longer be concerned with my own desires, but the desires of Christ. Not that all human desires are wrong or should be ignored, but rather that I submit them to Christ my master.

Do you see the paradox with what we call “freedom” in America? Freedom here is the freedom to do whatever you wish with your life, and be free of governmental control, religious control, and free from tyranny. Freedom in Christ is the freedom to no longer be concerned about your own life, and to no longer be enslaved to your own sin, but to wholeheartedly give your life to Christ and live for him. To call him Lord and Master: two words that are inherently, not “free.” To be completely free from yourself, your desires, and your sin is true freedom.

Again, I by no means believe there is anything immoral about experiencing what I am calling “American” freedom. Indeed, we are arguably better enabled to serve Christ and live for him because of it. But I hope we can see the limitations of that freedom too. And I hope we can see that our freedom in Christ is completely independent of secular freedom, and perhaps even stands in stark contrast to that secular freedom. Christians living under the most oppressive governments, or Christians who are physically enslaved to someone, can still experience freedom in Christ, and perhaps they even have experienced that freedom more fully than we who live in “free” countries.

I leave you with the words of Christ from John 8:31-36 :

To the Jews who had believed him, Jesus said, ‘If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples.  Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.’

They answered him, ‘We are Abraham’s descendants and have never been slaves of anyone. How can you say that we shall be set free?’

Jesus replied, ‘Very truly I tell you, everyone who sins is a slave to sin. Now a slave has no permanent place in the family, but a son belongs to it forever. So if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed.’

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Understanding Timing

April 24, 2010 in Reflections on Grief

I question God’s sense of timing. I know the Christian answer that “His ways are higher than ours” and that “He works all things together for good.” But honestly it just doesn’t make sense to me.

Why my mother died when I was 20, for example. I’m sorry, but there’s just no way around the fact that sort of thing shouldn’t happen. God may have a plan, and he make work this into something greater, but that just isn’t something that is suppose to happen. Or why, weeks before the end of school, I learn that I sit at the same lunch table almost every day with a man who lost his mother to cancer. There are so few who understand what this is like, to meet someone with such a similar story, is great…I just wish it had been a few months ago. God’s timing…it just doesn’t make sense to me.

Or why God can’t spare me from the frustrating details of life. Like financial aid. I need more money next year than I did this year…and yet I learn that JBU is actually reducing my financial aid package. It’d be so easy for God to just take care of the financial part of life, I could honestly do without the stress. But no. It just doesn’t make sense.

My perspective on so many things has changed this semester. Business, for example. I’ll be honest, sometimes in the midst of so much going on, I get a little sick of people complaining about all they have to do. That test you are stressed over? Guess what, I have it too, oh yeah, and I’m dealing with a ton of crap going on in my life at the same time. I have learned this semester how easily offended I can be with people. For stupid things, really. Things they don’t even realize they are doing, or saying. But I notice. Some days, I feel like I have more grace for people than I use to have, and then on others, I think I have less.

This weekend, and coming week, marks the same time on the semester “timeline” that my mother died. I haven’t sat for finals since last May. That is more than a little weird to me. It was at this time last year that mom really started feeling ill. I came home after finals last year to a mother who could barely walk to the door to greet me. Sometimes I wonder how much the people around me realize that this is still a very present reality in my life. I wake up with it and I go to bed with it. It hurts. A lot. No matter where I turn, or what I do, I am reminded of what has happen. Even something as simple as the rhythm of a semester that is winding down can cause pain.

I hope I haven’t sounded too down here. People ask me sometimes how I am doing, and I never really know how to respond. In a day to day sense, I am doing well. But in the big picture, life is hard. I lost someone who has been a part of my life for over twenty years. Every single day, for twenty years. You don’t just lose someone like that. The loss leaves a huge void in your life, one that I don’t think will ever really totally heal. Imagine what a “bad day” feels like in normal life…that is probably the best way to describe what the “best” days are for me. I do have good days. But they aren’t like what they use to be. And that is hard sometimes.

I wish I could understand it all right now. But I can’t. And that’s alright. Hopefully, someday it will. In the meantime, I keep on.

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Looking at Loss

December 21, 2009 in Reflections on Grief

Tell someone you just lost your mother, and immediately you’ll have more notes, hugs, and sympathy than you know what to do with. It is good and it is needed. I find it interesting that, though people may not have experienced the same thing, universally people understand how hard it is to lose someone you love.

I think some people assume I must be having an incredibly difficult time in the wake of my mother’s death. Certainly, it is hard, but I think I’ve laughed more than I have cried in the days since her parting. The day I found out, several people told me that they thought they were more emotional about it than I was. How can someone learn of the lose of their mother, a very close friend, and that same day turn around and genuinely laugh and smile?

The shortest and most simple answer is the peace of God. Without God, I know my perspective on everything would be incredibly different. God promises peace, and he gives it generously to those who ask for it. It probably sounds cliché to the reader, but in a way I can’t even begin to describe it; in the most difficult time of my life, God has been there.

Christians know of God’s promise to never leave or forsake us, but I think at times it is easy to feel left and forsaken. In an hour where it would be very easy to feel that God has forsaken me, I have found instead that God is closer than ever. In Him I have joy, and that joy isn’t dependent on circumstances. I’ve always hoped and believed that it would be there through the darkest storms, and now I know it can be. I may have lost my mother, but my joy did not depart with her.

But perhaps another part of my grief, is understanding that there are two ways of looking at it.

On the one hand, it would be very easy to look at the death of my mother and feel cheated and robbed. No twenty year old should lose there mother; I think most people believe that intuitively. It can be very easy to start remembering my mom, and then start looking at all the lost opportunities. My future, my career, marriage—should I be so blessed, children, the lessons I learn, the people I know; there is so much that she’ll never get to see or talk about. Yes, it is very hard to think about those things, and it can create a feeling of being robbed.

On the other hand, and the view I choose to ascribe to as best I can, I can remember my mom’s life and all of the good memories with her. As I have remembered, talked about her, looked at family photos, and the home she created, I know so well how blessed I was to call her ‘mom’.

I suppose I’m biased, but she was an incredible woman. It was the love of a gracious God that allowed my life to not only intersect with hers, but to be shaped by it in the way only the role of ‘mother’ can shape a child. There are reminders of her motherly love everywhere I turn, and rather than be frustrated by the loss, I rejoice in the great gift I was given in a mother. In some ways, I can’t even feel sorrow knowing how much I really had.

Certainly, it is easy to say I lost so much; and I did. But by that very same token, I had so much. For whatever reason, God chose to make that relationship end earlier than most mother-son relationships do. But I am intensely grateful that even as brief as that time was, it was good time.

Some people don’t even get to know their parents, some people live in broken homes, and some have parents who don’t love their children as they should. To me that seems the greater loss. I may not have had a long relationship with my mother, but the years I did have were good years. I’m thankful for that, and that every time I remember her, it will be with a smile and a laugh, because that was who she was. I won’t have the pain of a lifelong relational wound whenever I think of her.

Ultimately I don’t really like using the word ‘loss’ or ‘death’ since because of the sacrifice of Christ, my mother’s death was really only a temporary separation. It is a loss only in that I must live these few short years on earth without the present-ness of my mother’s relationship. And to that, I can only say, I truly had so much. I have not lost, but gained; for now I can say that even though she is no longer here, my relationship with her is better than before. It may sound strange, but I appreciate her now even more than I did a year ago. I’ve always know I was blessed to call her mother, but I see that now more than ever in her absence. That too is a gift, for since I will see her again, I can give her an even bigger hug, and say “I’m so glad to see you mother.”

I’ll shed my tears, and I’ll have my sorrows, but it is only a reminder of what a gift I had. To my God, I am thankful for the beautiful years with my mother. To my mother, I am thankful for the love and care she showed. And to my friends and family, I’m thankful for the incredible support you have shown me. Yes, I have not lost, but gained. I truly have so much, and for that, my tears are tears of gratitude and joy.

What do you have?