I woke up early this morning,
wrestling with thoughts and attitudes toward a situation in my life. I must
confess I am perplexed at how God is working on this and if I were to be
completely honest, there are times when I want to ask Him to move over and let
me deal with it. How arrogant – but that is the black and white of it.
As is often the case, God allowed me
to stew on my thoughts for a bit as I took my shower, saw Kimberly off to
school, made my cup of cappuccino and came into my room for my quiet time.
Bam! The first thing out of the shoot
in the book I am using is the thought of total surrender to Christ. And I’m
sure you, my dear reader, have already figured out what verse I was directed to…
Mark 8:34
“If anyone would come
after me
he must deny himself
and take up his cross
and follow me"
Squirm… sigh… All of those commands
are hard and require devoted time and attention.
Next I went to Psalm 139, that
beautiful psalm that talks about how intricately I was made by God and that
there is no where I could ever be without Him. But it begins by acknowledging
God knows me – my thoughts, when I stand up, what I am about to say. It ends
with a request to search my heart and know my thoughts.
I sat back and sighed again. Because I
was (am) still struggling and I’m
not sure I want to deny myself and pick up my cross and follow or have my heart
and thoughts searched.
But how can I deny my thoughts? He
already knows them. So as I had a chat with my Abba I guess you could say I got
a little whiny about the person in this situation I’m wrestling with. And you
could also say, as any loving parent would do with a whiny child, I got dealt
with rather quickly.
He reminded me of something that stood
out to me in a couple of the books from the Chronicle of Narnia series I just
recently read. When Lucy was upset and struggling to understand what was to
happen with so-and-so, Aslan gently told her she didn’t need to know another
person’s ending to their story.
Immediately I thought of when Jesus
was with His disciples after the resurrection and He was having a heart to
heart with Peter. Jesus was trying to get to Peter’s heart by asking if Peter
loved Him. I’m sure Peter was squirming by the third time Jesus asked the
question, because when he saw John he quickly asked what was going to happen to
him (John).
This is when I wish I had a dvd of the
actual exchange because I would love to see and hear how Jesus spoke the next
sentence; “If I want him to remain alive until I return, what is that to
you?”
Was it said quietly in sorrow? Was
there a tear in His eye at Peter’s seeming lack of understanding? Or perhaps Jesus
reached out His hand and tapped Peter’s arm while His voice showed His
exasperation at the lame attempt of diversion. But regardless of how it was
said, the message was still the same – it is none of your business.
That is the same message Abba has for
me. “Val, what I am planning to do with someone else is none of your business.”
And if I listen closely I hear the rest of the admonition… “Isn’t it enough to
tend to yourself and obey what I ask of you?”
Ouch. Ok… yes, it is a big enough task
for me to take care of myself. While it doesn’t feel very good at the moment
(what discipline does??) I know God’s love for me is shown in His parental
rebuke to take care of myself and mind my own business.
Hey, Val! Thanks for always sharing your heart, and even the hard stuff, so that we can continue to learn through your triumphs and struggles. Love you, friend!
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