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Archive for the Christianity Category


2011:The Year of Letting Go

The past three years have been difficult for me. Struggling with my writing career, personal crossroads, personal loss, and pretty much overhauling my relationship with God have yielded a very different “new me.” Part of the tradition of New Year’s resolutions, I suppose, is the idea that with a new year, we are given a fresh start, a chance to put the past behind us and break free of the self-destructive habits that plagued us in the past.

Many New Year’s Resolutions involve losing weight, staying in shape, being better with finances—all of these things are good and honorable things to strive for. But one of the main things God has been impressing upon me the last few weeks is the selfish practice of appropriating God’s gifts of friendship, relationship, and love for myself. Is it possible to love someone too much? To hold a friendship too dear? Absolutely. When the idea of connection, relationship, of feeling for another human comes between us and the sanctification of our hearts before God, they become stumbling blocks to our gateway to communion with the living God.

The minute we begin to hold back for ourselves the thing that makes us feel loved, the thing that makes us feel safe, appreciated, secure, or valued and we invest it in/attribute it to another person, it begins to corrupt us. What does this mean, friends? Could it be that our spouse is the one who has corrupted us and become a stumbling block to further spiritual growth? Or does God demand the relinquishment of our right to ourselves—including the love for our spouse—in the all-encompassing depth of His own love for us?

Nothing we have belongs to us, including our relationships with the ones we hold most dear. Deceiving ourselves into thinking we can hold back that extra sense of security, that feeling that nothing will ever go wrong as long as we have our sweetie, is a dangerous thing. It can become our crutch, our addiction, the way we comfort ourselves in times of crisis. It is not faith in God, but rather faith in man. That special bond God gives to us and our partner becomes corrupted, and in the end, it becomes a barrier between us and the God of creation.

As I review the past few years of my life, I realize that I put too much confidence in the blessings God has given me. I realize that nothing is mine, and I need nothing but the love of Christ to sustain me. I’ve seen it happen to my friends, friends with pure hearts and the desire to serve God above all. God stripped them of every pretense of security and self-sufficiency, brought them to their knees, and filled them with a love that pales in comparison to all others.

Most of us are terrified of this kind of blessing, because we would rather sit on the couch by the fire with our self-serving and self-destructive addictions to human love and security, and let the world pass us by. Most of us will never run full-speed ahead into the hurricane with our hair on fire for Christ. Most of us will never know that kind of passion, that kind of absolute security. Most will never, because we will not pour our meager little blessings out on the ground as an offering to the Lord.

My resolution this year is to let them go. I want to have the courage to daily pour out the love and blessings of my family and friends onto the ground before the Lord and let Him fill me with His presence. It will be hard; most days I will fail. But I pray that some days, I will be able to truly relinquish the right to myself and let Him do what He will through me.

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On Measuring Success

One of my colleagues wrote a blog post the other day entitled, Why Does Your Blog Suck? In the first paragraph, he divulged one standard by which people measure the success of any blog: the number of comments.

I suppose I take issue with the issue of metrics as the hard and fast determiner of the success of anything, particularly from a Christian viewpoint. Popularity, maybe. But is that really “success”?

How many times does the Bible say that God sees all our deeds done in secret and the inclination of our hearts, and is pleased with every minute good work we accomplish according to His Word?

All right, you say, but we’re talking about business here, not spiritual disposition. Writers have to develop a platform of followers before their writing ever hits the presses, and they have to cultivate some reader loyalty through other social media platforms or their work will never sell well. They have to create good, consistent content and keep people coming back for more. But they also have to know why their doing what they do.

The separation of work and religion is a common disease in American society. We put aside our relinquishment to the sovereign will of God in the false notion that winner-take-all in business is somehow separate from the giving up the right to ourselves in our spiritual life.

Of course we must be good stewards of the abilities God has given us. Of course we need to try our very best in our jobs. But we also, first and foremost, must consecrate everything we do to the Lord God.

God does not measure success by page views, number of followers, or number of comments.

If a grand total of three people read my blog in its entire existence, and one of those people comes to Christ as a result, is it not worth the hundreds, perhaps thousands of hours I have spent keeping a blog for several years? Absolutely.

If I never henceforth publish a single story, novel, or article for the rest of my life, never make another dime on my writing, is it worth writing a blog that nobody reads? Yes. Why? Because I know why I’m writing the blog. For the King first, for my readers second. I only have to reach one person to touch the lives of many. Particularly if that one person has a big voice. Like Oprah.

I actually don’t care who reads my blog and who doesn’t. I know I am doing God’s work, and that is reason enough. Writers of faith, don’t get caught up in the world’s ways of measuring your success. If the Lord decides to give you the gift of a large, loyal readership, it will come, no matter what the odds. Our God is a God of the impossible. You are a success even if the metrics say otherwise.

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