In one of my recent posts, I wrote about being consumed,
about opening my hands and my heart to let the Spirit enter in. This could be part two of that post. I’ve been meditating and praying a lot on
what this means, and I’ve been seriously amazed at what it can mean. Over the past
several years, I have known I’m missing something in my spiritual life. I was kind of floating along, playing the
part, listening to others and wondering what I’m doing wrong. I would read certain Scriptures and long for
the words to come alive in me, although I really had no idea what that
meant. I felt like I should be further
along than I was. I’ve been raised in a
Christian home, went to a Christian college, married a guy who is passionate
about his faith and has now been called to holy orders. Shouldn’t I have “gotten it” by now? Shouldn’t I be one that others look to as an
example, instead of blindly stumbling my way through each day, hoping no one
sees the real me?
A handful of experiences lead me to realize that I had built
some pretty thick walls around my heart and soul. And I had an army protecting those
walls. I was desperate to dictate who
and what was allowed in, all the time wondering why I felt so restrained and
uneasy. I determined to do something
about it. I was going to figure out how
to make things better. I prayed about
it…every now and then. I bought books,
read blogs, faced hard days with a fierce resolve to get it right. And I failed.
Over and over. Nothing worked. I was so frustrated.
Fast forward to last year.
The Lord started to work on me.
At first it was in ways I didn’t even notice. But then there were a few key events that
were refreshing slaps in the face. I
slowly started to understand that I needed to let Jesus tear my walls down and
be my strength. I remember one evening
our Bishop was praying over me, and he told me that he sensed that for my whole
life I had been walking alongside a rushing river, and now it was time to jump
in. Yes!
That’s what I want, what I need.
Not long after this experience, on my way home from a
women’s retreat (which was one of those key events), as I drove I had an image
of chunks of me falling away, and I was frantically grabbing the pieces and
holding them tightly to me, literally trying to hold myself together. It was a vivid picture of the rigid pattern I
had developed in my life, working so hard to look like I’ve got it right, to
move through each day in complete control.
I tearfully recognized the need to let Jesus pick up those pieces and
hold them for me. To let the Holy Spirit
guide me, to relinquish the control I clung to.
But with this realization came intense fear. Doubt.
What will happen if I let go?
What will I be asked to do? To
give up? What if I don’t have what it
takes? What if I fail? Can I really trust that He will provide? Too many questions. Too many unknowns.
Then, at a retreat for the clergy and spouses of our
diocese, I was so blessed by a word the Lord spoke to me. During a time of prayer, our Bishop prayed
that he knew there were some people present who needed to open their
hearts. Of course, I identified with
that right away. This had been on my
mind for several months, but I was still coming to terms with it. So I began to open my heart right there. I started telling God that I knew He was
speaking to me, but that fear had been holding me back, and I didn’t know what
to do with that. He spoke clearly and
powerfully to me through the prayers of others, through my own prayers, and
through His Word. He reminded me that He
will show me the way, He will provide more than I could ever ask
or imagine, that I need not fear, only believe.
So, I’ve jumped in the river, and the freedom I’m
experiencing is incredible. The other
day I came across one of the books I purchased in my earnest attempt to fix
myself. It was about the fruit of the
Spirit. As I put it away, I joyfully
thanked God for this journey I’ve been on; for the place I am now; for the
opportunity to be in communion with Him, Father, Son, Spirit; for the fruits He
produces in us when we allow Him to enter in.
For the freedom from feeling like I have to figure it all out and make
the fruits take root in my life.
Now I’m not saying it’s all sunshine and roses. As Fr. Eirik so eloquently reminded us in his recent sermon, just like Thomas, we often don’t trust easily. We need to come just as we are, humbly,
honestly, admitting our faithlessness.
And while He will give us marvelous signs to show us that He is enough,
the true blessing comes when we believe.
When we are in communion with Him, with our defenses down, just being in
His presence will allow Him to renew us into the fullness of life, in the hope
and reality of His resurrection. Because
He has overcome, all of our shortcomings, our fears, our doubts. And His wounds are the way to the
Father. The way to abundant life, a life
of victorious freedom in the Holy Spirit.
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