Last Thursday I had my monthly meeting with my spiritual
director. I shared with her about the
surprising experience of my birthday and how refreshing it was in light of this
challenging year. As we continued to
explore this past year the word that came to mind for me was “resignation.” So much of this year has felt like I’ve given
up. There are many reasons for
this. Changes, changes, and more
changes. I’ve moved work, home, and
church. All significant shifts of
life. What I’ve noticed is that so often
when I’ve been hit with disappointment, instead of expressing my emotions to
God, I’ve just accepted it and moved on.
Except inside, I am not at peace with the disappointment. My acceptance has been a resignation, not a
trust in God. It is despair. Not hope that he is working and weaving in
the disappointment. Doubting that he
sees or even cares.
At one point, my spiritual director asked me whether I would
approach God differently today than I did this year. As I sat with that question, I saw the ways I
would approach him differently, but also saw shifts and decisions I made
throughout the year that I wouldn’t change.
I want to approach him differently by leaning into honesty. Even though I know about desolation and
suffering, it does not mean that I am at the place yet where I always truly
mean “your will be done.” Yet, there
were times when my feelings wouldn’t be contained and they exploded in prayer
to him.
That same night I started meeting with some women to go
through a book on prayer. It was one of
those nights when the conversation eerily echoes all the things you’ve been
wrestling through during the day. I was
hit with the reality that I have not been asking boldly from God lately. I have not entered into the dangerous place
of stating what I want.
At one point in the evening I mentioned how we have these
two pray-ers in us. The nice, cleaned up
Christian pray-er. In my mind she wears
pearls and vacuums wearing heels. Her
prayers are safe, concrete, and pristine.
I called this pray-er neutered. (To
be completely honest, I said that this pray-er’s junk had been cut off). I then went on to say that we also have a
true pray-er within us. Her prayers are
risky, all over the place, and messy. I
want to unleash that pray-er. She is
crying out the true prayers of my heart.
However, when I let that pray-er do her thing, I enter into the scary
world of risk. And it completely flies
in the face of resignation.
Risk terrifies me.
Because when I risk, there is no guarantee. I might be disappointed. I might fall.
I might end up just where I started.
Risking feels like living life outside of my control. Yet, I truly do not control my life. Ultimately.
To play devil’s advocate (to myself), risk also could mean a
life different than I imagined. I might be
surprised. I might soar. I might end up on the other side of the
world. Risking opens me up to life beyond
my control, into the hands of God, who’s vision and imagination is infinitely
more expansive than mine will ever be.
As I sit with the possibility of this upcoming year I am hit
with the decision of resignation or risk.
As I drove home last night, I chose risk. I don’t know all that will hold for me. I fear risk, but resignation doesn’t
work. I am over resigning.
……….
How are you stepping into risk today with God?
2 comments:
Agh! Thank you for this post!!! You have just put into words something that I have been feeling for a long time, and didn't know how to express it. Didn't really even know I was doing it. Wow.....resignation.....I know that feeling all too well. and you are right - it IS safe and clean and tidy.
I read a great book on prayer at the beginning of this year (The Circle Maker), and have tried to be more intentional and bold in my prayers since then, but I always seem to fall short - into the "safe zone." Thanks for your encouragement - and thanks for letting the Lord speak to me through you! :)
Thanks Lindsey! I'm glad it was an encouragement for you. It was a shock for me as well. I've been reading Paul Miller's book "The Praying Life" and have really been challenged in a good way.
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