Such is the confidence that we have through Christ toward God. Not that we are sufficient in ourselves to
claim anything as coming from us, but our
sufficiency is from God, who has made us sufficient to be ministers
of a new covenant, not of the
letter but of the Spirit. For the letter kills, but the
Spirit gives life. 2 Corinthians
3:4-6
In the state of Arkansas there is
a small town called Prescott in its southwestern region. There I spent most of my formative years
learning how to read, add and bail hay.
I was in the 4H club, on the baseball team and a member of the high
school marching band. Trust came easily
to me. My parents took me to church
pretty much every Sunday morning, Sunday evening and Wednesday evening. When I was older I drove myself. The farm I grew up on was well over 100 acres
and I roamed it freely. In the winter I
helped my dad cut and store firewood. In
the summer we took care of our five acre garden. My uncle taught me to play the guitar and
Mrs. Cannon taught me piano. Trust came
easily to me. My first girlfriend was
Monica in the fourth grade and we “went together” (where – I have no idea) for
the better part of two years. I learned
to sing listening to singers like Sting, Billy Joel, Kenny Rogers, Don Henley,
Phil Collins and Richard Marx. I learned
that if I played my piano and sang “Right Here Waiting” girls would pay
attention. And through all of this
rather arbitrary-ness, trust came easily to me.
Trust came ridiculously easily to me.
Gullible, might be a better way to describe the “me” of back then.
All of that changed when I
entered college. I had freedom there
that could cause a five year old to salivate.
I could stay up as late as I wanted, go wherever I wanted – whenever I
wanted. It’s when you have this kind of
freedom that you begin to question the things that are foundational to
you. It was then that I challenged the tenets
I had been taught all my life. The word
“trust” became dubious. Is God really
listening? Is God really even there? These were questions that I never entertained
before. Now I heard them regularly from
my peers and mentors alike. I found
myself asking them more and more often.
I lost sleep puzzling over all these truths that had been laid before me
in years passed. So, I made the decision
that I would not simply “go with the flow”.
I decided that I would not merely fall in line with the teachings of
those who taught me. I would decide for
myself what was true and live by whatever rules resulted. At first this newfound liberty was akin to
old, heavy, rusty shackles being removed from my heart and soul. I could think my own thoughts. I could do whatever I wanted. The next couple of years were full of what I
now refer to as foolish trial and error.
I sometimes went to worship (in the traditional sense) but often I would
simply worship from Bedside Baptist. God
played almost no part in my decisions, at least from my perspective. You might say I was in a place where I had
given up on him. I didn’t trust him or
really anyone else. I trusted only
me. But there was a problem. With all this new freedom I wasn’t really
happy. In fact, I was most certainly
unhappy! I didn’t enjoy the life I was
living. I didn’t enjoy it, and I
couldn’t figure out why. Every character
I watched on television and in film who existed in the manner I was attempting
to exist was content. Yet I was far from
content. I was empty.
I had a best friend at the time
who was journeying similarly and we had both agreed that the puerile belief
systems of our childhood were beneath us.
When throwing off the contrivances of your youth it is essential to have
a person in your life to give you courage.
Let’s call my friend Emil, because I have never personally known anyone
with this name. Emil would encourage me
in my agnostic quest when I doubted my own resolve and I did the same for
him. But I reiterate, I wasn’t
happy. No matter how I tried to like
this new life, I didn’t. I
couldn’t! I felt hollow,
transparent. I was in a terrible dating
relationship with a girl we’ll call Veronica, because I’ve never personally
known anyone by that name. My grades
weren’t going all that well and I generally had no real direction for my
life. I was at a crisis point.
That’s about the time I realized
that the real problem with the worldview I was ascribing to was where I placed
my trust. I was trusting. . . (pause for
effect). . . ME! However, I was finding
that in spite of my extensive twenty something years I was hilariously
unequipped to lead myself. I began
revisiting the ideals and beliefs of my past.
I thought back to the open fields of Nevada county (pronounced
Neh-VAY-duh). I remembered the old hymns
of the Bluff City Church of Christ where I began leading worship when I was
thirteen. And something I didn’t expect
happened. I began to long for that time
period again. I began to crave the innocence
and naiveté of my youth. I hungered
after the time when trust came easily to me.
I began desperately pouring over the Scriptures I had once been
force-fed. But one very disheartening truth became more and more apparent. As much as I wanted, I couldn’t go back to
the innocence of the past. The thing about
innocence is that once it’s gone you can’t get it back. I prayed to my God, “Please God, show me a
sign.” “I need to be able to trust you
as I did before.” “I need my life to
have meaning!” His answer came gradually. He sent me a new set of friends who wanted to
live a life of meaning just as much as I.
He sent people who also realized that that meaning could not be found
within ourselves. He also sent me a companion
who would become the most important person in my life. We’ll call this person Jennifer, because that
is her actual name. We all enjoyed
lengthy spiritual discussions. We
celebrated the word of God in dialogue that challenged and grew us. It was during this time period that I
realized I no longer longed for the “me” of the past. I was reading the words of Solomon and how he
had tried out all the temptations of the world and found them wanting. I saw a lot of myself in him – minus all the
wisdom. I also read Jesus’ words about
taking care of all our needs giving the birds of the air and the lilies of the
field as example. I marveled that he
contrasted the splendor of Solomon with the provision God provided. And then it happened.
I made the colossal and audacious
decision to trust my God.
The man in me would love to say
that I found the courage to make this decision completely within myself. However, I know that isn’t true. I was humbled by the fact that, in spite of
myself, I had been led into the decision to trust. I would never have gotten there by
myself. There was nothing within me that
could have ever gotten me there. And in
this realization I found that I was better here than I had ever been in my
childhood. That isn’t to say that I no
longer appreciated the innocence of the past, I just now realized that my God
didn’t want me to blindly believe out of ignorance. He wanted and still wants me to have a deeper
appreciation for him. He allowed my
straying (without approving of it) because he had a better plan for me and had
already decided to preserve me through that desert period. My understanding of that made my trust all
the more sweet.
Trust is ultimately a
decision. It’s an audacious decision
because it laughs in the face of human reasoning. It’s a colossal decision because everything
depends upon it. Yet this is where I, you,
WE all need to be. My God pursued this
farm boy from Arkansas when there was absolutely NO good reason to do so.
He is pursuing you as well.
Father, help me to trust you today, tomorrow and every day after
that. I know that I am a fool to the
world. Help me be even more foolish
before them as I increase in faith in you.
Draw me ever closer to you and forgive me for straining against my
yoke. Thank you for your patience and
grace. It is in Christ I pray, Amen.
Greatness! It's an odd place to be when we end up thanking God for what He's done with our waywardness. We know He doesn't condone it, but how He so often uses it--redeems it even. Blessed by this!
ReplyDeleteTrue Quentin. It is a humbling experience to pray a prayer of thanksgiving for God rescuing us from ourselves.
ReplyDeletePraise God that He is still there for us even after we have deserted Him to try things on our own. Good stuff!
ReplyDeleteI have come back to this post several times reading and re-reading it, but today, I came to focus on the last two paragraphs. Stunning truths.
ReplyDelete