Love Conquers

The shadowy fear of loss compels me to meet my own needs, satisfy my own hunger, disguise my loneliness, or fill my own empty spaces. Fear is irreversibly fluxed with greed.  Fear’s solution is always “more” and yet it never satisfies.  The more I do in response to fear the greater the void. Fear consistently alters the face of longing to keep me in a cycle of lust and greed.  I can detect fear by the baggage it demands I carry.  If it cannot kill me, it will distract me; if it cannot distract me, it will depress me; if it cannot depress me, it will find another way to disqualify me.  Fear will anesthetize me to the heart cries of the poor and lonely…

Love, however, comes with the reckless message of letting go.  It speaks of singular need and finds satisfaction in Christ alone.  Love convinces me that every need is met and there is nothing I need outside of who He is in me.  Every answer lies within.  Love demands nothing; it never makes me feel incomplete or defective.  It always comes with the assurance of the finished work that is waiting to be seen.  Love conquers fear.  Love finds its way into all things and reveals itself at every angle.  Love moves me toward others assuring me that in Him, I too am love.  Love is every solution; it conquers all…including me.

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Calcutta?

I blog for simple reasons…I have unanswered questions.  Something in me needs to bridge the gap between the vibrant life of Christ and the life He seems confined to live through me.  There is a gnawing unrest, a discontent that pushes me to keep looking for some “missing” piece.

I was raised Catholic, answered an altar call at a Billy Graham crusade, was baptized in a Baptist Church, met the Holy Spirit in a Charismatic Church, discovered biblical integrity in a Word of Faith Church, learned to hear and to trust my union with Christ at Visionwriters – still, restlessness remains.

I’ve had seasons of rest, moments of fulfillment, and the periodic sense of purpose – but an underlying dissatisfaction is never far from the surface.  I’ve wondered, “What’s wrong? Have I missed something?  Does anyone else feel this way? Am I defective?  Is everyone else content?  Why do I still feel hungry? Am I malnourished? Overfed?”  I’ve felt ”used and burned out” at the same time that I’ve felt ”under-utilized and unchallenged”.  Inside, I cry.

A few years ago, I sat with a homeopathic doctor to look at my blood and diagnose potential health problems. We never got further than my informational chart.  When asked my occupation, I entered ”office manager”.  The doctor couldn’t have known how unhappy I was in my job.  I loved the ministry I worked for, but was deeply dysphoric with my function.  I felt bound to my position and didn’t know how to get out.

After reading my job title he simply stated that the job was draining my life and that it was crucial to my health and well-being that I quit. His insight was uncanny; he spoke many things that confirmed what my heart was telling me.  It took a couple of years to let go of the job; but there was one thing he said that day that broke my heart with its clarity…and continues to do so to this day.

I held the pivotal words close; I shared them once and received a disagreeing smile.  Embarrassed, I pulled back, downplayed the words, and privately asked God to show me who I am.  What did the doctor say?  He said I have ”an uncommon compassion” – the kind that ranks with ”Mother Teresa” – and that a ”hurting world” is ”crying for me to leave the office” and to find my own “Calcutta”.  The words still humble and haunt.

The words seem contrary because I can appear selfish.  Not knowing what to do with what I often feel, I get overwhelmed and I shut down.  Years of depression were shamed by a belief that self-pity fueled its presence.  True, I need an outlet for the compassion that feels so heavy – and yet in tender revelation I can also see that depression can be a form of intercession on behalf of those who bear unbearable sorrow. I often feel detached from my own emotions and so I wonder how I am so easily anguished by the pain of others.  I cry more easily for you than for myself; even movies can bring uncontrollable sobbing.

Having been raised in the All American Church, I long for a new view, fresh approach, and greater scope.  Can I understand union with Christ and not become His literal hands and feet in this world?  I want the actuality of the gospel and would guess that my missing piece is linked to my need to help others in a tangible way.  Lord, lead me to the Calcutta of your choosing…

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Easy Steps

Every urge to fix myself is a temptation designed to thwart faith and strengthen the illusion of independence.  I am provoked to prove an identity that does not exist.  Temptation tries to move me into a position of separated thinking.  Dismissing the urge is a continual lesson in letting go.

The enticement to take matters into my own hands or to try to make something happen is subliminal.  Beliefs below the threshold of conscious thought continually incite the effort to manufacture change.  If I take the bait, faith is undermined by inevitable failure.  Failure is inevitable because the flesh cannot replicate the freedom of the spirit.  I’m weary of trying; the need to prove any thing is disappearing.

Goaded steps or even those that resemble a parent coaxing a child feel unnatural.  I want steps that are confident and relaxed.  I want natural steps, or none at all.  Life’s too short to keep calculating steps in a vain effort to prove potency.  I will take the steps that arrive with clarity – with no mental effort, strain or manipulation.

When I hear a word I won’t presume it to be an invitation to perform.  I will not translate words into laws or allow the mind to assign meaning to that which only my heart has heard.  Words spoken in my heart are spirit and life; they supply their own freedom of movement and their action isn’t noticed until I am already in motion.

Argument and logic need not agree with my action.   Although the mind loves to analyze situations (so it can take credit for outcomes) it has no role in decisions of the heart.  An unsubdued mind resists the submissive role it plays in a life of true union.  It takes time, but my soul is bowing her knee to the “knowing” deep within.

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More Paradox

In co-union I find the poise of life—the balance between being broken and running wild; between lying down and running away; between being selfish and being selfless.  Although, paradoxically speaking how can I be “self-less?”  Christ did not come to replace self or to eradicate it.  It is “self” that accurately bears the image of one deity or the other.  On one side of paradox it is impossible to be selfless for God created me to be a self.  He asks me to love my neighbor as my self.  Therefore the self is to be loved, even as the neighbor is to be loved.  Loving and affirming myself is right – being the best possible me (self) I can be is my grateful response to God.  In doing so, Christ is glorified for it is then that His image is born again.  Love needs a self to express from, toward, and through.  Hence, Christ was born.  Hence, I too was born.  I ache for God, and yet it is God’s ache for me that sets the craving in motion. I ache to be me…this is His will at work in me.

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Beguiled by Noise

Confusion occurs when I am beguiled by the noise of the crowds, whether internal or external.  I hear their chants and contrive it into some kind of a command.  If I respond to self-imposed rigors then the whims of the flesh just keep changing the commands.  For this reason I keep letting go, allowing Christ to purify my stream of thought.  As the pool I draw from is purified, I find the commands are few and they are not in a continual state of flux.  The commands conjured up by false and separated thinking change all the time and yes, they cause me momentary confusion.  But I am anchored to Permanence and He returns me to simplicity time and again.  I seek Him (in me, as me) and all these other things are added unto me (like a gift), not upon me (like a burden).  In this season, simplicity is purity and purity is energy!

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I am Led

I continually remind myself that I am not alone.  I live knowing that I am guided even when I’m not aware of His leading.  I am led out of the wilderness, out of turmoil, out of debt, confusion, complacency, out of the land of the non-living, out of indecision or insecurity, and out of fear or torment.  I am led “out of” and I am led “in to.”  I am led into the fullness of grace, peace, confidence, true movement and correct action, and into a good attitude of heart and mind.

Jerking, awkward movements are replaced with a steady stream of steps taken without hesitation. I am led away from base human reasoning and rationale.  I am led away from limitation and into liberation.  The knowing of the spirit is bigger than the soul’s ability to understand, and I am continually being led away from small-mindedness and closer to the expansive mind of Christ.  God honors movement (faith).  The steps I take are obvious for it is easy to recognize the craving of my own heart.  I trust union, all is well… Christ is my ambition and true vocation.

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I’m Back!

Claudia said the road trip would be a God journey – about far more than the obvious.  Was it ever! From my angle, it was a continued weaning from the false cry for identity, definition, and the labels I’d placed on myself. There was darkness, and in the end… sweet light that revealed God’s right to define me.

I often felt I was in a very dark cave.  There by appointment, but uncomfortable none-the-less.  The cave was painful.  Unable to see, I stubbed my toe and hit my shin; but I couldn’t back up.  I had to keep going knowing I might bump my head too.

Darkness tested the paradox between the unalienable right to be myself and the freedom to be nobody at all. The silence hurt my ears but I did not cover them.  Shedding pretense was worth losing what I thought was so important.   I faced flaws… deep, dark, spiritual flaws; the kinds that mar the character and mask true identity.  I was pained until I saw that the obstacles I bumped in the dark were the things I was unwilling to see about myself.

I am back, but the journey continues.  Humility severed the need for definition and revealed that I was never undefined.  I am who He says I am;  He calls me a writer.  I belong to Him; He will prove Himself through me in the vein of His choosing.

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Different, Yet the Same

I have a melancholy temperament and often feel the need to be understood.  I like knowing I’m on the same page with others and tend to work hard to articulate or extrapolate meaning.  I cherish this part of me when it’s nested in God; but for the struggling mind in me it can be a false cry for conformity.  How often have I looked for validation through uniformity with others?

When I need to “be like you” to feel credible then even a different outlook will make me auto-adjust or over-correct my position to make sure I’m rightly understood.  It’s as though any difference between us must be relegated to simple misunderstandings. I’m convinced if you just understand me, you’ll agree with me; and if you agree, then my silent cry for conformity is met.

I reject my uniqueness when I suspect others of being better than me.  Comparison is the number one enemy of self-acceptance.  My fear of being different (and more subtle craving for others to “see it the way I see it”) is rooted in a misunderstanding of union.

I erroneously expect Christ in me to be the exact reflection of Christ in you. When He isn’t, I presume one of us is defective (usually me, but occasionally you). Kicking into conformity mode, I back paddle my position.  If I think you’re amiss, I’ll try to shift your position by re-explaining mine.  If needed, I’ll pull out bigger guns and cite my inner knowing or what the Lord’s showing me…anything to persuade you that God in me is more accurate than God in you. Please know, these actions are not conscious, they’re autonomic in nature; it is “false self” preservation at its finest.

Yet another paradox; Christ is the same, but different.  His Spirit unifies us; His “sameness” is recognizable in each.  And yet, this same Christ is expressed differently in everyone and procures different answers and solutions to life’s complexities.  His heart is more passionate in one than in another on any given subject.  He may ache for political reform in one and will move that person into action; in another He may ache for personal reform and move them to action of another kind.  In both, love is the motive, execution, and conclusion.

A difference in passions is not a lack of involvement in the human condition.  We’re different parts of the same body…but remain of one heart, mind, and spirit. To applaud our differences is to affirm our uniqueness.  Singularity of purpose mixed with multitudinous expression and execution is the key to love gracefully conquering all.

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Doing and Being

There was no other choice for me…leaving the familiar was like God pushing me out of the nest. He was asking me to rise up and fly. New turf is rewarding and exhilarating – but also a lot like a junkie with intense withdrawals.  There are days I am screaming on the inside… demanding some form of definition as to who I am and what I’m supposed to be DOING in life.  “Doing” is like a drug that masks the pain of waking up to being myself.  The skin crawls and the flesh cries out like the drug addict who would sell their very soul for another fix.  I know…I’m melodramatic, but it’s a fairly accurate description for the process.

In moments of weakness I want to return to the familiar by looking for a new role to play, duty to perform, or job to fill.  I am inwardly urged to resist the temptation.  It’s not that I will never “do” anything again…I will.  What I do will strengthen what this season of “non-doing” is all about – allowing myself to be who I was created to be with no apology, false humility, fear, or reservation.

I was wrestled from the nest to find my voice, rhythm, style, and expression…then, to live it by serving others from my true being.  I will do much, but what I do will reflect who I am at the core.  My service will flow from the revelation of who I know myself to be.

Of course there’s a paradox! Although I spent years doing things that didn’t satisfy they weren’t the “wrong” things.  They were the “right” things for showing me who I wasn’t (I have to see who I’m not in order to see who I am).  Doing refines being and being refines doing. So I “do” for as long as it takes for me to realize that this is NOT who I am.  I may even “keep doing” long after I know that what I’m doing is no longer a fit but eventually I will break under the pressure of trying to do that which does not nourish the call of my being.  It is THEN that I will enter a place like the one I’m in right now – a place where I am not allowed to do anything until I can recognize and call myself by the name that God has chosen for me…I am Susan, He calls me a writer…

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Good-bye…again

Mom died a year ago today…my brother Mark, less than six months ago.  Daddy died two years before Mom…a dear friend and spiritual mentor close behind him.  A kaleidoscope of grief made it difficult to face each death with distinction.  So much change in such a short span of time made life as I knew it unrecognizable.

I once heard that losing parents is akin to watching a great library burn to the ground.  My greatest resource in life is suddenly gone.  I not only grieve the death of my parents, but the last remnants of my childhood for suddenly I am the new voice of wisdom.  A generation has moved on, their hand reaching backwards fully expecting mine to reach forward to take the baton they are passing…whether I want it or not.

The shock wave of my brother’s death is diminishing and I find myself returning to a grief interrupted, life in absentia of mom.

Mom was my best friend, confidant, and safest haven…all descriptions incapable of conveying who she was (and in my heart still is) to me.  Mom was the one with whom I was my raw self.  That is to say, she overlooked a lot and withstood the abuse of my own pain.  With Mom I never pretended to be more than who I was on any given day.  She wanted me to feel safe, intuitively knowing I was hurting and hiding from other relationships.  The thing is – Mom saw the whole of me.

She was my biggest fan and the number one hopeful that I would find my own voice.  She read every word I wrote and never failed to let me know that she felt they were, well, anointed.   She once told me that my writing “made an easy connection between my message and me as a person.”  That meant a lot to me.  I was her favorite writer, teacher, and singer of songs.  We all deserve moms like this!

For many years, I’d go to visit my mom and just sleep a lot.  I usually showed up at her door feeling spent.  It wasn’t the length of the drive…11 hours is an easy trip for me.  It was the way I lived my life. I was always going above and beyond – trying to live up to an expectation that I could never meet.  I was angry, bitter, depressed. When the masks were wearing thin, I’d show up at Mom’s ready to rip them off.

Mom drew poison out of me like a healing poultice.  She’d woo details of my morbid self-view onto the table and then help me to dismantle them one-by-one.  I think it caused her pain, but she knew the wounds needed to be lanced and so she did.

Mom had a way of delivering me out of my hellish circle of self; she did it by simply needing me.  She didn’t lecture against self-pity or use back-handed methods of correction.  She knew I was too self-focused, but rather than telling me to shift my focus (causing me to feel guilty when I was unable to do so) she would just need me.  She knew to draw upon the real Susan.  She’d have a problem she couldn’t solve, a question she couldn’t answer, a need that required my response.  She drew my focus off of myself and onto her. She’d ask me to explain a perplexing thought, what the Word had to say on a given subject, or simply ask me to sing her a song – as though only my voice could soothe her own unrest.  She did it often and she did for me.  I have no doubt my mother knew more than I…but she chose to need me for my sake…and that changed my life.  She taught me that helping others was helping me.

Mom lived to see my evolution.  She saw me walk away from depression in its most debilitating forms.  She watched me make the painful transition out of a ministry position I was afraid to let go of even though I no longer fit the role.  She witnessed the softening of the rough edges of my difficult relationships.  

Mom, I love you and I have never thanked you enough for seeing me through.  Because of you, I am a much better me.  I still reach for your hand daily…and miss you dearly.

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