Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Living In Between

(by Lorie Codispoti) 

Over the last few years we’ve lost some very close friends to death. It’s been difficult to walk through the pain of losing people you love. In retrospect, you wish you’d of spent more time together, having more conversations, laughing until you can’t breathe, and taking more pictures to record the memorable moments. The older I get the more death feels like a thief attached to a clock whose minute and hour hands are moving like the second hand and there’s nothing I can do to slow it down.
I’ve tasted a little bit of something my grandmother told me years ago. She said that aging was not the hardest part of getting old. She said that the hardest part of growing older is outliving those you’ve experienced life with. Attending the funerals of friends and relatives becomes more frequent and this can leave an elderly person with a feeling of abandonment and loneliness, on top of the reality that the world they’ve lived in has changed and they are now a stranger in a foreign land.
While I understand that there is a silver lining for us christian sojourners, and that our eternal home awaits us with unimaginable joy, the journey is still hard. Having the ability to embrace the unbelievable pain of loss, while at the same time fixing our minds on the irrepressible hope that we have in Christ, is a practice to cultivate.
For believers, grief and hope go together. The two are not mutually exclusive. They coexist in the tension between the already and the not yet.
I love the way Bruce Hillman explains this state: “To live in a state of "already but not yet" is the gift of the faith. …we already possess all that Christ possesses, but the fullness of that is not yet experienced. Hold an acorn in your hand, and you have a whole oak tree, hold a handful of acorns, and you hold a forest. The acorn is a promise, a reality that is not yet realized in fullness but still exists in your hand. To hold the Bible, then, is to hold the universe, salvation, the world to come, everlasting life. To hold to the Bible is to hold in your hand the promises that faith grasps.”
In 1Thess. 4:13 we read that christians do “not grieve as others do who have no hope.” And, before that (vs.17-19), the Apostle Paul informs us that if our hope is limited to this life, only, we are to be pitied because our faith is futile.
So, how do I grieve with hope?
First, I don’t deny the pain. Death is a thief that steals from all of us. It hurts to lose a dear friend. I hate it! But, allowing myself to walk through that pain does more than acknowledging that it’s real. It serves as a springboard to the next part of the process: remembering! (Sometimes you have to go back to move forward.) I remind myself of the realities of living in a fallen world, but I also remind myself of the promises that God has given us for the next one. Our citizenship is beyond this world (Phil.3:20). We have a forever home being prepared for us by our Savior Himself (Jn.14:2-7), and an inheritance we’ll never lose (1Pet.1:3-5). Although our physical bodies will deteriorate and die on this side of eternity, Jesus assures us that He will transform them into incorruptible bodies, like His (Phil.3:21).
This is the essence of a faith secured in a hope that extends beyond what we experience.
We live in the tension between what Christ has already done (He came. He died. He rose again.) and the fulfillment of the promises to come. Death is part of that tension. However, the clock is ticking. Grief, for the christian is but a temporary reality.
The thief has already been defeated, and its funeral is close at hand.
If you like a party there’s a big celebration coming (Rev.19:6-9). When Jesus puts the final nail in the coffin of sin and death, and buries this enemy forever, I won't be sitting on the front row, crying. No! I'll be standing and shouting, “Death, your stinger is gone forever! Our God reigns!”
“And God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away.” (Rev.21:4)
May we live as Jesus lives - in the already, but not yet!

Friday, June 2, 2023

Curtail Lying

(by Lorie Codispoti)

A friend recently posted a request, asking for suggestions on how to deal with her children lying to her. She received some very caring responses that I hope encouraged her heart.
Reading the thread had me thinking about how we dealt with lying when our children were young. My friend had already been given plenty of good counsel on how to handle her dilemma, so I chimed in with what I thought might help to counter the whole issue from the side of prevention.
Most kids lie - not simply because they don't want to get caught - but because they don't want to expose their sin nature and disappoint their parents and others.
Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord, but those who deal truthfully are His delight. (Prov.12:22)
God hates lying, so to lie about something was one of the biggest offenses in our home. Our children knew it carried the harshest consequences. It was much more serious than the disappointing truth they attempted to cover up.
By way of prevention, we did something early on that drastically (and I mean drastically) reduced the number of times we ever dealt with lying.
Certainly, teach them about trust, respect, and how lying damages relationships, but all of these preferred outcomes are based on one very simple, yet profound, principle … safety. When children know that they are safe to tell the truth - even if it means disappointment, exposure, and consequences - they will run TO you with their offense rather than away from you with a lie.
What if Adam and Eve would have taken their offense directly to God instead of running away from Him? Would they have experienced the same loving God that we do when we resist the temptation to run away from Him, and run to Him instead? I think so!
We have a loving Father, who desires for us to run TO Him when we fail to live up to His prescription for holiness. A Father who beckons His children to come to Him, contrite and fully exposed. We are invited into His very presence and encouraged to lay all our guilt, shame, and remorse at His feet. His throne room is a merciful place where forgiveness is freely offered, and abundant grace is extended to every one of His children. When we know that we are safe and secure in our Father's love even His discipline is received with an open heart.
Create and cultivate a safe space for your children and you’ll discover that lying becomes less and less of an issue. This is how we crush the head of the lier himself.
The goal - no matter the offense - is, and always has been, restoration.

Saturday, April 15, 2023

Dream Interpretation

(by Lorie Codispoti)

I’ve known people who have such vividly detailed dreams that their recall reads like an adventurous tale in a storybook, complete with detailed and colorful illustrations.
When I was younger I had a lot of nightmares. I’ve also had a few recurring dreams over the years. But, these days most of my dreaming is lucid and nonsensical. Add that to my current medication - that comes with its very own dream notice - and you’ve got a woman who wakes up feeling incredibly thankful that there is no replay button on the fragmented craziness that just ran through her head.
Dreams can be mysterious and confusing.
My favorite movie line about dreaming comes from a medieval fairytale, where a young man has just witnessed something unbelievable, and in his confusion he says, “Maybe I'm dreaming. My eyes are open, which means maybe I'm awake dreaming that I'm asleep. Or, or more likely, I'm asleep dreaming that I'm awake wondering if I'm dreaming.”
The capricious nature of dreams have fascinated people for thousands of years. The interest to understand them better can be linked to various scientific and psychological fields of study.
The Bible records 21 dreams. (Not to be confused with visions.) Incidentally, only one of the dreamers is a woman, and her dream is a nightmare. (Go figure!) If you do a study on the biblical dreams you will find that each one comes with a clear interpretation. God made sure of that. Some of the dreams are obviously confusing, but not a one of them leaves any doubt as to what they mean.
Do you think we should seek to interpret our dreams?
Many charlatans have set up shop and taken advantage of people desperate to understand what’s behind some of the dreams that plague them. The exploitation of curious dreamers is big business. The practice of dream interpretation is heavily rooted in the occult, and we should be wary of practices that entice us to explore beyond biblical boundaries. It’s part of the indwelling Holy Spirit’s job to help us discern God’s instructions. So if God wants to communicate to us through a dream (which He certainly can and does do), then the interpretation will be clear, direct, and straightforward.
I recently read about a Christian that was troubled by something his late mother left unfinished. He records a dream visitation he had with her, where she instructed him. Another article suggested placing an item from a deceased loved one under your pillow in order to interact with them in your dreams. This, along with idea that we can use a Christian dream dictionary (Yes, there is such a publication.) - making note of the symbols and spiritual connections we have within a dream to analyze and determine the message God wants to communicate to us - is dangerous territory. Besides that, this whole process of interpretation is completely subjective, which makes it very difficult to “test the spirits, whether they are of God” (1Jn.4:1).
Why do we need to spend so many of our waking hours trying to figure out what God might be trying to tell us, when His objective word leaves no doubt as to His message?
God may use a dream to inspire us, guide us, encourage us, convict us, or even warn us of some kind of danger. However, we need to be careful not to over emphasize dreaming as a means of seeking and hearing from God. Prioritizing this method of interpretation is not wise. God has given us His word as His primary means of communication. If you want to hear from God, open and read your bible. He speaks through it every time.
Allen Parr (The Beat) suggests five things to consider when questioning dreams:
1. No scripture suggests that God has stopped speaking to us through dreams. (Joel 2:28)
2. In our day, the most common way God speaks to us is through His word - Jesus is the word. (Heb.1:1-2)
3. God is not the Author of confusion (1Cor.14:33), and will always make the meaning clear. (Ex: Matt.1:20-21)
4. For various reasons, not every dream is meant to be shared. (Ex: Gen.37:5)
5. There are serious consequences for misrepresenting God when interpreting dreams that effect others’ lives. (Deut.13:1,5)
(If you're interested, here's his entire video teaching: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aWUyWXLpqHA)
So, with all of this in mind, perhaps the dream I had the other night - about smuggling bibles into the black zone, while riding on a flying bar of soap - would be better suited as a tale for my grandchildren, rather than a message from God that I need to spend time trying to decipher.

Saturday, April 1, 2023

See The Possibilities

(by Lorie Codispoti)

We live in the realm of the impossible.
Each of us walks through circumstances that, no matter how hard we try, they remain impossible to fix.
Perhaps you are facing a serious health issue. Maybe it’s a wayward child that keeps you awake at night. Or, you may be trying to care for a disabled family member. You name it, we all have impossible situations to navigate. Financial challenges, marital issues, legal matters, relationship struggles, job insecurity, addictions, etc. No one escapes the impossible.
However, let's not lose heart!
Chuck Swindoll said it well when he noted that, “We are all faced with a series of great opportunities, brilliantly disguised as impossible situations.”
What would happen if we viewed our impossible situation from that perspective?
It’s not easy. It requires something outside of our natural tendency to ruminate on our problems.
If I want to see the possible in the midst of the impossible, I need to start by removing the “im” from the word. This is called surrender. When I surrender my own ideas of how to fix whatever is needed in a difficult situation, I actually open the door for God to work.
While it may be a fearful thing to let go of something, when we willingly surrender our thoughts, ideas, and actions to the Lord it activates our faith to employ all the possibilities that the “im” kept us from considering. By removing the “disguise” (as Chuck calls it), we clear the way to see the “opportunity” that lies before us.
Will it change your circumstance? Not necessarily. But it can change your view, which will most definitely have an impact on that circumstance.
Do you know what Paul said to the Philippian believers after warning them not to put their confidence in themselves? He reminded them that “The Lord is at hand” (Phil.4:5). It’s so much easier to surrender confidence in our own efforts when we remind ourselves of His residing presence in our lives.
But this doesn’t absolve us of our responsibility to do the same thing Paul exhorts these believers to do: “Stand fast in the Lord” (vs.1).
I pray we will also stand fast and be assured of God’s presence as we surrender our problems to Him.
May He give us the faith to believe what Jesus said to His disciples - when they and the rich young ruler realized that none of them possessed the ability to save themselves - “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.” (Mtt.19:26)

Thursday, March 16, 2023

Activate The EXTRAordinary

(by Lorie Codispoti)

“Be very careful then, how you live – not as unwise, but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evil. Therefore, do not be foolish, but understand what the Lord’s will is.” (Ephesians 5:15-17)
In Ephesians 5, Paul reminds Christians that, as Christ followers they no longer walk in darkness. And that they were to reflect His light in the way they lived their lives.
God’s word is the blueprint for living the extraordinary life.
It doesn’t take much to be ordinary, as it simply means to be of common rank or ability, and denotes a deficiency in quality. To add and activate the “extra” means to purposefully go beyond the status quo.
Here are four notable characteristics of extraordinary people (not exhaustive):
ONE - Extraordinary people acknowledge that they are ordinary people serving an extraordinary God.
These people lack the ability to be anything but ordinary. They know that going beyond the ordinary means going outside themselves and tapping into the One who holds the “extra.”
Biblical history affords us many examples of the ordinary turned extraordinary by a great and mighty God .
I like Moses because he was admittedly an ordinary man. When God informs him that He has chosen him to lead the Israelites out of Egypt Moses begins to list all the reasons why he can’t do it.
What was God’s response? He encourages Moses by saying, “I will help you…” (It’s not what you know, but Who you know.)
TWO - Extraordinary people are hospitable.
Did did you know that this ministry is so important to God that he makes it a prerequisite for a widow to qualify for church support? (1Tim. 5:10)
Hospitality has many looks, but for most of us our homes are where we practice and develop this ministry.
Winston Churchill said, “We shape our dwellings and then our dwellings shape us.”
I started out like Moses in this area. I gave God all the reasons why I would never be good at hospitality, but He told me the same thing He told Moses: “I will help you.” And the way He helped me was by giving me a mentor. She is a natural at making everyone that comes into her home feel loved. She taught me that the size of your house is not as important as the size of your heart, and that the dinner menu is less important than what you serve up in conversation. I’m so thankful for her investment in my life.
THREE - Extraordinary people have learned to be content.
Paul testified that he “learned in whatever state I am, to be content.” (Phil.4:11)
Note that he “learned” this principle. It wasn’t something that came natural. God taught Paul that contentment is not based on our circumstances.
One of my dearest friends is a mother of seven children. Her husband worked shift work for a number of years, and at the time they live in a tiny two-bedroom house. For 5 years she and her husband slept on sofa bed in living room. When we talked she would express the challenges of trying to homeschool her children and keep the house quiet for her husband to sleep. Over time I have watched her go from wondering how they would make room for another baby, to a heart of joy for the close relationships that were developed by living in such tight quarters. She “learned” to be content in her circumstances because her contentment was not based on her circumstances.
Whatever our situation, the only way to counter discontentment is with a heart of gratitude.
The Paul that said that he “learned” how to be content, is the same Paul who later testifies to his protege’, Timothy, that “godliness with contentment is great gain.” (2Tim.6:6-7)
FOUR - Extraordinary people judiciously guard their gates.
In ancient times, the city gate was the busiest place in the city. (Can you relate?) It served as both entrance and exit, and was the location of most important exchanges (social, business, justice, news, markets, trading, preaching, and even lodging).
In battle, to “possess the gates” meant to possess the city. Therefore, a strong defense was crucial for the protection of the inhabitants. Many gates were flanked by towers and manned with watchmen who stood guard day and night because the gate was the most vulnerable place within the wall.
Consider The Great Wall of China.
History records it to be 4,000 miles long, and wide enough at the top for 10 people to walk side by side. It was built as a defensive fortification that symbolized the great power of the emperor. Each watchtower was heavily fortified with soldiers that were well equipped and highly trained with the finest weapons of their day. Cannons were also mounted in strategic positions.
In its glory days this wall was successfully invaded three times. Can you guess how?
It was not scaled or penetrated, and the enemies were not well armed with the latest weaponry.
Each invasion came at a time when the inhabitants were impoverished and weakened by their own government’s breakdown and corruption. All three times, their enemy bribed the gatekeeper and marched right through the gate. What a sobering truth!
While we may not build literal walls around our dwellings these days, we are charged, by God, to love Him with all our being in both our homes and our hearts. In fact, Deuteronomy 6:5-9 tells us to go so far as to know and bind ourselves to His precepts, and to teach them to our children. We also make it known to everyone who enters: "You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and ON YOUR GATES.”
This kind of guarding requires us to be proactive and strategic. This is no time for passive conformity to ungodly forces that tempt our hearts to stray. We need to arm ourselves with God’s word. In Psalm 118 we read that the Gate of the Lord is righteousness. At the very entrance, our right relationship to God should be known. No matter how strong our enemy appears, God has promised to give “strength to those who turn back the battle at the gate.” (Isa.28:6)
No one has ever lived a perfect life, except for the One who modeled it for us. Jesus Christ enables us to live an extraordinary life because He is the One who puts the “extra” in “ordinary.”

Friday, March 3, 2023

The Eyes Have It

(by Lorie Codispoti)

When my kids send me photographs of themselves there’s one thing I do not want to see. Something that I think should require an immediate retake. In fact, I think there should be a beeping sensor on every camera that serves as a warning not to proceed.
What is this aversion that pokes my inner angst?
Sunglasses!
They conceal my children’s beautiful eyes and I am against obscuring that reality.
Science has confirmed that eyes tell us many things about a person. Whether it’s physical, emotional, or spiritual, the eyes communicate. You can mask the rest of the face and still read things about a person by looking into their eyes. Haven’t you found that to be true these last couple of years?
Shakespeare may have coined the phrase that “the eyes are the window to the soul,” but both he and science only confirm what the Bible says about the eyes being a lamp to the soul.
“Your eye is the lamp of your body. When your eye is healthy, your whole body is full of light, but when it is bad, your body is full of darkness.” (Lk.11:34)
I’m reminded of an experience my husband had when he was ministering in a maximum security prison. He encountered an inmate whose eyes were like a deep, empty cavern. (Sin has a way of slowly killing the soul with a hopeless darkness.) Something amazing began to happen as the Gospel was presented to him. This man - whose feet were chained and connected to another chain that was connected to his chained hands - began to lift his arms and use the sleeve of his uniform to wipe the tears that were streaming down his face. John watched the Holy Spirit do what only He can do. As the message of salvation penetrated this prisoner’s heart his countenance began to change. His dark and hollow eyes were transformed as the Light entered his soul and infused it with joy.
Eyes are the dominant communicator.
In one study, participants were shown a variety of eye images and asked to assign an emotion with each photograph. The accuracy rate was very high, especially when it came to detecting things like fear, anger, and joy.
Eyes may not be the only thing we use to evaluate someone’s emotions, but without them our assessment will not be complete.
If a picture paints a thousand words then don’t begrudge this mamma a single brush stroke. Remove the sunglasses so that I may collect and read every beautiful scene that our Father is painting.

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

Love Like Christ

(by Lorie Codispoti)

According to the Christian History Institute there are several St. Valentines, who were all martyred about the same time in the third century.
First, we have the Valentine who aided Christians who were being persecuted. He was imprisoned, where he found faith in Christ and refused to deny Him. He was tortured, beaten with clubs and then beheaded. He was said to have written letters to his friends during that time that read, “Remember your Valentine.”
Second, there’s the legend of a Valentine who was martyred when he was caught secretly marrying couples so that husbands wouldn’t have to go to war.
And third, we read about the Valentine who was a priest that refused to sacrifice to pagan gods. From his prison cell he shared God’s love through his testimony. As a result of his prayers the jailer’s daughter was healed and on the day of his execution he left her a note that was signed, “your Valentine.”
There isn’t enough evidence to determine which Valentine our holiday was named after, but the common thread that stitches these hearts together is their love for Christ and a willingness to share that love no matter what it cost them.
Remember the characteristics of love in 1Corinthians 13…
Love is long suffering and kind. It doesn’t envy, parade itself, or puff up. It doesn’t behave rudely, seek its own, provoke, or think evil. It doesn’t rejoice in sin, but rather in the truth. It bears, believes, hopes, and endures all things.
When you study the lives of these Valentine’s you will see that each one was willing: to bear things unpleasant - to believe that God had a plan - and to hope in something they couldn’t see. They were martyred for their willingness to endure the hardship this kind of love requires.
“A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this all men will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.” (Jesus - John 13:34-35)
If you peel back our culture’s shallow layers of fluffy tissue paper love, you will find that the gift bag is empty. This kind of “love” is short lived. The slightest wind of trouble will shred the superficial layers and blow the fragments in every direction.
Christ came to show us what true love looks like, and then leave us a gift. When we open His gift of a new heart we find that He enables us to love like He does.
Will it cost us something? Yes.
The question we need to answer is not about the price, however. The question we have to answer is are we willing to bear, believe, hope, and endure all things in order to show the world what the love of God looks like.

(GloryUsGate.blogspot.com)

Sunday, February 12, 2023

None Like YOU

(by Lorie Codispoti)

Why are we surprised when pagans behave in an “Unholy” manner, all while the audience applauds and awards the evil on display?
Should we be repulsed that a song that glamorizes infidelity in order to “liberate queer joy” is honored, and its artists celebrated for their debased lifestyles? Yes.
Should we also be surprised by it? No. Not at all.
When I view some of our culture’s modern performances (many of which I can’t even stomach all the way through), the over-arching emotion it triggers is a deep-seated sadness. The kind of “joy” they describe is indeed queer. And being deceived into embracing a lie is called bondage, not liberation. To witness the level of depravity that a human being is capable of is truly heart breaking.
But, it is not surprising.
Without Someone to rescue us from ourselves we would all head down the path of self-destruction. Our vices will vary, but without Divine intervention the end result will always the same: destruction.
Scripture and history bear witness to this fact.
Jesus tells a story (Mtt.12 & Lk. 11) about a man who was delivered from an evil spirit. The spirit decides he wants to return to his former abode - only this time he brings seven friends that are more evil than himself, and they join him in the repossession party. Jesus noted that as a result this man’s current state was much worse than the former one, and that this is what it will look like in an evil generation.
If you read the parable you will see how Jesus goes from talking about one man’s house to predicting the state of a whole generation.
Messianic rabi, Jonathan Cahn, details the return of what he calls “the dark trinity” to a civilization who willfully turns away from God. In his book, The Return of The Gods (little g gods) he parallels the nation of Israel with our culture and identifies the three primary gods that they embraced when they foolishly turned from the God who rescued them, cleaned them up, and set them apart to be His people.
Cahn identifies this dark trinity and details their main objectives:
The Possessor - whose name is Baal (“owner”) - is the first entity who shows up to drive God out from among the people and persuade them to forget their God (Jer.23:27). His objective is to paganize God’s children (the cleansed house/man) by systematically removing Him from every influential aspect of life (the public square, homes, education, etc.).
The Enchantress - whose name is Ashtoreth (1Ki.11:5) - was known as the harlot goddess of sexual immorality. Her objective is to sexualize the culture by introducing them to pornography, removing sexual boundaries, and destroying/redefining biblical marriage. The spirit of this goddess transforms men into women and women into men. (Did you think the transgender lie and gender confusion was something new?)
The Destroyer - whose name is Molech (Lev.18:21, 2Ki.23:10) - was a god who required child sacrifices. Infants were burned alive to appease this god.

Is history repeating itself in our culture? Are we the generation Jesus was talking about as we witness the repossessing of a house once swept clean by the delivering grace of God? I think the answer is glaringly obvious.
But these gods don't have power over ours.
“Who is like You, oh Lord, among the gods?” (Ex.15:11a)
“Among the gods there is none like you, Lord; no deeds can compare with yours… You alone are God.” (Psa.86:8,10b)
God has no more given up on our culture than He did on Israel. He is still the one and only, capital “G,” God who rescues His children when they cry out to Him for deliverance.
While we witness “sin abounding,” we need not let it overwhelm us with discouragement. Why? Because of what the second part of the verse says - “grace does much more abound” (Rms.5:20). What this means is that although we are witnessing unrestrained sin, multiplying and expanding, the amount of grace available supersedes it. The Greek word describes this grace as “something that is growing out of measure, beyond proportion, and out of its banks to a far-stretched extreme.”
This goes right along with the fact that the Bible says that in the last days that the knowledge of God will increase, and that the wise will understand and be purified by it? (Dan.12:4,9-10)
Perfect timing, considering that we live in the Information Age. Before the 1900’s knowledge doubled every 100 years. Today it doubles daily.
Jesus said that before the end comes His Gospel will reach every nation. It is predicted that by 2043 the Bible will be translated into every language.
The call has not changed.
Jesus sent His disciples into a pagan world, and with the power of His Spirit they were to drive out the pagan gods by proclaiming the truth of the Gospel.
Christian, we carry that torch! The Spirit of the living God dwells within us, enabling us to drive out the pagan gods with the Light of the Gospel.
Christ is the only one Who can liberate the captives so that they can experience genuine joy.

Tuesday, January 31, 2023

Light That Restores

(by Lorie Codispoti)

When was the last time you experienced a power outage?
Living through a natural disaster is challenging enough, but the prolonged power outages that can result only add to the intense level of mental stress.
We have experienced many power outages out here in the boonies. They have come in every season, so being prepared for their unwanted visitation is very important. While it may be fun to light candles and camp out next to the wood stove for a night or two in the middle of a snowstorm, most of us are not equipped to handle a prolonged event.
Why?
Because power outages are not limited to the physical realm.
Unpredictable spiritual storms can take our Power out too. And if we’re not prepared, we can be overwhelmed by the darkness. The question isn’t whether or not the storms will come; the question is how will we respond when the Light goes out?
Think about some of your go-tos for relief when you feel physically, emotionally or psychologically drained (the very definition of stress). We all have them.
We rely on certain mechanisms to help us relieve the stress that accompanies this life. My husband enjoys going outside and splitting wood when he is stressed. Our son also enjoys splitting wood when he comes to visit. He also enjoys playing his guitar, and opportunities to sit at a coffee shop with a good book. My daughter would always bake or escape into a good book when she was younger. Now she finds that hiking with her dog helps to recharge her batteries. And me? I can literally feel the strain ease up and melt away when I can go out on a long walk or escape into something creative.
Goodness knows we all need help when it comes to relieving the stressors that plague us in this life. When you find a healthy and beneficial way to stave off the negative effects of stress it can be a huge blessing.
But, here’s the thing about those go-to stress relievers: They don’t last.
Your short-term stress relief is not meant to carry you through a long-term power outage. It will not see you through the storms that throw your life off course.
So, if finding relief isn’t the key, what is?
Light!
Every artisan knows how critical light is to their design.
There’s a scene in a movie I like, where a famous architect is trying to reconnect with his estranged son - who is also making a name for himself in the architectural world. Before he dies, the father wants to pass on the secret to his success…
“A truly great structure, one that is meant to stand the tests of time never disregards its environment. A serious architect takes that into account. He knows that if he wants presence, he must consult with nature. He must be captivated by the light. Always the light.”
Believers, Jesus is our Light! (“I am the light of the world…” Jn.8:12)
We too need to recognize and harness the source of Light if we hope to be built into a structure that reflects it (1Pet.2:5). If we’re not captivated by the Light resident in God’s Son, then we will succumb to the darkness. Our short term, go-to mechanisms for relief are simply not enough to stay the course and weather the storms that can take us by surprise.
Jesus’ light is no secret, however. He’s given every believer the access code to punch into the keypad of our hearts when the power goes out. Part of that code includes two actions:
1. COME (“Come away with Me…and rest” (Mk.6:31-32) / “Come to Me…I will give you rest” (Mtt.11:28).)
Both of these passages imply a kind of relief that provides much more than a short term recharge. When we come to Jesus He restores us. His Light replenishes what the darkness attempts to steal.
2. ABIDE “If you abide in my word, you are my disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free (Jn.8:31-32).)
This abiding is a continual, ongoing thing. In Psalm 91 the writer says this type of abiding provides a refuge and fortress. Notice, also, that abiding in Jesus’ word enables us to discern truth and make us free.
For the past four years my disability has prevented me from exercising my go-to relievers. I pray that I will be able to enjoy them again one day, but during this prolonged power outage I have discovered the restorative benefits of coming away with Christ and abiding in His presence. And the beauty of His Light never ceases to captivate my heart.
The next time your power goes out, I encourage you to turn off the short-term relief and turn on the Light that will restore your soul.
Remember, it’s "always the Light!"