Friday, September 20, 2013

Stagnation

A student in my (Aimee’s) youth group made the comment a few months ago in a small group that she felt like her spiritual walk had plateaued. She was sure that she had been growing, and she still believed, and she still prayed, and she was still reading her Bible, but she felt like she had stopped growing and was leveling out. More than this, something inside of her was telling her that this was not good.
 
So our small group talked about it. 
 
Is it even possible to level out? Is it bad, normal, or ok? Should she continue on as usual or did she need to do something different?
 
I’m not going to get into everything that we talked about, mainly because there was a good amount that was very particular to her and may be different for different people. But there were a few things that I shared that I feel are truly and applicable to all people. So I want to share with you …
 
Calm water is deceptive. You may think it’s great, but do you know what happens to water that sits till for very long?
 
It becomes stagnate. It becomes a breeding ground for all kinds of parasites, fungus, and general scum of all kinds.
 
So too, it can be deceptive when you are cruising along thinking that all is good in your spiritual life because things are “calm.” When in actuality it may mean that all is calm on the surface and all hell is breaking loose (perhaps literally) just underneath the surface.
 
Leveling out in your growth toward God is an illusion. There is no happy plateau to be reached in our walk with God. The joy and pain and growth comes in the walk; not in the coasting. 
 
What it comes down to is that either your growing closer to God or you’re not. 
 
Do you understand what that means? Really understand? It means: either your growing closer to God or farther from God. Your growing to look more like Jesus, or your growing stagnate. One or the other. No middle ground.
 
I’m happy to be able to say that the same youth who was worried that she had leveled out in her growth has since then reported that she has broken out of her funk and that she is growing again. Prayer (her own and that of others who care for her) was a major factor in this battle.
 
If you’re growing stagnate, prayer is your best weapon to break out of your own personal funk. Pray and ask others to pray for you. And never allow the enemy to convince you that you’ve topped out or leveled off and you can’t grow anymore. 
 
Growing is a lifelong process.
 
 
 

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Confrontation

Let's just jump right in, shall we?!

In today’s society it is totally acceptable to tell someone that they’re fat if you claim that you’re doing it because you’re concerned about their health.
 
In today’s society it is totally unacceptable to tell someone that they’re a sinner even if you claim that you’re doing it because you’re concerned about their spiritual health.
 
Does anyone else see a problem with this besides me (Aimee)?!
 
I’ve even personally experienced this. The negative side of both, unfortunately. 
 
Almost 10 years ago I began putting on weight. It was a mixture of different things all coming together to mean that I packed on almost 100 unnecessary pounds. And I wasn’t even 30 years-old yet (not that it’s ok when you get older). I had a few very well-meaning people come to me near the end of my weight-gain period to tell me that they were concerned about my health. In the last few years I’ve been working on trying to bring my weight back down. It’s a struggle. And it’s slow work. But it’s happening. By God’s grace, His strength, and the support of friends and family, I am mercifully shrinking.

While it wasn’t fun to hear those people tell me that I was getting alarmingly fat, I understood why they did it. And I loved them and respected them for stepping out of that comfort zone that tells everyone to simply accept and not question—I’m sure you know that zone, I know I do—and tell me their concerns.

Around the same time that I was coming to the end of my weight gain period, I made comments about my concern for someone’s spiritual health. The details aren’t important, and since it’s someone else’s life I’m not going to share them here. The point is that there were things I was seeing consistently that were raising red flags in my head. So I said something out of loving concern. 
 
I was told that I was just being a goody-goody, I just don't know how to have fun, I'm a stick in the mud, and so on and so on...
 
Why is it ok to say something when someone is throwing away their physical health with both hands but not when they’re throwing away their spiritual health?!
 
Which has eternal consequences?! Well ... both. Yes, it’s true. You’re physical state is important., but it’s importance lies in your state of heart and mind that is allowing you to throw your health away. Let me try to explain.
 
Paul says that our bodies are temples of the Holy Spirit (1 Cor 3:16 and again in 6:19-20). Jesus Christ died so that you “may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10b). You were “created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do” (Ephesians 2:10). God has no desire for us to throw away the life that He has given us to live here on this earth. When we neglect our health because we’re not considering His plans for us, that’s very, very bad.
 
However, God cares most about the state of our hearts and minds. In 1 Samuel 16:7 it says:
 
“The LORD does not look at the things people look at. People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart.’”
 
Hence, our physical health matters. But our spiritual health matters more. When we neglect our health for selfish reasons, we're ignoring God's plans, and that's bad. When we neglect our spiritual health for selfish reasons, we're ignoring God's plans, and that's bad. My selfish consumption of food is not better or worse than another’s selfish consumption of anything that takes their attention away from where it rightly belongs: on God!
 
“… for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God …” (Romans 3:23)
 
I want to encourage you to talk to people when you’re concerned about their spiritual health. But be warned! It's likely that 9 times out of 10 it will not be received well. At least not at first. I also caution you to do it very carefully and with lots and lots and lots of love.
 
Galatians 6:1 says:
 
“Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently.”

 
 

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Remember

Like anyone else who was alive and old enough to understand what was going on, I (Aimee) remember where I was when I learned about what was going on in New York on September 11, 2001. I remember how I spent that day. I remember the emotions that ran through me as I watched everything unfold on the tv. I also, (and perhaps more clearly) remember the lack of emotion as I watched and thought about how unreal it all felt, thought about how helpless I felt, thought about so many things that all I wanted was to stop thinking and so I became numb.
 
I remember. I don’t think that I will ever forget. I don’t think that I could forget if I tried. But as  friend of mine posted on her Facebook page today, someday all of us who were alive and remember will be gone and there will be no one left who really remembers. That’s how life works. That’s how it’s always gone for every major catastrophe and atrocity throughout history.
 
Therefore, how can we continue to say: “never forget”?
 
Someday it will be forgotten. New generations will learn about it, but that isn’t the same thing. Just as when I read about World War 1 or 2, they aren’t my memories. I acquire the information, and I can work to make sure I don’t forget the information. But that isn’t the same.
 
So, why do we continue to say: “never forget”?
 
When we say “never forget,” it isn’t a call to dwell on the past, to focus on the memories, to relive them and shudder. 
 
It isn’t an angry call to remember the harm done to people and to our nation as a whole, to refocus hate on whoever we think the enemy is.
 
It is a call to remember the sacrifices that were made so that today and tomorrow and for the rest of our lives we can live lives that honor those sacrifices.
 
It is a call to remember that in a dark, dark day of our history, people stepped up to help, to serve, to protect, and to comfort. Friends and strangers. Those who were trained and whose who were not.
 
It is a call to remember that even in darkness there is light at the end of the tunnel when we pull together and lean on God.
 
Just as we are to live everyday honoring the sacrifice that Jesus made for us on the cross. That was a very, very dark day. Evil truly believed that they had achieved a victory. And while it was painful, we can now look back on it and see the brightest of lights that is at the end of that tunnel.
 
When we remember Jesus’ sacrifice, it isn’t to dwell on the pain, it isn’t to be angry at those who crucified Him, it is to remember to live lives that honor that sacrifice, it is to remember that with our focus in the right place (on God) we can get through anything, it is to remember and focus on the Light when we pull together and lean on God.
 
 
Thank you, God, for the sacrifice of Your Son.
Thank you, Jesus, for enduring the pain we all deserve.
Thank you, Lord, for creating and inspiring people who risk their lives for our greater good. I suppose it’s just another way that You created us in Your image.
Lord, bless those who still suffer, allow them to see the Light that they might have joy once again.
God you are good.

Amen.
 
 
 

Friday, September 6, 2013

What do YOU think?

I know that I've (Aimee) talked about forgiveness before … but this time I want to ask you some questions about it.

The DJ on the Christian station I was listening to as I headed home was talking a little bit about forgiveness. He said that he was looking at a book about forgiveness on Amazon and that he read a review that bothered him. In the review the woman was putting down the book because she said that we are actually only supposed to forgive those who are sorry, and that the rest don't deserve our forgiveness. The DJ said that he immediately thought of Jesus' words on the cross: "Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34 and Mark 11:25).
 
The station went back to music after that. When the song ended, a caller was asking what the DJ thought about forgiveness then if he disagreed with the woman’s comments.
 
His response was, "Well, I think that you give up your right to be angry with someone."
 
Personally, all of this really resonated with me. But I want to know what you all think.
 
Do you agree with the DJ or with the woman?
What are your thoughts about forgiveness?