Listening

Since my life totally changed in August, I decided it was time to try all things new. One of those new things was a different form of exercise. By God’s grace, I ended up at Big Power Yoga in Memorial. I love it — love the community, love the teachers, love getting hugs on the way to class (Gayatri), love the workouts (though I am almost always sore). I can honestly say that yoga has become part of my healing journey. I have learned so much about myself, my body and how to breath through challenges. Yoga has helped me grieve honestly and intentionally.

One of the amazing teachers, Nancy Perry, said something quite profound in class today: “This practice is designed to teach you to stop overriding your body with your mind.” I couldn’t help but think of my earlier posting about hope and perseverance.

Perseverance is good; it is necessary; however, sometimes we have to listen to our bodies, to our spirits, to our broken hearts and slow down or even stop. Life for me has been about pushing through — pushing past the pain in body, mind and spirit. In His mercy, God designed us with the capacity to survive. The problem is that the very means of our survival can become the very things that rob us of life.

Healing for me has come as I have learned to listen to the pain and stopped trying to forge ahead without acknowledgment. Feeling the pain is scary. Pain takes us places where we feel out of control and uncertain. The promise of God is that His truth sets us free. Entering into truth leads to a greater experience of God himself and a better relationship with ourselves and others.

I am so thankful that I am learning to stop overriding my body with my mind. It is still my natural go to but with intentionality, I am getting better. Friends, we need a resting place. In yoga, that is child’s pose. It is humbling to go there, but sometimes it is the only place where one can get much needed rest and restoration.

Persevere with HOPE but don’t override your body with your mind. God designed these two to work in sync with the guidance of the Holy Spirit.

And thank you to Amy Bruce who introduced me to Holy Yoga. I am had NO idea where God was going to take me after that, yet I am so grateful for the blessed start!

Live Loved

My word for the year is HOPE, and I have been posting Scripture verses that speak of that hope. This week, I have been pondering how to live with hope. One message reverberates in my heart, mind and spirit — LIVE LOVED!

I heard this message in church on Sunday; it was repeated over and over again in a song on the way to Bible study yesterday: “Oh, He loves us. Oh, how He loves us……”; in my Centering Prayer group, I kept hearing about God’s steadfast love then saw a picture of what it means to live in that love.

LIVE LOVED! Where to start? Reagan’s sermon on Sunday reminded me of a Cross Train devotion I taught many years ago from Mark 1:9-11: “In those days Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan. And when he came up out of the water, immediately he saw the heavens being torn open and the Spirit descending on him like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, ‘You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased.'”

Thanks to the death of Jesus on our behalf, we are cleansed from all unrighteousness. When God looks at us, He sees Jesus — all the righteousness of Jesus. We are declared clean, healed, forgiven, accepted, delighted in and perfectly loved.

This is an amazing message! Despite the amazing gift God offers me through Jesus, I still often choose to live unloved. I wonder what it would be like if we started each day allowing God’s words to Jesus/to us to flow over us and through us: “You are my beloved daughter/son; with you I am well pleased!”

God’s love is not earned; it is accepted. Just like God’s grace. If I want to live with HOPE, I realize I have to choose each day to live loved. The enemy taunts me. Shame wants to control me. Guilt sometimes tries to hold me back from fully living life. Yet, Love, GRACE, HOPE call out to me through God’s truth.

Today, I choose to LIVE LOVED; I choose grace; I choose HOPE because I am God’s beloved daughter and He is well pleased with me. That is a miracle that I choose to believe!

Your Body God’s Temple

A couple of weeks ago, I had the honor of teaching a class entitled “Your Body God’s Temple”.  While preparing for my teaching, I came across a thought provoking quote from a book called Temple Maintenance:

“Since the Bible gives assurance that God knows your frame (He made it), He knows how much weight your body should carry to function best. When you think about it, the Lord was very specific about the dimensions of both the tabernacle in the wilderness and the temple of Solomon. Your body is a temple, too. He has your perfect size in mind”(p. 9).

The world tells us what we should look like and many times that goal is unattainable for us. Personally, I will never be the 5 foot 8 model with thin legs walking down the runway. My body is 5 foot 4 at best (on my tall days 🙂 and my base is much more muscular than thin. God made me to be athletic so this build often is quite useful to me in my line of work.  How crazy it would be for me to try and reach an emaciated state that would rob my body of the muscle and size that I am made to be.

Nevertheless, if you know my story, you will know that was my goal for a couple of years of life. I fell victim to finding power and strength in reaching a certain size and weight. The results were not power and strength but compromise, a lack of connectedness to myself and to others, as well as an unhealthy view of food and of myself.  It has taken a lot of work for me to see my body as the temple, healing work done with the Lord.  I can honestly say it has been some of the hardest work and most productive work I have done.  The fruit of that work is that I am being set free — free to be all that God created me and called me to be!

How has God designed your body? Are you working with Him and His plan on how to get to that place of health or are you striving to be something you weren’t made to be? Often when we find that we are stuck or moving in the wrong direction it is because we have lost sight of the true goal of health.

I would love for each of us to take a little time this week to ask your maker how He made your frame, what His picture of health is for your life and the steps to get there. I believe the purpose and plan for each of us is freedom and Optimal Health.

The Race of Faith

“Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus the founder and perfector of our faith, who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is seated at the right hand of the throne of God” (Hebrews 12:1-2).

Last weekend, I learned about running with endurance. Months ago, I signed up for my second half marathon in the past few months. Knowing that I like to train with a group, I led the Cross Train ladies in preparation. As always, training with these ladies was an absolute blast! We talked a lot; we laughed a lot; and we also worked hard. We did long runs, maintenance runs, speed work, technical drills and plenty of strength training. I felt very good about our upcoming race. The week of the race is always my favorite week as it is taper week. In taper week, we cut back on training and rest our bodies so that they are race ready. We add a few extra carbs to our diets and try to get a little more sleep. I did all those things and thoroughly enjoyed them!

On race morning, I awoke at 5:00 to make sure that I had a good breakfast, coffee and water two hours prior to my starting time. I had the plan for my race hydration and nutrition. As far as I knew, I had done everything to prepare me to accomplish the goals that I had for the day.

The race started. I had a lofty goal for my race so I started with a pace group that was just a bit faster than my goal time. Immediately, I knew something just wasn’t right. My breathing didn’t settle; my legs felt like lead; I wasn’t enjoying the race. Nevertheless, I had a goal so I kept pushing on towards my goal pace. Three miles into the run, I wanted to cry. Nothing was going as I had planned. My December run felt nothing like this one. If I hurt this badly at 3 miles, how was I going to run 10.1 miles farther?

Questions abounded in my mind — Quit? Slow down? Let go of my goal? How I toyed with quitting! I could make a good excuse—I had suffered from a cold last week. Quitting was acceptable, but I just couldn’t grasp the idea of stopping after all those weeks of training.

Slow down? That takes humility, admitting that I am not able to do what I had set out to do. Nevertheless, the longer I ran, the more I knew that slowing down was the only good option. I simply couldn’t keep up the pace. So what about my goal? Is it okay to set a goal and not reach it? What does that mean about me?

The Lord had some powerful answers for me that morning. He started with the reminder that even Jesus took breaks. He knew when he had to slow down and rest and spend time with his Father. There is value in recognizing our limitations and operating within them.

I did slow down, and I did let go of my goal. When I did, some pretty amazing things happened. Every time I passed by a police officer, I had the breath and the desire to say thank you. Thank you for making this a safe race course for me. Thank you for sacrificing a Saturday morning to stand out in the rain for hours. All those volunteers who handed out water, sports drinks and supplements — they didn’t have to be there. They served us in a much needed way. I thanked them and tried to share joy with them. When I passed spectators, I took in their words of encouragement and affirmation. I smiled and told them I appreciated their cheering us on in the race. I encouraged other runners and shared words of acknowledgement. The race did not get a whole lot easier for me. My breathing never fully settled; my legs still hurt; every mile was pretty painful. However, I gained a very valuable insight: when it comes to the end of my life, I want to be remembered for being a person of love, not a person who succeeded at all of her worldly goals. As I was able to let go of the lesser goal of a race time, I was able to pursue my greater goal of loving well.

There were other blessings along the way — when I slowed down, my friend and running partner caught up to me. Truthfully, I don’t think I could have finished the race without her. We didn’t talk nearly as much as the last race (or at least I didn’t), but she kept me going. I felt stronger and more motivated with her by my side. On the one stretch where she got weak, I got strong and was able to encourage and push her. We finished together and God reminded me once again that we are made for community; we are better together!

Finally, The Lord graciously helped me think through my goals in life. While running, I saw a picture of myself coming to the end of my true race. At the finish line, Jesus stood there with arms outstretched. His joy in my race was overwhelming. Despite all the times I missed my goals and fell short of my expectations, Jesus was not disappointed. Instead, he met all the goals and expectations for me. All my goals are complete in him. Better yet, he understood that I could never do it on my own.

Running the race with endurance is looking at Jesus. It means keeping my eyes on him, dropping the baggage and sin that holds me back, dropping the idea of quitting, the excuses, and looking to the joy set before me. It means listening to my body and feelings, listening to my limitations and working within them. It means knowing that I need God’s strength and the strength of the people he has put into my life. Finally, it means trusting in the Only One who could finish the race perfectly. My race is one of faith and that race has already been won by my Savior!

God is For You!

”For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him” (John 3:16-17).

Most of us are very familiar with John 3:16. We know and teach that God sent his Son so that those who put their trust in him would not perish but enjoy eternal life. What most of us miss is John 3:17: “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world.” We focus on the salvation but still live our lives thinking that God is out there waiting and watching to condemn us.

For much of my life, I saw God as the One who sat up in the heavens looking for my every mistake. I felt condemned and judged all the time because I knew my weaknesses far too well; I was aware of all the times I fell short of the glory of God. If God was not constantly angry at me then, at least, He was very disappointed by me. I could not grasp that God was for me not against me.

Reading this passage from again while preparing for The Abundant Christmas talk, I saw my error. For the past 10 years, I have walked through a healing process, one that has allowed me to see my Father’s heart for me. I have seen the Lord’s patience with me, his love for me, his desire to set me free and to redeem even those things in my life for which I was most ashamed. Slowly, but surely I have come to believe the passage of Jeremiah 29:11: “For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord, plans for welfare and not for evil, to give you a hope and a future.” I am starting to grasp that the Lord’s desire is to bless me. Yes, life involves much trial, tribulation and pain; however, God, in his infinite wisdom, knows that those things are necessary to grow us into Him. Going back to the words of John 3:16: “For God so loved the world.” For God so loved me; for God so loved you, that He gave His only Son that we may have intimate relationship with the Godhead.

Do you walk through your days knowing that you are completely known by God, accepted through Christ and perfectly loved? Do you appreciate that He is for you and not against you? Do you know that no one wants your happiness like God does? Think of how much you long to see your son or daughter happy, joyful, and content. Your feelings for your child are only a glimpse of God’s feelings for you. Our human love is imperfect but God’s love is perfect. In his book, The Purpose of Christmas, Rick Warren writes that God does not want to rub your sins in; instead, He wants to rub them out. That is what Jesus came to do — to show us the Father’s love, take our sins upon himself so that we can enter into relationship with the God who loves us.

How would your life change if you lived in this love of the Father? How would your life change if you lived in the perfect acceptance and delight of your Father? Would you be free to fail, to make mistakes, take risks, to truly love God and others?

Hear the truth of God today — God is for you! He is not against you. God loves you and has a good plan for your life. If you cannot accept and embrace this truth right now, take some time to sit with the Father and ask Him to show you what keeps you from believing in His love and delight. There are often wounds behind the lies that we believe. Thankfully, God is not only the perfect Father, he is also the perfect healer.

Entrust yourself to the One who loves you today for He has abundant plans for you!

The Call to Sacrifice and God’s Provision

After these things God tested Abraham and said to him, ‘Abraham!’ And he said, ‘Here am I.’ God said, ‘Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.’ So Abraham rose early in the morning, saddled his donkey and took two of his young men with him, and his son Isaac” (Genesis 22: 1-3).

The story of Abraham and Isaac in Genesis 22 has always challenged me. I wrestle with the question of why God would ask Abraham to sacrifice the very son that He had promised. How did Abraham respond with such obedience? My desire is to keep the story at bay thinking the challenge is just for Abraham. However, God never lets me off that easy.

In thinking through this account over the years, a few things stand out to me. God gives us amazing gifts. Isaac was the miracle child! He was God’s promise fulfilled in Abraham’s life. Our God loves to lavish us with good gifts, gifts that surpass even our greatest expectations and dreams. The challenge with us is that we often take those good gifts of God and make them into idols. How does that happen? Gradually — slowly but surely we lose sight of God’s provision and we start longing to control, hold onto, and even worship these gifts. The very thing that God has provided becomes the very thing we want to withhold from Him. Just like the the seagulls in the movie Nemo, we shriek with the words over and over again: “mine, mine, mine!”

At this point in Abraham’s life, God “tested” his obedience and allegiance. God instructs Abraham to go to the land of Moriah where he is supposed to sacrifice Isaac as a burnt offering. The next morning Abraham awakes and embarks upon his journey. Everything needed for the sacrifice is there, even his beloved Isaac.

After a three day journey, they arrive at the place appointed by God. Abraham and Isaac leave the servants to go and make the sacrifice. When Isaac questions Abraham about the sheep offering, Abraham speaks powerful words: “God will provide for himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son” (Genesis 22:8). Abraham, when asked to sacrifice the gift most precious to him, was able to trust God to provide. Abraham trusted God all the way to the altar where he had Isaac bound and knife in hand. As his hand was coming down, an angel spoke from heaven to stop Abraham and to commend his obedience. It was then that Abraham looked up and saw a ram stuck in the thistles. That ram became Abraham and Isaac’s sacrifice.

God provides! God provides at the perfect time! God’s provision is often not the one that we expect. Abraham said God would provide a lamb; God provided a ram. God’s provision doesn’t always work with our plans or ideas. We have to go back to God’s truth in Isaiah 55: “For my thoughts are not your thoughts neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” We cannot figure out God. Instead, our calling is to trust and obey.

For us to see God’s perfect provision, we have to be willing to sacrifice the very gifts that we hold so dear. The gifts we want to control, own — “mine, mine, mine!” It may be our children, our spouse, our work, our home, our bodies, our habits or addictions. Anything that was given as a gift and once was good but captivated our hearts and minds and became more prominent in our affections than God. God is a jealous God. He wants to be our main attachment, our first affection, the delight of our hearts. Every other gift is God’s abundance. To fully appreciate His abundance, we have to embrace that we are made for God. We are made for a relationship with Him. If He is not first in our lives, then our lives are not what they were made to be. Go further into the story and hear the angel speak to Abraham a second time: “By myself I have sworn, declares the Lord, because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your only son, I will surely bless you, and I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven and as the sand that is on the seashore” (Genesis 18:15-16). God’s provision and blessing follow our obedience. It is His heart and delight to pour out abundance in our lives!

Whether we like it or not, this story is not just for Abraham. It is for me; it is for you. What is the Isaac in our lives? What has captivated our hearts above God? Whatever it is, it is time to lay it down on the altar of the Lord. This is NOT an easy process. It is one that will involve sweat, tears, sacrifice and trust; it is also the very process that will lead us into the right relationship with God and the one in which we will see God’s perfect provision in our lives.

Will you lay it down?

The Call to Sacrifice and God’s Provision

The Call to Sacrifice and God’s Provision

“After these things God tested Abraham and said to him, ‘Abraham!’ And he said, ‘Here am I.’ God said, ‘Take your son, your only son Isaac, whom you love, and go to the land of Moriah, and offer him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains of which I shall tell you.’ So Abraham rose early in the morning, saddled his donkey and took two of his young men with him, and his son Isaac” (Genesis 22: 1-3).

The story of Abraham and Isaac in Genesis 22 has always challenged me. I wrestle with the question of why God would ask Abraham to sacrifice the very son that He had promised. How did Abraham respond with such obedience? My desire is to keep the story at bay thinking the challenge is just for Abraham. However, God never lets me off that easy.

In thinking through this account over the years, a few things stand out to me. God gives us amazing gifts. Isaac was the miracle child! He was God’s promise fulfilled in Abraham’s life. Our God loves to lavish us with good gifts, gifts that surpass even our greatest expectations and dreams. The challenge with us is that we often take those good gifts of God and make them into idols. How does that happen? Gradually — slowly but surely we lose sight of God’s provision and we start longing to control, hold onto, and even worship these gifts. The very thing that God has provided becomes the very thing we want to withhold from Him. Just like the the seagulls in the movie Nemo, we shriek with the words over and over again: “mine, mine, mine!”

At this point in Abraham’s life, God “tested” his obedience and allegiance. God instructs Abraham to go to the land of Moriah where he is supposed to sacrifice Isaac as a burnt offering. The next morning Abraham awakes and embarks upon his journey. Everything needed for the sacrifice is there, even his beloved Isaac.

After a three day journey, they arrive at the place appointed by God. Abraham and Isaac leave the servants to go and make the sacrifice. When Isaac questions Abraham about the sheep offering, Abraham speaks powerful words: “God will provide for himself the lamb for a burnt offering, my son” (Genesis 22:8). Abraham, when asked to sacrifice the gift most precious to him, was able to trust God to provide. Abraham trusted God all the way to the altar where he had Isaac bound and knife in hand. As his hand was coming down, an angel spoke from heaven to stop Abraham and to commend his obedience. It was then that Abraham looked up and saw a ram stuck in the thistles. That ram became Abraham and Isaac’s sacrifice.

God provides! God provides at the perfect time! God’s provision is often not the one that we expect. Abraham said God would provide a lamb; God provided a ram. God’s provision doesn’t always work with our plans or ideas. We have to go back to God’s truth in Isaiah 55: “For my thoughts are not your thoughts neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” We cannot figure out God. Instead, our calling is to trust and obey.

For us to see God’s perfect provision, we have to be willing to sacrifice the very gifts that we hold so dear. The gifts we want to control, own — “mine, mine, mine!” It may be our children, our spouse, our work, our home, our bodies, our habits or addictions. Anything that was given as a gift and once was good but captivated our hearts and minds and became more prominent in our affections than God. God is a jealous God. He wants to be our main attachment, our first affection, the delight of our hearts. Every other gift is God’s abundance. To fully appreciate His abundance, we have to embrace that we are made for God. We are made for a relationship with Him. If He is not first in our lives, then our lives are not what they were made to be. Go further into the story and hear the angel speak to Abraham a second time: “By myself I have sworn, declares the Lord, because you have done this and have not withheld your son, your only son, I will surely bless you, and I will multiply your offspring as the stars of heaven and as the sand that is on the seashore” (Genesis 18:15-16). God’s provision and blessing follow our obedience. It is His heart and delight to pour out abundance in our lives!

Whether we like it or not, this story is not just for Abraham. It is for me; it is for you. What is the Isaac in our lives? What has captivated our hearts above God? Whatever it is, it is time to lay it down on the altar of the Lord. This is NOT an easy process. It is one that will involve sweat, tears, sacrifice and trust; it is also the very process that will lead us into the right relationship with God and the one in which we will see God’s perfect provision in our lives.

Challenges or Opportunities?

”So we do not lose heart. Even though our outer nature is wasting away, our inner nature is being renewed day by day. For this slight momentary affliction is preparing us for an eternal weight of glory beyond all measure” (2 Cor 4:17-18).

One thing I have noticed about us as christians is that we do not like challenge, trial or tribulation. What makes christians different than non-christians is that we seem to take these things personally. Often I hear unrealistic shame in words like “my son wouldn’t have done this if I had been a better mother”,“if I hadn’t of let her go out tonight”, “if I had been a more loving wife, my husband would not have looked elsewhere” . We take personal responsibility for things that are not ours to take or feel that it is our personal failing that led us to this place of pain.

Other times I hear words like God must be angry at me; He must want to punish me; He does not have a good plan for my life. There is disappointment with God and anger because we feel He is failing us in some way, that He does not truly love us or want the best for us.

All of these thoughts are directly from the thief that comes to steal, kill and destroy (John 10:10). The truth taught all throughout Scripture is that God loves you; He calls you by name; and He has a wonderful plan for your life, a plan to give you a hope and a future (Jeremiah 29:11).

Graham Cooke teaches a different perspective on challenges. Graham calls these things “opportunities”. I wonder how our perspective could change if we could embrace each of our challenges as “opportunities”. Paul’s words could be much more of our reality in that we would not lose heart; instead, in the challenges God could be shaping us, ministering to us, making us to be more like His Son. Sharon Hersh calls this the invitation to walk into the arms of Jesus.

There is no place I would rather be than in the arms of Jesus! Nothing drives us there like pain. Sometimes pain is the greatest gift! The abundant life is not just found in the good times. The abundant life is found in the Lord.

Can you allow The Lord to meet you in your place of struggle today? What do you think He wants to be for you at this time? Will you accept the invitation to walk into the arms of Jesus?

Has The Lord Forsaken Me?

“Yes Jerusalem says, ‘The Lord has deserted us; the Lord has forgotten us. Never! Can a mother forget her nursing child? Can she feel no love for a child she has borne? But even if that were possible, I would not forget you! See, I have written your name on my hand.”

In Isaiah 49:14 we read the lament we often feel but rarely put voice to: “The Lord has deserted me; the Lord has forgotten me.” Allowing himself the freedom to express the lament opens the Psalmist to hear the Lord’s response: “Never!” The question is then posed to the Psalmist and to us: “Can a mother can forget her nursing child?” A mother would answer emphatically as the Lord did — Never! Having nursed three children, I appreciate this question. The Lord shows great honor for the love a mother has for a child and the privilege of nursing. Even if our minds and hearts would allow us to forget the dependent baby (which we know would not happen), our bodies would not let us forget. God designed our bodies so we could not forget that child, especially at feeding time. At that time, there is nothing we can do BUT nurse and care for that baby!

That is how precious we are to God. Everything in him remembers us, cares for us, longs for us. Could he forget the one he loves so much? Never! To drive the point even deeper into our hearts, the Lord reminds us that our names are engraved on the palm of his hand. When my son has something he absolutely cannot forget, he puts a reminder on his hand. The message on Chase’s hand signifies a priority in his life.

The name on the Lord’s hand signifies a priority in his life — you are that priority! You may not feel that way right now, but every time God looks down, he sees your name. Your name is ever before him, engraved into his skin, his being. There is no way that God could or would forget you.

Do you see your value? Do you see the deep and perfect love of the Father for you? You can never walk in the abundant life until you realize you are loved by the heavenly Father. There is no love greater, no love that will ever meet the deep needs of your heart outside of this love of the Father for you. Far too often, it is this love that we reject. We feel unworthy of love from the King. In fact, I think we often feel we deserve to be rejected, abandoned or forgotten. That has happened before by people we trusted, people like our parents, our spouses, our friends. That pain of abandonment or rejection is deep. Satan plants the lie that is what we deserve, who we are.

The Lord wants to cast out that lie and plant his truth — you are known; you are accepted; and you are loved. See, the Lord is not like your parents, your spouse, your friends. His truth, His promises will never change! His love is perfect and cannot change.

Will you choose to accept this perfect love of the heavenly Father today? Are you willing to look at His hands to see your name? Whether you choose to look or not, your name is there. God’s love is there.

Choose life, abundant life, by choosing to live and believe in God’s love for you. Your name is engraved on the palms of His hands!

I Have Overcome the World

“I have told you these things, so that in me you may have peace. In this world you will have trouble. But take heart! I have overcome the world.” John 16:33

This morning I was talking to a favorite friend of mine. We enjoyed light talk then moved into the realities of a chaotic and challenging summer. I loved her question: “Don’t you just want to take a break from growing, a break from being transformed?” “Yes!” I answered; I love breaks and I do believe God gives us those. However, I want abundant life even more than the break.

This is what I have come to understand. The world showcases the glamorous lives of the rich and famous through movies, TV and tabloids. Facebook or “Fakebook”, as my friend refers to it, portrays problem-free life. What the movies, TV, tabloids and Facebook do not properly portray is what is underneath all the glamour shots. With a close up view, there are things that even facades and make up cannot hide.

Struggle and Pain. Most of the time our lives have some element of struggle and pain. Yes, we can hide it behind facades, make up, busy schedules, exercise addictions, eating disorders, alcohol and anything else used to escape the reality of life. Nevertheless, underneath all the addictions and facades lay the same things — struggle and pain. It is the truth that we desperately don’t want to hear.

Look at the life of Jesus. He shared many wonderful, joy-filled moments with his people. There was also struggle and pain. Jesus experienced much rejection, being misunderstood, anger at those who did not understand his Father, mistrust of his own family, abandonment by his closest friends, then a trip to Calvary and an agonizing death on the cross.

Jesus understands struggle and pain. He did not die to guarantee you a pain-free life. He died to guarantee you a resurrected life. The struggle and pain in our lives are agents of change, agents to take us deeper into that resurrected life. They can be the means to our healing and freedom.

Here is the question: are you willing to trust God with your struggle and pain? Are you willing to allow Him to take you deeper into His heart, His plan, His way? If so, you have to embrace the struggle and pain and allow God to convict, heal and set free. This is our cooperative work in transformation. Like Jesus, we can overcome the world. We can overcome the pain. To overcome, we have to be willing to walk through the process of transformation. The awesome promise of God is that through that transformation we are moving from one degree of glory to another.

Yes, I know we all want a break from the transformation process God works in our lives. But ladies, we have to take heart. The victory has been won for us in the cross. It will be won in us through the Holy Spirit. We, too, will overcome the struggle and pain. In the meantime, we get to move deeper and deeper into the heart of our heavenly Father who loves us beyond comprehension and deeper into the abundant life he has planned for us.

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