"I caught a glimpse in my rearview mirror,
of an old familiar face,
blurry image coming in clearer
of a past I can't erase.
I thought I'd put him in the ground
looks like he's found his way out.
"God help me get away,
break this chains and set me free
from the other side of me.
I can't fight this fight alone,
I'll never make it on my own,
Lord Jesus rescue me,
from my own worst enemy.
"I'll take a step and he's right behind me
always fighting for control,
there's a war that's raging inside me,
I feel the battle for my soul.
It's like my shadow is dragging me around,
and you are my only way out...
"...help me believe the old is dead and gone,
and I am, a new creation!" ~ My Own Worst Enemy, Casting Crowns
These past couple of days have been a bit of struggle for me.
I'm sure you know the type.
Those soul wearying days when you God commands, and you sit and just stare because you know He's right but you just can't face it?
Those harrowing, painful days where you fight with yourself and you fight with God because you're just too afraid? Too full of shame? Too certain of your own inadequacy?
We've all got a secret pain, a secret wound, something we'd rather die than ever tell. Something we'd rather bury forever than ever face. Even though facing it will heal it.
Yeah... you all know what I'm talking about.
So, what happens when God asks that you face it?
Like he's been doing with me these past few days.
Well, it's been looking a bit like that story in Genesis of when Jacob is preparing to meet Esau after years of separation (and plenty of time for Esau's anger with him to fester to the murderous point) and the night before he wrestles with God. Yeah... it's been a wrestle that can only end with God winning and me meeting my Esau.
Still... I'm still wrestling.
I'm finding that it's looking like my desire to pray "not my will but yours" is manifesting itself as "not my will but yours... except in this matter. Think you can do that for me, eh God? Think you can leave me to deal with this one at my own pace? And, you know, if that means I never deal with it, that's cool. I, I don't mind."
I can kind of see God clucking his tongue, nodding His head and going "uh-huh. And in the meantime you're just going to what? Pretend you're perfect when part of you is still dead? I think not. I died to give you life and life to the full. Now what that means? It means no part of you has to be dead. No part of you should be dead. Now then, let's get started on... really? you're doing this again?"
And part of me grimaces because yes, yes I am fighting Him on this one, and that's a really, really stupid idea.
So why am I fighting Him?
The truth? I'm afraid. I'm afraid of what I'll see when I stop fighting. Afraid of who I'll see. At the moment, it seems easier to just fight than to face it, and well, that can never end well.
This all sounds so ludicrous.
But I'm terrified.
Terrified that I won't pass, that I'll break beyond repair, that this red won't be washed white.
And my head tells me that's ludicrous.
It reminds me off passages like Psalm 51 and Isaiah 53, passages that prove God's goodness and mercy and remind me that I am clean because I have made clean by God, not because I have somehow managed to clean myself.
But somehow, my heart doesn't seem to want to follow. My feelings are getting in the way of the truth.
So I guess, I guess I'm just going to finish this by asking you to pray for me. To pray that I'll stop fighting Him on this and start submitting to Him instead.
And I also want to let you know: if you're feeling this way, if you've ever experienced this, you're in good company. We all have.
And I want to pass on the promise that has been giving me comfort: God isn't going to give up on you just for this.
Showing posts with label cracks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cracks. Show all posts
Wednesday, 16 October 2013
Tuesday, 1 October 2013
Why We Shouldn't Try Hiding the Cracks of our Brokenness
It's true isn't it.
We're all broken.
I know I am.
And I guess we know that in God we're mended. Though often, that's hard to really believe.
Because we still feel broken. We still see the flaws and the cracks.
Those cracks where we're broken and pieced back together.
Or is that just me?
I don't think it is.
I don't think I'm the only one who sees my cracks and wishes they were gone.
And I do have them.
I've got a real big one that is my temper. She's not so pretty. And she gets bigger the more tired and stressed I am.
I've got another along my trust line - I find it so difficult to trust, I sometimes wonder if I'm deficient in some way.
I've got one big crack in my heart from all the good-byes I've had to say in my life.
And let's not start of the all those cracks and chinks that come from all the bullying I went through, all the times I've been betrayed, and all the times when I haven't honoured God.
And it's so easy to be ashamed of those cracks. So easy to try and hide them.
I bet I'm not the only one who tries pretending that everything is just peachy, and that they're perfect and that no, I'm really not holding back the tears, there's just something in my eye.
Anyone else know that feeling?
That feeling of deep shame and disgust at ones own faults and imperfections?
Used to be with me that the better I dressed, the worse I was feeling. (That is not true any more - now I dress well because I like dressing well!) But you know what I mean.
The way I dressed used to be a way I compensated for the horror of the broken mess I was (and still am).
Any one else tried that?
Any one else ever looked at themselves in the mirror, or stopped short for a moment and just cried to God "How can you use me when I am so broken? How could you even want me?"
Yeah, you know what I'm talking about.
You know what I've been learning, and what really hit home for me today?
We shouldn't be hiding those cracks.
We shouldn't (I almost left it at should - slightly different meaning there) be denying the brokenness.
We shouldn't be ashamed of who we are, imperfections and all.
As much as we may want to crawl into a whole and hide or completely redo ourselves so that we have less cracks, less flaws and imperfects, we shouldn't try to.
I shouldn't try to.
I shouldn't be denying that fact that I've been broken.
Why? Well, partly, it's because I've been mended.
But mostly, it's because of who mended me and how He is using those cracks.
I'll just write here something that I wrote in my journal earlier. On a side note, I spent three hours journaling about this topic this morning, so everything that is quoted from this point to the end of the post is from there.
"If it wasn't for the cracks, [God] couldn't seep out the way [he does].
"Yeah, my imperfections, my blemishes, my weaknesses, my cracks, they all serve a purpose. They are how God shines His light into the world through me. They are how God shows the world just how amazing He is.
"Through life, there is one thing I have observed that true Followers of the Way are pretty consistently unique in.
"We don't boast about our strengths, our moments of personal glory. Instead, we speak about our moments of weakness, ugliness and despair.
"Why?
"Because those are the moments in which God reveals His strength, His Grace, His Love."
Yeah, that's why we shouldn't be hiding our brokenness and our cracks. Not just because the people who matter aren't judging, as I've believed for so long.
But because the God who created us uses those cracks to display His glory and wonder.
And suddenly, those cracks aren't marks of shame.
Instead, they are an amazing part of who I am. Of who you are.
An image that worked it's way through my journal entry was that of a mosaic. Here's where it ended up:
"Do you think that those stones knew anything about what was going on when they were being set? If they knew anything at all, it was that they were broken. They couldn't know that they were being organized into a beautiful artwork. But that didn't negate the fact that that is what was happening.
"And when you see a mosaic, do your thoughts immediately start praising the gloriousness of the stones, or you they wonder at the skill of the maker. I know what I think. The skill of the maker awes me.
"And we're the same.
"Broken. Mended to a certain wonderful design. Drawing attention to the glory of the One who fashioned us through the very brokenness we so despise about ourselves.
"We're not amazing in spite of our brokenness.
"God has made us amazing through our brokenness and His amazing Grace.
"There are days I'd like to recreate my design, change it to something I'd prefer.
"But, like mosaic stones trying to fashion themselves, I'd botch the design.
"God's design is so, so much better than I could imagine.
"And all the cracks are filled with His Grace, Love and Joy."
So why do we try hiding them?
We're all broken.
I know I am.
And I guess we know that in God we're mended. Though often, that's hard to really believe.
Because we still feel broken. We still see the flaws and the cracks.
Those cracks where we're broken and pieced back together.
Or is that just me?
I don't think it is.
I don't think I'm the only one who sees my cracks and wishes they were gone.
And I do have them.
I've got a real big one that is my temper. She's not so pretty. And she gets bigger the more tired and stressed I am.
I've got another along my trust line - I find it so difficult to trust, I sometimes wonder if I'm deficient in some way.
I've got one big crack in my heart from all the good-byes I've had to say in my life.
And let's not start of the all those cracks and chinks that come from all the bullying I went through, all the times I've been betrayed, and all the times when I haven't honoured God.
And it's so easy to be ashamed of those cracks. So easy to try and hide them.
I bet I'm not the only one who tries pretending that everything is just peachy, and that they're perfect and that no, I'm really not holding back the tears, there's just something in my eye.
Anyone else know that feeling?
That feeling of deep shame and disgust at ones own faults and imperfections?
Used to be with me that the better I dressed, the worse I was feeling. (That is not true any more - now I dress well because I like dressing well!) But you know what I mean.
The way I dressed used to be a way I compensated for the horror of the broken mess I was (and still am).
Any one else tried that?
Any one else ever looked at themselves in the mirror, or stopped short for a moment and just cried to God "How can you use me when I am so broken? How could you even want me?"
Yeah, you know what I'm talking about.
You know what I've been learning, and what really hit home for me today?
We shouldn't be hiding those cracks.
We shouldn't (I almost left it at should - slightly different meaning there) be denying the brokenness.
We shouldn't be ashamed of who we are, imperfections and all.
As much as we may want to crawl into a whole and hide or completely redo ourselves so that we have less cracks, less flaws and imperfects, we shouldn't try to.
I shouldn't try to.
I shouldn't be denying that fact that I've been broken.
Why? Well, partly, it's because I've been mended.
But mostly, it's because of who mended me and how He is using those cracks.
I'll just write here something that I wrote in my journal earlier. On a side note, I spent three hours journaling about this topic this morning, so everything that is quoted from this point to the end of the post is from there.
"If it wasn't for the cracks, [God] couldn't seep out the way [he does].
"Yeah, my imperfections, my blemishes, my weaknesses, my cracks, they all serve a purpose. They are how God shines His light into the world through me. They are how God shows the world just how amazing He is.
"Through life, there is one thing I have observed that true Followers of the Way are pretty consistently unique in.
"We don't boast about our strengths, our moments of personal glory. Instead, we speak about our moments of weakness, ugliness and despair.
"Why?
"Because those are the moments in which God reveals His strength, His Grace, His Love."
Yeah, that's why we shouldn't be hiding our brokenness and our cracks. Not just because the people who matter aren't judging, as I've believed for so long.
But because the God who created us uses those cracks to display His glory and wonder.
And suddenly, those cracks aren't marks of shame.
Instead, they are an amazing part of who I am. Of who you are.
An image that worked it's way through my journal entry was that of a mosaic. Here's where it ended up:
"Do you think that those stones knew anything about what was going on when they were being set? If they knew anything at all, it was that they were broken. They couldn't know that they were being organized into a beautiful artwork. But that didn't negate the fact that that is what was happening.
"And when you see a mosaic, do your thoughts immediately start praising the gloriousness of the stones, or you they wonder at the skill of the maker. I know what I think. The skill of the maker awes me.
"And we're the same.
"Broken. Mended to a certain wonderful design. Drawing attention to the glory of the One who fashioned us through the very brokenness we so despise about ourselves.
"We're not amazing in spite of our brokenness.
"God has made us amazing through our brokenness and His amazing Grace.
"There are days I'd like to recreate my design, change it to something I'd prefer.
"But, like mosaic stones trying to fashion themselves, I'd botch the design.
"God's design is so, so much better than I could imagine.
"And all the cracks are filled with His Grace, Love and Joy."
So why do we try hiding them?
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