My last few runs have been pretty lack-luster to say the
least, hence why you’ve not heard from me. NOT to mention, I’ve been doing a
marvelous job at pushing these wedding plans to the side until my fiance comes
home… almost makes his return bittersweet…
don’t worry dear, less bitter than sweet… (kinda).
But on tonight’s run, I really started to wrestle with some
things. I read a blog post earlier today that really shook me. Written by a
heart that is very obviously captivated by Jesus, but also very obviously
teaching with an uninformed agenda, I quickly felt my spirit burdened by this
beautifully passionate Jesus follower, still not seeing the big picture…
Jesus is love, the basis of the blog post I read this
morning. We’ve heard it. We’ve said it. We’ve used. And perhaps, more than
anything, we’ve abused it.
We’ve used this all-encompassing compassionate biblical
concept to excuse wrong behavior that we don’t intend on changing… to excuse
the sin patterns in our life.
There are some pretty cool things that happen when you run.
Obviously, one, you get a nice toned up behind and some
pretty cute quads. Two, you start to feel better; you breathe deeper and stand
straighter and have a little more energy to burn.
But what’s even better is that your body starts to offer you
some serious benefits. When you run you release all those gross, nasty toxins
that are built up in your body. You get rid of a lot of the crap inside of you.
AND as it’s doing that, it also releases endorphins, helping us let go of some
stress and giving us a natural happiness boost. Not bad, eh?
Well, for all the good it does us, we sure don’t like it, do
we? (okay, I sure don’t like it)
No, because it makes us push ourselves. It makes our muscles
hurt. It makes stretch and move in ways we really don’t want to.
From everything I’ve heard, marriage is very much the same
way. It has a lot to offer us. It’s fulfilling. It can help complete us and
make us better people. It gives us someone to love and walk life with. It
offers us the chance to show people what God’s love for the church looks like. (…and the tax break isn’t bad either)
But they don’t usually last, do they?
No, because they hurt and they’re hard and it makes us
stretch and move in ways we really don’t want to.
Sound familiar?
Here’s what I’m getting at. Jesus is love. But just like you
don’t get nice lean legs by sitting on the couch, or a happily ever after
marriage without weathering the storms of a committed relationship, you don’t
get to be in perfect relationship with God without moving past the crap in your
life.
We must push ourselves to run the toxins of our sinfulness
out of our relationship with Jesus, so we can truly experience the fullness of His
perfect love. We must push ourselves in our relationships with our spouses (or
soon to be spouses) through the painful times so those sweet, powerful
endorphins can be released and offer us the joy we long for from our marriage.
If we don’t push each
other to do that, while we may not be upsetting people, we may be letting them
miss out on best Jesus has for them. His love is whole and complete, and He
wants to make our lives reflect that.
So here’s the question?
Are we willing to push each other past our sinfulness so we
can truly experience God?
Or are we going to sit on the couch and let ourselves go and
convince ourselves, “Oh, my wedding dress will still zip up in a few months… “
Might be time to call the seamstress…
Wedding Count:
130 days- 6 miles
Wedding Count:
130 days- 6 miles
Well said, as always, Shelby.
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately it seems we want to embrace the love aspect of God without dealing with our sinfulness (to have our cake and eat it too, if you will).
Seems this thought process is becoming more and more a minority view, and that is a sad thing indeed.
Thanks Barden =)
ReplyDeleteAnd I hear ya. It's becoming the way of our culture.But it's really too bad...
Especially because, by moving past these things, these areas where we struggle and lose touch with God, God gives us a more worthwhile life. He gives us more wholeness. He gives us what's best, instead of just what's better.