Monday, March 4, 2013

Part One: Fear and Other Things You Shouldn’t Let Run Your Life

So this is the beginning of a long-promised (and just plain long) post about me and my life and stuff.  It’ll be an update about what I’ve been dealing (or not dealing) with in 2013 so far, a little bit of good and a fair amount of bad.  I would also say that it’s going to be an update on what I’ve been doing during the weeks of blogosphere silence, except that I haven’t been.  Doing things, I mean.

So as you may know, I graduated KVCC in December with an Associate of Arts in General Studies (it was going to be Liberal Arts, until they stopped offering the last foreign language credit I needed.  Uuuurgh).  That was…really anticlimactic.  I spent two and a half years toiling away at reading and papers and talking and making my brain do things and came away with a degree that, from a career standpoint, is totally useless until I get another degree (a bachelor’s at the very minimum) to go with it.  Yay.

Over New Years’ weekend, I went to the OneThing conference in Kansas City with some of the lovely folks from Dwell.  That was pretty much the most amazing four days I’ve had in a long time.  Unlike many conference experiences, it didn’t feel like it was “building up” to anything spectacular — God was already tossing amazing revelations at me and working in me from the very first worship set.  He felt so intensely present and thick and personal.  (One thing I felt convicted about over that weekend was reducing my relationship to God to what’s happening with me, and forgetting that He’s a person and it’s an interaction, not just about results.  I didn’t even realize it was a problem until He showed up in person, and woooo.  Another thing — let me tell you, in all seriousness, conviction is great.  I know I’m not perfect, so in comparison with struggling under condemnation all the time, Holy-Spirit conviction is inspiring, which is probably the point.)

So I heard lots from God at OneThing.  He taught me about relating to him as intimately and intensely personal, inviting Him into distraction when I struggle with it, spiritual warfare.  He told me my gift of empathy was important.  he told me to work on storing up knowledge in the spiritual sphere, like I already do somewhat in the natural.

The most intense thing that happened actually was during the last day.  I had wanted to buy a t-shirt from the merch table(s), so I wandered over there during the afternoon break. One shirt in particular caught my eye, one with Micah 6:8 printed on it:  “Do justly, love mercy.”  (The whole verse runs:  “He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.  And what does the Lord require of you?  To act justly and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.”)

It was like somebody rammed a fist into my chest, grabbed my heart, and squeezed it.  I had a physical, visceral reaction to seeing that verse.  So I bought the shirt.  I wore it to the evening session.  And in the middle of the worship set I couldn’t stop thinking about it, and then — clear as a bell — clearer than anything else I’d heard all weekend, probably one of the clearest things I’ve heard from God ever — He said, “Do justly and love mercy:  if you do anything with your life, do that.”

And I was like, “Yes, yes!  I am 100% behind that.  I want to do that, and not even because you said it just now.  That verse articulates what I’ve been noticing is a pretty important part of my philosophy of life and faith and success.  That’s perfect.  That’s it.”

And then I got home and was like, “Um.  That’s really hard to quantify.  It’s not like God told me, ‘Go to Romania and spread justice and mercy for homeless people’ or something.  So…now what?”

And that’s pretty much what I’ve been doing for two months – going, “now what?”  I had a weekend that should have put a ton of impetus behind me, and instead I completely stalled as soon as I set foot back in Kalamazoo.  That stall has lasted for two completely ridiculous months.  I kind of spent the last week or two deconstructing why, and I’ll go into that in another post.  SOON I PROMISE SOON.

Thanks for reading, guys — <3

1 comment:

  1. I don't really have much to say in response to this, except that stalling with God is frustrating, and I understand that. I love you bunches and bunches. Thank you for the insight into your life right now. :)

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