Monday 13 December 2010

"You shall have no other gods before Me."

Most of the stories I tell people about my life have occurred within the last year. Occasionally, I’ll tell a story that's from further back - maybe the beginning of college. I almost never tell stories from earlier. I don’t think this is a conscious decision, its just the pattern of thinking I’ve gotten into. I don’t go back to old things over and over again and savor them very much – least of all with other people who weren’t there. And most of the people that I know now, weren’t there. I’ve had a segregated and compartmentalized life. I have little clusters of memories spread out over different places and people. None of them know each other. Each is its own separate world without much in common with each other except for me. I’m the common denominator. I’ve experienced them all and given a part of myself to each of them.
I think I exclude the past parts of my life because I’m afraid of blank stares and uninterested minds. A lot of people are comfortable with the world they live in. Many have only lived in one. They are happy to stay there. It’s difficult to think outside of ourselves. Any experience unlike our own with nothing we can resonate with is uncomfortable and, if possible, we’d rather not respond to it or be forced to interact with it. This would mean growth and growth is always a little gruesome.
The truth is my fear is the symptom of an idol. I fear men, often more than God who has commanded us to love. When I’m afraid of rejection, I can’t love. I’d rather ignore the entire situation/person than live riskily, taking a shot in the dark again and again – reaching out to love someone. Telling our stories to each other is like offering a level of intimacy and reality. Telling our stories is loving someone.
It would be such a neat little answer to say that lately I’ve been trying to ‘find a good balance’ between hiding from people and allowing myself to get hurt by people. It sounds like a cute, simple solution to a complex question. But complex questions usually have complex solutions. I don’t think that’s the right answer, in fact it’s a dangerous one. “To love anything is to be vulnerable.” (C.S. Lewis) If we are called to love, we are also called to tell the truth, to be open and unrestrained with people, even strangers. The Western myth of the necessity for ‘personal space and boundaries’ needs to be overturned. If we are to love people radically like Jesus did, it will take more than being comfortably good-natured with them. It will take a dying to self, a destruction of personal space, an open countenance, a desire to reach past the borders of self and speak, express, proclaim. “He is the expression of His fullness…” Isn’t that what God did – reached out and loved us unrestrainedly, vulnerably. He loved us first. It’s always dangerous to love first. If we share our stories and our lives with others, the glory of His Son will radiate from our faces. His image will be made clear in us and we will truly be like God, not as the devil tempted Eve, but as children of the Father and brothers and sisters of His Son.
One more thing: God space is not the same as personal space. Jesus went up on the mountain to pray. He didn’t go up to be alone. He had no shrine to self. Every moment of His time was given to others and to God. God will break every idol His children have set up. “I will allow no other gods before Me.”

5 comments:

  1. Wow, I don't think I've ever thought of Jesus' "alone time" that way. When those passages have been discussed in churches or Bible classes I've attended, the connection we are meant to draw is that we need to spend more time away from others in order to solidify an otherwise weak relationship with God. Instead, we should be seeking Him in every one of our relationships with other people, and when we are with Him in private, we present our honest requests (giving through our vulnerability in sharing our needs and desires), and we receive from-and are taught by-Him in return. It is not to "find ourselves," but rather to lose ourselves & find Him.

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  2. Thanks Grace, that was really cool. I think of how if we don't love our brother who we can see, we don't really love God who we can't see. If this is true, then spending time alone with God is rather unnecessary. I mean don't we have inner thoughts throughout the whole day no matter what we are doing? Can't i spend time with Him then? And anyway- there are moments when i am forcibly alone - doing dishes, early in the morning when i wake up before others... I don't need to take special time to be alone with Him. Of course i need to study the Scriptures enough so that i can meditate on them throughout the day- but the Bible should not be relegated to a special time of the day to write down thoughts in a notebook- He is with us all the time - I guess He did take time away to pray - but maybe this was also to rest - this was his way of resting, instead of watching a gladiator fight or going to temple prostitutes. So when i rest, then i can get time alone with Him. That is a trick to balance my life in such a way that i am loving Him by loving Others with as much of my time as i can, but taking the needed rest that He knows we need - as even He took after creating everything... And that ratio changes over time... I probably need more rest now that i am older and frailer... The C.S. Lewis quote is great. He contrasts it with Aristotle who said it is better not to love anyone except God too much... What a cold, loveless Christianity he espoused... Thank you Grace for being willing to say things that are hard for American ears... He who has ears to hear, let him hear! Can i post a link of this to our facebook?

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  3. correction- it was Augustine, not Aristotle that Lewis was quoting... oops. sorry.
    When will you post again Grace? :)

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  4. living this right now. And still not quite sure if my heart is strong enough to accept (even if my mind does) that "finding a good balance" between loving and protecting from hurt is not the right answer. because like you said, "when i'm afraid of rejection, i can't love" which is exactly what i am afraid of...

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