It’s beginning to look a
lot like Christmas… ok so maybe it’s not really looking like Christmas but
these cold mornings and the wonderful radio station that started playing
Christmas music already has me in the Christmas mood. As a child I remember watching White
Christmas during this fall season and thinking how wonderful it would be to
wake up and see snow. It would be just
perfect. You could make snowmen and snow
angels, have a snowball fight. It sounds
great doesn’t it? White, wonderful,
glorious, snow.
And then I come back to
reality and realize that I hate being outside in the snow. Seriously, it’s cold and wet and potentially
very dangerous. I tried snowboarding
once (keyword TRIED) and it was awful. I
was talked into riding to the top of the mountain with this amazing guy that
once up there laughed as I fell sideways into a mound of powder and left me
there freezing my tush off until one of the workers came to rescue me. A real gem that guy. I married him.
When I think of snow now
I think of that day. I had a huge
oversized snow jacket that weighed fifty pounds (that may be a slight exaggeration
but not much of one) and these huge boots on.
After being left for what seemed like forever by myself on the side of a
mountain I decided to wait inside for the remainder of the trip. It was much safer for a girl like me in there. I was there for hours in a stuffy lodge with
this heavy coat and huge boots on stinking like a junior high boy because I had
forgotten to take the snow items off. I
didn’t need them anymore but I had taken a mental vacation and didn’t realize
it.
I’m reminded of that
silly girl sitting in the lodge sometimes when crazy seasons of life hits. When the storms come and unload barrels of
snow onto your sunny days and seem to weigh you down. When you reach for the jacket to protect
yourself only to later realize that you have a lodge that you can run to for
safety. But once inside you sit there
like a total nerd forgetting to take the dumb coat off so you don’t know which
was more miserable- being outside trapped in the snow, or inside sitting in
your own sweat.
That heavy coat for me
was the years that I battled with depression as a teenager. Things would happen and this coat of sadness
would drape over me causing me to be numb, protecting me from what I thought would
hurt me but really all it was doing was preventing me from experiencing true
joy. I felt like a zombie walking through
life until I went to a youth summer camp and a man introduced me to Jesus. It was like running inside from the
storm. It was warm and inviting in the
midst of total chaos, a safe place to hide from the storm, my refuge.
Even though I had found
my way inside, I still sometimes forgot to take off my jacket.
This summer has been
quite the stormy season. I’ve been
bombarded with the feeling of being a complete failure as a youth pastor, doubting
the very influence and calling to ministry with teen girls that I have held so
dear for years. I’ve lost the woman who
was both like a mother and a mentor to me.
I’ve struggled with my place in helping someone dear to me as they
completely alter their life. I’ve felt
lonely, sad, incompetent, hurt, betrayed, lied about, taken advantage of, run
over, and even a little depressed.
Me? A youth pastor? A woman devoted to speaking into girl’s lives
about facing their struggles with strength and dignity? Yes, me.
I was staring at that
very same teenage girl who was safely inside but still weighed down under the
heavy coat of life. It’s like I could
see her sitting in the room with me and all I could think was, “you again?” That’s not me. That’s not who I am anymore. I am a new creation in Christ, old things
have passed away and God has made all things new… right?
Right…ish. God can only renew what we surrender to
Him. Yes He is our refuge. Yes He is our redeemer. Yes He is our strength and our joy. But He can only be that if we CHOOSE for Him
to be. We have to choose to give Him the
old self, the old thoughts, the old ways of doing things. The old ways of reacting with hurt and
bitterness and sadness. When we take off
the coat and give over to our loving Father, He takes it and replaces it with a
cardigan of comfort. Yep, that’s
right. Long live the cardigans.
But it doesn’t stop
there. When stormy seasons hit, the
devil will always be out there in the snow ready to hand that heavy coat to you
again.
Don’t do it! Run inside where you can be safe. Yes the storms will rage. Yes there might be some damage done. Yes you may have to walk two miles uphill
both ways to get to a place of refuge.
But it is there. For you. And for me.
So I decline your heavy coat Sir Satan, and you can shove it
where the sun don’t shine. That’s not me
anymore. I am not that girl. I know my word and I choose to plant my feet in
it and stand my ground.
Psalm 91:4-7
He will
cover you with his feathers, and
under his wings you will find refuge; his
faithfulness will be your shield and rampart.
You will not fear the
terror of night, nor
the arrow that flies by day, nor the pestilence
that stalks in the darkness, nor
the plague that destroys at midday.
A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand, but it will not come near you.
A thousand may fall at your side, ten thousand at your right hand, but it will not come near you.
Love this.
ReplyDeleteLoved it!!!!!
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