One
joy I find in coming back to my home in Minnesota, especially after being away
for 8-10 months, is that I get to rediscover things I forgot I had. I joke that
it’s like Christmas as I open drawers and find clothes I left behind, or look
through the books on my shelves and find classics I don’t ever remember buying.
Although, I would have to say one of the greatest discoveries I’ve found not in
a drawer or stacked on a shelf, but scribbled on wrinkled pages of journals I
wrote in years ago. It’s interesting to think that every December one year ends
and another begins, and with that those journaled pages fade further and
further into the past, till they are not much more than a speck in the distance,
ink on a page. After a while we may not even be able to see them anymore. I
don’t think we need to linger in the past, but I do think it’s important to
revisit it once and a while, atleast long enough to find what we are looking
for, and we are always looking for something.
Last
night I decided, around 11:30pm, to flip through some of those pages till I
found what I was looking for, only I didn’t know I was looking for anything, until
I found it.
Growth.
Ah yes. Looking back through those pages I now realize I was looking for growth.
I wanted to see where I had been, and compare it with where I’m at now. The
entry I found was written in 2010 while I was working at a camp in the woods of
northern Wisconsin. I’m not sure if I was more challenged by it when I wrote it,
almost this exact time three years ago, or when I read it again last night, but
I wanted to share it with you in hopes that something fresh begins to stir in
you as it has in me.
“So,
lately, I’ve been thinking more about who I am. Craig (one of my bosses at the
camp) asked me what makes me who I am, why I am the way I am. I gave him some
excuse of an answer, but I didn’t think it was close to scratching the surface.
When it really comes down to it I don’t know why I am the way I am. Obviously,
I can say, “God,” and attribute it to his influence in my life, and yet I
rarely read his word or enter into daily communion with him. Why is that?
Distractions? Sin? Laziness? Selfishness? Yes, I think it’s a combination of
these, but I also think it’s because I have so little an understanding of who
Jesus really is, and what he means to my life, deeply, going beyond living a
moral/right life. Anyone could do that if they put their mind to it. So what is
it that truly separates me and makes me who I am? How does Christ affect me, and
how am I “me”? How am I different with him, knowing him, than I would be
without him? Especially when I am not consistently in his word pursuing him,
pursuing a greater understanding of who he is, and pursuing a deeper love and
awe of his relationship with me?
Sitting
in youth group ( I was helping with a high school youth group at the time) I
got this vision, desire, idea, call it whatever, to put aside the things that
easily distract me from God and to seriously dedicate my time and mind to
searching for him. Striving to discover who he really is, and why I let my
life be affected by him, beyond “he died for my sins.” Yes, I believe this and
acknowledge it, but what does that mean? How do I know it and how can it be
passed on? I can hardly answer why I live my life the way I do beyond the
surface answer of “because he died to save me.” This sounds harsh, but how will
someone with no concept of love or sacrifice grasp that concept? How can I
explain my willingness to model my life after a man I barely know? If my little
knowledge and “acquaintance” of a relationship with him is enough to live the
way I do, how much more will I live, love, and sacrifice when I truly know him? When I open my life and
mind to getting to know him better and more intimately? Who is this man that
affects me so greatly, and yet, I know so little?
I’ve
decided to take these next forty days to explore this. I’m moving out my books
and movies, and dedicating my “alone” time to searching for, and seeking to
know, the Jesus that gave himself for me in a way that I can never pretend to
comprehend.
Tonight
I’ve made this commitment, forty solid days; days of focus, days of
surrender... Tomorrow it begins. Also, I’ve decided to use two notebooks. Once
as a daily journal of what I am learning and where I saw God in that day, and
the second as a study journal where I will record the passages I read and the
scriptural journey I am pushing myself to embark upon.
I
am finally ready, I think...”
So,
what do you think? Are you ready? I’m
thinking I’m about ready to embark on a new forty day journey. I want to spend
the next forty days looking at the attributes of Jesus. I want to explore how
he related to God the Father, how he related to people, how he lived, and how I
can be more like him today than I was yesterday.
Jesus
gave up food for forty days in the wilderness. Which is pretty intense... Will you spend forty days giving up more time in your day
to discovering more Jesus? There is so much more to him
than we can even imagine, and it will take us the rest of our lives to come
close to discovering that. In that case we better get started.
Thanks
for reading this! If you are thinking about doing some kind of forty day “discovery”
I would love to hear about it! It doesn’t matter when you start, but feel free
to let me know about it through facebook, or go ahead and comment here. One guide I had as I journaled daily was to begin by asking myself "How was God real in my life today?" This takes the attention off of me and redirects it to him. It's also a cool way to be more intentional in acknowledging the presence of God is our lives daily. Ask yourself that, and then write down what comes to mind. Years down the road you will be thankful you did. I, from personal experience, can guarantee it! :)