~ As a Clay Jar
Galatians
5:1
(NIV)
“[Freedom in Christ ] It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.”
“[Freedom in Christ ] It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.”
Source: Unknown |
I stood in
the kitchen with my hands clenched and heart pounding. Angry. Oh, I was angry. I tried to find one area of
my life that was not being controlled by someone else. I couldn’t. Looking
through the filter of my white hot mess, I was the victim and everyone else was
the conductor of my life.
Money that
was due to me was being held by those who were unknowingly controlling our
financial picture.
Our family schedule
was being dictated by the amount of homework my 9-year old was given the week
before Christmas break, even though during school hours they were watching
movies.
Technical
difficulties were preventing the editor of my book from completing the first
round edits that I so desperately wanted to receive.
A multitude
of other people were unintentionally controlling my ability to plan, cope,
smile, rest, and enjoy the holiday season. At least that was how I felt.
My external
self was falling apart. I felt gagged, leashed, and handcuffed to my
circumstances and to others’ selfish decisions and actions. The age-old adages
that “good guys finish last” and those who selfishly roll over people do get all
the breaks were at the forefront of my thoughts. This “nice girl” was ready to
throw in her towel.
One day God
said not just yet. He left a book in
my path, and I wisely picked it up and started to read…
John
Ortberg’s “When the Game is Over, It All Goes Back in the Box,” reminded me
that I do not have to be yoked to this world. I am not bound by others, by
circumstances, or even by my own unmet expectations. I am free, because I
believe.
“One of the
strongest myths is the illusion of control. ‘I am in control’ is not just a
lie; author Ernest Becker called this the vital
lie because we need it for our egos to survive.” Externally, I was seething
because I felt I had lost control. But maybe – just maybe – I hadn’t.
John
Ortberg argues in his book that perhaps our external selves are not really who
we are. Yes, our bodies, our clothes, our wealth, our families, our success,
and our possessions are what the world values and judges. And, because of those
values and judgments, they are the things we try desperately to control in order
to save our egos. However, it is our internal selves that matter to God. It is
our hearts, our thoughts, and our choices that matter. That is what He is after
– for all eternity. He doesn’t call back our bodies; He calls back our souls to
an eternal home with Him. “We can all be tempted to place all our focus on the
outer person. But one day all that will pass away. You, however, are a being
who will never cease to exist. Your spirit – your inward character – is in the
process of becoming something. Something either unbelievably good or something
unimaginably dark. That something is the main thing God sees when he looks at
us.”
I realized
this anger of mine was dark. Left to its own seething, it would have wrapped me
around its bitter finger. I didn’t want to be a slave to darkness, to anger, or
to my frustrating circumstances. I instead chose to stand firm in my freedom
through Jesus - the Christ who's birth we are about to celebrate. “It is for freedom that Christ has set us
free. Stand firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke
of slavery.”
I chose to work on what
I could control – my internal self. With the Holy Spirit’s help, I reminded
myself that just like the apostle Paul who was trapped in prison yet found
unending joy, I could feel financially, socially, and physically trapped in
these temporary circumstances of mine and still be spiritually, relationally,
and eternally free.
Are you feeling trapped...
- by a scary or painful medical condition?
- in a marriage that has not met your expectations of wedded bliss?
- by financial burdens you cannot solve or escape?
- in a job that is demanding more of you than you might be willing to give?
- by the choices you must make?
I needed this reminder … perhaps you do too:
“When the game is over,
it all goes back in the box.” Everything, that is, except our spirits – the ones
God created, loves, and wants to be free.
© 2013 As a Clay Jar. All rights reserved.