My journey!

"I did not give you a voice so that you could be silent!"
Every time I feel impressed to say something in a discussion at church and don't, every time I could comment on something a co-worker says by sharing a scripture or personal testimony and don't, every time I don't speak up about something amazing God has done in my life, that phrase enters my thoughts and I know, without a doubt, it is God saying it. Know how I know it's God and not just me thinking it? Because it's not thought in a critical, disappointed, angry, frustrated, belittling way. It's more like a loving reminder, gently guiding me toward who I am supposed to be and what I'm supposed to be doing. It's supportive and encouraging, and kind, and positive and not at all the way I talk to myself.

In an effort to become more comfortable with actually vocalizing my thoughts, I've decided to start this blog and first get really comfortable with just sharing my thoughts. Each post will refer to God and Jesus and will contain scripture as well as my experiences and feelings and thoughts about God, Jesus, Church, scripture, etc. since, after all, this is my spiritual journey.

I also love movies, t.v., music, and books and frequently discover nuggets of inspiration in them that I will most likely share here.


Wednesday, August 12, 2020

Are you judging?

 

About a month ago I took my mom to a 3 month follow up appointment with the eye doctor who performed her cataract surgery.  The area we live in is pretty rural so it’s a long drive to these appointments.  It's 200 miles round trip to be exact which feels even longer than usual when driving in a car with an air conditioner on the fritz.  To top it all off, I would have to wait in the car because of social distancing restrictions due to the COVID-19 virus.  I wasn’t exactly looking forward to the trip since this was our third time making this trip in three weeks. 

Once we arrived at the center, I pulled into the parking lot to drop mom off at the front door.  There was a vehicle just parked in the drop off area, no driver waiting, just a parked vehicle.  I, of course, start complaining about people parking where they’re not supposed to and the inconvenience it causes me because I should be able to drop my mom off right at the door without having to maneuver around some incorrectly, inconsiderately parked vehicle.

Mom goes inside for her appointment, I find a parking spot nearby where I can see the door to pick her up when she’s done, and decide to take my mind off the bad mood I was in by finding something uplifting and spiritual to read or listen too.  A few minutes later I see a person exit the building and approach the offensively parked car.  As I’m sitting there trying to decide whether to give them the “how stupid are you” glare as they leave, I see an aide from the surgical center pushing an elderly lady in a wheelchair toward the vehicle.  And then, slowly, the realization of what I’m seeing washes over me and I feel absolutely awful.

The woman in the wheelchair had just had surgery, the driver of the car had only just moved it there not long before we arrived and there had probably been other cars in the pick-up area keeping them from pulling all the way up, then they went in and got the discharge instructions and belongings of the patient.  So, I’m sitting there watching them load up, calling myself a “hateful, horrible, awful person”, and God, in that very gentle way He does, shows me that this is one of the reasons why he tells us not to judge others.

We hear all the time that we shouldn’t judge others because we don’t know what’s going on in their hearts and what work God may be doing with them.  It is a very true, very valid argument for not judging, but what if there’s more to it than that?  What if the reason God tells us not to judge others is because of what it does to us?

Multiple studies published in multiple psychological journals talk about the psychological and physical effects of we experience when we judge others.  The more we judge, the more we start to experience anxiety and depression because we start to believe that others are judging us the same way we are judging them and eventually we turn our judgement on ourselves.

Judging others can also desensitize us making us less accepting of others and give us an incorrect perception of reality.  In an article in Psychology Today from 2015, Rubin Khoddam, Ph.D. explains, “The truth is that we, as humans, tend to fuse with our judgments and perceive them as reality.” He goes on to explain, “So often, what happens in arguments is that we fuse with our opinions.  We fuse, meaning that we can’t tell the difference between what our opinion is and what the reality is.  And in the end our perception becomes our reality.  We end up believing our thoughts/judgments and take our thoughts as facts.  We believe that person is horrible.  We believe the furniture is ugly.  We believe the movie was awful.  Instead of seeing our multitude of judgments as a perception or as a lens we put on situations, we see if as truth.  By doing this we subliminally create a separation and lack of acceptance of other’s beliefs.”

The bottom line is, when we judge someone it stirs powerful negative emotions in us, whether it is anger, cynicism, envy, anxiety, depression, or mistrust, those negative emotions are some of the most powerful tools Satan has at his disposal to build distance between us and God.  And, the more we engage those negative emotions, the easier it is to default to them and widen the gap between us and God.

Scripture tells us often to love one another.  John 13:34-35, “A new commandment I give unto you, That you love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.  By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples, if you have love one to another.”  And in Romans 13:8-10, “Owe no man any things, but to love one another, for he that loveth another hath fulfilled the law.  For this, Thou shalt not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, Thou shalt not bear false witness, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be any other commandment, it is bfiefly comprehended in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love they neighbor as thyself.  Love worketh no ill to his neighbor, therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.” 

We’re also told to go forth and share the gospel and make disciples.  It’s really hard to do those things if we’re failing to love each other, distancing ourselves from people by judging them, and distancing ourselves from God by engaging in the negative emotions associated with judging and doing that which he has told us repeatedly in scripture to not do.

Mahatma Gandhi said, “You must be the change you want to see in the world.”  So if I feel that the world has become overly judgmental and unaccepting I guess that means I need to take an honest look at myself to see what I can change before I start looking to change others.  I know altering my pattern of judging others isn’t going to be easy; being judgmental is pretty much my default setting.  Hopefully with a whole lot of prayer and self-control I can overcome my “hateful, horrible, awful” self and find a kinder, gentler, less judgmental me, and then perhaps work on changing the world, one positive thought at a time.

Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Are You Listening?

It’s been 6 years since the last time I wrote a blog post.  Life just got very…life-y.  I’ve been feeling the push to start writing again for a while and kept putting it off.  The other day I realized I can’t put it off anymore.  The idea for this post started forming and hasn’t really left my thoughts.  I started writing last night, sitting on my bead, furiously writing my thoughts down in a spiral notebook, the targeted light of a goose-neck desk lamp over my shoulder.  Unfortunately what I ended up with was more of a passive aggressive venting of all my frustrations with people over the whole COVID-19 virus situation.  I was so exhausted by the time I got everything out about that I didn’t write anything about my feelings about everything else going on in the world.  Of course, since this blog is supposed to be about my spiritual journey and my relationship with God and Jesus and not my opinion on the state of the world, I cannot use 99% of what I wrote last night, but I do feel better for having vented.

I woke up a couple mornings ago feeling overwhelmingly sad.  It was such a strong feeling that I didn’t even want to get out of bed.  There was no reason for it that I could easily identify and I was looking forward to doing what I had planned that day so feeling that sad made no sense to me.  As I lay there trying to motivate myself to get up and get going, I realized the sadness was for the world in general and the United States of America specifically.  There are so many huge issues we’re facing in this country right now and the country feels more divided that it has in my lifetime. 

Each new major issue that arises seems to make the division grow wider and deeper and with twisted, biased information coming from politicians, mainstream media, and individuals on social media, It feels like there are a thousand voices screaming “Pick Me!” at me constantly.  I’ve reached a point where I’m just over saturated with information from all sides of every issue and I don’t want to hear about any of it anymore.

So, I eventually drag myself out of bed and head to my sister’s house for our Bible Study group.  We’re between actual studies and waiting on getting the books for the next study we’re doing so this week we watched “War Room”.  And, as He so often does, God started giving me “little clues” to my situation.  I came away from the movie with two scriptures running through my mind.

John 10:10 KJV (the first half of the scripture):  The thief cometh not, but for to steal, and to kill, and to destroy:

1 Peter 5:8 KJV:  Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour:

I’ve also been listening to podcasts of sermons from Passion City Church, most of them by Louie Giglio and, surprise, surprise, each of the 5 sermons in the series has the word roar in the title and talks about roaring.  I was reminded that in Revelation 5:5, Jesus is referred to as The Lion of Judah so I decide clearly God is giving me a lion theme here. 

I start pulling the pieces together and doing a little research on lions and their roars and I find some fun facts like a lion’s roar can be heard from 5 miles away, they roar to frighten off enemies who are encroaching on their territory and warn others in their pride of danger.  The lion’s roar measures 114 decibels.  To help put that into perspective, your washing machine or dishwasher measures 70 decibels, a motorcycle measures 95 decibels, most sporting events measure 100 decibels (unless you’re at a Utah Jazz home game where the noise from fans has been measured as high as 109 decibels), and rock concerts typically measure in between 105 and 110 decibels. 

One thing started to bother me as I was pulling everything together.  The scripture in Revelation calls Jesus the Lion of Judah but the 1 Peter scripture describes the devil as a lion.  They can’t both be lions, right?  I suppose they could be, it worked for Disney in “The Lion King”, but this isn’t Disney, this is God we’re talking about.  Then I saw it, that one little word in the middle of the 1 Peter scripture that explained it all, “as”.  The scripture doesn’t say that the devil is a lion, it says that he is like a lion.  The devil is a liar, a counterfeiter, a manipulator, and will do everything he can to make it seem like he is a lion.  He will use a million voices to try and confuse us and pull us in all different directions.  He will use the noise from those voices to make it seem like he has a mighty roar to try and drown out the voice of Jesus.  But, Jesus IS the Lion and the roar of the Lion of Judah drowns out all other noises, all other voices.  His roar claims us as His, frightens away our enemies and warns us of danger. 

I found a quote that I think helps further explain my point. 

“Among the hordes of animals that roam the wild, whether the jungle, the mountains or the plain, the lion is universally recognized to be their chief. The living embodiment of self-possessed power, he is the most regal in manner and deportment, the mightiest, the foremost with respect to speed, courage and dominion. The expression of the lion's supremacy is its roar — a roar which reduces to silence the cries, howls, bellows, shrieks, barks and growls of lesser creatures. When the lion steps forth from his den and sounds his roar, all the other animals stop and listen. On such an occasion none dares even to sound its own cry, let alone to come into the open and challenge the fearless, un-surpassable roar of the golden-maned king of beasts.” – Bhikkhu Bodhi

One other fun fact about the roar of a lion, male lions use a much softer roar when playing with their young.  It therefore makes perfect sense to me that contained within the roar of The Lion of Judah is the gentle guiding voice of our shepherd.  In John chapter 10, Jesus talks about the Good Shepherd and in verse 27 he says, “My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me.” 

The long and short of it is, His roar will silence all the other voices bombarding me so that I can listen to the only voice that matters, the voice of my Shepherd, my Redeemer, my friend…Jesus.