Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Poem 11/23/2011


Just a little whisper, silent as can be,
Came from the lips that no one could see.

There was no desire to listen, as this voice was not close by,
It came from a distant place that was missed by the naked eye.

It did not enter through the ears like noise so often will,
But instead went deep within, and the heart it did fill.

There was a strong desire to ignore it, and carry on with the day,
But the voice spoke again, saying, “I am here to stay.”

In an instant all was clear, this voice was from heaven above,
There was absolutely nothing to fear, but instead everything to love.

The voice is not always so subtle, but for sure out of sight,
It never leaves or misguides, but teaches wrong from right.

Indeed, what a blessing it is, to have this voice within,
To keep the paths of life straight, and help to avoid all sin.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

You are what you eat

Well, that is debatable, but that is not what I am going to talk about.

Last night, I was reading 2 Mc 6:18-31, and it really got me thinking. Mind you, all this in my own personal interpretation and what it means to me.

Here was a man, Eleazar, who refused to eat the pork. He willing went to the torture chambers because he would rather die then give in -- for it was unlawful to eat the meat.

It was suggested that perhaps they serve him a meat of his choosing at this "unlawful ritual meal," and he just pretend that he was eating the pig for he was a close friend of the host. Still, Eleazar refused.

Eleazar's intentions were noble; he did not want to give the false impression that he was doing something unlawful just to save his own life. He did not want to cause others to sin by them also eating the meat and thinking that it was alright because he had done it first.

That. That part right there. Stop a moment and think: how many times do we cause our brother to sin? How many times do we do something to  please our friend, but the very action itself is unlawful to God? Sadly, looking back at my life, I can certainly see areas where these are most definitely true.

As scary as it sounds to the human mind, dying doesn't sound very pleasant-- even if we firmly believed that God was waiting for us with open arms on the other side.

Eleazar knew what God's laws were and he was willing to die in defense to it! He willingly submitted to the torture from man, knowing full well that he was going straight into his Heavenly Father's arms.

That was like a huge wake up call for me. It has challenged me to rethink what I am about to say or do. People are watching me. People are taking note of what I say and what I do. The last thing I want to happen is that some one sins because I made the choice to honor man over God and they thought since I compromised, then they can too. Ultimately, I need to live a Christ-filled life. Striving to live a life for God ultimately leads to me doing right and leading others to God; not the other way around.

So thus I continue to live my life with the intention of doing all that is pleasing to God. I am working towards having a sincere love for God and a hate for sin not only because it separates me from God, but mainly because God Himself hates sin.

I am not what I eat -- especially true if I don't eat it.


"Therefore, if food causes my brother to stumble, I will never eat meat again, so that I will not cause my brother to stumble" (1 Corinthians 8:13).

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Not the "Norm"

I want to be an exception to the norm.

In today's society, it is hard to stand up for my beliefs. Either hardly anyone today shares my beliefs, or it is just that everyone who does is like me: too afraid to speak up.

My thoughts and beliefs cannot be expressed unless they are "politically correct."

Our world is becoming so gray. There appears to be no "right from wrong." We strive so hard to make everyone feel welcome and make sure that everyone is treated equal. We loose sight of morally right and wrong. Does anyone still have morals and values in this day and age? I can see why people like things "black and white" because then there is a clear distinction between right and wrong.

I, either fortunately or unfortunately, see things in life as either a dark shade of gray, or off-white. I have "black and white standards" for my life, but I cannot honestly judge others based on my own personal morals.


But anywhoo, I strive to be the person that God wants me to be. I am not trying to fit a mold that society, or anyone else for that matter, thinks that I should be in. I say this day in and day out, and continue to say it: God is in complete control of my life!

Without God steering my ship, I have no idea where I would be in life. I was just talking with some amazing women of God last night and recounting how I used to flow with society and be quiet about God in my life. As one girl put it, "Whisper Christian."

Unfortunately, we are in a day and age where Church and State are separated. One of my professors told the class that she could make us leave if she (or a classmate) was offended by any one's religious practices. I still carry my Bible around campus when I can.

Though I have to say, it gets sticky: We are allowed freedom of religion, but as soon as someone is offended by something that someone says or does (whether directed at an individual or not) then it seems as though the standards change.


Jesus himself said that we will be persecuted because of Him! While as humans we do not want to undergo this, when we look at this from a spiritual standpoint, how beautiful is that? How beautiful is it to surrender our lives to God so much to the point that although we are outcasts, and frowned upon by others and talked about and laughed at and mocked and so so so much more, how amazingly beautiful it is to realize that God is protecting me and that I have GOD on my side!

"You will be hated by all because of My name, but it is the one who has endured to the end who will be saved" (Matthew 10:22).

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Planting a small seedling of time for God and watching it grow!

Making time for God. It seems so simple! It seems so logical. But then why can it be so hard? Too often we get so caught up in trying to fit everything into the time that we are given, that we forget that we owe our very existence to God alone!

It has not been until recently that I have started making an effort to make time for God. By planting that very first seedling, more and and more time has seemed to "grow" from it! Now, in every "spare moment" that I find, I am spending it with the Lord! From Adoration, to Mass, to college group, to Bible Study, to reading the Bible and praying my Rosary, to just sitting quietly loving the Lord for all He is and for what he has done in my life!

Back in June, I was barely even meeting my Sunday obligation. I was still going to Church, but it was more like a "going because I had to, and thus let's get it over with." I complained that there was not enough time to do as much as I wanted to. I want to do so much more then time was allowing. All the while forgetting (or trying to ignore) God in my life. But all the while, God was there; God was calling me by name.

Living for God certainly did not come easy at first, and most certainly did not happen overnight. It started a little at a time and has blossomed into what it is today, and continues to grow into what God wills for me!

I highly encourage Bible reading. I had never picked up my Bible with such a sincere intent to read it until this past summer. And even then, it was like reading it maybe once a week, maybe two days in a row, and there were plenty of week long "dry streaks" where my Bible sat there collecting dust. But something was happening to me. I began reading it more and more. I could feel God working in me. I could see my life improving. I could see more trust and faith and reliance in God and less and less on things of this world! Happiness was, is, no longer found in material goods.


I look at where I am now, and wonder how I used to manage. I used to be miserable and long for things that I thought would make me happy. Oh how thankful I am where I am today and life is only going to get better with keeping my focus on God!

I want Christ to be within me. I want to radiate His light through me. I want to keep this focus on God! That is not to say that life is easy, but it sure is rewarding!

Every "bad day" is God breaking me and rebuilding me and shaping and forming me into something ever so beautiful! God is in control of my life. And it all began with me surrendering my life to Him- a little at a time. He should have always come first and foremost in my life, but unfortunately I got caught up in the ways of this world.

I have an app on my phone for "daily Mass readings" and there is a part that reflects upon one of the 2 to 3 readings. I almost always find them inspiring, and this one in particular has inspired this post, and I felt inclined to share the original source, seeing if I tried to take credit for something that is not mine, it would not get the point across as eloquently as Don does here. 


I wish these were my words because they are so beautiful, but all the credit goes to Don Schwager in response to Luke 17:7-10

Gospel
  Lk 17:7-10
Jesus said to the Apostles:
'Who among you would say to your servant
  who has just come in from plowing or tending sheep in the field,
'Come here immediately and take your place at table?'
  Would he not rather say to him,
'Prepare something for me to eat.
  Put on your apron and wait on me while I eat and drink.
  You may eat and drink when I am finished?'
  Is he grateful to that servant because he did what was commanded?
  So should it be with you.
  When you have done all you have been commanded, say,
'We are unprofitable servants;
  we have done what we were obliged to do.'


The Reflection:

"We are unworthy servants;
we have only done what was our duty"


Meditation:
"Are you ready to give the Lord your best, regardless
of what it might cost you? Perhaps we are like the laborer in Jesus' parable
who expected special  favor and reward for going the extra mile? How
unfair for the master to compel his servant to give more than what was
expected! Don't we love to assert our rights: "I will give only what is
required and no more!" But who can satisfy the claims of love? Jesus used
this parable of the dutiful servant to explain that we can never put God
in our debt or make the claim that God owes us something. We must regard
ourselves as God's servants, just as Jesus came "not to be served, but
to serve" (Matthew 20:28). Service of God and of neighbor is both a
voluntary or free act and a sacred duty. One can volunteer for service
or be compelled to do service for one's country or one's family when special
needs arise. Likewise, God expects us to give him the worship and praise
which is his due. And he gladly accepts the  free-will offering of
our lives to him and to his service. What makes our offering pleasing to
God is the love we express in the gift of self-giving. True love is sacrificial,
generous, and selfless.
How can we love others selflessly and unconditionally? Scripture tells
us that God himself is
love (1 John 4:16) because he is the author
of life and source of all relationships. He created us in love for love
and he fills our hearts with the boundless love that gives whatever is
good for the sake of another (Romans 5:5). If we love one another, God
abides in us and his love is perfected in us (1 John 4:12). God honors
the faithful servant who loves and serves others generously. He is ever
ready to work in and through us for his glory. We must remember, however,
that God can never be indebted to us. We have no claim on him. His love
compels us to give him our best! And when we have done our best, we have
simply done our duty. We can never outmatch God in doing good and showing
love. God loves us without measure. Does the love of God compel you to
give your best?"

"Lord Jesus, fill my heart with love, gratitude and generosity. Make
me a faithful and zealous servant for you. May I generously pour out my
life in loving service for you and for others, just as you have so generously
poured yourself out in love for me."

Sunday, November 6, 2011

What Soil am I?


After reading Matthew 13, I began to wonder what kind of soil I am. Jesus told this parable:

 “Listen! A farmer went out to plant some seeds. 4 As he scattered them across his field, some seeds fell on a footpath, and the birds came and ate them. 5 Other seeds fell on shallow soil with underlying rock. The seeds sprouted quickly because the soil was shallow. 6 But the plants soon wilted under the hot sun, and since they didn’t have deep roots, they died. 7 Other seeds fell among thorns that grew up and choked out the tender plants. 8 Still other seeds fell on fertile soil, and they produced a crop that was thirty, sixty, and even a hundred times as much as had been planted! 9 Anyone with ears to hear should listen and understand.”

At first, this parable can be confusing. How does scattered seed relate to the Kingdom of God? How can we relate to seeds? Fortunately, Jesus does not leave us hanging. He gives us a very clear explanation and from there we can reflect upon which seed we, ourselves, are.

18 “Now listen to the explanation of the parable about the farmer planting seeds: 19 The seed that fell on the footpath represents those who hear the message about the Kingdom and don’t understand it. Then the evil one comes and snatches away the seed that was planted in their hearts. 20 The seed on the rocky soil represents those who hear the message and immediately receive it with joy. 21 But since they don’t have deep roots, they don’t last long. They fall away as soon as they have problems or are persecuted for believing God’s word. 22 The seed that fell among the thorns represents those who hear God’s word, but all too quickly the message is crowded out by the worries of this life and the lure of wealth, so no fruit is produced. 23 The seed that fell on good soil represents those who truly hear and understand God’s word and produce a harvest of thirty, sixty, or even a hundred times as much as had been planted!”

The seed is the Word of God. The Word of God is sown into the hearts of the people, and from these seeds are grown one’s desire to live a life for Christ. But we alone cannot take credit for this growth, for growth only comes from God. As Paul writes in 1 Corinthians 3:6-7:

6 “I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God has been making it grow. 7 So neither the one who plants nor the one who waters is anything, but only God, who makes things grow.

God plants the seed (by using a close friend, song lyrics, a beautiful day, and the list goes on and on), and God allows the seed to take root and grow.

God has planted the seed within me. I want to be the good soil and produce a good harvest. I want the word of God to enter into my heart and change me into a woman of God who serves, honors and loves God all the days of my life! I pray that God works wonders through me and that His seed is being nourished well and that a great harvest will be produced!  
23 "The seed that fell on good soil represents those who truly hear and understand God’s word and produce a harvest of thirty, sixty, or even a hundred times as much as had been planted!” That is the kind of soil I strive to be. I want the seed to fall upon good soil, ready to nourish it and give it a good, safe place to rest and grow!

Which soil are you?

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Christ be our Light!

This is the day the Lord hath made, I am rejoicing and I am glad! Another beautiful November day! How abundantly blessed I am! God has been blessing me so richly and words cannot express the gratitude that is in my heart. Thank goodness God knows my heart!

How wonderful it is to live for God and let the light of Christ shine from the inside out! I long for others to experience this joy that burns within me and share in the peace and hope that comes alone with it!

How do we reach out to non-believers, or even believers that have not yet experienced this? I want to profess from mountain tops that God is the Lord of my life and then proceed to tell everything that has been going on in my life! But is that going to persuade others to turn to God? Probably not nearly as effectively as desired.  

One of the easiest ways for me to reach out to non-believers and share the light of Christ with them, is by letting Christ be my light and living my life as a living testimony to the Risen Christ! Lead by example. One can preach with words, but if someone is not ready to hear what is being said, then the words will not be heard.

At least for me, there is nothing more inspiring then seeing someone live a life for Christ and seeing the fruits of their labors.

That is not to say that life is easy, but it certainly is rewarding. Have faith and take a step towards God! Faith is taking the first step even when we cannot see the entire staircase!


"But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him" (Hebrews 11:6).
 
"If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you" (Matthew 17:20).

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

What are you thankful for?

So, with this being November and Thanksgiving coming up here rather quickly, what are some things that you are thankful for?


1) I am thankful for having God ever so present in my life. I love it that I can turn to Him in all things and He is always there ready to help!

2) I am thankful for the opportunity to spend quality time with friends and family.

3) I am thankful for awesome friends whom I can talk to them about anything!

4) I am thankful for relationships so centered around Christ, that when trials arise, we know who to turn our focus back on to and where to draw our strength.

5) I am thankful for awesome Christian music that is always a comfort just when I need it.

6) I am thankful for a job that allows me to do my homework at work.

7) I am thankful for my dad for giving me a place to freely explore and discover on my own without fear of judgment.

8) I am thankful for children of all ages. Being able to spend time with them and love them for who they are is priceless!

9) I am thankful for my crockpot. So many yummy fall meals have been prepared in it thus far!

10) I am thankful for random phone calls that are intended to be a quick "hi" but turn into talking for hours on end.

11) I am thankful that I rely on God, and not on technology and the such -- for if that were the case, this would be one very unpleasant person.

12) I am thankful for living in Michigan!

13) I am thankful for Church!

14) I am thankful for the ability to work extremely well under immense pressure (yes, I s h o u l d be working on my paper that is due in 24 hours instead of blogging... lol)

15) I am thankful for clean, cool drinking water.

16) I am thankful for warm running water.

17) I am thankful for those people who come in my life for the sole purpose of teaching me a lesson, and then it is time to move on (but sad in a way too, but happy knowing that God used them in an incredible way in my life!).

18) I am happy that I get a semi-steady paycheck and can at least pay my bills on time.

19) I am thankful for my Bible and for all that God has revealed to me through it!

20) I am thankful for my car, for as reliable as it it. And for a garage that I can park in at night (so I don't have to scrape the windows at 7:10 in the morning when I am already running 10 minutes behind schedule)!

21) I am thankful that I am thankful for so many things!

22) I am thankful for my piano.

23) I am thankful for the opportunity to go to college.

24) I am thankful that I can blog and journal.

25) I am thankful that I am accepted for whom I am.

26) I am thankful that God loves me unconditionally.

27) I am thankful for where I am in life -- every aspect, despite some areas being more trying then others.

28) I am thankful that I am improving in my art class (and that my prof told me that she likes how "expressive" my value is in my drawing!!!)

29) I am thankful for beautiful fall colors, light breezes, and sunshine.

30) I am thankful for summer rainstorms and rainbows that follow!!

31) I am thankful for scarves!

32) I am thankful for mac and cheese.

33) I am thankful for my phone and other technical devices that I do use regularly (but can live without).

34). I am thankful for my dining room table.

35) I am thankful for self-sticking stamps.

36) I am thankful for heating pads that I can take to bed with me at night.

37) I am thankful for men who treat me as their sister in Christ, and whom I treat as a brother in Christ.

38) I am thankful for hope. I am thankful that I can have that hope in Christ to bless me indeed!

39) I am thankful for the stars! And the comfort that they bring when I look at them!

40) I am thankful for my background, for it has made me whom I am today!

41) I am thankful for the adventures that lie ahead on my journey through life.

42) I am thankful for Jesus, who died on the cross to save me.

43) I am thankful for life. (Any day above ground is a good day!)

44) I am thankful for everything else that I have not said yet.

45) I am thankful for Y O U who is currently reading this. God bless you richly!

46) I am thankful for open-minded people.

47) I am thankful for everyone in the medical field.

48) I am thankful for all my brothers and sisters in Christ.

49) I am thankful for those brief moments that I can spend with my Lord, my God in silence.

50) I am thankful that God knows the desires of my heart and will bless me with them if, and only if, He knows they will bring me closer to Him!

51) I am thankful to be thankful for the life that God has blessed me with! What a wonderful life I have!

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

A Single Person's Identity by John Fisher

This was given to me about 4 months back. None of the words that follow are mine, but it is way too good of an article to just let it sit on my bookcase and not share it.

"A Single Person's Identity" by John Fisher
August 5, 1973


"I would to talk this evening about living as a single adult in the church, i.e., the body of Christ, the family of God. I'll speak from the Word and from my experience. And even though the subject will probably touch only a limited segment of the church, the principles should apply to us all.

"In the last few years, I have noticed a problem in my own personal life as a single person. The problem is that I live with a pressure toward marriage, because marriage in suppose to be the only way a person can be mature. We have had a lot of fantastic teaching here at PBC, and a great deal of Christian literature is available, about the fact that marriage is an example of the Lord's love for the Church, and about what marriage does for two people in causing them to be mature in Christ. Though taking their masks off and coming to know one another they can learn many deep lessons.

"But I have also noticed that it is possible to make such a statement on this subject that an imbalance in produced. I have even hear people make statements such as, 'It's impossible to be a mature Christian without being married.' This kind of thinking produces some problems for those of us who are single. I have notices that the suggestion creeps into the back of my mind that I am incomplete, in a 'holding pattern' fling around trying to find the airport so that I can get my feet on the ground to start living. This kind of thinking keeps me from living now to be what God has called me to be. It can be very subtle. It comes up even in the way I live around the house and the way I keep things in my room. I keep thinking, 'When...'-- 'When I have a place of my own...' or 'When I have someone with me... then I'll do this or that.'

"On top of that, there are those dear, loving, well-meaning married couples who think that everyone ought to be like they are, and who seek to push us together. You know, 'Matchmaker, Matchmaker, make me a match...!' That's not much help, either! So there is a tension which has been produced in this situation, and I think there are probably many people who feel it.

"What I would like to do it turn to the Scriptures and very quickly go through some passages in which both Jesus and Paul say something about being single. We'll turn first to Matthew 19, beginning in verse 3. Jesus is being tested by the Pharisees. As often, they are trying to trap Him:

     And some Pharisees came to Him, testing Him, and saying "Is it lawful for a man to divorce his wife for any cause at all?" And He answered and said, "Have you not read, that He who created them from the beginning and made them male and female, and said, 'For this cause a man shall leave his father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh.' Consequently, they are no more two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let no man separate. They (the Pharisees) said to Him, "Why then did Moses command to give her a certificate and divorce her?" )In other words, "Why did Moses allow divorce, then, if this is true?") He (Jesus) said to them, "Because of your hardness of heart, Moses permitted you to divorce your wives, but from the beginning it has not been this way."

"The Law had to be altered because of the depravity of man and the brokenness of his relationships. But God's intention was never for marriage to be that way at all. The two become one, and you cannot separate two who have become one. This is a teaching on marriage and divorce, but Jesus' disciples force Him into another subject, verse 9:

"And I say to you, whoever divorces his wife, except for immorality, and marries another, commits adultery."

"The disciples respond to this heavy statement:

The disciples said to Him in reply, "If the relationship of the man with his wife is like this, it is better not to marry!"

"They were beginning to realize the seriousness Jesus placed on the marriage relationship. And they said 'Wow! If that's the way it is, it's better not even to fool around with it, not even get married.' Notice Jesus' very interesting reply--he does not disagree. He says:

"Not all men can accept this satement, but only those whom it has been given."

 Singleness is a Gift

"What He is saying here is that to some people, singleness is a gift. Have you ever thought of viewing your singleness as a gift from God? That is the way Jesus views it. I am not suggesting that your singleless in necessarily permanent, but I am talking about where you are right now. You can view your singleness, at this point, as a gift from God. You might want to move on. There is a littler more about that in the next verse, but I don't have time for it. It is a good passage for you to study at home. But I did want you to see that Jesus called singleness of a gift.

A Single Person's Identity

"Now, let us turn to I Corinthians 7. This is na interesting chapter in this connection. In verse 7, Paul says:

Yet, I wish that all men were even as I myself am. However, each man has his own gift from God, one in this manner, and another in that. But I say t the unmarried and to the widows that it is good for them that they remain (single) even as I.

"Paul uses that same word 'gift.' He calls singleness a gift. The state in which you are living now, if you are single, is a gift from the Lord. I asked myself, 'Why is this a gift?' I read further in the chapter and Paul answered the question for me in verses 32-35:  

But I want you to be free from concern. On who is unmarried is concerned about the things of the Lord, how he may please the Lord: but the one who is married is concerned about the things of the world, how me my please his wife, and his interests are divided. And the woman who is unmarried, and the virgin, is concerned about the things of the Lord, that he may be holy in body and spirit; but one who is married is concerned about the things of the world, how she may please her husband. And this I say, for your benefit, not to put a restraint upon you but to promote what is seemly, and to secure undistracted devotion to the Lord.

"Paul is speaking very positively here. He elevated the state of singleness to the point where a person can give his undivided devotion to the Lord, can be totally set aside to please him, with no conflicts of interest. Because let's face it, marriage entails responsibility, higher responsibilities, more dealing with the world, and more financial complications. Please don't misunderstand me; he is not speaking against marriage here at all. He is speaking positively, and is encouraging the single people to realize the blessings and advantages of his singleness.

Don't Say, Tomorrow we will do Such and Such

"This truth has begun to set me free to realize that God has called me to live now. He hasn't called me to life four years from now. I don't know what is going to be happening four years from now. I have no idea. He wants me to realize my full potential as a man right now, to be thankful about where I am, and to enjoy it to the fullest. I have a strange feeling that the single person who is always wishing he were married will probably get married, discover all that is involved, and wish her were single again! He will ask himself, 'Why didn't I used that time for the Lord when I didn't have do many other obligations? Why didn't I give myself totally to Him when I was single?' So I encourage those of you who are single to praise God about your state, to devote yourself fully to Him, and to realize the full potential which God has called you to live right now.

"It has been a great encouragement to me to discover that there are Christian man who have not married and yet who are very mature leaders in the community. One man who is very dear to me is Lyle Hillegas, President of Westmount College. Lyle is a single man, and God has called him to that, at least for now. And Lyle is a responsible, gifted man of God. That fact has helped satisfy my own desire to find 'models' whom I can emulate in patterning my own Christian life. Sometimes all the models we see are married people, and we say 'Where do I fit in?' But God has models for single people. You can find them everywhere. And they are serving the Lord. The reason they are good examples is that they have begun to learn to truly give themselves to the Lord, and to enjoy where they are. Paul says, 'I have learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.'

"I have been talking up to this point about how a single person should view himself in the body of Christ. I am going to turn a corner now, and talk about relationships between single adults in the body of Christ. As I grew up in the church, I occasionally heard young men speaking about bachelorhood only half-joking in terms like 'Celibates for Christ' and 'Bachelors till the Rapture!' You might have assumed from what I have said so far that I am suggesting that asserting yourself as a single person as realizing God's full potential for your life somehow means avoiding people of the opposite sex or setting yourself aside.

"Art Hoppe, a humorous columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, wrote an article proposing 'Celibate Liberation' in an effort to counteract all the other 'liberation' movements--Woman's Lib and Gay Lib. He called this movement 'Mono Lib.' His classic example is the guy who walks alone out of the bar, puts on his hat, and asks himself 'My place or mine?'

"That is not all what I have in mind! As a matter of fact, what the Lord is beginning to show me, in my new found freedom, is that he wants to drive me into relationships, to put me in them, and through them to teach me and enable me to grow. He wants me to minister as a brother in Christ and to get to know my sisters.

The Pursuit of Love

"I think that a great deal of our tension, not only in our own self-image as single people, but also in our relationships with members of the opposite sex, has arisen because deep down inside, what we are pursuing is the state of marriage. We have gotten this goal into our heads, and we are working toward it. And because the married state is so exaulted and is suppose to be where maturity lies, we start thinking, 'Gee, when is this going to happen to me? Where is my marriage partner?'

"We have gone to classes and have heard teaching on the subject, so we devise our blueprint for the perfect marriage partner. Then, we go running around with our list of the characteristics (speaking from a brother's point of view, now) that we want in a girl and fit everybody up to it. We start to get to know a sister, and ... check, check, check! We have spiritual items that we look for, and the flesh usually throws in a few too ... be realistic.

"You know what happens then. We get down to item seven or eight on the list and she doesn't measure up. She we say, 'Good-bye. She's not the one, let's try another one.' Because we are pursuing this idealized conception of marriage, we have preconceived ideas of what that is all about. This causes all kinds of frustrated reflection and comparisons.

"What I really wont to share with you tonight, the idea which is closest to my heart, is what I have discovered that what God wants us to pursue is not marriage, but love, and that marriage is not an end in itself; it is a means to an end. The end is love. Marriage is the servant of love. If we are pursuing marriage, we are pursuing the wrong thing. Love starts to become subservient to marriage. We start making up our own ideas of what love is, and we don't allow the Lord to show is and teach us what love actually is through the relationship He gives us. 'Pursue love, not marriage,' This is such a simple principle, but it has set me free in the past few months in my relationship with my Christian sisters.

A Single Person's Identity

"Pursuing love immediately does all sorts of wonderful things! It alleviates all the questioning. 'Id this the one because that is not so important at this point. We are learning how to minister, how to build up one another, how to be friends. We have had such great teaching on this subject in recent weeks. Dave Roper's message last week on the friendship of Jonathan and David is beautiful. And I was so excited this morning to hear Dave speaking on David and Abigail because it was so perfectly in tune with what I wanted to say tonight about how the sisters can turn and minister to the bothers. You see, when we are free to pursue loving one another in the Lord, we are free from all the tensions, pressures, and hassles of trying to find a mate.

Principles for Relationships

"I need to tell you what I mean by 'pursuing love.' The standard of love must always be that expressed in I Corinthians 13. As far as I am concerned, no other definition of love is worth spending much time on. In verses 4 through 7 there is a checklist of eight characteristics of true love. Check and see if you truly understand what love it. This passage stands in tremendous contrast to the 'love' of the world, the common, ordinary usage of that word, the 'love' we hear of today in songs and movies. Listen to the words here: 'Love is patient. Love is kind. It is not jealous. Love does not brag. It is not arrogant, does not act unbecomingly, does not seek its own (it is not possessive). It is not provoked, does not take into account a wrong suffered, does not rejoice in unrighteousness, but rejoices with the truth. It bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.' That is the love we're talking about. It is a giving love. It is a fruit of the Spirit of God. It is impossible to have apart from Jesus Christ alive in your life. It is the life of God living out through you to enfold other people.

Acceptance

"I would like to talk now about two very practical areas concerning the pursuit of love in relationships between mature single adults. These are two principles which come out of my own experience and are certainly backed up by the Word. The first is ACCEPTANCE. That is, instead of coming to a person with my preconceived ideas of what I hope this person already is, I come as a viewer, a receiver. This person is to be accepted by me because she (or he) is accepted by the Lord. The Lord loves this person, and died for this person, and I am to accept the fact I am to stand back and allow myself to be ministered to, to be blessed and encouraged by this person, to accept her (or him) the way she (or he) is and then just sit back and discover what is there. 

"This is a fantastic, exciting way to relate to people! If we view the people we meet in life as a discovery, then we don't put bonds on them, we don't force them to conform to our preconceptions. We can accept them and learn from them, and grow from what they give to us. God accepted us while we were yet sinners (Romans 5:8). He didn't place any behavioral criteria on us. He accepted us in our filth. Now, are we going to place more restrictive standards upon anyone else? The Lord says, 'As I accept you, so you accept your brothers.'



"In this pursuit of love, acceptance is what helps us to be able to take our masks off. This is the quiet, slow process of revealing myself to another person. It may be difficult, ever painful, very painful. But it is rich and deep and fulfilling. Have you ever had that experience of revealing yourself to another person and have that person start to open himself to you in a free relationship of acceptance? You don't have to wait until marriage to experience that, you can start now. We should be relating to all Christians in a way--brothers with brothers, brothers with sisters, sisters with sisters--in a discovery relationship of being unveiled before one another. We really need to help each other take our masks off, and acceptance is the key to that.

 Commitment

"The other principle is COMMITMENT. This is a quality which I really sense is very much missed in our brother/sister relationships. What has happened is that a lot of us have come to use the brother/sister relationship basically on a cop-out from responsibility. The way I see it, it is actually a taking on of responsibility for a brother to get to know a sister or a sister to get to know a brother. I am speaking primarily to the brothers now, because I've talked to a lot of them about this, and I've talked to some sisters, too, who have been deeply hurt--too many who have been deeply hurt. In fact, one of my motivations for being here tonight is that I have talked to so many sisters who have been in relationships which have started to open, in which they have started to reveal themselves, and the brother has started to reveal himself, they have started to spend some time ... and then the weirdness has set in.

"By 'weirdness' I mean the pressure which results from the prospect of marriage--raising disquieting inner questions like, 'Is this the one? Is this THAT relationship?' -- yet without our communicating our feelings and questions to the other people. This 'weirdness' starts to creep in, both people get uptight, and the guy splits! The sister has opened and bared her heart, but the brother has turned and left her. This has happened many times because of 'Well, this is just a good brother/sister relationship, right?' We use that, sometimes, as a cop-out from the responsibility involved in truly getting to know another.

"I have begun to see that there is really no back door in any relationship. Once you start a relationship, in the kingdom of God, even if it starts to get difficult, you have a responsibility to work that difficulty out with each other--you pray, you talk, you seek the Lord's mind as to what is happening. You are not to run in fear, because in God's book, there is no back door to relationships. You are to close the door behind you and to move forward. The definitions of the relationship may change. But the Lord is striving for us all to become one in Him and any move counter to that oneness is a move against the Lord's Will. He desires oneness.

"Perhaps I can share just one personal experience which will help to show you what I mean. In recent months, I have gotten to know a sister whom I met in South Africa. We met again in Redlands, California which I was teaching there last winter, and we got to know each other in a very free relationship. I realized that she had been 'burned' in relationships before, and she was very cautious about showing anything of her deep inner feelings and desires. But I noticed that as we got to know each other she began to trust me more, and she began to reveal more of her life to me. It was mutual, and we began to reveal more of her life to me. It was mutual, and we began to encourage one another and to open up toward each other.

"And then the weirdness came! This was before I learned these things. As a matter of fact, this relationship was one of the factors which helped teach me. The weirdness come, we had a good talk, and we took a step back. We said, hey, we are really not sure where we're going. Neither of us is thinking about marriage right now, so let's not keep heading there, 'brother/sister,' right? Right!

A Single Person's Identity

"As I drive home that night, the Lord showed me something. My responsibility to that sister was more then ever to remain committed. If there ever was a time I was responsible to stay with her and be communicative, it was then. The next time we got together, she said, 'You know, I thought I was never going to see you again.' If I had left, it would have been one more time, and it would have been that much more difficult for her to open up her life the next time to someone else. We both discovered together that something good happened at this point. We weren't worrying about marriage--we had erased that. We simply began to minister to one another and to pursue the meeting of each other's needs as a man and a woman. Now, it is a fantastic relationship, and it is still going on! Is this striking a cord?

Pursuing Love

"I so appreciate Dave's word this morning, and I'd like to close by reinforcing his major point. What Dave showed us so beautifully from the life of Abigail was that she ministered to David's life as a sister in the Lord, calling him to the truth in love. Please realize that these principles are not only for single people, but for all brothers and sister in the entire body of Christ. One of my greatest experiences this past year has been getting to know Ann-Marie Ritchie. I have spent the last two years with Ron Ritchie for discipleship and teaching. But in the past year I've discoered his other half for what she is-- not Ron Ritchie's wife, but the person Ann-Marie. She has blessed me to no end! She has ministered to me, encouraged me, built me up as a man. We are talking about righteous relationships, and being free to have them. And God wants us to have them.

"The last thing I want to say is, if God leads you, begin to commit yourself to a special person. Step out in faith, jump in, and do it! It involves a risk, tremendous risk. It is a lot easier to keep everyone a certain distance, and if the relationship starts to get weird, to split. What I encourage you to do is to pursue love, in spite of your fear, and watch God set you free! If anyone should be having relationships which are open and beautiful and righteous between men and women, it is Christians. That is what the Lord has put us here to do."