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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

faith & spirituality

Learning the Art of Self-challenge by Jason Jaggard

January 7, 2013

Here’s another slice of New Year’s wisdom, this time by speaker and writer Jason Jaggard. Challenging advice.

Through taking healthy risks that make you a better person or the  world a better place, you begin to develop a deeper appetite for good.  At first it might not be very tasty. Taking even a small risk can be  more difficult than it sounds. And that is why we have to practice. We  have to develop the skill of challenging ourselves.

We want the act of making healthy choices to become a natural and  authentic part of who we are. But before something can become a habit,  it often is a hassle. Put another way: if we want new habits to become  instinctual, then they must first be intentional. And in order for that  to happen, we have to practice the sacred art of self-challenge.

sparkwordI don’t want to freak you out, but what we’re really talking about is  obedience. Obedience to God is the path that leads to Life. It’s the  path that transforms you into the person you long to be. And obedience always requires risk.

What’s amazing is that much of our obedience is instinctual. In at  least some areas of life, we naturally make healthy choices. We  naturally smile at a stranger, or perhaps we have a great work ethic or  are naturally curious or easygoing.

Yet we can’t define obedience solely in terms of what comes naturally. Often our greatest moments of obedience come when it is least  natural. Perhaps our natural tendency in certain situations is  unhealthy or hurtful. Or perhaps what we naturally want to do is  nothing, to avoid taking action when action is called for. In these  moments we have to choose something else, something we don’t want to do,  something that, most likely, will move us into the space of the  unknown.

I want to be a person who is able to act—who is able to obey—even when it’s unnatural.

Intentionality and risk are the ways we develop a greater capacity to  obey. When we say, “I’m going to do this thing that I wouldn’t normally  do,” we are developing the capacity to grow into the people we were  meant to be.

When Jesus invited people to follow Him, He was inviting them to obey  Him. There are parts of you that already reflect God’s character, parts  of your uniqueness that are expressions of something God wanted to say  when He created you. Those are already consistent with following Jesus.

Maybe it’s your smile. Maybe it’s your way with people. Maybe it’s your work ethic. Maybe it’s your sense of right and wrong. Maybe it’s your intelligence or your curiosity for life. Maybe it’s your sense of responsibility or your flare for fun.

These things are good just the way they are. It’s easy to obey when  God calls us to things we naturally love. When God calls us to the stuff  we already like (which happens a lot more than we realize), it’s one of  the great pleasures of life.

Risk is the central narrative of the scriptures. When I do Spark  Group trainings with faith communities, I always have participants do  this exercise:

1. Pick any person in the scriptures that comes to mind. 2. Identify the risk God called that person to take.

This is surprisingly easy. And once people get going, it’s hard to  get them to stop. Abraham: stopped living with his parents at age  seventy and moved into no man’s land to start his own nation. Moses:  even with a speech impediment, he stood up to the most powerful man in  the world to liberate an enslaved people. Mary: endured the shame of  people assuming she had been unfaithful to her fiancé. Joseph: remained  committed to a teenage girl, his fiancée, who in the eyes of their  neighbors and extended family was almost certainly an adulteress.

Samson.

Ruth.

The apostle Paul.

Rahab.

The twelve fellas who quit their jobs to follow Jesus, most of whom were later killed for doing so. The people whose stories are recorded in the history of the scriptures  all took risks—often huge risks—to be a part of what God was doing in  the world. It seems like a prerequisite for being mentioned in the  narrative of the movement of God is the willingness and courage to risk. Like God’s people throughout history, we can jump into life in ways  that only we can so that God can move in ways we cannot. Call it faith  if you want, but in terms of everyday life, it’s risk. And it’s through  risk that God can change our lives.

Faith. Love. Hope.

Risk. Compassion. Optimism.

When we begin to live out these values, we create a context that is  thick with potential. When we have the courage to take risks of compassion that produce optimism in others, we create space for God to move and work. We begin to form our souls into the kind of textured lives that gives God traction to guide us into the future He dreamed we could  participate in. And we become fully alive.

This is what Jesus did two thousand years ago. He assembled a team  and spent three years with them, throwing them into the deep end of  serving humanity. Coaching them. Teaching them. And then He kept saying  weird things, such as “Have faith in me and you will do greater things  than what I have done.”

And then, before He turned His followers and friends loose to serve  humanity on God’s behalf, He said: “Go, create cultures of servant leadership, of risk, compassion, and optimism out of every society.”

He looked into the eyes of folks like you and me and said, “Go.” Risk. Care. Create. Just like the people you’ve read about in this book, you have ideas  that need to be set free. God has placed potential inside you, potential  for creative joy and love, strength and peace. And all of that needs to  be unleashed.

So risk. Choose something. Do something. Partner together with God  and others to pull off something beautiful that serves humanity. It will  be hard. You will experience failure. But I promise, you will never regret it.

As Steven Ma put it: “It’s definitely a challenge. It’s definitely a risk. But most important: it’s fun.” This is the way the world heals. It is the way God has chosen to move  through the contours of history. He has chosen our hearts, our feet, our  fingertips. Some people will hear God’s voice only if it sounds like  ours, inviting them into the adventure of hope that we have been invited  into.

This is how we spark our world. When we begin to realize that  learning is a verb and that life is the best classroom. When we begin  taking risks of compassion in the context of community. When we start  intentionally leaning into our relationships, our careers, our faith.  When we step outside of our comfort zones and experience a life that can  exist only if God is with us.

Our world will begin to change.

One small risk at a time.

Adapted from Spark by Jason Jaggard with permission of WaterBrook Press, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: faith & spirituality Tagged With: healthy risks, jason jaggard, new year's challenges, obedience, spark

This year: Dream Bigger, Start Smaller by Steven Furtick

December 31, 2012

greaterword-2I’m pleased to feature these encouraging words from author Steven Furtick today. Wise advice for the new year.

I’ve met a lot of people who knew what it was to burn plows and set  out to live for God but didn’t know what to do next. They prayed, they  made a commitment—and they got stuck. As a pastor, I’ve seen it over and  over again. As a man trying to live for God, I’ve experienced it over  and over again.

I’m guessing you’ve made plenty of resolutions about stuff you needed  to start doing or stop doing. Maybe you were going to start praying or  reading your Bible more.

Or maybe you were going to stop smoking or boycott carbohydrates or  stop looking at pornography or stop saying mean things about family  members behind their backs. Maybe you decided to break away from a  relationship you knew was unhealthy for you.

The way I see it, there are two major reasons why well-intentioned people like us get stuck after we burn our plows.

One, we don’t think big enough. Two, we don’t start small enough.

I’m not trying to talk like Yoda here. Thinking big enough and  starting small enough are two sides of the same coin. So I not only want  to motivate you to dream bigger dreams for your life. I also want to  challenge you to take realistic steps of obedience that can actually  make God’s vision come to pass.

After all, our God “is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask  or imagine” (Ephesians 3:20). It is true that we often settle for dreams  and visions that are far less than those God has for us. And He wants  us to experience much more. If I didn’t believe that, the title of this  book would be Samer.

So of course God wants you to believe big—it’s in His very nature.  I’ve devoted my whole ministry to inspiring people with this truth.  Preacher Dwight L. Moody made a statement that I love: “If God is your  partner, make your plans big.” That way of thinking makes my heart race.

But we’re not going to see God’s bigger vision fulfilled in our lives  just because we spend more time thinking transcendent thoughts. We  don’t attain greater things simply by lying on the couch and  concentrating on the possibilities of a better life. Alas, sitting for  thousands of hours with my headphones on listening to Guns N’ Roses and  imagining I was Axl Rose didn’t translate into my being the lead singer  of the world’s most dangerous rock’n’roll band.

You do have to be willing to think big. But the active ingredient of  God’s greater work through us is our willingness to start small.

I want to show you an incredible image in one of the first main-stage  miracles Elisha performs after Elijah departs and leaves the ministry  in his successor’s hands. It demonstrates the principle that small steps  and hard work precipitate a move of God. That human action prepares the  way for supernatural favor.

It comes from 2 Kings 3, and it goes like this:

King Joram is ruling over Israel during the years when the kingdom is divided. When the king of Moab rebels against him, the frightened king enlists King Jehoshaphat of Judah and the king of Edom to help him. Their combined military force should be fearsome against the Moabites—but they almost immediately run out of water for their armies and animals. Now they are preparing to face a terrifying foe while facing an even more terrifying fate: dying of thirst.

Par for the course in Israel’s history, the crisis drives King Joram  to look for divine help. He isn’t desperate for God, but he is desperate  for a solution. King Jehoshaphat asks if there is a prophet who could  consult God for them. A servant reminds him of Elisha, the artist  formerly known as Mr. Plow. So the three kings and their entourages go  looking for Elisha.

Elisha confirms to the kings that water will flow from Edom by the  time the sun comes up the next morning. Their armies and their animals  will have plenty to drink. The drought is almost over. God is going to  deliver Moab to His people just as they prayed for. Hallelujah,  somebody?

But he tells the kings to take a small, ludicrous step first.

This is what the Lord says: Make this valley full of ditches. (verse 16)

Why would anybody in their right mind dig ditches to hold rain that isn’t even in the forecast?

Because that’s the way faith works. When you know God has promised  you greater things, you don’t wait for a sign to appear before you  respond. The kings wanted a miracle. They would get their miracle. But  first they got a work order: This is no time for the power of positive  thinking. Tie a bandanna around your head and pick up a shovel.

It would have been great if all the army had to do was sit around  thinking hydration-related thoughts or had a few guided exercises to  help them visualize the water. But that’s not how God operates.

It’s as if God says, “If you really believe I’m going to do what I  told you I would do, get busy. Show Me your faith, and then I’ll show  you My faithfulness. Do your part. If you will do what I asked you to  do, I will be faithful to My word.

“If you’ll dig the ditches, I’ll send the rain.”

The entire nation must have pitched in and dug all night, because  they got it done. The next morning the water arrived. As promised. As  always. The newly installed ditches were full of water, the armies and  animals were refreshed, and the joint army easily overtook the Moabites.

I think Elisha used the process of ditch digging to teach Israel this important paradox of great faith:

Only God can send the rain. But He expects you to dig the ditches.

It really comes down to this: What small steps and practical  preparations is God asking you to make for the greater life He wants you  to live? What ditches is He asking you to dig?

You can’t expect God to entrust you with a big dream if He can’t trust you to make a small start.

You can’t have the apostle Paul’s walk with God overnight. Big dream.

But you can pray ten minutes a day beginning tomorrow. Small start.

You can’t entirely mend a broken relationship overnight. Big dream.

But you can have a conversation and open the door, write the letter, make the call, say, “I’m sorry.” Small start.

If your kid is far from God, you can’t bring him back overnight. Big dream.

But you could start praying for him every day. Small start.

Notice what Elisha doesn’t say; he doesn’t tell the kings to dig one ditch. No singular ditch digging on this prophet’s watch.

Instead, make this valley full of ditches. Plural.

Believe that God is going to send a lot of rain.

If we really believe God is an abundant God, ready and willing to  bless our lives in greater ways than we could ever imagine, we ought to  be digging all kinds of ditches. In our relationships. In our careers.  In our ministries. In every area of our lives, there ought to be  heavy-duty equipment on site. Moving dirt. Making preparation.

And we ought to dig ditches using every means available. We can dig  ditches with our words. With our prayers. With our expectations. Even  with our thoughts.

How many ditches are you willing to dig? How deep will you dig them?  You’re not digging alone. And it’s not in vain. God has a downpour  scheduled in your near future. The deeper you dig, the greater the  rainfall has the potential to be.

Adapted from Greater by Steven Furtick with permission of Multnomah Books, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

Filed Under: faith & spirituality, holidays Tagged With: dream big, new year's resolutions, prepare for rain

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