If I find in myself a desire which no experience in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that I was made for another world. -C.S. Lewis

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

A Blessing and a Curse


I have not posted a single blog entry since I got my job and moved to Illinois. I could say that this is because transitioning is stressful and I was adjusting to a lot of new life experiences at once, but I moved here over nine months ago, so I think that excuse has expired. I could also say that my life is now so full with my job and my friends that I don’t have enough free time to post anymore, but I think the amount of time I spend watching television refutes that argument pretty well. No, if I’m honest with myself, I’ve let myself stagnate and I haven’t written anything because there hasn’t been anything for me to write.

Don’t get me wrong – I’ve been through a lot in the last nine months and I’ve certainly had to grow in many ways as I’ve taken further steps into adulthood. And I’ve loved almost every minute of it. My life has overflowed with many blessings and I’m so thankful for that.

But here’s the thing about blessings: they’re dangerous.

Last year, while I was still greatly struggling and waiting for God to direct my life, I posted this to my blog:

I’m afraid that if God gives me comfort, if he gives me a job and money and an apartment and friends, I will wander away from him again. I won’t feel the same desperate need of him, and look to him for every meal. I’ll forget what it’s like to be incapable of making it through a single day without his help.

Re-reading those words – my own words – is painfully convicting, because that’s exactly what’s happened. My prayers for a job were answered, and I’ve wandered away. I’ve coasted. I’ve gotten comfortable.

The problem is that a life full of blessing starts to feel like a life of self-sufficiency. I have grown to believe that I have everything under control. Don’t worry, God, I’ve got this now. As if he isn’t the one who gave me my steady paycheck and my incredibly supportive group of friends! As if he is not still the one who gives me every meal, every breath that I breathe in!

I don’t want to push God into taking away the security crutches I’ve so carefully propped up around my life. I don’t want to hold out my hand for his blessings, and then promptly spin on my heel and walk away, forgetting where I received them. I wrote that first blog entry during my unemployment because I wanted to remember. I wanted to remember God’s faithfulness, and I wanted to remember my own dependency. I wanted never to turn away from the one who is truly holding me up.

I do want to thank God for the many, many blessings he’s heaped on me this past year. He’s given me all I asked for and more. And I pray that he will remind me daily that he is the one sustaining me with these good things that could just as easily be taken away. I’m grateful for them, and I hope I can use them to bless others. But strangely, I thank him most of all for that time when I didn’t have as many blessings, when my own worldly need was so great, so strong and painful and potent that I could not rest in anything but him. It felt like I was walking on thin air and somehow not falling. I miss that feeling, and I would never give up that experience, because it’s through that I now understand, so well, the only thing I truly need to continue to live. May I never forget.