Down the streets of our lives march a thousand kinds of souls. We love differently, we sin differently, and each of us see the world differently. Yet we’re all given life by the same breath of God. We’re each living in His one story.
Maybe there are as many different kinds of people as there are expressions of God’s Love. And maybe we all can feel it: that there’s this unique expression wanting to come out of us, wanting to play its role in this world. And while we’re each wanting to let this expression come out, we do a million wonky things. Because these bodies we live in are broken. Because it can feel impossible to navigate the fears that hold back the true expression of us that is wanting to come free. And truly these broken bodies do not have the strength in themselves.
Perhaps we all have different broken ways of trying. For myself, in longing to let out the person God made me to be, I have at times, written poetic kinds of things to people hoping they’ll see what I need, or what I’m trying to ask them. I think often I don’t consciously realize that that is what I’m doing. And there’s nothing wrong, in itself, with being poetic. It’s a piece of my personality that I enjoy and that I believe has many wonderful uses to it. But to use poetic language to try to communicate my needs to the people in my life… it doesn’t give them much to go on and it leaves me feeling depressed because I’m trying to communicate my needs and my needs are going unmet.
And at its core, when I want to ask someone a question and end up finding any other way to try to communicate with them, what it comes right down to is this fact here: I am afraid.
I’m sure there’s many more ways I’ve done it and many that I probably don’t know about yet. And more than that, I’m sure there are innumerable ways that we as people try to communicate with each other when we are feeling afraid.
We are all different kinds of broken. Doing different kinds of broken things to try to let this person inside us be the person we’re made to be. So many indirect ways we try to let ourselves come out of hiding. We’ve all done wonky things trying to communicate what we need. Hoping that someone will see what we need. Often we’re so accustomed to our own ways that we don’t realize how indirect we can be about getting our needs met.
It’s a good thing to have needs and to know what your needs are. And even what your wants are. When blind Bartimaeus called out to Jesus, Jesus asked him one question, “What do you want me to do for you?” (Mark 10:51) And the answer Bartimaeus gave was simple, “I want to see.” When Jesus asked him the question, he wasn’t ashamed to speak his desire. Bartimaeus knew what he wanted. Jesus saw through Bartimaeus’ cries for help. Where some would have dismissed Bartimaeus as crazy in his crying out to Jesus, Jesus cut through what some saw crazy. He got to Bartimaeus’ heart with one simple question.
The spirit inside us has it’s own specific needs and desires in learning to let the old ways of the flesh die and continually come alive as the person God made us to be. In the funny things we can do hoping someone will see what we need, Jesus knocks on the door of our heart, “What do you want?”
Our Father invites His children to be honest about what we want.
“What causes quarrels and what causes fights among you? Is it not this, that your passions are at war within you? You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and connot obtain, so you fight and quarrel. You do not have, because you do not ask. You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions.” James 4:1-3.
Our Father invites us to ask our honest questions in this world.
It’s simply a fact that each of us have needs and desires that are a normal and necessary part of us becoming the person we are made to be. If we are not honest with ourselves, with God and with each other about those needs and desires, our spirit will hurt and find a way somehow to express those things in ways that aren’t fully honest.
Sometimes I think it’s true that we aren’t sure how to be fully honest. We’re learning and God gives grace for the process. While we carry the brokenness of this life, we get to share in fellowship with our friend Jesus, who carried every bit of it before us. He didn’t want the cross, but He wanted us and He willingly laid down His will for the will of the Father. He laid Himself down in trust that this suffering way, was the path to joy.
God walks with us through the hard places, comforting us, and knowing that He is working these things for our good. He is growing us as people who are becoming who He made us to be.
And what is more than true is this: different kinds of broken people all find healing in the same kind of broken place.
His broken body on that cross is the healing place for all of us. Here are at His cross we are safe to fall apart at His feet, where His blood and His Love takes the role of putting pieces together. We can not fix ourselves, but we can fix our eyes on Him and hold onto His Love as people in desperate need.
In the goodness of His Love, we can say it in His presence.
In the goodness of His Love, we can say it with His people.
In the goodness of His Love, we can learn to not be ashamed of our honest needs.
I need a friend.
I want to know that I can be seen in my mess and someone will still care.
I need help finding the way through this.
I need a place to use my gifts.
I want to be able to use my abilities and serve without getting burned out.
I want to be healed.
I want to not be afraid anymore.
I need community.
I want to know that I can be useful.
I need a place to call home.
I want to know that I am not a burden.
I need a safe place to cry and fall apart.
I need Love.
It’s okay and good to say those things, even when we don’t know how. In the Love of God, there is no shame in what we truly need or what we truly want. And in His Love, He will bring us home one step at a time, while our desires are finding their life inside of the kingdom of God.
Below, I share a poem kind of prayer that I wrote in a season of struggling to be honest with what I was wanting in a certain situation. Writing the poem helped me find comfort in the Love of the Friend who can always meet me where I am. It’s His Love that emboldens us to know we’re safe to be more honest.
What is friendship?
And why do seasons change? Is it winter?
And is there a marked place when a friendship moves to winter?
And does winter last forever?
Can a broken person be a friend?
And can a broken friendship be healed?
And what is a friend’s silence?
And what is a friend’s forever questions?
And when will brokenness be gone?
And are we the same kinds of broken?
Or different through and through?
Will the sun shine here again?
Did I imagine it before?
Do I know how to be a friend?
Or do I see the whole world wrong?
Do you know that I still care?
At least, I believe I do.
Is my heart beyond repair?
Is there healing yet to be?
Can the Son still touch my face with His own loving mercies?
Will Light yet have it’s way with the darkness here in me?
I believe it will. And need help my unbelief.
Is Jesus’ blood enough to heal all broken things?
Can it heal what keeps me asking and pleading to be seen?
Can His Love break through the deafening roar of the silence?
Is it enough alone to fill the aching things in me?
I do believe it can. And need help my unbelief.
Can I fix these things myself?
Can I stop longing to be seen?
Can I offer anything that fills the void of the silence?
Can I truly make right any one thing I’ve done wrong?
I can’t, but I trust that there is purpose to the darkness. And need help my unbelief.
Can I understand these struggles?
Or reason out the ways?
Can I say with any confidence that I know all that’s right?
Can I even fathom God’s own working in a place?
I can’t, but know He does. And need help my unbelief.
And perhaps what’s here to see is maybe all along, we’re all more different than we know,
And more alike than we could say.
And maybe what’s true is different kinds of broken people,
Are all very much the same. We are mirrors to each other.
And maybe while we all do different kinds of broken things,
We all find healing in the same kind of broken place.
Maybe friendship in this world is a broken kind of beauty,
That shows us the kind of Love we stand here in need of.
What is friendship?
And what is Love?
“Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends.” John 15:13.