This February, I decided to buy myself a pair of leather boots for the first time in my adult life and it felt like a big deal. Based on the price tag, I would guess it’s imitation leather maybe, but they look like leather boots just the same. They’re brown ankle boots with a bit of a heel and ruffles around the cuff. It’s not a style I’m completely used to yet, and they’re a bit tight on me, but I’m hoping they’ll break in a little.
Usually in the colder months, I’ve mostly worn boots that were more of the ug type style. Those make me feel comfy and relaxed when I’m wearing them, while the leather boots make me feel intentional, on purpose and womanly. Or something like that.
I’ve thought about buying a pair of leather boots for a while, and there we go. I did it, and now I get to walk around feeling a little extra stylish.
Some decisions are fun and easy like that… what to wear on your feet.
And some decisions are not easy. Like when you’re trying to discern what it means in your own life to be still and wait on God.
The invitation to wait on God is freely given in our Bibles, but I can struggle so to grasp onto this in practice. I think something inside all of us instinctively knows that the Bible is not telling us to do absolutely nothing while we sit back and watch life happen. And when we look at the rest of the Bible, we can be assured, contextually, that this is not what it is saying. Our first call as God’s people is to Love and Love is an active thing, not an inactive thing. Yet, we are invited and called to wait on God.
“But they who wait for the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.” (Isa. 40:31)
This verse gives us the promise: waiting is the place where God gives us His strength.
It doesn’t encourage us to go to intellect to find strength . It doesn’t encourage us to turn to passion to find strength. And while each of those have an important role in our life and our journey of learning, while each one of these is powerful as God’s own grace and strength uses it, neither one of these, themselves is the place where we are promised by God that He will give us His strength.
Sometimes, a decision to wait can feel like it goes against the grain of my intellect. And if not that, it feels like it goes against the grain of my passion. Because I have an intellectual understanding of life and a passionate understanding of life and sometimes I’m not sure how in the world to make sense of them together.
Whether I am having a moment where I want to lean more on my intellect or my passion, my understanding of life and of Love is easily offended either way, by the idea of waiting. But in the Spirit of God, waiting is the place where God gives His strength to our whole person.
In his description of Love, it was the very first thing Paul wanted us to know: Love is patient. 1 Corinthians 13:4.
Why is it so difficult for my mind and heart to feel at peace together in the intentional choice to wait? Why can the two of them feel at such a war with each other in what it means to wait on God and is there a place where the two of them, my mind and my heart, can find peace with each other?
Because when my mind and my heart cannot join hands together, I don’t know how to rest with peace, until the two of them each come to both rest together in the same Spirit.
It’s as we bring *every* need, to Him, that He gives us the beautiful promise: “And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” Phil. 4:7.
Our hearts and our minds, both, are pointed to their life and peace, in the same place.
Stillness with God is the place where truth and feelings connect with His Spirit inside of our own spirit.
When truth and feelings are disconnected in my life, I will feel out of sync and I will not be at peace.
I recently listened to Emily P. Freeman’s podcast episode entitled, “How to Cope with Disappointment.” She talked about how all of us have the tendency to start thinking in extremes and forget what is really true about our situations.
When my feelings in life are not connecting with truth, I will start thinking things like…
*I’m a terrible, worthless person.*
*They are a terrible, worthless person.*
*Life is terrible and worthless.*
In all of these examples, feelings and truth are out of sync.
Truth tells me that I am not worthless. Truth tells me that they are not worthless. And truth tells me that life is not worthless. What is truer than true is that I have worth, they have worth and life has worth. These things are undeniably true and biblical. And holding onto these truths is essential to our well-being.
The truth of those things does not invalidate my feelings and it doesn’t change the fact that I am feeling something terrible and I have reason to pay attention to what I’m feeling.
But when I bring my feelings to truth, I can draw more balanced thoughts from what I am feeling. When my feelings and truth are in sync, I am more likely to have thoughts that go more along the lines of this:
*This situation makes me feel terrible and I don’t want to interact with it this way anymore. We need to try something else. What do I have the ability to do as part of the “we” that removes myself from what is not working while also extending a hand for connection, compassion, respect and grace to everyone involved and gives the best chances for successful change?*
Most often, it takes a messy journey to go from the place of thinking of ourselves, someone else or life as *terrible and worthless,* to the place of *This situation feels terrible and I want to change the way I interact with it.*
When truth and our feelings work together, they can normally point us in a good direction. A next step. But we are the most forgetful people and mostly none of us are strong enough to put our feelings and truth together. Rarely do we remember in the heat of a moment to think clearly about our situations instead of jumping to extremes. And rarely do we easily recognize when we keep trying different versions of the same thing over and over, expecting that maybe... maybe this time, it will work. We need a strength that is not natural to us in order to see our own reality.
Those who wait on the Lord will renew their strength.
And mostly, when everything inside me wants to jump to one end of the pool - one way of seeing them or seeing me or seeing life - mostly what I need more than anything is a still heart and mind before my God. To recognize when I’ve done what I can with what I know and it’s time to pause, and possibly just let go, of what I most want to manage.
In the pause, and in the letting go, the heart and mind have to stretch in a way that hurts. And they have to learn to flow a little differently. In the pause, the heart and mind are left with nothing else, but to bring everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving and flow into all of this together in the Spirit.
In the pause, we release what we want to keep grabbing up, desperate to manage, and lay it instead at the feet of the One who knows how to shepherd our hearts in His time.
And the peace of God which transcends all understanding will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.
And maybe waiting on God, doesn’t have to put me in this place where my heart feels like it’s being punished and labeled a disappointment, where all of it’s passion is dammed up and my life runs dry. Maybe waiting on God is an invitation to gently learn with time to let all of the heart’s passion flow into another course, a river that is more wild and free than my heart ever dreamed.
Because while the beautiful streams in this life - relationships, adventures, and lifework - are all good gifts for the heart to occupy and enjoy in her time and place, none of the streams in this life were created to be able to handle all of the wild life of these hearts of ours. Sometimes I expect the gift I’ve been given to be a place where I can gallop and run free becoming all God made me to be. But when I expect to find that in a gift God has given me, instead of in God, Himself, I will always be disappointed.
But the river of life in God holds room for her every wild dream and journey inside of His own heart. God’s heart is never a place where anyone has to tiptoe, desperate for a dance, holding themselves back, lest He draw away. How limited is our view of who God made anyone else to be and foggy is our view of the life is growing in us. Small is any human ability to hold all of anybody’s heart. For God's heart alone is the only heart that is able to contain all of who we really, truly are. And the human heart that can’t ever be fully tamed or calmed, is set free to gallop again, in all the wilds of prayer with it’s God.
She can be who she is with the One who made her, and in time, the streams she is gifted will overflow with the splashes of the dance... good gifts to enjoy with freedom. For her Father’s heart will always find hers with untamed Love in that river eternal.
Her Father’s heart will find hers for He is strong enough for her. And the failing of her weakness will always show His strength.
The failing of our weakness will always point to an unfailing God.
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Excited to share with you today, a prayer kit to help you grow in the wilds of prayer in your own journey.
Enjoy an overview exploring the unique and heart-grounding ways that the people of the Bible used prayer.
Learn to use a few Scriptures to guide your heart in opening up it's hungriest places into untamed prayer.
And use your five senses in the sensory sheet, to inspire your own unique weekly adventure into the heart of your God.
Prayer Foundations: A simple guide to freshen your prayer life.
You can get it here below. I pray it's a blessing. And today I simply pray that whoever you are reading this, are blessed and grounded in your heart this day with all of the joy and the undying hope of having all the wilds of prayer within your heart's reach for all of your life. Be blessed.