Dear Hestitant You,
I know it’s the most ordinary moments that make your insides freeze.
When, just like any other day, she smiles with her eyes, reaches for your hand and asks you how you’ve been. Such a simple moment, but it’s where the war inside can sound so loud that you think she has to wonder what’s going on.
Do you smile, say what’s good? Because there really is so much that is good. It just doesn’t always feel good. And that’s the honest truth.
Do you be honest? Share the truth of the days when you can hardly remember how to breathe? Because you feel so weak and you hardly know what to do with this.
“Rejoice always.” 1 Thess. 5:16.
It’s so curious, isn’t it? How in the world do you always be joyful, yet also be true. For God never calls us to hide. He always calls us to bring the darkness to light. To be honest. And how the ache can sting with longing for all these people to know every dark and doubting thing about you so you can feel truly, and really authentically honest. But why can this sometimes feel like such a pull away from joy?
And can’t it feel a constant war in all these interactions? How in this blessed world do you be both cheerful and real? And how do you ever stop hesitating so between these two long enough to really love people? That thought that can ache so deeply.
These thoughts, these hesitant circles you spin in yourself… when you hear them, perhaps you’re paying attention to a war that is not yours to fight.
Confusion is your natural way, but confusion has never been the way of God.
Yet, this struggle surely aches for a reason. And you remember the days when you couldn’t hold the tears back and they didn’t understand what could be so wrong. And well, how do you even explain it? Sometimes you just have to mourn the fact that you don’t really know what you’re doing with this life.
When you can’t control your grieving, it’s not the time to ignore it. Maybe though, tears are an invitation to pay attention. Maybe tears are drawing our hearts to see, not a war, but something else.
Tears come to help relieve stress. I hear it’s a proven fact. So maybe one reason tears come in is to invite you to lay down the war and run your race.
Dear hesitant you, let’s lay down the war between joyful and real and instead, let’s take up the daily race of staying real in the presence of His joy.
You may feel too weak and you are, but we both know that He is enough.
So then... here are three ways forward, three ways to stay real in the presence of God’s joy.
Run the race of joy (and know what it is not.)
“Rejoice always.” 1 Thess. 5:16.
It doesn’t mean to fake a smile when you don’t feel happy. It doesn’t mean don’t grieve or don’t ever feel sad. It doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with you if you don’t feel "joyful." It doesn’t mean you have to just cheer up when you’re actually aching inside.
And just in case you doubt that, we can find out what it does mean. God sees hearts and it’s okay to find and share the meaning of things if it helps your soul rest in truth.
The word for rejoice here “has a direct ‘etymological connection with xaris (grace)” (Str. 5463).
And maybe running the race of joy is nearly the same as running the race of grace. Maybe the way you rejoice, has more than anything to do with the way you’re relating your moments to grace.
I’ll include the definition of the word rejoice (xairo) in the footnote of this letter for when it helps you to see it. But what we know tugs on the heart inside you is the idea contained inside it: “leaning towards grace.” “Delighting in” God’s grace. “Experiencing” and “being conscious of” His grace. This is what it means to rejoice. It’s not that we always hold a certain feeling. Rather it’s that we take each feeling we walk through and we bring that feeling to grace.
Simply put, you could say that the word rejoice here means leaning toward the joy of God’s grace.
Rejoicing is not a constant emotion we strive for. It is rather a way of being. Perhaps, you could say it’s a way of caring for the feelings and thoughts inside of us.
“Rejoicing” is the act of taking our moments, our feelings and leaning them toward the joy of grace.
So we’ll wake up in the mornings and gear up for the race of rejoicing. We can run into these moments ready and eager to see how the unique moments of our day today can meet the joy of God’s grace anew.
Especially our broken places.
2. Run the race of healing (and run with confession.)
Jesus has always been the One who stands with the broken, the weak, the weary, the sick, the sinner, the lost and the hurt.
The only ones Jesus never stood with were the ones who claimed to be none of these things.
When you feel broken and weak, you know from experience that trying to see through your own brokenness will never heal you. Trying to work the pieces of your weakness like a puzzle will never make you strong.
But confession and prayer is healing as a promise.
“Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.” James 5:6
The realest healing we can know takes place in the light, takes place, day by day. With each new morning, we get to bring our broken pieces real into His presence, where He takes each scar, each doubt, each failing piece of our broken bodies, and He names it whole in the name of the risen Jesus to walk another day in the victory of His life.
So we’ll run the race of healing by waking up each morning to new morning mercies, bringing our broken places to the healing of His light. Even though your heart may be failing, His joy always heals it to run another day. Full on His mercy...
…and you are free to praise Him for the weakest part of you.
3. Run the race of praise (and praise your way to bold contentment with your weakness.)
It’s as we praise God for our weakness, and live in bold contentment with it’s presence, that the power of Christ rests on our lives.
“But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly of my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” 2 Cor. 12:9.
Run the race of praise with the challenge of this: When you speak of your weakness, when you think of your weakness, when you pray for your weakness, speak satisfaction.
Maybe if you choose to daily speak over your weakness with satisfaction, contentment and praise for what God is doing with it… maybe it could change everything.
There are a thousand reasons to praise God for your weakness. Maybe at the end of all your prayers, there is only praise.
And you just read it last week: “There are moments in life where you need to stop pleading and start praising” (Mark Batterson, The Circle Maker, 40).
How you know it’s true, this feast you are free to partake in. Relief for so many cares. Maybe it’s why you keep running into a thousand more reasons to give thanks for the weakness you find inside.
“When we pray for guidance, perhaps God’s answer is every way he hems us in, like a river” (Christie Purifoy, Placemaker, 27).
“Limits lead us to the water. Like a tree I will send out my roots toward the stream, grateful for every hard rock and difficult stone that tell me this is the way, walk in it ” (Christie Purifoy, Placemaker, 27).
A thousand reasons to praise Him for what He is doing with the beautiful weakness in you. He is writing a good story and before you were ever born He knew the form of the days coming to meet you.
Remember that He is forming a story of His faithfulness with the weakness of your life. You get to be a part of this beauty.
Praise Him. And run your race.
Lay down the war of how you want to be. And run the race of who you are in Him.
Find three tiny ways you can gear up in the mornings to run your race each day.
Rejoicing. Healing. Praising.
When you fall down, the race is not over. Your God’s mercies have not run out.
The morning always comes again.
So wake up in the morning… and run.
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Footnotes:
Rejoice (xairo) is defined as “(from the root xar-, “favorably disposed, leaning towards” and cognate with /xaris, ‘grace’) - properly, to delight in God’s grace (“rejoice”) - literally, to experience God’s grace (favor), be conscious (glad) for His grace.” (Strong's 5463)
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