Growing: Spiritual Transformation, Part 2 of 5

A spiritual awakening changes everything.

The best thing you could ever do for yourself is to have a spiritual transformation. A spiritual transformation is like a spiritual makeover. It changes everything about you, inside to out. However, a spiritual transformation is not just about growing in the Lord. It is much, much more.

“Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.”

–Matthew 7:7

What spiritual transforming entails.

  • Spiritual transformation is when God becomes your enough.
  • Spiritual transformation is when God comes first.
  • Spiritual transformation is when you quit doing spiritual life your way.

Why would you want to spiritually transform? It will give life to your spiritual walk. You will strengthen in your daily interactions. You will know the Source of life, God Eternal, in a very real way.  You will walk with God, and that is truly amazing awesomeness.

Spiritual life is a journey, not a destination.

I never set out to have a spiritual transformation. After it had changed my life, I knew what to call it. I set out to know God without holding anything back. I wanted nothing to block my pursuit of Him. That was it. God took it from there.

Did you ever have something happen to you that knocked you down and changed your life, your thinking, the way you process life, and altered the way you interact with others?

When life happens.

I had one of those life events when I lost my younger sister. She was 33, and I was 38, when she passed away. My kids and I had just been to visit her three weeks before at her home in Beaverton, Oregon. We went for a walk in the park and ate a meal at her home. My kids loved their Aunt Lou.

My sister committed suicide. When we lost Lois to suicide, it destroyed me more than all the other bad things that had happened to me. My sister and I were raised in the same home, with the same parents, with a strong Christian presence in our lives. She had followed the faith until the last two or three years of her life.

What was missing?

My sister’s suicide made me question why this had happened to her. Why hadn’t God been enough for her. Where had we failed her? Why had her Christian life and heritage failed her? I wondered what had been missing that had caused her to be empty and lost. Lois was successful at work, had loyal friends, and was talented, intelligent, and witty.

This started me on a hunt. I wanted to know what had been missing in my sister Lois’s life and why Christianity had not been enough in her life. I believed part of the answer involved our ‘brand’ of Christianity, a lack within fundamentalism to go beyond spiritual obedience and head knowledge to address human need and human suffering.

What I found.

The first answer to the complex question came in the form of an awareness. The more I pursued the path to knowing God, the more I became aware that our Christian life is about a living relationship with Father, Son, and Spirit. This relationship with the Godhead is life-changing, life-giving, and life-enabling. It’s not that the other was bad in and of itself, it was that it fell short of the most important aspect of following Christ, a spiritual relationship.

If you are like me, and you were not taught about living relationship with the Father, Son, and Spirit, then here’s your opportunity to spiritually awaken to this phenomenal truth. God wants to be known. He wants to interact with you. God desires living relationship with you. This living relationship with God will cause you to become spiritually real, personally authentic, and fully alive.

I want you to want it.

Next in series: Middle: Spiritual Transformation, Part 3 of 5

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Her Suicide Still Speaks, Part 3

From a Christian Perspective

I refute the belief that suicide is selfish.

A friend of mine recently posted about suicide. He said suicidal people need to reach out, find help, and not be so selfish. He equated suicide with a selfish act. I didn’t respond to his comment but I did think, “No, that’s not true.” I strongly disagree with that common view of suicide that he was espousing. I do not believe selfishness has anything to do with why a person chooses to commit suicide even though it is the self who makes the choice.

People choose to commit suicide because they are in pain.

Suicidal people are desperate. They want the daily struggle to end. They don’t see a way out. They have lost hope. They don’t think they can face another day. They want it all to stop; the negative voices, hopeless thoughts, and wretched weariness with the daily struggle. They don’t want to be a burden to others, not realizing the heavy burden they are now placing on those who will be affected by their suicide.

Depression, despair, and hopelessness have darkened their days. Broken relationships have left them devastated, demoralized, and scarred. It all seems like too much, too big of a hill to climb. The journey back all too encompassing a task … for them to dredge up the will to overcome and to continue to press on.

In her final letter, my sister wrote, “I would go home, but I don’t want to be a burden to my family.” She was misguided in her rationale. Her family would have welcomed her home and would have done anything to help her. She also said she couldn’t face another day at work.

I wish she would have contacted someone.

She was tired of fighting her inner struggles, depression, the will to fight on. As a family, we wish we had known it was the moment she needed help. I called her that night about an upcoming family event, but my call was placed too late.

You can wish there were second chances. We all know there are none.

Satan takes advantage when he perceives a weakness in the spiritual armor.

I also believe that Satan influences the vulnerable and speaks lies to them. “You can’t handle this. You’re not going to make it. Why not end it?” People talk about hearing voices, some of them are from the evil one. He pushes the vulnerable to want death as the answer to free them from their pain. He whispers the lie that they are better off ending it, that all is hopeless and this will end their suffering and pain. He clouds their vision with darkness that colors everything they do. I, also, have felt that darkness on occasion. It is immobilizing and blocks out joy, happiness, and well-being.

Of course, what Satan whispers is deceptive. Satan deceives. He is all about sin, evil, suffering and death. Satan is active in engaging people to consider suicide as their out. Here’s why. He is the enemy of life. God is the giver of life. He hates God with a vengeance. Not only is he the enemy of God, he is in a battle against God. He hates what God loves and wages war against it.

Human beings are created in God’s image. That separates us from other created beings. God is about life and living. Satan wants to destroy what God has created in any way he can, which includes us, the human — God’s triumph — people whom God gave the will and power to discern and choose. He doesn’t want humans to choose life, especially eternal life through Jesus Christ.

Satan is a cunning adversary and powerful foe. I know he was there at time of my sister’s death. My family could feel an evil presence during the days after her passing. Some of it was like a veil of darkness. It was creepy and scary. Out of respect for my family, I will not elaborate on this aspect.

I also reject the notion that suicide means they’re damned to hell.

I just don’t believe it. Their eternal existence depends on the state of their soul, whether saved or unsaved. Several Christians of my acquaintance have family members who have committed suicide. I knew some of them. I believe these people were sincere, believing Christians. Depression hovered about them, defining their lives in tortuous ways others could not possibly understand … unless they’ve been on the cusp. They suffered. Their families were fearful for them. Yet, I’m positive some or all of them knew the Lord. The two would seem to be incompatible at first blush.

Some things are not so simple.

There are many factors when there is a sucide. Some think my sister is not in heaven, is lost, for two reasons: she turned away from belief in God; and she chose to end her life. I know what scripture says, that if we reject him, he will reject us. I also know God keeps his true children in the palm of his hand and says no one can take them from him. There is comfort in those last words.

The question is, did she have saving grace? Was she a Christian or not? For my part, I believe my sister knew the Lord. I saw it in the way she cared for others, and her kindness, and the affirmation she imparted to others. I saw it in the times when she walked closely with the Lord. She was serious about faith being authentic belief. She often had questions, the kind that I believe can only be answered with the eyes of faith.

My sister struggled with spiritual belief off and on throughout  life. But that does not mean she was not God’s child. She would open up to me about her struggle (starting at age 12). I’ll never forget the first time she confided in me. I was shocked at her unhappiness with it all. It scared me. I saw in her a dislike of legalistic strictness, a weariness with the church and family’s expectations and rigid viewpoints. She wanted to get out of that cage of spiritual perfectionism and live free of its constraints.

She indicated that we didn’t know the real her. Many of us could say the same. Who really knows another person?

Somehow she missed the better stuff, the joy of a living relationship with God, of ‘being,’ of living fully centered in Christ, of knowing what it is to be truly free, of being delightfully immersed in God’s love. In those days we treated our Christian faith more as a belief system than as a loving, reciprocal relationship. I don’t believe she ever knew the sweetness that one can have in God.

Yet even in her pain and self-stuff, I think she could not get away from God’s presence in her life, though she tried to ignore his voice by acting as if he didn’t exist. Often called, the hound of heaven, he pursued her. God was calling to her, drawing her to himself, wanting her to know him. But she resisted, couldn’t quite go there, couldn’t quite turn the corner to return to the faith of her past. If only she had known what she was missing.

People ask me, “Do you think Lois is in heaven?” It’s a hard question. God only knows. I do not. I think so, but that’s me. I have always believed she is and have peace that it is true. I think God saw her pain, her hurt and confusion, and the Good Shepherd had compassion on his straying lamb, his little lost sheep. Maybe I am in denial, wishful, and I may be in error with my conclusion in the matter. I hope not.

I believe Lois and I will meet again on the other side. I hope with my whole heart to see her. My heart leaps with joy as I picture it. She and I tightly embrace on my welcome into the promised land where an eternality of hope rests in its peace and gloriousness.

. . .

This is the ending of my three part talk on losing my sister by suicide. I shared more this time than on past years. I wanted you to see behind the curtain, and how it is confusing for Christians. Many of you have been influenced by someone’s suicide, and it’s been a hard journey forward. You understand my heart. After losing Lois, I have used my experience to learn and grow and to help anyone I can. I hope these writings are helpful. I care deeply. I don’t believe in easy answers. I want people to receive the help they need.

Tomorrow I will post an addendum with a list of suggestions to help a suicidal person get on the road to recovery. Until then, God bless you. Leave me a comment. I’d love to hear from you. Blessings, Norma

Photos: With my siblings, Lois as a baby, and mr holding Lois.

Back Links to this series: Part 1 and Part 2