You Can have a Relationship with God

My sincere friend — a single woman, a devoted follower of God, a woman of God, a seeker of truth, a sacrificial person who has lived her whole life for God, in other countries … teaching children, and in several schools in the States — and I were having a heart-to-heart talk a couple of weeks ago. By the way, I admire her walk with God, she has trusted him when others might have quit. I mentioned to her the relationship we have with God. She then said a brief statement that stopped me in my tracks. “I’d never heard it called a relationship until recently.” THAT surprised me.

But I shouldn’t have been surprised. I don’t remember it being referred to in that way either. I was never taught it, but it has become a dear friend to me. My relationship with God is like a friendship, a long and enduring steadiness that strengthens, helps, and enlivens me where it counts.

After my friend’s comment, I thought back to my understanding of the term ‘relationship’ and why I believe it is a correct term to describe my connection with God. I did not see my walk with God as a relationship until it became a real relationship. This knowledge changed my viewpoint in many respects. I also saw a problem I’d never seen before and the solution to that same problem. I had a tiny epiphany.

I realized we’d been missing a big chunk of what it means to be truly Christian, and that, in itself, as a result, has led to disillusionment with the faith by some and a turning away from the faith, creating distance in those who had once professed faith in Christ but now had left the fold, not believing in its relevancy for them. Lack of depth in spiritual relationship, or in the knowledge that relationship can be had, most likely had not been cultivated in their life. Nor had an awareness of the richness that can be known in spiritual relationship infiltrated the church in living color, except for the notables who lived it, like Andrew Murray, for example. Their spiritual life was probably frustrated by a lack of intimate connection with the Trinity.

I realized that some people, believers (?), turn away from God simply because they’ve never developed a close intimacy with Him in a way that deeply impacts the heart. When God is not real, when lives are lived in two categories, secular and spiritual–with separation between the two, they have not connected with God in the interior life in a way the speaks life to the soul. Their walk with God is not one of deep heart-belief. There is a noticeable gap somewhere between believing, knowing, worshiping, and heart-living. They need to awaken, or re-awaken, to a life hid in Christ with a renewal that goes to the core. When God becomes real to you, and in you, it changes everything. This is where real living becomes sweeter than honey.

For me, it was during that process of seeking God to know Him, a pursuit that involved minutes, hours, days, and years. This was the impetus that propelled me forward, and when I began to have a greater heart for God and a more in-depth understanding of who He is and His interest in me. As His life flowed in and through me, and as my intense longing to know God became fruitful, my way of thinking and my inner self absorbed living truth that spoke volumes in the quiet places. A person that pursues God will find. God promises us that we will, and it is true.

Spiritual relationship with God starts at salvation when you believe on the Lord Jesus Christ as your Savior. That is just a starting point. From there on, your life grows in the knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ and begins to reflect His life in you. The relationship becomes deeper as you submit to Him and follow God and the truths found in His Word. You are being shaped and molded into the form the Master Sculptor would have you to be. But at times, the relationship becomes strained when you choose to follow the ways of the flesh instead of the ways of the Spirit, or when your spiritual life has become dull, placid, rigid, or smacks of religious routine. Then you have to get back on track to renew in the areas where you’ve become distant and to make intentional choices that will revive an intimacy of tender relationship with God.

Seek God until you find Him. You’ll be glad you did.

Have We Lost Our Minds?

Reminiscent of Public Lynchings

The recent developments in the Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavenaugh confirmation hearings have become a spectacle of dire imaginings. I have wearied of the sport being made of the man. He’s being vilified over and over again in social media and beyond. The man is being seen as guilty until proven innocent. Christine Blase Ford is also getting her share of hits, but I think they’ve been kinder to her. It all comes down to a ‘he said, she said’ episode of “To Tell the Truth” being broadcast on the national stage. Every word, expression, emotional reaction, and innuendo is being micro-analyzed. Even their hair and clothing are being critiqued and publicly, and sometimes distastefully, discussed or assailed.

There are no winners here, as it stands now, except the money that is being made and can be made in its aftermath. Speak of the word despicable, the accusations and implications spread as truth across social media are in that category.

Have we lost our minds?

Let’s go back two years—  Remember the anger and hatred spewing right and left?

2016:

During the past presidential election season, ugliness was everywhere and even some of my fb friends were being sucked into the fight with words. It got so bad that I began hiding posts from my fb newsfeed. I couldn’t take it anymore. Yet I wanted to know what was being said and what was going on. I have a political bent and strive to keep informed. Some had lost a handle on what constitutes decency and order and civility during those tempestuous times. I was appalled by people’s hateful words and angry rants.

I wrote the following FaceBook post to try to raise awareness of the indignity of it all.

Dear American Sisters and Brothers, Hatred is not the answer. It has never been the answer. Stand for peace and justice. Stand for liberty and freedom. Stand for the innocent and the marginalized. Stand for the ones with no voice. Stand for the ones who represent our country wherever they may be and whomever they may be. Stand for what is good in America. Be willing to stand for what is right even if you have to stand alone. Those who condemn others so harshly look closely at yourself and rise to a better place, the place of grace and blessing. It is better to build people up rather than to tear them down. There is a right standard that pulls us together that is above the fray. We must seek to find that place of common ground where the better good is found. MLK understood this. He spoke the language of a land which wishes all its people free, equal, and accepted. Hatred toward other people in our land will never achieve a good end, it will only inflame anger and harm…and this includes our attitudes towards our newly elected officials, whether you  like them or not. Please, look truth in the eye. What you hate may consume you and change you to be more like what you are hating. People are making statements that are inflammatory and akin to public shaming and entitlement. It behooves all of us to be careful and kind to even those we disagree with or find offensive. There is civic dialogue and civilized ways of behaving. Please consider your part in making this a peace-loving country. United we stand. Divided we fall.  –NLB 2016, November

Hatred is being consumed in the ever-increasing national appetite for sensationalism. People are believing it, too. Like with the #MeToo movement, a person’s personal narrative is influencing the way a subject or person is viewed, whether positive or negative. What is contrived or what is true, what is remembered correctly or what is being misrepresented, are the pertinent questions.

But could there be another angle to the story?

Is this about a woman’s right to choose? About abortion? Opinions on abortion could be a contributing factor and a possible underlying presence that is fueling this anger against a Kavenaugh confirmation. Do I know? Of course I don’t know. I can only surmise. But it always surprises me how the ‘innocents’ are so easily abandoned–terminated, to be precise–in a country that by law seeks to protect people, trees, and animals.

I wouldn’t want a miscarriage of justice or a misrepresentation of what is true to publicly ‘lynch’ either person.

You see, there is a right and there is a wrong, there is evil and there is righteousness. Here on this blog it is my responsibility before God to carefully write about the things of God and to reflect the spiritual in ways others can consume. I am a person, and I fail more than I care to admit. I don’t always know how to do it right. But I do know we are encased in a spiritual battle that has repercussions in every home in our country.

I pray often about what is going on. Please join me in praying.

I want those with ears to hear, to turn to God with all their heart, mind, and soul. I know that in Christ is where your soul’s redemption is found and real life begins. Right now I see a contest being played out before us. I think of Elijah, he was alone when he faced impossible odds. But he fought the good fight, believed in the one true God, and God answered and proved he was God. That same God is at work today. The battle belongs to the Lord. He is able to do above and beyond what we ask or think. I’m so glad this is true.

And when I pray, I pray that the truth will be known but not assumed.

God bless you.


What do you think?