A Tightrope for Jesus
I experienced a personal revival at the age of 17. While at
a conference, God got my attention in a powerful way and showed me that I
needed to come to a place of being fully surrendered to His will for my life. This
was a pivotal moment for me, and (for the first time since I became a teenager)
I sincerely desired to follow God with my whole heart.
Soon afterwards, I graduated high school and moved to
Indianapolis to work at a home for international orphans. This was a move of
faith for me. Though I had been “saved” for many years, I was still very new in
my walk with the Lord. I had been raised in a “Bible culture,” but very little
of that knowledge had been practically applied to my life.
Now living in a deeply religious Christian community, I had
a chance to learn those disciplines which come with the Christian territory.
The practical application of scripture to my life was riveting. I loved reading
though the Bible passage for the day and looked to see how I could walk out
what I was reading in a practical way.
As soon as I arrived in Indianapolis, I went through a
course on child training. One of the things we were taught to avoid telling the
orphans was “you can do better,” because this isn’t something you should tell
someone who may be trying their hardest. The fact is they may not KNOW how to
do better. Instead of this discouraging phrase, it is much better to show them
a practical way they can do better, but then also encourage them to keep
trying.
Unfortunately for me, almost as quickly as the new growth
set in my life, so did a wicked little lie. That poisonous thought was “Amos,
you can do better. If you said and did X, Y, and Z, God would love you more.”
So, over the course of the next year, I sought ways to make myself an even
better Christian.
Whereas only weeks earlier I had been thrilled to even remember
to read my Bible, I decided that I should read for at least 30 minutes every
day. On the days I didn’t, I was not as worthy to be loved by God as on the
days I did.
Matthew’s gospel mentioned fasting (or the giving up of food
for a time in order to pray and seek God). I decided to fast, even though
problems with low blood sugar have always made me sick when I fast. But one day
wasn’t good enough! I should fast for a week! (Fortunately I was talked out of
this one by a wise mentor.)
One day someone mentioned some amazing missionary that got
up at four in the morning to pray and read his Bible. I started getting up at
four.
Every week it seemed like I found new ways I could be
better. Was I memorizing scripture? “No… I guess I should start that.” Did I
spend time in the evening praying (even though I was already spending an hour
praying in the morning)? “No, I guess I could use my time more wisely…”
More and more areas of my life started to jump into the dog
pile of disciplines I was amassing. The people I worked with were all devoted
Christians and were all very supportive of me. I doubt they knew the pressure I
was putting on myself, but they themselves seemed to be adding to their own
lists of improvements. I felt like I fit in with them.
Surprisingly, I kept up many of these things for several
months. I felt so close to God. Surely He was impressed with how much I was
doing to serve Him… and after all, I was
working at an orphanage, wasn’t I? “That’s pretty much the purest definition of
loving Jesus right there,” I thought.
Slowly, though, I slipped out of the habit of early rising.
Four o’clock became five. Five o’clock became six. Finally I was getting up at
seven, just to make it to breakfast on time. I was a horrible Christian. I
still read my Bible, but not as much as I should have. My fifteen chapters a
day were slipping to ten.
I was wracked with guilt for my lack of discipline. “Oh look
how far I’m sinking!” I often thought. “I’ve done so much better before—God is
probably very disappointed that I’m not as sincere in my devotion to Him as I
used to be.”
I compensated by increasing my devotion in other areas. I
stopped listening to the radio. Secular music was bad. Every time I listened to
country music I would spend time repenting. “Only hymns from now on!” I stopped
watching movies that weren’t explicitly Christian. I felt that that time could
be spent memorizing scripture or doing something productive like witnessing to
the poor.
---
Remember that missionary I mentioned earlier? The one that
got up at four to pray? Well, he had an amazing life that God greatly used. I
felt that his success was because he got up at four. That’s why I started
getting up at an insane hour. Obviously four o’clock had been magical for this
missionary.
The truth of the matter is, though… his success had nothing
to do with what time he got up. He could have slept in until ten for all it
mattered. The reason why he got up at four is what matters. I sincerely doubt
he said to himself, “if I get up at four I’ll have a greater ministry.” No, I
suspect that he was a busy man. I suspect that he had a lot on his plate, but
loved the Lord. How could he spend time with the Lord? By getting up early to
pray and read.
That was the compelling force I missed.
I was perfectly able to spend time with the Lord without
getting up at four in the morning. My schedule wasn’t in a state that demanded
that level of inhuman torture. I surely wasn’t getting up this early because I
enjoyed it or was especially productive—I was rising this early as form or
superstition. “If I do this, then I’ll have more of God’s power in my life!”
In fact, many of my
little additions were not at all based on love of God, but on love of self.
“What can *I* do so that *I* can make myself a better Christian?” “How can *I*
be effective?” These were thoughts that controlled my extra measures of
devotion.
For some reason, I had it in my head that God would not be
satisfied with simple obedience to Him. No, I had to make it bigger; I had to
make it better. And in and of themselves, the changes I was making were okay
things to do. There is certainly nothing wrong with getting up early, avoiding
movies, or reading lots of chapters in the Bible.
But my motives were wrong. They were centered on my works
making me more acceptable to God. At the time, I would have been the first to
tell you that our works are not enough to get us into heaven. Yet, there I was,
working my hardest to gain God’s favor…
In essence, I was trying to impress God. I was stringing a
tightrope to put on a show for Jesus. Now I know that the Creator of the
universe isn’t impressed with our little shows, but at the time I believed the lie that said my devotion (and
even asceticism) was somehow a way to make God love me more. I believed that *I*
could do better…
The truth is that
when God bought me with the blood of Jesus, His love for me was irrevocably set
in place. He controls it. There is nothing I can do to deepen that love or
diminish it, either. Nothing.
That is the truth I missed, and that is why I constructed a
tightrope for Jesus.
Next: Tightrope
Performer
Thank you for being willing to be transparent and writing about what God has done in your life. Some of what you have written I feel like I could have written myself. It's amazing the journey God takes us on to mold us into who He wants us to be. Keep up the blogging!
ReplyDeleteThank you for writing this blog. I want everyone to read it because it shows how a heart turns toward grace. Why He has chosen to draw us to Himself is a mystery but I am so thankful that He draws us.
ReplyDeletebtw .. love your pic. Cute little guy.
ReplyDelete