Pages

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Guest Post: A Moment of Bravery

I'm tickled.  It's rare I get the opportunity to write for anything more than this little blog for any other reason than my selfish ambition of honing what I hope will be considered a "gift."  But today, I'm guest posting for Elora here.

And it would be awesome to know someone read what I had to say.

And even more awesome to gain new friends through the experience.  Feel free to follow through email (You all are awesome.  I didn't realize how many of you there were!) or blogger.  Or it would be awesome if you just email me to start a conversation.

That's what I feel writing is anyway--the beginning of a conversation.  I've said my piece.  Now it's your turn.

I am reposting that guest post here since Elora has revamped her blog and I don't want to lose these thoughts.  When they were written, I had no idea what the very close future would hold, and by the time they were published, I was expecting Ryno and had no idea.  Isn't God so very funny? (5/26/2015)

I have this whole vision of the Proverbs 31 woman—how she sews and knits and probably doesn’t believe in spanx because all of her industriousness has led to a beautiful physique only branded by the stretch marks that came when she incubated her now-larger-than-the-Duggars family.  She makes her own laundry soap, face wash and deodorant and doesn’t have a dishwasher because it is a waste of money to own something she can do with her own hands.  My close reading of scripture also indicates that she accomplishes these tasks in high heels, perfectly coordinated outfits and a coif only Texas girls can actually recreate.

I had hoped I would be her by the time I was thirty. 

Well, I’d hoped to be her minus the sewing nonsense because I’ve never really had the patience to learn when I had a perfectly good stapler that could basically accomplish the same job with a little bling.  But that’s beside the point.  The point is I took a wrong turn somewhere—a drastically wrong turn that led to severely different life circumstances.

That’s what I tell myself anyway—that my road had a pretty significant Y instead of following the straight and narrow to an absolutely industrious household.  And, truthfully, I project the Proverbs 31 Woman in all her June Cleaver glory so I can sarcastically declare my status as a female who wasn’t built with these features. 

As soon as I get comfortable in that declaration, these lyrics flutter to the top of my consciousness:  “We were meant to live for so much more.  Have we lost ourselves?” (“Meant to Live” Switchfoot).  For the second my vision clears, I can see this scripture a little differently—not as a woman embodied, but as attributes that come through someone who knows her place and value.
But I have forgotten myself. 

Instead of seeing my life as a valuable acquisition in the hands of the Almighty, I pretend I’m a victim of my circumstances.  A disease I didn’t want to have.  A baby I didn’t want to lose.  A body I just can’t stand.  I wallow in things beyond my control and forget who I was meant to be

Apparently, I’d rather continue to point out others’ blessings and ask God why He hasn’t seen fit to seat me at his right hand.  Then, I turn my back and find a way to accomplish those things in my own strength while He keeps prodding me to follow Him despite the roads others are traveling (John 21:20-23). 

Frustration meets me when I plant myself and demand answers.  Sometimes I find myself suffocated by emptiness.  I’m terrified God has forgotten me because it doesn’t look the way I thought it would.  I don’t look the way I thought I would. 

And again, He gently calls my heart and asks me to follow Him.

I can’t get away from His gentle leading: “Remember who you are and your purpose as beloved servant, Crys.”

Daily, I’m asked to put one foot in front of the other when I can’t see the fix.  But I guess Proverbs 31 doesn’t describe a woman who knows the outcome—just a woman who knows who she is in relation to Jehovah Jireh, the God who provides.


So my action, often taken for inaction, is giving my servant’s heart room to grow.  In the waiting, I’m asking for God to move His hand—slowly, steadily and in the direction of his choosing.  And without any burning bushes or pillars of clouds in my living room, I realize:  Maybe the bravest thing we ever do is let God’s hand work when the only movement we can see comes from putting one foot in front of the other in service to Him.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Gaining new friends through the experience? Well absolutely, sister! I loved what you wrote on Elora's blog and I'm thrilled to visit you for the first time here. What you wrote was indeed a moment of bravery and so much resonated with me. Thank you for sharing -- and can't wait to get to know you better!

Bev said...

Well put Crystal... So many times I want to be like the Proverbs 31 woman. I think that God is trying to tell us to keep focused on him and then the fruits of our labor will be more like what he wants. We don't all bear the same fruit but the relationship with him is what grows the fruit.... I am not eloqent in what I write like you but maybe you can get what I am saying.