Good Ol’ Days

P6118781I was thinking recently about my spiritual journey. I have seen some amazing things during my nearly 35 years as a Christian. I was thinking about a particular period when God seemed as close to me as any flesh and blood person. Christians like to call this a “mountain top” experience. During this time in my life, God spoke to me in a way that would seem scary to some people. In fact, there were times when I myself questioned my very sanity.

I remember being in times of worship and opening my eyes to see a literal “fog” of God’s presence. I remember mowing the lawn and praying – holding a real conversation with God – on topics not related to spiritual things. We discussed my job, my family, friends who were also going through some tough financial times. We talked.

A group of us would gather at 5:45 am on Thursdays to pray. I had a young man who would come home with us after church on Wednesdays and spend the night because he wanted to go to prayer on Thursday morning and he lived quite a ways from the church. I remember waking up in the middle of the night to the sound of ethereal singing. I assumed that this young man was playing the radio and had forgotten to turn it off. I crept into the living room, where he was asleep on the couch, to turn the music off so it would not wake anyone else up, only to discover that the sound was coming from outside the house. I listened to voices singing “alleluia” for nearly an hour before it faded away. Lest you think that someone was having an outdoor concert, we lived in a fairly remote area, and this was around 2 am on a Wednesday, not a weekend.  No one lived close enough to have played music outdoors that we could have heard at my house. Besides, the sound was kind of warbly. It wasn’t the same as someone singing through a sound system or a radio playing loudly. I have always thought that I heard actual angels singing.

SONY DSCI remember a time as I was leading corporate worship when something unusual happened. I had my eyes closed as I worshiped. Suddenly the number of voices in the room singing seemed to double. The volume went up. The tone of the singing changed. I thought that some late-comers must have joined us, or that some members of church meeting on the other side of the building had come in and joined us in worship. As the worship ended and I opened my eyes, I saw only our regular group of worshipers. And I wasn’t the only one who heard it. People were looking around asking “What was that? Did you hear that?”.  Again, we all agree that what we heard were angels joining us in worship.

During that period of my life, God seemed so close. Real. He was very personal. I received my call into ministry during that period in my life. I told God “no”. I had a great job, I made a lot of money. Why would I quit a career like I had to go into ministry? After all, my Dad was a pastor. I knew what ministry was like.  He told me to go into ministry on a Wednesday night. I told him I had a great job that I wouldn’t quit to go into ministry. I was a salesman who sold 80% of the company’s business and had just landed a job worth 2.8 million dollars. That job alone kept a shift running every week and would have doubled my salary. Like Gideon, that great man of faith, I asked God for a sign. He gave me one. I was laid off on Friday.

That time of my life was certainly not normal. In hindsight, it was kind of weird. And yet, I find myself longing for that kind of relationship with God again. While God is not silent, I do not hear him speak like I did then. As I worship now, I do not experience the glory of God like I did then. I have never heard angelic singing since that time. I find myself longing for the good ol’ days. I have this Norman Rockwell – like image of this segment of my spiritual journey that draws me back to a better time. The struggles of that period of my life pale in comparison to the spiritual high I lived in. During this time in my life when God was the closest was also the same period in my life that I experienced the most struggle. I lost my job and didn’t go into ministry immediately. We struggled financially. I struggled with my call. I knew I supposed to be in ministry, but was unfulfilled because I was not able to pursue my passion. I lived in constant frustration. I was bitter and miserable. Ask my wife. Yes, those “good ol’ days” were not all good. But there are aspects of the past that I miss.

stella_outlawAs I pondered this recently, wishing I could go back and experience some of that again, God spoke to me. Not audibly, but I heard him speak my language. He spoke XBOX. Only God could relate to me in XBOX language. You see, I enjoy playing video games. My day off is spent in relaxation saving the world from the many evils that confront it. There in my fantasy world, I become the hero who saves the day. Blasting my way through anything that stands between myself and victory, I become immersed in a world where I am not an overweight, middle-aged man. I am young. I am strong. I am a hero. But it wasn’t always like this. I was alive in a time before video games. I remember the first video game – Pong. It consisted of two vertical bars on each edge of the screen and a square “ball” that you bounced back and forth between the bars. As video games progressed, the gameplay became more immersive. I remember playing games like Frogger, Asteroids, and Centipede. The games progressed, so that by the time I was experiencing this great move of God in my life, I was playing games like Zelda and Contra. I would spend hours playing a game with square bushes and characters who only moved North, South, East and West. I would save the world using a gun that shot a stream of balls from the barrel and two-dimensional characters that could only move in one direction and jump over pixellated hills. And yet I became enthralled with the gameplay. I can’t tell you how many hours I spent actually enjoying these games.

Jump to now. The gameplay is realistic. The characters move in a three-dimensional world filled with not only bad guys, but vehicles that can be driven, various weapons that can be picked up, aliens that actually look frightening. None of these Pac-Man “ghosts” anymore! As much as I enjoyed playing the games I played in the 80’s, I don’t long for the “good ol’ days” of Atari. I have progressed. I have matured. Something better is available.

The same is true of my relationship with God. As much as I enjoyed the presence of God in the 80’s, my relationship has progressed. It has matured. I have something different, but in may ways, better. I am different. God is still the same, but I am different now. I have experienced some real-life battles that have weathered me. They have created some scars from wounds that have healed. And just as my interaction with the game console has changed, my interaction with God has changed.

from-seed-to-oakToday, I am in full-time ministry. I have moved beyond my initial calling of music ministry to become the Executive Pastor of a thriving, growing church. I can help initiate the change that needs to happen in the church. I can watch as people grow in their faith and relationship with God and know that I had a part in creating the environment for that growth to take place. Why should I long for the good ol’ days? These are the good ol’ days. No, these are not the days of my youth, but they are the best days of my life. They really are. My faith in God no longer requires that I hear angels singing. I still experience God, but much like the gameplay has progressed in the last 30 years, my relationship with God has progressed as well. Both have matured.

Do you find yourself looking to the past to bring value to your present? Is your self-esteem wrapped up in past accomplishments? Is your self-worth found in someone you were 10 years ago? Stop looking at the past to validate your present. Nostalgia is not so much longing for the cake as it is the joy of eating it all over again. Remember that someday, these will be the good ol’ days you miss. Make the most of today.

Resolution

Happy-new-yearWell…. the new year is finally here, and many of us have taken steps to create this year’s version of our New Year’s Resolutions. As most of you probably know, our resolutions will be faded memories by March. Statistics show that while 45% of us make resolutions for the new year, only about 8% of us will actually succeed in keeping their resolution. We hit opposition to our goal, and statistically, most of us will give up and never realize a goal that would have improved our lives.

The same is true for our lives in general sometimes. We have hopes and dreams. We have God-given promises for our future. Yet quite a few of us have just given up completely. I would say that at one time or another, all of us have given up on a dream. If you’ve been out of high school for more than 10 years, ask yourself: Is this where you thought you would be at this stage of your life? Is this the life you imagined you would have by this time? Very few of us are able to realize the life we imagined ourselves living. We live lives of struggle to achieve our goals. Even those dreams that are inspired by God seem difficult to accomplish. It leaves us questioning whether we even heard God correctly. Is this really what he wants me to do?

I want you to understand that God rarely helps us in what we can do ourselves. It is in those times of difficulty that he really shows himself. In fact, God often makes it more difficult than is necessary just to prove to us that he is God and can accomplish not only the difficult, but the impossible. Consider a couple of examples:

In Judges 6, we begin the story of Gideon. The Israelites had once again reverted to pagan worship and God once again allowed a foreign country to invade in order to punish them and lead them back to himself. God appears to a man named Gideon and tells him that he wants Gideon to lead an army in rebellion against the invaders. In Judges 6 we read that the Midianites, Amalekites  and other eastern people had invaded the land and were “like locusts”. In verse 5 it says that they were impossible to count because their number was so great. Chapter 8 (8:10) gives us a number of 135,000 people in the opposing army. Gideon is leading an army of 32,000.  When we get to chapter 7, God begins to make things interesting. Let’s recap. God has told Gideon that he wants him to lead an army against an invading army that outnumbers him considerably. Gideon’s army is not made up of professional soldiers. The enemy’s army is. Gideon already has a reason for pause. The odds are against him.  It’s going to be a miracle if Gideon is able to win a battle with such odds, but he has a word from God so he prepares to move forward. Then God says something that Gideon wasn’t expecting. God says in Chapter 7 verse 2 “You have too many men for me to deliver Midian into their hands”. What? I’m already outnumbered by at least 4 to 1 and I have too many? Yes. God says that you may think that you did this all on your own if you fight a battle with this many men. I can imagine Gideon saying “No. Really God. We’ll know it was you if we win.” But God whittles Gideon’s army down to 300 men. Impossible odds. God took an already impossible situation and just made it worse.

In the book of 1 Kings, we read a similar tale. Elijah is a prophet in Israel. Ahab is the king and has not been a very good one. In fact, in Chapter 16 we read that Ahab did more evil than any of those before him. God is not pleased, and as punishment, Elijah tells the king that it will not only not rain for 3 years, there won’t even be any dew! Now that’s a drought! In a society that relied heavily on agriculture to survive, it was a death sentence. Three years later, Elijah returns to Ahab and proposes a showdown. We’ll pit the prophets of Baal against the one prophet of God. 450 to one. Not good odds to begin with. The test? The first one to call down fire from heaven to burn a sacrifice wins. Not only does fire have to come down from the sky, it has to hit this altar. Those of you familiar with the story know that the prophets of Baal built an altar, killed a bull and placed it on the altar. Then they prayed for about 6 hours, with Elijah trash-talking the whole time. That must have been quite a scene. That evening, Elijah told Baal’s followers that they had had their turn. He would give it a shot now. After rebuilding the altar and placing the bull on it, Elijah does something astonishing. He tells some of the people to fill four large jars with water and pour it on the altar. Three times he has them pour the jars of water over the altar, wood and sacrifice. Have you ever tried to light wet wood? There was so much water that it overflowed the altar and filled the trench around the altar that was dug to contain the blood of the sacrifice. Now Elijah is ready.

iStock_000021267657MediumHow many of us are in similar situations? We know that God has something great planned for us. We heard him speak. We can sense his call tangibly. And yet, seemingly impossible odds just got worse. We have had water poured on our altar. Our army has been decimated to 300 men. The cool thing about each of these stories is that God came through. Gideon didn’t just win a marginal victory over his enemy. They were decimated. Completely destroyed. Fire didn’t come down from the sky 3 or 4 times to light wet wood. Fire came down and even burned the water! The Bible says that it licked up the water in the trench. Water burned!

Are you in a position to allow God to work things out for you, or are you still trying to work it out for him? While I believe that God puts us in positions to do things, I also know that there are times when we face impossible odds. Times when we give up. Times when we lose faith because of impossible circumstances. Impossible situations get worse. Wet wood. An army of leftovers. No hope.  I believe that those are the times when God really works though. Too often we think that we have to be on top in order to be used by God. In 1 Corinthians 1, Paul says  “Brothers, think of what you were when you were called. Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth. But God chose the foolish things of the world to shame the wise; God chose the weak things of the world to shame the strong.  He chose the lowly things of this world and the despised things…” In other words, if you are on top, you actually have less of a chance to be used by God statistically. Consider the people God used. Gideon said that his clan was the weakest in Manasseh, and he was the least in his family (Judges 6:15).  David was the youngest child, and a shepherd. Daniel and Joseph were both foreigners, slaves and prisoners. Paul said that he was the least of the apostles (1 Corinthians 15:9) who were all a bunch of fishermen. In fact, none of the apostles was an influential leader. Moses, Joshua, Noah, Esther, Abraham… The list could go on. All of them faced impossible odds of becoming anything in life. They were nobodies. God doesn’t choose the best and brightest. In fact, he sometimes makes an impossible situation worse just to prove a point.

imposibil

So where are you? You may be called to ministry and working in a fast food joint. Now, you’ve been moved to second shift too! It was impossible to be involved in ministry with your schedule before, now it’s gotten worse! You may be facing a financial debt that seems insurmountable. Now you find that you owe more in taxes than you thought. An impossible situation just got worse. Your wood got wet. It is in these times that God shines. He doesn’t say that in our strength he becomes stronger. He told Paul that his power is made perfect in weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9). Your time of weakness may be just the time that God comes through. Be resolute in your resolutions. Don’t give up because a situation looks impossible. God not only specializes in impossibilities, he sometimes creates them.