At the conference I attended in February, a friend was
sharing about the lesson she learned last year.
She was once again learning a lesson that seems to appear every few
years. Instead of being frustrated with
learning the new lesson, she was celebrating the fact she was able to go deeper
in growth. Our Father in not content to
have our character and actions be shallow, so we are being challenged to go
deepen our character and make every action reflect Him. This is a lifelong process and we will never
be prefect at it or fully display His attributes. Instead of being upset with herself or think
the lesson was remedial, she was celebrating the change to experience something
more from Him.
My friend used the analogy that character development is
like climbing a mountain. Now, we don’t
scale this mountain but slowly walk around the entire circumference until we
reach the top. We can learn a lesson at
the base of the mountain and when we are at 1,500 feet we might be again be
working on that area in our life/lesson but it is not the same lesson we
learned at the base. At 1,500 feet we
have new muscles, have more experience, and have more knowledge about what is
needed to survive the mountain. We need
to hone our skills in this area so that we can make it to 3,000 feet, 5,000
feet or ever have hopes of reaching the top.
This analogy has been extremely helpful for me this week. I am a planner and like to have things
scheduled. Living cross-culturally, this
natural desire is often challenged and just doesn’t happen a majority of the
time. My first few years living in Asia,
learning to be flexible and “go with the flow” was one of the biggest and
hardest lessons I had to learn. This
week, it has become clear that I have come back around to the lesson of
flexibility. [Coming out of a meeting where
your mentor challenges you to be open-handed with your schedule and receiving
10 text messages asking you to change plans or rearrange something is a pretty
clear indication that flexibility is once again on the lesson plan]. After the selfish, human part of my flesh had
a pity party and was angry that my plans were changed, I remembered my friends
wise words.
Being asked to work on my
flexibility does not mean that I did not pay attention to the previous lesson
or that I forgot all that I learned. It
means that flexibility is a tool that He needs me to hone, sharpen, and use so I
can serve Him to my full capacity. I can
fight the growth and learn the lesson anyway, or I could lean into it and work
with the growth (the latter is much less painful, or so I’ve heard). I will not be learning the same lesson. I am
now at 1,500 feet and need to be sharpened so that I have the capacity to climb
to 3,000 feet.
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