Why I Write


But beyond these, my son, be warned: there is no end to the making of many books (Eccl. 12:12 HCSB).

If Solomon were parenting today he might have said it this way, “There is no end to the making of many books, articles, blog posts, tweets . . .” (you get
the idea).

Because of Jesus, we have victory over enemies big and small. One of the weapons He has asked us to wield is our story.

The steady drip of written content Solomon noticed in his era has been replaced with a flood in ours. With so many words already circling the stratosphere,
I often stare down this question: “Why should I keep writing? What’s the point of adding my words to the deluge of content created by other writers?” But
day after day, year after year, I sit at my keyboard and write. Here are four reasons why.

1. There’s Power in My Story.

Revelation 12:11 describes the moment all of history longs for, when Satan is thrown down and God’s people are victorious. Pay attention to how we will
overcome:

They have conquered him by the blood of the Lamb and by the word of their testimony.

Because of Jesus, we have victory over enemies big and small. One of the weapons He has asked us to wield is our story.

Think about the testimony of Jim Elliot who sacrificed his life to share Jesus
with a remote Indian tribe in Ecuador.

Think about Naghmeh Abedini who used her story to tell 100 ambassadors at the United Nations that Jesus is
the solution their countries are looking for.

Think about Louis Zampereni, the former Olympic runner and WWII prisoner of war, who overcame
alcoholism, night terrors, and a failing marriage after a collision with the gospel.

I don’t count myself in the same league as the heros on that list, but I do have a story to tell about God’s grace and provision in my life, so I write
about what God has done.

Let the redeemed of the LORD tell their story—those he redeemed from the hand of the foe (Ps. 107:2 NIV).

2. Writing Takes Me “to the End of the Earth.”

Jesus said, “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation” (Mark 16:15).

Acts 1:8 promises, “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you, and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and
Samaria, and to the end of the earth.”

When it comes to ministry, God asks us to think globally. Yes, I need to use my gifts to serve my local church. I am called to love the people in my
zipcode. Writing is not a substitute for either of those things, but I add it to the ways I am investing in the kingdom close to home because it allows me
to expand my reach.

Just this week I heard from a woman who reads my blog posts in Canada and another who is teaching one of my Bible studies in South Africa. As a momma of
three on a farm in Missouri, I could never disciple someone in Canada or teach a Bible study in Africa, but God graciously allows me to have influence in
those regions through writing. He sends me to the nations from my desk in the Midwest. That mind-blowing truth keeps me writing.

3. I Write as a Record for the Next Generation.

In the wake of my grandfather’s recent death, we have spent hours combing through his belongings. Though I know my grandpa had a deep faith in Jesus and
experienced His work in his life, he didn’t write it down. We are left guessing about the details of his Christian walk. I don’t want my children to say
the same thing about me.

Long after I’m buried, I want people to know that Jesus rescued me, that He constantly provided for me, that He kept His promises to me.

Long after I’m buried, I want people to know that Jesus rescued me, that He constantly provided for me, that He kept His promises to me. I want there to be
an overwhelming body of evidence for His work in my life for my children and grandchildren.

We all have a responsibility to pass the torch of faith to the next generation. Writing is part of how I do that.

He established a testimony in Jacob
and appointed a law in Israel,
which he commanded our fathers
to teach to their children,
that the next generation might know them,
the children yet unborn,
and arise and tell them to their children (Ps. 78:5–6).

4. My Gifts Are Meant for the Kingdom.

The honest truth is, I can’t not write. Words burn in my heart until I feel I might burst if I don’t get them on a page (or screen). I often feel like a
fish who lives on land, and when I write it’s like I get to swim in the fishbowl for a while. I know this is because God has uniquely gifted me to write.
Like all gifts from Him, I want to surrender writing for the benefit of God’s kingdom.

As each has received a gift, use it to serve one another, as good stewards of God’s varied grace (1 Peter 4:10).

It is my deep desire to use my words to encourage, equip, challenge, or teach others to follow God and His Word more closely.

Living for Jesus vs. Writing About Jesus

I take my role as a writer seriously. There are certainly plenty of landmines buried in a writing career, primarily that I will become more concerned about
writing about Jesus than living for Jesus. When that happens, I pull back and stop writing for a while.

Because of Jesus, you have a story worth telling.

The word of my testimony isn’t very powerful if I’m not actually doing the things I write about. There is also a temptation to use writing to shine a
spotlight on myself instead of on Jesus or to see writing as my only ministry outlet when God clearly asks me to love others in ways more tangible than
words on a computer screen (Matt. 25:35–40).

Because of these temptations, I have accountability in place to make sure I am actually living what I write. Certainly I make mistakes, but that’s a part
of my story, too.

Because of Jesus, you have a story worth telling. Maybe you will sing it in song or whisper it into your baby’s ear or write it in a book. Whatever your
gifts, find a way to tell about what God has done. “Let the redeemed of the Lord, tell their story!”

In fact, I’d love to hear your story today.

Why do you do what you do for the Lord?
What story do you have to tell?
How are you using your gifts to build God’s kingdom?


PS: If you’re wondering how to write, needing tools to keep writing, or want a reminder why what you write matters, join me at Revive ’15. I’ll be with
Lore Ferguson Wilbert and Jennifer Lyell in a pre-conference track on writing titled “Writing to Touch Hearts.”

 

See you there!

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Nancy Leigh DeMoss’ Advice to Young Writers and Speakers.”

 

Do All Men Cheat?

I stared at my computer for a long time. After reading about the Ashley Madison scandal that is currently sending shockwaves through our culture (anyone
else feeling like it’s a train wreck? It’s hard to look away!), I learned that you could search the hacked database to find out if your spouse was on the
list.

I followed the link but paused for a long time before finally deciding not to enter my husband’s information in the search bar.

The same Spirit that is at work in our hearts is at work in the lives of the believing men around us.

I’ve been at this crossroads before, fighting a deep and nagging fear that news of my husband’s infidelity is right around the corner. I haven’t always
chosen to kick my fear to the curb. More often, I’ve invited the fear to sit in the driver’s seat.

The Ashley Madison headlines are recent, but men who cheat aren’t new news. For many years, I’ve struggled with an intense fear that my husband would
cheat. That fear was reinforced by a dad who cheated and tales of infidelity even among my Christian brothers and sisters.

Fear left unchecked can wreak all kinds of havoc on our hearts and lives. In my case, the fear that my man was destined to stray led me to be clingy,
accusatory, anxious, and worried. None of those behaviors could have kept him from cheating. That’s a job for the Holy Spirit.

But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control; against such things there is no law
(Gal. 5:22–23).

Do All Men Cheat?

During the most intense seasons of fear, I kept stumbling across verses like Romans 8:15, which states, “For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to
fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons,” and 2 Timothy 1:7, which says, “God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power
and love and self-control.” These verses made me want to deal with the fear that was gripping my heart (and my marriage), but I didn’t know how. The fear
that my husband would cheat wasn’t something that I could just talk myself out of. It’s a fear that didn’t unravel until God started exposing the lies
rooted to my fear.

Men aren’t given an extra dose of the sin nature any more than we have been given an extra helping of self-control.

I realized that my fear was based, in part, in the lie that all men cheat. The media portrays men as unable to control their sexual appetite. I just
assumed that if given the opportunity, my man would cheat out of an inability to control himself. This lie has dangerous ramifications far beyond a fearful
heart.

The truth is that men are no more carnal than we are.

Titus 2:11–13 says,

The grace of God has appeared, bringing salvation for all people, training us to renounce ungodliness and worldly passions, and to
live self-controlled, upright, and godly lives in the present age, waiting for our blessed hope, the appearing of the glory of our great God and Savior
Jesus Christ.

We don’t have the market cornered on self-control. The same Spirit that is at work in our hearts is at work in the lives of the believing men around us.
Men aren’t the animals we see them portrayed as. They aren’t perfect, but that doesn’t mean that the entire gender is destined to ditch their marriage
vows.

No Spiritually Superior Gender

Ladies, I think that sometimes we see ourselves as more spiritual than our male counterparts. The truth is the Holy Spirit lives in men who know Jesus as
vibrantly as He lives in our own hearts. Men aren’t given an extra dose of the sin nature any more than we have been given an extra helping of
self-control.

All of us are prone to run away from God’s best for our lives. It’s why we need a Savior so much.

All of us are prone to run away from God’s best for our lives. It’s why we need a Savior so much. My deep fear of marital unfaithfulness has forced me to
search my own sinful heart. Over and over again, I’ve had to make the choice to praise God for His grace in my own life instead of going on a witch hunt
for sin in the life of my husband.

I love how Alvin Reid said it recently, “I am experiencing personal revival because I stopped confessing everyone else’s sin.”

I closed my laptop and reminded myself that though imperfect, I have a wonderful husband. I gave him a hug instead of an accusation. I chose to lay my
fear, again, in God’s capable hands.

Is your man doing his best to live out his faith in Jesus? Has his love for you and commitment to your marriage kept him faithful? Don’t wait in
anticipation for the moment he will fail. Thank him for serving God by faithfully loving you.

Note: To those wives whose husbands have cheated, please check out these posts for a hopeful dose of God’s truth.

The Whole Truth: To the Christian Woman Who Just Discovered Her Husband’s Affair

Hope for the Hopeless Marriage

5 Reasons Unity Is Worth Fighting For

We are a culture of advocates. Perhaps more than ever before, it’s trendy to latch on to a cause and passionately declare our support through colored
ribbons, memes, and virtual thumbs up. While I love to see us standing up for truth with passion, in our zeal to champion the people and causes we love, I
can’t help but notice that we seem to have missed something that matters deeply to God—unity.

Do we value harmony in the Church to the same degree we esteem
right theology and defending our tribes?

Sure, we throw “unity” around when we are speaking Christianese. But do we really get it? Do we value harmony in the Church to the same degree we esteem
right theology and defending our tribes? Yep, theology matters. Yep, it’s okay to align myself with people who help me love and live out God’s Word better.
But advocacy that cracks the foundations of the family of God misses a massive mark. If we are really interested in understanding and applying Scripture,
we won’t miss the clear message that unity in the Body matters to God.

With that in mind, here are five biblical reasons to care about unity in the Church.

1. Jesus passionately prayed for unity.

In John 17, we find Jesus praying to the Father in the moments before He was arrested, put on trial, and eventually executed. Since that moment is a little
too cosmic for my finite brain to grasp the significance of, I like to think of it as the final huddle that would decide the outcome of a game that had
gone into sudden death. Jesus knew what was on the line. It was all or nothing at this point, so He huddles up with the Father and prays a desperate,
passionate prayer.

What did He ask God for?

“That they may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you, that they also may be in us, so that the world may believe that you have sent me.
The glory that you have given me I have given to them, that they may be one even as we are one, I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly
one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me” (John 17:21–23).

It’s go time. Soldiers are steps away. Jesus knows what’s coming, and He gets His game face on by taking some time to pray a short, passionate prayer.
First, He prays for the disciples (vv. 6–19), knowing that after His death they would build His Church. But then He pivots and prays for us (v. 20). Here’s
what He specifically asks the Father for on our behalf:

  • That we would be witnesses. (More on that in a minute.)
  • That we would be with Him.
  • That the Father’s love would be in us.

Those are all important things, but they aren’t what Jesus asks the Father for most often or most passionately. In this short prayer, He asks the Father to
give us unity three times.

  • “They may all be one, just as you, Father, are in me, and I in you.”
  • “They may be one even as we are one.”
  • “They may become perfectly one.”

Not once does He pray that we would understand and apply the Bible perfectly. He never prays that we would be able to argue eloquently. He doesn’t pray for
us to become passionate advocates. He prays for us to be unified. And then He prays for it again. And then one more time with feeling. When Jesus looked
ahead and saw us, what was He most desperate to see? Unity.

2. Unity is fragile. Handle with care.

And after some days Paul said to Barnabas, “Let us return and visit the brothers in every city where we proclaimed the word of the Lord, and see how they
are.” Now Barnabas wanted to take with them John called Mark. But Paul thought best not to take with them one who had withdrawn from them in Pamphylia and
had not gone with them to the work.



And there arose a sharp disagreement, so that they separated from each other. Barnabas took Mark with him and sailed
away to Cyprus, but Paul chose Silas and departed, having been commended by the brothers to the grace of the Lord. And he went through Syria and Cilicia,
strengthening the churches (Acts 15:36–41).

Paul and Barnabas were thick as thieves. The Bible tells us that it was Barnabas who first advocated for Paul after his dramatic conversion ( Acts 9:27). Barnabas accompanied Paul on his first missionary
journey (Acts 13–14). Together they traveled more than 1,200 miles
over the course of two years. If you’ve ever been on a mission trip, you know it works like spiritual superglue, bonding you to your fellow travelers like
few other experiences can. And yet, despite all of their history and all that held them together, a single disagreement caused them to part ways. One
“sharp disagreement” severed unity and put oceans between these two Christian brothers.

Slapping on smiley faces and singing Kumbaya
through clenched teeth isn’t the answer. Fighting hard for unity is.

Unity is slippery like that. One minute we are living in harmony with our Christian brothers and sisters, fiercely committed to each other and our shared
Savior, and the next minute our church is splitting, our small group is fractured, or two Christians are duking it out online.

There is no sense pretending we aren’t prone to discord. It has been this way since the beginning of mankind. Slapping on smiley faces and singing Kumbaya
through clenched teeth isn’t the answer. Fighting hard for unity is.

3. Unity is an evangelism tool.

Pop quiz! What did Jesus say was on the line when He asked the Father for unity on our behalf? (Go ahead and cheat by re-reading John 17:21–23 above. You
can even skip to the last line).

“I in them and you in me, that they may become perfectly one, so that the world may know that you sent me and loved them even as you loved me” (John
17:23).

Jesus wants us to be unified so that the world will know that He is God’s Son and that He loves them. Since discord, pain, and fracture are the norm in our
fallen world, true unity will draw in the lost like moths to a flame. That’s why the Psalmist wrote these words:

Behold, how good and pleasant it is when brothers dwell in unity! (Ps. 133:1).

Unity in the Church is an evangelism tool. The flipside is that when the Body is fractured, it undercuts Christ’s message. Why God opted to put the weight
of that on the shoulders of a group as contrary and finicky as we are is beyond me, but He did. When He prayed urgently for us to be unified, it wasn’t
just so we could all feel warm and fuzzy. It was because He knew that unity shoots up a beacon of hope in a fractured world.

4. Unity is a commandment.

“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you” (John 15:12).

Loving other believers well isn’t a suggestion. It’s a commandment, straight from Jesus’ mouth. Just in case we are tempted to justify some of the unloving
things we say to each other, Jesus spells out just how high the bar is . . .

“Love one another as I have loved you.”

We are to love each other sacrificially, even when our fellow Christians don’t “deserve” it. (Because Jesus loved us sacrificially even though we didn’t
deserve it).

What does that look like practically?

  • It looks like following the clear model for dealing with conflict among believers outlined by Jesus in Matthew 18:15–20. This passage encourages us to work
    out our differences one-to-one and in person. Interacting on a Facebook wall is not the same thing. Neither is a heated Twitter battle.
  • It looks like valuing unity above being “right.”
  • It looks like championing other Christians as often as possible instead of looking for reasons to pick them apart.
  • It looks like speaking highly of the Church and its members.

5. Unity protects us.

Unity matters because it is a fence that protects us from the wolves that want to rip the Church apart. I know that sounds dramatic, but listen to how Paul
wrote about it in Romans 16:17–18:

I appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught; avoid them.
For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive.

One commentator pointed out that Paul was addressing the “sin of schism,” that tendency that many of us have to cause division. We are a culture accustomed
to discord. Our politics are based on two parties in perpetual duke-it-out mode. Our news comes to us through two talking heads debating both sides of
every story. But this is not God’s model for the Church. God’s people are meant to be an oasis from the “schism” all around us.

Unity in the Church is an evangelism tool.

Paul tells us to be on the lookout for those who come against the unity of the Church. Before you take your place on the wall, determined to watch out for
anyone who might cause disharmony, check yourself. Are there any ways you are committing the “sin of schism”?

With Jesus’ clear call to unity in mind, I’d love to urge (beg, plead!) us as Christians to force ourselves to ask these questions as we write, speak, and
post.

  • Will this contribute to unity or discord?
  • Will someone look at this post, comment, tweet and declare it “good and pleasant”?
  • Do I commit the “sin of schism” by strongly opposing other Christians often or in public forums?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “One-Souled Relationships.”

 

35 Things I Wish I’d Known in High School

This year I turned 35.

When I was a teenager, thirty seemed ancient. But as I crest the hill of my mid-thirties, I can assure you I won’t be picking out a retirement home any time soon. I’m just getting warmed up. In fact, my thirties have been some of the best, most fruitful, most fun years of my life. I don’t have life all figured out, but God has taught me some valuable lessons since high school graduation.

Whether you are heading back to school in a few weeks or you turned your tassel long ago, I think you’ll find that these are truths you can take to the bank because they are deeply rooted in the timeless Word of God (the ultimate school for knowledge and wisdom!).

  1. God’s promises are true.
  2. He really does have a hope and a future for me (Jer. 29:11).
  3. The college, major, and career I pick don’t define me. I am not my work. I am a child of God.
  4. Marrying a guy who loves Jesus really, really matters.
  5. Parents are pretty cool. Their rules are for my good.
  6. Being the prettiest or most popular girl in school matters for about half a second after graduation. In contrast, being the kindest girl in school gets remembered well past your ten-year reunion.
  7. You will look back at pictures of you and think you were stunning. Trust me.
  8. Insecurity is a massive waste of time and energy. Be confident in God’s love.
  9. “The heart of man plans his way, but the Lord establishes his steps” (Prov. 16:9). It’s okay to have a ten-year plan, but there’s a 100% chance God will interrupt it. That’s a good thing.
  10. The bands you listen to in high school will be your very favorite bands forever. Keep the t-shirts. They will be “vintage” and awesome when you’re thirty.
  11. You truly do reap what you sow. I love how Nancy Leigh DeMoss says it, “You are what you’re becoming.” Do you want to know your Bible frontwards and backwards later? Study it like crazy now. Do you want to be more like Christ someday? Be more like Him today.
  12. Broken hearts heal. Mine got broken often in high school. All these years later I’ve still never felt a pain like it. But those deep chasms are now all healed up. If your heart is broken, I promise it will heal and someone else will capture it someday.
  13. Start saving money now. I know that top at Anthropologie is super cute, but it’s also crazy overpriced. Imagine dropping that $75 in a savings account and using it for something lasting like a car, an education, or a child sponsorship. Most people think they will start saving “someday.” I wish I had developed the discipline of saving money as a high school student. While we are on the subject of money . . .
  14. Start tithing. The Bible calls all believers to tithe regardless of income. So, if you have an allowance, a part-time job or babysitting money, you have an income. Everything you make belongs to God, but there are tremendous blessings to be found in giving a portion of it back to Him. Don’t wait until you’re rolling in the dough to start tithing.
  15. The world doesn’t revolve around me. That’s a good thing.
  16. Champion others as often as possible. Instead of wanting everyone to cheer you on, figure out ways to cheer them on.
  17. Normal is a mirage. Embrace your weirdness.
  18. I know that boy gives you butterflies, but that won’t carry you through the ups and downs of life. Find someone who loves Jesus (remember point #4), but also someone who is fun to talk to and knows how to cope when the going gets tough. Then, when you least expect it, the butterflies will start to flutter in your tummy once again. Fourteen years after I married my high school sweetheart, I still get butterflies.
  19. I’ve never met someone my age who is glad she partied in high school. Ever. I’ve met lots and lots of them who regretted it. There is no long-term benefit from that scene.
  20. You don’t need a bunch of friends. You need one or two who’ve really got your back.
  21. Worry less about having the right friends and worry more about being the right friend.
  22. Be picky about your friends. The Bible says it this way, “Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm” (Prov. 13:20). Pick wise friends. Since Proverbs 9:10 tells us that the fear of the Lord is where wisdom begins, wise friends need to be Jesus-loving friends.
  23. Don’t be afraid to fail. Stand up in front of the class and give that speech. Try out for the lead role in the play. Start a club. You may fall on your face. You may not. But at least you went for it.
  24. You can do big things for the kingdom now. Don’t wait to get involved in ministry.
  25. Your parents don’t need to be your friends right now. They need to be your parents, and that means they make and enforce the rules. The good news is, they will likely be your friends someday. Right now God has given them the job of being in charge. Do everything you can to make that job easier.
  26. Find something you are good at and enjoy it, but don’t make it your whole life. Soccer is supposed to be fun, not stressful. So is singing, sculpting, and playing the saxophone.
  27. It’s okay to miss practice for church. In fact, church trumps activities every single time.
  28. Sometimes it’s cool to love Jesus and not the Church, but Jesus loves the Church. If there is something that could be better at your church, then get involved and make it better instead of complaining or checking out. The Church is the Bride of Christ.
  29. Your youth pastor is not your connection to God.
  30. “The things of earth will come to pass, only what’s done for Christ will last.” That’ll preach.
  31. When you get your license, it’s a license to drive, not a license to do stupid things. I know because within a few weeks of getting my license, I got caught racing on the highway and wrapped my car around a telephone pole. I drove dumb so you don’t have to.
  32. When you do something stupid to impress someone, it’s still doing something stupid, and it likely won’t impress them as much as if you did something smart. Do the smart thing instead.
  33. Your siblings are cooler than you think. When you’re thirty-five, they’ll be the people you want to grab coffee with.
  34. Nothing good happens after curfew. Go home.
  35. “Charm is deceptive and beauty is fleeting” (Prov. 31:30). Since outward beauty cannot last, spend your time growing a beautiful heart.

Visit ReviveOurHearts.com/35lessons for a special locker art graphic of “35 Things I Wish I’d Known in High School,” and give it to a student who’s heading back to school.

 

Teenagers + Technology: 3 Things You Might Be Missing

News flash: Scientists say modern teenagers have grown another appendage.

Well, those are not their exact findings, but close. A recent Pew Research Study shows what any of us who have tried to look a teenager in the eye recently
already know—they are superglued to their iStuff. Here are the study’s highlights:

  • Three-fourths of teenagers have or have access to a smartphone. (My experience shows that the other fourth are begging their parents for a
    smartphone, 24/7.)
  • 92 percent of teenagers are online daily.
  • 24 percent of teenagers go online “almost constantly.”
  • 71 percent of all teenagers are on Facebook. Half are on Instagram; a quarter are on Twitter.

In other words, they’re online. A lot. The hub of their existence is digital. It is how they connect with friends, vet new ideas, and develop a worldview.

The hub of their existence is digital. It is how they connect with friends, vet new ideas, and develop a worldview.

Teenagers’ hyper use of technology is not exactly new news. They have long been on the cutting edge of social media as natural early adopters. Just because
that’s obvious doesn’t mean we, as adults, have always responded correctly. Here are three reasons to pay attention to what teenagers are doing online.

1. “I’m watching you, Wazowski. Always watching you.”

That classic line from Monsters Inc. is the gut punch all of us grown-ups need as we post, comment, and click away online. Just like Roz, the
secretary/head of a secret government agency, warned Mike Wazowski that her eyes were always on him, these numbers about the massive number of teenagers
who are online are a warning: We are being watched.

Teenagers are watching how we behave online.

While it may seem like teenagers have one world online and we have another, it simply isn’t true. Teenagers are watching how we behave online. They are
reading what we post, and I’ve got to be honest, I think we’ve showed them just how low the bar can go.

  • What are we teaching teenagers about authenticity when we post spackled versions of ourselves online?
  • What are we showing them about loving their neighbors when we work so hard to create dividing lines, identify or disassociate with tribes, and
    blast political and spiritual leaders in the virtual colosseum that the Internet so often becomes?
  • What are we demonstrating about how to deal with conflict in the church when we violate the principles of Matthew 18 so often?

All parents know that “do as I say, not as I do” is hogwash. So why is it that we assume teenagers will ascribe to it when it comes to our behavior online?
I don’t model Christlikeness online perfectly, but I’ve stopped pretending the teenagers in my world aren’t looking at my example through their Twitter and
Insta feeds. For the next generation of social media-loving Jesus followers, I’d like to urge us to raise the bar.

2. They’re hungry for human connection.

Despite the fact that most young people have an average of 243 Facebook friends, it’s not translating into real-life friendships. Researchers theorize that
they are spending so much time online that they no longer have time to go out with non-Facebook friends. Even with Facebook “friends” and Twitter
“followers,” teenagers are lonelier than ever before.

“Skin hunger” is a real condition that is affecting more and more of us. Think of skin hunger as the adult version of failure to thrive. It has become such
an issue that MIT students invented the Like-A-Hug inflatable jacket—a garment that inflates to “hug” you whenever someone likes your Facebook post. In
2006, the Hug Shirt was released. TIME Magazine named it one of the best inventions of the year.

Even with Facebook “friends” and Twitter “followers,” teenagers are lonelier than ever before.

I can only assume that skin hunger has gotten progressively worse since then. In the absence of regular, meaningful human contact, we fail to reach our
full potential. One study discovered that skin hunger was making young people as lonely as the elderly, the group typically seen as the loneliest among us.

The bottom line is this: The teenagers in your world need a hug. They need eye contact. They need someone to sit across from them in an actual coffee shop
and carry on a conversation without emojis. Since Titus 2 calls all of us to invest in the next generation, this is important news. We don’t have to be
cool. (Thank goodness!) We don’t have to develop slick programs. We don’t have to write or speak in teenager jargon. As we seek to disciple young people,
the plan is simple—give them what they crave, human connection, and then point them to Jesus. You can do that!

3. The mission field is online.

According to Barna, nearly half of Americans who accept Jesus as their Savior do so before the age of thirteen. Two out of three born-again Christians made
that commitment to Christ before they turned eighteen. Clearly, evangelism is bearing fruit among the very young. My own walk with Christ is the result of
a youth pastor who invited me and my sister out for pizza and then talked to us about faith. Evangelism and discipleship really can be that simple.

The hearts of teenagers are one of the most fruitful mission fields on the planet.

Since all believers are called to go and make disciples as part of the Great Commission, sharing the gospel effectively should be our collective concern.
The hearts of teenagers are one of the most fruitful mission fields on the planet. What’s more, the future of the Church sits squarely on their shoulders.
We’ve missed something when we relegate the evangelism and discipleship of this people group solely to the guys with the cargo shorts and goatees.

While it’s true that we should seek to engage the next generation in person, we also need to go where they are—online. It is worth considering:

  • How can we present the gospel in a meaningful, winsome way to teenagers online?
  • How can we be more welcoming to teenagers in our own online communities?
  • How can we better model who Jesus calls us to be online? (See point #1.)

I’m glad we’re sending missionaries to places like Africa and China, but with the goal of making and training disciples in mind, I think we may be missing
a potential gold mine. Teenagers are online, and their hearts are fertile places for seeds of truth. As a church, we need reach out to this accessible and
attentive people group with the Good News.

Stop the Eye Rolling

When it comes to teenagers and technology, we seem to have adopted a classic teenage posture. We roll our eyes, sigh, and collectively throw up our hands
about the fact that the young people in our world are glued to their phones. The facts are, they are attached to those handheld devices and that trend is
unlikely to reverse. So instead of bemoaning them, let’s engage them. Instead of dismissing them, let’s disciple them. I’m looking for a few good
missionaries who are willing to raise the bar when it comes to who we are online and to look for ways to engage the teenagers in their world online and in
person. Will you join me?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “3 Trojan Horses That Are Affecting Our Ability to Connect.”

 

A Right Theology of Fear (And Why You Need It)

I know that I’m not supposed to be. I’ve heard all of the lines about how God wins. I’ve sung the words plenty, “If our God is for us, then who can ever
stop us.” I know that I’m supposed to “fear not” and yet, in these times, I have to wonder how it’s possible to feel no fear without assuming an ostrich
position and ignoring all that is happening in our world.

In addition to tasting the bile of fear in my stomach, I am wrestling with how to reconcile my fear and my faith.

  • What am I supposed to do with my fear?
  • Is fear the “gift” that psychologists tell me it is, or is it evidence that my faith is sick and useless?
  • I’ve been a Christian for nearly twenty years; should I have the fearlessness of Wonder Woman as a result?
  • Is my fear a sin?

Fear makes me suddenly and painfully aware of my total lack of control.

I may not have all of the answers, but I know where to run to find them. God’s Word has plenty to say about fear. In fact, there are well over 400 verses
on the subject. I imagine that is because there is much to fear in our fallen and broken world and because I’m not the only one whose heart’s default
posture is fear. Yes, the Bible says “fear not.” In fact that is the most consistent message about fear in the Bible, but it’s not all God has to say on
the subject. If you’ve got questions about fear, the Bible has answers. Here’s an overview of the theology of fear found in God’s Word.

Fear is not always the absence of faith. Sometimes it’s the underpinnings of it.

If possible, I’d have Philippians 4:6–7 tattooed on the back of my eyeballs.

Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made to God. And the peace of God,
which surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Fear makes me suddenly and painfully aware of my total lack of control. It pops the bubble of illusion that I can take care of myself. It forces me to look
for purpose and meaning beyond the trivial. It makes me desperate for hope.

In this way, fear is a gift because it yanks my eyes off of my naval and toward the only One who can do something about all that threatens me. I believe
this is why God asks us not to be anxious. It isn’t because there’s nothing to be anxious about. There is! But only God’s peace can shore us up enough to
face that.

Jesus Offers a Different Kind of Peace

There isn’t a lock that can keep every bad guy out. There isn’t a vaccine against every disease. There isn’t an army big enough to enforce world peace.
Those are the cold hard facts of life this side of Eden, but Jesus is the Prince of Peace (Isa. 9:6). He offers a different kind of comfort than I can find
in security systems and emergency preparedness plans.

“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid”
(John 14:27).

Aren’t all of our fears really rooted in a fear of death? Isn’t that why cancer scares the hooey out of us? Isn’t it why war is so terrifying? Since death
cannot touch Jesus, we can know that nothing that scares us will take Him down. Peace is the gift Jesus gave His followers upon returning to heaven. It
remains the unique gift of Christians and the exclusive hope we have to offer the world around us.

Because He is omnipotent, omnipresent, and sovereign over all, He can watch the unrolling of history without fear. I get to borrow some of that
fearlessness as His child. I cannot carry the burden of fear. I can say from experience it will crush me. But God does not tell me to slap on a happy face
and act like I live in La La Land. Nope. He gives me very specific instructions for what to do with my fear . . .

What Am I Supposed to Do with My Fear?

Humble yourselves, therefore, under the mighty hand of God so that at the proper time he may exalt you, casting all your anxieties on him, because he
cares for you (1 Peter 5:6–7).

What am I supposed to do with my fear and anxiety? I am supposed to hurl it toward the cross. Because in light of the fact that Jesus died in my place and
has secured an eternal place for me with Him, all fears—real or imagined—must shrink in significance.

What does that look like, practically? Let me give you an example . . .

What am I supposed to do with my fear and anxiety? I am supposed to hurl it toward the cross.

For several years, I was awakened in the middle of the night a couple of times a month with panic attacks. I couldn’t breathe. My mind and heart raced. My
chest felt like it was in a vice grip. You should know, I was a believer already. I was serving God in full-time vocational ministry. I read my Bible
often. And yet fear sometimes stalked me.

In those dark moments I didn’t know how to “cast my anxiety on him.” Then I learned the power of God’s Word. It is my offensive weapon when something
terrifying is charging me.

That’s why Ephesians 6:17 says, “And take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”

When I started to use the Word as a weapon, the panic attacks stopped. Now when I wake up afraid, I say verses like these out loud.

For God gave us a spirit not of fear but of power and love and self-control (2 Tim. 1:7).
 
Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand (Isa. 41:10).

Slavery to fear is the mark of unbelievers. Adoption breaks the yoke.

For you did not receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received the Spirit of adoption as sons, by whom we cry, “Abba!
Father!” (Rom. 8:15).

When my sons have nightmares, they want their daddy. His strong arms and calm voice provide an oasis when they are in the desert of fear. It is no accident
that in this passage God reminds us that we have been set free from the chains of fear and then reminds us that He is our “Abba! Father!” He is our daddy.
When we are afraid, we can run to His strong arms.

The yoke of fear was broken when He adopted you. That doesn’t mean you will never feel afraid. It does mean you don’t have to be chained to that fear. You
can put one foot in front of the other because you know your heavenly Father is keeping watch over His beloved sheep.

Knowing the difference between eternal and temporal threats changes what I fear.

Psalm 56:11, 118:6, and Hebrews 13:6 all reach the same conclusion . . .

“What can man do to me?”

I know that the answer is plenty. Man can hurt our feelings, ruin our reputation, corrupt our children. Man can harm our physical bodies and destroy our
property. Man can take what we treasure. I know those are all real threats; however, they are temporal. No reputation or possession will make it with us to
eternity. They might last eighty years, a blip compared to forever. When God “stamps eternity onto our eyeballs” we can see clearly that even in a worst-case
scenario, we have hope of a perfect existence free of pain and fear with Jesus. But if “fear not” is one side of the coin when it comes to how the Bible
describes fear, “fear God” is the other.

Knowing the difference between eternal and temporal threats changes what I fear.

Well over 100 times the Bible calls us to “fear God.” Because as much as God is our Comforter and Prince of Peace, He is also just, righteous, jealous, and
holy. The buck stops with Him. Instead of living our lives in fear of man, worrying about what the people around us might do or think, we are called to
fear God and make every choice with His will in mind.

I need a theology of fear because, without it, I will spend the best part of my days and years wringing hands and biting fingernails. I need to remind
myself often of all that God says about fear and to use my fear as a diving board that springs me into the deep waters of God’s truth.

Psalm 23:4 works like a life jacket in scary, choppy waters.

Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.

The Psalmist wasn’t fearless because there was nothing to fear. He was in the Valley of the Shadow of Death after all. I think of that valley as the place
where our heart cries, “If I have to stay here one more minute, I’ll die!” It’s a dark and scary place. When we find ourselves there, why shouldn’t we be
afraid? Because of God’s presence. Because His rod is there to protect us, and His staff is there to shepherd us. Because He will not leave us there
forever. Because He has gone to prepare a place for us where all fears will cease. Remembering this is the only cure for my fearful heart.

  • What makes you afraid?
  • Do you have a good theology of fear?

  • How can we show peace to a terrifying and terrified world?

PS: I love my friend Trillia Newbell’s book on the topic, Fear and Faith. I’ll choose three of you to win a free copy!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “When Fear Is Pressing in on Your Heart.”

 

A Birthday Wish to Do Something Big

It’s my birthday! You can tell by the twenty candles on my cake.

Nope, I’m not actually turning twenty (again!). I’m not celebrating my physical birthday; I’m celebrating my spiritual birthday. Twenty years ago this month, I walked an aisle in a hot and crowded auditorium and gave my heart to Jesus. Nothing has been the same since.

To celebrate all that God has done in my life in the past two decades, I came up with a wild and crazy idea. Here’s a video with the highlights.

Why I’m Asking for Blisters for My Birthday

Who I Stole The Idea From

The idea of doing something big to mark what God has done isn’t mine. I totally plagiarized it straight from His Word.

  • In Genesis 35:7, Jacob built an altar to remember the night he wrestled with God.
  • In Exodus 17:14-16, Moses built a memorial to commemorate God’s help in defeating the Amalekites.
  • In Joshua 4, after safely moving the people of Israel across the Jordan River, God commanded them to pull up twelve stones from the riverbed as a monument to His deliverance.
  • In Matthew 26:26-29, Jesus instituted the Lord’s Supper as a way to regularly remember His sacrifice on our behalf.

God clearly knows about our tendency to have spiritual amnesia and forget the good things He has done for us. Through His Word, He urges us to force our hearts to remember. I won’t be building an altar, but I do hope that by doing something to mark God’s hand in my life the people in my world will remember the faithfulness of God in their own lives.

“That this may be a sign among you. When your children ask in time to come, ‘What do those stones mean to you?’ then you shall tell them that the waters of the Jordan were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the LORD. When it passed over the Jordan, the waters of the Jordan were cut off. So these stones shall be to the people of Israel a memorial forever” (Josh. 4:6-7).

I won’t be putting one stone on top of another, but I will be putting one foot in front of another as a way to counsel my own heart and send a message to the world:

  • God has been faithful.
  • He has kept His promises.
  • His Word is true and can be trusted.
  • I’m not who I once was.
  • We’ve got a God-sized mission to do. Let’s roll!

3 Ways to Get Involved

I’d love for you to get involved in celebrating this milestone with me. Here are three ways you can.

1. Build your own memorial.

When is your spiritual birthday? Consider marking it or celebrating it in some way.

  • Can you give to a ministry that has impacted you?
  • Can you write a letter to a pastor who has challenged you?
  • Can you invest in someone else since you’ve been invested in?
  • Can you create art focused on a Bible verse that has been especially meaningful to you?

The possibilities are endless!

2. Let’s take a walk!

I’d love to have you walk with me on July 25. Sure, we probably can’t physically walk side by side, but you can walk in your world and I can walk in mine. (And thanks to technology, we can shoot each other pics!) If you’ve known the Lord five years, walk five miles. If you’ve known Him ten, walk ten miles—or ten yards or ten steps. This isn’t about pushing the boundaries physically; it’s about remembering all God has done for us!

I’ll be tweeting live as I walk. Follow me @eringraffiti. I’d love to hear from women all over the country who are on the move to celebrate what God has done!

3. Invest in kingdom work around the globe!

I’d love to have you give toward my effort to raise $20,000. Remember, I’m giving every cent away to four organizations that have dramatically impacted my relationship with Christ and are busy with meaningful, kingdom work. Every dollar raised will be divided four ways and given to these ministries. By giving, you will be a part of sharing the gospel in India, South Africa, across the United States, and around the world. Talk about a great investment! Here’s a recap.

Greentree Christian Church—This is my home church. Under the leadership of my pastor, Tim Cook, no organization has had a greater impact on my life than this church. We will use the money raised to build safe houses in India.

Impact Community Church—This church is pastored by my former youth pastor, Barry Smith. Impact will use funds raised to create an online campus so people can access truth-packed services worldwide.

Pure Freedom—This ministry is run by my mentor, Dannah Gresh. Funds raised will be used to continue to teach moms and daughters a biblical view of sexuality and purity. Talk about a timely message!

Revive Our Hearts—Revive Our Hearts calls women to freedom, fullness, and fruitfulness in Christ. I have grown in my understanding of biblical truth so much through this ministry! Funds raised will be used to equip women’s ministry leaders in South Africa to dub and circulate quality, biblical teaching for women.

So whatdya say? Will you pledge to give for each mile I will walk?

  • You could give $1 per mile, $20 total.
  • You could give $10 per mile, $200 total.
  • You could give $1,000 per mile, fully funding this effort.
  • Or give any amount in between.

Find out more information at www.gofundme.com/ErinDavis and ErinDavis.org, and plan to follow me LIVE on Twitter or Instagram (@Eringraffiti) July 25 as I walk twenty miles to raise $20,000 in celebration of twenty years.

The Parable of the Lost Sheep 2.0

Easter 2015 was particularly memorable for the Davis clan.

We had new baby sheep on our little farm, and I got the bright idea to take one of those sweet little lambs to our Easter celebration at my mom’s house.
Nothing says Easter like kids in their Sunday best taking a photo op with a baby sheep, right?

My nieces and nephews were smitten with the lamb, so much so they decided to take him for a walk. You can probably guess where this is going, even if they
couldn’t—the lamb got loose. A herd of children screaming and running toward it made him bolt, and the lamb got lost in the woods.

The parable of the lost sheep reminds me that He pursued me when I
was still running away from Him in glad rebellion.

Once they realized they weren’t in trouble, the kids handled the escape pretty well, until someone mentioned a coyote. All of the kids simultaneously burst
into tears. It was a symphony of screaming and crying. Not even another chocolate bunny could console them. What started out as a very Norman Rockwell-like
holiday quickly downgraded to a scene more closely resembling an episode of Jerry Springer.

For more than two days we searched for that little lamb. His mama stood out in the field and called for him until she was hoarse. I told my boys he was
likely a goner. They cried some more. Then someone had the bright idea to put our plight on Facebook. I never saw the post, but I am sure it went something
like this:

Easter lamb led to the slaughter by adorable children in church clothes.

I wasn’t sure what broadcasting the bad news on social media would do, but then we got a crazy phone call.

“Did you lose a sheep?”

“Yep, we sure did.”

“My husband was out cutting wood, and he swore he saw a baby lamb. I told him, ‘I read about him on Facebook.'”

In no time at all, my husband raced over to the home of the good-natured Facebook friend who called. They had, in fact, found our lost sheep. Against all
odds, he had made it five miles from my mom’s home. All the cousins were called. The children rejoiced. But then . . . the very best part of the story
happened.

My husband opened the gate, and that little lamb ran to his mama. As he nursed for the first time in more than two days, his little tail wagged at super
speed.

Miraculously, the lost sheep had been rescued and brought home.

The Original Lost Sheep

Our little lamb was not the first sheep to be lost. His reunion with his mama was not the happiest ever after. Check out the similar story Jesus told in
Luke 15:1–7. (Don’t skim it. It’s only seven short verses.)

Now the tax collectors and the sinners were all drawing near to him. And the Pharisees and the scribes grumbled, saying, “This man receives sinners and
eats with them.”

So he told them this parable: “What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open country, and
go after the one that is lost, until he finds it? And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders, rejoicing. And when he comes home, he calls
together his friends and his neighbors, saying to them, ‘Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.’ Just so, I tell you, there will be more
joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance.”

After the lost sheep incident at our house, this story took on new life for me. As someone who has, in fact, lost a sheep and looked earnestly, desperately
for it, I can feel the weight of what Jesus was teaching.

The parable of the lost sheep is likely a familiar one to you, just like it was to me before our little lamb made a break for it. But it’s taken on new
life in my heart. Would you mind looking at it closely with me in case God wants it to do the same in yours?

In fact, let’s do more than just read this parable. Let’s study it from three angles, like a gemologist trying to discover the exact value of a precious
stone. Ready?

Angle #1: The Lost Sheep

Who am I in the parable of the lost sheep? I’m the lost sheep.

Well, actually, I’m not lost anymore. In fact, I’ve been “found” by Jesus for two decades now. It’s been a long time since He rescued me from my wayward
ways and brought me into the fold. Perhaps that’s why I have spiritual amnesia. It’s so easy for me to forget how desperately lost I was. I need frequent
reminders that Jesus sought me out when I was still separated from Him by my sin.

Romans 5:8 says it this way: “But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”

When my Type-AA, achievement-driven side thinks I have to earn God’s love or acceptance, the parable of the lost sheep reminds me that He pursued me when I
was still running away from Him in glad rebellion.

Jesus is delighted by His children, especially when they run to Him.

When I doubt if He really loves me, the parable of the lost sheep reminds me that He sees me like a shepherd sees a sheep he’d do anything to rescue. He
rejoices over me. He carried the weight of my sin on His shoulders as He hung on the cross.

In hindsight, it was a little silly how worked up we got about our little lost lamb. He didn’t even have a name. (Farm animals are like that.) He didn’t
hold much value. More lambs will be born again soon on the farm. It’s kinda like the fact that I am only one of six billion people on the planet right now
and countless people since the beginning of time. But we desperately wanted that lamb to come home. God desperately wanted me to come home, too. He feels
the same way about you.

Jesus would hammer this point home just minutes after He told the parable of the lost sheep with the parable of the prodigal son.

And he arose and came to his father. But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and felt compassion, and ran and embraced him and kissed him
(Luke 15:20).

We were all once prodigal sons and daughters. Jesus eagerly watched and waited for our return to Him like an expectant father waiting for his wayward son.
I need frequent reminders of this truth.

Angle #2: Jesus

Jesus, of course, is the shepherd in this story. Pay attention to how Jesus describes the tender way He cared for the lost sheep and the great lengths He
went to celebrate its homecoming. Perhaps it takes seeing the homecoming of a real lost sheep to grasp Jesus’ description of Himself here, but the bottom
line is this: Jesus is delighted by His children, especially when they run to Him.

Perhaps you need reminded that Jesus is a good shepherd. Here’s some tender truth just for you.

He will tend his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms; he will carry them in his bosom, and gently lead those that are with young (Isa. 40:11).

“I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep” (John 10:11).

And when the chief Shepherd appears, you will receive the unfading crown of glory (1 Pet. 5:4).

Angle #3: The Pharisees and Scribes

While the parable of the lost sheep certainly has a warm and fuzzy quality about it, the original listeners would have found it a bitter pill to swallow.
Backtrack to verses 1–2 for the original reason Jesus told this story.

Now the tax collectors and sinners were all drawing near to hear him. And the Pharisees and the scribes grumbled, saying, “This man receives sinners and
eats with them.”

The Pharisees, or religious folks of the day, were rubbing shoulders with sinners and they didn’t like it. They really didn’t like that Jesus received
sinners with a welcoming attitude that said, “Come, have a seat at my table.” So they grumbled . . .

“How dare He show compassion to them!”

“Doesn’t He know what they have done!”

“How can a good God put up with such nonsense?”

When I really study Jesus’ story, I can see myself standing there in their judgmental shoes. For me those thoughts look like this:

  • “What is he doing in church? I heard he had an affair.”
  • “Why is God blessing them? They don’t live clean like we do.”
  • “Why is God blessing her work? She is not as good of a person as I am.”
  • “When is God going to intervene with that group of people? They are a stain on our culture.”

When I dare to point the finger at the sin of others, I need the reminder that I was once a lost little lamb, helpless, and vulnerable to an enemy who
“prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour” (1 Pet. 5:8). I didn’t save myself from that desperate situation. I couldn’t. Jesus made a
way for me to come home and then came looking for me to show me the path back.

Gospel Gratitude vs. Grumbling

The parable of the lost sheep is really the story of the gospel. When I am judgmental toward others, or secretly wish that God would be stingy with grace,
I’m just like the ones who grumbled because He ate His lunch with sinners.

The parable of the lost sheep is really the story of the gospel.

Instead of grumbling, God calls me to gratitude that overflows by helping me see the lost through gospel-colored lenses.

The lost will act lost. They are separated from their Shepherd after all. But He is desperately searching for them. He is already planning a party in the
hopes they will return.

  • As you look at the parable of the lost sheep again, where do you see yourself in the story?
  • What makes you “grumble” about the grace of God?
  • What shift does it cause in your heart to remember how it felt to be lost?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Does My Heart Belong to the Pigs?

Should You Take Marriage for a “Test Spin”?

Don’t you just love a free trial—a no-strings attached chance to try something out before you shell out your hard-earned cash? Most of us do.

Is it a good idea to enjoy a free trial without the commitment of a permanent arrangement?

When it comes to a new car, a test drive is a wise idea. If you’re thinking about investing four years and a wad of Benjamins into a college, it’s a good
idea to spend some time on campus first. Before you sign on the dotted line for that new house, you ought to go over the place with a fine tooth comb a
time or two. But what about marriage? Is it a good idea to enjoy a free trial without the commitment of a permanent arrangement?

Some people think so.

In fact, somewhere in the neighborhood of forty percent of people between the ages of eighteen to thirty-four said they like the idea of a “beta marriage.” If
you’re a non-techie like me, that phrase might not mean much, but it’s connected to the practice of “beta testing.” That’s geek for simply testing a
product before its official release. If you’ve ever done a free trial download of software or been given a free sample of something and asked to provide
feedback, you’ve been a beta tester.

In our culture of constant feedback, some people think that beta marriages are a good idea. This is an arrangement where a couple takes the marriage for a
“test spin” before committing for life. They give the marriage a trial run and then decide to formalize or dissolve the marriage after a two-year trial
period. Besides being terribly unromantic . . .

“Do you promise to love, honor, and cherish this woman for at least the next two years?”

“I do.”

Do beta marriages fit into God’s plan for marriage? Is giving the marriage a “trial run” by living together first a wise idea?

Hold the Phone!

Before I answer those questions, let me give this disclaimer:

I know that most of you aren’t running out to sign up for a marriage trial run. In fact, thirty-one percent of young people surveyed said that they are still in
favor of traditional marriage. You know, the kind where a couple is committed “until death do us part”? But I still wrote this post (and hope you will read
it) because . . .

  1. More and more couples are choosing to live together before marriage, including Christian couples. When I see a trend, I always want to filter it
    through God’s Word.
  2. While you may not consider living with someone at this stage in the game, a few years down the line you might change your mind. I want you to be
    anchored in God’s truth before that happens.
  3. Sometimes we give marriage a “trial run” in ways that don’t include moving in together. (For more on that, check out this great post “Divorced . . . at 18?”). Because of that, it’s good to remember what God’s plan
    for marriage looks like.
  4. As the culture moves toward wider acceptance of cohabitation, it is wise to know where God stands and to be able to articulate that well and with
    love.

So with that in mind, is it a good idea to live together before marriage?

The Facts

Here’s a snapshot of this trend.

1950: Nine out of ten women married without first living with their partners.

1990: One-third of couples lived together before saying “I do.”

Today: Half of all marriages are preceded by cohabitation.

Since 1980: The number of couples who live together before marriage has increased by 1,000 percent!

But cohabitation rarely leads to “happily ever after.”

  • Forty percent of people who cohabit break up before marriage.
  • Of those who make it to the altar, couples who live together are almost twice as likely to divorce as those couples who don’t live together before
    marriage.

Why? What is it about living together that impacts marriage so negatively?

Simply put, it is not God’s plan.

A Permanent Merger

We see our first description of marriage in Genesis 2:24:

“Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.”

In Matthew 19, Jesus was teaching about marriage when He said, “So they are no longer two but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let not
man separate” (v. 6).

There is no way to have a “free
trial” of the kind of commitment God designed to be enjoyed between husbands and wives.

God’s plan for marriage is a permanent merger. It’s combining two people into one new family. It’s intended to endure. There is no way to have a “free
trial” of the kind of commitment God designed to be enjoyed between husbands and wives.

Couples choose to live together to get a foretaste of what marriage will be like, but the very things that make marriage work are absent in that situation.
Specifically, the commitment that allows couples to weather the trials of life together. There’s no way to fast track a lifetime commitment.

Psst . . . I’ve Got a Secret

From a human perspective, living together may seem like a good idea. It allows couples to spend lots of time together. It is economically cheaper than
maintaining two households.

Most couples see it like a “trial run” to determine if their relationship can stand up to the day-in and day-out challenges of life without the total
commitment that marriage requires. Some will argue that they need to make sure that they are “sexually compatible” before agreeing to share a bedroom for
life.

But take it from someone who has been married for more than a decade, these are things best practiced within the context of marriage. My husband Jason and
I had no money, terrible communication, and zero sexual experience when we got married. If we had beta tested our union, we might have quickly decided it
wasn’t a match made in heaven.

The goal isn’t to have a perfect marriage from day one,
but to grow into the people and couple God wants you to be together.

But God’s idea is that we learn those things within the loving protection of a lifetime commitment. The goal isn’t to have a perfect marriage from day one,
but to grow into the people and couple God wants you to be together.

Does your marriage need a “test run”? The short answer is no.

There is no such thing as “no strings attached” love. God’s design is for our hearts to become so tethered to our spouse that it’s as if we are “one
flesh.” When it’s time for you to say “I do,” opt for the not-so-free trial by saying “no” to living together and reserving the most intimate parts of
yourself for after you’ve made a lifetime commitment.

Note: Portions of this post are taken from a book I wrote with Josh McDowell, The Bare Facts: 39 Questions Your Parents Hope You Never Ask About Sex. You
can check it out
here

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “My Son Moved in with His Girlfriend . . . What Now?

Antelope Hunting: How Loneliness Makes Us Vulnerable to Sin

A herd of antelopes grazes together on an African plain. There are so many of them that they are calm and relaxed, drawing a false sense of security from
their numbers. They do not scan the horizon for predators. No one stands guard. They simply eat in peace.

But look closer. Something is lurking in the tall grass.

A pride of lions is moving forward. Slowly. Meticulously. In military-like formation. They make a wide circle. Soon, they will have the herd of antelopes
completely surrounded.

When we step outside of community, we become significantly more susceptible to temptation and sin.

Suddenly, one female lion gives the signal the others have been waiting for. The pride stands up in unison and starts running. The antelopes dart. A planned
confusion results, and the lions work together to isolate a single doe. Then they move in for the kill and drag their prey off to the shade to be shared by
the pride.

It’s a scene that most of us will only ever observe on Animal Planet or the National Geographic channel. But you might be surprised how much a pride of
lions hunting their prey can teach us about one of the root causes of loneliness.

Every time a lion pride hunts together, it is a lightly organized operation. They do not test their potential prey for weakness like other predators do. The
only weakness they are looking for is isolation. If they can remove a single animal from its herd, lunch is easily delivered, even if the animal they are
hunting is much larger or faster than the lions themselves.

Knowing Our Place

Where do you see yourself in the lion-hunting scene I just described? Are you the lion? Confidently stalking your prey? Are you standing on the sidelines
somewhere with a telephoto lens?

The truth is, you are the antelope. So am I. Because we are all made weak and vulnerable by isolation. We may be living life, oblivious to the threat, just
like the antelopes who thoughtlessly munch on grass while a lion lurks just feet away. But the threat is there, and it is real.

First Peter 5:8 puts it this way, “Be sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary the devil prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.”

Staying disconnected has the power to do much more than simply make us feel lonely. It may just be what the enemy uses to prey upon you and bring you down.

Back to the Garden

Let’s head back to the Garden of Eden to take a look at exactly how isolation led to the fall of all mankind.

In Genesis 3:2–5 the serpent, who likely had been lurking in the grass for a while, sees his opportunity to deceive God’s children and moves in for the
kill.

“And the woman said to the serpent, ‘We may eat of the fruit of the trees in the garden, but God said, “You shall not eat of the fruit of the tree that is
in the midst of the garden, neither shall you touch it, lest you die.'” But the serpent said to the woman, ‘You will not surely die. For God knows that
when you eat of it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil.'”

I believe Satan was hunting Eve. He waited for a moment when she was not surrounded by her community. Verse 6 tells us that Adam was nearby, but maybe he
was just slightly out of earshot. And even if he wasn’t, Eve apparently didn’t take the time to talk to him about what was happening. We see in her the
very first woman with an independent streak, as she determined that she would process the information Satan was giving her and make the decision all on her
own.

Would things have turned out differently for Eve if she had simply said, “Let me talk to my husband about it” before taking a bite of that rotten fruit?
Certainly, she would have been double protected against this attack if she had talked to her husband and consulted with God. God had given her a
double-layered safety net through a relationship with Him and a relationship with Adam, but she cut right through the net and put herself in grave danger
by deciding to go at it alone. What happened next reminds us that we are all daughters of Eve.

“Then the eyes of both were opened, and they knew that they were naked. And they sewed fig leaves together and made themselves loincloths. And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and the man and his wife hid themselves from the presence of the
Lord God among the trees of the garden” (Gen. 3:7–8).

Loneliness set Eve up to sin. Then her shame led to even deeper isolation.

Here’s the big takeaway: When we step outside of community, we become significantly more susceptible to temptation and sin. In this way, loneliness is less
of an emotion and more of a military strategy effectively used by our enemy. Then, our shame lies to us and tells us that isolation is the only way to
regain control. In this way, loneliness and shame become a two-edged sword that is very effective at takings us out at the knees.

A Church at the Stadium

Researchers recently surveyed those who regularly attend church services to get a feel for their experiences.

Sixty-six percent of the people they talked to said that they feel they have a “real and personal connection” with God while attending church. That’s good!
Safety net number one is in place for most of us.

However, the study also revealed that our second layer of defense is tattered. More than a quarter of those surveyed agreed with the statement that church
feels “like a group of people sharing the same space in a public event but who are not connected in a real way.” Another nine percent of those surveyed
weren’t sure if they were connecting to others in their church or not. I have to wonder if the people in this group know what connectedness feels like or
if they’ve settled for a synthetic substitute.

What people were saying is that for them church feels like going to a football game. The stadium is packed. They are surrounded by people who all want the
same thing. The mood is light, but they are not really connected. At the end of the service, they will go back home to their lonely lives with the same
sense they could never tell what’s really going on.

Lean in. Listen closely.

I think this trend is less a reflection on the state of our churches, and more evidence of a personal problem. As individuals we refuse to get real about
our sin. We want to keep up appearances. We want people to think we’re really good people. We prefer to think of church as a country club where we wear our
best clothes, including a pretty mask, instead of a hospital where we can get bound up and healed through the loving care of others.

Refusing to tell your sin to others will keep you an antelope until you return to your community.

That kind of thinking will get us isolated from the herd every time. Sure, antelopes are pretty. People like to look at them, but they are easy targets
because they are quickly separated from their community. Refusing to tell your sin to others will keep you an antelope until you return to your community.

Are you lonely? If so, is it possible that sin is the root cause? Can you look back and see that Satan waited for moments when you were outside your
community? He attacked and then he lied to you and told you shame should banish you to the bushes, making you feel even more alone.

It’s time to fall into your safety net. Seek God, and ask Him to reveal the sin in your life. Confess it to Him right then and there. Don’t hide yourself
or your junk. But don’t stop there.

Tell your Christian friends. Tell your pastor. Tell your mentor. Tell your family. Keep telling until you see the lion pride slink away and set their
sights on a different antelope.

Note: Much of this post was taken from my latest book, Connected: Curing the Pandemic of Everyone Feeling Alone TogetherI’ll give away a copy to one of you who leaves me a comment sharing how isolation has impacted your faith.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Connected.”

 

3 Trojan Horses That Are Threatening Our Ability to Connect

After a fruitless ten-year war against the city of Troy, the Greeks come up with a strategy to secure their place in the pages of history. They construct a
massive horse designed to hide an elite force of their best fighters. The rest of the Greek army sails off into the sunset, leaving their enemies to
believe that they have given up the fight. Relieved that the conflict is finally over and assuming that the giant horse is an offering to the god Athena,
the Trojans wheel the beast into the fortified walls of their city.

Night falls, and the Greek special forces climb out of their hiding place and unlock the gates for their fellow soldiers who have returned under the cloak
of darkness. Troy is destroyed. The war ends. The Greeks win.

No, this blog hasn’t taken a hard right turn into the subject of ancient mythology. This is a post about loneliness. To tackle that big subject, we need to
revisit the Trojan horse, because too many of us have pulled our own version of that horse into the gates of our lives.

For our purposes, a Trojan horse is simply this: Something we invite into our lives thinking it’s a gift, but in time it turns and attacks the things we
most treasure. Here are three Trojan horses that are attacking the depth and quality of our relationships, leaving many of us disconnected in a connected
world.

Trojan Horse #1: Technology

If we are going to get real about the ways loneliness rears its ugly head in our modern lives, we must take a hard look at technology. Don’t worry. There
will be no witch hunts for your iStuff. I won’t propose a ceremonial burning of everything with an on/off switch or suggest that if we all moved to a
TV-free hippie commune, then loneliness would cease to exist in our lives.

Researchers theorize that we are spending
so much time online that we no longer have time to go out with our non-Facebook friends.

The reality is that technology is both a cause of loneliness and a false cure. It’s impacting our relationships, and the impact overall isn’t good. But
technology is here to stay. Over-romanticizing life without a screen won’t scratch our itch to be known. The answer is to rethink the difference between
authentic human connection and connection to the virtual world.

Honestly, when I’m not writing a blog post about technology’s role in our relationships, I largely consider the media consumption habits of others to be
none of my business, but I have marveled at the consistency with which others feel the need to defend themselves in this area. The fact that we are all so
testy about our media usage should throw up a red flag or two. The truth is, we’re all addicted, and our denial about this fact isn’t doing us much good.

Here are the hard facts:

  • 70% of Americans sleep with their cell phones within arm’s length. One-third of us get online before getting out of bed.
  • 61% of us check our phones every hour.
  • Adults spend at least 8–12 hours per day staring at screens. That’s more time that we spend on any other activity, including sleeping.

What is the result of being constantly plugged in? More than half of us admit we find it difficult to make friends in “real life” compared with online.
“Skin-hunger” is a real condition that is growing like wildfire. Think of skin-hunger as the adult version of failure to thrive. For the first time in
history, deep, devastating loneliness is making young people as lonely as the elderly, the group typically seen as the loneliest among us. Despite the fact
that most young people have an average of 243 Facebook friends, it’s not translating into real-life friendships. Researchers theorize that we are spending
so much time online that we no longer have time to go out with our non-Facebook friends.

It’s time that we all get real about the opportunity cost of so much clicking. What aren’t we doing by spending time on Facebook, Words with Friends,
Internet news, Twitter, email, and watching television?

Society as a whole has chosen its side of the fence. The masses will continue to worship technology and work toward faster and faster pings. If you want to
be truly connected with others, you will have to break away from the pack.

Trojan Horse #2: Convenience

If we were to build an altar to our worship of convenience, I think it might be sponsored by Google.

Close your eyes for a moment and try to imagine life without Google. What would you do if you needed to know how to make a pie crust? You would have to
call your momma. What if some new friends from church invited you over for dinner? How would you know how to get there? You would pick up a phone and ask.
What if you wanted to learn how to garden, or how to build a treehouse, or how to paint with watercolors? You would have to take a class, ask an expert, or
at the very least enter a bookstore (remember those?). You would be unable to learn how to do things by watching a YouTube video or reading an answer from
Ask.com. Human contact would be required to solve basic, everyday problems.

Valuing people means adopting an overt willingness to be inconvenienced.

Instead, as a society we have removed the need for connection. Our iPhones know everything, so there’s no need to ask questions of others. But what if
convenience isn’t as great as we all think it is? Is it possible that inconvenience is the real sweet spot?

As I read the Gospels, one fact is undeniable to me—Jesus valued people. Over and over He allowed Himself to be stopped, inconvenienced, and used by the
people around Him. There is a lesson to be learned here. Valuing people means adopting an overt willingness to be inconvenienced. It means doing things
that cannot be measured. It means developing relationships based on who people really are and not who we want them to be.

Trojan Horse #3: Busyness

This idol may not look like a giant horse. It’s more likely to resemble your job or your church or your kids’ sports schedule. But I am convinced that in
the war for true connectedness, the Trojan horse sitting outside our gates that poses the biggest threat is busyness.

Here’s a look at just how big this idol has become.

  • One study found that 80% of Americans work the equivalent of a second work day after leaving the office.
  • We’re doing plenty of work inside our office walls too. Nearly 10 million Americans worked more than 60 hours per week last year. We work longer
    hours than almost every other advanced country.
  • We’re too busy to sleep. More than one-third of working Americans sleep less than six hours per night. That means there are 40 million of us
    suffering from chronic sleep deprivation.

Yep, we are a busy bunch, and our breakneck pace is hitting us where it hurts. One study found that 60% of Christians around the world feel that their
hectic schedule prevents them from spending more time with God. That trend is also reflected in our relationships with others. The simple truth is this:
the roots of our relationships cannot grow deep when we don’t have time for true, meaningful connection off the clock.

Sending the Trojan Horse Back

Allow me to rewrite history for a moment. After a ten-year war, the Greeks retreat with no warning and leave in their place a giant wooden horse. The
Trojans have a moment of clarity. They realize this doesn’t make sense. The jig is up. The small team is easily defeated once exposed. Troy wins.

You can rewrite your own story too, you know? You don’t have to keep pace with the rest of the world. As a Christian, God deserves the firstfruits of your
time and energy, not another excuse about why there is no time left to know and be known. As a parent, your children deserve to have the best of you, not
the scraps left over by a bulging schedule. As someone with only one life to live, you deserve to know that rich relationships are possible. The world will
keep on spinning. Our iStuff will keep on beeping. The offers to go and do and be will keep coming, but a peaceful life full of deep relationships is
possible, and it’s worth fighting for.

  • Do you feel lonely and disconnected, even though you have lots of people in your world?
  • Do you recognize the impact of any of these Trojan horses in your own life?
  • What can you do to push them back outside the gates?

Note: Much of this post was taken from my latest book, Connected: Curing the Pandemic of Everyone Feeling Alone Together. I’ll give away a copy to one of you who tells me about the “Trojan horses” that are impacting your relationships.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Please Stop the World—I Want to Get Off!”

The Next Time Life Has You in the Waiting Room

I hate waiting. We all do. Waiting for God to move can feel especially uncomfortable. When I’ve prayed and do not yet see God’s hand at work, I tend to get
squirmy. Did He hear me? Will He answer? Will these circumstances ever change?

Despite our culture’s efforts to eliminate waiting from daily life (think ATMs, pay at the pump, and drive-through windows) inevitably life sticks in the
waiting room. Because we serve a God who operates on His timetable, not ours, waiting is a by-product of our prayer lives as well.

Maybe you’re in the waiting room:

  • Waiting for God to heal your physical body
  • Waiting for God to bring you a spouse or a baby
  • Waiting for God to work in your church
  • Waiting for God to bring a prodigal child home
  • Waiting for employment
  • Waiting for reconciliation

Yep, I’m in the waiting room too these days. But, I’m determined not to spend this time kicking and screaming. I want to wait well. I don’t want to waste
the waiting.

An Expert Waiter

Moses was an expert waiter. First, he waited to be rescued as a wee babe in a bulrush basket (Ex. 2:2). Perhaps he was too small to remember that moment of
waiting, but it was a glimpse of how the rest of Moses’ life would go.

After murdering a man, Moses fled his home and family to the foreign land of Midian. He waited there for forty years (Acts 7:30). He spent four decades
waiting for something to happen or for news that he could return safely home. Something did happen. Moses encountered the voice of God booming from a
burning bush (Exodus 3:2). The wait was over! He had a mission.

But he found himself in the waiting room again soon, waiting for Pharaoh to let his people go. Once that wait was over, he wandered with God’s people in
the desert for another forty years, waiting to enter the Promised Land. In total, Moses spent at least eight decades waiting for the Lord. He died at the
age of 120 (Deut. 34:7), meaning he spent more than 60% of his life in the waiting room.

As we look at his life, here are ten lessons we can learn about how to wait well.

1. Be Content

After finding himself in a strange land with no family or possessions, Moses was invited to live with the Midianite priest and his family. I doubt the
situation was perfect. But Moses chose contentment.

“And Moses was content to dwell with the man, and he gave Moses his daughter Zipporah” (Ex. 2:21).

You have a choice. You can wait with great anxiety, fear, and frustration. Or you can wait with contentment. Here’s a visual. Think of the last time you
sat in the waiting room at the pediatrician’s office. Since I have three young boys, that’s a stop I make about as often as the post office.

There are two kinds of waiters in that waiting room. There are the children who scream and cry and dump toys. And there are the children who snuggle close
to their mommies or quietly wait (thanks to the help of the Disney app on their daddy’s iPhone). Both kinds of kids have to wait. The kid throwing a fit
doesn’t get in to the doctor any sooner than the one who isn’t. But believe me, as a mama who has waited with both kinds of kids, the waiting feels
infinitely longer to the distraught kid (and his parents!).

You don’t have to be happy about the waiting, but you can choose contentment.

First Timothy 6:6 reminds us, “But godliness with contentment is great gain.”

2. Love Your Own Family Well

Moses’ forty years in Midian were not unproductive years. He had two sons during that time (Acts 7:29) and devoted himself to caring for them and their
mother.

This is a simple, yet effective, action plan for waiting well. Take care of your tribe. Love your children and grandchildren. Serve your husband. Don’t
force them to bear the brunt of your anxious heart. Stop wringing your hands and get busy taking care of the people in your world.

“But if anyone does not provide for his relatives, and especially for members of his household, he has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever” (1
Tim. 5:8).

3. Work Hard

How did Moses spend his days in Midian while He waited for God to reveal the game plan? Did he pace the floors? Search the Internet for answers? (No, of
course not. There was no Internet, but that’s often how we fill the waiting space, isn’t it?) Take matters into his own hands?

“Now Moses was keeping the flock of his father-in-law, Jethro, the priest of Midian, and he led his flock to the west side of the wilderness and came to
Horeb, the mountain of God” (Ex. 3:1).

Moses was about to get shoved from the waiting room to the operating room, where God would give him a new identity and purpose. Moses was steps away from
encountering the living God speaking from a burning bush. And what do we find him doing there?

He was herding sheep.

Training to be used by God is more likely to happen in the sheep fields than it is to happen in the palace. Especially when we are waiting for God to use
us for kingdom work, we need reminded of the value of working hard and stewarding well the tasks He has already assigned to us.

“Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men” (Col. 3:23).

4. Intercede for Others

As Moses wandered in the wilderness, waiting for deliverance into the Promised Land, he prayed bold, powerful prayers for God’s people. (See Ex. 33:12-16,
Num. 14:13-19). He knew the promised outcome, but he didn’t stop praying for God’s work.

As you wait for God to work in your own life, pray like crazy that He would move in others’. Your faith will be shored up by seeing God’s hand in the lives
of other people.

“First of all, then, I urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be made for all people” (1 Tim. 2:1).

5. Value God’s Commands

We all know the story of when Moses brought down the Ten Commandments on slabs of stone only to smash them out of anger for the people’s rebellion (Ex.
20:1-21). Moses was passionate about both God’s Word and righteous living. So much so, that he trekked back up the mountain to retrieve a second copy of
the commandments from God (Ex. 34:28).

I don’t know about you, but sometimes when I am waiting on God I feel bitter about how He has called me to live. I don’t want to have joy in the waiting
room. I want to pout. I don’t want to trust in Him when I cannot see Him, I want Him to reveal Himself. Frankly, sometimes I want to be the one to “throw
down the tablets” in frustration.

Instead, I need to trek back up the mountain to be with the Lord. I need to ask Him to remind me of His priorities. I need to be about the business of
living like He calls me to live. The waiting room reminds me that I serve a big God who does not jump through the hoops I set for Him. I should live
according to His Word at all times.

6. Go to War Against Idols

In Exodus 32 Moses came down from the mountain (another waiting room) and found his people worshipping a golden calf. His reaction to this idol was not
passive.

“He took the calf that they had made and burned it with fire and ground it into powder and scattered it on the water and made the people of Israel drink
it” (Ex. 32:20).

Throughout the exodus Moses was diligent about purging idolatry from his people. The waiting room has that effect. Often, waiting exposes idols in my own
heart. As my heart gets squirmy, I often come face to face with the fact that I am looking to something other than God to meet my needs. Then I have to
swallow my pride, which tastes about as bitter as the powdered gold Moses’ made His people drink, and repent. Because of this pattern, I have found the
waiting room to often be a gift. It is there that God does business with my heart. It almost always hurts, but the end result is a heart more devoted to
God. If waiting makes your heart go wild, ask the Lord to reveal any idols you may have settled for.

7. Celebrate!

Moses’ people did lots of wandering, but they also did plenty of partying.

“On the day of your gladness also, and at your appointed feasts and at the beginning of your months, you shall blow the trumpets over your burnt offerings
and over the sacrifices of your peace offerings. They shall be a reminder of you before your God: I am the LORD your God” (Num. 10:10).

Even in the waiting room, God has given you much to celebrate. Instead of focusing on all that He has not done yet, rejoice about all He has already done
for you.

“Rejoice in the Lord always; again I will say rejoice” (Phil. 4:4).

8. Keep Your Eyes on the Promised Land

What has God promised you? Even if He has not delivered yet. Even if the finish line is nowhere in sight, you can take His promises to the bank. Moses knew
that and spoke these words,

“Know therefore that the LORD your God is God, the faithful God who keeps covenant and steadfast love with those who love him and keep his commandments to
a thousand generations” (Deut. 7:9).

Moses knew what it was like to wait. He waited longer and more often than I ever have, but all of that waiting didn’t weaken his faith. It strengthened it.
In the end, he decided God is faithful. We can trust Him to take us where He has promised He will.

9. Seek God

One phrase Moses uttered over and over in the wilderness was, “Let me ask the Lord.” He was constantly double-checking with God that they were headed in
the right direction. As you wait, seek God often. Read His Word. Squeeze your desires and plans through them and make sure you are headed in the right
direction.

“But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” (Matt. 6:33).

10. Enjoy the Journey

While Moses waited for God to deliver His people into the Promised Land, he saw:

  • God change Pharaoh’s heart
  • God part the Red Sea

  • Food rain from heaven and water spout from rocks

  • Clothing and sandals that did not wear out for forty years
  • A pillar of fire led Moses by day and a cloud of smoke by night
  • By God’s power alone, somewhere in the neighborhood of two million people survived in the desert for forty years. Moses had a front row seat.

God may not be doing the one thing you want Him to do at this moment, but He is doing a million things that He promises are working for your good (Rom.
8:28). Don’t get tunnel vision, honing in only on what has not happened yet. Widen the lens and see all He has already done.

Moses refused to try to manipulate God. He waited well and stayed ready to move when God called, and what a ride he got to take! As I wait, I want to be
like Moses. Do you?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Are You Tired of Waiting on the Lord?

How I Know Marriage Will Stand

“Marriage Under Fire”

“Government to Hear Testimony on the Re-Definition of Marriage”

“Biblical Definition of Marriage Questioned”

Nope. I didn’t rip these headlines from today’s blog roll. Not yesterday’s either. Yes, I know they are an accurate description of the state of the marriage debate our country is currently facing, but we’re not the first society to wrestle over the subject of marriage.

God’s plans will not ultimately be thwarted.

These headlines describe what was happening in sixteenth century England during the English Reformation. In case it’s been awhile since you sat in a world history class, here is a crash course. Pay attention to the parallels between what was happening then and what is happening now. (Don’t worry. There won’t be a quiz!)

  • King Henry VIII wanted his marriage to Catherine of Aragon annulled.
  • Catherine had not yet given Henry a male heir, and he had a sudden and passionate interest in a new lady, Anne Boleyn.
  • This ignited a frenzy of public debate about marriage, government’s involvement in marriage, and the limit (if any) of the Bible’s authority in our private lives.
  • It became a political affair centered around a theological dispute.
  • In other words, marriage became the issue around which politicians, church leaders, and the public war danced.
  • Because of the invention of the printing press, more words were written and circulated than ever before. If you had an opinion, you had the option to share it beyond your immediate circle. (Kind of like an old-fashioned blogosphere!)

Ultimately, good ol’ Henry split from the authority of the Pope and the Catholic Church and created the Church of England to get his annulment. But why am I taking us so far down this ancient path?

The Battle for Biblical Marriage Is Not New

Let’s take a slightly shorter trip into the history books and hop back a few decades. In the 1970s and 80s, cultural forces converged to create skyrocketing divorce rates. The “no fault divorce” was introduced and the effect worked like tidal wave in American homes. Almost half of couples who got married in the 70s and 80s divorced. That number stuck in the American psyche and caused much hand wringing, especially in the church.

I was a preschooler in the 80s, too young to be aware of any debate in the public sphere. As the 90s hit, I still didn’t care much about public opinion and was not yet a Christian, but I knew that my parents were divorced, and it was devastating. I started paying very close attention to how people talked about marriage. I picked up on a tone that seemed to say, “Marriage is a doomed institution and married people are more likely to win the lottery than to stay happy.” Needless to say, I headed into my own marriage with great fear and low expectations for success.

Now sociologists are telling us there is good news. The divorce surge is over! But for those of us in the church, there is still a great deal of hand wringing and head shaking.

The definition of marriage is still being debated. Is marriage strictly between a man and a woman? Can it be between two men? Two women? One man and multiple women? Is marriage forever or just for now? Is divorce healthy or devastating? Should individuals have the freedom to choose what marriage looks like, or do we need to agree on a consensus?

Just like in Henry VIII’s time, the government is involved in the discussion. The church leaders are involved. The public is involved and fractured.

We continue the war dance.

If you’re wringing your hands, stop. This is not bad news. In fact, it’s the opposite.

Lean in. Listen close.

People have been trying to re-define God’s plan for marriage for centuries and yet, God’s plan still stands.

A House That Must Be Built

Several months ago, I read through the book of Ezra. It’s a short, Old Testament book that outlines the rebuilding of God’s temple by a ragamuffin crew of exiled Jews.

God’s people begin to rebuild His place of worship. They stake their claim. Draw their lines in the sand and declare, “We will do what God calls us to.”

Go on, picture yourself in their midst. As a Christian, called to stand for truth in a world where anything goes, the task can feel monumental. Sometimes it seems like that for every step forward we are pushed ten steps back. God’s people in the book of Ezra knew this feeling. Their beliefs and purpose were not popular or widely accepted.

“Then the people of the land discouraged the people of Judah and made them afraid to build and bribed counselors against them to frustrate their purpose, all the days of Cyrus king of Persia, even until the reign of Darius king of Persia” (Ezra 4:4–5).

The general public tried to block God’s people. They wrote accusatory letters, convinced that the remnant was intolerant. There were decrees from kings to cease and desist. The cause looked hopeless much more often than it looked hopeful.

And yet . . .

“And the people of Israel, the priests and the Levites and the rest of the returned exiles, celebrated the dedication of this house of God with joy” (Ezra 6:16). 

Despite resistance from kings, the pushback of public opinion, and the unpopularity of their cause, God’s people were not stopped.

As I finished the book of Ezra, one theme came into clear focus: the plans of God cannot be stopped.

When it comes to marriage, that’s the good news, but of course there is bad news. Marriage may always be in the sights of the Enemy who seeks to kill and destroy all that God has made (John 10:10). That’s because it’s a picture of God’s unbreakable covenant with His people (Eph. 5:32). There have been and will continue to be causalities, marriages that break or miss God’s mark . . . but all of history will end with the marriage between God and His people. Marriage will stand. 

But what should we do in the meantime?

A Strange Dedication Prayer

Ezra takes the lead in rallying the people toward God’s purposes in the book of Ezra. As Christians in an anything goes world, we’d be wise to take our cues from him.

“For Ezra had set his heart to study the law of the LORD, and to do it and to teach his statutes and rules in Israel” (Ezra 7:10).

Ezra studied God’s Word and taught it faithfully. Even when that was unpopular.

He also prayed like crazy. In fact, at the dedication service for the temple that cost so much blood, sweat, and tears to build, Ezra is deeply broken on the issue of marriage. He realizes that God’s people have intermarried with the pagan people around him and his reaction is anything but passive. He tears his clothes and yanks the hair from his head and beard (Ezra 9:3). He fasted and then he fell on his knees and prayed this prayer . . .

“O my God, I am ashamed and blush to lift my face to you, my God, for our iniquities have risen higher than our heads, and our guilt has mounted to the heavens.”

For verse after verse Ezra goes on about the sin of his people, but this is not a “get ’em God” prayer. There was no “us” versus “them.” Ezra lumps himself with his people and asks for mercy in spite of the prevalence of marriages that don’t stick to God’s plan.

What happened next?

“While Ezra prayed and made confessing, weeping and casting himself down before the house of God, a very great assembly of men, women, and children, gathered to him out of Israel, for the people wept bitterly.”

The people repented.
They committed to marriages that honored God.
The tide turned.

Marriage will stand, but there is a battle to be fought for it. God’s plans will not ultimately be thwarted. Kings cannot stop the plans of God. Neither can angry mobs. Cultural trends do not change His mind or dilute His message. That knowledge is enough to stop the hand wringing. And yet, there are many who would come against God’s plan for marriage? What should we do about them?

Lets pray like Ezra and watch for the tide to turn.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Praying for a Restoration of Marriage.”

A Modern Woman’s Guide to Fasting

Fasting is the spiritual discipline of denying ourselves of something (typically food) to feast on the things of God. I explored some reasons to fast in yesterday’s post. Perhaps you sense the Lord is leading you to fast. You may be thinking, Now what?

To get you started, here are answers to some practical questions about fasting.

Q. Do I have to fast from food?

When we see fasting in the Bible, typically food is involved. But what the individuals eat (or don’t eat) varies. For example:

  • Moses had no bread or water for forty days (Deut. 9:9).
  • Esther didn’t eat or drink anything for three days (Esther 4:15–17).
  • Daniel ate no delicacies, meat, or wine for three weeks (Dan. 10:3). In other words, he ate to live but not for enjoyment.

The Bible doesn’t give us strict rules about what we can and cannot eat during a fast because the focus is less on what we do (or don’t do) and more on what we are asking God to do in our lives.

With that in mind, food isn’t the only thing we can fast from. When considering a fast ask this question, “What can I remove from my life for a season in order to make more space for prayer?” Here are some ideas:

  • Fast from all social media.
  • Fast from TV.
  • Fast from your favorite show.
  • Fast from a certain activity that is a part of your daily routine.

Q. How long should I fast?

Again, the Bible describes wide variety in the length of fasts. Here are a few examples:

  • All of the people of Israel fasted for one day after a devastating battle in Judges 20:26.
  • Esther asked the Jews to join her in fasting for three days before she approached the king on their behalf in Esther 4:16.
  • The men of Israel fasted for seven days to mourn the death of Saul in 1 Samuel 31:13.
  • Moses fasted for forty days before receiving the Ten Commandments in Deuteronomy 9:9–18. Jesus fasted for this same amount of time before starting His ministry in Matthew 4.

So, how can you know how long to fast?

Ask the Lord. If He is leading you to fast, He will make the specifics clear.

Look at your calendar. Do you have a big event coming up that would make fasting difficult? Are you hosting a dinner at your house? Is there a holiday coming up? In order to keep your commitment to the Lord, plan a fast that is manageable with your responsibilities and commitments.

Q. What am I supposed to do during the fast?

You are supposed to pray like crazy!

Fasting without praying isn’t fasting. It is dieting or deprivation. The only reason to fast is to make space for you to seek the Lord with greater urgency. Here is what that might look like practically.

  • During the times when you would be eating, pray!
  • Use those hunger pangs as a reminder to pray. When your belly rumbles, seek the Lord.
  • Pray passages of Scripture related to hunger. Here are a few such prayers.
    • Lord, Your Word says, “Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness” (Matt. 5:6).
      Increase my hunger for You and Your Word just like my physical hunger is increased during this fast.
    • Jesus, You said, “Man cannot live on bread alone but on every word that comes from the mouth of God” (Matt. 4:4).
      Teach me to be sustained by Your Word.
    • Lord, Your Word promises that You can satisfy my needs (Isa. 58:11). Help me to see all of the ways You satisfy and sustain me.

Q. But I’m a momma! How can I stop cooking?

You can’t! Those little mouths will still need to be fed. Lunches will still need to be packed. Your family will still need your care. Explain to them what you are doing upfront and ask them to pray for you. Take meal times as an opportunity to explain what you are praying about and how God is answering. Use the opportunity to teach your kids about prayer and open a dialogue about what God is doing in each of your lives.

Q. Is it okay to tell others I am fasting?

It will be impossible to hide your fast from your family, but the Bible clearly teaches that fasting should be as private as possible.

Here is fasting 101 according to Jesus:

“And when you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces that their fasting may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face, that your fasting may not be seen by others but by your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you” (Matt. 6:16–18).

In Luke 18:10–14, Jesus hammered this point home by blasting a Pharisee who fasted publicly in order to draw attention to himself.

“Two men went up into the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. The Pharisee, standing by himself, prayed[a] thus: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I get.’ But the tax collector, standing far off, would not even lift up his eyes to heaven, but beat his breast, saying, ‘God, be merciful to me, a sinner!’ I tell you, this man went down to his house justified, rather than the other. For everyone who exalts himself will be humbled, but the one who humbles himself will be exalted.”

A natural by-product of fasting should be humility. It doesn’t take long without food to realize that we aren’t really in charge. We cannot even sustain our own bodies without food the Lord provides. When fasting becomes about impressing others or trying to impress or persuade God, we’ve missed the point.

Speaking of impressing God . . .

Q. Will fasting earn me preferred parking in heaven?

It may be a temptation while fasting to think of yourself as super spiritual or to convince yourself that God will be highly pleased with your fast. The truth is, God is already pleased with you (Rom. 8:1). He accepts you, not because of anything you do or don’t do, but because He created you and ransomed you through His sacrifice, not yours. Because of this, fasting is not a gift we give to God, but rather it is a gift He gives to us. Ultimately, we fast under grace, not under the law. It’s not about rules; it’s about our relationship with God.

Q. Why haven’t I heard more about fasting?

Honestly, I’m not sure! It is a subject that gets plenty of real estate in God’s Word but isn’t talked about much in our Christian circles. As I’ve studied fasting, I’ve realized that fasting is an important discipline for my Christian walk just like prayer and Bible study. God has moved some major mountains in my life recently through fasting.

That’s why I wanted to open this dialogue about fasting with you. I’m not an expert on fasting, but I’d love to become one. Maybe you can help me out! What truths has God shown you in His Word about fasting? What has your experience with fasting been? Do you have some questions about fasting we could dig into God’s Word to answer together? Leave me a comment below.

If you enjoyed this post, read part 1 by Erin, “Should I Be Fasting?

 

Should I Be Fasting?

Mark 9 contains a story I’ve read a zillion times before. Jesus and His inner circle were coming down from the mountain where they had experienced the transfiguration and making their way toward joining the other disciples.

While Jesus, Peter, James, and John were up on the mountain, the remaining disciples had an encounter with a heartsick daddy and his demon possessed boy.

“Teacher, I brought my son to You. He has a spirit that makes him unable to speak. Wherever it seizes him, it throws him down, and he foams at the mouth, grinds his teeth, and becomes rigid. So I asked your disciples to drive it out, but they couldn’t” (Mark 9:17–18).

It is during this encounter that the dad prays one of my favorite prayers in all of Scripture, “I do believe! Help my unbelief!” (v. 24). Jesus casts the demon out of the boy, and he stands up cleansed and healed in front of his dad.

After the dust cleared the disciples asked an important question:

“Why couldn’t we drive it out? (v. 28).

Jesus replied, “This kind can come out by nothing but prayer [and fasting]” (v. 29).

For me, the two words found inside the brackets of the text are like a gold nugget of truth I’d never noticed until recently.

“This one can only be driven out by prayer and fasting?”

If that was true for a child afflicted by demons and his desperate daddy, is it true for something in my life? What about the things that seem to throw me to the ground or toss me up against the ropes? Can they only be dealt with through prayer and fasting? What about when I’m in the fire like this boy was? Are prayer and fasting the only way out? What about those things that I’ve tried and tried to fix and cannot? Is fasting the key that unlocks the remedy?

Those questions nudged me to run to God’s Word looking for answers to this big question, “Should I be fasting?” Here’s what I found.

Good Reasons to Fast

Fasting is a theme throughout all of Scripture. Fasting is never commanded for all believers, but the Bible does give us lots of good reasons to fast including:

  • Fasting before making an important decision (Acts 13:2, 14:23).
  • Fasting to overcome addiction (Isa. 56:3–7).
  • Fasting for God’s intervention (2 Sam. 12:15–17).
  • Fasting to show humility (Ps. 35:13).
  • Fasting in response to grief or mourning (Ps. 35:14, Esther 4:3).
  • Fasting to request God’s protection (Esther 4:15–16, Ezra 8:21–23).
  • Fasting to set apart leaders for Christian service (Acts 13:2–3).
  • Fasting with repentance (Joel 2:12–15).
  • Fasting as a leader who desires God to work amongst your people (Jonah 3:6–10).

Fasting in Good Company

I can find plenty of good reasons to fast from that list. Scripture also shows us that many of the superheroes of our faith, including Jesus, fasted.

  • Moses fasted before receiving the Ten Commandments (Deut 9:9–18).
  • David fasted to mourn his child’s illness and ask God to intervene (2 Sam. 12:1–23).
  • Ezra fasted to mourn the sin of his people (Ezra 10:6–17).
  • Esther fasted for the safety of the Jews (Esther 4:15–17).
  • Daniel fasted for an answer to prayer (Dan. 10:1–3).
  • The elders of the church in Antioch fasted before sending out missionaries (Acts 13:1–3).
  • Jesus Himself fasted before starting His ministry (Matt. 4:1–2).

These are the people I want to be like when I grow up. I want the power of Moses. The passion for the Lord of David. The courage of Esther. The boldness of Daniel. The gospel focus of the church in Antioch. Above all things, I want to be like Jesus. If Jesus fasted, I want to follow His example.

If we are looking to the Bible for good reasons to fast, there are plenty of them. But the Bible also offers a few bad reasons to fast.

3 Bad Reasons to Fast

Not all fasts are God honoring. Here are three bad reasons to fast.

  1. To twist God’s arm

    The people described in Isaiah 58 were regular fasters. But they got miffed when God didn’t seem to notice (v. 3). God took the opportunity to teach His people about true and false fasting. What’s the bottom line? Fasting is about positioning our own hearts, not twisting the arm of God. It is not a transaction where we fast and God gives us what we want. (That would make Him a pretty small God, no?) It is a gift He gives to us, not a gift we give to Him.

  2. To gloss over our sin
  3. The Pharisees were regular fasters too, but they were also very good at missing the point. In Luke 18-1–14, Jesus blasts a Pharisee who publicly declared that he fasts twice a week while simultaneously glossing over his own sin. Fasting is not a substitute for repentance.

  4. To show off

    Jesus said we should pray in secret. It’s not because fasting is shameful or something to be covered up, but because it is private—it’s between you and God. If your motivation for fasting is to impress others, to make them see you as super spiritual or extra holy, go ahead and have the cheeseburger, sista, cuz that is not what fasting is really about.

Is God Calling You to Fast?

I told you God’s Word has A LOT to say on the subject of fasting! And I’m just getting warmed up. There’s still so much to discuss. Be sure to hop back on the blog tomorrow for a follow-up post, “A Modern Woman’s Guide to Fasting” for some practical helps for how to fast.

In the meantime, I’d love to hear from you.

Have you ever fasted? Do you fast regularly?
Why do you fast?

(Note: All verses were taken from the HCSB.)

Six Reasons Your Husband May Not Like Your Women’s Group

Ladies’ Bible studies are a staple in most of our churches. That’s a good thing! Titus 2:3–5 tells us that it is God’s design that women teach God’s Word to each other. But have you ever wondered what those closest to you really think about your women’s group?

I polled my wise (and handsome!) husband about the reasons why husbands might not be mega-fans of their wives’ women’s group. His answers were surprising, thoughtful, and more than a little convicting.

Here are six reasons why your husband may not like your women’s group.

1. You come home with a to-do list for him.

Here’s how this might look at my house . . .

My weekly Bible study group hones in on the passage Ephesians 5:22–33. It outlines God’s blueprint for a beautiful and Christ-exalting marriage. There are specific instructions for both husbands and wives, but my heart parks on verse 25.

“Husbands, love your wives, as Christ love the church and gave himself up for her.”

The more I think about it, the more it’s clear that my husband isn’t loving me in this way. When I get home from Bible study, I decide I should help the Holy Spirit in making my husband more like Jesus. I sit him down for a “state of the relationship address” with a plan to talk about some of the ways I feel like he isn’t loving me as well as he should.

Stop looking at the Word with an agenda to “fix” your husband, children, or others.

This might be comical if it weren’t so true. It is easy to look at Scripture and see what others should be doing. It is much harder to view God’s Word through the lens of, “What should I be doing differently?” Jesus diagnosed this as plank-eye syndrome.

“Why do you see the speck that is in your brother’s eye, but do not notice the log that is in your own eye?” (Matt. 7:3).

When you look at Scripture both on your own and with other women, force yourself to ask these two questions:

  • What does this passage show me about God?
  • What does this passage show me about myself?

Stop looking at the Word with an agenda to “fix” your husband, children, or others.

2. You come home with other people’s stories.

Transparency in your women’s group is a good thing. It should be a safe place for women to take off their masks and get real about what’s going on in their lives. But what happens at Bible study should stay at Bible study. If you come home from your group and unload stories of whose marriage is in trouble, whose finances are out of whack, or who is facing a personal crisis at home, your husband becomes an unwilling participant in gossip, and that’s not good for anyone.

Proverbs 11:12–13 says,

“Whoever belittles his neighbor lacks sense, but a man of understanding remains silent. Whoever goes about slandering reveals secrets, but he who is trustworthy in spirit keeps a thing covered.”

I know you may feel the need to get the deep stuff you’ve heard in your group off your chest. I know you may want to tell your husband “everything,” but a wise woman sees the hurts and trials shared with her by other women as precious treasures, to be kept close and prayed over often. Women are no more likely to spontaneously combust than our male counterparts. (I looked it up!) You will not burst into flames if you don’t run home and share every secret you heard at Bible study with your man.

3. You give your best to others.

“STOP EATING THOSE COOKIES THEY ARE FOR MY WOMEN’S BIBLE STUDY GROUP!”

Ever shout something similar to that at your husband and children?

Don’t put your best foot forward for your friends and give the leftovers to those at home.

Does your women’s group get your best cooking, best attitude, and best behavior while your family gets your worst behaviors and a frozen pizza? Don’t put your best foot forward for your friends and give the leftovers to those at home.

Remember that Titus 2 verse? It instructs us to be loving and kind to our husbands and children and busy at home. Give them the best of you. And if you’re in charge of snacks for Bible study . . . bake a double batch!

4. You complain about him there.

When women get together, the conversation almost always turns to relationships. It’s easy to default to complaining mode in the cocooned safety of other women whose husbands also forget to take out the trash. But using your women’s group as a sounding board for everything you’d like to change about your man isn’t the Titus 2 blueprint. Don’t use it as a place to vent about your children, coworkers, or in-laws either. Here is a good “rule” for the conversations among your group.

“Let no corrupting talk come out of your mouths, but only such as is good for building up, as fits the occasion, that it may give grace to those who hear” (Eph. 4:29).

Don’t assume that everyone already knows this verse. Talk about if often. Maybe open each discussion by reading it out loud.

5. You resent “man time.”

Titus 2 isn’t just for women. Verses 1–2 are instructions for Titus, the male pastor of a growing church and say,

“But as for you, teach what accords with sound doctrine. Older men are to be sober-minded, dignified, self-controlled, sound in faith, in love, and steadfastness.”

God’s design is that men teach each other the qualities of Christ-likeness, just like women teach women. But for my man, that doesn’t look like sitting around in a circle of other men with their Bible’s open.

It looks like standing in a trout stream with our pastor. It looks like taking a weekend hunting trip with the men from our small group. It looks like going out for coffee with his grandpa.

Give your man the freedom to learn from other men in non-traditional ways.

I’m the kind of gal who likes to have my husband near me 24/7, especially as we parent our three small children. It’s hard for me let him go do other things, especially if they seem frivolous to me, but he doesn’t seem to have my hang ups. He graciously encourages me to spend time with other women often. He doesn’t have a rubric for what quality time looks like. When I grow up, I want to be just like him.

Give your man the freedom to learn from other men in non-traditional ways.

6. You’re a hearer not a doer.

I once heard a pastor say, “It’s possible to sit in church for thirty years and just get meaner.”

The same could be said about women’s Bible studies. Female friends are great. Women’s Bible studies are great. But if it does not translate to a changed heart and life, it’s a lot like banging on a big ol’ gong.

James 1:22 cuts to the chase,

“But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.”

Here’s a game plan to make sure your husband loves your women’s group.

  • Go to your women’s group.
  • (Leave some yummy goodies behind for him and the kids).
  • Roll up your sleeves and dig into God’s Word together.
  • And then put into practice what you’ve learned.
  • In other words, BE A DOER!

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Our Male-Bashing Bible Study.”

 

What to Say to That Immodestly Dressed Girl at Church

When speaking to parents and leaders of teenagers, I often hear a version of this question:

“There is a girl in my church (or a group of girls) who wear totally inappropriate clothes to church. What do I say to her?”

Here’s my response . . .

Drop Your Stone

For those of us who have grown up in the church, the choices of non-Christians can often be alarming. But we need to stop being surprised when the lost act lost. It’s been my consistent experience that young women usually don’t dress immodestly because they want to ooze sexuality but simply because they don’t understand God’s heart on the issue.

Instead of passing down a list of rules for what we wear, the Bible encourages us to “wear” the qualities of Christ.

Let’s take a detour to a story that might help us see how to approach that young lady in your church like Jesus would.

In John 8, Jesus encountered a woman whose life was riddled with sexual sin, and she probably looked like it. She had been “caught in the act” of adultery after all. I doubt she had time to throw on modest clothing before she was dragged before Jesus. How does Jesus handle the issue?

First, He deals with the hearts of her accusers.

“Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her” (v.7).

Maybe you don’t come in to church wearing a spaghetti-strap top and way-too-short skirt, but did you bring anger, bitterness, resentment, or addiction? Immodesty is an easy-to-spot sin, but don’t come at that girl with judgment or frustration. Wait to approach her until you can do so in love.

Start with the Gospel

After the woman’s accusers realized they had too much of their own junk to make a case against someone else, they slowly slinked away. But that didn’t mean Jesus let the adulterous woman off the hook. He did confront her sin. Titus 2:3–5 gives us permission to speak truth into the lives of young women. Look how Jesus did it:

Jesus: “Has no one condemned you?”
Woman: “No one, Lord.”
Jesus: “Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more” (vv. 10–11).

This is the simple, beautiful message of the gospel. There’s no doubt we are all guilty of sin. We can’t cover it up or talk our way out of it. The adulterous woman deserved the punishment the crowd wanted to give her. She was guilty. I deserve the punishment of death that is suitable for sinners. I am guilty. But Jesus offers the woman an exchange. Trade in condemnation for acceptance. Trade in shame for love. Trade in a life of sin to become a new creation.

Does that girl in the pew in front of you know the gospel? Has she turned her life over to Him? Just because she is in church doesn’t mean she has. When you approach her, start with the gospel.

Let’s Figure This Out Together

Long ago, I was a high school history teacher. Maybe that’s why my love for young women is so deep. I believe with my whole heart that middle school and high school girls can change the world.

Back in my teacher days, I had a mantra that colored every lesson plan I wrote, “Whoever is doing the work is doing the learning.” Sure, you could download your thoughts on modesty to the young women in your world. They might think it matters. They probably won’t. But if you challenge them to open up the Bible for themselves and to discover God’s heart on this issue (or any issue) without an agenda, you will see the light bulb go off in their hearts.

This requires an important shift. We need to stop asking, “How can we get our girls to dress modestly?” and start asking, “How can we get our girls to be passionate students of God’s Word?” Hebrews 4:12 tells us that God’s Word works like a sword, surgically removing those parts of our hearts that don’t line up with the holiness of God. Which would you prefer? A girl who covers up out of obligation, or a girl who chooses to change because of God’s work in her through His Word?

Let me write your curriculum!

Here are some key verses and thoughts to get you and the girls in your church started.

“Likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, but with what is proper for women who profess godliness—with good works” (1 Tim. 2:9–10).

This is a passage about what it should look like to be a woman of faith, but it is not a dress code. There’s no hem length mentioned here—no black and white rules about sleeves or no sleeves or the exact right place for a Christian woman’s neckline. In fact, this verse is less about the clothing we wear and more about God’s intention that we clothe ourselves with qualities that reflect Him.

Notice that right after Paul tells Timothy that women should dress modestly and avoid appearances designed to draw attention, he makes it clear what all women of faith should wear—”self-control” and “good works.” Obviously, those aren’t things that hang in my closet. When we talk to girls about the issue of modesty, we need to broaden the conversation to get them thinking about how the ways they present themselves reflect (or don’t reflect) Christ.

This is just a puzzle piece in the bigger picture of God’s heart for modestly presented in His Word:

  • Matthew 6:28–30 tells us not to be preoccupied with clothes, but instead to focus on the things of God.
  • 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 says that our bodies are a temple of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, we are to honor God with our bodies.
  • 1 Peter 3:3–4 says that true beauty is internal. Nothing we could ever put on and nothing we could ever take off can give us the kind of true, lasting beauty that comes from Christ working in us.
  • 1 Peter 5:5–6 urges us to clothe ourselves with humility.
  • Proverbs 31:25 describes a woman who is clothed in strength and dignity.
  • Psalm 132:9 talks about being clothed in righteousness.

Instead of passing down a list of rules for what we wear, the Bible encourages us to “wear” the qualities of Christ. This is why you have to start with the gospel when approaching this issue. No one can wear the qualities of Christ until they have turned their lives over to Him.

Take Her Shopping!

I’m not sure if you’ve ventured into a Forever 21 or Abercrombie and Fitch lately, but being a young woman with a commitment to modesty and purity isn’t easy. Marketers aren’t pushing girls toward the “respectable apparel” that Paul mentioned in 1 Timothy but toward the opposite. If the girls in your church are going to live like Christ has called them to in this area, they are going to need reinforcements. Care for her heart, first, through love and Bible study, but then help her give teeth to what she’s learning by venturing with her into the mall with ideas and encouragement.

Yes, modesty matters! But the hearts of the young women in your world matter so much more. Can you swap the adulterous woman found in the story in John 8 with a girl in your world? If so, will you ask the Lord to help you respond to her like He would by sharing the gospel in love?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Gentle Jesus, Meek and . . . Modest.”

 

What to Say to That Immodestly Dressed Girl at Church

When speaking to parents and leaders of teenagers, I often hear a version of this question:

“There is a girl in my church (or a group of girls) who wear totally inappropriate clothes to church. What do I say to her?”

Here’s my response . . .

Drop Your Stone

For those of us who have grown up in the church, the choices of non-Christians can often be alarming. But we need to stop being surprised when the lost act lost. It’s been my consistent experience that young women usually don’t dress immodestly because they want to ooze sexuality but simply because they don’t understand God’s heart on the issue.

Instead of passing down a list of rules for what we wear, the Bible encourages us to “wear” the qualities of Christ.

Let’s take a detour to a story that might help us see how to approach that young lady in your church like Jesus would.

In John 8, Jesus encountered a woman whose life was riddled with sexual sin, and she probably looked like it. She had been “caught in the act” of adultery after all. I doubt she had time to throw on modest clothing before she was dragged before Jesus. How does Jesus handle the issue?

First, He deals with the hearts of her accusers.

“Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her” (v.7).

Maybe you don’t come in to church wearing a spaghetti-strap top and way-too-short skirt, but did you bring anger, bitterness, resentment, or addiction? Immodesty is an easy-to-spot sin, but don’t come at that girl with judgment or frustration. Wait to approach her until you can do so in love.

Start with the Gospel

After the woman’s accusers realized they had too much of their own junk to make a case against someone else, they slowly slinked away. But that didn’t mean Jesus let the adulterous woman off the hook. He did confront her sin. Titus 2:3–5 gives us permission to speak truth into the lives of young women. Look how Jesus did it:

Jesus: “Has no one condemned you?”
Woman: “No one, Lord.”
Jesus: “Neither do I condemn you; go, and from now on sin no more” (vv. 10–11).

This is the simple, beautiful message of the gospel. There’s no doubt we are all guilty of sin. We can’t cover it up or talk our way out of it. The adulterous woman deserved the punishment the crowd wanted to give her. She was guilty. I deserve the punishment of death that is suitable for sinners. I am guilty. But Jesus offers the woman an exchange. Trade in condemnation for acceptance. Trade in shame for love. Trade in a life of sin to become a new creation.

Does that girl in the pew in front of you know the gospel? Has she turned her life over to Him? Just because she is in church doesn’t mean she has. When you approach her, start with the gospel.

Let’s Figure This Out Together

Long ago, I was a high school history teacher. Maybe that’s why my love for young women is so deep. I believe with my whole heart that middle school and high school girls can change the world.

Back in my teacher days, I had a mantra that colored every lesson plan I wrote, “Whoever is doing the work is doing the learning.” Sure, you could download your thoughts on modesty to the young women in your world. They might think it matters. They probably won’t. But if you challenge them to open up the Bible for themselves and to discover God’s heart on this issue (or any issue) without an agenda, you will see the light bulb go off in their hearts.

This requires an important shift. We need to stop asking, “How can we get our girls to dress modestly?” and start asking, “How can we get our girls to be passionate students of God’s Word?” Hebrews 4:12 tells us that God’s Word works like a sword, surgically removing those parts of our hearts that don’t line up with the holiness of God. Which would you prefer? A girl who covers up out of obligation, or a girl who chooses to change because of God’s work in her through His Word?

Let me write your curriculum!

Here are some key verses and thoughts to get you and the girls in your church started.

“Likewise also that women should adorn themselves in respectable apparel, with modesty and self-control, not with braided hair and gold or pearls or costly attire, but with what is proper for women who profess godliness—with good works” (1 Tim. 2:9–10).

This is a passage about what it should look like to be a woman of faith, but it is not a dress code. There’s no hem length mentioned here—no black and white rules about sleeves or no sleeves or the exact right place for a Christian woman’s neckline. In fact, this verse is less about the clothing we wear and more about God’s intention that we clothe ourselves with qualities that reflect Him.

Notice that right after Paul tells Timothy that women should dress modestly and avoid appearances designed to draw attention, he makes it clear what all women of faith should wear—”self-control” and “good works.” Obviously, those aren’t things that hang in my closet. When we talk to girls about the issue of modesty, we need to broaden the conversation to get them thinking about how the ways they present themselves reflect (or don’t reflect) Christ.

This is just a puzzle piece in the bigger picture of God’s heart for modestly presented in His Word:

  • Matthew 6:28–30 tells us not to be preoccupied with clothes, but instead to focus on the things of God.
  • 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 says that our bodies are a temple of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, we are to honor God with our bodies.
  • 1 Peter 3:3–4 says that true beauty is internal. Nothing we could ever put on and nothing we could ever take off can give us the kind of true, lasting beauty that comes from Christ working in us.
  • 1 Peter 5:5–6 urges us to clothe ourselves with humility.
  • Proverbs 31:25 describes a woman who is clothed in strength and dignity.
  • Psalm 132:9 talks about being clothed in righteousness.

Instead of passing down a list of rules for what we wear, the Bible encourages us to “wear” the qualities of Christ. This is why you have to start with the gospel when approaching this issue. No one can wear the qualities of Christ until they have turned their lives over to Him.

Take Her Shopping!

I’m not sure if you’ve ventured into a Forever 21 or Abercrombie and Fitch lately, but being a young woman with a commitment to modesty and purity isn’t easy. Marketers aren’t pushing girls toward the “respectable apparel” that Paul mentioned in 1 Timothy but toward the opposite. If the girls in your church are going to live like Christ has called them to in this area, they are going to need reinforcements. Care for her heart, first, through love and Bible study, but then help her give teeth to what she’s learning by venturing with her into the mall with ideas and encouragement.

Yes, modesty matters! But the hearts of the young women in your world matter so much more. Can you swap the adulterous woman found in the story in John 8 with a girl in your world? If so, will you ask the Lord to help you respond to her like He would by sharing the gospel in love?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Gentle Jesus, Meek and . . . Modest.”

 

Ten Truths That Will Change Your Life in 2015

Are you a New Year’s resolution maker? I’m not.

Over the years, I’ve found the tradition of vowing to change at the start of the New Year to be an exercise in disappointment. Every year, my diets fail, my habits stay the same, and my resolutions to do things differently fall flat.

Maybe that’s because I’ve been focusing on the wrong things.

I’m feeling motivated to make changes that truly matter. I want the same for you.

There’s nothing wrong with making the choice to be healthier or try new things at the start of a new year. But, this year I’m feeling motivated to make changes that truly matter. I want the same for you.

As I think about you, and what I hope for you in 2015, my thoughts keep circling back to the impact of God’s truth. Most of you come to this site because you’ve already been exposed to God’s truth in some way. But if you are like me, there is evidence in your life that that truth hasn’t truly transformed the way that you live.

There’s a difference between knowing God’s truth and fully embracing it. I can’t imagine the ways our lives would change if we chose to believe what God says in His Word and allowed that truth to change how we live. It’s even more exciting for me to envision the impact we could have on other women by knowing God’s truth, believing it, and putting it into action. That thought gives me goose bumps.

I’ll help you get started. In the last chapter of Lies Young Women Believe, Nancy and Dannah list several powerful truths to counter everyday lies. I’ve turned a few of those truths into action steps for the New Year. Your job is to identify the areas of your life that are in need of a dose of God’s truth and put that truth to work in your own life.

Ready? Let’s choose truth together!

  1. I will praise God on good days and bad days this year.

    “You are good, and what you do is good” (Ps. 119:68a).

    When everything is going right, it’s easy to believe that God is good and to praise Him because of it. But when life gets tough, we are tempted to question God’s goodness and “forget” to praise Him. When your life gets messy, you can choose to believe God’s Word rather than trusting your emotions and praise God in all circumstances.

  2. I will live like I am deeply loved this year.

    “The Lord appeared to us in the past, saying: ‘I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with loving-kindness'” (Jer. 31:3).

    Feeling unloved can have a huge impact on the way that we live. Specifically, believing the lie that no one cares about you can lead to depression, anxiety, and destructive behaviors. The truth is that you are deeply loved by God. If you believe God’s love is real and receive it, it will transform your life.

  3. I will pay less attention to what others think of me this year.

    “For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be pure and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will—to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves.”(Eph. 1:4–6).

    When a friend, a co-worker, or a loved one rejects us, it’s easy to let that rock our world. It’s also easy to get wrapped up in trying to please the people around us in order to avoid that rejection. But God’s truth is that He chose you and loved you enough to adopt you into His family. Choosing to fully embrace that truth provides the perspective we need to be less concerned about what others think.

  4. I won’t use stuff to make me feel good this year.

    “The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want” (Ps. 23:1).

    God is enough to satisfy your needs. If you have Him, you have everything you need. Believing this truth allows you to stop trying to make yourself feel better by having the right stuff. You already have what you need.

  5. I will do what it takes to overcome a sinful habit this year.

    “For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves to sin—because anyone who has died has been freed from sin” (Rom. 6:6–7).

    God’s truth is that you do not have to sin, and every sinful pattern in your life can be overcome by the power of Christ living in you. That doesn’t mean that overcoming sin doesn’t often take work. You may need to confess your sin to a Christian friend or pastor, recruit an accountability partner, or remove a habit or relationship that has become a stumbling block in order to stop a sinful habit in your life. But God’s Word promises that you can receive freedom. Believe that truth, and then do what is necessary to remove sin.

  6. I will embrace a God-sized challenge this year.

    “I can do everything through him who gives me strength” (Phil. 4:13).

    God has not commanded you to do anything that He will not give you the grace to do. That means, for example, that:

    • there is no one you cannot love (Matt. 5:44)
    • you can give thanks in all things (1 Thess. 5:18)
    • there is no one you cannot forgive (Mark 11:25)
    • you can be sexually pure (1 Thess. 4:3–4)
  7. I will accept responsibility for my actions this year.

    “The soul who sins is the one who will die. The son will not share the guilt of the father, nor will the father share the guilt of the son. The righteousness of the righteous man will be credited to him, and the wickedness of the wicked will be charged against him” (Eze. 18:20).

    You are responsible before God for your behavior, responses, and choices. You may not be able to control the things that happen to you this year, but you can control how you respond to the things God allows to come into your life. Making the choice to stop blaming others for the negative patterns in your life and to assume personal responsibility for your own choices will free you to obey God regardless of your circumstances.

  8. I will be more concerned about my holiness than my happiness this year.

    “Be holy because I am holy” (1 Pet. 1:16).

    Jesus didn’t die so that we could live a life for ourselves and our own pleasure, but so we could be free to live a life that pleases Him. Pleasing Him will sometimes require sacrifices. But any sacrifice we make is temporary and cannot be compared with the joy and fulfillment we will gain in eternity. Only through seeking to be holy can we ever experience true happiness.

  9. I will add praise, thanksgiving, listening, and confession into my prayer life this year.

    “For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son” (Rom. 8:29a).

    God is more concerned about changing you and glorifying Himself than about solving your problems. With that truth in mind, a balanced prayer life should include more than just asking God to fix your problems. Work to build a relationship with God that is not strictly focused on asking Him to change your circumstances.

  10. I will focus more on Jesus and less on myself this year.

    “He must become greater; I must become less” (John 3:30).

    The truth is it’s not about you; it’s all about Him. The world was not created to revolve around you. It was created to revolve around Christ. This year, look for every opportunity to make your life more about serving Jesus and attracting others to Him.

Your life will be radically transformed this year if, by God’s grace, you make the decision to: 1) know God’s truth, 2) believe it, 3) act on it. How will you live out God’s truth in 2015? Leave a comment and tell us which resolution you plan to put into action. We’ll choose several of you to receive a 2015 Revive Our Hearts calendar.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “900 Years Worth of Resolutions.”

 

5 Reasons We Still Need John 3:16

It’s been reduced to a cardboard sign held up at the edge of the wrestling ring or a mantra for frenzied NFL fans.

We assume everyone already knows it.

It’s a verse so well worn that it seems to have lost some of its luster.

But we still need John 3:16.

“For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.”

Did you skim it over? If so, go back and read it again. Let it marinate. Here are four messages from this verse we still need to hear and are especially appropriate as we take time to remember and celebrate Christ’s birth tomorrow.

  1. God loves the world.

    You know the crazy world outside your front door? The one where wars are raging, diseases are spreading, and sometimes it seems like the whole ship is sinking? God loves that world. He loves Americans and Saudi Arabians. Those in the heartland and those in the Middle East. His love is big and global. It may not always seem like it, but He’s got the whole world in His hands, and He likes it that way. The wool is not now, nor has it ever been, pulled over God’s eyes. He sees the state things are in. He loves people who are lost and do not know him in the world. He loves the sick, the broken, and the sinful.

    He loved us when we were in that very state. Lost and broken. In glad rebellion against Him. His love for us didn’t begin when we surrendered our hearts to him and started to “clean up our act.” He loved when we were of the world.

    When we are tempted to shake our heads in disgust, wave our fist in defiance, or bury our heads in the sand over the condition of the world around us, we need to revisit John 3:16. God loves the world. Do we?

  2. God gave His only son.

    The original sin was rooted in the lie that God didn’t really love Adam and Eve. If He had, Satan hinted, He would not withhold good things. Satan knew that lie would cut Eve to the quick. Soon enough, she was nibbling on forbidden fruit in an attempt to ease her insecurity about God’s love.

    I understand why Eve took the bait. I am very prone to questioning God’s love for me. If things don’t seem to be going right, I assume I’ve made God mad. I have a tendency to live in perpetual fear of disappointing Him. That’s why several years ago, I adopted a mantra I force myself to say often . . .


    I will measure God’s love by the cross and His power by the resurrection.

    Does God love me? Well, He sent His only Son to die for me. I think that screams a pretty big “yes!” Maybe your heart is like mine and needs frequent reminders of the price God paid to demonstrate His love.

  3. Whoever believes

    John 3:16 uses a word that I often do not . . . “whoever.” It may seem like a benign word, but in the context of the gospel, I assure you, it is not.

    Salvation is available to “whoever believes in Him.” It is a free gift available to everyone. It’s not just for people who look like me, think like me, and Tweet the same blog posts I do. The gospel is so much bigger than that. I need John 3:16 because I need God to give me a bigger vision of His Church and a passion for lost people who don’t fit into the paradigms I create. Do you?

  4. We will not perish, but have eternal life.

    When we surrender our lives to Christ, we are snatched from the fire. We will not burn up. We will not be destroyed. We will spend our eternity in heaven with Him.

    But sometimes heaven feels so far away.

    When my life is topsy turvy . . . when the future looks bleak or boring . . . when bad news comes . . . I can grab on to the promises of God and hold on for dear life. There is hope beyond my current suffering. There is hope beyond our ruined world. There is hope beyond the sin which so easily entangles (Heb. 12:1).

    We will not perish! We will have eternal life. That’s a promise I need daily.

  5. We need John 3:17, too.

    While we are on a roll, let’s keep reading.

    “For God did not send his Son to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through Him.”

    This passage is an antidote to our wrong thinking about God. He isn’t sitting up in heaven, waiting to zap us with a lightning bolt when we fail. Condemnation is not His specialty. Love is. He wants us to be saved from our sin. His heartfelt desire is for us to be reconciled to Him.

    In a world that often sees God as either overly permissive and unconcerned by our sin or overly judgmental and harsh, we all need to hear that He did not send Jesus to condemn us but rather to save us from the sin that separates us from Him. Your neighbors need to hear that message. Your friends need to hear that message. Your co-workers need to hear that message. Will you be the one to tell them?

How have these reminders about the gospel stirred your heart to worship your God and proclaim His greatness?

Why Santa’s Not a Christian

I’ve been praying for Santa and his wife, Mrs. Claus. I’ve invited them to church. They say they’d come if they just weren’t so busy. They own a small business that seems to eat up all of their free time. I’ve shared my faith with them before, and they always smile at me kindly. But they just won’t accept Jesus as their Savior. It’s not that they have a problem with Jesus. After all, Jesus and Santa are the two faces of the biggest holiday in the world. Santa respects Jesus, but what he cannot wrap his mind around is the Gospel.

You know the Gospel right?

The Part of the Gospel Santa Knows Best

It’s the truth that all of us are sinners. From the North Pole to the South Pole and in every nook and cranny in between, the planet is packed with sinners. It’s our very nature to rebel against God’s holy standards and try to live life on our terms. It rarely works out like we think it will, and that is bad news.

But there is worse news because there is a God in heaven who is not just holy. He’s holy, holy, holy. He is set apart. He is perfect. And because He is so holy, He cannot tolerate our sin. Isaiah 59:2 says that because of our sin, God hides His face from us. Our sin keeps us separated from our Creator. What’s more, Romans 6:23 says that the punishment that we all deserve is death.

Santa knows all about this half of the Gospel. He’s always watching for sin. Sure, he calls it naughtiness, but it’s the same thing. He sees us when we’re sleeping. He knows when we’re awake. He knows when we’ve been bad or good. The pervasiveness of sin is no surprise to Santa. He has dished out enough lumps of coal to know there are plenty of naughty boys and girls in the world.

But just focusing on sin causes us to miss the beauty of the Gospel.

The Best Gift That Santa Can’t Give

Romans 6:23 goes on to say, “But the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.”

I can be a lot like Santa. I feel like I have to earn God’s love.

God’s gift of salvation is totally, 100%, no-strings-attached free. In fact, that is what Christmas is really all about. Jesus came as a baby, but He had no intention of staying so small. He was laid in a wooden crib that first Christmas so that He could bear a wooden cross in order to change my heart of stone. Because of my sin, I deserve so much worse than a lump of coal. I deserve death and eternal separation from the Holy God. Jesus came to pay that penalty. It is an immeasurable gift that I did not earn and could never repay.

Santa just can’t get his head around it. He doesn’t understand free gifts. His reality is a team of elves working day and night to create gifts for good little boys and girls. He associates gifts with effort and elbow grease.

I can be a lot like Santa. I feel like I have to earn God’s love. I find myself often wondering if He will take back the gift He gave me and replace it with a lump of coal. But that is not the Gospel, and it’s not the true message of Christmas either.

Jesus came as a perfect bundle so He could die as a perfect sacrifice. No jolly man in a red suit with a bag of toys can offer me anything sweeter.

Santa and his family will have to decide for themselves whether they want to keep clinging to the idea that all good and perfect gifts can only be earned through good and perfect behavior, but I’ve already made up my mind. Of course, I’m not really praying for our culturally created version of Santa or inviting him to church, but I imagine this is why he would turn down the Gospel if he were my neighbor. It’s why so many of us do.

Christmas is so miraculous because it points to a bigger story. Jesus came as a perfect bundle so He could die as a perfect sacrifice. No jolly man in a red suit with a bag of toys can offer me anything sweeter.

How do you fix your eyes on the Gospel during the Christmas season? Leave me a comment below with your answer.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Some Thoughts on the Guy in the Red Suit.”

 

Navigating the Holidays as Adult Children of Divorce

“Hello, my name is Erin, and my parents are divorced.” Sometimes, I feel like I’m a member of a club that I can’t get out of, even if I fail to pay my dues. It’s the Adult Child of Divorce Club, and there are times when being a member is no picnic.

Much effort is often made to console and comfort children whose parents are divorcing (and rightfully so). But when we become adults, no one seems to want to talk about it anymore. It’s entirely possible that if you’re a child of divorce, you start to feel the familiar pangs of sadness, anger, resentment, and loss resulting right about the time you flip your calendar from October to November. That’s because the holidays can usher in a season of angst while we try to navigate celebrations at multiple households, interact with parents and step-parents, and face painful memories of past holidays.

Divorce leaves such a painful scar on our hearts that we may need to forgive our parents (or their significant others) many times.

While my husband sees six (yes, six!) holiday dinners as nothing more than a chance to chow down, I see it as a huge reminder that my parents and my grandparents are divorced. All those turkeys just represent failed marriages to me.

Don’t get me wrong—it has been twenty-one years since my parents divorced, and by God’s grace, I am fully healed of the resulting pain. But I still have to navigate my complicated family situation every year for the holidays. If you’re in the Adult Child of Divorce Club, you have to deal with similar issues. I’d like to start an open dialogue about how, as children of divorce, we can avoid potential land mines and thrive in this season. Believe me, I haven’t got this all figured out, but after twenty-one holiday seasons with divorced parents, God has taught me a lesson or two. Such as . . .

Forgiveness Is Not a Suggestion

God’s Word gives us clear commands to forgive. We tend to think of forgiveness like a dot on a map. Yes, I visited “Forgiveness” once. I checked that off my to-do list. But, it’s not always that simple. Divorce leaves such a painful scar on our hearts that we may need to forgive our parents (or their significant others) many times. Does the impact of your parent’s divorce on your holidays make you feel angry, hurt, bitter, or resentful all over again? Let those emotions serve as a reminder to forgive, not because your parents deserve it, but because Jesus commanded you to, and because He has forgiven you!

Foster Unity

My parents have been divorced more than two decades. Each of them is happily re-married. But, they still have many important things in common: mainly me, my siblings, my children, and my siblings’ children. That’s why I’ve suggested having some holiday celebrations together as one BIG, happy family.

Not every family could do that, but I do what’s in my power to make being together feel natural by treating everyone equally. Whether you get everyone together in the same room or not, how can you foster family unity this holiday season?

Call ‘Em as You See ‘Em

Sometimes more pain is caused by what isn’t said than by what is. Refusing to ever talk about the divorce again won’t make it less painful. We had trouble working out our Thanksgiving plans this year because there were multiple houses to go to on the same day and I didn’t want to stretch my small children (or myself) too thin. Instead of forcing arrangements that would have added to stress or sweeping the challenges under the rug, I simply called both sets of parents and said something like, “I’d rather not go to both houses on the same day. We end up not enjoying the holiday because we are so rushed. I want to be a blessing to you. How can we work together to fix this?”

We came up with an arrangement that worked for everyone and we were all better off because we talked about the challenges of our blended families openly and with a goal to love each other well.

Be Intentional About Legacy

As grown children of divorce, the odds are stacked against us. But we have tremendous hope in God’s power to transform our circumstances for His glory—your parents may be divorced, but that doesn’t define you. That is not your legacy. Use the holiday season as a reminder of God’s ability to heal, transform, and restore. And then ask Him to strengthen your own marriage, friendships, and overall mental health in the days and weeks to come.

I now call the meeting for the Adult Child of Divorce Club to order. Today’s topic: making the holidays sweeter. What do you do to navigate this time of year with grace, even with your family’s “interesting” dynamics?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “5 Ways to Make the Holidays More Peaceful.”

 

Will You Pass the Insecurity, Please?

My mom’s crockpot corn (yum!). My granny’s cranberry salad (yuck!). My Aunt Rhonda’s pumpkin cake (double yum!). All of these will make an appearance at my family’s Thanksgiving table this year. But those yummy dishes will be chased by a harder pill to swallow.

As the men move into the living room to catch the football game, the women will fall into a familiar pattern. We will bemoan all of the food we just ate. We’ll promise to diet in earnest in the new year. We’ll joke that we removed the calories from the pumpkin pie. But inside, no one will be laughing because in my family beauty can be one ugly subject.

The Ugly Legacy of Beauty

Several years ago, I wrote a book about true beauty for young women. It chronicled my struggles with an eating disorder and the freedom I found when I learned to see my beauty through the filter of God’s Word. Six years later, I should see if anyone has a copy of that book so I can borrow it. After three babies and an ever-fluctuating number on the scale, I still struggle to see myself as I know God sees me.

When we fail to see our worth or strive to find value somewhere other than God, our hearts are revealing pockets of unbelief.

In some ways, embracing our God-given beauty and worth is a struggle for all women. When I read Eve’s story way back in the Garden, I see a woman who was really asking “Am I enough?” when the serpent offered her a slice of fruit that would make her like God.

But for some of us, the struggle is more intense. I suppose there could be lots of reasons for that, but for me, lies about beauty and worth have wreaked havoc on my family for generations. Do you know where I learned to struggle with my beauty? From my momma. As I little girl, I watched her go on every diet imaginable. I heard her constant comments about her weight. I saw her make faces at herself in the mirror. Where did my momma learn to struggle with her beauty and worth? From her momma, of course. It’s a part of our family folklore that long before the existence of the FDA, granny once took diet pills that turned out to be tapeworms (Ew!). I never met my great-grandma, but I have a hunch that she struggled to embrace her worth, too. Looking for value in a certain size or weight or style has the worst kind of trickle-down effect.

As I started to travel and speak about beauty to young women, I realized my mom and I needed to have a chat. I told her I wanted to honor her but felt compelled to open a dialogue about the often ugly legacy of beauty lies. She started to cry and said, “I thought telling you that you were beautiful was enough.”

Sigh. I wish it was that simple.

I don’t have any daughters (only a house full of rowdy boys!), but I’ve had to learn this hard parenting lesson: Do as I say not as I do, is hogwash. Our kiddos will never believe God’s Truth if we don’t.

Lord, Help my Unbelief

Make no mistake, when we get off track about the source of our value, it’s not about numbers on the scale or how our pants fit. It’s bigger than that. Ultimately, it’s an issue of unbelief. Maybe it’s not your outer beauty that makes you question your worth. Perhaps you gauge your value by:

  • The number of Twitter followers or Facebook friends you have
  • Who’s reading your blog
  • The size of your house
  • Your ability to get the job done
  • What others think of you
  • What your family looks like
  • How many plates you can keep spinning

Those are all symptoms of the same problem—we don’t believe God’s Word. He has declared we have great value that is not based on any of the things on that list. I know what you’re thinking, Hold the phone! I love the Bible. I believe the Bible.

And yet . . .

  • Genesis 1:27 says you bear the image of God.
  • Psalm 139:14 says that you were fearfully and wonderfully made.
  • 1 Corinthians 6:20 says you were bought with a price.
  • Matthew 10:29–31 says God values you highly.
  • Ephesians 2:10 says you are God’s workmanship. You were created by the master Artisan!

When we fail to see our worth or strive to find value somewhere other than God, our hearts are revealing pockets of unbelief. We don’t believe that God really meant what He said when He spoke so boldly about our significance. We don’t believe He really intended for us to be this way. We don’t believe that He could have made us with fear and wonder.

Why does that matter? Because when women fail to find their worth in Christ, there is always collateral damage. When we look to others to affirm our value, we saddle them with a weight they cannot bear. Even worse, our insecurity is contagious. The girls in your world are especially vulnerable to catching yours.

Why I Wrote This Post

I knew I needed to write this post after a recent women’s event where I spoke. I was teaching out of 2 Corinthians 12:9, in which Paul declares that he would gladly boast in his weaknesses because they provided an opportunity for Christ’s strength to be put on full display. I asked the women to write about their weaknesses in “brag books.”

Overwhelmingly, the number one weakness women wrote about was their weight and inability to control their relationship with food. Lack of self-control with their children and discipline to read God’s Word came in second and third, but it wasn’t even a close race. When those women thought about weakness, they thought about food and weight.

I understand. I struggle to have self-control in this area too, but it is only a symptom, not the bigger problem. My weakness is sin. I desperately need Jesus’ work in my life. Sure, that can look like jamming a box of cookies in my mouth to deal with emotional overload. But with so many women locked in a pattern of love to eat, hate to eat, and seeing food and weight (I’m not talking about women who have genuine physiological reasons for being overweight nor am I advocating that we all need to be stick-thin), not sin, as their primary weakness, it’s no wonder our girls are struggling.

And believe me, they are struggling . . .

  • 91% of women on college campuses diet—22% of them diet “often” or “always.”
  • Almost half of American children between 1st and 3rd grade want to be thinner, and half of nine- to ten-year-old girls are dieting.
  • There has been a rise in incidences of anorexia in young women between the ages of fifteen and nineteen every decade since the 1930s.
  • 40% of newly identified cases of anorexia are in girls fifteen–nineteen years old.

The Girls at Your Table

I spend a lot of time counseling young women. Girls who cut. Girls who skip meals. Girls who will date any guy who will make them feel beautiful. They all find their way into my world often. I do what I can to help them. I pray for them. I point them toward God’s Word. But my reach is limited. You’re the ones who need to do the hard work.

If you’re a momma or grandma (or aunt, or sister, or cousin), you can be sure that the young women in your world are watching you between the eye rolls. They really are listening to what you say, but they have a laser-like focus on what you do. If you’re looking for your worth anywhere other than Christ, they will pick up the scent in a heartbeat.

Even if there is a long history of rejecting God’s truth about beauty in your family, you are free to stop the pattern.

The holiday season offers a unique opportunity to open up a dialogue about food since there’s so much of it! Family gatherings have a strange way of exposing our insecurities, providing another opportunity for teachable moments. If the legacy of beauty is ugly in your family, this could be the year when you turn things around.

Practically, that means being very careful about how you talk about the food on your Thanksgiving table. It is not an enemy. It’s a gift to be enjoyed with much gratitude and no guilt. It also means taking the time to speak life to the girls who will join you to celebrate this year. Tell them how much God loves them. Remind them that their worth comes from Him.

Because I love young women so much, I’m hoping you will join me in fighting for their hearts. But first, we must be brave and let the Lord change ours.

  • What makes you feel insecure?
  • Are there girls in your world vulnerable to “catching” those insecurities?
  • What changes can you make to change the legacy of beauty in your family?

Even if there is a long history of rejecting God’s truth about beauty in your family, you are free to stop the pattern. You can eat without guilt or shame. You can look in the mirror and appreciate what God has created in you. You can know that your value and worth are not affected by the number of helpings on your plate. When you truly believe what God says about you, it is guaranteed to send shock waves through your family.

Whatdya say? Will you join me in choosing to believe what God says about our value this Thanksgiving?

If you’re willing to break the pattern of generational insecurity, leave me a comment to tell me about it. I will choose three of you to win a free copy of my book, Graffiti: Learning to See the Art in Ourselves.

If you want to jump start a conversation with your girl on this issue, check out this post on LiesYoungWomenBelieve.com together and discuss.

3 Terrible Ways to Measure Your Ministry

First things first, I believe the Bible calls all of us into ministry. As followers of Christ, sharing the gospel (Mark 16:15), making disciples (Matt. 28:19), and caring for those in need (Matt. 25:35–40) are tasks assigned to all of us.

And probably in anticipation of our tendency to compare, God makes it clear in His Word that the ways we minister may look different, but it all matters. Just like the parts of a body are all needed, each of us must do our part for Christ’s body to work at maximum efficiency (1 Cor. 12).

Having a ministry can look a million different ways:

  • It might look like teaching kindergarten Sunday school.
  • It might look like mentoring a young, single mom.
  • It might look like leading worship.
  • It might look like writing books.
  • It might look like raising children to know and follow Christ.
  • It might look like managing a blog.
  • It might look like knitting warm hats.
  • It might look like praying like crazy.

I could keep going, but there really isn’t space inside my brain or in this blog post to paint a picture of all of the forms that ministry can take.

So, if you are a Christian seeking to live like God calls you to live, chances are you have a ministry.

I’ve learned the hard way that when it comes to ministry, too often we use the wrong ruler to gauge our success. Maybe you’ve fallen into the same trap. Here are three terrible ways to measure the impact of your ministry.

  1. People love you.

    Selling a bajillion books, gaining oodles of Twitter followers, packing the seats of a sanctuary . . . these are not good indicators of successful ministry. We tend to think that if people are showing up with smiles on their faces, God is blessing, but this is not the pattern we see in the Bible.

    How’s this for a mind-bending truth?

    “Blessed are you when people hate you and when they exclude you and revile you and spurn your name as evil, on account of the Son of Man! Rejoice in that day, and leap for joy, for behold, your reward is great in heaven; for so their fathers did to the prophets” (Luke 6:22–23).

    The Bible doesn’t say you’re blessed when everyone pats you on the back. It doesn’t say it’s awesome when you’ve been propelled to superstardom in the Kingdom of Christ. Nope. The Bible says we should jump up and down with joy when people hate us. We should rejoice when we are left out because of our faith. We are in the company of the spiritual giants who go before us when our ministry repels some people instead of drawing them in.

    There is a balance to be struck here. If the gospel is your core message, growth is a good thing. As you are impacting people for the Kingdom, they are bound to want to pat you on the back. But if you stick your finger into the wind of public opinion to determine the success of your Kingdom work, it will feel like a wild goose chase.

  2. There is immediate fruit.

    I once mentored a young woman named Amanda. Every single Wednesday for more than a year, I picked her up from school, took her out for pizza, and tried to get her to care about Jesus. She was a closed book! She sealed up her heart like a vault at Fort Knox. She never opened up to me, never showed enthusiasm for what I was showing her in the Word, never gave any indication of interest in the things of God.

    Just because the impact isn’t immediately felt, doesn’t mean what you’re doing for the Kingdom isn’t fruitful.

    If you had asked me during that year, or in the several years following, if my ministry with Amanda was fruitful, I would have said, “No way!” But there was growth in Amanda’s heart I could not yet see.

    Fast forward nearly ten years, and I got a letter from Amanda. She told me what a difference that year made in her life. She wrote about God’s Word like the living and active book I so wanted her to take interest in. She told me she’s now a wife and a momma, seeking to honor Jesus in her home. Spiritual fruit hung in big bunches from her life, but it didn’t grow quickly. That growth took years.

    In Matthew 13:4–8 Jesus told us this would happen.

    “And as he sowed, some seeds fell along the path, and the birds came and devoured them. Other seeds fell on rocky ground, where they did not have much soil, and immediately they sprang up, since they had no depth of soil, but when the sun rose they were scorched. And since they had no root, they withered away. Other seeds fell among thorns, and the thorns grew up and choked them. Other seeds fell on good soil and produced grain, some a hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty. He who has ears, let him hear.”

    Did you know that radishes grow quickly? In only twenty-five days you can plant a radish seed and then pull it up and eat it with your dinner. Pears, on the other hand, grow slowly. It can take up to twelve years for a pear to grow from a seed to ripe, juicy fruit, ready to eat.

    I don’t know about you, but I’d take a pear over a radish any day of the week. Sometimes the best fruit takes time to develop. That’s as true in ministry as it is in vegetable gardening.

    Just because the impact isn’t immediately felt, doesn’t mean what you’re doing for the Kingdom isn’t fruitful.

  3. The sailing is smooth.

    Confession: I wrote this blog post for myself. I have a bad habit of throwing my hands in the air and assuming I’m doing ministry all wrong whenever the road gets rocky. But Bible says that trials are simply par for the course. In fact, we can respond to trials with that same jumping-up-and-down joy that we do to criticism because they help us minister for the long haul.

    “Count it all joy, my brothers, when you meet trials of various kinds, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing” (James 1:2–4).

    If he was using ease as the gauge for success, Paul would have hung up his hat. Likewise, we shouldn’t determine our effectiveness by whether or not the going is easy. (Did you hear that, Erin?)

Who’s In Charge of Growth?

So how can you know if you are ministering effectively? It may seem crazy . . . but I’m not sure you can.

In 1 Corinthians 3:6–7, Paul said this about ministry. “I planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. So neither he who plants nor he who waters is anything, but only God who gives the growth.”

Ultimately, the fruit of your efforts aren’t up to you. You can’t predict how God will grow your ministry nor can you control it. You can be faithful, looking for opportunities to share and to serve everywhere you go, and at the end of the day, you can lay down your garden tools and trust God with the fruit.

Speaking of gardens and fruit, here’s a promise for all who minister. There will be a harvest, friend. I look forward to reaping it together with you.

“And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up” (Gal. 6:9).

What promises keep you going as you do ministry for the Kingdom?

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Ministry Is Messy.”

 

Sticking Your Neck Out for Others



Editor’s Note:
This is Day 14 of our 15-Day Heart Prep series for True Woman ’14.

Don’t miss a thing at True Woman ’14. Get the True Woman ’14 App to keep updated with bonus material, schedules, maps, speaker information, resources, and more!


There will be a Teen Track for girls in 9th–12th grade led by Dannah Gresh and Erin Davis. Young women will explore biblical truth on topics that are relevant to their lives and spend some exciting time in plenary sessions with their mothers and other adult women who attend the event. 

Prisca (later changed to Priscilla) and Aquilla were my kind of people. They had a ferocious love for Jesus and His people. We know from 1 Corinthians 16:19 that they hosted a New Testament church in their home. Their willingness to serve made a difference, because Paul gives them several shout-outs in the New Testament, always sending his greetings to Prisca and Aquilla accompanied by high praise for their kingdom work:

“Greet Prisca and Aquilla, my fellow workers in Christ Jesus, who risked their necks for my life, to whom not only I give thanks but all the churches of the Gentiles give thanks as well” (Rom. 16:3–4, emphasis added).

In Romans 16:3–4 we see that these were people who were willing to take risks for God’s glory. Paul says, “they risked their necks for my life.” In this case, Prisca and Aquilla may have literally risked their lives for Paul, but they were “sticking their necks out” in other ways. They were risking their comfort by hosting a church in their home. They were putting their reputations on the line. And let’s face it, investing in others is always risky. Just because you stick your neck out for someone does not mean they will return the favor.

It is impossible to live the Christian life without risk.

But these two took big risks for the kingdom, and I doubt they did it for Paul’s praise. Paul was clear. These were his family members in Christ, fellow laborers in the task of making and training disciples. They were motivated by their love for Jesus and the calling He had placed on their lives.

As Christian women, we get to join the ranks of followers like Prisca and Aquilla. We are also fellow workers in Christ Jesus as we seek to do the kingdom work God has called each of us to. And I have a hunch that as thousands of us gather to seek the Lord together at True Woman ’14, He will call each of us to follow the lead of individuals like Prisca and Aquilla by sticking our necks out for Him. That might look like:

  • Finally forgiving that person who hurt you so deeply.
  • Agreeing to be the wife God calls you to be, even if your husband never changes.
  • Standing up for biblical womanhood in a culture that is hostile toward God’s design for gender.
  • Hosting a True Woman event in your local church after True Woman ’14.
  • Confessing an area of sin that has kept you sidelined from loving and serving God’s people.

It is impossible to live the Christian life without risk. It is impossible to be a true woman of God without personal liability. But since Jesus stuck His neck way out for us, we are free to take risks for His name’s sake.


As you prepare to head to True Woman ’14, would you be willing to ask the Lord to make you more like Prisca and Aquilla by praying this bold prayer: Lord, at True Woman show me how I can stick my neck out for you and your people. Amen.

Helpful Tip for True Woman ’14 Attendees:

Be sure to bring your Bible and a pen!

LIVE Stream:

If you aren’t able to join us for True Woman ’14, be sure to watch via LIVE Stream Oct. 9–11.

I Refuse to Be Embarrassed

My six-year-old is easily embarrassed. If his hair is going haywire or he makes a mistake in front of others, it is likely to result in tears. When he’s really embarrassed, he has a habit of finding a corner or a piece of furniture under which he can duck and hide.

Heightened self-consciousness is a normal part of development for my kindergartener. As his world expands, he is suddenly (and painfully) focused on fitting in. Being different in any way makes him uncomfortable. I have no doubt that he’ll work through it, and I’ll have my fearless boy back again soon (until the teenage years!), but his sudden tendency to blush so easily has me thinking about my own insecurities.

If I choose to believe what God says about me is true, insecurity doesn’t stand a chance.

It’s been a long time since I was six years old, but not so long since I wanted to impress others. Maybe I will never fully outgrow my desire to fit in or my fear of sticking out. But, after almost twenty years as a Christian, I can tell I am growing in grace because I blush less often. I still like to be liked, but it is no longer the end-all, be-all.

In fact, one of the unexpected “perks” of being a Christ follower is that the more I focus on Him, the less bandwidth I have to focus on me. The more I live my life Christ-conscious, the less self-conscious I feel.

Identity Check

One of the areas that has been most revolutionized by my relationship with Jesus has been my understanding of my identity. Through His Word, the Lord has sweetly helped me to see myself as He sees me. It isn’t always easy, but I’ve learned to cling to truths like:

  • I am God’s beloved (Ps. 127:2).
  • His love for me is everlasting (Jer. 31:3).
  • I am God’s ambassador (Eph. 6:20).
  • I am His adopted daughter (2 Cor. 6:18).
  • My weaknesses highlight His strength (2 Cor. 12:10).
  • I am highly valued (Luke 12:7).

If I choose to believe (and it is a choice) that what God says about me is true, insecurity doesn’t stand a chance. Embarrassment is the byproduct of worrying what others think of me. In contrast, security can be found in choosing to care most about what God thinks of me.

The List

Sometimes, as women, we live like who we are in Christ is just a theory instead of letting the powerful truths He outlines about us in His Word really change us. I don’t want to live like that! I don’t want to be like my little guy, running and hiding over things that don’t matter. I don’t want to make choices rooted in fear of failure or embarrassment. I want to stand tall, shoulders back and chin high, on the foundation of who God declares me to be.

That’s why, I’ve been working on a list of all the things I don’t have to be embarrassed about anymore. Here’s what I’ve got so far . . .

  • I refuse to be embarrassed by my shape and size because I am fearfully and wonderfully made (Ps. 139:14).
  • I refuse to be embarrassed about my house made messy by three small boys, because children are a blessing (Ps. 127:3).
  • I refuse to be embarrassed about taking time to rest and refuel, since I am following Jesus’ lead (Mark 6:31).
  • I refuse to be embarrassed about not being “in the know” as I seek to conform less and be transformed more (Rom. 12:2).
  • I refuse to be embarrassed by saying “no” to lesser things in order to avoid the pitfalls of busyness (Luke 10:41–42).

Those are just a few of the ways I’m refusing to be embarrassed because of who I am in Christ. What’s on your list? Add it in the comments below.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Growing in Grace Like a Preschooler.”

 

Four Ways to Spot a Bitter Root

Every good gardener knows that you can’t chop weeds. Try to go after those buggers with a weed eater, and you’ll get nowhere in a hurry. You’ve got to rip weeds up by the roots. Otherwise, they will just keep coming back and when they do, they’re bound to bring more and more of their weedy friends.

It’s no accident that God uses the image of a weed to describe a particular sin that has a way of creeping into all of our hearts. . . bitterness.

“See to it that no one fails to obtain the grace of God; that no ‘root of bitterness’ springs up and causes trouble, and by it many become defiled” (Heb. 12:15).

Bitterness isn’t one of those big, flashy sins that you can see growing above the surface of our hearts. It may not show off like anger or produce big ol’ hunks of rotten fruit like disobedience. Bitterness is a sleeper sin. It grows beneath the surface, down deep in the soil of our hearts.

But the author’s warning in Hebrews is clear—that bitter root will one day sprout and when it does, “many will become defiled.” In other words, if that bitter root keeps growing there will be a harvest of pain for you and the people in your world. And because bitterness is a weedy sin that burrows in our hearts first, we can’t just cut off the behaviors that bitterness causes. (We will get to those in a minute). We need the Lord’s help to yank that baby up by the root.

The Pack That Bitterness Travels In

Ephesians 4:31 says,

“Let all bitterness and wrath and anger and clamor and slander be put away from you, along with malice.”

Paul is describing a cluster of emotions here that come along with bitterness. I know from experience that bitterness almost always travels in a nasty pack. When bitterness is taking root in my heart, usually wrath is too. The same goes for anger, slander, and malice.

Our pastor directed my husband and me to this passage as part of our pre-marital counseling. He described these emotions as a progression.

  • If we don’t deal with bitterness, that bitterness will progress toward extreme anger (that’s wrath).
  • If we don’t deal with the anger, we will start to clamor or demand what we want.
  • If that doesn’t work we will start to talk bad about the object of our bitterness in the hopes of recruiting others to agree with and justify our feelings (that’s slander).
  • If that goes unchecked we will eventually have a desire to cause harm to the person we are bitter toward.

All along the way, people are hurt, relationships are derailed, joy is stolen, and the Fruit of the Spirit growth is stunted.

Four Ways to Spot a Bitter Root

With so much on the line, it is wise to ask ourselves often, “Am I bitter?” Since bitterness is a sleeper sin, the answer isn’t always obvious. Here are four questions to help you spot a bitter root.

Am I replaying the tapes?

Do you find yourself constantly replaying the tapes of a conversation with someone? When you interact with her, do you spend days rehashing every word or body language cue?

Bitterness flourishes in the soil of justification. I’ve found that when I fixate on my interactions with a specific individual, I am looking for justification for the anger or frustration I am feeling in a relationship. I’ve learned that if I find myself replaying the tapes often, I should see it as red flag that something is off in my own heart.

Is my mouth out of control?

Romans 3:14 says, “Their mouth is full of curses and bitterness.”

There is a connection between the junk that comes out of our mouths and the bitterness that tends to take root in our hearts. Do you find yourself losing your cool often? Are you critical, snappy, rude? Maybe the sins you are committing with your mouth are simply an extension of the bitterness that you have allowed to grow in your heart. If you are trying to deal with the way you speak and gaining no ground, it’s possible that you need to dig deeper and yank out the root of the problem.

Am I sick?

Psychologist Dr. Carsten Wrosch has studied bitterness for fifteen years. He says,

“When harbored for a long time, bitterness may forecast patterns of biological dysregulation (a physiological impairment that can affect metabolism, immune response or organ function) and physical disease.”

Scientists have concluded that bitterness, if left unchecked, interferes with the body’s hormonal and immune systems. Bitter people tend to have higher blood pressure and heart rate and are much more likely to die of heart disease and other illnesses.

Of course, the apostle Paul didn’t have access to this scientific data when he wrote much of the New Testament, but that didn’t keep him from connecting the dots between bitterness and our bodies. In Acts 8:23 Paul describes the “gall of bitterness.” It’s a bile, bitter substance that can literally make us sick.

Is my clan bitter?

The “bitter root” in Hebrews 12:15 is first described in Deuteronomy 29:18.

“Beware lest there be among you a man or a woman or a clan or tribe whose heart is turning away today from the Lord or God to go and serve the gods of those nations. Beware lest there be among you a root bearing poisonous and bitter fruit.”

Like all weeds, bitterness has a way of spreading. This passage describes one possible progression. A man infects his wife. She infects her children. The bitterness spreads and soon the whole tribe is infected.

  • Is your marriage marked by bitterness?
  • Are your children bitter?
  • Does your group of friends tend to sit around and gripe?
  • Is your church filled with harsh and angry people?
  • Is your community prone to placing blame?

Is it possible that your own bitterness has had a ripple effect and that the poisonous root has burrowed past your own heart and into the hearts of the people you love?

Trust the Gardener

In John 15:1, Jesus said, “I am the true vine and my Father is the Gardener.” If those questions revealed some weedy roots, would you join me in this prayer?

Father, I confess my bitterness to you. Please show me how to get rid of the bitter root. Replace it with the Fruit of your Holy Spirit. Amen.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “

Your Sin Is Not in Your Junk Drawer

Is your sin really hiding in your junk drawer?

I’ve got a junk drawer so full of junk that it is renting storage space from three other drawers.

I can’t see the top of my washing machine. It is covered in soap, rags, laundry baskets, and an army of Lego men rescued from the dryer.

I haven’t cleaned out my closet since the last time we moved.

We think God is most concerned with our productivity. The truth is, He is most concerned with our holiness.

Despite my desire to live a tidy and organized life, I’m disorganized and scattered. I often find myself wishing God would give me a twenty-eight-hour day instead of the standard twenty-four. I just can’t seem to squeeze everything on my to-do list in between the hours when my alarm goes off and when I fall into bed praying the baby will let me catch a few winks.

I know I’m not the only woman frustrated by disorganization and inefficiency. But girls, it’s time we get real about how big of a deal our junk drawer really is. (Hint: It’s not).

An Irritating Fact

Several months ago, I was doing research for a writing project when I accidently stumbled onto a Barna study about Christian women and spiritual health. As I read, these stats jumped out at me.

When asked about sin struggles . . .

  • 50% of women listed disorganization as their number one struggle.
  • 42% of women listed inefficiency.

These were the top two struggles listed.

Something about that study stuck like a grain of sand in my heart. It irritated me, but I wasn’t sure why. But after a while, through the lens of my own heart, this pearl emerged.

As women, we think God is most concerned with our productivity. The truth is, He is most concerned with our holiness.

Which Mark Are You Missing?

The fact that half of Christian women would list disorganization as their number one sin struggle tells me that we don’t know (or we don’t like) what sin is.

Sin is not simply those nagging habits that we would like to change about ourselves. It isn’t the things that make our lives less than magazine-spread perfect. It’s not something that can be cured in ten easy organizational steps.

While God calls us to work hard as if doing all things for Him, His love for us is not tied to our ability to perform.

First John 3:4 defines sin this way, “Everyone who makes a practice of sinning also practices lawlessness; sin is lawlessness.”

When we violate the law of God, found in His Word, we sin. We live in a culture that highly values productivity. Certainly, getting things done matters. But disorganization and inefficiency do not violate God’s law.

Deuteronomy 9:7 and Joshua 1:18 define sin as rebellion against God.

When you don’t master your to-do list who or what are you rebelling against? Your own expectations? Maybe. A culture that gives gold stars for productivity at all costs. Sure. But God is not disappointed in you when your to-do list is not wrapped in a tidy bow at the end of the day. Being disorganized is not rebellion against God or His law.

I’ve often heard sin defined as “missing the mark.” This is backed up by Romans 3:23 which says, “All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God.”

Yes, we are all sinners because we all fall short of the glory and perfection of God, not because there is dirty laundry on the floor and expired cheese in the refrigerator. Jesus didn’t die to redeem your junk drawer. He died to redeem you from your tendency to run in the opposite direction of God and His plans for your life.

Don’t Waste Your Guilt

Certainly a clean and organized home is a worthy goal. There’s nothing wrong with getting organized. (You naturally organized girls were already typing me a letter on your label makers, weren’t you?)

Too many of us feel more guilty about the state of our homes than we do about the condition of our hearts.

But if half of us think falling short in the area of productivity is our number one problem, our priorities are out of whack with God’s. As a result, too many of us feel more guilty about the state of our homes than we do about the condition of our hearts.

I can’t help but wonder . . . as women, are we wasting valuable time and energy feeling guilty about our messy homes instead of asking the Lord to work in our messy lives? Are we going to war against sin with the same vigor and determination that we go to war against clutter?

And for me, here is the question at the root of it all:

Do we get that while God calls us to work hard as if doing all things for Him (Eph. 6:7), His love for us is not tied to our ability to perform.

In fact, God doesn’t shake His finger at messy. He uses our messes to proclaim His message. He uses our shortcomings as an opportunity to highlight our need for Him.

A Strange Poster Child for Prioritizing

Admittedly, I have some All-American girl, first-born achiever hang ups. I have a tendency to measure my value on my ability to perform. That’s probably why the story of Mary and Martha found in Luke 10 has always gotten on my nerves.

Martha is knocking performance out of the park. The Savior comes over to her house and she puts on a fabulous dinner party. Her sister, Mary, on the other hand, get’s the “Atta girl” from Jesus for just sitting at His feet, making Mary a strange poster child for how we are to order our lives.

“But Martha was distracted with much serving. And she went up to [Jesus] and said, ‘Lord, do you not care that my sister has left me to serve alone? Tell her then to help me.’ But the Lord answered her, ‘Martha, Martha, you are anxious and troubled about many things, but one thing is necessary. Mary has chosen the good portion, which will not be taken away from her'” (Luke 10:40–41).

Based on this passage, I have a feeling that Martha would be among the 50% of women who list disorganization and inefficiency as her primary struggles. She just couldn’t seem to keep all of the plates spinning. But we need this story because it reminds us of a deeper truth.

Yes, having a clean house is good! Certainly, we should seek to show hospitality to others and to use our homes for God’s glory. Organization is a good thing too. It helps to smooth out the wrinkles in our day . . . but these are not the best portion. Productivity and organization should not be our primary goal or the measuring stick by which we calculate our value.

With that in mind, can I encourage you to examine your own life? Ask God to reveal the true sin in your life (remember sin violates God’s law) and to help you to repent. Ask Him to show you what true sin is and to see clearly if you are beating yourself up about something that doesn’t matter to Him.

Let’s ask God for strength to run toward holiness. If we can have a clean junk drawer and get the laundry caught up in the process, great. If not, let’s ask God to make us women who always choose the better portion.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “The Fine Art of Selection.”

 

Freebie Friday! The Gospel Is a Love Story

Freebie Friday

Did you know that you can put the gospel on display just by being a girl? It’s true!

This week we are giving away a CD recording of some of my favorite ladies talking about how embracing God’s design for gender helps present a picture of God to the world. It’s good stuff.

Simply answer the questions in this survey to be entered to win a free copy of the CD, “The Gospel is a Love Story” featuring Nancy Leigh DeMoss, Holly Elliff, Dannah Gresh, and Mary Kassian (and I’m on there too!).

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Psst . . . BIG changes are coming to liesyoungwomenbelieve.com. Be sure to check back often. You won’t want to miss this!

Can I Know If I'm Saved?

Can I Know If I'm Saved?

the·ol·o·gy noun : the study of God

We study God through His Word each Thursday on the blog. Our goal is to present the truth of God in a way you can digest and apply. This week we will look at how to know that you are saved.

I decided I would stick around after youth group.

As my youth pastor picked up trash and straightened chairs, I shuffled toward him.

"What’s up, Erin?" he asked.

"I just don’t feel like I’m saved," I said. "How can I know for sure?"

Living the Christian life with that much doubt isn’t fun. It leads to fear, worry, and anxiety and can rob us of joy and peace.

I’d had this same conversation with my youth pastor before. Lots of times. And with my parents. And with my Christian friends. Every time I heard a sermon on heaven or hell or salvation I wondered, Am I really saved? Honestly, their answers never did much to ease my fears.

I can say from experience that living the Christian life with that much doubt isn’t fun. It leads to fear, worry, and anxiety and can rob us of joy and peace. It’s a roller-coaster ride you don’t have to buy a ticket for.

First John 5:11–12 says, "And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this is life in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life."

We have a tendency to overcomplicate things. John says if we have the Son (Jesus) we have eternal life.

And here is the icing on the cake.

I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life (v. 13).

Your salvation doesn’t need to be a guessing game! Here are four questions to ask the next time you doubt your salvation.

  1. Do I understand the gospel?

    Part of the reason we decided to spend an entire month on the gospel is because it is possible to hear the gospel and somehow misunderstand it. When that happens, we are bound to question if Jesus really saved us from our sins. If you’re not sure if you understand the gospel, check out this post.

  2. Do I think salvation depends on me?

    If you secretly think you have to earn your salvation, you are destined for a lifetime of doubt. Every time you sin or fall short of God’s standards, you will wonder if God has retracted His offer for salvation because He is disappointed in you.

    Romans 5:15–16 says, "But the free gift is not like the trespass. For if many died through one man’s trespass, much more have the grace of God and the free gift by the grace of that one man Jesus Christ abounded for many. And the free gift is not like the result of that one man’s sin. For the judgment following one trespass brought condemnation, but the free gift following many trespasses brought justification."

    Why do you think Paul saw fit to mention the "free gift" four times in four sentences? I bet it’s because he knew we would get gospel amnesia and that we would forget that salvation is a free gift Jesus offered us, not something He expected us to earn. (Get it? It’s FREE!)

  3. Do I think feelings are facts?

    One day you’re feeling totally pumped about your Christian life, the next you can barely muster the energy to read your Bible. One day you feel totally confident in God’s love for you, the next you doubt how He could ever love someone like you. One day you feel ready to do whatever God calls you to. The next day you’re riddled with fear about God’s plans for your life.

    Feelings are a terrible barometer for the truth. Instead, build your confidence on the promises of God’s Word.

  4. Am I listening to good teachers?

    There are several places in the New Testament where the confidence of believers’ was shaken because of false teachers. The apostles often wrote to them offering assurances and pointing them back to the truth of the gospel (see Rom. 6, Gal. 1, 2 Pet. 2:1, and Jude 1:3–4).

    If you are dealing with chronic doubts, make sure that the books you are reading, podcasts you are downloading, and sermons you are listening to are backed by God’s Word.

Are you a doubter? If so, I’d love to hear your answers to these four questions, but I also want to give you a very practical homework assignment.

Will you write out this verse on a card or piece of paper and put it somewhere where you can see it often? Ask the Lord to marinate your heart in this truth in the days to come.

And this is the testimony, that God gave us eternal life, and this is life in his Son. Whoever has the Son has life; whoever does not have the Son of God does not have life. I write these things to you who believe in the name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternal life (1 John 5:11–13).

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Psst . . . BIG changes are coming to liesyoungwomenbelieve.com. Be sure to check back often. You won’t want to miss this!

A Gospel for Serial Killers

A Gospel for Serial Killers

Ted Bundy was convicted of killing thirty-six women and girls, making him one of the most notorious serial killers of all time. While waiting on death row for his execution, Ted turned his life over to Jesus and became a Christian. He repented publicly for his crimes and spent his final night praying with his pastor.

Ted Bundy was a rapist.

Ted Bundy was a murderer.

Ted Bundy was a liar.

Assuming Ted Bundy really did confess his sins and put his whole trust in Jesus, today Ted is in heaven with Jesus.

The gospel applies to people in every nation and age bracket. It is for "good" people and really, really bad people.

Many people have questioned Ted’s conversion. I guess it’s hard for our minds to conceive that someone guilty of such evil could truly turn from their wicked ways and run toward Jesus. But I can only assume that Ted’s decision to become a Christian was legit. If I’m honest, there’s a part of me that is irritated by it. How could Jesus forgive a serial killer? That’s not fair!

God must have of known I would have this internal tug of war, because He addressed it often in His Word. Though not an easy pill to swallow, here is some hard-hitting truth about who really deserves the gospel and how to wrap our heads around the fairness of God.

The Good News is For All People

When the angel told the shepherds about the birth of Jesus, he announced it this way: "And the angel said to them, ‘Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people” (Luke 2:10).

The angel wasn’t talking in generalizations. He wasn’t from the south, using the term "all" like "y’all" to include whoever was standing around at the moment. The Good News of Christ’s coming was for all people.

Jesus repeated this idea in Mark 16:15 when He gave the Great Commission.

And he said to them, "Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel to the whole creation."

The gospel is for all people. It applies to people in every nation and age bracket. It is for "good" people and really, really bad people. It is for young and old people. It is for people who have gone to church their whole lives and people who have never sat in a pew.

The Gospel is for Sinners

For most of us, there is a pocket of our hearts that questions if God’s grace should really extend to them. This is nothing new.

In Matthew 9, Jesus called Matthew to be a disciple. Matthew was a tax collector. Meaning, Matthew was scum. Nobody liked tax collectors because they were notorious thieves and schemers. So when Jesus called Matthew, the Pharisees got their feathers ruffled.

And when the Pharisees saw this, they said to his disciples, "Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?" But when he heard it, he said, "Those who are well have no need of a physician, but those who are sick. Go and learn what this means, ‘I desire mercy, and not sacrifice.’ For I came not to call the righteous, but sinners” (vv. 11–13).

The gospel is not about making clean lives even cleaner. It’s not about making good people even better good people. It is about extending undeserved grace to those who have earned death because of their sin. The end result is that we get to become more like Jesus.

Be Glad God Is Generous

In Matthew 20, Jesus told a story designed to give us perspective on who deserves His grace. You can read the entire thing in Matthew 20:1–16.

Here are the highlights:

  • A man needs workers to work in his vineyard.
  • Early in the morning, he recruits a group of workers and agrees to pay them a denarius for a day of work. (That’s about $20.)
  • The men get right to work.
  • About mid-morning the vineyard owner goes to the grocery store and hires two more workers. He agrees to pay them $20, too.
  • He goes out again at noon and then in the late afternoon. Each time he hires more workers, always for the same wage.
  • At the end of the day, he paid all of the workers $20, no matter how long they worked.
  • The guys who had been working all day were mad! They couldn’t believe that the guys who had only been working an hour or two were paid the same amount that they were for working all day.

The vineyard owner replied this way, "Friend, I am doing you no wrong. Did you not agree with me for a denarius? Take what belongs to you and go. I choose to give to this last worker as I give to you. Am I not allowed to do what I choose with what belongs to me? Or do you begrudge my generosity? So the last will be first, and the first last" (vv. 13–16).

If I’m honest, I often feel like those workers who got hired first. Because I’ve known Jesus a long time, I feel entitled to greater blessings from Him. But God has the right to do what He wants. (He’s God after all!) He certainly doesn’t need me armchair-quarterbacking when it comes to the salvation of others.

And more importantly . . .

God’s generosity has been a great gift to me. At the end of the day, I shouldn’t want God to be "fair," because that would mean that I deserve punishment instead of grace. Instead of secretly hoping God will be stingy toward others, we can celebrate His crazy generosity.

The Thief Beside You

Jesus was crucified between two thieves. They admitted they were guilty. What happened to them might fit into our definition of "fair." They were getting what they deserved.

One thief mocked Jesus, never admitting his need for him.

But one recognized Jesus’ divinity and innocence. He publicly proclaimed his desire to be with Jesus forever.

And [Jesus] said to him, "Truly, I say to you, today you will be with me in Paradise" (Luke 23:43).

That thief didn’t deserve paradise. He never did a single thing to earn grace. He didn’t go to church, didn’t lead a Bible study, didn’t pay back the money he had stolen . . . but God’s grace is crazy big. He offers it to us freely because He loves us, not because we’ve done anything to earn it.

Maybe it’s not serial killers or thieves who make you question the fairness of the gospel.

  • Maybe it’s that girl at school who is into such dark stuff that you don’t even bother to pray for her.
  • Maybe it’s people from a certain religion that you think would never accept the truth.
  • Maybe it’s someone who hurt you so deeply you secretly hope they will have to pay a heavy price for their sin.

The bottom line is that the gospel isn’t fair. None of us deserve the gift of grace that God so freely offers. With that in mind, would you ask God to show you where you have "begrudged His generosity" toward others, and then start praying radical prayers for the lost around you?

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6 Truths to Remember When a Christian Leader Screws Up Royally

When a Christian leader you’d looked up to and learned from screws up royally (and unfortunately it’s not a matter of if but when you’ll experience this), I know what you’ll want to do. You’ll want to block them on Facebook and delete their pictures on your Instagram account and burn their books and reject every truth they ever taught you but apparently didn’t live themselves.

A flood of emotions will bombard you from all sides—anger, disbelief, revulsion, guilt for not having seen through their hypocrisy. Your stomach will hurt, your head will ache, you’ll feel like throwing up. You won’t be able to understand how they could’ve preached against the very thing they were doing in secret.

When that happens, go ahead and weep. Let it tear you up. God’s glory is at stake. Pour out all your emotions to God like David does in the Psalms. In fact, that might be a great book of the Bible to camp out in for a while!

Always remember that anything good you see in a Christian leader—if it truly is good—is only a result of Jesus Christ making His home in them.

While your emotions are churning, though, it’s important to remember that your emotions are tied to your thoughts and beliefs. When a Christian leader you looked up to screws up royally, here are six truths to remember that will help tame your wild emotions:

  1. Only God is good. Jesus said it Himself in Mark 10:18: "No one is good except God alone." Boy, we forget this all the time, don’t we? We set men and women up on pedestals and follow them rather than following the God to whom they’re pointing. Always remember that anything good you see in a Christian leader—if it truly is good—is only a result of Jesus Christ making His home in them.
  2. Truth is still truth, whether they lived it or not. Romans 1:18 doesn’t say man’s unrighteousness disproves the truth—He says it suppresses the truth. This is why God’s wrath is revealed from heaven, because He takes the truth very seriously! Truth is still truth—even if it’s hard to distinguish it through the lie of their life.

    It’s also entirely possible that they twisted the truth. Open your Bible, and search out truth for yourself. Don’t just do this when a leader fails but anytime a leader teaches or writes or preaches (Acts 17:11).

  3. "But for the grace of God, there go I.” Be careful if you think you’re above ever stooping to that level. We’re warned in 1 Corinthians 10, "Let anyone who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall. No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man" (vv. 12–13). You will probably be tempted in a similar way someday. When that happens, God promises He’ll provide a way of escape (v. 13)—it’ll be up to you to take it. When that happens, run far, far away as fast as your little legs will take you. Don’t linger and dream about what it might be like to toy with sin just a little.
  4. God still loves them. Their sin hasn’t "chilled" God’s love for them. Remember, He died for them while they were still His enemies (Rom. 5:10)! The fact that their sin was discovered by others is actually God’s mercy. Romans 2:4 tells us that God’s kindness is meant to lead us to repentance. If they don’t repent and trust in Christ’s righteousness on their behalf, you can be sure they’ll experience God’s wrath in the future (Rom. 2:5). But for now, He waits patiently, kindly, not wanting any to perish but all to come to repentance (2 Pet. 3:9).
  5. Repentance is a process. If you’re like me, you’ll expect that leader to repent immediately. To confess their sin and bring it out into the light and turn from it back to the Lord. That’s certainly God’s desire, too! But this won’t always happen right away.

    When King David (a man who genuinely loved God) had sex with another man’s wife and then had that man murdered in order to cover up his sin, it was at least nine months before he acknowledged, "I have sinned against the LORD" (2 Sam. 12:13). Pray that God would give the leader you looked up to godly sorrow leading to repentance (2 Cor. 7:10).

  6. Not everyone who claims to be a Christ-follower actually is one. First John 2:19 tells us that only the person who finishes well was actually ever saved: "If they had been of us, they would have continued with us. But they went out, that it might become plain that they all are not of us." Not that believers never stumble (remember King David!). But if they really are Christ-followers, you will see them repent and return to their original faith in Christ’s righteousness on their behalf.

If you’ve ever had a "Christian" leader fail big time, what other truths have you clung to? If it hasn’t happened to you yet, is there someone you need to take off your pedestal? Remember, no one but God is ultimately good.

And don’t forget to pray for your leaders. A great prayer is found at the end of the Lord’s Prayer in Matthew 6:13: "Lead [them] not into temptation, but deliver [them] from evil." Which leader can you commit to praying for regularly?

A Freebie Friday Double Whammy!

Freebie Friday

I totally forgot to send out a Freebie Friday post last week. My bad!

To make up for my slack, we are giving away two books this week. Yep, TWO books! It’s a Freebie Friday double whammy!

Since we are focusing on the gospel this month on the blog, our giveaways this week have a gospel focus. Here is this week’s swag.

ESV Gospel Transformation Bible

The goal of this Bible is to help readers see Jesus in all of the Bible. This study Bible will help lead you to Jesus over and over with notes that point you to the gospel and give you practical application for God’s Word.

If you already have a great study Bible, consider using this one to participate in our Lazarus Project, and ask God to raise your school from the dead.

Because He Loves Me by Elyse Fitzpatrick

This book (complete with study questions and invitations to further study) is designed to rescue you from "identity amnesia" and point you toward your true identity as God’s beloved child.

If you’re wondering how the gospel should impact your daily life, this book is for you!

Since we’re giving away a Bible and a Bible study, I’d love to learn a little more about your Bible reading habits. Use the Giveaway Widget below to learn how to be entered to win.

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The Cure for the Back-to-School Blues

A Cure for the Back-to-School Blues

There’s no denying it. Summer is winding down. Textbooks and school supplies are in your near future. It’s time to head back to school. (Some of you already have!)

God doesn’t so much care about where you’ll spend your school year but what you will do with the year ahead.

Maybe you love school and are excited about the return to regular routine. Maybe you hate it and are dreading the school year ahead. Either way, I think God has a mission for your school year. It doesn’t matter if you’re in middle school or college; home-schooled, private-schooled, or public-schooled, God doesn’t so much care about where you’ll spend your school year but what you will do with the year ahead.

In fact, no matter how or where you go to school, I believe these words sum up God’s plan for your school year:

"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age" (Matt. 28:19–20).

This passage is often called the Great Commission. When Jesus spoke these words, He was giving us a very specific assignment. As Christians, Jesus trusts us with the message of His gospel. He wants us to tell others what He has done for us (and them!).

What if instead of looking at the year ahead with classes and clubs in mind, you made the Great Commission your focus? How would it change things if you decided to share the gospel with your school?

Waking the Dead

As I was thinking about encouraging you to share the gospel this year, I kept thinking about the story of Lazarus. If you don’t know it, you can read the whole story in John 11:1–44. But let me give you the short version.

  • Jesus’ friend Lazarus died. (You may have heard of Lazarus’ sisters, Mary and Martha.)
  • Lazarus had been dead three days by the time Jesus got to his tomb.
  • But that didn’t stop Jesus! He commanded Lazarus to rise from the dead, and Lazarus walked out of his tomb, alive and well.

Most of you know a Lazarus—someone who is dead in their sins, living their lives in darkness, separated from God. Maybe they’ve lived that way their whole lives, and there doesn’t seem to be much hope that they will ever choose the eternal life Christ offers.

But if Jesus can bring a dead man back to life, don’t you think He can rescue your friends and classmates who are dead in their sins?

Some of you will spend your school year feeling like you’re the one inside a tomb. Your school is a dark place. Most people don’t seem to care about Jesus. They’ve gotten so used to the smell of death, it doesn’t even seem to bother them anymore.

If that’s your school, be encouraged that God works even in the darkest places. And He is asking you shine like a bright light!

"You are the light of the world. A city set on a hill cannot be hidden. Nor do people light a lamp and put it under a basket, but on a stand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father who is in heaven" (Matt. 5:14–16).

No matter how dark your school is, God wants to shine His light through you. You remember the song? "Hide it under a bushel? No! I’m gonna let it shine."

The Lazarus Project

I don’t know about you, but sometimes when I hear other people talk about sharing the gospel, it can be a little hard to grasp. Sure, I want to tell others about Jesus. I definitely want to see my friends become disciples who live their lives for Him. But how am I supposed to do that exactly? I want a game plan!

I’d like to suggest a very specific plan. I’m calling it the Lazarus project.

Would you consider purchasing three new Bibles? If you’re short on cash, consider picking up some babysitting jobs or selling some of your stuff to raise some cash. Then, take those Bibles to school with you this year. You can stick them in your locker or keep them with you in your bag. But don’t miss the most important step!

Ask the Lord to show you who needs those Bibles. Pray for specific opportunities to share the gospel, and give a Bible to three people in your school.

God does the hard work! He is the One who calls us from death to life, but wouldn’t it be awesome to be standing beside the tomb when someone from your school turned their life over to Jesus and moved from death to life?

God is able to rescue your classmates from their sin. He is able to raise your school from the dead. He has commissioned you to be a part of His rescue mission for the people you will be rubbing shoulders with for the next nine months. Will you accept the challenge?

If you’re willing to share the gospel and a Bible with at least three people in the school year ahead, leave me a comment below. I’d love to pray for you and cheer you on as you take the gospel to your school this year.

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The Not-So-Wonderful Thing About Tiggers

The Not-So-Wonderful Thing About Tiggers

We’re focusing on the gospel all month here on the blog. Since the nature of the gospel can be hard to understand, and even harder to believe, I’ll let Romans 5:8 give us a quick recap.

But God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.

The gospel means:

  1. We are sinners who cannot stop sinning.
  2. The penalty we deserve for our sin is death.
  3. Jesus died for us, even though He knew all about points 1 and 2.
  4. His death made a way for us to be reconciled to God.

If we go to church very long at all, we can become very familiar with the gospel message. When we are in our church clothes around our church friends, we’ve learned how we should respond to the gospel. But if you’re like me, sometimes I respond to the gospel in ways I wouldn’t necessarily want my church friends to know about.

Yesterday, I told you about the Eeyore in me. Today, let’s look at another response to the gospel taken from the Hundred Acre Wood.

The Wonderful Thing About Tiggers

When we react to the news that Jesus died for our sins like Tigger would, the results aren’t so great.

When it comes to Winnie the Pooh’s friends, everyone loves Tigger. In addition to his bright orange fur and extra long tail, here are Tigger’s defining characteristics:

  • He bounces from point A to point B.
  • Sometimes he exhausts and exasperates his friends with his constant bouncing.
  • Tigger’s confidence is in himself. There’s nothing he thinks he cannot do.
  • Tigger’s actions sometimes lead to chaos.
  • He’s well meaning (and likeable!), but Tigger usually does more harm than good.

What does Tigger have to do with the way we respond to the gospel? All of this is pretty wonderful when it describes a fictional character in a book, but when we react to the news that Jesus died for our sins like Tigger would, the results aren’t so great.

Often, we respond to the gospel by trying to earn God’s love. We think . . .

  • If I can just impress Him, He won’t care so much about my sin.
  • If I can just be the very best daughter, sister, friend, in the whole planet, it will somehow make up for the fact that I am a sinner.
  • If I can be a super Christian, Jesus’ death for my sins will somehow make more sense.

Ultimately, girls with a Tigger heart love gold stars. We love high fives. We love attagirls. And if we are not careful, we can live our whole lives bouncing from one attempt to earn God’s approval to another.

But Good Girls Don’t Need the Gospel

Check out Romans 6:23: "For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord" (emphasis added).

The gospel is a free gift. Tiggers know that, but we think we still need to figure out a way to earn it.

Tiggers, lean in. Listen close. Check out Romans 5:6–8.

For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly (v. 6).

He didn’t die for you because you’re a good girl. Good girls don’t need a Savior.

For one will scarcely die for a righteous person—though perhaps for a good person one would dare even to die—but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us (vv. 7–8).

The gospel is this . . .

Yes! You are a stinkin’ sinner. The price you deserve to pay is death. But God died to pay the price.

You didn’t earn it.

He died for us because He loves us, not because of the number of gold stars we’ve earned on some imaginary chart. 

If you miss the gospel, you will spend your time bouncing from one thing to the next trying to earn God’s love and acceptance. Just like Tigger, you will end up creating a chaotic heart in the process.

Making Payments on a Free Car

Living the Christian life like Tigger is like trying to work for a car that someone has given you. It’s a free gift, but some of us are working ourselves to the bone to try to pay for it.

Imagine someone hands you the keys to a brand-new car and says, "It’s yours. I’ve paid for it. I’ve paid the taxes. I’ve paid the insurance. Here’s a gas card for all the gas you need. It’s yours because I love you."

You look at the keys and the car, and this conversation follows:

You: "Man, I’ve got to get a job to pay for this car."

The Giver: "No, it’s paid for."

You: "I need to work 24-7 to earn the money to pay you back."

The Giver: "I don’t need you to pay me back."

You: "I need to prove that I deserve this car."

The Giver: "You don’t deserve the car, baby girl. I gave it to you because I love you."

Living the Christian life like Tigger is like trying to work for a car that someone has given you. It’s a free gift, but some of us are working ourselves to the bone to try to pay for it.

That might look like:

  • Striving to be perfect and being overly hard on ourselves when we fail.
  • Being involved in every good thing we have the opportunity to participate in.
  • Refusing to ever take off our mask in front of God or others. (What would they think if they saw the real us?)
  • Mistakenly believing that God will love us less if we miss our quiet time.
  • Running at a pace that leaves us totally exhausted all the time.

In the end, we know we are Tiggers when we feel totally exhausted by our faith instead of grateful and set free by the gift Jesus willingly gave.

Are You a Tigger?

How can you know if you’re trying to earn the free gift Jesus died to give you? Let’s look back at what defines Tigger with that big question in mind.

Tigger bounces from point A to point B.

  • Are you constantly running from one thing to the next, trying to earn God’s approval?

Tigger sometimes exhausts and exasperates his friends with his constant bouncing.

  • Are the people in your world exhausted by your constant doubts about God’s love? If you’re not sure, ask them!

Tigger’s confidence is in himself. There’s nothing he thinks he cannot do.

  • Is your confidence in God’s love for you really rooted in your ability to be a good girl?

Tigger’s actions sometimes lead to chaos.

  • Do you have a chaotic heart?

Tigger means well, but he usually does more harm than good.

  • Is it possible you are harming yourself and your relationship with Christ by trying to earn a gift that He freely offers you?

Let me be the first to admit I have a lot of Tigger tendencies. I bet I’m not the only one. Is there evidence in your life that you respond to the gospel like Tigger would? Tell me about it below. Be specific.

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Eeyore's Response to the Good News

Eeyore's Response to the Good News

Last week, I asked you to define the gospel. Nearly one hundred of you responded, many with fantastic ideas about what the gospel really means. Here are just a few of my favs:

Because of Christ’s death and resurrection, we have been rescued from sin, death, and separation from God.

We all are born with Adam’s sin nature. We are destined for hell from birth. The gospel is that Christ died for His chosen people, because of His great love for us. We have salvation in Christ alone by faith alone. —Abbie

Man’s indwelling sinfulness overcome by the perfect power of our Savior! —Haley

The gospel is the good news that all of the sin I have ever committed has been paid for in Jesus Christ: His life, death, and resurrection. By His blood, I have been adopted as God’s own child and will stand blameless before Him, ransomed and redeemed. —Jenn

All of these descriptions of the gospel hit on three important highlights:

  1. We are all chronic sinners. (I loved how Haley called it our "indwelling sinfulness." That means we are sinners to the core.)
  2. Jesus died to pay the penalty we deserved because of that sin.
  3. Because of Christ’s death and resurrection, we have been rescued from sin, death, and separation from God.

It all sounds pretty warm and fuzzy on paper or when we hear it from the pulpit. But if you’re like me, you have a tendency to respond to the gospel in ways that aren’t all rainbows and butterflies. To put the ways I tend to respond to the gospel under a microscope, we need to take a little field trip to the Hundred Acre Wood. (In case you’ve forgotten, that’s where Winnie the Pooh and his friends live!)

"Thanks for Noticin’ Me"

Do you remember Eeyore from the stories of Winnie the Pooh?

There’s nothing spectacular about him. He’s just an old, gray donkey. He’s gloomy and grumpy, always looking at the ground. He’s famously fond of saying, "Thanks for noticin’ me," as if he’s surprised that anyone would ever want to pay attention to him. He’s definitely a glass-is-half-empty kind of donkey. In fact, did you know that his corner of Pooh’s forest is called "Eeyore’s Gloomy Place: Rather Boggy and Sad"?

Eeyore is the kind of friend who sucks the life out of you. After fifteen minutes with him, we would all feel a little worse about the world.

My natural disposition isn’t quite as gloomy as ol’ Eeyore, but when it comes to the gospel, my response sometimes is. I often catch myself thinking thoughts like these:

  • "I’m stuck."
  • "I’m such a screw up."
  • "I will never get it right."
  • "I will never overcome my sin."

Have you ever felt those things? Then you know what we tell ourselves when we take the Eeyore approach.

  • "God doesn’t love me."
  • "How could He?"
  • "I’m such a failure."

Gloomy.

Hopeless.

Downcast.

Just like poor ol’ Eeyore.

The Antivenin for Eeyore Syndrome

It’s not about trying harder or winning more. It’s about Jesus. Our victory is through Him and because of Him.

Here’s how an Eeyore approach the to gospel plays out practically. We don’t try to get free from our sin. We don’t repent. (What difference would that make?) We live like slaves, even though God wants us to be free!

In fact, the gospel is the only antivenin to our Eeyore mentality. Because the gospel makes it clear that it is no longer our responsibility to cure our sin problem. We don’t have to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps. It’s not about trying harder or winning more. It’s about Jesus. Our victory is through Him and because of Him. The gospel is a billboard seen throughout all of history that screams, "God loves me! Because of Him I am free!"

Eeyores assume that God just kind of tolerates us, but the gospel is proof that He doesn’t just tolerate us. He loves us with an everlasting love. He was willing to pay any price to rescue us.

When we look at our sin and Christ’s sacrifice and our heart starts responding like Eeyore would, we’ve got to learn to run to God’s Word for the truth that is anything but gloomy and hopeless. Whenever I feel Eeyore start to rise up in me, I run to one of my favorite verses . . .

For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore, and do not submit again to a yoke of slavery (Gal. 5:1).

God set me free so that I could be free. Not so that I could be:

  • stuck.
  • depressed.
  • downtrodden.
  • hard on myself.
  • mopey.
  • hopeless.

So how about you? Do you ever get an Eeyore response to your sin or Christ’s sacrifice? How have you seen that impact your relationship with God and others?

PS: Be sure to hop back on the blog tomorrow to see how Tigger might respond to the gospel.

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Why the Real You Isn't Good News

Why the Real You Isn't Good News

Who are you?

I don’t mean your name necessarily.

I mean, what makes you, you.

If we were meeting for the first time, we would both introduce ourselves with the good stuff. We might talk about our families, our jobs, our hobbies, our school . . .

We like to polish our identity up to a high shine, but that’s not the whole story, is it?

The reality of who we are is very bad news, but there is good news.

David has a way of writing with a brand of brutal honesty that I love. Here’s one way he answered the question, "Who are you?"

Have mercy on me, O God,

   according to your steadfast love;

according to your abundant mercy

   blot out my transgressions.

Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity,

   and cleanse me from my sin!

For I know my transgressions,

   and my sin is ever before me.

Against you, you only, I have sinned

   and done what is evil in your sight (Ps. 51:1–4).

Want to hear my true confession? I’m a sinner, too. So are you. The Bible says that all of us have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory (Rom. 3:23). That’s the not-so-shiny truth about who we really are. Put that on your Facebook profile.

Paul answered the "who are you" question by describing himself as the foremost of sinners. Sometimes I feel like I’m giving him a run for his money.

The truth is, who we are is very bad news. We are sinners who cannot shake our sin nature. No matter how much we want to or try to, we cannot live sin free.

And the bad news keeps coming . . .

For the wages of sin is death (Rom. 6:23).

The cost of our sin is death. Who we are has put us on a path toward destruction.

But . . .

The reality of who we are is very bad news, but there is good news. The rest of Romans 6:23 says, "But the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord."

The bad news is we deserve death. But the story doesn’t end there.

What Is the Gospel?

Have you ever heard of the gospel? That’s a word that shows up in the New Testament about the time Jesus starts preaching and teaching. Gospel simply means good news. But what is the good news, exactly?

Even though the gospel is mentioned nearly 100 times in the New Testament, Paul sums it up for us in 1 Corinthians 15:1–4:

Now I would remind you, brothers, of the gospel I preached to you, which you received, in which you stand, and by which you are being saved, if you hold fast to the word I preached to you—unless you believed in vain.

For I delivered you as of first importance what I also received: that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures.

The gospel is this:

  • We are sinners who deserve death.
  • Jesus died to pay the penalty for our sins.

This is the reason why Paul called this message the gospel of grace (Acts 20:24). It is why all Christians are called to proclaim the gospel to those who are still sentenced to death by their sin (Mark 16:15).

A Gospel Worth Preaching

The gospel is what makes us Christians. It is a message we should want to shout from the rooftops. Romans 1:16 says it this way: "For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek."

Simply put, the gospel changes everything.

That’s why we are looking at the gospel all month long. Look for posts about how to share the gospel, what to do when someone doesn’t deserve the gospel, and more.

To keep the wheels turning in your head, here’s a great video that beautifully illustrates why the gospel matters so much.

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Find out why the gospel = Good News today on @lywbblog.

Cheaters Welcome

Cheaters Welcome

I’ve never been good at math. Maybe that’s why when I discovered the answers in the back of my high school algebra textbook, I was giddy. True, only half of the answers were there, but they turned out to be practically the only answers I got right all year long.

Today’s post is kinda like that.

I’m gonna ask you a question.

If you know the answer, feel free to jot it down in our comment section. If not, that’s okay. You are free to cheat. No one will even know. And since in this case the answer is way more important than the question, I’m okay with you getting some help. In fact, I’ll have a post up tomorrow that tells you my answer. But for now, I’d like to know your thoughts on this simple question:

What is the gospel?

That’s it! Feel free to run to your Bible, your pastor, or even Google for help with your answer. Shoot me a comment and stay tuned to the blog, cuz we’ll be talking about the gospel for the rest of the month.

Oh . . . and to sweeten the deal, I’ll send a free personal-size ESV study Bible to three of you who comment.

Ready, set, cheat!

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Win a free Bible by cheating today on @lywbblog.

Freebie Friday! And the Bride Wore White

Freebie Friday

I was fifteen years old when I first met Dannah Gresh. She was leading a girls’ retreat for my youth group about sexual purity. I’d heard the message before that I shouldn’t be having sex, but Dannah transformed my view of sex, romance, and God.

I left wanting to wait, not because of some rule or fear of something bad happening to me, but because for the first time I understood that God is for me—the things He asks me to do (or not to do) are for my good.

Fast forward a few years, and the curriculum Dannah taught a few of us on that first retreat became And the Bride Wore White. Fast forward another decade, and that book has sold over a quarter of a million copies and helped gobs of girls understand God’s plan for sex.

I wish we could all pile in a cabin and let Dannah teach us the seven secrets to sexual purity she outlines in the book. Since we can’t, let’s do the next best thing—I’m giving away a free copy of And the Bride Wore White to one of you.

You can watch this short video to learn more about the book:

And find out how to win your copy here.

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Should You Wait to Have Kids Until You Can Afford Them?

$241,080

According to the USDA, that’s how much it costs to raise a child (not including college). I don’t have an extra quarter of a million dollars sitting around. Do you? Kids are expensive. The culture loves to remind us of this fact. Baby talk is usually accompanied by singing the blues over the rising cost of almost everything.

If God calls children a blessing, is it possible that He will bless that blessing?

The Bible is clear in passages like Proverbs 21:5 and Matthew 6:19–21 that God cares about your bank account, and He wants you to steward your resources well. So, if God wants us to be wise stewards of our resources, surely He would have us wait until we’ve got the money in the bank to cover all those diapers before having children, right? For those already parents, certainly God wouldn’t want you to add to your family until your checking account is robust and your house has more square footage, right?

Maybe. But maybe not. When it comes to planning for kids, here are four things to consider beyond your checking account balance.

God calls children a blessing.

“Behold, children are a heritage from the Lord, the fruit of the womb a reward” (Ps. 127:3).

It’s a simple truth really, but one many of us miss. Children are a blessing. Yes, they are expensive. Yes, diapers, and school shoes, and college educations cost a lot, but none of that changes the fact that God sees children as a blessing. Does the Bible call a fat savings account or total financial security a blessing? Nope. But it does say that children are. Perhaps we are pursuing the wrong gift.

If God calls children a blessing, is it possible that He will bless that blessing?

God is your provider.

My third-born just turned one year old, and I just bought my first box of diapers for him. Friends threw an unexpected shower for me that stocked me up. Family members bought diapers for him for Christmas and birthdays (because what baby really needs toys?). Other mommas whose babies had outgrown diapers passed their leftovers along to me without me ever asking them to do so. Bags of baby clothes have been given to me in the past year without me ever seeking them out . . . so has fresh produce just right for turning into baby food, new shoes for my little guy, and other gently-used baby items right when I needed them.

I know what you might be thinking, I don’t have friends that just drop stuff on my back porch!

Honestly, I might have said the same thing before I started having children. But God has used the people in my world over and over again to meet the practical needs of my family.

There’s no economic formula that can account for the generosity of God and His people.

I’m not the only one. I have friends who recently took in two girls in need of a stable home. God has provided everything from dressers to extra cash in order to fund the transition. I have another friend who received thousands of dollars through an IRS error for her international adoption. (Yes, God can use the IRS!)

There’s no economic formula that can account for the generosity of God and His people.

Philippians 4:19 promises, “And my God will supply every need of yours according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus.

It’s good to budget and plan. It’s wise to live within your means, but don’t get caught up in thinking that the buck stops with you. God is ultimately your provider, and He will be the provider for your children. It may not make sense on paper, but if God is asking you to start or grow your family, you can be sure that He will provide.

Fear is not our friend.

“Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand” (Isa. 41:10).

Fear not. It’s a commandment found throughout God’s Word.

It makes sense for those who don’t know Christ to operate out of scarcity. They don’t know what’s around the corner, so they stockpile and fret and do everything possible to avoid potential land mines.

Any decision that is made out of fear is out of whack with how God calls us to live.

But we know the God who is the beginning and the end (Rev. 1:8). He commands us not to worry (Matt. 6:25–34), not because there is nothing to worry about, but because He has our backs.

Any decision that is made out of fear is out of whack with how God calls us to live. Choosing not to have children or to add to your family because you are afraid of what may or may not happen or what you may or may not be able to pay for doesn’t line up with God’s call to fear not.

God’s economy doesn’t deal in the same currency as the American economy. He doesn’t have recessions or bear markets. He owns the cattle on 1,000 hillsides (Ps. 50:10); surely He can handle the expenses that come with growing your family.

Remember the goal.

Sometimes we avoid having children because we lose sight of the goal of parenting.

Psalm 127:4–5 says, “Like arrows in the hand of a warrior are the children of one’s youth. Blessed is the man who fills his quiver with them! He shall not be put to shame when he speaks with his enemies in the gate.”

Jim Elliot applied that verse this way, “Remember how the Psalmist described children? He said that they were as a heritage from the Lord, and that every man should be happy who had his quiver full of them. And what is a quiver full of but arrows? And what are arrows for but to shoot? So, with the strong arms of prayer, draw the bowstring back and let the arrows fly—all of them, straight at the Enemy’s hosts.”

God doesn’t call us to raise well-dressed kids or kids with well-stocked playrooms. The ultimate goal isn’t just to get them through college in a car we managed to pay for. The goal of parenting is to raise kids who are dangerous to the Enemy. What resources are needed for that calling? Prayer. Discipleship. Bible study. More prayer. Living out God’s will in front of little eyes. Repentance they can see. Tons more prayer. Constant preaching of the Gospel to little hearts and heads.

Sure, these things are costly, but they won’t drain your bank account. It’s great to buy stuff for your kids. It’s fine to save for their future, but ultimately these are not the tools you most need to raise great kids. God is able to provide for your deepest parenting needs.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Trusting God with Everything.”

 

Hope For the Anxious

Hope For the Anxious

A few days ago, I found myself in the middle of a storm. You may have heard about the massive dust storm that covered Arizona last week. (If not, here’s a crazy video of it.) While that storm sent people into their homes looking for cover, I was stranded on an airplane, sitting on the runway, waiting until it was safe for ground crews to direct us toward a gate.

To be honest, I was pretty oblivious to the storm at first. It was late at night, and I was dozing. But when we were finally allowed to disembark, a new storm started raging in my heart.

I suddenly found myself in an unfamiliar airport, alone at 1:00 in the morning. I missed my fight home and was shuffled toward an extremely long line of passengers waiting to rebook. I didn’t have access to my luggage. All of the restaurants were closed and I was hungry, with no way to get food. I didn’t know where I would sleep or whether or not I would be safe.

In addition to feeling tired, hungry, and homesick, I felt . . . anxious. I was afraid and nervous. I was eager for my circumstances to change. I didn’t know what would happen next, and the possibilities made my palms sweat.

Forecast? Stormy Weather

Don’t worry—this isn’t just a pity party by a weary traveler. We all know that travel plans can go haywire, and I eventually made it home. But I wonder how many of you find yourselves in the middle of a storm?

  • Your parents fight all the time. You wonder if they will stay married.
  • Your friend is mad at you. You’ve tried talking to her, but it hasn’t helped.
  • Everyone keeps mentioning college. You want to get in to a great school and eventually get a great job, but the pressure to have perfect grades makes you feel mostly S-T-R-E-S-S-E-D.
  • Your youth pastor is leaving, and your youth group is falling apart.
  • That boy you like likes you back, but your parents say "no." As a result, your heart feels like a tornado.

I’m not sure what your storm is, but I’m sure I’m not the only one who has ever felt anxious while waiting for the dust to settle.

When we are anxious in the middle of a storm, where can we look for a lifeline?

The Winds And Waves Obey Him

Jesus knows a thing or two about storms. Mark 4:35–41 tells about a time that Jesus found Himself smack dab in the middle of one. I’d encourage you to read the entire story (just one short paragraph), but here are the highlights:

  • Jesus and His disciples are on a boat crossing the Sea of Galilee.
  • Other boats were with them. (That little detail will matter in a minute.)
  • A great windstorm arose.
  • It was such a big and scary storm that the boat started to break.
  • The disciples started having a full-on freak-out.
  • But not Jesus. He was peacefully sleeping while the storm raged.

The disciples woke Jesus up from His nap this way:

"Teacher, do you not care that we are perishing?" (v. 38).

Be honest. When you find yourself in a middle of a storm, do you ever ask Jesus a version of this same question? In your heart, do you find yourself feeling like God let you down? Do you wonder if God caused the storm or why He allowed it to happen? Do you doubt that He will come to your rescue?

Me, too. And apparently so did the disciples.

And [Jesus] awoke and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, "Peace! Be still!" And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm (v. 39).

The winds and waves obeyed Jesus. A storm that seconds earlier was ripping a boat to shreds suddenly got quiet.

This reality caused the disciples to have a different kind of freak-out.

He said to them, "Why are you so afraid? Have you still no faith?" And they were filled with great fear and said to one another, "Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey him?" (vv. 40–41).

Why We’re Really Anxious

God’s promises hold firm in every storm.

Yes, I am sure that storm was scary. Yes, watching chunks of your boat fall off into a raging sea would make me anxious, too. But that’s not really why the disciples were scared.

They forgot who was at the helm of their ship. Jesus was there. He was in charge. When they forgot that . . . when they thought the outcome was up to them . . . then, they got stressed.

Life’s storms have a way of clouding our vision. They make it hard for us to remember the promises of God because the sounds of thunder and lightning are so loud. But God’s promises hold firm in every storm.

That’s why God commands (yes, commands!) us not to be anxious:

Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God (Phil. 4:6).

God isn’t saying there will never be trouble, He is just clear that He is in charge no matter what. When anxiety makes us feel out of control, the antidote is to remember that God is always in control.

The Other Ships

There’s an old sermon that I love in which the pastor points out that Jesus’ boat was not the only ship on the water that day. Certainly, His was not the only one being beaten by the storm.

But when God commanded the winds and waves to be still, all of the boats were brought under His control.

When the Lord’s ship got calm, so did the others. This is how it works with our lives. When we recognize that God is in charge, it impacts our:

  • friend-ships
  • relation-ships
  • owner-ship
  • disciple-ship

And ultimately our wor-ship.

We can praise God in any storm instead of feeling anxious, worried, or afraid because we know He is in charge. He will not fail us. Our circumstances are not beyond His power and authority.

So think about your storm.

  • Are you anxious about your family because you don’t believe God can really reconcile relationships, even though He promises He can change even the hardest heart (Ezek. 36:26)?
  • Are you anxious about your friendships because you’ve forgotten you have a friend who sticks closer than a brother (Prov. 18:24)?
  • Are you anxious about school because you think you’re the one planning your future (Jer. 29:11)?
  • Are you anxious about romance because you worry God doesn’t have a good plan for you in that department (Ps. 73:1)?

God met my every need in the middle of that dust storm. I found a cozy corner to sleep in and a couple of granola bars in the bottom of my bag. I was home with my family in no time, not because of me, but because of God who never left me alone for a minute, even in the middle of a big, scary storm.

What is making you anxious today?

How does that anxiety compare to a God who stills storms?

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Freebie Friday! True Princess

Freebie Friday

Are you living like a princess or a daughter of the King? Answer true or false to the following questions to find out.

T or F: I love being the center of attention.
T or F: When making a decision, I don’t usually consider the truth in God’s
Word.
T or F: My friends think I am a drama queen.
T or F: It’s hard for me to find time to help others.
T or F: I feel like I deserve certain things.
T or F: Love doesn’t require sacrifice.
T or F: The way I spend my time and money is my business.
T or F: I want to be taken care of.
T or F: The things I watch and listen to have nothing to do with my relationship with
God.
T or F: I couldn’t live without my cell phone, iPad, or computer.

Mostly true—Princess alert! There’s a part of you that wants to be like the princesses you see in movies and fairy tales. You like to be comfortable and avoid making sacrifices and serving others. You’re drawn to the things that culture promises will bring fulfillment. If you’re in this category, don’t worry. The promises God offers can motivate you to live out His plan for your life.

Mostly false—Living like a daughter of the King! No divas here. You’re already living out some of the qualities of a daughter of the King, but as you dig into His Word, you will become more and more like the King you serve.

This quiz is taken from True Princess: Embracing Humility in an All About Me World. I wrote it with one big idea . . .

There is a difference between acting like a princess and living like a daughter of the King!

Most of us have plenty of princess in us, but through His Word, God wants to teach us about humility and get us excited to live as ambassadors for the King of Kings.

I’d love to send you a free copy.

Here’s how to win: Answer the poll question in the giveaway widget below. Please note: The Twitter options are not mandatory, but they do get you bonus entries!

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Why You Need to Know the Rule of Three

Why You Need to Know the Rule of 3

If you’re lucky, you’ve got a few more lazy days of summer left, but it won’t be long before nothing-to-do turns into how-will-I get-it-all-done. As you look ahead to the new school year, you need to know about the Rule of Three.

What Is the Rule of Three?

The "rule of three" is a strategy used by the United States Marines. In a nutshell, the rule is this: each Marine has three things to worry about. Marines are divided into teams of four individual Marines (three team members and one team leader). Teams are divided into squads. Each squad is made up of three teams. Three squads make up a platoon.

The entire Marine organizational chart is made up this way. What’s more, Marines are encouraged to limit their attention to three tasks—three things to worry about. No more. No less.

Several years ago, the Marines experimented with a Rule of Four, and effectiveness plummeted. Marines were stretched too thin. They became overextended and confused. Lives were lost.

What does that have to do with you?

Are You a Good Soldier?

God doesn’t ask you to be involved in every sport and activity. He has a much simpler game plan for your schedule.

You may not be a Marine, but did you know that if you are a Christian, you are a soldier? Cue: "I’m in the Lord’s Army" song. (Yes, sir!)

Share in suffering as a good soldier of Christ Jesus. No soldier gets entangled in civilian pursuits, since his aim is to please the one who enlisted him (2 Tim. 2:3).

God has enlisted you into His army to fight big battles for His kingdom. But most of us are fruitless soldiers, because we are entangled in "civilian pursuits." We are stretched too thin. Overtired. Overextended. Maybe no lives are lost because we’re trying to do it all, but opportunities are . . . relationships are . . . chances to serve others are.

God doesn’t ask you to be involved in every sport and activity. In fact, He has a much simpler game plan for your schedule.

In Matthew 6, Jesus was preaching about the things that tend to stress us out (are you picturing your maxed-out schedule?) when He said these words:

"But seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you" (Matt. 6:33).

The Rule of Threes means you can handle putting your effort toward three things. Not five. Not thirteen. Not seven. Three.

God clearly states what the first thing on our list should be. We are to seek God’s kingdom first. We are to organize our schedule, our priorities, our life around what matters most to God.

As you look at your plans for the school year ahead, are you seeking God’s kingdom first? If, instead, your schedule revolves around band or academics or hanging out with friends . . . you’ve got some rearranging to do.

The Twos and Threes

Your relationship with God needs to be your first priority. But what else should you fill your schedule with?

The answer to that question is different for all of us. If you’re in school, that’s one of the things you need to be focusing on. If you’re working, that’s an area of focus for you. Maybe you volunteer with a great not-for-profit or help your mom around the house several hours a week. Those are all great things, but as you plan, keep in mind the Rule of Threes.

You can be involved in Kingdom work, do well in school, and work a part-time job, but you probably can’t do all of that and play basketball and sing in the school musical without crashing and burning. You can volunteer in your church, go to school, and play a sport, but you won’t have bandwidth to also start a Bible study at school and try out for track and be on the leadership team for Fellowship of Christian athletes.

See how that works?

You pick three things and you do them well instead of picking twenty things that you do halfway.

I want to be upfront in saying that the Rule of Three is not a biblical principle. Nowhere in Scripture do we see God forbidding us from dividing our attention four or five ways. But from someone who has run a track meet or two in your shoes, for all the wrong reasons (I hated track, but wanted to impress my friends!), can I just encourage you to think about the wisdom found in a pared-down schedule? The purpose of your life is not to be involved in every club, activity, and sport possible. The purpose of your life is to glorify God and be used by Him. (It says so in Isaiah 43:7.)

As you look to the school year ahead, would you ask these questions?

  • Can I best glorify God if I am burned out and stretched too thin?
  • What/who are the "causalities" when my schedule is too full?
  • What are my top three priorities?
  • What can I let go in order to focus on these three things?

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As nothing-to-do turns into how-will-I-get-it-all-done, find out what you need to know on the @lywbblog today.

How I Know You Will Get Married

How I Know You Will Get Married

As far as I’m concerned, there’s only one way that movies should ever end.

Having faced whatever challenge the movie plot was about and won, the couple (because there is always a couple) should kiss. The camera should spin, and they should be transformed into a bride and groom kissing on their wedding day. The rice gets thrown. The Mr. and Mrs. ride off into the sunset, and happily ever after begins.

Sigh.

Movies that end in a wedding should win the Oscar every time.

But maybe, just maybe, when you see a wedding on the big screen you feel a pang of something like panic. When you go to weddings of friends and family members you feel something bitter along with the sweetness of it all.

Will I ever get married? you wonder.

What if happily ever after never happens for me?

First, let me shoot you straight that marriage can never be the answer to a happy life. Yes, marriage is a wonderful gift, designed by God to put the beauty of the gospel on display. But that’s not the same as saying that marriage will meet all of our needs. Only God can do that.

The desire you have to pledge your life to someone else in the name of love? That craving is about something bigger.

But for many of you, that doesn’t stop the ache, the craving, to one day be a bride, greeted at the aisle by a groom who is crazy about you.

Maybe you will get married some day and maybe you won’t, but that craving? The desire you have to pledge your life to someone else in the name of love? That craving is about something bigger, and I know for a fact that it will be satisfied.

The Story Starts With A Wedding

Grab your Bible. (Go ahead, I’ll wait right here.)

Check out Genesis 2:18–25. Here are the highlights:

  • Adam was alone, and it was "not good" (v. 18).
  • Adam had companions of every shape and size, but he needed "the one" who would be a helper fit for him (v. 20).
  • God formed a woman from the man (v. 21).
  • God brought the woman to the man (v. 22).

And Adam gushes some of the most romantic words ever written.

"This at last is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out of Man" (v. 23).

"At last!" Adam exclaims. "I have been waiting for you all my life." Which wasn’t very long, but it must have felt like it. Adam knew what it was like to wait for love.

Then God gives these instructions to the new couple:

Therefore a man shall leave his father and mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh (v. 24).

Recognize those words? You’ve probably heard them at a wedding before.

God was telling Adam and Eve that they were now one. Their instructions were to cling to each other in good times and in bad. We just witnessed the first marriage ever.

Fast forward to the end of your Bible, to the book of Revelation.

The Story Ends With a Wedding

Check out Revelation 19:6–9:

Then I heard what seemed to be the voice of a great multitude, like the roar of many waters and like the sound of mighty peals of thunder, crying out,

"Hallelujah!
For the Lord our God the Almighty reigns.
Let us rejoice and exult
and give him the glory,
for the marriage of the Lamb has come,
and his Bride has made herself ready;
it was granted her to clothe herself
with fine linen, bright and pure"—

for the fine linen is the righteous deeds of the saints.

And the angel said to me, "Write this: Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb."

Genesis tells the story of a simple wedding. The only ones in attendance were Adam, the groom, Eve, the bride, and God, the wedding officiant.

But Revelation tells of a grand affair. There are so many in attendance that their voices sound like mighty peals of thunder. The bride is spectacular, clothed in blinding white garments. This is the biggest event in history. This is a wedding not to be missed!

You’re Invited to the Wedding of Mr. And Mrs. ?

Sure, the wedding in Revelation sounds romantic, but we miss something big if we don’t catch who is getting married here.

This is a wedding between "the Lamb" and "His Bride" (v. 7).

Who is the Lamb? Jesus! We see Him called this in verses like John 1:29 and John 1:36. Scripture calls Him the Lamb because He was the sacrifice for our sins, a role reserved for livestock before Jesus came.

Who is the Bride? We are! If we believe in Jesus and turn our lives over to Him, we become a part of His Church. Scripture describes the Church like a bride.

Here are a few examples.

For I feel a divine jealousy for you, since I betrothed you to one husband, to present you as a pure virgin to Christ (2 Cor. 11:2).

Then came one of the seven angels who had the seven bowls full of the seven last plagues and spoke to me, saying, "Come, I will show you the Bride, the wife of the Lamb" (Rev. 21:9).

Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, so that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish (Eph. 5:25–27).

Jesus is the groom, and those of us who follow Him are His bride. He died so that we could be clothed in beautiful, white wedding clothes instead of the filthy rags our sin wraps us up in.

A Perfect Ending

If you follow Jesus, your wedding day is coming.

I don’t know how the story of your life will go. I don’t know if you’ll get to a plan a wedding or pick rice out of your hair. But I know that if you follow Jesus, your wedding day is coming.

There will be so many people there, that their voices will sound like thunder. The groom will be beaming. He has waited for this moment for an eternity. And you, girl? You will be the most beautiful bride there has ever been. Your wedding clothes will shine like the sun! And in that moment, the craving . . .

  • to be loved
  • to be known
  • to be accepted
  • to be someone’s forever

. . . will be realized.

It will be the perfect ending.

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Blood, Bread, and Remembering Your Rescue

Blood, Bread, and Remembering Our Rescue

I brought a new friend to church with me recently. She’d never been before and when the communion tray was passed, she leaned over to me and whispered, "What is it?"

I wasn’t sure what to say, exactly.

For someone like me who has grown up in the church, communion can seem ordinary because it’s so common. I know it matters, and I know Jesus took it, but why? What’s the point of that little cup of juice and tiny cracker? What should I have said to my friend who has never seen the communion tray before?

Let’s dig into God’s Word together to find out.

An Object Lesson To Jog Your Memory

Jesus observed communion the night He was betrayed.

Now as they were eating, Jesus took bread, and after blessing it broke it and gave it to the disciples, and said, "Take, eat; this is my body." And he took a cup, and when he had given thanks he gave it to them, saying, "Drink of it, all of you, for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. I tell you I will not drink again of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom" (Matt. 26:26–29).

Imagine that you were in that upper room with Jesus. You’re sitting around the table with Him and your group of closest friends, and all of a sudden Jesus passes around a loaf of bread. You tear off a bite and start chewing, and Jesus says:

"Go on! Eat up. This is My body.”

Gulp.

What is He talking about? Sounds kinda creepy.

Jesus passes a cup around. You take a swig, and He says:

"That’s My blood. I’m going to pour it out for you.”

Double gulp!

Communion is an expression of your faith in a God who saves you by grace.

Broken bodies and spilled blood don’t sound like great appetizers. And Jesus is sitting at the table in the flesh as He’s talking. Clearly, He and His disciples aren’t eating His physical body or drinking His physical blood.

But Jesus knew what was coming. He was giving His disciples and all of the disciples who would come after (that includes us!) a tool to remember some very important stuff. My guess is He knew all about our tendency to get amnesia about the good news of the gospel and forget about the sacrifice He made for us on the cross.

Just like baptism doesn’t save you, neither does communion. It is an expression of your faith in a God who saves you by grace. Think of communion as an object lesson given to us by Jesus, the teacher. The cup and the bread are physical objects that symbolize deep, spiritual truths. The bread is a symbol of Jesus’ body, broken for us on the cross. The cup is a symbol of Jesus’ shed blood, poured out for us.

What to Do When the Tray is Passed

Jesus says for us to remember Him when we take the Lord’s Supper. We are to use communion to jog our memory about His death on the cross for our sins. When we take communion, we should take time to remember Him, and thank Him, for what He has done for us.

But Paul says before we get to the thank yous, we need a heart check.

Whoever, therefore, eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty concerning the body and blood of the Lord. Let a person examine himself, then and so eat of the bread and drink of the cup. For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body eats and drinks judgment on himself (1 Cor. 11:27–29).

Paul says that before you take communion you need to examine yourself. But what’s this "unworthy manner" business?

Worthy Ways for Unworthy People

Let’s get something straight. None of us are worthy of taking communion. It is, after all, a symbol of Christ’s death on the cross for the forgiveness of our sins. None of us deserved that! We could never, ever earn it. It was a gift given to us because we are so loved, not because we are so worthy.

You don’t have to be perfect to take communion. It’s not only for those who come to church scrubbed clean (because none of us do).

But we still need to take communion in a worthy manner. When Paul wrote those words, the people in the church of Corinth were trying to use communion as a meal. Can you imagine trying to get filled up on tiny crackers and miniature cups of juice for lunch? It seems silly!

But just like the Christians in Corinth were using communion to fill their bellies, we can use it for the wrong reasons.

  • We can do it because we think it takes away our sin. Remember, it doesn’t. It’s just a symbol of the fact that only Jesus can do that.
  • We can do it to fit in. Everyone else in church seems to be partaking.
  • We can do it as a ritual; it’s just something we do.

Paul is saying, "Check yourself." Make sure that when you take communion, you are doing it for the right reasons.

Shout It From the Rooftops

Do you remember last week when I told you that baptism was a way to show the world what God has done for you? Communion is like that, too. When you take communion, you’re showing others what Christ did for you.

Paul said it this way: "For as often as you eat this bread and drink the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes" (1 Cor. 11:26).

Every time you eat that little cracker and drink that little cup of juice with a heart turned toward Jesus, you are telling the world, "He died for me! He is coming back for me soon!"

That’s a message I want to share with others. How about you? Do you take communion at your church?

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What’s that tiny cup and little cracker all about? Find out on @lywbblog today.

25 Rules for Strong Friendships

25 Rules for Strong Friendships

We could all use a little help in the relationship department from time to time. Here are twenty-five "rules" for friendship, straight out of the book of Proverbs.

Rule #1: Don’t get mad over nothing.

Do not contend with a man for no reason, when he has done you no harm (Prov. 3:30).

Rule #2: Don’t try to change a friend who is unwise.

Do not reprove a scoffer, or he will hate you; reprove a wise man, and he will love you (Prov. 9:8).

Rule #3: Hatred leads to more fighting. Choose love.

Hatred stirs up strife, but love covers all offenses (Prov. 10:12).

Rule #4: Don’t be two-faced.

The one who conceals hatred has lying lips (Prov. 10:18).

Rule #5: Don’t talk trash.

Whoever utters slander is a fool (Prov. 10:18).

Rule #6: Pick humble friends.

When pride comes, then comes disgrace, but with the humble is wisdom (Prov. 11:2).

Rule #7: Keep criticism to yourself.

Whoever belittles his neighbor lacks sense, but a man of understanding remains silent (Prov. 11:12).

Rule #8: Keep secrets.

Whoever goes about slandering reveals secrets, but he who is trustworthy in spirit keeps a thing covered (Prov. 11:13).

Rule #9: Don’t be a mean girl.

A man who is kind benefits himself, but a cruel man hurts himself (Prov. 11:17).

Rule #10: Be an encourager.

Anxiety in a man’s heart weighs him down, but a good word makes him glad (Prov. 12:25).

Rule #11: Just because you think it doesn’t mean you have to say it.

Whoever guards his mouth preserves his life; he who opens wide his lips comes to ruin (Prov. 13:3).

Rule #12: Choose wise friends.

Whoever walks with the wise becomes wise, but the companion of fools will suffer harm (Prov. 13:20).

Rule #13: Don’t get mad easily.

Whoever is slow to anger has great understanding, but he who has a hasty temper exalts folly (Prov. 14:29).

Rule #14: Don’t be jealous.

A tranquil heart gives life to the flesh, but envy makes the bones rot (Prov. 14:30).

Rule #15: Don’t be cranky.

A soft answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger (Prov. 15:1).

Rule #16: Stay away from that girl with the temper.

A hot-tempered man stirs up strife, but he who is slow to anger quiets contention (Prov. 15:18).

Rule #17: Get advice from wise friends.

Without counsel plans fail, but with many advisers they succeed (Prov. 15:22).

Rule #18: Speak sweetly.

Gracious words are like a honeycomb, sweetness to the soul and health to the body (Prov. 16:24).

Rule #19: Don’t talk behind your friends’ backs.

A dishonest man spreads strife, and a whisperer separates close friends (Prov. 16:28).

Rule #20: Don’t get mad easily.

Whoever is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he who rules his spirit than he who takes a city (Prov. 16:32).

Rule #21: Don’t jump ship.

A friend loves at all times (Prov. 17:17).

Rule #22: Pick a few close friends over lots of acquaintances.

A man of many companions may come to ruin, but there is a friend who sticks closer than a brother (Prov. 18:24).

Rule #23: Don’t be easily offended.

Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense (Prov. 19:11).

Rule #24: Avoid the drama.

It is an honor for a man to keep aloof from strife, but every fool will be quarreling (Prov. 20:3).

Rule #25: Don’t celebrate when your frenemy has trouble.

Do not rejoice when your enemy falls, and let not your heart be glad when he stumbles, lest the LORD see it and be displeased, and turn away his anger from him (Prov. 24:17–18).

What friendship rules has the Lord shown you in His Word? Tell me about it!

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25 rules for better friendships, straight from God’s Word today on @lywbblog. 

Freebie Friday! Lies Young Women Believe

Freebie Friday

Quiz time! Look at these word pairs. For each one, make a mental note of which one best describes you.

  1. Relaxed or totally stressed out?
  2. Happy to be single or gotta have a guy?
  3. Good with what ya got or ugly?
  4. Forgiven or guilty?
  5. Definitely taking my problems to God first or gotta ask my friends for advice?
  6. Got just enough friends or lonely?
  7. Friendly or totally PMSing?
  8. Authentic or hypocritical?
  9. In control of my tech world or would die without text messaging, Facebook, and more?
  10. Confident in my stand to be pure or ashamed to stand alone?
  11. Content with what ya got or MUST shop now?
  12. The real deal or different depending on whom I’m with?
  13. Walking in victory or unable to overcome certain sins?
  14. Content to submit or angry at my parents?
  15. Confident of God’s protection or afraid of Satan?

Okay, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out we used some healthy descriptions first and some unhealthy descriptions last. Which did you tend to identify with?

I’m guessing you may have chosen the second option at least a few times (or more!). At some level, we all experience negative emotions or harmful responses that are rooted in lies we’ve believed (though we may not even realize they are lies).

That’s why you need the book this quiz came from (and the one this blog is named after), Lies Young Women Believe. It’s a book about exposed lies, but it’s really about God’s truth. Every girl needs it in her arsenal!

That’s why we are giving away a free copy for today’s Freebie Friday giveaway along with the Companion Guide.

Here’s how to win.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

PS. You do not need a Twitter account to win. The Twitter options are simply bonus entries for sharing this giveaway.

Connected: Curing the Pandemic of Everyone Feeling Alone Together

Enhance your summer reading with a True Woman book. The entire line is on sale this month.

Hey ladies!

I’m giddy to announce the release of my latest book, Connected: Curing the Pandemic of Everyone Feeling Alone Together. It’s about loneliness, and it’s the most personal thing I’ve ever written. I also know from months of traveling the country interviewing women like you that it might also be the most needed. Loneliness is a pandemic among us. But God’s Word holds the vaccine. Here’s a taste of the deep truth I found . . .

Polishing Up the Golden Rule

In Matthew 7, Jesus is teaching important principles about our relationships when He drops this little gem, “So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets” (v. 12).

We’ve come to identify this teaching as the Golden Rule. Later in Matthew, Jesus presented this same concept in a slightly different wrapper by saying that loving others as yourself is the second greatest commandment (Matt. 22:39).

We’ve got to learn to love others well without constantly wondering, What’s in this for me?

These verses urge us to love others in the same way we want to be loved, but they are not a guarantee that the favor will be returned. The Golden Rule is not an invitation to keep score.

When it comes to my relationships, I tend to think thoughts like these:

  • I was nice to you today, so you better always be nice to me.
  • I forgave you, but you better not ever hurt me again . . . or else.
  • I helped you, so you better help me.

But this is not the spirit of the Golden Rule. And let’s face it; it doesn’t make for great relationships. If we want to know and be known, we need to stop keeping score. If we

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want to move toward worrying less about having the right friends and put effort toward loving like Jesus did, we’ve got to learn to love others well without constantly wondering, What’s in this for me?

When Jesus gives us the second greatest commandment, what is He really commanding?

John Piper put it this way, “He is commanding that our self-love, which has now discovered its fulfillment in God-love, be the measure of the content of our neighbor-love. Or to put it another way, he is commanding that our inborn self-seeking, which has now been transposed into God-seeking, overflow and extend itself to our neighbor.”

Other’s Esteem

Jesus didn’t ask us to love others extravagantly simply so the neighborhood can hold hands and sing “Kumbaya.” It’s not about warm fuzzies. It’s about giving teeth to our faith. It’s about letting the abundant love God has demonstrated toward us overflow and impact others instead of keeping it bottled up and to ourselves.

When it comes to our relationships, this is a mark that so many of us miss.

In a culture completely obsessed with feeling good, we’ve been raised with the idea that our self-esteem should be fed into. We look to our relationships to satisfy our craving for constant ego strokes. This is not the formula that Jesus modeled or taught.

Paul was urging Christians in Philippi to be encouraged by Christ’s example when he penned these words: “Do nothing from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility count others more significant than yourselves” (Phil. 2:3).

Perhaps it’s time we outgrow the notion that the purpose of our relationships is to provide a steady drip of feel-good fuel for our delicate self-esteem.

Perhaps it’s time we outgrow the notion that the purpose of our relationships is to provide a steady drip of feel-good fuel for our delicate self-esteem.

As I’ve wrestled with loneliness, I’ve learned that there’s more on the line than simply having great friends. If we can feel desperately lonely as wives, daughters, sisters, and friends, the antidote must be found in the quality of our relationships, not the quantity. The Bible teaches a paradoxical truth. The depth and quality of our relationships hinge on what we give, not what we get.

I don’t do math, but when we look at Jesus’ teachings and examples, it becomes clear why our relationship equations so rarely add up. We tend to plug the factors in this way:

Me + relationships built on my self-esteem = shallow connection.

We need a new equation that looks like this:

Me + relationships built on others’ esteem = deep connection.

No ATMS

True, deep connection, the kind that can keep us tethered and hemmed in, is born from sacrifice, not self-esteem. There is no room for an ATM mentality among the people of God.

If we are going to vaccinate ourselves and others against the pandemic of loneliness, we must love like Jesus loved. We’ve got to connect with people who have nothing to offer us. We should befriend the undesirable and cast out. We need to look at our relationships and ask what we can give instead of what we can get.

An Unexpected Parachute

Loving others wholeheartedly can feel like jumping without a parachute. There are no guarantees that they will love us back or be able to meet our relational needs. I think we should jump anyway . . . it’s the only way to find true connection. But as I looked in God’s Word for the answers to my loneliness, I found that God does offer a parachute. He is the parachute.

Deuteronomy 31:8 promises. “It is the LORD who goes before you. He will be with you; he will not leave you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed.”

  • Do you feel lonely because no one is thinking about you? The truth is, since before you were even born, God knew you (Ps. 139:13–16).
  • Do you feel like no one notices how hard life can be? God keeps a record of every heartbreak (Ps. 56:8).
  • Do you feel friendless? Betrayed? Walked out on? The God who created everything out of nothing, who always was and always will be, whose name is Faithful and True, calls you His friend (John 15:15). You can never accurately say you are friendless. God’s offer for relational intimacy always stands.

So, yes, knowing and being known is risky, but God is able to meet our deep need for connection, and through His Word, He shows us how to let that ripple out into our relationships with others.

Ready to jump with me? If you’ve felt the sting of loneliness and are ready to discover the secrets of knowing and being known, leave me a comment about it. I will choose three of you to win a copy of Connected: Curing the Pandemic of Everyone Feeling Alone Together.

If you enjoyed this post, you may want to read “Weathering the Storms of Loneliness and Life.”

 

4 Good Reasons to be Baptized

4 Good Reasons to be Baptized

the·ol·o·gy noun : the study of God

We study God through His Word each Thursday on the blog. Our goal is to present the truth of God in a way you can digest and apply.

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This week we will look at what God’s Word says about baptism.

Laura was one of my closest friends in high school. She invited me to church long before I became a Christian. Once I turned my life over to Christ, she was a friend I ran to often with my questions about God and the Bible. But something about Laura bummed me out . . .

She didn’t want to be baptized.

We talked about it a few times. When I asked her why she had never been baptized, she would always say something like . . .

"I just don’t think I need to."
"I don’t want to."
"I’m a Christian. I love Jesus. I think that’s enough."

Baptism is a picture of the way only God can make us pure and whole.

Laura was right. She didn’t have to be baptized in order to follow Jesus, but I still wanted her to. I just didn’t have enough biblical knowledge to understand why at the time. Many years later, I’ve seen God’s plan for baptism laced throughout the Bible, specifically in the Gospels and the book of Acts. Just in case there are some "Lauras" reading this blog who are Christians who have either decided not to be baptized or who are simply wondering why they should, here are four good reasons to be baptized.

You should be baptized as a symbol of God’s grace.

Repentance is a fancy church word for being sorry for and running away from your sin. The Bible makes a clear connection between repentance and baptism.

And Peter said to them, “Repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins, and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38, emphasis added).

When we repent, we agree that we are sinners who violate God’s standards for holiness. Part of the process of repentance is telling God we need Him to clean up the messes we make. Because of grace, He is faithful to do it!

Baptism is a way to say the world, "I can’t be holy on my own. I’m a sinner and I can’t stop sinning, but because of God’s grace, I can turn from sin." Baptism is a picture of the way only God can make us pure and whole. Isn’t that a picture you’d like to paint for the world?

You should be baptized because it shows your loyalty to Christ.

I like how Pastor John Piper puts it:

Faith unites us to Christ; baptism symbolizes the union.

An analogy would be saying, "With this ring I thee wed." When we say that, we don’t mean that the ring or the putting on of the ring on the finger is what makes us married. No, it shows the covenant and symbolized the covenant, but the covenant-making vows make the marriage. So it is with faith and baptism.

You should be baptized because Jesus commanded it.

Right before Jesus ascended into heaven, He gave His disciples their marching orders. These were His final words to them—the things He really wanted them to remember until His return.

"Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age" (Matt. 28:19–20, emphasis added).

In addition to promising He would never leave us, God gave Christians very specific instructions:

  • Go.
  • Make disciples.
  • Baptize those disciples.
  • Teach them to follow God’s Word.

Because baptism is a symbol of God’s grace and because it is a way to publicly pledge our allegiance to Him, Christ commands it for His disciples.

You should be baptized because Jesus did it.

Matthew 3 tells the story of Jesus’ baptism:

And when Jesus was baptized, immediately he went up from the water, and behold, the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming to rest on him; and behold, a voice from heaven said, "This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased" (Matt. 3:16–17).

Jesus was baptized. I want to be like Jesus. That is good enough for me.

How about you? Have you been baptized? How would you convince my friend Laura to be baptized, too? I’d love to hear about it.

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Four good reasons to be baptized today on @lywbblog.