The Beginning: Hearing God

The Beginning: Hearing God

Despite the fact that there was a very clear beginning to God pursuing me, it’s hard to know where to begin the story of my journey. I’ll confess, at the time I was not a believer. I had a whole lifetime of pain stored away, so why would I believe in a God that would let terrible things happen to people? Why would I believe in a God that was alleged to answer prayers, but so obviously didn’t? This recent injury that left me bedridden was the final blow. I was broken by the world and now sat isolated in my room day-after-day, feeling hopeless, believing that this was all my future would ever hold—then I woke up hearing God.

It was late July, 2014. I had been bedridden for almost a year. My daughter left for work early in the morning, so I was alone when I was startled awake by a powerful, commanding voice. I bolted upright in bed. My first thought was that it had to be the voice of God, because of how it resonated and resounded both within me and around me, but as I sat there I began trying to explain it away. Could it have been a voice in my dream? Or, a noise outside that in my sleep I misinterpreted as words? Perhaps in all the isolation, I was finally losing it. My mind searched for a rational answer to what had happened.

The message from God was probably not what you’d expect. He didn’t impart wisdom or express His love for me. He only said one word, “Work!” I began hearing His voice every few days, at first only waking me from sleep but, later, I started hearing Him when I was awake too. I tested my sanity, but all my other mental faculties seemed to be intact. I studied my interactions with my daughter in case I had gone mad and didn’t know it, but our conversations were no different than before. Surely, if I had gone mad, it would be evident in some other area of my life. Hesitantly, I began accepting what my heart already knew—I was hearing God.

Once I began to come to terms with that, I had a problem. I wasn’t sure what He meant by “Work!” I am goal-oriented and have always loved to have projects but, bedridden as I was, I could only think of one thing to work on. I got on my computer and pulled up a website I had started creating several months before but had abandoned when I got in over my head coding the design. I wasn’t sure if this was what God wanted me to work on, but I didn’t know what else to do. I began re-familiarizing myself with the work I had been doing and started updating the content on the site.

Several times I felt led by God to make changes in my wording, most notably to add “God given” in front of the word “strengths” when I was writing about a person’s innate talents. When this happened, for the most part, I didn’t comply. I didn’t like the mention of God on people’s websites, so why would I potentially turn people off to my site by mentioning God? I might not have been obedient to His will yet, but my belief in His existence was no longer in question.

As August arrived, I started feeling more depressed. My daughter’s hours at work had increased and she was going to college full-time, so I was left alone sixteen to eighteen hours a day, every day. To add to my emotional state, my birthday is in August and as the day arrived it brought up thoughts of what my life had been and the reality that I would inevitably spend the rest of my life isolated and confined to bed. I was already in a dark place emotionally, and then it got worse when Robin Williams committed suicide on my birthday. With every news report and message on Facebook (and if you remember, news of his suicide was everywhere), I kept thinking to myself, “If Robin Williams with all his talent, friends, fans and wealth couldn’t find a reason to live, why was I still breathing?” My depression was so deep it was suffocating me. In my pain, I cried out to my new-found God.

Shaking and with tears streaming down my face, I explained to Him that I couldn’t think of a reason to live, that I didn’t need His love, or heaven, or even healing—I begged only for one thing. I cried out, “I have education and experience and a love in my heart for helping people! Why would You lock me away like this? God, If You won’t put me back into the world again, then I need You to give me purpose!” Then I cried myself to sleep.

After that day, nothing seemed to change. God continued to say, “Work!” Terribly depressed, but imagining that somehow the website could be the answer to my prayer, I tried to focus on that. I avoided going online so news of Robin Williams’ death wouldn’t stir up my feelings of desperation. Finally, I finished the content and was faced with finding a way to overcome the roadblock that in the past had kept me from moving forward with my website. That is what prompted me to go to the freelance site where I first met my God-friend, Jacob.

My story continues here: Meeting Jacob

Since then, God has made such a transformation in me that, even now looking back, it amazes me to see how intimately my Heavenly Father knows me, and how perfectly and patiently He brought me to Him and molded me into a Vessel of Prayer for others. Through my pain, my anger, my selfishness, my stubbornness, my arrogance and my unbelief, He brought me to joy in worshiping at His feet and in tenaciously holding on in faith and faithfulness to the path He has laid before me, no matter how difficult or how impossible it seems. I say this in faith because I don't know where this story will take us, but if you want to see God’s power revealed, keep following my journey—and, together, we will see what our God can do.

Derision – A Sin Against Man

Derision – A Sin Against Man

As is true for many of us, if asked to name some of my best traits, my friends and family would usually include my sense of humor. I like to make people laugh. Looking back (and this is hard to confess), that used to include making jokes at other people's expense. I didn’t just do it sometimes, I did it all the time. I justified it like this: I have a diverse group of friends who don’t know each other, so there is no harm to anyone if I make people laugh by discussing someone’s ineptness and social inadequacies to a person they will never meet—kind of a what they don’t know, won’t hurt them philosophy. Then, God stepped in and changed my heart.

It was soon after the thing that happened happened, after I had received the Holy Spirit and the gift of prayer. I was praying when God began directing my thoughts to this less than admirable behavior. His countenance was one of displeasure and sternness and I immediately felt the seriousness of what He was about to lay before me. It was painful to bear the tremendous weight of His disapproval.

He began to show me the different ways in which I offended Him when I disrespected one of His children—each of His children who were fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14), who He knew before they were formed in the womb (Jeremiah 1:5). He made it clear that it was completely unacceptable to Him that I would mock those that He had created and loved so dearly that He gave His only begotten Son for them. He continued by showing me the pain I inflicted on His children (even when they didn’t know how I disrespected them) and how my behavior lessened and dishonored who He created me to be. It devastated me to see my behavior in this light.

I was so disgusted with myself. My heart ached because I saw how deeply I had disappointed my Heavenly Father. He continued by expressing to me that I needed to give honor and respect to everyone in every circumstance. At the time I didn’t know what my calling was, but I knew in that moment that this was a deal breaker. I needed to repent or I could not fulfill the plans God had for me.

God convicted my heart so powerfully that I was wracked with sobs. The last thing I wanted was for Him to have brought me this far, to have brought me to now, only to fail Him. I begged Him for forgiveness. I pleaded that He would know the sincerity of my desire to change. I repented from a depth I had never experienced before and my heart was transformed.

After this experience, it must have been easy for me to stop deriding, right? Oh, but I wish that were true! I missed the laughs I got deriding people and, in my mind, I didn't know where the boundary was. For instance, if someone did something I found funny and I only talked about what they did, without adding any of my own commentary, was that deriding or just stating facts?

I find that most of us are prone to this type of negotiating as we try to assimilate the changes God requires of us. My heart had changed, but instead of handing this part of my life over to the Holy Spirit for guidance, I continued to look outside the Spirit for direction. As has been true many times, I have to sit with the uncomfortable discord, that battle between who I am and who God wants me to be, before I realize that I need to dedicate this area of my life to God and follow the divine guidance of the Holy Spirit—only then are we truly transformed in His [Jesus] image.

For me, it’s important to take the focus off the change I’m struggling with and, instead, look at myself and the actual process of changing. For instance, if I catch myself negotiating with God in a way that would defend keeping the behavior, I know my transformation has not been great enough. I have not faithfully answered God’s call to change when I pretend the change does not have to be complete. Luke 9:23 says, “Then He [Jesus] said to them all, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily and follow me.” "Daily." Not deny ourselves "when it’s easy" or "when it suits us," not "when a special challenge arises"—daily.

Jacob was a loyal God-friend through this time of transition. He caught me if I was stepping over the line and I checked with him on several occasions to see if my words were derisive. I didn’t slip often, but I spent a lot of time not mentioning certain people for fear my words would deride. The adage, “If you can’t say something nice, don’t say it at all,” had never been more true.

I look at people differently now, with more compassion, with more love in my heart as they stumble through life, like we all do sometimes. I guess I'm not as funny as I used to be. I just asked some friends to list my top traits and only one of them said "funny," but the words “thoughtful,” “compassionate” and “understanding” made it onto the lists more than a few times. Sometimes God works in mysterious ways, sometimes He’s a lot more direct than that.

I am now firmly rooted in my calling as a vessel of prayer for others and I can clearly see there is no way I could have held both disregard for others by deriding them and the compassion for others my calling requires. In Matthew 6:24 it says, “No one can serve two masters,” and I think this is a great example of that. Deriding people was self-serving, not serving my Heavenly Father—you can’t do both, serve yourself and God—a lesson we all need to learn again and again.

My prayers book starts with a bible verse, “I urge you, first of all, to pray for all people…” (1 Timothy 2:1) and because of this experience with God, I am able to do that with my whole heart, holding nothing back. I take this scripture seriously. I pray that God will move in your life as He moves in mine and you will embrace His path for you with a heart open and accepting of the changes He needs to make in you, even if they are uncomfortable for a while. The reward of knowing you are walking on the path He created for you will make it all worthwhile.

Conversation with Jacob - Derision, a Correction from God

Note: I was reading "Hearing God" by Dallas Willard along with Jacob's Bible Study group and that is the reference to "Chapter 2."

From the Previous Day's Discussion

Me:
Jacob. know what I got out of Chapter 2?? A very strong awareness of my lack of righteousness. I haven't even told you everything that has been happening with me. I don't know what to think... or do.
Jacob:
Well that is the beautiful thing about the love of God! It doesn't matter how dirty your past is or how far away you are from Him. He loves you! And Jesus' blood can clean anything pure. If you have accepted Jesus, on the day of judgement God will look down on you and Jesus will step between and God will only see Jesus and let you go by. No one is perfect, but you don't have to be!
Me:
... and if God wants me for something and I miss it because I don't understand?
Jacob:
Then He will make it work! Don't worry you will have plenty of opportunities!
Me:
Just trust and breathe? Every time something happens I want to text you and say, "Jacob, what does this mean!!?" And, truthfully, I can't keep up. I don't know what to do with all these feelings and things that are happening. Find the calmness in knowing that these things can only come from God's hand, and if it comes from Him it is good and what is meant to happen?
Jacob:
Sounds like a good plan to me!

The Derision Correction

Me:
This correction from God makes me feel terrible. On a deep level it speaks to exactly what we talked about yesterday, my "very strong awareness of my lack of righteousness," so strong, in fact, I have always felt my lack in that area should deny me the right to experience God's message.
Jacob:
I hope you have realized that isn't true though. You have every right to God's message as anyone else!
Me:
I did not become more righteous and, therefore, became acceptable to God and able to receive His message. God took me as an unrighteous person and by His hand I am becoming more righteous.
Jacob:
Exactly! And that is grace! Giving even when it isn't deserved :)
Me:
Hey, I kinda get that now! God's grace never made much sense in my head, but with the changes that have been taking place in my life I can feel it in my heart first and now my head is understanding it more. I still know in my heart that this is a deal breaker though, God needs me to make these changes.
Jacob:
That very well could be, we can't know God's plan for us, but I can definitely see Him working in you and it's wonderful!