Goal-Oriented

Some of us consider ourselves goal-oriented, while others…not so much. However, we all have goals, whether we realize it or not. The mere fact that we all have needs dictates that we will at least have goals designed around meeting our particular needs. So, it is safe to say, we are ALL goal-oriented. However, this may not be such a good thing, depending on the reasoning behind our goals. 

Forgive me while I plunge into the political realm for a second to offer an example. I dare say that there are some politicians out there that say their goal is one thing, but their hearts are really set on something else. One might say his goal is to help a certain segment of the population, while his true intent is to appease and use them in order to get the votes he needs to be elected. Money may be a factor, but power usually is a big temptation for elected officials. So the stated goal is to help others, but the real goal may be to help himself.

A good personal example of trickery with goal-setting is if I were to smile at someone as if I were listening to them. My expressed goal may appear to be to care about them and hear what they are saying. However, my real intent might be to get out of that conversation without the other person being mad at me for being uninterested in what they are saying. Therefore, my real goal? It may be to simply to be accepted or avoid conflict. To avoid the controversy and rejection, I put on an act, appearing to be interested when I am really not. As with the politician in the previous example, I am more about helping myself than the other person. 

With it being so easy to hide our true intent, at times even from ourselves, it becomes a way of life for some of us. Those of us that are desperate to be accepted, we may put on a people-pleasing mask everyday in order to meet our goal. For those of us who are anxious, we may avoid certain things in order to feel safe. This winds up keeping us from experiencing life and being joyful. And to be fair to the politician in the example above, many of us struggle with the same thing he struggles with…feeling insignificant and searching for something to make us feel better about ourselves. For him, it may re-election, for us it may be moving up the corporate ladder, going out with an attractive person, being recognized for an accomplishment, or simply winning a pick-up game of basketball.

Identifying our true goals is important. It helps us realize what we are really after, so then we can begin to address what is leading us to run after such things. To do this, we must take a look at what we are doing and what we are feeling. These are evidence of our true intent. For instance, if we are getting anxious or angry, that may be a sign that we are not getting what we want (hence, our goal is not being met). As with my example of smiling and “listening”…if I find myself feeling anxious, or even a little frustrated, with the other person, I very well could be after more than just an opportunity to listen to them share their heart about something. 

While identifying goals is important, when you boil it all down, attempting to revise our goals may not be the next best step. A better step is to give them up altogether. Bad, or unhealthy, goals come from bad beliefs. We can’t surrender our goals without our view of things being changed first. If we believe we are unlovable, trying to drop the goal of being loved is unhelpful. Even if we could be successful in changing that goal, we still have a major issue: we believe we are unlovable!

If we are determined to revise our goals in a good way, the first goal should be to find the truth. There are many places to look for truth, but there is only one source. While emotions, experiences, and relationships here on earth may lie to us, God is consistent in telling us the truth. In fact, one of the descriptions of Jesus was that He is “the Truth”. Jesus chose to lay down His life for His bride, the Church. God’s love for us has been amazingly demonstrated through that act. Not only has He promised to meet our needs, but He has demonstrated how far He will go to do so.

To accept the truth of how God views each and every one of His children is to gain the ability to give up goals to meet our needs on our own. If I am accepted by the King, then I do not need the acceptance of the people. If the Creator of everything has a purpose for me, then I do not need to seek significance in this world. And most importantly, if my Heavenly Father truly loves me unconditionally, I needn’t worry about searching for someone to love me in order to prove myself lovable. Believing these truths are examples of faith. It is sometimes much more difficult to walk by Grace through Faith than we realize because we fail to see how goal-oriented we really are when it comes to our needs. 

Self-Worth

Self-esteem is a high commodity. Books geared towards helping one build up his or her self-worth have been flying off shelves for decades. Motivational speakers can fill large stadiums, drawing crowds easily whereever they go. Counselors, therapists, and ministers all see people regularly who are struggling due to how they see themselves. As a whole, we are hungry to feel better about ourselves.

There appear, to me, to be more than one phase that we can be in regarding how we view ourselves. There are those of us in the first phase: “Complete Awareness Phase”. In this phase, we are completely aware of how negative our view of self truly is. We look in the mirror and hate what we see. We find it very difficult to see even one thing we like about ourselves. We may even struggle with seeing that we have a purpose. When in this phase, we are depressed/emotionally distraught. We feel hopeless most of the time. This is a scary place to be.

The second phase is the “Aware But Hiding Phase”. Some of us know exactly how we view ourselves, but we are “working on it”. We are attempting to cloak just how unacceptable/unsuccessful/unlovable/ugly/weak we think we are. There is a considerable amount of anxiety associated with this phase. The uncertainty of whether we will find what we are looking for is stressful. In this phase, we hide behind things such as our children, hobbies, work, wealth, power, attaining goals we set, appearance, skills, knowledge/education, or a boyfriend/girlfriend/spouse. In this phase, we work our butts off to find a satisfiable view of ourselves through something outside of us.

The third phase is the “Unaware and Striving Phase”. Similar to the previous phase I mentioned, this one includes a lot of trying to find worth in things in this world. The difference is, in this phase, we are either so good at finding temporary feelings of worth in people/performance/things, or so oblivious to the truth for some other reason that we are also temporarily unaware of just how in the tank our self-worth is. A good example might be a professional athlete who is very good at what he or she does. The only time people in this position might realize how they truly view themselves is when they have an injury and cannot perform at the same level anymore. Then they are faced with the truth: “Their value was dependent upon something that was fleeting!”.

I would bet that 99% of anyone reading this, including myself, is in one of these phases, at least in some way. I admit, Phases I and II are popular choices for me. Years ago I was provided with knowledge about myself that made Phase III difficult for me to reside in now. The veil has been removed. Now it feels like this: “scramble to put the tiny veil back on or sit in a pile of miserableness”.

In this world, there truly are no other options…not that I can see this morning, while I sit here in this quiet house, pondering the things that run through my mind early in the morning before anyone else is up. But as a person who has seen, firsthand, others find freedom from the cycling through of those three phases, I need to remind myself where my real worth is found. Yes, I do have worth, despite the lie that I believe that I do not.

When I make a large purchase (car, furniture, etc.), I often do not know enough about the item to know the value of that item. Without some trustworthy information about that item, I might wind up purchasing something for more than it is worth. To get the best idea of its value, I think the ideal source to check is the designer/creator of that item. He or she would know what materials were used, who assembled it (and how carefully they did it), and how valuable it truly is.

In searching for our worth, we need to look to the One who knows us best: our Creator. He knit us together in the womb. He knows what “went into making us”. He valued us so greatly that He paid a high price for us to be set free and to call us His own children. He sent His own Son, who willingly chose to be put to death to save us. We were purchased for a price so high it cannot be fathomed. Our value and worth, dependent on God’s love for us, is as great as that immeasurable love. God, our Father in Heaven, cannot love something of no value.

Perhaps “self-worth” is a bad way to describe the true worth we have in Christ. It is a “worth based on Christ”. Although our feelings, what others think, what our experiences teach us, or even what we think might contradict the truth about our value in Jesus Christ, they are all flimsy things to rely on in evaluating our view of self. All the failures and rejection in the world will not and cannot devalue us one bit. The value placed on us as children of God is eternal because His love for us is eternal.

Strategic Deconditioning

The setting in 2 Samuel 7 is this: King David has finally come to a moment in his life that he can rest. He has spent years fighting battle after battle. God has given him victory over the opposing forces time and time again. Now, David wants to do something I think many of us would think about doing at a time like that. It’s time to move on to the next big thing. David wants to build God a temple to dwell in. He may have been thinking, “Why slow down now? Let’s stay busy with ‘the Lord’s work’.” At least that’s probably what I would have said.

However, that was not God’s plan. Instead, God put off the building of a temple for David’s offspring. Nathan, the prophet at the time, delivers the message to David. The following passage (2 Samuel 7:18-29) details David’s prayer after receiving this news from God. The ESV of the Bible calls this “David’s Prayer of Gratitude”. David goes on and on praising the Lord, recognizing all that He has done. His words reflect an awe of God. David is worshipping his Heavenly Father deeply and passionately. David didn’t get what he wanted, but he got what he needed: a stop sign from God. It appears to me that, instead of “getting busy with something else to do”, God called David to slow down and rest.

Years ago, I discovered a hobby that I really enjoy: lifting weights. Any weight lifter that knows anything about building muscle will tell you, you don’t grow muscle in the gym. You put in the hard work in the gym, but you grow when you rest. If you don’t rest, you just tear your body down, and it doesn’t have time to repair itself. One workout plan I have followed for a while requires a full week off periodically. It’s called “Strategic Deconditioning”. Without this crucial rest break, the workout only leads to overtraining (injuries, sickness, and actual LOSS of muscle mass). But after this crucial week off, your body is ready to move to the next phase of training.

David was probably worn down from all the fighting. Although he did not realize it, he needed time to rest, heal, and grow. We all need those periods in our life where we stop for a moment and chill out. I know for me, when I find myself pushing myself harder and harder, I eventually find myself anxious, having a difficult time getting a good night’s sleep, and short-tempered. I also find myself isolated from God. And it’s not that I am not doing the things typically acclaimed as what a Christian “should be doing”. I may be spending my time in my morning devotions, attending church regularly, and participating in the new small group study on Sunday nights, but the busyness of it all detracts from any depth in my personal relationship with Christ. Even seemingly good things can often become more of a chore to mark off of my list than an intimate conversation with God and others.

And so I sometimes find myself struggling, itching to jump forward. I try to recall how disastrous that can be when I do not take a time-out every now and then. I have definitely experienced that before. It’s not fun. “Waiting on God” is hard. But as with the story of David in 2 Samuel 7, I can see that “waiting” doesn’t necessarily mean twiddling my thumbs. The down-time He gives me is not only healing and relaxing, but it is crucial to my growth. It’s crucial to my relationship with God becoming more real to me in a world that screams at me to “STAY BUSY!”, all the while robbing me of the relationships with Him and others that really matter.

He MAKES me lie down in green pastures. He LEADS me beside still waters. (Psalm 23:2, ESV, emphasis added by me)

The Opiate of Blame

And they heard the sound of the Lord God walking in the garden in the cool1 of the day, and the man and his wife bhid themselves from the presence of the Lord God among the trees of the garden. But the Lord God called to the man and said to him, “Where are you?”2 10 And he said, “I heard the sound of you in the garden, and I was afraid, cbecause I was naked, and I hid myself.” 11 He said, “Who told you that you were naked? Have you eaten of the tree of which I commanded you not to eat?” 12 The man said, d“The woman whom you gave to be with me, she gave me fruit of the tree, and I ate.” 13 Then the Lord God said to the woman, “What is this that you have done?” The woman said, e“The serpent deceived me, and I ate.” (Genesis 3:8-13, ESV)


Anyone who knows anything about me probably knows that I have been a fan of old-school Smashing Pumpkins music for a long time. Recently, while listening to one of my favorite songs, a lyric sung by Billy Corgan stood out to me. In the song “Soma”, he makes the statement, “The opiate of blame…is your broken heart”. While I think Corgan was pointing towards something else entirely, I began pondering something about the “opiate of blame” part.

In a previous post, I talked extensively about manipulation in our lives. One of the most used forms of manipulation is blame. It goes way back to the Garden of Eden. Adam quickly blamed God, Eve, and Satan for his sin. When we place blame on someone or something other than ourselves, we choose to shift the focus off of ourselves. Instead of taking responsibility for our own choices (standing by and saying nothing as Eve had a conversation with Satan, eating the fruit offered by Eve, etc.), Adam chose to blame others in an attempt to avoid his own guilt and shame.  


Blame is like an opiate. Opiates are painkillers. They offer a quick escape from reality. When we do something wrong, there are consequences, and those consequences affect ourselves and others. Blame is used to manipulate a situation so that the pain of personal guilt is killed. Blame appears to be an escape from the consequences of our actions. It feels much safer than owning our mistakes. It feels much easier than taking personal responsibility for something. These feelings are lying, however, just like the feelings ascertained by taking opiates. When on an opiate, the damage that is causing the pain is still there, although temporarily numbed. It is the same with blame. Later, these things will resurface, just as the pain does after an opiate wears off. And while we are numbed, more damage will be done because the pain is not there to warn us to stop. Blame is different than opiates in at least one way. Opiates have a place in medicine for those who need it. Blame is an insidious drug that, even in moderation, has no real, lasting benefits.


Blame is tempting only because we fail to see the truth behind what it is and what it does. Blame requires absolutely no trust in the Lord whatsoever and only tears down relationships with others. It is an act independent of God that leads to all kinds of painful consequences that only get worse due to the delay in dealing with them. The truth is, although every situation involves people on both sides who are at fault for something, it is advantageous to no one to point fingers.


It is vitally important for us to acknowledge our tendency to blame. Once we are willing to acknowledge this tendency, we can sense the Holy Spirit nudging us so that we can catch ourselves in the act. We can then choose to take a step of faith rather than settle to hide behind blame. If all those involved in a given situation chose not to blame, issues would be resolved and relationships would be restored. If only one person decided to take up his or her own responsibility, that one person would be able to move forward, even if the relationship did not. But when no one is willing to look at themselves…when everyone chooses to blame, then everyone is bound to the consequences of unaddressed hurt and shame, which are extremely painful, even if the blame delays the onset of symptoms.  

A Fork in the Road: Manipulation or Faith?

What causes quarrels and what causes fights among you? Is it not this, that your passions are at war within you? You desire and do not have, so you murder. You covet and cannot obtain, so you fight and quarrel. You do not have, because you do not ask. You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions. You adulterous people! Do you not know that friendship with the world is enmity with God? Therefore whoever wishes to be a friend of the world makes himself an enemy of God. Or do you suppose it is to no purpose that the Scripture says, “He yearns jealously over the spirit that he has made to dwell in us”? (James 4:1-5, ESV)
My wife, son, and I got into watching the television show Big Brother a couple of years ago. I’m not sure how many of you reading this have actually watched the show, but it’s basically a group of people locked up in a house for a couple of months competing for $500,000. People are voted off each week until only one remains and that person is the winner. Needless to say, since the people in the house are the voters, there are all kinds of mind games being played. Everyone wants to win the money, so everyone is trying to figure out how to get everyone else to keep them in the game. Although many seem to be fooled into thinking they have developed great relationships with fellow cast members, more often than not, this is only a charade by the others to get what they want.
It is really easy for me to sit back and be critical of the casts and how they are often willing to do and say anything to get what they want. However, truth be told, we all struggle with being real with others to some degree. We are all guilty of manipulating others to get what we want.
With the needs that we are all walking around with (things like love, acceptance, security, and significance), we often find ourselves desiring for one or more of these to be met in our lives. Instead of a cash prize, our needs being met is the thing we seek. That’s when we come to a fork in the road: will we choose faith in our Father to provide what we need or manipulation to get what we want? The path we choose determines whether our relationships thrive or take a nose dive. James 4:1-5 is clear that when we focus on getting what we want, we will do sinful things to make it happen. When we choose to manipulate, we argue, fight, cheat, steal, and hate others. We treat others like objects that we can use to get what we want.
Walking by faith is synonymous with trusting the Lord to provide for my needs. If I am manipulating, even in a seemingly small way, then I am not trusting Him. I am taking my life and my needs into my own hands. I am deciding that He may not provide, so I will find a way to get what I want on my own. I will put on a mask and make everyone around me think I am something when I am not, to gain their acceptance. I will fool others into thinking I am capable of things that I am not, to gain a sense of significance. I will be nice to others so that they will take care of me, to feel secure.
But we are not the authors of manipulation. Satan is the great deceiver. In other words, he is the great manipulator. He wanted what he wanted and turned from God to try to get it. He even blatantly tried to manipulate Jesus to do what he wanted Him to do. When we manipulate others, we’ve been manipulated by the Enemy. We’ve been deceived into thinking we can do something to provide for our own needs. Even though we may feel that we are in control, we are not.
Manipulation strips us of our ability to be real with others. It destroys any chance at authenticity in our relationships. It thoroughly prevents us from enjoying others just as they are. And at the end of the day, it never gives us what we really need. At best, it gives us false security, acceptance, etc. because those giving us those things are giving them to us on false pretense. They are loving the act I am putting on (the cunning manipulative device of the day), but they are not freely choosing to love the real me!
Manipulation is a type of bondage: once you go down that path, there’s no way out except to keep putting on masks, or choosing to come clean and enjoy the life and freedom that comes from trusting Him. Maybe that’s one big reason why many cast members on Big Brother start “losing it” emotionally after a few weeks. Manipulation stresses us, traps us, and drains the life out of us.
Maybe we should take a look at shows like Big Brother and realize that the show is not driving people to do bad things (being manipulative), nor are the people struggling with different things than us. The show, in this way, is more a platform to demonstrate the wide-spread issue of us as a whole struggling with the sinful desire to get what we want without looking to the true Provider. It is a magnifying glass focused on just how desperate we are and how dependent we must be on One who can truly meet our needs.
And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus. (Philippians 4:19, ESV)
-Neil

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When the “Fruit” Seems to Lie

Every way of a man is right in his own eyes, but the Lord weighs the heart. (Proverbs 21:2, ESV)

Taking time to examine our hearts is a crucial yet underused discipline. Much of the time, we can look at the fruit in our lives, or lack of it, and be clued into what is going on with our hearts. However, although our hearts always reveal themselves eventually, sometimes, the true evidence is not seen at first. It is possible for us to put on a good act. And when what we are doing looks good to us, and especially to others, then we are typically satisfied not to investigate why we are doing what we are doing. We often fail to appreciate the importance of the motivation behind our actions.

For instance…when we decide to “kill someone with kindness”, we must be careful not to think too much of ourselves. Our intent is still to “kill”, even if the weapon of choice makes our actions appear more acceptable to ourselves and others. Although our actions may make it look like we are doing the right thing, our heart is still bent towards overpowering or hurting, not loving, the other person. When we don’t take the time to honestly look at what is motivating us, we blind ourselves to the truth and our wayward hearts eventually do some damage. Unfortunately, the damage is usually what it takes to finally bring us around so that we decide we MUST take a look at our hearts to see what’s wrong.

Several years ago a good friend of mine turned me on to an awesome singer/songwriter by the name of Derek Webb. I love many of his songs, but a line from one song in particular jumped out at me as I was writing this post:

“…you can make your life look good
You can do what Jesus would
But you’d be surprised what you can do with a hard heart”
(lyrics from the song, Ballad in Plain Red, by Derek Webb)

These lyrics say, more eloquently than I can, how easy it is for us to get caught up in doing what looks good, while losing sight of what really matters. If our motivation is off, everything is off, no matter how great the performance is. And there is only One who can straighten out a heart issue…and He loves for us to open up our hearts to Him to do so.

Prove me, O Lord, and try me; test my heart and my mind. (Psalm 26:2, ESV)

Why Call It Fruit?

I know I have touched on the subject of “fruit of the spirit” here several times. Paul coins this phrase in Galatians 5:22. Although the exact phrase is not always used, this idea of “fruit of the spirit” is discussed other times in Scripture as well (for example, Colossians 3). Jesus, Himself, talks about fruit. Fruit of the spirit is, quite simply, evidence in our lives that we are walking by the spirit. It is not strenuous effort on our part to do what is right. Fruit shows up when we are believing truth. When we actually take God’s truth to heart, our actions and even out emotional state are affected in an awesome way. Fruit is the product of truly trusting God, made possible only through a relationship with Christ. 

The thought that hit me the other day was this: “Why call it fruit?”. This may have been obvious to you, but for some reason I had never thought about this much in depth. Paul uses the word “fruit” for a reason. When we walk in truth (please don’t confuse this with positive thinking which is just mind games), something special happens. Fruit is produced. Actual fruit, such as apples, bananas, oranges, pears, watermelons, and grapes, all bring to mind something enjoyable to our taste buds. They are filled with nutrients that energize us. They are often sweet. They can be a nice snack or something to compliment a whole meal. 
But we can’t just make our own fruit from scratch. Fruit is sourced from certain vegetation that can produce it. It is a miracle outside of our control. We get to enjoy the fruit when we get involved with the vegetation. It’s almost like a partnership. The plant does its part, and we just trust it to do so and act accordingly, expecting the fruit by watering it. 
I can now see more clearly why Paul used “fruit” to describe the product of trusting God. He is blatantly telling us how great it is to walk by faith. Contrary to what we may think at times (when faith takes us into difficult places) it is always sweet and enjoyable when we rest in His truth. Paul even experienced fruit while in prison, which still boggles my mind at times when I think about it. 
To top it off, I don’t believe for a second that Paul’s list in Galatians 5 is an all-encompassing list. Paul was just throwing out a good list to give us an idea of what kind of profits we have in store as believers. There are many types of fruits to eat and enjoy. There are also innumerable enjoyable products of a trusting relationship between us and our Heavenly Father, because He is, in and of Himself, infinitely enjoyable. 

God’s Sovereignty: Soothing or Scary

Several years ago, as some of you reading this may know about me, I began a tremendous struggle with anxiety. This included panic attacks (night and day), as well as a general sense of anxiety that plagued me almost continuously throughout each day. It was debilitating. One of the key truths that I encountered that changed my life during that time was a better understanding of God’s sovereignty (there is nothing outside of His influence and authority). When I truly realized His infinite love for me and how it was coupled with Him reigning supreme over all things, I also realized that there was nothing to worry about.

Now, I am not saying that I would always believe this, 100% of the time, but it became a common thread in my outlook on life, and, over time, that was enough to relinquish the control that the anxiety and panic had over me. Please understand that I am not implying this as a “quick fix” for any of you struggling with anxiety and/or panic attacks. Much interaction between God and I took place for this kind of truth to take hold in my life.

I had learned incorrectly through life that God was not a safe God. For instance, where was He in the midst of hardship? Experiences in this world had sent messages about Him that were not true, and I eventually bought into them enough that in my twenties, the dam broke and all the fears and anxiety became overwhelming. Of course, at the time, I did not see it this clearly and simply thought I was losing my mind. It’s not a pleasant experience to think such as this.

But back to my main point here, the revelation in my life of God’s loving, sovereign rule made a huge difference. It was miraculously soothing to me. I was so thankful for His rule and control.

Fast forward to recent months…

I have been noticing some things about myself lately with which I am not content. There has been more anger and definitely more of a tendency for me to try to control things…and of course anxiety. Peace has been evasive. It’s hard to explain, but I have noticed many seemingly small things going wrong in my life to the point that it almost felt like something was out to get me. I found my anger progressing past me getting frustrated with people in my life, and becoming more obvious that my anger was towards God. What was He doing with all this control He has over things? Obviously not watching out for me! It sounds ridiculous, knowing what I know about Him, but something had happened to my view of Him that had changed my emotional state and actions. But what?

Yesterday, God made it abundantly clear to me through the story of Joseph being sold into slavery in Genesis 37. His own brothers sold him into slavery, but later in the book of Genesis Joseph was able to see how God was in control, not his brothers, when they sold him into slavery. He had become an authority figure in Egypt and was instrumental in saving many lives, including those of his family, from starvation during a famine. It hit me hard that Joseph was not controlled by his brothers, the circumstances, or anything else. No one or nothing could steal God’s authority.

The one thing that was so soothing, so precious to me, I had come to reject. A rebellious spirit had come up in me that was not accepting God’s sovereignty. The key, though, to this deception in my life, was that I was still believing in His sovereignty, but leaving out His love for me. It’s all too easy to lose sight of His love when I get focused on things of this world. Without love, authority is just cold and I don’t want it. I don’t think anyone truly desires that kind of authority. How can you trust someone over you that doesn’t care about you? Our faith in Him slips when we don’t believe in His unconditional love and acceptance of us. Without love backing it, authority can be downright scary. God’s huge reminder to me yesterday was to remember His love for me, first and foremost. When that is a reality to me, I am able to accept His sovereignty…and the peace comes with it.

Fruit of the Spirit: Loving Our Wives


Recently, I was honored to be invited to speak to the “Men of Courage” at Mt. Elam Baptist Church. I shared with them from Ephesians 5:22-27. I thought it would be nice to put my notes together in “blog-form” and post them here. Seeing how I have not posted in a while, I figure it’s about time I do something! So here it is…

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22 Wives, submit to your own husbands, as to the Lord. 23 For the husband is the head of the wife even as Christ is the head of the church, his body, and is himself its Savior. 24 Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit in everything to their husbands.

25 Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, 26 that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, 27 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. [Ephesians 5:22-27 (ESV)]

It is very easy to read Scripture and find examples of people we know that are good examples of “what not to do”. We will read about how someone was dishonest, and immediately, someone comes to mind. We have no problem at all applying Scriptures to others. And that’s a big problem. When we are focused on others, we are not focused on our own hearts. It’s a sneaky way to play the blame game. If we stay focused on how others are messing up, we don’t have to look at ourselves.

In reading the words of Paul from Ephesians 5:22-27, I believe it is all-important for us to make it personal. For instance…men, we need to pay much more attention to the “Husbands…” part. Paul did not say, “Husbands, see to it that your wives respect you and submit to you”. Nor did he say, “Husbands, make sure you keep your wives happy”. 

Instead, Paul focused on personal responsibility for men. He stressed “loving our wives”. But we need to really take a look at what he meant by “love your wives, as Christ loved the Church”. It’s far too easy to gloss over this and not take it the way he meant it. This verse is VERY heavy with responsibility for us. If it doesn’t strike us that way, we aren’t taking it seriously. “Love”, in this passage, is the word “Agape” in the original Greek. This is much different than the “phileo” type of love mentioned in other Scriptures. It’s not just a friendly, warm affection.

This “agape-love” is the kind of love Christ has for His bride, the whole body of believers, the Church. Agape-love is unconditional, steadfast, protective, forgiving, patient, gentle at times, aggressive when appropriate, and safe. For guys like me who struggle and have struggled with behaviors such as withdrawing, holding grudges, losing my temper, and dealing out the silent treatment, this type of love sounds impossible, particularly at certain times in my life.

But then comes the most important thing that we need to know about this agape-love (above all the things I listed previously). This kind of love mentioned in Ephesians 5 is also mentioned in Galatians 5:22. There it is described as fruit of the spirit. This is all-important because it is the key to how this kind of love is possible.

Paul ordered his letters in a certain way. He would begin with important doctrine, or truths that we need to believe. He would follow with important notes on the kind of behaviors that we could expect from believing those truths (fruit of the spirit). He really grasped the importance of our relationship with God and how we need to really put our trust in Him and believe that what He says is actually true. When we take these steps of faith (believing the truth), we act on them and then the behaviors flow from Him, through us, to others. As I have stated in this blog many times, our behaviors are motivated by believing or not believing God’s Truth. Our relationships with others are directly affected by our relationship with God.

The portion of Scripture we are focusing on here (Ephesians 5:22-27) is actually from the “behavior-section” of Paul’s letter. We often jump to this section, attempt to do all these good behaviors, and then wonder why we fail. Loving our wives is actually evidence of our trust in our Heavenly Father. If we don’t address this first and foremost, we are lost when it comes to seeing fruit in our lives. This is good and bad news. It’s bad because this is hard to hear sometimes. We often want to blame someone else for our bad behavior. This requires us to look at our own hearts. However, it is good news because we cannot possibly overcome the bad behavior and love our wives the way Paul is calling us to…so we need help…and we have it! 

But then we need to take another huge step out of a bad box we get into a lot as Christians. We often make faith this mystical thing that we talk about, but have very little working knowledge of how to apply it in our lives. We must take the mystery out of it and find ways to make it practical for our everyday walk. 

First of all, it is not nearly enough to know truth. Knowledge without acting on that knowledge is worthless. Knowing the truth and not acting on it is an excellent way to define “dead faith”, as James puts it in his book. God’s Truth has to be so real to us that we act on it. That is when we see the fruit, such as loving our wives.

Experience helps His Truth to become more real to us. We must act on what we know is true, which is taking steps of faith. If we act on ANYTHING other than truth, we subsequently fail to receive and offer His love.

EXAMPLES:

At this point, I want to offer some personal examples of what it might look like to take steps of faith the way I am attempting to describe here.

Years ago, I remember my wife and I were sitting at home. She had something to do outside and went to take care of that. While she was gone, I decided to vacuum the house. Well, when I finished, I realized she had not come back in yet. I really wanted her to notice what I had done, so I contemplated leaving out a piece of the vacuum cleaner in order to make her aware of my “good deed” without having to say a word to her. In a situation like this, a step of faith might look like putting the vacuum away and saying nothing. Instead of looking for my wife’s approval or attention (or whatever it is I’m after), I can choose to seek God’s approval (which is readily available because He DOES approve of me in Christ). The fact is, when I was thinking through this, my struggle was that I wasn’t trusting fully in God’s acceptance of me and was seeking it elsewhere (my wife, through my completion of a chore). Steps of faith like this are not easy, but they are necessary in order to truly love my wife instead of looking to her to make me feel better about myself. And she might not even know what happened!

Another quick example is how I used to, regretfully, make my wife the brunt of my jokes. When in the presence of others, I would make jokes pertaining to her and she would laugh along (sometimes not). I realized years into my marriage to her that this was extremely hurtful, although she had said nothing to me about it. How could I be protecting her, being an advocate for her (as Christ has been for me), and valuing her as the precious gift that she is when I am making jokes about her? Often, I found that I was being critical of her actions and the jokes were subliminal messages that I wanted her to change something. How manipulative! And manipulation is not love. Anyway, my step of faith was giving up this terrible habit by giving her the freedom to be her and shedding some light on my despicable behavior despite the fact that no one really knew how bad it truly was. I had to make a choice to trust God’s Truth that giving my wife freedom to be herself in our relationship (not manipulating her to be what I wanted her to be) would produce what I was really after. Building her up and protecting her is far more enjoyable than trying to change her.

I know these examples may seem small and inconsequential, but the reality is that they are real examples of everyday struggles I believe many of us share. If we aren’t taking the seemingly small steps of faith, then we certainly are not taking the big ones.

Some men struggle with choosing work first over relationship, others with being passive when they need to be more of a leader, and others with being abusive and controlling. Many other examples could be given here, but I will stop there. There are many works of the flesh that show up when we are not walking by faith. As husbands, our relationship with God is central to everything, including being able to love our wives, and the ability to love our wives comes from faith. When we fail to trust God’s Truth (even in the little things), we fail to love. If we catch ourselves without fruit such as “loving our wives as Christ loves the Church”, instead of beating ourselves up or trying harder to do what is right, we need to focus on going back to the drawing board: “By Grace Through Faith”. The fruit will follow.
 

People Never Change

Recently, in a conversation I had with several others, it was suggested that “people never change”. Having counseled many people over the past five years, I admit, I was rather annoyed by this comment. However, after some thought, I realized what this person may have been attempting to convey to the rest of us. In that person’s experience, there had been little evidence of lasting change in people who try to change themselves. That’s something I can agree with. Attempting to modify our behaviors is fruitless because we are incapable of changing ourselves. For behaviors to change consistently, there must be a deeper change that takes place, and that change must be instigated from something outside of us. There must be a change in the heart, and only God can do this. It does require steps of faith on our part, though. True change does not come about from a passive stance. It is a difficult road to take. Sometimes it’s a choice one makes to face the reality of where they are at in life despite the temptation to keep hiding and acting like everything is okay.
Sometimes it’s a choice one makes to surrender things to God that they really would like to hold onto due to fear of what may happen if they truly let go. Sometimes it’s a choice to take a risk at losing relationships with others by setting up healthy boundaries.

I have had the privilege of counseling many awesome people while serving full-time as a minister/counselor. I have also had the awesome privilege of being invited to come alongside these friends and watch them bravely work through tremendous hardships. I have had the incredible opportunity to watch these people make the choice to trust the Lord and then to watch our Heavenly Father do His work in these people’s lives. People may never change…themselves, but God definitely responds to their willingness to surrender to Him…and He definitely changes the hearts of people. I have seen it.