Friday, December 20, 2013

The Trigger Myth

There’s no trigger.

That comment popped into my head on my way home tonight from Trace’s. 

As the street lamps passed, my mind surveyed the last six months of my life.  It seems like a lifetime ago I was single.  It seems like a lifetime ago that I was sure I’d never be married.  And here I am.  On the verge of...  It’s funny how quickly things change.

And that led me to wonder how things changed.  What was the turning point?  Was there one?  Was there a moment where God said, “Aha!  Now she’s got everything together!  Now is the time to bless her!”?

During the OYC, there were moments I thought, “If I’m devout enough...if I study enough...if I pray hard enough...if I reach this point...if I make it to this imaginary goal post...then God will give me someone.”  I also thought, “Hmmm, I must not be [insert adjective here] enough yet since I’m still single...”

The truth is, there’s nothing I could have done (or not done) to have gotten Trace any quicker than I did.  Nothing finally clicked.  I didn’t suddenly memorize all the books of the Bible.  I definitely didn’t cure myself from sin.  I didn’t cause world peace or nix world hunger.  I did nothing to earn Trace nor did I do anything to be rewarded with him.

There wasn’t this point where God said, “Ah, yes, you’re ready now that you’ve done A, B, and C.”  No check list to mark off.  God being Who God is gave him to me only when He saw fit, and there is a large vagueness in those last four words: “when He saw fit.”  God has vision that we simply don’t, and so I don’t know why God gave him to me when he did...there’s no formula to find a spouse, because it’s all up to God. 

One of my biggest mistakes was looking at the women around me and thinking they had reached some point of godliness and the reward was a husband.  I judged myself, evaluating what I must’ve been “doing wrong” against what they must have been “doing right.”  But here’s the thing, it’s not about comparison.  Comparison blinds you to the truth that God has a timeline for everyone.  And every timeline is different.  Different things happen at different times.  There’s both frustration and beauty in that.  Truth is, if my timeline paralleled with friends’ timelines, if God had given me what I wanted when I wanted it, I would have been married at 21 to someone who cheated on me, beat me, and used me for my money.  Thank God that He is sovereign and not me.

That’s the thing, we aren’t omniscient.  We can’t see the big picture.  We can’t see what’s ahead.  Or who’s ahead.  We have to trust that God has our best at hand, and sometimes that best hand doesn’t get played until later.  Sometimes it comes much later.  And though it is difficult to watch the “my-cup-overfloweth” hands your friends are dealt, it is very much to your benefit that God doesn’t play your hand just yet.

So while you patiently and faithfully wait for that hand, here’s what got me through (and inevitably still gets me though) the waiting room:

·         Being obedient to God.  Tune into His voice and listen to him.  He says NO, you say NO.  He says YES, you say YES.  Straying only causes what could be a short lesson to be drawn out into a long, repetitive one.
·         Crying out to God.  Friends will tell you the last several months before Trace, you could have called me Jeremiah.  I cried out to God.  I didn’t pretend to be okay or to understand.  And I think being honest with God is better.  He already knows your heart, but he wants you to want to share it with Him.  Happy heart or achy breaky heart, tell Him about it.
·         Being patient and DWP (“doing while patient”).  Unless you’re in your QT, don’t sit around doing nothing waiting on God to answer prayers!  Be satisfied with your daily bread, satiated and full, and DO!  Live a full life in the midst of a faithful patience.
·         Pray.  Don’t stop praying.  Keep in communication with God.  Jesus is on the mainline.  Leave as many voicemails as you want.  Jesus does not grumble.  Just because God doesn’t answer your prayer today, tomorrow, or two years from now, doesn’t mean you cease supplication.  How badly do you want something?  The more you want something, the more you’ll pray for it.  But more important than that, how much faith do you have in God that He will answer?

I think I’m writing all this tonight to say, I did nothing to earn what I have today.  I sit every day in wonderment that God would bless me so greatly.  Just like I can’t quite comprehend a King dying for his servant, I just feel so undeserving.  If God can and has blessed me like this, He can and will bless you.  So do not be dismayed.  Do not give up on prayer, because God hears you.  And even though He doesn’t answer right away, it’s because He’s preparing something—or someone—amazing for you.  And, trust me, it is completely worth the wait and worth the prayers you may believe are falling on deaf ears, because they are not falling on deaf ears.  They aren’t.

Trace is everything I could have ever wanted and more.  And I can’t justly explain it.  In my heart I know in what great detail God prepared us for each other and I trust His hand.  Knowing Trace now, I would have waited another 50 years for him.  Suddenly the last 20 years of my life seem like a distant memory compared to the present.

Just remember, there’s no trigger.  Nothing you can do better if you’re already being obedient to God and listening to the Holy Spirit.

In our loneliness, we assume God is waiting on us to do something to get to a certain point, but really, when it comes to waiting, He wants us to wait on Him.  It isn’t a matter of reaching high enough or far enough, but just reaching toward Him with a steadfast, trusting patience—our reliance based on heart-knowledge that He’ll go great lengths to bless His children.

None of this blog entry is to say that that preparation isn’t good. Preparation is great, but only as long as it’s not done with expectation of exchange.  If you’re preparing your heart for anyone else other than God, if you’re trying to earn yourself a husband, I’ll be the first to tell you don’t waste your time.  Live your life under the wings of God.  Live it not to receive blessings from Him, but to love Him completely, subsequently enjoying the great gifts He showers you with along the way.