The Luggage of Life – New Year’s 2023

“It’s been the kind of year I’d be fine if I forgot, yeah 

But I’ll never forget it as long as I live and that’s saying a lot”

Ben Rector, The Best is Yet to Come

As the second hand continues to click a breath closer to the end of 2023 and the beginning of 2024, I find myself in a familiar position. My hands with fingers curled and soft clank of light of keys beneath them. Words start to stream on a white screen as again I try to make sense of the year that was in some hopes of hope for the year that will be. 

Maybe some famed poet such as Whitman, Hemingway, or Shakesphere eloquently described how to properly measure a year. Is it with moments or minutes? Do we measure it in months or mementos that we carry with us? Either way, the truth remains, we reflect, we look back, we remember. So this leads me to asking how will 2023 be remembered?

The recording artist Ben Rector in his New Years themed song “The Best is Yet to Come” opens with the line – “It’s been the kind of year I’d be fine if I forgot.” Well Ben, me too. Not that the year was forgetful or dull, in fact most certainly the opposite. It has been filled with swells of joy and crashing heartache and sorrow. It has been marked by memories and overrun by tidal waves of hardship. It has been full of whispers of thanksgiving and full of shouting at the heavens. In the past 364 and a half days, life has been filled. It has been filled with decisions, unexpected outcomes, pleasant and heartbreaking surprises. 

And I sit on a day the sun will set and rise on a new day, a new month, and a new year. If the Lord is willing, I will rise tomorrow to begin another revolution around the sun in a year we call 2024. And I get to be the captain of the ship of decisions – what do I take with me, what do I leave behind, what do I pick up along the journey of the year ahead?

In truth, the baggage of my life is well worn. It has seen the port of previous years. Marked and scuffed from being dragged in and out of season after season, there are probably some articles in that bag that need to not go with me. Per usual, I am overpacked for the “what ifs” of life. But maybe this year, I need to leave some things in life’s Goodwill pile and not pick them back up.

As I crack open the suitcase of my concerns, I begin to dig deep in the luggage of my life. I swim through the things I carry, I finally put my hands on insecurity. Insecurity was once a high end piece of fashion that dressed my outer self to protect my inner brokenness. It is as colorful as the tail of a peacock. It is bold, vibrant, hiding all my hurts and fears. When it was new it was beautiful, flashy, and stood out. Now it is just worn, fatigued, with holes where hurts bleed through. It can no longer act as a shell of protection of the honest emotions that seep out the seams. It is time to leave it behind. 

My hands sort and sift as my heart and eyes look in the luggage of life, I find a pair of childhood shoes. Black canvas with white soles. From first glance, they appear to be classic Converse Chuck Taylor’s. Upon further inspection, there is no name brand on them. The soles are worn with holes. Shoelaces covered in the dust of childhood baseball fields. The dusty footprints left behind I would sweep away with my foot out a shame I felt for my off brand, poor kid shoes. 

My mind and heart with the shame of feeling impoverished. These shoes that are now 10 sizes too small remain in the bag of my mind perpetually reminding me that there is not enough. Shoes I walked in but a shame I feel I have walked out my whole adult life. It was a moment, momento of nearly 40 years previous. It is an echo of a moment of years past that I packed in my life’s luggage to serve as a reminder that no matter how much you get, there is never enough. 

The shoes on my feet may be marked by designer brands, be fashion forward, but that poor kid dressed with off brand Chuck’s has lived on my life’s luggage. Carried into year and after year. Reminding me I am just a poor kid and we do not have enough. 

As I set those raggedy childhood sneakers aside, the words of the apostle Paul try to find a home in my heart. His declaration of finding the secret of being content. Whether there was a lot or a little, in times of abundance, times of struggle, he and I can do all things through Christ who is our strength. In short, I have enough. The difficulty is putting aside those shoes that no longer fit, and in truth for years haven’t and walking in what God has for me in this season. It starts with laying aside the shame of the kid who thought he didn’t have enough. 

As the clock chases closer to midnight, I continue to sort through the bag of my life. Tucked in the top pocket is a handful of heartbreak. Like shattered pieces of glass from a kaleidoscope of mirrors, I hold them in my hand. Despite all the pieces, it will never be put back together. My jagged reflection staring back off the broken pieces almost speaks to me of how I have felt as if I was unworthy of being whole, that I would always have to be broken. 

Dumping out the pieces on the once shiny insecurities and the worn out shoes of shame, I watch as each piece reflects back a man who is learning he is worthy of being loved. As I lay the shattered pieces of life to the side, I remind myself that I don’t have to live broken. 

Rearranging the pieces of life and love that I will take with me into 2024, I make sure my bag is only half packed leaving room to acquire new articles of life on this circle around the sun. I am leaving room for new friends, new adventures, and new experiences. Taking with me the wisdom of years gone by that I do not have to lug around the luggage of my past. I can simply unpack them and leave them behind. 

In the distance “may old acquaintances be forgot” is being sung and I am going to kiss my wife at the strike of midnight with the luggage of life a little lighter walking into the new year.
 

Qualified and Unseen

Sometime back while sitting in my graduate class at Lee University, a question was posed about where we saw ourselves in the story of Moses. The eyes of Dr. Long, my professor, swung toward me seeking my response. Like a sucker punch of emotion, I choked back the lie I had shaped in my brain and spoke from the gut. “I feel” the words began to slowly get shaped across my lips, “like Moses tending Jethro’s sheep on the backside of the desert. Qualified, yet unseen.” This emotive confession came with the contextualization that since my graduation in May of 2001 with a Bachelor’s degree in Pastoral Ministry, I had spent more years not doing church work as I had living out the calling in the space of church.

Now to clarify, I have been in church. Yet, in the context of living out the role and calling of pastor, preacher, or leader, I have spent most of my years “making tents” like Paul. I do not write this seeking empathy, it is just a truth I stare at in the mirror of my life. Trained, called, and qualified, at now 43 years old, I feel like I have been hidden in the back of desert taking care of someone else’s stuff.

As a child of the 1980’s, you do not have to communicate the Mr. Miyagi “wax on, wax off” principle. The attempt at comfort that the Lord taking the role of my sinsei and is preparing through seasons and situations with skills I will need once the fighting begins. I know that scenario all too well. There just comes a point where the sermons stirred in my soul need a place to be preached. There comes a boiling point of leadership, where the skills need to be applied. There comes a tension of study and preparation, where the lessons learned need to lived out. And now at this unique stage of life, with a resume with little reflection of moments of ministry to account for that someone else may count, I am caught in between. The zeal of youth has passed and while my beard begins to show flecks of salt in the pepper dark brown whiskers, I am not considered the wise sage. I am just somewhere in between. Qualified and unseen.

Like a melody of a song without proper resolution, the chords just seem to go unfinished and leaving you feeling the hook of the melody, yet incomplete all at the same moment. Pieces of the sonata remain unwritten. Even as I write and the melodic click of my fingers tap a rhythm of song with these words, the thought gets chased will anyone see them and will they matter to anyone.

What I fear is I am not alone. I fear there is a tribe of men and women who God has called, equipped, and gifted looking for space and place for that calling to be lived out. I fear there are teachers with life-changing messages stuck in Google Drives with no lectern to deliver them. I fear there are preachers with heartfelt and convicting words with no pulpit to deliver them. I fear there are lead worshippers, writers, musicians, artists, and other incredibly gifted children of God who feel much like I do – qualified and unseen.

The paradox of our current planet is that with the right filter and little quips of truth, you can become a somebody of “influence”. You can create a following. You can manufacture a tribe of people who know you, but you do not know them. Often based on the number of people who double tap your carefully crafted content, you are given space, place, book deals, and leadership. This becomes the measuring stick of calling and character and even qualification.

Yet, as scripture tells us, not all the shimmers is gold. It was “ruddy” boy David who Samuel anointed over the tall, dark, and handsome oldest brother. It was Moses, the younger, who stammered on words over the well spoken Aaron. It was Peter, James, John, and Andrew that Jesus selected over the learned and studious of Jerusalem. What I am driving home is there is tribe of people like me, who do not fit a narrative that is neat and tidy. Resumes reflect seasons of something other than church work, who are qualified and need to be seen.

The Kingdom of God is near and fields are ripe for harvest, so why are there workers without space? Dear church, make space for those who have spent some years in the desert taking care of someone else’s sheep. You just may see we are qualified.

The Pursuit of Happiness

“If it makes you happy, it can’t be that bad.

If it makes you happy, then why the hell are you so sad?”  

90s on 9 on Sirius XM radio is one of those gifts that just keeps on giving.  Everyday that I listen, there’s always a song that comes on that brings memories or funny times, or just a really great song that I know every word.  This morning, on my way back from an appointment, I heard one of the 90s best artists, Sheryl Crow, sing some really poignant words from one of her songs. It was “If it makes you happy, it can’t be that bad.If it makes you happy, then why the hell are you so sad?”  

As I processed these words by Sheryl, I began to process some things in my life and life of people I know and I started to think about some statements people have made about their own lives.  “I just want to be happy”, “I want you to be happy” “this is what makes me happy” Continuously people who are selfish will use that statement.  They’ll go on to say “I deserve to be happy” “you deserve to be happy”.  But ultimately the root of this well-wish of wanting someone to be happy is really a root of selfish motives or selfish ambition or just plain old self centeredness.  

I’ve seen time and time again marriages dissolve because of these statements.  I’ve seen multiple relationships crumble, even parent child relationships fall apart under the guise of wanting to be happy.  

I have bad news for my family and friends.  I don’t want what makes you happy.  Happy is temporary.  Happy is selfish.  Happy is a fleeting emotion that has no stickability and nothing about it last.  M and Ms can make me happy in the moment, then when the bag is gone, I’m not happy anymore.  A funny movie can make me happy, when the movie is over, the emotion is too.  Time and time again we see people literally give up their entire life over that one statement,
“I just want to be happy”

King David also wanted to be happy. He essentially gives up everything over something he wanted.  David thought Bathsheba was going to make him happy.  He was doing things that kings should not do.  He stayed home from war in the springtime and found himself bored and unhappy.  He sees what he thinks will make him happy, Bathsheba.  Suddenly, we end of up with a king who has committed adultery, murder, lied, and essentially destroyed a family with his desire to be happy.  King David suffers the ultimate when his decision to do what makes him happy ends in the consequence of losing a child.   

Happy isn’t where it’s at.  Happy is actually the opposite of where it’s at.  Paul tells us to have rejoice.  Nehemiah wrote that the joy of the Lord is our strength.  I can have a deep, bubbling joy in the midst of extreme hardship and trial.  Joy isn’t a fleeting emotion that is here one minute and gone the next, it is deep, it is of the Lord, it is lasting.  Happiness is not.  

If you pursue happiness, you will always be in pursuit.  Looking from one thing to another, from one relationship to the next, from one accomplishment to the next, from one addiction to the next addiction, from one dollar amount to the next dollar amount, it will never ever be enough.  You will always be in pursuit of happiness.  It is not lasting.  

So, back to the words of Sheryl Crow, if it makes you happy, it can’t be that bad.Gosh, she’s a liar.  Yeah, it can be that bad.  If it makes you happy it can destroy your family sometimes, it can destroy your life, it can end relationships, it can damage your children.  However, I do appreciate her question, why the hell are you so sad? 

Over and over we see people choose happiness over joy, choose happiness over real love, choose happiness or the pursuit over anything that a relationship with Jesus has to offer. Every time, when the high of the happy has worn off, they are sad.  We are sad.  The happy wears off and once again, we have to pursue the next happiness.

So, why are you so sad? Because there is no fulfillment, no joy.  The Holy Spirit is absent because in Him you will find fullness of joy.  It will not last unless it comes from the source of a relationship with Jesus and the presence of the Holy Spirit.  

If you’re in the pursuit of happiness, whatever you’re pursuing, I hope you get it.   But when it doesn’t bring what you want, or if you’re happy for a minute, the happiness will inevitably fade.  When the happiness fades, you’re going to be sad again.  

Let’s stop pursuing what makes us happy and start pursuing the Lord and his joy that is everlasting and that brings strength.  

“…, for the joy of the Lord is your strength.”

Nehemiah 8:10

“You have made known to me the paths of life; you will fill me with joy in your presence.” 

Psalm 16:11

“For the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking; but righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit”

Romans 14:17

I Feel Seen

I love personality tests.  I love seeing how my brain and the brains of others work.  Almost 2 years ago, my husband and I heard about Enneagram.  We took the test immediately and then while on our family vacation that year, we made all of our kids take it.  It has been so helpful in all of our relationships! Understanding how each one works, which reactions help, which reactions harm.  For me, it made me feel seen.  

That’s what we all want, right?  To be seen?  We want the world around us to understand us and see us.  We want to be known. We want our loved ones and those we interact with to really know us, to get us.  But do we really want to be seen?

Being seen makes us vulnerable.  If someone really sees us, then we can no longer hide behind our facade of what we want people to think.  If I’m seen, then I’m exposed.  We certainly don’t like to be exposed.

If anyone lived in this tension of wanting to be seen and wanting to hide, it was the Samaritan Woman Jesus met at the well.  As Jesus encounters her, she is hiding in plain sight.  She is at the well in the middle of the day.  This was the way for her to avoid being seen by the other women in the village to be mocked or more than likely, ignored.  There’s nothing worse than being in the presence of a crowd and being ignored.  But, Jesus shows up during her mundane chore of drawing water and her life changes forever.  

However, Jesus doesn’t show up with the preacher’s voice of “REPENT, THUS SAITH THE LORD!”  No, Jesus shows up to have a conversation.  They talk water, they talk belief systems, then as Jesus reveals who he is to her, he tells her everything she had ever done.  Jesus didn’t make a spectacle, it was just her and him.  In my mind, she must have collapsed to her knees with relief and shame.  Relieved that finally, someone sees her.  Finally, she isn’t ignored or shunned.  In the same breath, shame would shroud her.  What had she done?  And now this man was exposing it all.  He wasn’t exposing to condemn, he was exposing to accept.  

Today, do you feel seen?  The Enneagram is a great way to feel understood, but only  El Roi, “- The God who sees me”, can really make you be seen.  
13 She gave this name to the Lord who spoke to her: “You are the God who sees me,” for she said, “I have now seen[a] the One who sees me.” – Genesis 16:13

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