The In-Between

This may be the most quintessential post of my life, at least at this point. I am clanking on keys not sure where this is going. This has felt like the last 6 weeks of life. 

As we stepped away from one thing into the unknown there was a certainty that the Lord would make clear the next step. With a heavy heart and a handful of hope, we resigned our church believing God’s best was just ahead. 

Enter heartbreak. 

Without much detail, the door that looked promising and the answer to our prayers quickly closed in our faces with no explanation, no conversation. It stung. It was painful. It felt personal without any personal contact. 

Which leaves us here feeling a little like David. Called. Anointed. And stuck in the in-between. Knowing what the Lord has said and seeing no real way to get where he has said to go. 

So we have asked ourselves the question I believe David had to ask. What do we do in the meantime? 

Now, I can say with certainty, I am not raising up a small army. And no one is trying to kill me. So we can exclude those pieces of the narrative. But my heart deeply connects with the psalms of the man in between. My hearts bangs and beats with rhythms of the songs David wrote from caves and plains and hills where the oil of anointing lingered in his nostrils, but the opportunity of the position was still a far way off. 

The in-between. Not heaven. Not hell. Just hard. Moments of God’s miraculous provision juxtaposed with moments of lengthy silence from the Lord. With prayers and praise pronounced in volume to be met with stillness and silence in the hopes of hearing about a next step. 

Every year we watched the classic film White Christmas. The ole’ General who is now running the inn is at an impasse as the lack of snow has created a lack of business. So in his mind it is time to re-enlist, go back to the field. As he waits for the letter and anticipated assignment, some old Army buddies have arrived. Enter a one-liner I use to this day – “I am playing a little trombone myself” as Bing Crosby reads the letter from the US Army. 

The hard part of the in-between is the stealthy thought that I should just go back. Go back to the Army, go back to Egypt, go back to my father’s fields, go back to the church we left. The arduous in-between stacked with silence of the next will slide into our consciousness of a return to what was previous. But we all really know, there is no going back. There is only going forward. 

God’s gear box for our life does not have reverse. 

Waiting on the next is a one-way road. It only goes forward. Like David on the run until the appointed time of his kingship, we will keep moving. 

While uncertain if this psalm was penned in those days of in-between for the future king, it certainly feels like it. And maybe it just feels like the prayer I am trying to pray currently:

Hear me, Lord, and answer me,

    for I am poor and needy.

Guard my life, for I am faithful to you;

    save your servant who trusts in you.

You are my God; have mercy on me, Lord,

    for I call to you all day long.

Bring joy to your servant, Lord,

    for I put my trust in you.

The Day I Thought I Killed Our Dog

Was it the right door?

We got our sweet Winston Bishop as just a pup of maybe 12 weeks. Yes, he is named after a New Girl character. He was so tiny and small he nearly fit in your hand. He was also a very curious and energetic puppy. 

One afternoon, as I was trying to quickly slip out the front door to leave, Winston jetted toward the door with the quickness of a lightning strike.  I step out the door toward the car pulling it shut quickly behind me as to not to let our little guy out because he would run toward the street. That is when I heard the most gruesome yelp I had ever heard in my life. Then felt the door find tension on his tiny little body. 

Sandwiched between the door and the frame was my tiny puppy. I was certain I had crushed his small ribs as he whimpered with the noise that crushed my heart. He didn’t know that there was danger behind the door. He didn’t know that the street was not his personal playground. He saw an open door and cracks of daylight and he was headed straight for it. 

I was closing the door not to neglect him from the green grass but to protect him from the dangers just beyond the yard. He sprinted in hopes of green grass adventures and blacktop sprints. I closed the door in order to keep him safe. 

Isn’t that a picture of us?

We see cracks of light in open doors and immediately sprint toward the sunlight. We think what is beyond the door is where we belong. And even believe that God, our Father, is one opening the door for us.  We sprint toward the opening only to have it closed with us between the door and frame causing hurt and damage. 

I wonder if some of our greatest hurts are getting caught between the door and the frame when we fail to discern the door properly. 

If we are being honest, it looked like a really good door to go through. It looked like the perfect opportunity. It looked like the ideal job. It looked like a wonderful partner and future spouse. It looked like this was the answer to the prayer you had been praying.

Then bang. A closed door and you are caught in between. 

A friend asked me a great question: “can it be God’s will and someone get in the way?”

Let me just say because the door abruptly closed, does not always make it the wrong door. Some doors God shuts to protect us. Other doors are closed in our face due to disobedience of human decisions. Humanity has free will. Sometimes our blessing is beyond the door that God is asking someone else to open on our behalf. 

It may have been the right job. It may have been the right opportunity. It may have been the right school. And that door may still have slammed with you in the middle.

The challenge for each of us is to allow time and patience to help us to discern the door. 

Winston turned out okay after a short session of puppy whimpers and lots of love and cuddles. Most of us too will be okay. It may take a moment to get over the smart of the door, but we survive and move on.

error

Stay Connected!