Ever have those moments of
stagnancy in a relationship? They are the moments which seem like the
relationship is not what it could be, or used to be. You become guarded
and seek a comfortable position and the intimacy just isn’t there. I can
have those moments in my relationship with God and it is a challenge to get it
back.
A while back I was really
struggling in my relationship with God. I wasn’t out breaking the law or
doing anything bad per se, it was just a lack of intimacy in my relationship.
I was in a stagnant place and could not figure out how to get
closer. One of the passages I came across in my daily reading was the
Parable of the Sower in Matthew 13:1-23. Part of what makes a parable so
powerful is that the listeners know they are represented in the story.
I had heard this parable
hundreds of times since childhood so it did not feel like a particularly
interesting read. This time however, instead of just reading it, I
imagined myself as a part of the audience actually looking at Jesus and
listening to Him. Which soil would I relate to when hearing the
story? When looking Jesus in the eyes? And those eyes, looking at
me: I know he would not look upon me with conviction or to provoke guilt, but
in knowing the truth and forcing me to be honest with myself.
Examining my life can be
tough sometimes because I don’t always want to be honest with myself. If
I had not imagined myself looking into the eyes of Jesus I probably would have
said I was the good soil because it is who I wanted to be. But being
honest with myself, which of the soils was I? I was stuck in the weeds.
My life was centered on long hours at a stressful job and paying the
bills so we could own a house. Those were my weeds. This wasn’t a
case of desiring the biggest car or the newest gadget; it was simply an intense
focus on “this job is stressing me out, how can we change?” I was more
focused on how to get away from my job than how to strengthen my relationship
with God. This was my challenge.
Once again I thought about
being in that crowd, listening to Jesus speak. Emotionally, how would
people in the audience have felt knowing their relationship with Christ was not
reflected in good soil? How would Christ have felt about those people as
He looked upon them?
Here comes the disclaimer:
I am in no way saying anyone out there is a soil which does not produce
fruit. In fact, the parable itself is not even the point of my
story. The point is that your relationship with Jesus is not going to be
everything it can be unless you are challenged sometimes: challenged to be more
authentic, more vulnerable, and more truthful to both Jesus and yourself.
To have an intimate relationship with Jesus, you have to go deeper and
deeper. Think about the best moments you have had in relationship with
your parents, your spouse, your best friend. Were those moments when you
were simply engaged in small talk? Or were they moments when you had
those deep, intimate conversations? I bet they were the deep
conversations where you felt like the other person really understood you. It is a
wonderful thing that you can have intimacy with God as well. How do we
grow intimacy in our relationship with Christ? In service with brothers
and sisters, in worship and fellowship, in prayer and in reading Scripture –
God reveals himself to us in action. It is our choice of whether or not
to be truthful and vulnerable to Him. It is our choice to be intimate
with God, to take action and seek a relationship with him or to be one of those
other soils in which the seed dies.
I pray we all grow through
this challenge.
Mark Juanes
Pastor of Administration
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