looking through me

Tag: vision

luxury

Luxurious . . . What a word to pop into my mind as I entered work!

I glanced down at my seven year old slacks and six year old heels. The shirt was new—a recent Christmas gift. The cardigan had to be pushing a decade of service. All in good condition, but hardly luxurious. My car is a practical import, bought used with cash. In my hand was a commuter mug of coffee from home, and a hard-boiled egg was nestled in my purse.

But it remained an accurate thought. As a single, childless, educated, debt-free, healthy, employed thirty-something my time and resources allow me ridiculous luxury.

I go where I want, do what I want, read what I want, listen to what I want, buy what I want, eat what I want, say yes to what I want and say no to what I don’t want. I have the luxury of choice. I build the wide margins my introverted self needs into my daily rhythms. I read books and articles and blogs and chase down ideas. I take time to process through writing until clear thought emerges in text before me. I share meals with people who speak into me. I pause to watch the moon rise or the sunlight dance on the clouds. I hold Grandma’s hand and revel in her presence. I build Lego towers with toddler nieces.

I have entered into hard. I have engaged with poverty and lack. But I don’t live there. I live in a reality of abundance. My normal is not universal; I exist as an exception—an outlier.

What does this mean? What are the ramifications of my privilege? What responsibilities does it offer me? How can my comfort and plenty be a shared gift? How does my affluence influence my ability to follow Jesus?

This is the view I see out the office window: the delicate balance of freedom and liability riding on the wind of luxury ruffling the leaves of the everyday.

 

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my good

My mind roams. Something triggers a thought and I’m darting down a rabbit trail.

Recently in church I sang the line: “You make all things work together for my good.”[1] Words I’ve sung countless times. But this time they derailed me. I was off the path following a fresh set of tracks toward good. Easy? Comfortable? Understandable? Enjoyable?

And then I tripped on the me-centric nature of my words. Is “my good” really all about me? Is it painting a picture filled with my ideal outcomes? My blatant centrality in the emerging mental image made me pause.

Maybe my good is less like a pencil sketch and more like a pointillistic painting. It doesn’t take shape quickly or in sweeping strokes. It’s the compilation of individual, stand-alone dots that when taken together blend to form one image.

Maybe good in my life is more like a developing picture . . . the world’s slowest Polaroid. It won’t be fully focused and clear until the last moment.

But it’s more than that. I was thinking the image incrementally being revealed was of me. It’s my life, so it must be an image of me. But if I’m living the life I’ve been called to—the one working toward “my good”—then the image that will ultimately be revealed is of Jesus.

My life isn’t about me. I am the canvas and the paint—the tools for His self-portrait.

And if that’s the premise, the present and the destination, then it colors everything. It’s time to surrender my image of good and trust the Creator of good to develop a fuller, brighter, more nuanced and textured image in its place.

 


[1] Quilala, Chris. Your Love Never Fails. By Chris McClarney. Jesus Culture. 2010. CD.

 

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