Digging deeply into ourselves is really healthy, even though it's often uncomfortable.
One of the ways I do that is to keep asking myself the "so that?" question. The more I dig into the purpose behind my actions, the deeper I end up into the gears and clockwork of my own motivations.
When someone works, there's pretty much always a goal in mind. When I am doing my personal work, I am doing it so that something will happen.
So that what will happen, though? That's the important question.
For my writing, I am working so that people's hearts will be changed.
So that?
And that's where I've found my motivation wavering. One day, it's so that I can be important and influence the world. The next day, after God gets a hold of me, it's so that people won't have to live in bondage.
Do you see the difference? One is covertly focused on me. The the other is, at its deepest level, focused completely on other people. I've found that if I dig deep enough, I will find one of these two things to be true about each of my meaningful actions. Even the off-hand things I decide to say to people are influenced by these deep motivators.
This is the level of deeper motivation, just below the grid of our daily conscious thought. This is what I strive to uncover in my digging. There are really, really important things to figure out about myself from uncovering the deepest motivations of my heart, like what I'm the most scared of, and even what kinds of things I'm most longing for at my core.
When I'm longing for one of these deep things out of Fear, I'm longing from a place that God hasn't cured yet. His touch casts out Fear and replaces it with the core motivator of Love. Love is a place that feels secure. We have to be secure in order to Love with our whole hearts, to give our whole self away like God designed us to.
Is your deep self currently motivated out of Fear or Love? Be careful, because it can change quickly and without you recognizing that it has changed.
My dad likes to say "pay close attention to what's going on inside you." I think that's really good advice, and I try to remember it.
Keep close inventory of your "so thats."
Hello Bar
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Thursday, December 12, 2013
Christmas Post On The Young Life Leader Blog
Hey Guys,
Just wanted to let anyone interested know that I got a chance to co-author a post on the Young Life Leader Blog with Drew Hill, the blog's founder. It's about what we like to call "Elf on the Shelf Theology." You can check it out here:
www.younglifeleaders.org
I'm going to be posting more journal related things over the holidays, and then I'll ramp the Young Life Leader Survival Guide back up after that. So stay tuned, and Merry Christmas!
Just wanted to let anyone interested know that I got a chance to co-author a post on the Young Life Leader Blog with Drew Hill, the blog's founder. It's about what we like to call "Elf on the Shelf Theology." You can check it out here:
www.younglifeleaders.org
I'm going to be posting more journal related things over the holidays, and then I'll ramp the Young Life Leader Survival Guide back up after that. So stay tuned, and Merry Christmas!
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Stand for Something
YL Leader Survival Guide, Ch. 9
Peer pressure is a powerful thing. Even when you're a leader.
For me, it doesn't matter what the people are like. If I'm with energetic people, I'll notice myself acting more energetic. If I'm with older people, I feel the pressure to act older. And when I hang out with high schoolers, I feel the pull to act more like a high schooler.
Being a high school leader keeps you fun. You never forget how to go find something really fun to do when you've been spending time with high schoolers. When you're with them, you can make an awesome game out of an old Folgers can and two nickels... and be entertained for hours. It's like you get entertainment superpowers.
But there's another way you can be influenced when you're in ministry: there's often pressure to make exceptions to the way you've chosen to live your life.
For instance, you may find yourself in a situation where you could easily roast a sensitive kid and get some laughs or some street cred with some of those popular dudes you're trying to get to like you. Or you may end up in a situation where some kids are wanting to do something illegal that makes you extremely uncomfortable, and you have to either roll with it or be the party pooper.
What do you do??
These are situations I've been in before. And here is what I've learned in my experience:
Your High School Friends Need You To Stand For Something.
They need you to stand for the relationship and the life change that makes their hearts whole. They need you not to shy away from it just because you're worried they won't like you as much. You are the beacon that's calling them to the way they were meant to be all along. That's way more important than them thinking you're just a little bit cooler.
Many high schoolers desperately need someone to stand for true life living, because they don't have anyone else standing for that in their lives. They need someone to tell them that abstaining from sex is okay. They need someone to show them that sober, drugless fun on the weekends is a solid alternative. They need to witness someone who actually talks kindly about someone when they leave the room instead of the opposite.
Because if someone's not ever seen that life can be lived a different way, how will they ever have the guts to do it? How will they know it's even possible?
Overtly standing for Christ gives your friends a unique window into the fullness of a life with God that they may never have seen before.
What Might It Look Like?
It might just mean choosing not to be a part of a certain conversation. It might mean refusing to aid in a prank on a kid who will feel extremely hurt, or it might mean not driving a kid to a party on Friday night and telling them why. It might even just mean telling people that you're a Christian when they ask what Young Life is! We just have to be willing to let them know that we are choosing to live our lives a different way. Not condemnation, just public personal choice.
Sometimes we feel lame being "that guy" or "that girl." We get really worried about being the party pooper. But I think these are lies. True life is something worth fighting for, and its most certainly not lame. It's the difference between having fun at the beach and drowning in the ocean. Being able to show them that there's a better way to live is really important. And if in your heart, you're not sure that it truly is a better way to live, as I've honestly thought on multiple occasions, that's something to talk to God about. Trust me, He wants to talk about it, and it's not because He's mad.
Many situations we run across as leaders are going to have a lot of gray area. I think God designed it that way so we'd ask Him for help more often. He's pretty smart like that... He knows how to get our attention!
Let your friends know who you're representing through your actions and your words. All you have to give them is a display of who you are and whose you are. So depend on Christ, because He is really good at making a compelling case for Himself!
Matthew 5:13 - "You are the salt of the earth. But if salt loses its saltiness, how can it be made salty again? It is no longer good for anything, except to be thrown out and trampled underfoot."
Matthew 5:14-16 - "You are the light of the world. A city on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven."
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