Imperfect

 We now have this light shining in our hearts, but we ourselves are like fragile clay jars containing this great treasure. This makes it clear that our great power is from God, not from ourselves.                       II Corinthians 4:7
Ring the bells that still can ring, forget your perfect offering, there is a crack, a crack in everything that’s how the light gets in. That’s how the light gets in, that’s how the light gets in.                                                               From the poem by Leonard Cohen “Anthem”

Yesterday, I discussed the idea of being perfect- rather, the impossibility of being perfect. We can relate to imperfect, because we are. All of us. However, the idea of being imperfect, like the crack in the Liberty Bell, becomes a symbol for us. It is a reminder that brokenness is an opportunity to be real and transparent. No one will ever try to mend that Liberty Bell crack. It reminds us that the broken can still be celebrated, and it stands as a symbol of our strength in imperfection. It is the opportunity to look for the healing that we all need in this broken and imperfect world.

Our American experience is imperfect. Yet, we have survived those failures, and we are committed to a better America. Without the recent pain we have endured, there would not be the attention to addressing and mending those failures.

I really liked the way that Leonard Cohen put it in his poem- the crack is how the light gets in. If we are not broken, we do not feel a need for anything beyond ourselves. What a tragedy to think that we are self-sufficient, in need of nothing outside of ourselves.

Paul said that we are like “fragile clay jars”, containing a great treasure. Unless that jar is broken, the treasure is not revealed. So, our imperfection is the opportunity to recognize the need for a power greater than ourselves. In the lexicon of the 12 Steps, that is the first step- the humility step, which allows us to get the help we need to solve the problems we cannot solve on our own.

For addicts, that is an addiction that has baffled and overcome them. For all of us, that is a problem of sin that we cannot solve on our own. Christians confess and believe that Jesus is the answer to that problem.

So, imperfection is our lot. But staying in the broken places is not. We learn from the pain, and we seek the remedies. Thankfully, we have a God who has provided all we need.

Prayer: Thank you for meeting us at the place of need. Jesus is the friend we need and count on, Amen.

 

 

Perfect

But you are to be perfect, even as your Father in heaven is perfect.                                                    Matthew 5:48 
“Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection, we can catch excellence.”                               Vince Lombardi 

So, you want to be perfect. Great goal. Even Jesus said that we should be perfect, as his Father in heaven was perfect. So, let’s do this thing. Let’s be perfect.

Perfectionism can make us very anxious because we get frustrated in not having it all just right and under control. Anxiety tells us that we SHOULD be perfect, and anything less is inadequate. We are just not built that way. Less than perfect is OK. Giving up on the pursuit is not.

I tell my clients that the road to perfection is like a hyperbola. Remember algebra and the x and y axis? Parabolas and hyperbolas?

Neither do I.

But those concepts can be instructive for this discussion. I understand that from the mathematical equations in algebra, the formulas for a hyperbola cannot generate a figure which actually touches the x or y axis. The figure can get closer and closer to the axis, but it does not reach it until infinity. Our quest is like that. We are to do the things that get us closer and closer to the goal.

So, we are on the road to perfection. We will never get there this side of heaven, but we are told to strive for it. We can get closer and closer, and that is our striving. But do not expect perfect. Don’t get weary in pursuit of it, but don’t expect to get it- at least not in this life.

Our fallen nature simply cannot allow for perfect. We can get very close in so many ways, but there are too many things that can get in the way of perfect in this world.

So, we pursue perfection, knowing that we cannot get there. The striving is the key. We keep working at doing better, working toward the ultimate goal. The striving IS the goal. Not the perfection, but the working toward it.

So, when Jesus told us to be perfect, I think he meant, “Be on the road to perfection- be on the right road. As long as we are on the right road, we will ultimately reach his perfect place at the end.

Prayer: Thank you Father for the right directions toward you in Jesus.

 

Rights & Responsibilities

Let each of you look not only to his own interests, but also to the interests of others                   Philippians 2:4
Responsibilities are – “something that you ought to do because it is morally or socially right.” Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

 

We Americans are very proud, and very protective, of the rights that we enjoy. We have been blessed with a constitution and a cultural heritage of many specific rights. To name just a few- the right to free speech, freedom of religion, the right to bear arms, the right of assembly, the right to vote, the right of facing our accusers in the court of law, the right to due process, the right to remain silent when arrested and the right to not self-incriminate. These are just a few of our hard-won rights. We are so blessed to have been given such a heritage! The other side of those rights are responsibilities. We are expected to:

  • Support and defend the Constitution.
  • Stay informed of the issues affecting your community.
  • Participate in the democratic process.
  • Respect and obey federal, state, and local laws.
  • Respect the rights, beliefs, and opinions of others.
  • Participate in your local community.

So, in these days of political and social division, lets keep our mind on the balance of these concepts. We have wonderful rights, but we also have responsibilities. We have responsibilities toward our fellow travelers in this world.

We have great freedoms, and one of those freedoms is to limit our own rights, at times, for the benefit of others. Timothy Keller wrote in his book, The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism

“In many areas of life, freedom is not so much the absence of restrictions as finding the right ones, the liberating restrictions. Those that fit with the reality of our nature and the world produce greater power and scope for our abilities and a deeper joy and fulfillment.

So, we can find freedom in limiting our freedoms at times for the benefit of others. The words of Philippians are difficult to follow, but they produce a freedom unlike those in the Constitution. They can free our soul.

 

Prayer: Father I thank you for the true freedom you produce as we love one another, Amen.

 

What, Me Worry?

What, Me Worry?                                                                                                                                                         Alfred E. Newman
Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.                                                                                                                                  Matthew 6:34

We all tend to speculate on the future. It is natural to do that. We plan, we dream, we hope that tomorrow is a better day.  In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said that we need not worry about tomorrow because tomorrow will take care of itself. It will unfold no matter what we do. He basically said, stay in the present and don’t borrow against tomorrow’s possible problems.

When we have high anxiety, we want certainty and control. Anxiety does not like surprises, so we try to predict how tomorrow will be. The problem is that people who have high anxiety almost always predict that tomorrow will bring a terrible thing somehow. They brace themselves, I think, with the concept, “expect the worst, hope for the best”. At least that way, they have some preparation for that future problem- they are prepared for it.

It is understandable to try to control everything we can. We even try to predict the future to prepare ourselves for possible pain. Of course, one of the problems with this thinking is that we rob ourselves of present joy- of living in the moment.

So, I think that we should control what we can control, recognize what we cannot control, and pray about the rest. In that same sermon, Jesus said this:

Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they?  Can any one of you by worrying add a single hour to your life?

I think these words, if we can really follow them, can help with anxious thinking. If we believe that God takes care of his lower forms of creation, surely he will care for us.

Prayer: Father, we trust your provision for us. The future is yours, our future is in your hands, Amen

“If You are Willing to Laugh at Yourself… You’ll never run out of material.”

“I refuse to join any club that would have me for a member.”                                                                   Groucho Marx
All the days of the afflicted are bad,
but one with a cheerful heart has a continual feast                                                                                Proverbs 15:15

I believe that if we are willing to laugh at ourselves, we will never run out of material. Yes, it is true, and it is a principle of good mental and emotional health. Learning to “not take ourselves too seriously” is a key to contentment, and a tool for continual renewal.

Laughter at ourselves is healthy, refreshing, and it takes the edge off of trying to be perfect. It is far better to be aware of our own mistakes, foibles and quirks than to be blind to them, only to have to have someone else point them out to us. If they do, we might become defensive- especially if at the core we know it is true. Don’t you just hate that?

Sometimes anxiety says to us- (remember, I said in an earlier blog that anxiety is our traveling partner, so we might as well get used to it)- “you should have thought of that”; or “that’s not gonna work”; or “this project will be a disaster”; or “if people find out how incompetent you are…”

I remember telling my interns a story when I was supervising students.

Many years ago, I had just taken a new job at Miami County Mental Health Center, having come from work at the state hospital as a social worker. I realized that I had a huge learning curve in working in a community mental health setting.  My work at the state hospital had been difficult, but it was a very different challenge in this new setting. I thought to myself “If they have any idea how incompetent I am here, they will surely fire me”. And I laughed. It was not true, really. I mean, I was incompetent, they would just never get the chance to find out!

My interns usually laughed, and also felt great relief. Because that is exactly how they felt too at the time. My willingness to laugh at myself, and then share it, gave relief to a common anxiety- “I will be found out as a fraud”.  The truth was, we weren’t frauds, just inexperienced, and we knew it. But laughing about it defused it, normalized it, and we could get on with the business of learning, not worrying.

So, laughter is good, especially when we can see it in ourselves. Like I said, we’ll never run out of material.

Prayer: Thank you Father for the gift of laughter. It is healing to our body and soul, Amen

Effective People

Moses said to the Lord, “Pardon your servant, Lord. I have never been eloquent, neither in the past nor since you have spoken to your servant. I am slow of speech and tongue.”
 The Lord said to him, “Who gave human beings their mouths? Who makes them deaf or mute? Who gives them sight or makes them blind? Is it not I, the Lord?  Now go; I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.”                                                                                                                                           Exodus 4:10-12

Today we look at the other part of being safe and effective in helping others- being effective.  Having the right attitude, being safe, is a necessary component of helping others. However, it is not sufficient to simply have the correct attitude. One needs some tools to be effective in the helping process. I have found, and research confirms, that asking questions in a meaningful and sincere manner, is important in the healing process. Coming alongside the person who needs some support is best achieved by interest in learning the space where someone is at that time. It is not our job to take someone where WE think they need to go. It is our job to get to know their journey well enough, and earn the right to involve ourselves with them in that journey. This can take time and patience, and that is at times a sacrifice.

Genuine interest is, in itself, healing. Questions about background, interests, desires, and hopes are important in establishing rapport and credibility. This is not a feigned interest. If it is not genuine, let someone else be the helper.

Questions then can open up the areas of discussion which need to be pursued. A small sample of questions might be- “What would you like to do in this situation?”; “What is stopping you from doing that?”; “What have you tried?” ; “What is your biggest fear?”; “Who do you usually talk to about such things?” Such questions are just an example of ways to get at deeper issues which may be weighing on the person in need.

I believe that the best kid of ability is availability. Showing up and being available is critically important. Questions are the ways to unlock the best resources for the person we are helping. That is, letting them know that they possess the answers to their own problems- we are just facilitating the help.

Warmth is a key in gaining rapport. I define warmth as effective non-verbal communication. We are seen as being warm through our non-verbals, mostly. That is- eye contact, smiles, nodding our head to let people know we are with them, and body posture that is open and welcoming.

I loved the response that God gave to Moses at the burning bush when Moses, so unsure of himself, believed that he was not the right person for the job of leading the Israelites. In the passage from Exodus, above, God essentially told Moses, “You be available, I am able”

That is the approach I like. We just need to be really available, and God can do his work through us.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for giving us the privilege to serve others. You are able as we submit, Amen.

 

Safe People

A friend loves at all times,
and a brother is born for a time of adversity                                                                                         Proverbs 17:17

Today, a few thoughts on ways to be helpful to people who are struggling with some emotional response in these stressful days. Yesterday I wrote about how stress affects us in all ways- physically, spiritually, and emotionally. So, I want to give just a few thoughts on how to reach out to one another. Encouraging words, as I discussed, are healing to both body and spirit. However, to go a bit deeper, I will share some considerations about helping others.

I think we need to consider the two factors that we always use when we hear about therapeutic medications- safe and effective. Pharmaceutical companies typically advertise that their products are “safe and effective” . By that, they mean that the drugs will not produce undue harm, and that they have been shown to have some level of actually working to solve the medical problem for which they were developed.

So, helpers also need to be “safe and effective”. That means that we are “safe people”. In this case, safe means that we are trying to be helpful and available to help the other person, not to get our own needs met. That we can be non-judging and accepting. That we will not add to the burden already there for the person we help. That what they tell us is confidential, and will not be spread to others.

I recognize that I am discussing informal, friendly interventions, not professional counseling. Friends are not legally held to standards of confidentiality, however, there needs to be a discussion about where the information can go. The general rule is that the helping person is not the owner of the information, and has no right to share it without permission.

Finally, if possible, the helper should consider pointing the friend toward other safe people, who can be of help. Isolation is the thing that can get us in trouble during times of stress. Having a group of people who care is a tremendous help in our collective efforts to handle stressful times.

Tomorrow, we discuss “effective”. In the meantime, “be safe out there”! 

Prayer: Lord, help us to be strong and safe as we go about helping one another in hard times, Amen.

 

 

Stress and Response

Pleasant words are a honeycomb,
Sweet to the soul and healing to the bones.
Proverbs 16:24

 We are all familiar with the concept of stress and the damage that chronic stress can do to the body. It was however the work of Hans Selye in the 1930’s that verified that there is a significant reaction by the body to stress. Selye was working on experiments with the endocrine system when he found that the body has some responses to chronic stress that are not good. Not that the body reacts poorly to stress- on the contrary. Our body, with its “fight or flight” syndrome, prepares us for conflict and danger by sending a flood of signals to prepare us to run, or to fight a threat. The body signals the release of cortisol from the adrenal glands in response to those threats. However, once the threat is gone, the body typically responds by clearing the excess cortisol. A chronic state of stress, the threat of danger all the time, even at a lower level, keeps those cortisol levels high, and this wreaks havoc on all the body systems.

We are living in very stressful times. Yes, every generation has said that- life is stressful. But the presence of COVID-19 these past months has raised the stress level for a sustained period of time, and it is wearing on everyone’s system to some degree.  So, what to do? Well, we know that we must do things to protect ourselves from virus exposure of course. But there are other things we can do to help emotionally.

The one I suggest today comes from Proverbs. When a pleasant word is spoken to someone else, there is a physiological response, as well as an emotional one. When we hear a good word, a word of encouragement, it literally is healing. I was so fascinated by this verse from Proverbs because it connects healing to our bones with the concept of “honeycomb”. Did you know that the inside of our bones looks like a honeycomb? That is where, in the marrow, blood cells are formed. Healing to the bones is healing to the entire body.

I am not a physician, and the above description does not come from an expert. However, God’s plan for healing IS the expert one. A kind word in these stressful times heals both the speaker and the listener.

Prayer: Thank you Lord for the amazing way that we are made, as well as your plans for healing, Amen  

 

Today We Celebrate America

“It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried.”                                                                                                                                                               Winston Churchill
“You can always count on Americans to do the right thing- after they’ve tried everything else”    Winston Churchill
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.                                                                                                                                                                  I John 1:9

Yes, it is the 4th of July, and who better to quote from than a former English Prime Minister! Okay, but he did have an American mother.

As you know, I like Winston Churchill, and yes, he was a deeply flawed individual. I challenge us to find any leader who has a past unblemished. All have words or deeds which he or she regrets or had some shame over.

This is true of countries too. We have a beautiful country, one born in ideals of freedom. Despite the criticisms and ranting by many throughout the world, America is still that place held up as an example of freedom, opportunity, and yes, justice.

I have clients who have regrets and failures (yes, of course, we all do), and I often talk with them about not being defined by our failures or sins. We own those deficits and ask forgiveness, then we use those failures to become who we are trying to be. Indeed, that is who we are- the person we aspire to be.

So, we are going through an intense look at American culture right now, and that can be a very difficult thing- and a good thing. In reflecting, we see some painful failures and injustices. A reasoned look at past failures is the way that we grow. The object is to not get stuck in the look at the failures. The goal is to learn the effective and right measures to remedy them.

In I John 1:9 we are told that:

If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

So, that is the remedy for every sin, and that is the formula for recovery. We own our failures, ask forgiveness, learn from them, and aspire to the greatness that we are designed to have.

So, we say “Happy Birthday, America”, you’re still looking pretty good at 244 years old.

Prayer: Lord, we are grateful for the blessings we have in America. We turn to that motto and yearn for it to be true- In God we trust, Amen.

 

Upon Further Review…

Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the Earth                                                                                         Matthew 5:5 

I have always been drawn to the meaning of the word “meekness”. We have typically made the word synonymous with “mild” or even “weak”. One of the definitions I found for the word was:

MEEKNESS- NOUN

  1. the fact or condition of being meek; submissiveness

However, upon further review, I think the meaning is actually quite different than this. Some Bible expositors define meekness as “power under control”. I think this is the sense that Jesus talked about in the Sermon on the Mount. Those who are meek really will inherit the earth, because the meek have power and use it with great discretion. Those who have the attribute of meekness recognize that they do not need to bully others, or intimidate others in an argument. They have enough self-assurance that they need not explain to others that they are powerful in their reasoning.

Like a strong horse whose power is under control by the bridle, it can summon great strength when it is directed properly by the rider. The key is to understand that the power is available, and it is not used recklessly, but for a purpose.

Do not underestimate the power of a restrained response. Especially in these days of conflict, anger and social media confrontation, those who demonstrate meekness, may be seen as weak, but their discretion is so important. The restraint that we need these days will be modeled by the meek.

I hope they do inherit the earth.

Prayer: I thank you for the depth of Jesus’ amazing teaching. His are truly the words of life, Amen.