I’ve Arrived

My pastor was preaching. 

His text and his sermon title I’ve already forgotten. But it will be a long time before I forget this. 

His words were about buy-in and the Great Kingdom and meaning and God. About sacrifice and worship. About  purpose and dying to self and wanting more of Him, less of me… 

Well, at least some of those things were in there. It maddens me how quickly the mind blurs specifics sometimes. I’m sure he was clear in the moment. All the words going somewhere and making excellent points. I’m confident that whatever he said, he was organized and we were all tracking along. But I would soon go on to miss whatever would be said next because of this: 

“I’ve arrived!” 

What on earth kind of absurd deduction is THAT, mister?

It was not my pastor speaking. Far from it. For he doesn’t in the least live, act, or act like he thinks that. C’mon, who are we kidding? No one––not the haughty, not the grossly self-unaware, not even my long, long ago pastor who very much acted like he believed he’d “arrived” somewhere important––would dare commit the social suicide of saying “I’ve arrived” out loud. 

It’s clearly against our rules. So no, I hadn’t heard it. 

I’d thought it. 

In my own head. About myself.

Somewhere along the dividing line between my pastor’s words and my thought train about giving up my own life and being willing to hang on to the adventure that is life with God, it came to me. I had: the thought. 

“I’ve arrived.” 

“I have that life.”

Believe me, had you been there to hear me think it, your jaw would have dropped, but it would not have dropped faster than mine. I was more aghast than you would have been.

Oh, my, Dann.

How could you?

You can’t think that! It’s forbidden. It doesn’t matter what “good” deeds you think you may have done, you know as well as everybody. WE NEVER ARRIVE. You will never “arrive.” 

OK, Ok, I know, I know! I don’t know what happened! I didn’t actually intend to think it.

Like excuses can ever stand in for truly satisfactory analyzation of mortifying mental no-nos.

I knew exactly the roots of where the thought had come from. It was coming out of our last three years. I had laid down my life. I had learned to be content in whatever circumstance. I had placed free time, my career, my finances, sanity, my spouse, and my other children at the foot of the cross. I’d let Him determine the course of my life and I’d held on for every subsequent by-product since, pleasant or not. 

And I’d come out on the other side of wilderness, while not unscathed, more committed than ever to submission.

And before my eyes I saw that wilderness path in a Kingdom way with 20/20 hindsight. He’d accomplished so much. In me. In our family. I was living a type of life that in years prior I could easily remember only longing for. My very existence now was different than it had been.

I’d “arrived.” But that was too far.  

How to deal with the embarrassment of consciously thinking it? Everyone knows you can’t say THAT. “Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from the body of this death?” (Rom 7:24 NASB). I figured I’d just gotten in line for some of the same kind of sinful-nature wrestling I’d engaged, like Paul, a thousand times over. 

What came instead was unexpected. 

The mental tape of self-flagellation had barely started spinning up in my head before it got stopped abruptly. (I know, some of you have digital files that play in your head. Others maybe vinyl. Mine plays tapes.)

Instead…

“What if, my son, you thought of it as arriving in some place? Instead of to some place?” 

Wait, what! 

God?

“If you’ve arrived in a place, rather than to a place, might it not actually be okay to think what you just thought?”

Whoa.

Like into a river. A stream. A place where I was knowing and understanding and experiencing both Him and a way of living that previously I had not known. 

That’s not what I’d expected. And wow, maybe there really hadn’t been any pride in my heart. I’d had the thought and God wasn’t in the least taken aback by it. It just was. 

OK, God!

I bought it immediately. And saw that my greatest transgression was probably the knee-jerk reaction. That was my flesh. The old nature. He never fails to tithe on his mint and, doggonit, he was going to call a spade a spade: 

“That phrase is evil. Thou shalt not ‘arrive.’ Thou shalt not say it, nor think it, nor permit it within thy hearing if spoken by thy neighbor.”

I myself was so aghast at its outward appearance (weren’t you when you first read it?) that it never even crossed my mind to look any further into my heart. 

I’m so glad God does. 

I have arrived. I’ve been walking in places where my spirit hadn’t come previously. And there are more places, still, where he wants to take us all. Let’s let him decide. It’s weird to think that when I do arrive in those places, I might be saying so. 

The unspiritual self, just as it is by nature, can’t receive the gifts of God’s Spirit. There’s no capacity for them. They seem like so much silliness. Spirit can be known only by spirit—God’s Spirit and our spirits in open communion. Spiritually alive, we have access to everything God’s Spirit is doing, and can’t be judged by unspiritual critics. Isaiah’s question, “Is there anyone around who knows God’s Spirit, anyone who knows what he is doing?” has been answered: Christ knows, and we have Christ’s Spirit.

I Corinthians 2:14-16 MSG

Perspective. Everything.

Though the cherry trees don’t blossom and the strawberries don’t ripen, Though the apples are worm-eaten and the wheat fields stunted, Though the sheep pens are sheepless and the cattle barns empty, I’m singing joyful praise to GOD. I’m turning cartwheels of joy to my Savior God. Counting on GOD ’s Rule to prevail, I take heart and gain strength. I run like a deer. I feel like I’m king of the mountain! (For congregational use, with a full orchestra.)

-Habakkuk‬ ‭3‬:‭17‬ MSG

The Road Just Traveled

Another year has come and gone. And once again, I have a name. I never named any of “my” years before three years ago, and I’ll be happy to see the habit fall away again if it means life is simmering down to a half-routine, half-normal one.

I’ve made a list. A list of all the things we have at the beginning of 2019 that we did not have at the beginning of 2018…and it’s staggering: 

  • A brand new role in occupational ministry that we enjoy, and which has brought back some dearly-missed and very welcome companions, for instance purpose.
  • A new State in the south of the USA––1st time living in Georgia, and we love the warmer climate. (However, our move to get here was certainly nothing new—it was #19 (in 23 years of marriage)!)
  • Scores of new regular prayer supporters, not to mention our own better follow-through with more regular updates than we’ve had in many years.
  • 74! financial supporters of our brand new ministry, 53 of them monthly. Another 10 who donated multiple times in 2018. We’re simply overwhelmed.
  • A house here in Georgia that was perfect for our family and move-in ready when we bought it. (The story of how we got in it, when we were buying out of state and I was making near-minimum wage in NY, is an absolute miracle story. A few dozen of you have been told the story because you played a role in it.)
  • Three new vehicles. A second and third car for Tammy and the teens, then a motorcycle for Dann. One of the cars and the bike were gifts, if you can believe it. (You may recall that our existing 8-passenger vehicle was also a gift in 2016. And you may recall that I had been given a bike in NY as well, but before we moved, I felt clearly led to give it away. Now here I’ve been given another one! He sure speaks our love languages, doesn’t he?)
  • 8 happy kids who love where they live.
  • A great new church family (though we miss regular interaction with those who became family in our NY church).
  • Stability
  • Contentment about the future, etc., etc.

It is, without doubt, a year worth naming––the 3rd in a row*––because 2018 was another dramatic year for our family, and truly nothing compares to these three years.**

I’m calling 2018:The Year of Victory.

‘Cause did you read that list? Sure, 2018 may not have been one non-stop bed-a-roses, but… Did you read that list? Major changes. Major breakthroughs. Major questions that were up in the air for what felt like forever during our two limbo years in NY… answered

Answered! I gotta say, even for someone who relishes questions, I’m loving answers.

God has been faithful, and he was faithful all the while. Faithful when our faith wavered and faithful when it didn’t. He has brought us out of the woods.

We are so, so thankful to be where we are, doing what we do, and being supported by the people that support us (a not-insignificant contingent of those being friends from our New York stopover, I must add). 

Surely one of the darker clouds of 2018 would have to be our yet-unsold house still sitting empty in NY. A tracing of that emotional roller coaster through the year would fill pages; I’ll save you the navel-gazing. In fact, some time after the thought “Year of Victory” first came to mind last fall, I absolutely thought, “I cannot use that name if that house remains unsold come Dec. 31.” But that changed, too, and there have been many moments of victory along the way there, as well. Moments of faith. Of recommitment to trusting in the dark. Of slowly learning to disengage “the goodness of God” from attachment to a thing in my life that continues to appear to be only hurting me. 

The Lord has brought our hearts to a place of peace; I know He is taking care of us. The house will sell, and the current taxes/utilities being “wasted” are His business. We are also so very grateful to a couple of folks to whom we owe portions of the house sale money for their patience and understanding in waiting. (“Thanks for not tossing us in debtor’s prison!”) 

And so: I’m totally on board, and I’ve fully embraced it: 2018 is our Year of Victory. It’s true. And we’re so grateful. 





*2016 having been “The Year of Suffering” (and I make no apologies for that name) and 2017, though holding its own share of suffering as well, “The Year of the Lord’s Provision.”

**“Happy Adoption Day!” to Everett, btw, who came home to us three years ago today.