Showing posts with label healing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label healing. Show all posts

5.12.2010

Helping vs. Enabling

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How do you know when your offer of help has become enabling? As a Christian, I find it to be difficult to say ‘No’ – especially to someone in need. Early on in my journey, there would be so many times where I found myself getting burned out, exhausted even, yet showing little evidence of progress or change in the person’s situation. What was the problem? Was I not good enough? Was I not doing enough? I was running ragged with all the ‘helping’, even feeling taken advantage of. But helping is the right thing to do... right?

And then I realized that I was putting more effort into helping someone than even they were. What it boiled down to was that *I* WANTED it. I was willing to make a sacrifice, and they were willing to let me make it, rather than put forth reasonable effort themselves.

Enabling, in the context of problematic behavior, “signifies dysfunctional approaches that are intended to help but in fact may perpetuate a problem.” In this short lifetime I have come across many in need. In urban ministry, dire situations present themselves daily. People have no food, no shelter, no money, no love. My heart breaks with a yearning for others to experience a full, meaningful life in Christ. I desire to help others to discover and move beyond. Through that, I have observed that there are people who truly want to do well and act upon it, and there are people who will let YOU sacrifice FOR them.

This has lead to some serious reflection. In this case, one in particular example kept coming back to my remembrance. Envision a helpless man, lying near a downtown park, unable to walk for nearly forty years. His clothes are tattered, his legs are weak, his face thin with hunger and angst. He begs for change and scraps of food from passersby. There was such a man that Jesus came across, as recorded in John 5. This man had been an invalid for 38 years. He lay on a mat near Bethesda, a pool of water believed to have healing qualities.

When Jesus saw him, he asked one simple, poignant question:

"DO YOU WANT TO GET WELL?"

What an odd question to ask a man in an obvious condition. He obviously was not well. He obviously had a need. Yet the first thing Jesus did was inquire, ‘Do you want to get well?’ Why would he ask such a thing? Consider what would change once the man was well. It would mean a substantial change in his living situation. He would no longer be able to beg to make a living. He would have to let go of that way of life and adapt to something completely different, after nearly 40 years.

Instead of answering the question, the man replies: "I have no one to help me into the pool when the water is stirred. While I am trying to get in, someone else goes down ahead of me." The man begins to make excuses. He was waiting for someone else to do something for him. This illness ‘became’ him. He was not living up to his full potential. Perhaps he had adjusted to it in an unhealthy way and came to expect recognition, pity and attention as a result of his illness.

So then Jesus laid hands on him and healed him immediately... right? Wrong. The man was asked to take action. Jesus said to him, "Get up! Pick up your mat and walk." Two key things here. The man is commanded to walk. His weak legs were strengthened, yet the man was asked to obey – to walk. Secondly, he was told to pick up his mat. Why? Wouldn’t he want to leave the filthy, probably rancid mat there? There was a purpose for this command. Had the mat been left there, it could have been easy to return to what was familiar. He had to walk away in an act of obedience. Bridges had to be burned.

A little while after this occurred, Jesus saw the man in the Temple, and said: "You look wonderful! You're well! Don't return to a sinning life or something worse might happen." The man is reminded to not only mind his physical well-being, but also his spiritual health.

When I reflect upon this story, I realize that one must have a desire to ‘get well’. Healing, be it spiritually, physically, or emotionally, also comes with obedience and action. We have to be willing to let go of areas of apathy, comfort and familiarity, and burn bridges to move into new life.

8.02.2009

How To Stop A Tree From Bearing Fruit

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I happened upon this from my Myspace Blog. It's amazing what a year can do...

The Healing Begins (How to Stop a Tree from Bearing Fruit)

I'm sharing this because I know a lot of us are feeling some of the same things. We all go through heartbreak, disappointment and trials that cause us to question even the very thing we stand for. But after all that rain, the clouds are breaking and the sun is beginning to shine through… So that afterwards you can see things with an even clearer, more experienced perspective.

There is a beautiful tree I pass every day on the way to work. During the fall season, it drops small fruit onto the sidewalk, causing everyone passing it a bit of an obstacle course (especially because when the fruit is stepped on, it produces an unpleasant odor.)

The thought came to my mind that maybe there was a way to stop that tree from producing that fruit, therefore reducing the annoyance to all passers-by.

God used that tree (of all things) to teach me a lesson. I researched the ways that one can stop a tree from bearing fruit. When I looked up this particular type of tree, I found that the only way to stop it from bearing fruit was to CUT IT DOWN and then RIP THE ROOTS OUT.

The past six months have brought many heartbreaking events. Listing them here would add to the weight on my heart – but for those who know us you have some idea.
Through those weeks, days and long hours the thought has crossed my mind that maybe I'm pointed in the wrong direction. Maybe serving people (and the Lord) is not all it's cracked up to be. (Note: Yes, this may sound sacrilegious coming from a 'Pastor's Wife', but let's be honest – We all go through trials, and if we could just be more genuine about our struggles maybe we could help each other out a little more. I am striving to be this candid for two purposes: To minimize the likelihood of getting stuck in a façade that makes it appear as if everything is perfect and that I have no problems; and to also help out anyone else who is feeling the same way.)

When I first started on this journey, the excitement and energy could barely be contained. And with anything that is worthwhile, there came a season where that excitement then develops into discipline – To grow in understanding and realize that faith is not a feeling.

Through those times, we've accomplished what many in our outside circle deem a success. But when so many challenges and heartbreaks come along, it is natural to question. It is natural to think about taking the easy way out. It's natural to think about fleeing and starting all over. But deep within I know unswervingly that I have been called to something different. I wouldn't be happy as Jane Smith with 2.5 kids, 3 car garage and a husband I never see but whom brings home a six-figure paycheck, because I wouldn't be fulfilling my true purpose.

Of all the possible things God could speak to me through, He used a tree.

The trials that have arrived as of late have been attempts to destroy the growth that has already occurred, and to prevent it from developing any further. Many of us have gone through the wringer lately, and it is not a coincidence. When people in our lives leave, we feel disconnected, as if our ROOTS have been RIPPED OUT. What we thought was a central part of our lives is now detached. When we go through personal struggle and disappointment, we can easily be CUT DOWN.

This revelation has helped me come to the conclusion that I will not let myself be CUT DOWN; my roots are firmly planted and will not be RIPPED OUT. I will NOT be defeated.

Stay alert! Watch out for your great enemy, the devil. He prowls around like a roaring lion, looking for someone to devour. Stand firm against him, and be strong in your faith.- 1 Peter 5:8,9a

But I will hope continually, and will praise You yet more and more.- Psalm 71:14