“And of His fullness
have all we received, and grace for grace.”
John 1:16
As someone
recovering from disordered image, food and weight issues, I’ve long wrestled
with the perfection issue. There was a mandate, both self-imposed and emanating
from others, to be perfect in behavior, achievement and appearance.
However,
this last goal was the most frustrating and demoralizing.
As a child,
I was overweight, inheriting my mother’s own negative body image perceptions. Later,
throughout adolescence, I was bullied, teased and rejected.
And then,
adding insult to injury, I felt I could never win when it came to my dad and
his expectations.
“...I desperately wanted my dad to notice me.
I learned very quickly that one surefire way to do that was by winning awards.
When I won something, I wasn’t completely worthless or useless. I was
productive; I was “earning my keep.” I set impossible standards for myself. Try
as I might with award after award, I’d eventually disappoint everyone,
including myself, proving that I wasn’t worth anything after all.
My perfect attendance record in
school is an excellent example. For three years in a row, I did not missed one
day of school, knowing that I would win a perfect attendance certificate,
tangible proof on paper that I was worthwhile. It became a standard I had to
maintain because my dad seemed pleased in my performance. Of course, he never
said that he was proud of me, but he did lay off the criticisms briefly. So for
the next few years, I went to school with colds, sore throats and influenza. I
remember going to school once with a temperature of over 101, sitting at my
desk, on the verge of throwing up, yet only thinking of that certificate.
When I reached junior high, I became
so sick once I had to stay home. I felt defeated and anxious. My dad, who had
never really been sick with so much as a cold, was unsympathetic to my
condition. With each passing day I stayed home from school, the tension
mounted. Three days at home, according to my dad, was enough. He became upset
at my mom for being “such a terrible mother.” After three days home, he had
enough. He decided he would take me into school to make sure I got there.
On the way to school, he was fuming
and I was scared to death, but my fourteen-year-old mind wanted to know
something. We’d never had any father/daughter talks about anything, much less
about the existence of a loving relationship, but I got up the nerve to ask
him, ‘Do you still love me?’ His answer? ‘If you do this again, I won’t.’
His answer proved it. It was my
fault. I had to prove myself in order to be loved. I wasn’t the cute, good
little daughter he should have had. If I could just look right and act right,
he’d love me. All I have to do, I decided, is be perfect. That’s all.”
(Excerpt from Cruse’s book, “Thin
Enough: My Spiritual Journey Through the Living Death of an Eating Disorder”)
So, in all
of my efforts to be perfect, I learned I was not only unacceptable, ugly,
stupid and fat, I was also a hopeless failure.
“Success isn’t about perfection. It’s
about progression.”
I wish I
knew who uttered this wonderful quote.
But, little
did I know I was eventually and slowly actually
practicing it, via one of God’s most powerful truths: grace.
In fact, you
could replace the word, “progression” with “grace” and it would still hold the
same potent meaning.
It’s because
grace is critical to life, destiny and healing. None of us would have any hope
without it.
“For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of
yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.”
Ephesians 2:8-9
Grace has
been there from the start because, simply stated, we NEED it!
God provides
it for each one of us, equipping us for this thing called our lives, and yes,
our sins.
“But when it pleased
God, who separated me from my mother's womb, and called me by his grace.”
Galatians 1:15
“For sin shall not have dominion over you: for ye are not
under the law, but under grace.”
Romans 6:14
That is
vital for those of us obsessed with unrealistic, paralyzing perfection. It goes
beyond the anorexic or the bulimic. It covers anyone who struggles.
And hello, last time I checked, that was the human race.
But knowing
that reality and absorbing/applying it are two different things.
To achieve any
kind of healing requires seeing the personalization God has given to grace when
it comes to each of us.
“And God is able to make all grace abound toward you; that
ye, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound to every good
work.”
2 Corinthians 9:8
Grace is not
some nebulous theory; it is relevant, accessible and pro-us.
“Let us therefore come boldly unto the throne of grace, that
we may obtain mercy, and find grace to help in time of need.”
Hebrews 4:16
Who out
there needs help in time of need?
Exactly.
But coming
to terms with God’s personal, individual dispensation of grace can be tricky
because of the lies we’ve absorbed. These lies can dictate oppressive terms,
convincing us of such things as...
I am not good enough.
God doesn’t think about me.
God doesn’t love me.
I need to earn my worth.
It’s too late/hopeless for me.
For much of
my life, I lived each of these statements. They pushed me to anorexia, bulimia,
suicidal thoughts and numerous lost, self-destructive choices.
It had a lot
to do with my stance on grace.
For as much
attention as there is to the importance of accepting Jesus Christ as personal
Lord and Savior, there is not equal emphasis on us having a personal
relationship with God’s grace. Jesus and Grace: one can argue how they are,
indeed, one and the same.
“Even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together
with Christ, (by grace ye are saved).”
Ephesians 2:5
But do we
choose to accept this?
“I do not frustrate the grace of God: for if righteousness
come by the law, then Christ is dead in vain.”
Galatians 2:21
The process
of living our lives in and with grace is not dependent upon our performance.
It’s in spite of our performance. If
we are in a constant state of “earning,” we not only frustrate the grace of
God, we frustrate our lives, our health, our recovery and our irreplaceable
meaning.
We are all
in this same boat of being dependent upon God’s grace. No one has it together.
No one is mistake and sin-free. We have all blown it.
Therefore,
it is upon us all to heed 2 Corinthians 6:1...
“We then, as workers together with him, beseech you also that
ye receive not the grace of God in vain.”
It’s an
ongoing, flaw-filled process. However, committing to- and following it-
eventually reveals the transformation reality.
“But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the
glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to
glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.”
2 Corinthians 3:18
And that
truly is living, breathing progression in us all!
Copyright © 2018 by
Sheryle Cruse
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