I love this
adorable cartoon post.
Dinosaur
number one pleads, “Hug me!” to Dinosaur number two, who responds, “I’m
trying.”
I immediately
thought of the “fighting your help” principle, both on the recovery front and
the much larger spiritual playing field.
Many of us
struggling with addictions, disorders and vices often employ a lot of
self-sabotage when it comes to interaction and, yes, actual help.
We reiterate
such statements as...
“I’m worthless.”
“I’m unlovable.”
“I’ve made too many mistakes.”
With those
statements, we push others away; we fight our help.
And, of
course, we do this with God.
Why else,
perhaps, does there exist this scripture, were it not for this resisting
attitude?
“How often I have
longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her
wings, but you were not willing.”
Matthew
23:37
To
paraphrase and play with Matthew 26:41, “God, the Spirit, is
willing, but we, the flesh, are weak.”
Scripture,
indeed, gives us ample evidence we are loved by a Creator Who desires to heal
and help us...
“The LORD hath appeared of old unto
me, saying, ‘Yea, I have loved thee with an everlasting love: therefore with
lovingkindness have I drawn thee.’”
Jeremiah 31:3
“I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go:
I will guide you with My eye.”
Psalm 32:8
“… I have heard thy prayer, I have seen thy
tears: behold, I will heal you…”
2 Kings 20:5
“‘If You will, Thou canst make me clean.’ And He (Jesus) stretched out His hand
and touched him, saying, ‘I am willing; be clean.’”
Luke 5:12-13
And it’s
that last one, in particular, which calls into question the equally precise question, “Do we want
that help?”
“…‘Do you want to get well?’"
John 5:6
Squirming
yet?
This question, uttered by our Messiah, cuts through all of
the physical, emotional, situational and spiritual red tape.
Do we want to be healed? Do we?
Often, let’s be honest, that answer is “no.”
And the best we can hope for is the double minded, wishy-washy
perspective of “wanting our cake and eating it too.”
Yeah, I know. This is the wonderful perplexity of addict
land.
(Please keeps your arms in the vehicle at all times during
our tour).
Addiction pulls on us so much of the time because it, quite
honestly, feels like love. It feels warm, safe, nurturing, rewarding,
encouraging, euphoric and empowering. It feels like all of the things we wish
love could actually be to us.
Yet, because addiction is only a counterfeit to actual
love, let alone, God’s love, inevitably,
we are left wanting and disappointed when our “true love” failed to deliver on
its “solution” promise.
“There is no fear in love; but perfect love casteth out fear:
because fear hath torment. He that feareth is not made perfect in love. We love
him, because he first loved us.”
1 John 4:18-19
So, now we have trust issues. Now we are faced with
another question, “Do we trust love?”
And
again, all too often the answer is “no.”
So,
tightly, we hold onto our addiction; forcefully, we push away any and all help,
God included.
Again,
just like our cute dinosaur friends...
“Hug me!”
“I’m trying.”
Here we are,
at a crossroads. How do we truly view the “I’m trying” response from the Source
of all help?
Do we
believe He is willing and able to be our Alpha and Omega?
“And he said unto me, ‘It is done. I am Alpha and
Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give unto him that is athirst of the
fountain of the water of life freely.’”
Revelation 21:6
Upon
studying our little dinosaur conversation, I zoomed in on the arms. We have to
acknowledge the arms. Look at those suckers.
Indeed, there has been much discussion and
humor about how these fierce prehistoric creatures couldn’t even pick up their
prey with those short little limbs.
And this discussion
about short arms brings us back to the God element of things.
We are
confronted with two seemingly, diametrically opposing sentiments.
On the one “hand...”
“Behold, the LORD'S
hand is not shortened, that it cannot save; neither his ear heavy, that it
cannot hear.”
Isaiah 59:1
Yet, on the
other “hand...”
“How often I have
longed to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her chicks under her
wings, but you were not willing.”
Matthew
23:37
Huh? Well,
which one is it?
Answer:
both.
For this
brings to light the joint venture of our recovery. It is part us, part God. One
without the other cannot facilitate healing. We cannot cure ourselves
independently. Likewise, we cannot opt out of participation and expect better
health either.
And, while
God can do anything/everything, He does not go against our free will, even when
that free will “fights our help.”
So, we have
the dilemma, the constant challenge of what we believe, why we believe it and the
results of how those mindsets fight or help Divine intervention and recovery in
our lives.
I know. It
is maddening. It is...human...
But again,
if we return to the “I’m trying” response in the dinosaur conversation, we see
the willingness is there.
Remember
willingness?
“‘If You will, Thou canst make me clean.’ And He (Jesus) stretched out His hand
and touched him, saying, ‘I am willing; be clean.’”
Luke 5:12-13
1 John further backs this up...
“And this
is the confidence that we have in him, that, if we ask any thing according to
his will, he heareth us: And if we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we
know that we have the petitions that we desired of him.”
1 John 5:14-15
God wants
to love us. God wants to help us. God
wants to heal us.
“Hug me!”
“I’m trying.”
“‘If You will, Thou canst make me clean.’
... ‘I am willing; be clean.’”
Do we fight
the Truth or embrace it?
Are we the ones who need to “hug back?”
Copyright © 2018 by
Sheryle Cruse
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