LBY: An Uncharacteristically Serious BooMama Moment

About three and a half years ago some Life Stuff reared its ugly head. You know how Life Stuff works…it pops up out of seemingly nowhere, rocks your world, and leaves you in its wake. By the way, there were three completely unrelated metaphors in that last sentence. Life Stuff apparently renders one incapable of coherent figurative language.

Here’s the thing. The Stuff has absolutely nothing to do with me other than it affects someone I care about, so I feel the ripples. And if you’re thinking, “Um, could you possibly be more vague,” I apologize. Vaguery is of the essence, I’m afraid, because I try not to be in the business of betraying people’s trust. So you’ll have to bear with me. Just know that as a result of The Stuff, I feel like I’ve been in the midst of two Big Battles: 1) fear and 2) pride.

The fear part seizes me at the strangest times. I can be bebopping through my little BooMama life, minding my own business, and BOOM – my stomach drops down to my knees. I like for things to make sense, for all the parts to add up, for everything to be out in the open, dealt with, put back in the box, and filed away (it’s Mix Your Metaphors Day, evidently). Nothing about this situation is like that. And so the unknown – the fear of what’s down the road – well, it gets to me sometimes. I want to know how The Stuff is going to play out; I want to know the end result so that I’m not so wary of all the what-ifs.

Obviously, this is one area of my life where I’ve struggled with trusting God. I lay it all at the foot of the Cross, stare at it awhile, and then I think, “You know, I’m just gonna pick this little teensy part up again…I think I can handle it.” And I tippy-toe over to where I left it, pick up a little bit, and before you know it I’ve put the whole load back on my shoulders, and I’m overwhelmed, and I’m scared.

On top of that, my tendency to speak my mind, my desire to say my piece, means struggles with pride can’t be far behind. Now I have no right to say anything, mind you – this is not my battle to fight – but I have an almost physical need to try to right all the wrongs in this situation. I want to fight for someone who has been hurt; I want to shout, preferably from the rooftops, “HEY, EVERYBODY! LET ME TELL YOU WHAT SO-AND-SO DID!” But I can’t. Over and over again I’ve had to die to that selfish need, and I wish I could tell you that that was it, that I was over it, that I surrendered my need to speak and let it go altogether.

But that wouldn’t be true. Inevitably what happens is that I’m not myself when I’m around this person. I’m not rude in the conventional sense – I’m just distant. But it’s impossible for me to fake it (side note: one time I said that to Sister about something else, and she said, “Oh, believe me – we know – you are many things, but you are not an actress”). :-) On top of that, I want the person to know that they’re wrong, and they messed up, and doggone it there will be consequences, which I will happily facilitate if need be.

Surprise! Welcome to my passive-aggressive party! It’s loads of fun.

As it turns out – and there’s no way I think this is a coincidence – David and I were talking about these very issues last week. I was telling him all my frustrations, pouring my heart out, feeling just a tiny bit sorry for myself, talking about how lonely I was because I hadn’t been able to share the details of this situation with my friends, and I was really expecting some sympathy, to tell you the truth. But about halfway through my self-prescribed journey to martyrdom, David looked at me and said, “You know what? I don’t buy it. I don’t think this is really about you needing to share your feelings. I think this is about you wanting to point a finger, you wanting someone to pay for what they did. And you know what? That may never happen, at least not in a way that you can see.”

So, um, yeah. That sorta cut to the quick with me.

On Monday I started the LBY study. At the end of Monday’s lesson, I had to answer a question about how God might want me to respond to what I learned. My answer: “I think I need [to work on] humility…my pride has been fired up lately….” And then Wednesday, when I opened my workbook to the lesson for Day 3, the following verse was staring at me: “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me” (Galatians 2:20). It hit me right between the eyes.

As I moved through the rest of the lesson, which dealt with 10 essential qualities of being crucifed with Christ, I started talking back in the margins, writing like a madwoman. By the time I got to quality #4 – “intense times of aloneness with God are required” – I knew that being in this study was, as our former pastor would say, “by divine appointment.” Out beside point #4, I wrote, “Maybe God has ‘pulled me aside’ over the last [few] years because He wants me to lean on Him [in this situation], not [other people].”

YA THINK?

And then quality #8 – “You must forego your rights” – pretty much wipes out any excuses I make for being fearful or prideful. Here’s what Beth Moore said, and I’m going to quote it because I hope it’ll resonate with some of y’all the way it did with me: “You may have the right to be angry, the right to be bitter [but]….Don’t make the mistake of trying to simply ignore your rights when they are so difficult to lay down. Surrender them to Christ and ask Him to replace them with a supernatural work of the Spirit: with healing, with power, with wisdom!”

That spoke to me.

By the time I got to quality #9 – “You must accept that death [to self] is painful.” – I felt like God had a 2×4 and was ever-so-gently slamming it against my skull (in a most loving way, of course). Beth says, “…to choose the will of God over our own is excruciating….Never misunderstand pain as permission to forego the will of God.” And I was so completely humbled by that point that all I could write in the margin was “yes ma’am” – because she’s exactly right. Just because I can speak my mind doesn’t mean that I should. Confrontation with the purpose of satisfying selfish motives will never, ever be of God. That’s a tough one, but it’s true.

Dying to self is, for me, the biggest battle of all. I want things my way on my time in the manner of my choosing – and it is so arrogant, this presumption I sometimes have that somehow I know better than God. At the end of Wednesday’s lesson, when it was time for me to write down how I felt God wanted me to respond to what I’d learned, I was crystal clear: “[God wants me to respond] by laying down my need for confrontation and closure with _____. It’s not my battle. It’s not my call. And my motives are selfish.”

So I got a little clarity, you might say.

I Corinthians 2:9 offers great assurance about why I can happily, gratefully die to my own will and desires. It says, “No eye has seen, no ear has heard, no mind has conceived what God has prepared for those who love him.”

I have to trust Him. He knows better. It’s just that simple. Because it’s way beyond me.

Addie Heather* Carol
M Rach Jeana
Jenn Amanda MamaB
GiBee Boomama Maria
Blair Heather Nancy
Janna Flipflop Robin
Sherry Patricia Tara
Lauren HolyMama! Faith
Christy Eph2810 Karin
Leann Rachel Janice
This is a list of the women participating in the study and the links to their blogs. New postings on the study will be published for the next ten weeks, between Friday 8pm – Saturday 8am. Please feel free to visit each of us and comment. Everyone is welcome to participate in this discussion as we seek to live beyond ourselves. May God bless you richly from the hearing of His word.
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Comments

  1. Oh, wow. I’m really glad I’ve joined this study, especially after reading your commentary on this week. THANK YOU for being so open with what you’re feeling.

    I think God is working through a lot of pain I’ve lived through, too. I also struggle with a lot of fear. He’s changing something inside of me, I just couldn’t put it in words this week. I was even AFRAID to join this study because it’s been such a long time since I’ve done any serious Bible study.

    But your openess has really touched me. It’s something I could really identify with.

    I’m very THANKFUL this study is ten weeks long, and that there’s such a great mix of ladies involved. ;)

  2. Oh, yeah. AND you won my “recipe challenge”. Yeah! I’m guessing you’ll get a few more hits on your recipe blog.

    I’d like to mail the cook book out to you. Could you shoot your addy via my e-mail?

  3. Thanks for your transparency and honesty in your struggles. It i sso great to see the Holy Spirit working in our lives already. God is so good!

  4. I can really relate to this. I am very independent by nature, and it’s hard for me to let someone else take the reins even if that someone else is…God (she says sheepishly)

  5. Wow, what a powerful post on the first week of the study.
    You know how many times I have put things at the foot of the Cross and than ‘tip-toped away’ with them (I like your term :)).
    You know, I think that we have to die to self every single morning when we start our day – at least I see it that way. :)
    Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts on this week’s lesson – powerful indeed.

  6. I also agree with you that it’s tough to leave ourselves at the foot of the Cross. I have much to learn on this as well! :)

  7. BooMama, this post was absolutely wonderful and just vague enough to allow me to put myself in your place and see my own sin and shame. I do the same thing as you, “Someone has to make them pay, maybe I’ll extract a bit of payment from them.” Thank you for your openness.

  8. Wow… an honest husband … and a persistent God. God knows what we need to hear, and if we don’t hear it from Him, he sends us husbands to knock us on our back ends with honesty! I’ve got one like that to… Praise God for that!

  9. Great post! Lauren’s right, it was helpful for us that you didn’t reveal details. That way we could better place ourselves in the situation.

    I loved that you wrote “It’s not my battle. It’s not my call. And my motives are selfish.” Isn’t it somewhat freeing to admit? I know it has been for me.

  10. Thanks for all the great comments. And just a reminder to the rest of y’all…you don’t have to be in the LBY study to comment on this post or to visit everyone else’s blogs. I’ve gotten lots of great insight today just from reading what everybody else has had to say.

  11. “I felt like God had a 2×4 and was ever-so-gently slamming it against my skull (in a most loving way, of course).”

    That is so good!

    What a great post – so much to digest, i could read it over and over. I think I will….

    Thank you for your honesty.

    I also really appreciated this great truth :
    “Just because I can speak my mind doesn’t mean that I should. Confrontation with the purpose of satisfying selfish motives will never, ever be of God.”

    PS you are a riot – LOVE your quote on your masthead!!!

  12. My heart is incredibly warmed to see how God is so beautifully and intricately tying your lives together through Beth’s amazing study. All of your comments have been incredibly encouraging. BooMama and I go back a long way and it is so precious to see God all over her and you all. May God continue to bless you all — all Sisters in Christ!! I love you Boo!

  13. thank you for your openess. I am excited about this study as well.

  14. “Never misunderstand pain as permission to forego the will of God.”

    this hit me also. thank you for sharing with us some of what you’re dealing with lately.

  15. So exciting to see how God is bringing together and affirming His truth through our study!

    This entire concept about our rights is so clearly exposed as falsehood through His word. We nail our rights to the cross when we pick it up to follow Him. In return, He garantees us the right to be forgiven and to live with Him forever. All else is nothing compared to this!

    Great insights, BooMama!

  16. I’M A LITTLE LATE DUE TO THE LITTLE THROW UP THINGIE WE’VE HAD. I LOVE YOUR POST THOUGH. IT IS WONDERFUL. THANK YOU FOR SO MANY INSIGHTS. YOU ARE ONE CLEVER BOOMAMA!

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  1. […] Earlier that day I had been clicking around the Lifeway site, trying to find out if Beth Moore had any new Bible studies that were available for download (backstory: last spring I did an online version of her Living Beyond Yourself study with about 25 other bloggers, and through that study I met some phenomenal bloggy friends). I was having a hard time finding what I was looking for on the Lifeway website, so I thought I would click over to the Living Proof website and see if there was any info that I could get straight from the horse’s mouth. […]