Friday, May 12, 2006

Truly blessed!


This was in my online daily devotional (Blue words). And it came to me right after an email from just such a friend yesterday. I am so reminded of how blessed I am to have some pretty amazing friends and a God who put us together.

In one of our exchanges he wrote, “In any event, if you ever get discouraged or need a sounding board, please don't hesitate to contact me. My brow may be thick, but my shoulders are broad, and candidly, not too much surprises me anymore.”

I love that. You don't hear this kind of thing from just anybody. In fact if you hear it at all, you are a fortunate person. His statement contains two elements necessary before a relationship can grow: a willingness to bear another's burden and a commitment to total acceptance.
Though they are sufficiently broad, the shoulders he's offering are not physical; they are emotional. We are all called to “bear one another's burdens and thereby fulfill the law of Christ,” and later “for each one will bear his own load.” (Galatians 6:2, 5) That is to say: There are burdens and then there are burdens. There are certain weights of responsibility we are all expected to carry, but there will always be heavy loads too big for one set of shoulders. This is when we need someone to help shoulder our burden.
Keeping in mind that shouldering a burden doesn't mean solving it; it means simply to help carry it. Men usually have more trouble with this than women, because we naturally want to fix things. But this, of course, is impossible. It's a burden precisely because we can't fix it. No one can except God, and he for some reason unknown to us has chosen not to.
Then there's the second part: If I'm going to bear up under someone else's burden, I've got to be willing to take whatever they've got. Sometimes the very nature of a burden is that it is something we don't want anyone to know - a dark secret that does not want to be told. This is exactly why we bear too much alone; we have too much to hide and too much at stake.
My new friend's invitation cut through all of this self-protection. “Not too much surprises me anymore,” he said. In essence, he was leaving an open door on telling him anything. If our relationships are shallow, it is because they are defined by what is comfortable. We live by unwritten laws not to rock the boat while we drift by each other, waving casually from our respective sinking ships.
The reality of a relationship is measured by the level of truth about yourself you are willing to impart to another person. And if you have someone who does not require you to measure everything before you say it, you have a real friend
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Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Home

Home! I really am glad to be back. AZ was beautiful however the dust and sand were just to much. I missed having grass to walk on and the kids staynig clean. I must say that God's mountians were specatular. Everything out there seemed to have teeth. The plants, the bugs, everything. It was so amazing to hear and see different kinds of God's handiwork. And I do have to thank God for keeping us all safe on the plane ride there and back. I had to cling to Him a lot on the flight out the turbulance was awful but He was strong when I was weak and He helped me make it a fun trip for the kids instead of seeing me freak out. God is awesome not only in the beauty He surounds us with daily but in His loving care for us daily as well.