Ch-ch-ch-changes

This sculp­ture is enti­tled “The Speed of Grace” and is in the new addi­tion of the sculp­ture gar­den in City Park in New Orleans (Pho­to by K)

Do you even want to change? Yeah, I know about all the self-help books sold every year…but I think telling our­selves we would like to change is spir­i­tu­al com­fort food. And tak­ing itty-bit­ty steps down that path is dessert. Then you are done.

Do you want to change? We all feel like we should, in one way or anoth­er, but is it okay not to change? To be sat­is­fied just as you are? That sounds good, but it doesn’t work for me. That would be set­tling. I’ve nev­er met any­one that I thought was flat-out per­fect when I met her. (Yes, it was most­ly hers—and some of them came close.) How would any­one be sat­is­fied exact­ly as he/she is?

Can we change our­selves? “That’s just the way I am.” That phrase has dri­ven me crazy more than any oth­er in the Amer­i­can con­scious­ness. That is some­one who has sat down in the mid­dle of the race. True change will nev­er be against your will, at least any mean­ing­ful change. You have to be open.

To be more specific—this is inter­nal change we are dis­cussing. I’m not talk­ing job or lifestyle or appear­ance (all impor­tant top­ics, by the way). This is char­ac­ter. Chang­ing what you don’t like about your­self. And if you are more con­cerned about a pim­ple than you are about your envy of your cool friend, you have head­ed off course.

To move for­ward, I am going to assume that you, like me, see a need for change. This is a huge assump­tion because my obser­va­tion is that most of us don’t real­ly want to change. I call that blindness…been blind most of my adult life. But I also see that deep down (soul­ish­ly), we want to get bet­ter, we want to do bet­ter, we want to be bet­ter. And that’s where we get bull­dozed by the weight loss/­self-image/ap­proval seek­ing/­cap­tain-of-my-ship mon­ster that is con­trol­ling our men­tal air­waves. (Get down to 175. Work out five hours a week. Read my Bible every morn­ing.) You can do it.

Then we doom our­selves by try­ing to mea­sure the goal of the pro­posed change. We do this with pounds, bank accounts, social media hits, golf hand­i­caps, resumes, buck­et lists and so on. Every goal is self-direct­ed. And we are lost.

So here’s my ques­tion, and the point of this whole meditation…can we change our­selves? Sad­ly (or not), I don’t think we can. I find that my will is as weak as my faith (but my faith has a bet­ter reserve). I can­not will myself to a bet­ter char­ac­ter. I can’t find it in me. I have to receive it. It’s called the fruit of the Spirit.

I don’t think I ever fin­ished it, but I loved the title of Oswald Cham­bers’ 365 day devo­tion­al: My Utmost for His High­est. Whoa. That is some call to a rela­tion­ship, isn’t it? No one can believe utmost has already been reached. It is a goal, an aspi­ra­tion, a deter­mi­na­tion to move for­ward. His High­est? Unimag­in­ably bliss­ful. Who would not want to move clos­er to that?

I’ve nev­er been very good at the prac­ti­cal steps. I love the verse about “…being renewed by the trans­form­ing of our minds…” Com­mit your­self to being changed, not chang­ing. Breathe (really—pay atten­tion to that). Also, pay atten­tion. Here and now is all that mat­ters at each par­tic­u­lar instant—it all just adds up. Seek out others—they have more pow­er to change you than you do. Lis­ten. God loves good lis­ten­ers. And desire to be changed. Clay. Pot­ter. Believe.

Leave a Reply

* Copy This Password *

* Type Or Paste Password Here *