Monday, August 16, 2010

God's Fields

Imagine with me, if you will, a very large town....

A city, to be specific, located in California, USA, founded in 1872. As of 2010, the population was estimated 505,479, making it the fifth largest city in California, the largest inland city in California, and the 35th largest in the nation. It is smack dab in the middle of the San Joaquin Valley, which is in the central part of the state. This is where we retrieve our beloved nickname "The Central Valley."

There are many places to eat in this city. Any place you could think of, really. And (GET THIS) there are Starbucks stores everywhere - and that is saying a lot coming from someone who has grown up an hour away from Seattle, Washington.

One of the more important things to remember is that when the month of June rolls around....it gets hot. And boy do I mean hot. You know you are starting to get used to inhumane conditions when a forecast of 95 degrees brings a sigh of relief! Literally, this thought went through my head, "Oh good, it's going to be cooler today."

This is the place I am tentatively calling "home." Although that hardly seems to be the correct term for it. Nothing here is familiar, and I am getting accustomed to a never ending state of being out of my comfort zone. Imagine going to a Sunday morning service and only knowing 5% of the people who go there.

Do you have some sort of vision stuck in your head of what this might look like? Well, now I will give you a name for it. They call it "Fresno"....in Spanish, "Ash Tree."



Since coming here I have been discouraged. And before I write anything else, I will preface it by saying that this is all part of my adjusting. So please don't think I'm throwing a little pity party here. But needless to say this move has been surreal. Leaving Olympia was a long and arduous process, something I wouldn't want to relive. Maybe it would be comparable to having bamboo chutes shoved up your fingernails (I am currently debating on whether or not to redact that last statement....but no one is probably going to read this anyway....). Anyway, after three long months of having to say goodbye I wouldn't say that moving here brought any sort of reprieve from that pain. Not that I have been depressed or melancholy, but if any of you have left behind relationships that had been a part of your core for so long you might understand.

The discouragement came from wondering if anything I did while I was in Olympia made any difference, especially since I was leaving it all behind. There were a lot of relationships I invested so much of myself into - so what was supposed to happen now that I had no way of maintaining that? How do I start all over again in a community that has essentially grown up together? How do I perpetually meet people and expect to form those deep bonds I had in Washington?

Goodness, I feel like I'm just rambling now. It's been so long since I've written anything of value. After having multiple conversations on this subject, I began to realize how arrogant it has been of me to think that all of my efforts and my accomplishments would be going to waste - since it was God who had been calling me to do all of it in the first place! Does that make sense? All along it was only an effort in trying to be obedient to the Lord, not to earn some sort of high standing in the church. I will admit that at times I did certain things for self-glorifying reasons (which is a whole other blog in itself) but overall, I was just trying to love other people. If God had been the one calling me to pour into these relationships then why would me moving away affect God's call in any way? Why would he let any of that go to waste? Okay, okay. Still rambling. Here's a verse that I have been encouraged by, "I (Paul) planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the growth. He who plants and he who waters are one, and each will receive his wages according to his labor. For we are God's fellow workers. You are God's field, God's building." 1 Corinthians 3:6-9.

So in my mind I had my own field. I worked hard, and I produced my own fruit. And in my mind, God was rewarding my fruit. It didn't matter how hard or little I worked, as long as the fruit was there. Needless to say, I was wrong. God calls us to work hard, to labor for his kingdom. To break our backs for the Gospel. He rewards us for that labor, because we are laboring in obedience. If God rewarded us based on how many people got saved through our ministry, think of how miserable Jeremiah's existence would have been! No one listened to him! He became a laughingstock from declaring words that the Lord had given him.

If there is one thing I've learned over the past year, it's that God is in control, and there's not much I can do about it. For so long I was formless clay telling my potter how to form and mold me. Ridiculous. Though sometimes I get discouraged here, I get lonely, ultimately I have joy in my precious Savior. He rescued me. And I know that by being here I am being obedient to him. I may have this lofty idea in my head of the Woman of God I aspire to be one day - but I can't just get there. Every single day I have to give control to God. Every single morning I have to wipe my eyes and say, "Your will be done." And it will be - and if I continue to let God have a hold on my life day to day, then everything else falls into place. I don't have to worry about tomorrow!

Ah....I think I wrote this more for myself than anything else. God has been good to me.

3 comments:

Amy Brooks said...

Proverb 3:5-6
It's really all about patience and waiting on the Lord, rejoicing in all that He does and not trying to figure it all out. We can't see what He does. We can only trust!

Miriam Singleton said...

Idon't know you....yet, but I thought I'd check out your blog since you mentioned it on FB. My name is Miriam. I've met your parents and brothers. My son, Collin, has gotten to know Dawson a bit through PC junior High.

I must say, you're a passionate writer. Your question about whether life in Washington meant anything or not is understandable. I am sure you have left your "print" on the lives of many; people who are your "family" spiritually. You made a difference! For sure! No doubts! Like you said, God wastes nothing!

I can't say that I know how you feel because I've not moved to the degree you have, but I can say this: it will get easier as time passes. You're mourning in a sense over what you have lost. It's okay. Although, you haven't really lost it; you have gained a new church family to add to the one you left....for now.

People's Church is my family. I kinda sometimes feel like an outsider; you're right, many of these relationships have grown up with each other since they were kids.I've been here 12 years and still don't know EVERYONE! It's funny but when seasons in my life changed, so did my friends at church. As a stay-at-home mom, I could hang and meet with so many women. Going to work 8 years ago as a teacher kind of loosened those ties, but they're still there. Sort of. I choose to look at it as an adventure that Christ has for me....I don't want to look back or I'll miss what he has for me NOW! New people to meet and get close to, invest my life and service in, and connect with.

At times, it's hard to break in to existing relationships, but I find myself remembering that I'm not here (church) solely for "friends", but to serve. To grow and learn about Christ, and to reach others for him where I am .

HMMMM Good idea, this blog of yours, helps you vent! I must be doing that right now kind of. I guess your blog made me think about my time in my own church family. Funny, I'm reading in Jeremiah right now too.

I love your insight, Lauren, a lot like your dad's. Your family is so RICH in love and spiritual heritage. You all naturally draw people to you; no need to worry about a church our size because God will bring you the relationships he wants you to enrich. Don't feel overwhelmed by it seriously. If anything, I would say that your new job is to awaken our sleeping church body. With a church our size, we should be impacting Fresno more and it's surrounding communities. I'm not sure that's happening......yet:) Maybe you and your family are here to put that "fire" under us! Enough with playing church. We have to get OUT there in the mission field like our signs say. Not overseas per say , but OUT there in our lives. Our church is big with people who have known each other since childhood in most cases, but what about others who come every Sunday and are "invisible" in a church our size. The people who slip in and out without anyone saying a word to them. They're there....let's find them! I meet a few of them every Sunday:)

This blog thing is dangerous! LOL I'm rambling on. Ok. I'll claim the first to post a comment :) Keep blogging!

Daniel said...

"Having bamboo chutes shoved up your fingernails"? That's an interesting way to put it haha. Have you ever experienced this torture before?

Loved reading this. I especially loved the 1 Corinthians verse you used. Small world. Peine and I had a concept of something we wanted to do at Peoples Church and that was the inspiration for it. So awesome! I think you'll learn to love Fresno. Just gotta explore the amazing parts it has to offer.