No Longer an Orphan (But Tempted to Live Like It)

No Longer an Orphan (But Tempted to Live Like It)
by Christine Hoover | September 4, 2012
(Got it from http://www.desiringgod.org)

Until my late twenties, I spent the majority of my Christian life striving — striving for perfection, for God’s favor, for the approval of others, and for the joy and freedom that the Bible spoke of yet completely eluded me.

In her forthcoming book, Nothing Is Impossible with God, Rose Marie Miller describes my life as she depicts her own:

The gospel was not my working theology: Mine was moralism and legalism — a religion of duty and self control through human willpower. The goal was self-justification, not the justification by faith in Christ that the gospel offers. But, as many people can tell you, moralism and legalism can “pass” for Christianity, at least outwardly, in the good times. It is only when crises come that you find there is no foundation on which to stand. And crises are what God used to reveal my heart’s true need for him. (4)

Like Miller, I am a pastor’s wife, a church planting wife, and a missionary. Like Miller, I for so long lived a life of legalism, and, like her, ministry was the “crisis” that shone a light on my self-sufficiency and self-justification. I discovered quickly that I could not meet ministry’s demands, and I certainly could not love, according to bootstrap religion.

The beacon of light, simultaneously convicting and life-giving, was Galatians 5:4: “You are severed from Christ, you who would be justified by the law.” That is exactly how I felt — like an outsider standing apart from Christ, trying desperately to earn my belonging. I rejected any of Christ’s advances toward me out of shame over my failures and out of my stubborn self-determination.

Living Like Orphans

Rose Marie Miller’s husband, Jack, characterized her self-justification as orphanhood: “you act as if you are an orphan. You act as if there is no Father who loves you” (11).

Orphans have to take care of themselves.
Orphans must be strong.
Orphans must protect themselves from being taken advantage of.
Orphans cannot depend on anyone.
Orphans cannot be weak.
Orphans crave to be taken in and loved but doubt they ever will.
Orphans want to be accepted, to belong.
Orphans only trust themselves.
Orphans cannot get too close.
Orphans are on the outside looking in.
For many years, I was acting as if I were an orphan, trying to do the Christian life but failing miserably. I thought that my failures were my accusation, not realizing that this understanding — that I could not actually live the Christian life myself — was the first step toward liberation. Galatians 3:3 taught me that the Christian life can only be lived by the Spirit: “Are you so foolish? Having begun by the Spirit, are you now being perfected by the flesh?”

No Longer Orphans

The Father advanced toward me, showing me that, in Christ, I am no longer an orphan but his child: “God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law, to redeem those who were under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons” (Galatians 4:4–5).

If we are daughters (and we are, if we are in Christ), we enjoy the love and protection of a perfect Father. He is not an impatient, stingy parent forever irritated at our weaknesses and failures. He invites us into the family, gives us His name, dresses us with righteousness fitting of His family, and erases the ways of our orphanhood, especially our self-reliance and self-justification.

But that’s just it, we too often return to our orphanhood . . .

. . . living as if it were still up to us, living as if the Spirit never came and could never teach us or guide us in all the affairs of life. We go through the day believing that it is up to us to figure out how to solve our problems and get on with life. The result is that we live with an uneasy guilt and fear because we have not measured up to our standards or won the approval of others. (56)

I see orphanhood pervading my heart and the hearts of other women in an age when Facebook comparison and self-sufficiency reign. There is an undeniable urge toward perfection in our culture and even in our churches. Women stand apart from one another, wondering if they are the only ones, struggling to keep up the façade of flawlessness.

Worse, women stand apart from God, afraid to go before the throne with their failures or unwilling to acknowledge their need before Him, when, in reality, we are daughters with full access to our Father.

Perfect For Us

As Miller says, we don’t have to be perfect because Another is perfect for us. When perfect is taken care of — when we’re declared righteousness by the blood of Christ — we are finally free to love, to accept our weaknesses because God is strong in them, and to believe that God is for us.

“Living to please God — repenting of the true guilt that comes when we put anything besides God at the center of our lives, trusting in the blood of Christ to cleanse the conscience of dead works, and relying on the power and presence of the Holy Spirit for the tasks of the day — is truly the liberated way to live” (32).

OUR FATHER

Our Father
by Vanessa Ines on Monday, August 6, 2012 at 12:43pm

Last two Saturdays I attended the smallgroup of couples (ammm…just to clarify i’m still single,but I really want to attend and grasp wisdom from these awesome people.) So tito Ben (oh he’s an awesome man of God, you should meet this man!) shared about Matthew 6, the OUR FATHER (in verse 5), however I’m not gonna share yet what he discussed because the series is not yet done. (I’ll share it in another blog post)

After he shared, stretched out some verses, experiences, testimonies etc. he asked us an interesting questions:
First: “What’s your number one prayer request?”
Second: “What’s your “carnal” prayer request?” (Carnal means not spiritual; merely human; temporal; Worldly)

But I want to focus on the second question.

I listened and observed their answers but I want to highlight the answers of the Dads, so here it is:
Dad 1: I want to give the House and lot for my wife since that’s her desire…and for her daughter to marry a godly man…
Dad 2: PROVISION. This dad said that he really wants to fulfill or provide the needs of the family; he also mentioned that he wants to give that House and beautiful garden for her wife.
Dad 3: PROVISION also. He mentioned that: “yes we have savings…etc. but I want to provide more and more”.

WOW! (I’m amazed by their answers! They don’t even asked anything for themselves!)

After I heard all of their answers, GOD spoke to me, saying:
“That’s me, Van”
“I am more than these dads, look at My heart”
“I am your FATHER.”

I was really shocked (yah shocked!) and felt the Holy Spirit convicted me…revealing the character of God through these dads.

(note: This is not to put down my dad, he’s forgiven and praying for him every day.)
Just to give you a short background, I grew up without a father; he left us when I was I think 3 years old, he went to Canada, living with his own family.
So I never experience or the right words should be, I don’t understand the role and/or characteristics of a father. I grew up always asking, crying, praying, begging that I need support and money for my tuition fee, enrolment, food, fare, school supplies etc., and at that time, it’s so hard to contact him for me to address my needs. Then there’s a lot of questions, computations (computing expenses), sermons, hurtful words that I need to conquer before he provides.

Sadly, these experiences are normal to me, well I thought it’s normal because I’m used to it.

God is reminding me that:
You don’t need to cry and beg
You will not and never struggle in contacting me,
Because I’m ready to listen and eager to answer you
I know your needs
I know your desires
I have a wonderful plan
And I want to fulfill it
I want to bless you more and more
I am pleased with you
I am here
I am always with you
I delight in you
I will protect you
I will fight for you
Because I am your Father
You are my child And I love you.

If you go back and read again their answers,think about it, ponder, and absorbed the details of God’s message. I (absolutely) know that He is our God, our Provider, the King of kings, the Creator of world, dadada..etc… I always hear and believe all that, and I do have a personal relationship with Him, but SOMETIMES it’s already cliché, it’s only the surface of His characteristics that I see. Then I realized, God wants to reveal more of Him esp as a Father, He wants me to taste, grasp and see the specifics of His awesomeness, of who He is, the weight of His love, what is in His heart, that He values me;
He wants to take off the shallowness of our hearts and dig deeper to have a strong relationship with Him.
God is gazillion times far better than these dads.
Isn’t it amazing who God is?!
Isn’t He the coolest Father in the whole planet!?

As I mentioned above, my experiences (with my dad) are normal to me. But I’m deeply thankful to God for letting me pass through these circumstances because I value and appreciate how insanely great and deep is His love for me. Sometimes God will boldly reveal Himself in difficult and painful moments of our lives because it’s when the time we run after Him and only to Him.

I want to encourage you, some of you gone through the same thing as mine, or maybe you’ve been treated badly, received a lot of hurtful words, you’ve been ignored, abandoned, or you’ve been abused, or in some case, you have a dad but he’s not doing his job as a father, or he is sick and can’t do his responsibilities or he died and you missed him.

I want to tell you now that God is your Father. You know what… 🙂
He is waiting for you to receive Him,
He longs to bless you more and more
He wants to provide your needs
He wants to heal the wounds of your heart
He wants to carry your burdens
He desires to wrap you in His arms, protecting and guiding you along the best pathway
He wants to clothe you with an everlasting love and hope
He wants to put a smile in your face, be joyful, and live this life to the fullest
He longs to hear your voice, saying: “Dear Father”
Now he’s saying this to you…
“I am your Father and I love you and that’s forever.”

Father of the fatherless and protector of widows is God in his holy habitation. Psalm 68:5 ESV

Note: I also pray that someday you’ll forgive your earthly father as we are forgiven by God through our Lord Jesus Christ, just continue honoring your father and mother and God will surely bless you!
I know it’s hard but put your trust and obey OUR FATHER who is in control.

The Lord said to me, “You have seen correctly, for I am watching to see that my word is fulfilled.” Jeremiah 1:12

Amen.

All glory to God.