Tag Archives: pride

Recovering Rinnah

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There came the day when I understood that my sacrifices were nothing compared to that of Jesus.  My sacrifices had become my sin.  And in the space between grace and deeper grace, my journey with Jesus entered into my own jubilee season as I rediscovered rinnah.

Rinnah is my given middle name, a beauteous Hebrew word describing, in simple terms, a song — or shout — of joy.  It is a noisy, consuming, radiant word used to give full expression to emotion, especially in the Psalms.  The journey I am now sharing is not a painful one to me — not now — but it is a vulnerable one.  The more years I spend with Jesus, the more I realize that vulnerability is the tool of a powerful person.  At least, that is the example Jesus gives.  There is no amount of glamorizing that can make sin less destructive or less like the sting of death.  This is a story of recovering what I had sacrificed in error.  This is my journey of redemption, and I pray that it may encourage you in yours.

I must begin in this way: if you are not the happiest person you know, you have misunderstood the nature of God and of your design.  That is blunt.  You may wrestle internally with that statement.  You may wish to rant at me about that statement.  I am simply sharing what the Word of God says.

Rejoice in the Lord always.  Again I will say, rejoice!….
Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, 
whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report,
if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy — meditate on these things.

~ Philippians 4:4, 8, NKJV

Rejoice, and do not stop.  Ever.  If it is good, fixate on that.  Always.

‘”Happy are you, O Israel!
Who is like you, a people saved by the Lord,
The shield of your help
And the sword of your majesty!
Your enemies shall submit to you,
And you shall tread down their high places.”‘
~ Deuteronomy 33:26-9, NKJV

Happy in salvation?  So happy we are unrivaled in our joy?  Yes, He really is THAT good.

Blessed are the people who know the joyful sound!
They walk, O Lord, in the light of Your countenance.
In Your name they rejoice all day long,
And in Your righteousness they are exalted.
~ Psalm 89:15-16, NKJV

Those are the barest snippets of the endless Goodness in which we can rejoice.  “I came so they can have real and eternal life, more and better life than they ever dreamed of” (John 10:10, MSG) — that is the Gospel message, the Good News of Jesus Christ.  He did not come merely to comfort us in our sorrow and make our suffering bearable.  His yoke is easy and his burden is light (Matt. 11:30), and we are free in Him to “rejoice always.”  Scripture is relentless on this topic.  Try the book of Job if you feel uncertain.

Now I shall tell you why Rinnah became a recovered name for me.  For four and a half years I sacrificed myself, piece by piece, thinking I was loving well and honoring the commitments I had made, the marriage covenant made in such precious hope.  The first things I sacrificed felt small and justified — surely those joys were selfish if they caused discomfort to another.  The sacrifices required more with each demand: my time, my energy, my focus.  Then came the demand for my joy, which I sacrificed on the altar of another’s convenience, to make that person’s misery a more comfortable situation.

Misery is best coddled by the addition of sympathy.
It is most deeply affronted by the ministering work of joy. 

I released hopes and dreams, while still claiming Jesus as my true Hope — I needed nothing else, surely.  The demands became more pressing yet were wrapped in all the “right” words to move my heart.  Thus I chose to continue giving, to cover with my “love” the weak and ugly places of pain, the destructive choices that were made — love covers a multitude of sins, does it not?  And I can do hard things — I can get through anything, through any season.  If I can simply hold out long enough….

This is my sin: my pride of willing my sacrifices to be meaningful enough to change a life.  It does not matter that it did not start that way.  It does not matter that I did not intend it.  It was my sin.  Jesus, forgive me — and He already has, because HIS Sacrifice is perfect like that.  Unlike mine.  You see, Jesus is a truly powerful person, not only all-powerful in a sense of might and dominion but also perfectly powerful in the capacity for relationship.  He was, in fact, so powerful, that He agreed to the Father’s plan to willingly die without demanding a response to His death.  “For God so loved the world, that He gave…that whosever believes in Him would not perish but have eternal life” (John 3:16) — so loved, but did not force.  I continuously gave of myself in the hope that, one day, my sacrifices would mean something.  What those meant for the person to whom I had covenanted my life, I cannot say.  What I can say is that, for me, they meant I became a shadow of my design.  I sacrificed my rinnah for silent weeping, desperate pleading, and anxious anticipation for the better “someday” that I could so clearly envision.

The pressured demands developed into abuse.  Into aggression I could never have anticipated.  No matter my sacrifices, choices continued to be made that broke our covenant — and mostly in private.  No one knew.  To be entirely honest, even as a lover of Jesus for more than two decades and a licensed mental health professional, I did not know.  I continued to cover: because surely one day all the goodness of God would become real again to the person I married.  Depression, suicide, anxiety, paranoia, and rage were constants I battled — but I battled them for a spouse, because love stands firm.  The isolation pressed until I was, even together with others — even together with this person to whom I was helpmeet — utterly alone.  Only Jesus remained — and He is enough, always.

I am not saying I invited the abuse.  I am not responsible for my spouse’s mental health crises or violence or unfaithful addiction.  Yet in that lies my wrong: no one can be responsible for the choices of another.  My prideful sin sacrificed who and how God made me.  I sacrificed my rinnah so another could worship their misery without hinderance.  I am tempted to shame upon sharing that, but shame is not part of who I am, so I refuse it — and refuse it again if necessary.  You see, when I say I sacrificed my joy, I mean that I gave up my extravagant worship, my exuberance, my spontaneous singing and relentless optimism.  I gave those up because they made my spouse uncomfortable, and while I can give it those words now, I could initially only have told you that I was empathizing and meeting the needs of one beloved to me.  But as I pried away guns and withered before horrific words, the sacrifice of my joy became desperate, because there is only one thing that can exist in the absence of light: darkness.  I became miserable with one who was miserable, when I was designed to be holy as One is Holy.

Do not fear the Light.

I begged for Jesus to reveal the fatal flaws that I was being assigned — because then I could fix them.  Jesus and I could work on what I knew about!  And I continued in this way until I was beginning to become only exhausted, sick, hurting, and riddled with anxiety about when and where the next pain would appear.  I was physically and mentally deteriorating to the point that I barely knew myself — because I had come to the end of myself.  Aside from Jesus, there was no more I could sacrifice except the final scraps of my wellbeing.  And that is where Jesus found me again, because He is my constant who never left my side.

Jesus saw.  He saw it all.  He knows.  Each memory He tenderly takes me into and says, “That was not how it was meant to be.”  Then I smile tenderly for the girl who didn’t know, and I say, “Okay, Jesus.  I forgive that.  You can have that too.”  My hands release all the pain in order to receive joy again.  What need have I to remain in darkness when the Light is warm and full of healing?  I had lived a life that was never without joy, never unaware of grace — and after experiencing the stark absence I now rise in fierce joy, unwilling to relinquish wholeness under any circumstances.  Because I know what it is to be without, now I can guard all the more furiously the gift of grace, of life, of rinnah.  It feels like I have appeared to life fully for the first time, and it is radiant.

It is important to note that I am safe now.  I had to make hard choices and listen closely for the Holy Spirit’s guidance for each literal and figurative step, for each word and each action.  Divorce was never God’s idea, but healing and wholeness is ALWAYS His best idea.  So I press on, past the lies of shame and should-have-beens into the kindness of His mercy.  Keep your rock and your hard place if you choose.  I choose to press into the place between grace and deeper grace. 

The only advisement I can offer is to take up joy as your garment — not fleeting happiness of circumstances but the joy of the Lord that is your strength, as Nehemiah offered to his grieving and aggrieved kinsmen (Neh. 8:10).  Wrap yourself in praise, walk each step in gratitude, and be at peace, for only in Jesus can you access life as it was meant to be.

Welcome to rinnah, dear heart.

It is radiant here.

On His Shoulders — Nothing to Prove

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The past year has been one of recognizing my own weakness.  And there is nothing like recognizing your own weakness to cause you to reevaluate your perspective on life.  I don’t like to be weak; I like to be strong.  I want to take care of everything and everyone else around me, making life run smoothly.  So I toil beneath the crushing burden of my own expectations of perfection, determined to be strong.

What boxes are you carrying?

What boxes are you carrying?

Yesterday, as I balanced an unwieldly jumble of boxes while attempting to open a door, a friend ran up to help me.  “I’ve got you, Sabra,” he said.  Assuming he was coming to hold the door, I readjusted the boxes in my arms, thanking him earnestly.  But when he reached to take the boxes from me, I was surprised.  He smiled and said again, “No, I’ve got you, Sabra.”  Such a brief encounter, such a simple kindness, yet I was undone.  Here I was, waiting for someone to hold the door when someone was willing and able to take my boxes.  As I considered this, I wondered how often I misunderstand Jesus like that, hoping He’ll hold the door when He really wants to carry my burden.  He’s standing here telling me, “I’ve got you, Sabra,” but I’m so busy being strong that my greatest expectation is for Him to hold the door for me.

I always liked the moment in Pilgrim’s Progress when Pilgrim laid his heavy burden at the foot of the Cross and journeyed onward, lightened and free.  Yet like all analogies, it has its shortfalls.  The Cross is not a moment we come to then move beyond; it is a grace we live out a daily basis.  Salvation is not a point in time; it is an eternal, ever-present reality.  It is indeed that first Jesus-encounter before the Cross that gives us full access to grace and relentless forgiveness.  However, learning to walk in that freedom takes both time and practice as the Holy Spirit works in our lives, renewing our minds and transforming our habits.  We must learn to live beneath a new yoke – not the self-inflicted burden of rules and failures and expectations, but the light load that Jesus offers.     

Come to me, all of you who are tired from carrying heavy loads, and I will give you rest.  Take my yoke and put it on you, and learn from me, because I am gentle and humble in spirit; and you will find rest.  For the yoke I will give you is easy, and the load I will put on you is light.
– Matthew 11:28-30 GNT

But why is the burden or “load” that Jesus gives us so light?  Why is His yoke so easy?  It is because He takes our burdens upon His shoulders.  That is what the Cross is: “Surely He has borne our griefs and carried our sorrows….He was bruised for our iniquities; the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and by His stripes we are healed” (Isaiah 53:4, 5).  In light of the fact that pride causes problems but humility finds grace from God, we are urged, “Therefore, humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you in due time, casting all your cares upon Him, for he cares for you” (1 Peter 5:5-7).  God has not called us to lonely toil beneath heavy burdens of expectations and rules; rather, He has called us to sit quietly at His feet, finding our value in the restful place of His presence.  (Check out the Luke 10 account of Mary and Martha.)  He can faithfully promise rest because His shoulders carry the burden.

Jesus is our strong, steady companion who shoulders the load for us little oxen.

Jesus: our strong, steady companion who shoulders the load for us little oxen.

I had a cold this week, and on Thursday morning my mom essentially forbade me from going to class and chapel.  She told me that I needed to rest in order to regain my health.  “Sometimes it is just reality that you take a sick day,” she said.  Just reality.  I didn’t want that to be reality – I wanted to be strong.  It was difficult for me – I had to delegate my responsibilities and let other things go.  Last fall, considering my other commitments, I took on an obscene number of class credit hours.  When people mention that they barely saw me in the previous fall semester, I say that I barely saw myself.  My continued 4.0 GPA and high praises from work may not have made it seem as though I was struggling, but the reality of that situation is that I can scarcely recall anything from that semester.  Apparently my stress level was so high that my brain decided to blur my memories – and that makes me sad, because I missed out on the pleasures in my quest to be strong.  That same semester, I did not want to break down when my dog was put to sleep.  I felt embarrassment as I cried through a whole biology class.  (Of course, I would never have thought to skip the class that began minutes after I received the news about my pet.)  And even as I sought comfort from my closest friends, I wished my grief weren’t so messy.  I often find myself caught between the reality of my need and the depths of my pride. 

So you see, I write this not as one who “has it all together” (an unrealistic notion as ever was) but as one who is still learning to relinquish her boxes and let her Savior shoulder her weakness.  I am learning that my strength is not enough.  Though I knew it, it is another thing entirely to understand it.  Alone, I attempt to navigate an endless sea of expectations that I have for myself.  Yet like a shipwrecked sailor my strength soon wanes and I begin to sink.  I become so preoccupied with proving my strength, with doing everything perfectly, that I forget His yoke is easy and His load is light for me.      

I am not strong enough.  And that it is a healthy knowledge, because I have nothing to prove.  I want to be strong in His strength, and righteous in His righteousness alone.  I want to be a refuge and a resting place for others because I am at rest in His arms, safe in the shadow of His wings.  He has taken all my burdens upon His shoulders and simply waits for me to step into place and walk alongside Him. In His place of rest there is nothing to prove.  Our gentle Savior only longs for us to enjoy the spacious place of His gracious presence as He teaches us to operate in the freedom of His light load.

I’d like to share with you a song that I listened to as I wrote this.  Take a few minutes to listen to it; and as you do so, consider not only who Jesus is but also who you do not need to be because of who He is.  May we learn to find our place of rest at the side of Him who carries our every burden upon His mighty and unfailing shoulders.  We have nothing to prove, nothing to lose, and everything to gain.

“Shoulders” by For King & Country