Sunday, November 14, 2010

Vine vs. Branch: Day 27

"When we forget and start thinking that we are the vine instead of the branch, we get stressed out, because that was a role we were never created to play." -Shook

How often have I been stressed out and never really knew how to get out of it. I know that this year I have been dealing with a lot of anxiety. I have created a lot of this because of finances and stresses around finances. Mainly because I am not relying on the Vine but trying to be the Vine. This is not to say that I don't have a part in it, but I live under a lot of condemnation that I just can't get us out of debt.

But pruning me back so I can produce fruit is exactly what is happening. Having to live frugally and poor is forcing us to evaluated what we really need to not only survive, but to live abundantly. Abundance in American Society is linked to quantity and not quality. This book is following close on the hills of a more recent read by Shelly and I called "Radical:Taking back your faith from the American Dream". And the pruning is never ending.

I am fully aware that we are headed to a Kingdom Lifestyle where abundance is defined in quality. Quality time, quality possessions, quality family, and quality bills. Yes, bills. How many things am I paying for right now that if I could go back I would say, "Why? Why did I even spend the money in the first place?"

So here is my Lifework for Day 27 in our countdown:

1. What keeps you from connecting to the Vine as your primary source of spiritual life?
ME!!! And I don't mean Maine (abbreviated ME). "I am the Vine and the Branches" seems to be my issue first and foremost. I am totally stressed about me finances because (a) I try got us in a lot of this financial debt because I try to be the supplier of all my needs and live under a lot of condemnation that I just can't do it. (b) I am still trying to get us OUT of what I feel I got us INTO; still trying to be the Vine. God is pruning the crap out of me. I am realizing that I can do without (you fill in the blank) and I can only pay what I have. The rest is up to the Vine to produce for our abundance.


2. How is your present preparing you for a more fruitful season?
Now is the hard part. I am often worried about being fruitful. Meaning, I want to be there now. But I believe that learning to live satisfied is going to play a great part in where we are in five years (random number there). Meaning, I believe we will be out of debts and in the middle of what God has for us to be doing. That said, I am hoping that this season of really evaluating what we need verses what we want, what we have verses what we need to get rid of, who I am verses who I wish I was. This last one is a weird twist. I mean, i often see myself serving God and then get under condemnation for where I am at, which turns to anxiety, anger and frustration. I need to just get over it and live where I am at, knowing that one day this to shall pass.

3. How are you doing in the areas of communication and confession?
Honestly, I communicate with God a lot. I pray often. But I need to improve in the listening area. My conversations tend to be one sided. Stinks, but true. I need to listen more and read the Word more faithfully so I can hear what God has to say. This is hte hard part for me.

So, there you have it. I am NOT the Vine, I am a branch. I must learn to "abide" in him for my future and my present.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

I'm busy? Day 28

Well, I really wanted to write the title of this entry as "I'm busy...Bull Sh@t. I'm not trying to be vulgar; it's just really what I feel. I kind of got a little depressed this morning thinking about all the things that I need to pay off, settle up, put in order and so on and so on. But Day 28 in the count down as I die to myself dealt with time management.

Anyone who knows me is well aware that organization skills and my picture are at opposite ends of the dictionary. And part of that organization deficit (a politically correct way to say it and make me not feel so poorly) is my inappropriate use of time.

So here is the results of my Lifework from the book One Month to Live:

1. I am suppose to keep a journal for a week to see how I used my time "wisely". I wish you could see the sarcastic smirk I have in my mind right now. But I will have to write the results of this after a week. So, BRB on this one.

2. Ok, so the second question was "What is the biggest time waster in your past week?". I laughed as I read this. Bare with my sarcasm. Although it wasn't the BIGGEST time waster this week I have to mention my new found obsession with Bejeweled Blitz on Facebook. And in my defense I can't say it was an honest waste of time. I mean, after all, I have achieved Badge 8 Gem Polisher and presently have 61,000+ coins in my Bejeweled bank. That is the only bank I have any coins accumulated in.

But in all seriousness, I waste a lot of time on anything that electrical. Perhaps I can just project all the guilt on Ben Franklin and Thomas Edison. If they had wasted more time on senseless entertainment then perhaps electricity and the light bulb would have remained a secret. But I know that it isn't healthy. I just waste time. Bottom line. Computers, TV, musical devices, etc. And what does it profit me? Depression, anxiety, tiredness, lack of productivity, a never-ending to-do list. As I reflect back to before I got married to Shelly and had kids, I remember not having a TV or cable. I saved money and time. I was productive. I went to bed earlier. I slept and was rested. I was thinner. I was closer to God. It doesn't mean that marriage was bad for my health. (Although that does sound funny.) It just means I let go of something precious rather than carrying that into my marriage and instilling a legacy of simplicity in my kids lives.

3. The third question asked if I felt like I was under a frozen tundra or in the spring of life. Well, well, well. Honestly I am frozen but I think a better analogy works for me. I am more like a frozen pork roast. (No fat jokes now.) I feel like God took me out of the freezer I have put myself in and has thrown me in the microwave. As most of you may know, microwaves thaw meat from the inside out. While I feel my outside circumstances have me trapped, I feel God breaking the ice from the inside out. It may take a while. Maybe even resetting the minutes a few times. But eventually I am going to be free again.

My goal this week is to evaluate my time and see if I can spend less time on the wasted time and more time on productivity. I want to redefine relaxation in my life. I want that to mean time with God, time with family, long walks, less couch time. I'll keep you updated.

Monday, November 8, 2010

Day 2 or Day 29?

As I am doing this book I am wandering if this is a count up to or a count down to. I would prefer to use a count down method. Because in 29 more days I am hoping that I take off into a new found adventure that changes the rest of my life.

So here is my Lifework for today:

If I knew that my life was ending in the next 29 days my biggest regret would be not doing something radical for God's Kingdom and leaving that legacy of extreme faith with my kids like my parents did. This would be due greatly to me KNOWING what God has called me to do and never really fulfilling it.

I am suffering from the Someday Syndrome in so many different areas that I can't describe them all. But the biggest for me personally is that someday I will finally do something for God in ministry.

If I was over the Someday Syndrome and my life was fully engaged I would look like.... let me think about this one.

Sunday, November 7, 2010

Thirty Days to Live and Counting



Today Shelly and I have started reading a book together called One Monty To Live by Kerry and Chris Shook. I don't really have only 30 days to live (I hope), but the challenge of the book is to examine how I live my daily life and what are things I would do.

Here is my first Lifework assignment:
Name five things I'd change about my life immediately.
1. I'd take a walk every day just to pray and enjoy the sounds of nature and enjoy the silence of life.
2. I'd spend a week's vacation with my family and all my closest friends (a list I could make easily and short).
3. I'd visit New England one more time and go to Fenway to see the Red Sox play the Yankees.
4. I would spend an hour a day with each one of my immediate family members just laughing, crying, praying and sharing. I'd invest all the values of my relationship with Jesus into my kids (probably through a journal.
5. I'd move to Costa Rica or New England to die.
Today, I choose to do number one and number four.

The reason I picked this book up is that Shelly and I are going through a "vision cramp". We had real vision about church planting in New Hampshire. We closed the church reluctantly and miss every moment of it. But finances and circumstances really dictated the necessity to change. God released us at the time but now we are without any vision. Secondly, as much as we love the beach neither of us is enjoying living here. Mainly because we have NO burden to reach this area. We are just pulling time. We want to do something radical but, honestly, I don't have the guts to do it most days. I don't want to disappoint my parents for one thing. But if I must be honest, I would hate to die right now, where I'm at, doing nothing for the Kingdom and without a vision or purpose.

Since I am doing this with my wife I am hoping that she notices the change more than anyone. We both want to live out our faith radically and we want to do it soon.

I am going to keep this blog going daily. Feel free to read along and comment on my experience.