Sunday, October 2, 2016

Renewals and Rebirths


Over the past five months, my family and I have had a great deal of change in our lives and routines.  I left for three months to attend training for a new day job, not knowing where in the country my new employer would assign me to work.  I received my assignment some weeks into my training, and we began the process of finding housing online.  After I completed my training, I returned to my family, we packed up our belongings, then drove across the country to our new state.  We lived in a hotel for over six weeks while purchasing a new home.  While in the hotel, we welcomed a new daughter into our family and I started my new job, which was significantly different than my old one.  We then closed on our house and moved in.

In short, in the past five months we went from a blue-collar family in a small apartment in a rural location to a white-collar family in a surprisingly huge house in a good-sized city.  New job, new child, new city, new state, new house, new socioeconomic status: change has occurred rapidly this summer.

This summer has taught me about the inevitability of change, and about how to interact with that change.  Many people say that change is constant, and in a way they are correct.  What they may infer may not be, but the underlying statement is true.

This is because of the nature of God's love for us.  Renewal, rebirth, resurrection; these are eternal truths.  God gives us the opportunity to remake ourselves, not just one time, two times, or seven times seventy times, but constantly.  We are invited to have fountains of living water spring up within us from God, that we might be healed and renewed.  Each trial we face, each blessing we receive, each twist and turn in our lives is an opportunity to receive of God's grace and follow His will.

But do we take these chances of rebirth and renewal seriously?  Do we see these opportunities in the correct light, or are we so put off by the change that we can't see the greater pattern behind it?

My family and I have understood the changes we have lived over the past summer as a rebirth, a way for the Lord to change us to become more as He would have us be.  Without the gospel's light, some might see only a meandering path in life's changes, not understanding that the twists and turns are actually switchbacks, and that there is a wondrous goal on the peak ahead.  

May we always look to God and accept the renewal in each change that He sends us.


1 comment:

  1. Thank you for your inspired insight. Rarely does life turn out the way you plan it nor the way you want it to; sometimes you just have to figure out why.

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