I Bring Myself

Today Jesus met me in a way I haven’t had in a long time. Today I sat at His feet and wept and worshiped. Today I had needs met in me so deep and so long unmet I’d forgotten what it was like to have them satisfied. Today I felt known; more over, I felt people wanted to know me. Today I found a place that values all that I value; that holds dear what I hold dear; a place where conviction meets real life and both walk hand-in-hand. A place that is as close to Mosaic as I think a place can get without being it, and yet is different.

Now that its over, fear is threatening to take over my heart. Fear that the whole thing was just a marvelous dream, or at best a one-time thing that won’t be repeated; fear that what I found is just too rare to be mine. Is that not the most insane thing you ever heard? But there it is. The reality in my heart. I’m so afraid I will come back empty-handed next time.

Two months ago I wrote about my dilemma. I’d been struggling for months with not having community at the church I was serving. I had prayed, reached out, gone to events and small groups, even had one in my home, but I could not seem to really connect with anyone. It was as if I was a foreigner to them, and they to me. We were interesting to each other but ultimately we spoke different languages, and I felt Lost in Translation. They want comfort, stability, safety, sameness, perhaps even God-in-a-box. I don’t. Here’s what I wrote; Here’s what I want.

I want to be known more than I fear it. I want
community more than I fear intimacy. I want to be challenged more than
I want to be "fed". I want to follow Jesus no matter the cost more than
I fear where He might take me. And I want a community of people to
journey with in life here in Nashville that shares my passion for Jesus
and my longings for community and challenge. I want that more than I want to shuffle
alongside people who still think Church is a fortress from the "world",
rather than the shelter and refuge FOR the world’s most broken, twisted
and shattered that it is and was always meant to be. I want a community
who desires to pursue Jesus with full-out passion. I want it so bad it
hurts. I haven’t had it since I left LA.

Today I think I found that place. Not only that, but I joined that place; for the first time since leaving LA I became a member of a church.

I didn’t mean to. I didn’t intend to. I intended to go to this event ("class") and just find out about this community, investigate it. I was going to keep my options open this time, and guard my heart well, in case they weren’t what my friend who’d told me about them said they were.  What have I done?

But people at the event were so friendly, so open, so willing to be known, and to know others. Conversation was easy, and for the first time in over two years I felt I belonged, really belonged. Like I wasn’t a foreigner speaking a strange language, or a stranger trying to force my way in. It felt very good.

Anyone who knows me knows I love people, but that they also exhaust me. I’m such an introvert! Crowds, big or small, scare me and I have to take a deep breath before I plunge in. Yet I felt no fear with this group. I felt no… discomfort at all. And the time went by far too fast. I wasn’t at all ready for it to be over when it was.

God spoke to me as I stared at the community’s commitment/covenant at the end of our time. He spoke of putting down roots and how I’ve been avoiding it since the church-plant fell apart. I invested so much of myself, invested my whole heart and soul in that group. To have it disintegrate before my eyes broke not just my heart, but my spirit, I think.  It’s like losing a baby that never got to be birthed.

But here He was, Jesus, talking to me softly about putting down roots, reminding me that it is a rare thing, and this was the first place I’d found it in Nashville. He was soft, but insistent, yet never demanding. So, I took a deep breath, signed the covenant and nervously handed it to someone on staff.

What have I done?

This morning was my last morning on the sound team at the other church, and it was filled with sweet fellowship with the team leader and with my ministry partner/producer. It was as if they were dangling carrots to keep me there and involved. It nearly worked; part of me really wondered if I really ought to be leaving and whether a year was long enough a chance to give a community.

But then I walked into the other community– my new community now — and Jesus sat down beside me. Wrapping up the sound in the chapel after 1st service of my old church had caused me to miss the worship at my new home. When I came in the pastor was already into his sermon. I sat down on some steps nearby, the nearest "seat" I could find, and Jesus made His presence immediately known.

I have this "language" with Him that I cannot explain, it just is. Its a visual language; one where He shows me things–shows me Himself–in my mind, or what I call my "mind’s eye". I get flashes of images, Him sitting somewhere or standing or in some position, always near or next to me. Sometimes we dance, sometimes He holds me, sometimes He’s drenching me like a rainstorm, sometimes He’s at my feet. No, often He’s at my feet. At first I fought that idea; that’s not where He belongs, He belongs above me and I at His feet. But He’s been insistent that His position is at my feet. He came to serve me, came to love me. He adores me. And He kneels in front of me, and stares intently into my eyes, my face, because He wants me to know Him, not just as "Lord" or "Almighty God" but as Lover and Counselor and Servant-Leader and Friend.

I realize some will call me a heretic for this. I cannot help that. This is who God reveals Himself to be, to me. And I know, to the core of my being, that it is Truth. He has proved it over and over. Its a position I don’t fully understand, I just know that it is. And I live by it.  Since He calls me to follow Him — His position toward me says to me that my position is kneeling at the feet of others, serving them, looking intently into their faces, letting them know me as friend, counselor, servant.

So often I’ve longed to kneel at His feet. So often I have, only to have Him get down on the floor beside me, so He can look intently into my face, and I into His. I try to tell Him this defeats my purpose in being on my face, only to have Him retort that His purposes are higher than mine, and His purposes are the ones that will last. There’s no point fighting with God. He decides He’s going to do something a certain way, that’s what will happen, regardless of what I try — and believe me I have tried it all.

Today Jesus let me sit at His feet. I don’t know why. But today, as the Pastor brought us into a time of quietness before God and the worship team led us to the throne, Jesus let me place myself at His feet. And instead of getting down on the floor with me, eye-to-eye, He stood tall, His hands on my head, as if to say to anyone, everyone in the universe, "this one is Mine. This one I love. This one I am–" dare I say it?? –"I am proud to call My own."

I clung to His feet, knowing beyond doubt how blessed I am to be known by Him, how unworthy I am to be loved by Him, and how grateful I am to belong to Him. I did not want to get up from that place, did not want to leave that position. It became holy, sacred ground in that moment, though the rest of the world would see them only as stairs at a movie theater.

The pastor had asked earlier, what do we bring to God this Christmas season? We spend so much time and energy telling people what we want for Christmas, making our lists for our parents, friends, family — perhaps even for God — of what we want this Christmas. But what do we bring to Him? He is, after all, the one who came; the one who’s birth we celebrate. Sadly, for all my talk of mission and passion, I had not really thought about that question, until the pastor asked it. Sadder still, I didn’t have an answer.

So, today I brought myself. Today I brought all of me to His throne, to His feet, for whatever I am worth and whatever He can do with me, and I worshiped. And I wept. While He stood tall and proclaimed me His own, His beloved.

And when He later whispered that I had too long resisted putting down roots, I brought myself to Him again. Perhaps what I have done is to bring myself to the community He has brought to me. Is it real? Will it last? I don’t know. But perhaps its time to step into the fear, instead of running from it, and find out.

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3 thoughts on “I Bring Myself

  1. I had breakfast with Debbie and Nate yesterday. Naturally we talked about churches and Mosaic and I returned to a long-running question I’ve had about what would make a church effective. The question of what would make a church attractive to me is something else. Realizing that measuring effectiveness is hard, I still thought that churches tend to be irrelevant to the larger culture. What would it take to change this?
    I had a kind of idea-vision, of a church with no preacher. There would be teaching, somehow, because you need common ideas to hold the community and there are some who’ve been around longer than others. Somehow, though, you need to inculcate within the people the idea that they themselves can approach God directly and have Him affect their lives.
    We live in a culture that naturally assumes that God is just an idea. The idea has only the power a person invests in it. A God who is involved with people, who touches and changes them, is the belief of someone from the loony bin. Statments like this can’t be supported with logic and double-blind testing.
    So, it seems to me that for a church to be truly effective it would have to have members who individually know Jesus, just as you’ve described here. Only Jesus can give people a sturdy reason for living, but we’re so responsive to our world’s view of the absurdity of a living God that we continually downplay the signs of God’s participation in our lives. It’s also frightening.
    Your image of Jesus sitting at your feet, servant-style, is a shock and something of a challenge too. Yet, it is exactly what He came to do. He served us by allowing himself to be crucified. He serves me daily in guidance I rarely see but take for granted.
    I’m glad you’ve found a new outward home, Lu. I’m also glad you’ve written here about your inner home in a way so clear and warm.

  2. Thank you. That’s a huge compliment to me, coming from you. My inner home is beautiful. I’m glad I actually communicated it well enough for you to see.
    I can perhaps see a church without one preacher/teacher, but rather the body shares the teaching responsibility. They do exist in some places in Asia where there is no highly theologically trained leader. But a church without a pastor… that I cannot imagine. Even Mosaic has the rest of the Lead Team to be pastors, where Erwin is usually focused on unbelievers and speaking (we all know he’s not a true pastor, in that pastoral sense; just not his nature).
    That’s part of what I’m so hungry for now. A real pastor. Someone who knows me because of ME, not because I serve in a high profile position, like I did at Mosaic. Someone who knows my name, who knows me and will be there if I need counsel, encouragement or a good swift kick in the butt.
    Yeah, I can get that from a Life Group (they call them Community Groups here). And I want it from one as well. But I want more. I want the person teaching me each week to be someone I know wants to know me, cares enough about those of us who ARE followers of Jesus to be involved in our lives. I’m not saying that what Erwin does is bad. Only that I want something different now. I seem to NEED it; don’t know why. Perhaps I always did and just didn’t know it till now.
    I think I’ve found it at Rolling Hills. Not completely sure yet, only time will tell, but I think I have. Jeff, the pastor, only met me once, briefly after service three weeks ago. He walked into the new member event yesterday, saw me and immediately said, “Hey, Mary Lu! Good to see you again!”
    Hello!!! How’d he do that?? Its not like he met me that day, or that he’s only met a couple of other people between Nov 19th and yesterday.
    Yeah, I think I may have found a real live pastor.
    He’s just as good a speaker as Erwin as well. Perhaps not as dynamic, but just as compelling. God speaks to me through him, the way He did through Erwin. Haven’t found that since I left LA either.
    –Actually Jeff’s cadence and some of his content reminds me of Eric Bryant when he speaks. The first time I saw Jeff I’d walked up the ramp into the theater as he was welcoming guests (yes, I was late) and hearing his voice again brought Eric’s face to my mind. I got a bit of shock when I finally got a glimpse of Jeff. He doesn’t look anything like Eric. It was like taking a gulp of liquid expecting tea and getting coke. Not a bad thing, just a bit of a shock.
    At any rate, check out the podcasts on iTunes and let me know what you think. They’re a little behind, but you’ll get the idea.
    It’s so wild that you mention Nate and Deb. At the event I was at yesterday I met a guy who’s good friends with Nathan and did a lot of youth camps and youth ministries with him. He’s now the youth pastor at this church I joined (see link on the right). I emailed Nathan last night, apologizing that I hadn’t kept up with him, only to have him email me this morning and tell me we never really lost connection. You kept us connected by giving them updates on my life. Very cool. Thanks!

  3. Something else I’ve been thinking about… You’ve found a good thing in this church. Please ask God to help you keep from taking it away form yourself. There are countless ways for each of us to torpedo the good things that come along. I’m a master of it, unfortunately.
    So, let the church be itself and let yourself be yourself, and let God do the fitting. Follow the new path step by step, and please don’t attack yourself if it become difficult, or if it gets better. I suspect you may have a tiny little bit of trouble in this area, but this is a New Thing. The past doesn’t need to dictate today’s responses.
    Someday maybe I’ll learn to practice what I’m preaching here. It’s easy to see but hard to change. Step by step.