When I'm nervous and meet new people, I tend to read them my resume.
Not literally, I don’t carry it around with me, but I usually find a way to rattle off interesting tidbits about myself.
I did this recently at the Orange Conference. When I went to the blogger lounge I felt kind of insecure and didn't know what to do. Everyone had their laptop and business cards all over the tables and I had neither. I immediately thought, "Oh yeah, bloggers are supposed to carry laptops not Moleskine notebooks. I'm so dumb." After a few minutes of standing there like someone that's eating alone and has forgotten to bring the "don't feel pity for me I'm reading a book" book, I walked to the Land of a Thousand Hills coffee stand.
I asked if my friend was working at the stand that day and the guys behind the counter said no and then kind of said in a kind way, "And you are?"
I immediately started blabbering about how I had a blog and I once told thousands of people about their coffee and it's read in all these countries and I'm a special person and look at all my accomplishments, me, me, me, resume, resume, resume. Even as the words were coming out of my mouth I wanted to grab them back, but I couldn't.
And I find myself doing this more lately as I struggle with the impatience of wanting to be an author and a speaker. The Stuff Christians Like book will come out in March 2010 and I'm speaking at a bunch of conferences this fall so I completely get the foolishness of this thought but it's still there. It's a completely dumb thought to have but usually in life it's not the wise thoughts we have that do the most damage. It's the dumb ones.
When I pray, when me and God wrestle, there's a part of me that keeps saying, "How come I only get to spend such a fraction of my day on Stuff Christians Like? How come I feel like I'm bursting with ideas and I'm only getting to write about them an hour a day? How come I'm not a super fantastical mister important Christian writer person right this second God?"
In the midst of those questions, in the midst of being wildly impatient and selfish and arrogant and a million other words that mean "whack," I feel like God reminded me of a simple question,
"Why do you keep refusing the gift of the desert road?"
That's kind of a weird question, but it comes out of some verses I've written about before. In Exodus 13: 17-18, as the Israelites are leaving Egypt, the Bible says:
When Pharaoh let the people go, God did not lead them on the road through the Philistine country, though that was shorter. For God said, "If they face war, they might change their minds and return to Egypt." So God led the people around by the desert road toward the Red Sea. The Israelites went up out of Egypt armed for battle.
I love the simplicity of that. God knew that if the Israelites took the short way, if they took what probably seemed like the logical route, they'd face a war they weren't ready for and would probably willingly return to slavery. So out of love, out a deep, big love for His people, he took them on the desert road.
As an Israelite, having spent decades doing hardcore physical labor and leading the kind of manual labor lifestyle that puts the P90X exercise program to shame, you'd have to be thinking, "What? I'm armed for battle! The desert road? Seriously? Look at this sword, I've got skillz! Let's take the short way and give the Philistines two tickets to the gun show. Hey, I just compared my biceps to a weapon that is still centuries away from being invented, that's odd."
OK, maybe they wouldn't have thought that last sentence, but I promise that they probably felt a little confused at why they were on the desert road and maybe at some point in your own life, you've felt that way too. Maybe you've felt ready for something and for some reason instead found yourself taking the long way around.
I don't know what your "thing" is.
Maybe you want to fall in love and get married.
Maybe you're at a job that doesn't use your God-given talents and you feel desperate to get out.
Maybe you want to start a ministry.
Maybe you don't know what your thing is, but you know it's not what you're doing right now.
Maybe you want to have kids.
Maybe you want to head out to the mission field overseas.
Your thing, your dream or goal or vision could be a million different things, and when it doesn't happen, when it takes longer than we want, it's so easy to get frustrated. To get disappointed, to think that the time delay is because maybe you're not doing something right. Maybe God is mad at you. Maybe if you were a better Christian things would be happening faster and you wouldn't be on a desert road.
But what if that's not right?
What if God loves you too much to send you to war? What if He loves you too much to throw you into situations you're not ready for?
What if that desert road is a gift?
I still struggle with the desert road concept. I'm not "done" with that idea. But my hope for you and my hope for me is that the next time I find myself on one I'll pause long enough to ask God this simple question:
"I'm on a desert road, what war are you protecting me from right now because you love me so much?”
Great post! Very mature of you to realize this. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteNever quite considered the desert road a gift....until now. Thank you, kind and gracious Father God, for revealing it to JA so he could share this with us.
ReplyDeleteHey, Jon. I just found your blog about a week and a half ago. Let me tell you that it's been a great encouragement, challenge, and at times entertainment to me. I really appreciate your approach and style. My second language is sarcasm/wit, and I think you speak it very well.
ReplyDeleteToday, your blog was a challenge. I needed this. Thanks.
...crying....
ReplyDeleteYeah, me too.
ReplyDeleteI've already written 11 books (LOOK AT MY RESUME!!!)and have spoken at women's retreats and conferences before, but now I'm wandering in a book contract-less, idea-less, no speaking invitations desert wondering what's up.
Thanks for the reminder that it might not be such a bad thing after all.
Honesty. What a concept.
ReplyDeleteI think I'll keep a copy of this on my desktop - right beside the "why do bad things happen to good people" post. The questions God drops on you are so insightful. Thanks.
It seems, often, that the desert times are not considered valuable in the church - only the times when God is speaking and miracles are happening and people are coming to know Christ.
ReplyDeleteI know I hate wandering in the desert. Its lonely, it hurts and it wears me out.
I suppose it is foolish of me to ever think that my journey with God is about me 'feeling better' or things being easy. That's not the way of Christ, which is a narrow path which few will choose.
Thanks for being honest, Jon, Lord be with you and guard your soul as he leads you towards new vocations.
wow, this spookily landed very near my situation....I am recovering from 6 years of difficult, mostly unsuccessful inner city ministry. Lost lots of my own money, been abused, lost my wife, still in the 'hood, but done with ministry for now, have no idea what God is doing in my life. I have to remind myself daily that this desert road is part of Gods' plan, and he is everything he says he is....thanks for the encouragement Jon & other commentors
ReplyDeleteHere's the funny thing I'm realizing about the desert road: it may not be a desert at all if my attitude didn't suck. For example, I have struggled with being a stay at home mom. Though I wouldn't change that choice I have often told myself, "I can't wait till they are both in school so I can go do something marvelous." What a distorted reality. There are many women who would love to be right where I am, yet I take it for granted. Now that my youngest is off to Kindergarten I'm realizing what I considered "the desert road" was more of a water park I pouted my way through. It's all about perspective.
ReplyDeleteWe lose too much time wondering about "when?" instead of finding Him in the "now".
Another thought: For 5 years I lived in Phoenix, AZ, in the actual desert. Quite frankly, it was one of the most beautiful places ever. Apply this how you see fit.
At times, I have called the desert road the Joseph Complex but obviously the desert road lasts longer. Joseph experienced what Tim Keller calls the Hiddenness of God. His experience in a cistern, in prison for a crime he did not commit. Tough to see the desert road as a gift until we get to the other side of that desert.
ReplyDeleteWow. I never thought of it that way, but that's where I am. And somehow, just knowing where I am, feels so much better than feeling like someone pushed the pause button. I'm not just hanging in mid-air waiting. I'm traveling the desert road with my God. Too bad it can't be a dessert road...
ReplyDeleteWow. I just watched the preview of the new Rob Bell NOOMA video and your post absolutely echoed his message in that film: stuff happens for a reason, even when you don't want it to/expect it/plan for it. God knows what is going on, though.
ReplyDeleteYou could never know how much I appreciate this post and the timing of this post.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
You don't know how much I needed this today, Jon. I've been praying a dream for 16 years...and just waiting, wondering..scared as to what God wants..thanks man.
ReplyDeleteThat was rather profound. Thank you for helping me to see something new in my life!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the encouraging post, this came at a perfect time for me! I was just thinking about how "underutilized" in my mind I am at my job, and how I have all these desires and talents and am wondering why God put them in me if I'm not able to use them. But I am trying to wait on his timing- he knows best and he has a plan. thanks again!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful thoughts here. I've nothing more to add.
ReplyDeleteThanks, I needed this.
ReplyDeleteYou've nailed down yet another truth.
ReplyDeleteMoving forward is the way across.
What I find interesting is when things are going way faster than we could have ever dreamed of, when plans discussed a year ago as a 5 year goal are going to be reality in 6 months, we still feel like God isn't moving fast enough.
ReplyDeleteI say we but I am referring to myself and my own impatience at some amazing things that God has been doing but which are still months off.
Thanks for encouraging me to enjoy the road with God regardless of how fast it is.
Two words: wow....conviction....
ReplyDeleteJon,
ReplyDeleteThanks for another amazingly relevant post. About two weeks ago, thinking I just had the flu, I found out I'm in total kidney failure. God has been good during this time, but it's still hard to see the forest for the trees sometimes. Thanks for helping me to see it with His eyes.
My desert road is littered with all my plans, some dying off, some just coming to life, and I am beginning to see that it's exactly what I needed.
ReplyDeleteI graduated college two years ago, "equipped for war," and thought that I was going to slip comfortably into the life I had always planned for. And after about a year, I realized, among other things, that even though I got what I thought I wanted, I had a degree and a job in something that didn't interest me and was now back at square one. I realized that the rest of my life was now a blank and I had no idea what to do.
When on a desert road, you can do one of two things: focus on the short-term oasises (oasisi? What is the plural of "oasis?") that crop up on the side of the road and seem to be solutions to your problems, or you can focus on the step in front of you, even when all it looks like is a blank patch of sand. (Guess which one I did. Hint: It wasn't the sand.) I think in my tiny, tiny perspective, He couldn't share His plans in the sand with me because I was stubbornly shaking my head, insisting I was told (mostly by myself) that God was a God of instant gratification, who gave me what I wanted because I loved Him.
Well, I discovered that's not entirely, or at all, true.
I needed this past year of discontentment and frustration and God always, always knew that. He knew that I needed to work in a job that doesn't interest me for awhile to point out what I really love. He knew that I needed to be alone when several years ago, I figured I'd be married by the ripe age of 25. He knew that I needed to stay in my hometown when I had been going crazy to leave.
He also knew I'd come to like what I do and see it as a time to grow and learn, not a time for self-pity and apathy. He knew that I would grow to love being single and be blessed by it more than I could have ever anticipated. He knew that I'd come to love the city I was in, and only look to leave when it was time, not when I was trying to run away.
My desert road has only been one in retrospect, and now that I see where I am on it, it doesn't look so desolate anymore. In fact, it's quite beautiful.
Love love love this post.
ReplyDeletesometimes on the desert road, you're supposed to stop and play in the dirt.....
ReplyDeletesometimes you're supposed to build a sand castle to encourage someone else behind you...
sometimes you're supposed to thank God for the sameness of every day....
you don't know, unless you listen....
When I tell folks my story of publication, I try to emphasize the ten years I wrote in obscurity. Then I eventually share the story of landing the agent, signing the deals, publishing the books. They ask me about the latter (the glory...) and not the former (the desert).
ReplyDeleteBut I can honestly say I wouldn't be the writer I am today had it not been for those unnoticed, unseen moments. Of being disciplined in the quiet times. Of writing unpublished words.
Jon, I read your blog every day, but don’t normally comment. (To be honest, I can’t always think up something funny to say, so I figure I’m better off just laughing at my desk while my co-workers wonder what’s wrong with me.) Anyway. Thank you for this post. You could not have been any more spot on to what I’ve been struggling with, and I appreciate the perspective.
ReplyDeleteOh, the desert road. I've been on it for about ten years. In my (rare) patient moments, I can see it for what it is and truly appreciate the slow, patient unfurling of my life. Most other times, I'm thinking I missed the turn-off about seven years back. Or I start shouting at God, "Have You brought me out here because there weren't enough tombs in Egypt?" Not that I've ever been to Egypt...
ReplyDeletethanks, Jon. I've been working on trusting in God's will but was just thinking yesterday that I'm not where I thought I'd be. but, His ideas are way better than mine.
ReplyDeletethank you.
ReplyDelete...I'm trying very hard not to cry at work right now--but thank you for this great post.
ReplyDeleteThat is a timely word...thank you.
ReplyDeleteI will enjoy the desert road now that I understand it from God's perspective.
Thanks, again!
Thanks Jon. Great post. Definitely good food for thought for me.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderfully encouraging post for all of us waiting and wondering...
ReplyDeleteMoleskine? Dumb?
ReplyDeleteI think not!
I'm doing a memory verse challenge & that verse just got added to my stack! Someone's going to be puzzled when I recite that to them in the midst of a bunch of Psalms and New Testament stuff about love and patience, but I'm going to love explaining it!
ReplyDeleteI totally needed to read that. Thanks.
I was just thinking on this very concept this morning. My worship team was rehearsing Desert Song by Hillsong for next Sunday and it talks about praising God in every season because, well, he's GOD! I started thinking about Elijah and his time in the desert and Jesus fasting in the desert and all those other times where God puts people in a desert and saw that it's always a time a preparation, a time for that person/people to grow closer to God before he uses them in extraordinary ways.
ReplyDeleteI'm a firm believer that we shouldn't look at the desert times in our lives with frustration, but with expectation and that although we may feel ready to take on the world, God is in fact smarter than we are and knows we need some desert time before being used to accomplish our purpose.
Thank you, Jon. That really hits home right now!
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine once said that when he's going through a tough time or pain (or I think the desert road could be substituted too) he often just wants to pray over and over again for God to take it away or fix it, but that he's learning to pray asking God what he wants him to learn through this. I thought that was brilliant and so mature and a much better question to ask God.
ReplyDeleteOh, and can I just say... I love 'serious Wednesdays'.
i just wanted to say that i heart Moleskines.
ReplyDeleteThe.end.
"my book comes out March 2010 and I'm speaking at a bunch of conferences this fall"...you kinda did it again. jus' sayin' :-)
ReplyDelete@Donna - Thanks for the image of the sandbox and sandcastle. Made me smile.
ReplyDeleteJon - as always, another fabulous and timely post. If you ever doubt whether or not God is using you, just read the comments. Thanks for being willing to share the insights He gives you.
it was wonderful to read this today. i'm in the midst of that too, waiting for something(s) i think i'm ready for. it's hard to trust that God is protecting me not punishing me, but this was a great reminder. thanks, jon.
ReplyDeleteToo true. "Godliness with contentment is great gain" - contentment in any situation.
ReplyDeleteI've been there Jon. So much of it is perspective. God called me to ministry when I was 12. While in college I worked as a Children's Pastor part time and I only knew I wanted to do it more. I got married my senior year. Once I graduated, my wife still had another year and a half. That was an additional year and a half to be stuck in my college town substitute teaching, working at Old Navy and dreaming of doing what I wanted to do full time. That was nearly ten years ago and seems like a just a blip on the radar. Honestly, I look back and think, was it really a year and a half?
ReplyDeleteAll I know is that in the midst of waiting, it seems like eternity. Once on the other side, it doesn't seem as long as it really was. Oh, and it's worth the wait.
BTW, I was one of those bloggers with my laptop at the bloggers lounge. Don't be hard on yourself, we all felt we were in the presence of a rock star... you didn't need a laptop. Hang in there!
easily your best post in the past 87. :)
ReplyDeleteThis post was very timely for me as well. Thanks for writing it.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely something I needed to read this morning... thanks!
ReplyDeleteGod is cool. It's so easy to forget and to think that he isn't enough and to let my trust get sidelined and to let myself be overwhelmed but the whole time he's there on the side waiting for me and saying "hey, I've got this. Let it go. Take it a step at a time and enjoy the ride. I mapped this out for you and when you're done, you'll find I've used it to make you more like me. And maybe I routed you through the desert, but our relationship will be the richer for it. And maybe the famine will be hard, but you need to trust me anyways because I'm God and what I want for you is better than you can even imagine." And the desert is so full of beauty. And the night is so precious. And maybe finding the beauty in the desert is worth the thirst involved in traveling through it. And it's a stretch to say that I enjoy hard times/crappy feelings, but I know that my redeemer lives and if he wants me to wander through the desert, I'll find the beauty and know that it's worth it because I will trust him.
ReplyDeleteOur church has been going through Exodus and one of the pastors just recently preached on that very passage. I am, without a doubt, in the dessert right now, wishing I could go back to Egypt where numbness ruled (feelings are way overrated). Mine is not one of waiting for a dream, but of walking through (not even sure what that means) past sexual abuse and the painful effects it has had on my life. I feel like God took me the long way around, but you are right, maybe I wasn't ready years ago when I sought help. My time must be now, but it is hard. I look forward to the day as healing continues where I can look back at the years of wandering and this time of "fire" and see God's glory in my life.
ReplyDeleteJust in case anyone is interested in the sermon, here is a link
http://www.cov-pres.org/teaching/notes_and_audio.php?s=38
Thank you. Wow, I'm so there. I needed to hear this today.
ReplyDeleteI relate very much to the idea of the desert road. Admittedly i'm skeptical lately about God's will for it, but these are good concepts to think on further. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks for writing this! It really speaks to me today, and I'm going to send it to my husband.
ReplyDeletestop reading my diary, jon!
ReplyDelete(great post)
I've been struggling with those first four Maybes. Never actually stopped to think that it might be God protecting me from something. Thanks for writing this.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this post.
ReplyDeleteWow. I think you are exceeding blessed to be able to carve out an hour of your day to write. What you think of as your desert is the lamp I'm using to find my way out my own desert. My blog has been trapped in my paper journal for over a year.
ReplyDeleteI'm suddenly feelin' a little thirsty and think I will be walking out of the desert today. =)
For months I've been feeling unsatisfied with my life even though its at a great place right now. I'm married to a wonderful man, we just bought a house, my sister is finally saved, my youth group is growing like I never thought possible. I don't know why these blessings haven't seemed like enough, but I just don't feel like I'm where I'm supposed to be. I want more peaceful moments and less stress, more time and less busyness, more homemaking skills, more friends and time for friends... and I can't see a time in which I'll be able to have that. I feel like I think I'm on a desert road, staring down at the sand under my feet and if I were to look up I'd realize the desert isn't as bad as I think. I may not have exactly what I want, but I have plenty of other blessings.
ReplyDeleteJon, thank you so much for making me reflect on this.
I've been struggling with that gift lately too! This fresh perspective is just what i needed--thank you so much. I tend to want a time table for certain things rather than just rely on the fact that God has perfect timing. Proverbs 20:24 & Genesis 6:22 are taped to my monitor to remind me of this.
ReplyDeleteSo thank you for being so honest & posting this. I NEEDED to read that today Jon. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
wow, what a perfectly timed post for me today! I really needed to hear this and be reminded of God's perfect plan. Thank you.
ReplyDeletemuch needed and much appreciated...
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jon. That is some much needed encouragement and helps me to realize how much I think about what I want versus what God wants for me.
ReplyDeleteI know I won't be staring at these cubicle walls forever but I wish I knew where I was going next!
Thanks for this. needed to read this today.
ReplyDeleteVery well said! Great wisdom for all of us...
ReplyDeleteWow. What an eloquent yet simple way to portray the real emotion behind being on the desert road. I hate that our first impulse is to get off, find the highway, and be done with the growing part. Thanks for your words.
ReplyDeleteI love serious Wednesdays.
ReplyDeleteJon, I really needed to hear this, because I am so on the desert road. Thank you and may God bless you. I can't wait for your book to come out.
ReplyDeleteYou have this amazing gift of saying what I need to hear right when I need to hear it.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
Word! My short desert road story, not to be confused with a dessert road...what would be too appealing and tasty.
ReplyDeleteOK, i went to school and got a degree in youth ministry, volunteered throughout college and was ready to step into the YM world and change lives...only thing was, is that i didn't get a YM job right out of college and ended up walking that desert road at a tractor salvage for almost two years before i finally landed a YM job...which has turned into blessing after blessing after blessing...what we need to ask ourselves is not, "Why does it take so long to step into what God wants us to do?" but rather, "What if God wants me in this exact place in this exact moment?"
-my $.02
WV: Manter - also known as small talk between two or more men...topics usually include: the weather, the roads, any regional professional sports teams, politics, and of recent popularity the economy.
1) moleskine = COOL. true writers use these line of writing products, like hemingway and blah blah blah [per informational insert that comes with every moleskine product].
ReplyDelete2) how do i know God's putting me on the desert road because of reasons you've explained OR if it's because i just can't/won't learn something so He has to take me "'round the mountain" once again?
I tend to forget that the desert road is often the preparatory road so that when I do reach my goal/dream, I am in the right place spiritually and mentally to serve G-d there.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Jon.
dude thanks. i needed to hear that today. no really. i thought i was the only one who though "being a better christian would make things happen faster". glad to know i'm not alone.
ReplyDeleteAwesome.
ReplyDeleteI've been reading your blog for a while, and recently I was at a writer's conference and Chip MacGregor mentioned you...I'd say your making some waves in the industry.
Keep at it!
Sue
I'm wondering if God had you write this just for me. Okay, probably not. But this post spoke directly to my heart and was everything I needed to hear. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine in the blogger world emailed me this post. You have NO idea how much I needed to read it! Long story short: I was supposed to be leaving in 2 weeks for my FIRST mission trip ever, I've been so excited, and for me, it fell through. I've been beating myself up about getting the call wrong, feel pretty stupid, etc etc, however in my heart, I know God is right.
ReplyDeleteSo this blog just made my whole day! Thanks!
With so many people on the desert road why is it that we feel alone in our struggles? At a minimum we should enjoy some company while we are out trapsing about in the sand!
ReplyDeletewv
blesenti - the newest fragrance by estee lauder for christian men and women.
Slogan- So you can smell blessed even if your not.
I needed to read this today; thank you so much...
ReplyDeleteExactly the encouragment I needed. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI was going to leave a long-winded comment about how this specifically spoke to me and was the first post in the year or so I've been reading this blog to bring me to tears with deep realization of the truth. Instead, I will simply say: Thank you, Jon. I have a renewed hope in what God is doing in my life even if I still do not understand it.
ReplyDeleteThis was what I needed to read today.
ReplyDeleteAwesome post. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThanks. It's good to know I'm not the only one who feels like I'm wandering the desert, wondering where the heck this path will lead, and, like Meaghan, why I have all of these desires and skills and no way to utilize them right now. Thanks for some perspective.
ReplyDeleteAmazing. I can't tell you how much your posts (especially serious Wednesdays) encourage me. Thanks so much.
ReplyDeleteAwesome stuff.
ReplyDeleteIt's easy to seek out the stuff that says, "Life is too short for stuff to be in a bad job, relationship, etc."
It takes another level of faith altogether to live in the gift of the desert road.
If you're getting this stuff out there with only an hour a day, then maybe God isn't letting you speed up because our heads would explode!
ReplyDeleteThis post is yet another example of why I love Wednesdays. Keep up the great work!
ReplyDeleteAnd the crazy thing is, no matter how many desert roads you've been down, got to the end, looked back over your shoulder, saw the enemy that you were able to avoid, noticed the growth in your life and celebrated it and God's love for you... the next time, you'll not see it as the gift it is at the start, either. Been there, done that, t-shirt in production. Thanks, and a big side hug for reminding me where I am and where God's love is right now.
ReplyDeleteYou rock, SCL dude!
I believe (and hope) I am coming out of a desert road after a long, painful, dusty journey. There is nothing like a desert to help you recognize an oasis when you see it, and to help you be grateful for water.
ReplyDeleteOne of the saddest parts of the desert: The number of Christians who don't want to have anything to do with you when you're in the desert. The people who won't say hi at church. The phone calls, party invitations, coffees and lunches that don't happen. The snide comments.
Maybe that's another thing you get out of the desert road: A little compassion for those also lost in the desert....
Thanks, Jon....
WV: sandicty: sanctity without a spellchecker
I love Serious Wednesdays! They always seem to hit me either where I am or a review of a lesson I have only recently learned... thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteLeeAnn
i dont' know if being on the desert road is always God's protection. perhaps He's protecting us, preparing us, or maybe it's just not the time according to His much bigger picture. All that being said, being in the desert/waiting is definitely one of the hardest lessons we have to learn to go through and to experience! Help us Lord!
ReplyDeleteI think this is my favorite post. I'm in bed with the laptop and I just woke Husband up to read it to him.
ReplyDeleteas always, your serious wednesdays are exactly what I needed to read, thanks!
ReplyDeleteThank you, thank you, thank you. Know that God is using you as an instrument of his powerful grace and unstoppable glory.
ReplyDeleteI love that verse, Jon! I didn't catch the part about the war they would have had to go through when I read it (thanks for that!), but I caught that God led them around the long way. They didn't get lost in the desert, not even during that 40 year "wandering". God was right there, leading His people, just as He does with us. Thanks for the reminder.
ReplyDeleteThanks Jon, that hit home.
ReplyDeleteOh I am so stealing that idea for my next book!
ReplyDeleteIn Christian love of course. :-)
<-SB><
the one line that came to me after reading this was ..." girl ..you need to grow up...like seriously" ...
ReplyDeleteThank you ...
Thanks for this message Jon. I missed it yesterday, but really needed to hear it this morning. I had a rough night and had to really reflect on some decisions I have made. Thank You.
ReplyDeleteAnd a further thought...
ReplyDeleteWould it actually be all right with you if the desert road you are traveling on did not lead to the "Promised Land" in this lifetime?
Would that still be all right?
Great book recommendation: Kevin DeYoung's "Just Do Something:" about how our lives are not our own, God doesn't always [or even much of the time] reveal His will in our lives, his plans for our future, the reasons He does what He does, etc. etc. and that has to be all right with us, because we are fallen beings. He is almighty God..
this was timely indeed ... isn't it fun to be the one the lord kicks in the butt and uses to kick others in the butt? haha but seriously. thanks for sharing this ... i can't wait to read the book and its awesome to get to hear a bit of the backstory about how the lord is putting it together.
ReplyDeleteMy sunburn, the sand in my shorts, and I, all say: Thank You.
ReplyDeleteI so much needed to hear this...
ReplyDeleteThank you :)
So good!
ReplyDeleteSo true!
So timely!
Thanks, brother.
wv: roctom
def: very powerful blog post
"John's had some good posts in the past, but this one roctom."
I wish I had more words. Thank you
ReplyDeleteWhat an excellent, thought-provoking post! Thank you for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThanks for letting God use you as a spiritual 2x4 (covered in velvet) to gently knock some sense in me.
ReplyDeleteThat was beautiful, really. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteGod used your moment of not being or feeling like Super Fantastical Mister Important Christian Writer Person to give you a Super Fantastical Only-God-Could-Inspire-It insightful statement. :)
I was talking to my youth pastor about contentment before I go overseas on the mission field. We ended our conversation and yet I was still not feeling peace. I logged into my facebook and a friend had posted this link on my wall. It was EXACTLY what I needed. Thank you SO much!
ReplyDelete-Brittany
OK, yeah. Um, you so just described me. Good to be reminded. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteThank you for taking the time to craft that thought into a post that would speak to all of our hearts. Depending on how you look at it, I'm both 'living the dream' and on the desert road, and your taking the time to deal with it in a way that does the subject justice and is not a quick answer for a complex experience is greatly appreciated.
ReplyDeleteWow! That really spoke to me. Psalm 84:6-7 "Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee: in whose heart are the ways of them who, passing through the valley of Baca, make it a well; the rain also filleth the pools. They go from strength to stength, every one of them in Zion appeareth before God."
ReplyDeleteI'm gonna be on the desert road for a while, might as well install a coke machine to make it more comfortable for everyone who's coming by with me. we'll make it to Zion just in time.
Although I moved from the literal desert a few months ago, I feel like I'm still stuck in the desert...nothing is happening fast enough (at least for me). Thank you for this post and for reminding me that the desert is a gift.
ReplyDeleteKim
I SO needed to read this post. Thank you so much for so humorously smacking me in the face. :)
ReplyDeleteAmy
I just discovered your blog and I love it. Congrats on your upcoming book, by the way!
ReplyDeleteI'm totally with you. I actually had this very thought tonight, before I even logged on to my computer: One of these days when my kids are grown, I'm going to wonder why I tried so hard to cram my writing into their childhood."
And then I read your post.
Hmmmmm...
I love when God speaks.
Blessings,
Sandy
Alicia Chole's "anonymous: jesus' hidden years and yours" speaks about our desert/anonymous seasons. It changed my life in a profound way as it pertains to my thinking about my life and dreams yet to be realized.
ReplyDeleteI've found a measure of contentment in my desert.
peace~elaine
wow wow WOW.
ReplyDeletei have been struggling with this all week, especially today.
I could not have picked a better moment to sit down and read this blog.
My favorite lesson in the Bible is how God allowed Moses to have 40 years in the desert before calling him to lead His people.
ReplyDeleteThrough that very desert.
It may be years before we know why God has us on the desert road. But when it is revealed, it will make perfect sense.
My husband & I were just talking about this topic last night. Thanks for giving me something else to ponder while making sense of our situation. Very timely for me as well.
ReplyDeleteI love that last question. It reminded me of this quote from John Ortberg's book Love Beyond Reason: "In the desert all we have to cling to is the promise."
ReplyDeleteThe desert times are worth it every time I realize with new clarity that "all" I have are the promises made by the never-lying, never-forgetting, never-leaving-or-forsaking Creator and Sustainer of the whole universe.
dude, you're brilliant.
ReplyDeleteGreat blog, Jon. I think the allure of Christian stardom is more tempting than many of us care to admit. Thanks for being transparent.
ReplyDeleteI know this is comment 123, but just had to say thanks for ministering to all of us on the desert road. God is using you right now, even in the desert.
ReplyDeleteso good!!!
ReplyDeletethank you...
Moleskine notebooks rock.
ReplyDeleteI feet a connection to the children of Israel in the wilderness. Life has been pretty dry & sandy. Not exactly where I want to be, but God provides what I need to get through each day, my daily manna. Now I would prefer to have a storehouse full of provisions like in Joseph's day, but for now I get manna.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much. I'm a new reader of SCL and this post was for me today.
ReplyDeletegood post. helpful post. i bet many of us find ourselves there now. btw, a good way not to blab on too much (the orange convention), when you talk to new people, try and say something simply, and within 2 sentences. if they want to hear more, they ask.
ReplyDeleteI really needed that today. Thanks for a spiritual "slap upside the head" to snap me out of my poor me funk.
ReplyDeleteI've been struggling with this in various areas for years. Thank you. This is exactly what I needed.
ReplyDeleteThat was exactly what I needed to hear!
ReplyDeleteI needed to hear this today. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteBoy, this post struck me straight to the heart.
ReplyDelete"Maybe if you were a better Christian things would be happening faster and you wouldn't be on a desert road."
Yes, this is TKO that always keeps me down, when I'm walking in circles over a dream unfulfilled.
Lord, have mercy on me. Lord, have mercy.
This is beautiful & true & convicting-- thank you. I wrote about a similar concept awhile back- living in exile.
ReplyDelete(http://hopenoelle.blogspot.com/2009/01/my-learning-curve.html)
The desert road and the time of exile are never what we would choose for ourselves; but when you look back after coming out that place, do you ever regret it? Don't we learn and grow so much in those places?