conflict

Good morning…

Heading into yesterday, I read the monthly devotional message written by my husband Steve, the Upper School chaplain at The Lovett School. Through Steve’s keen wisdom God spoke in surround sound as I prepared my heart for a two day training with our talented Northside Church staff.

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Chaplain’s Devotional by Rev. Steve Allen, October 17, 2022

When I was in seminary I served as an intern in a church where one of my responsibilities was to work with the high school youth group. A few months after I began, I was pulled into a conflict between two parents and their daughter. They asked me to meet with them to help with a dispute they were having. I agreed, though deep down I knew I had no experience and could offer little in the way of wisdom or counsel. As it turned out, they didn’t need a pastor or a counselor, what they needed was a referee. They duked it out in front of me. My head was on a swivel as each member of the family charged the other with their offenses. The thing that struck me most about this intervention was that the parents were telling their daughter everything that was wrong with her. I’m sure they believed this was the best strategy to change her behavior. However, as I listened, what I began to realize was that the daughter was so incredibly frustrated by her parent’s disappointment. It began to become clear to me that she simply wanted to make her parents proud; to hear words of love and affirmation. What she felt was their judgment, what she wanted was their blessing.

I am reminded of Genesis 32:24-26. Jacob was left alone; and a man wrestled with him until daybreak. When the man saw that he did not prevail against Jacob, he struck him on the hip socket; and Jacob’s hip was put out of joint as he wrestled with him. Then he said, “Let me go, for the day is breaking.” But Jacob said, “I will not let you go, unless you bless me.”

When I read the story of Jacob wrestling with God, I see someone who, more than anything else, also yearned for a blessing. In the midst of a wrestling match in which he was injured and losing, he refused to let go of his opponent until he received the one thing he wanted most: “I will not let you go, unless you bless me.” 

A number of years ago a book called The Blessing by family counselors Gary Smalley and John Trent told story after story of people who longed to be blessed by the ones they loved the most. In a society that is hypercritical and offers judgment at every turn, think what a joy it is to be in the presence of someone who makes you feel blessed. Think how awesome it is to walk into a room and feel affirmation and love. I think our kids, our students, our colleagues and our spouses yearn for it.

When I think back to the session I had with that family so many years ago, I’ve often wondered if things might have been different if I’d have had the wisdom to encourage them to put the negativity on hold and instead find things in each other that brought them blessing. As theologian Matthew Fox has stated in his book Original Blessing, “The forces of fear and pessimism so prevalent in society and religion need to be countered by an increased awareness of awe and goodness.” May we look for that awe and goodness, seeking to bless the people with whom we live and work each and every day.

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In God’s perfect timing, the training for our Northside Church staff focused our collective attention on “Transforming Talents Into Strengthens.” One take away from yesterday’s dynamic discussion resonated deeply with the message Steve had shared in the morning. “Our weaknesses never grow into strengthens,” said our wise trainer for the day. “Our strengths develop infinitely.”

To counter the forces of fear and pessimism so prevalent in our world today, might we pivot and shift our focus?

  1. Focus on bonding strengths instead of divisive weaknesses.
  2. Put negativity on hold to be filled with awe and goodness.
  3. Increase awareness of the infinite strengths God is developing among us.
  4. Seek to bless the people with whom we live and work each and every day.

It is possible to open your eyes and take in the beautiful, perfect truth found in God’s law of liberty and live by it. If you pursue that path and actually do what God has commanded, then you will avoid the many distractions that lead to an amnesia of all true things and you will be blessed (James 1:25, VOICE).

…Sue…