Wake-up Call
An Eternal Perspective
  • Home
  • About This Blog
  • Looking Back
  • Still Growing
  • Hopeful Future
  • Reflections
Monthly Archives

June 2020

Hopeful FutureStill Growing

Who Do You Love?

by Tracy Brackett June 21, 2020

9/13/12  3:08 a.m. 

Beware of evil lurking at your door. Do not allow it in. Pray and be wise. Send evil away. Behave maturely and humbly. Do not allow evil any foothold. Love at all times. Force Satan to leave. Satan does not stay where he does not have success. Follow My lead and My guidance. Respond like Jesus and adhere to the voice of the Holy Spirit. Love at all times. Focus on this love with those who are hard to love. This is where your actions make the biggest difference, the largest impact. Loving the unlovely, loving the arrogant, loving the selfish. This is what I do, and I call you to love like Me. Love in action and word and see your joy multiply. See relationships flourish. See people change. Love is a miracle. Taste and see.

Recently, while reading over my ‘middle of the night’ messages, I was reminded there are more on ‘love’ than any other topic.  Hmm.  One could easily conclude I’m a cold person if I needed that many reminders to be more loving.  And that’s a fair conclusion.  I’ve already stated in a prior post that I felt the messages were for me.  But here’s the thing – in the Bible, love is the greatest commandment, first to love God and then to love our neighbors as ourselves.  If we are honest (and I hope we can be), we all have certain personalities that we struggle to love.  And I am no different.   

As far back as I can remember, I have struggled with arrogant personalities.  I’m not talking about someone who is occasionally arrogant.  That would be all of us (and I’m not condoning it).  I am talking about someone who is consistently arrogant, someone who thinks themselves better than most, someone who consistently brags or feels the need to show how great they are.  I also struggle greatly with self-centered personalities.  Not those who are occasionally self-centered.  Again, that would be all of us.  I am talking about those who are blatantly selfish and inconsiderate of others on a consistent basis.  Escaping the presence of arrogant and selfish personalities is usually something I want to accomplish as quickly as possible.  To me, these personalities are unlovely.  And I don’t say this easily.  My pride wants to tell you that I am a super loving person all the time, that I’ve learned this lesson well, and those multiple ‘love’ messages are part of my past.  But it would be a lie.  And I suspect I am not alone. 

What types of personalities do you find unlovely?  I’m talking about personalities that may or may not be sinful.  In some case, they are just ‘different’. I’m not asking you to write a personal blog about it; just to admit it to yourself so you can get the most out of this personal blog.  Sound fair?  Ok, I’ll give you a minute to reflect…

Truth is, whether we admit it or not, we all have personalities that rub us the wrong way or cause our blood pressure to rise.  And here’s another truth – you may be an unlovely personality to someone.  The day God opened my eyes to see this was the day I was truly humbled.  I am someone’s unlovely or difficult person.

Across the face of this earth are many different personalities, cultures, and belief systems spanning many different experiences.  We are all different and it is quite common for us humans to congregate toward those who are most like us and to move away from those who are different.  We don’t like different.  We don’t understand different.  And herein lies the problem.

God is love.  He is not partly love or sometimes love.  God is 100% love 100% of the time.  When Jesus died on the cross for our sins, He didn’t die for some personalities; He died out of pure love for all personalities, all cultures, and all skin colors.  The love of Christ is inclusive, not selective.  If we want to be more like Jesus, then we need to work on loving all personalities, all people, all the time.  And for us humans, this is not easy. 

I don’t need to go into detail about what is happening in our society today.  We all see the racial and political tensions.  And for African Americans, this is more than a today problem.  This is both a historical and present-day problem.  As Janetta Oni in a Summit Church interview said, “This is a ‘lived experience’ problem.”  And all African Americans know that it will be a future problem without real and dramatic change.  And that change needs to start with our mindset.  We need to stop and realize that different doesn’t mean ‘less than equal’ or unlovely. 

We all judge our neighbors in some form or fashion, and we all need to repent of our human bias.  We need to address sin head-on starting with our own.  For me, and for all of us, repentance must come first.  I need to recognize that I am not loving like Jesus.  Without that recognition, nothing else can happen.  Following repentance, I need to make the effort to understand those who rub me the wrong way.  Perhaps if I understood their background and history, I would see them differently.  I might even understand the reason for their arrogance or selfishness.  Perhaps if I came to know them, we might become friends.  This takes both time and intentionality and I need to be willing to invest the effort.  Otherwise, I remain separated from those who rub me the wrong way… and separation is not of God.      

Likewise, for racial issues.  For us to correct our sin of judgment, bias, hate, complacency, or indifference (yes, this too is sin), we need to be intentional about addressing it.  First, are we even aware of the problem?  By now, I hope most of us are.  Second, does our awareness come with a genuine understanding of the problem?  If not, we need to seek education on this topic.  I believe with a true understanding of this issue, we will be spurred to act.  This action may be speaking up against a racial joke, defending our multi-cultural friends and neighbors against racial attacks, or participating in awareness and education campaigns.  Some of us may even have the influence to propel political and legal change that will help shape a diverse, unified, and equal future.  At the very least, we need to teach our children about the equality of all human life… that racial bias will not be tolerated.  

I want to reiterate the reason for these very real, historical and current day issues and that reason is recurring and perpetual sin – loving self more than others… ignoring the issue of bias in our own hearts, sweeping racial tensions under the carpet, looking the other way, etc.  If you believe you are an innocent bystander in our world’s sin issue, I ask you to reconsider your position.  Who do you see as unlovely?  Who do you disregard?  What glaring sin have you been indifferent to?  Consider this: even though you may be unlovely to someone, you are not unlovely to God.  And those you see as unlovely are also not unlovely to God.  He loves us despite our imperfections, and He is asking us to love others despite theirs.  God also loves our differences and He sees them as beautiful!  Understanding the depth of God’s love and forgiveness in our own lives should spur us on to be more patient and loving with the personality and physical differences of others.  Intentionally working to instill love and understanding in our hearts will be the very catalyst to change.  Love is powerful.  To choose not to love is to give evil a foothold.  And make no mistake, friend, we have given evil a foothold.  With each choice not to love, sin is perpetuated.  If God is love (and He is), then love is stronger than evil.  With a genuine desire on our part, God can change our hearts and love can be increased in a world that so desperately needs it. 

I am praying for genuine love in my own heart for all people and I am praying for love in your heart as well.  Let us seek repentance and unification together!

There is no one righteous, not even one (Romans 3:10 NIV). 

Jesus replied: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.  This is the first and greatest commandment.  And the second is like it: Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:37-39 NIV)

For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life. (John 3:16 NIV)

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
June 21, 2020 2 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Looking Back

Growing Pains

by Tracy Brackett June 15, 2020

5/28/13  5:19 a.m.

Be fruitful. Bear much fruit. The time will come when you will see the reason for your sorrow today. The growth and beauty that will flow from this will be worth the pain and sorrow. You cannot grow to perfection without the fire. Be thankful for the fire knowing its purpose is favorable. Endure a little longer My child. Your end is near. Freedom will follow. Joy will be your friend. Know the purpose and rejoice. Look forward in hope and faith. Not one minute longer than necessary will I allow the fire to burn. You will see joy again. You are loved and you are blessed. This period of training will pass.

Several years ago, I felt a strong pull to wake up an hour earlier so I could double my prayer and bible study time.  During this period, I experienced what I would describe as exponential growth in my faith and love for Jesus.  I was feeling both the presence of God and an indescribable joy on a consistent basis.  A few months in, I began feeling hungry for more growth and I vividly remember praying this prayer: “God, I’m asking You to prune me.  I don’t care how much it hurts or how long it lasts, I just want to grow.  I can handle it.” 

Knowing what I know now, I can’t tell you how naïve that prayer was. No doubt, I genuinely wanted to grow stronger in my relationship with God – it was a pure desire.  And I knew that God will always say yes to a request that is in line with His will for my life.  But there is more to this story… 

The pruning began immediately… first with difficult relationships at work.  Although never perfect, throughout my career, I had mostly experienced good work relationships and some of my greatest friendships came from the workplace.  But this was a challenging period of trying to balance managing employees and friendship with employees.  I suspect it was difficult for them as well.  In time, this did work itself out but not without some tough discussions and uncomfortable pain points.  This situation helped me grow in experience, not only as a manager, but as a manager from a Christian viewpoint.  It provided an opportunity to see things from another person’s perspective, an opportunity to see I am not always right.   

Next, I began experiencing subtle exclusion in a Christian friendship group, something I never would have expected.  These were friends who seemed to have one foot in and one foot out when it came to their faith and I felt I was sometimes excluded because of my conservatism.  Of course, it may have been for another reason but it was still hurtful to feel excluded, especially by professed Christians. Honestly, it wasn’t until a couple of years later that I looked back on that hurt and was reminded that all Christians are in different stages of their walk with the Lord.  Just as God is patient with me in the areas I am still growing, I must be patient and loving with others.   

Not long after my “prune me” prayer, I was asked to take on a new role at work.  The company had just gone through a merger.  The surviving executive management team made the decision to move the accounting for both companies to North Carolina where I was located.  None of the existing employees were willing to relocate so I was asked to lead the transition.  This consisted of hiring a new team and traveling with them for several weeks to train with the departing teams.  I accepted the offer knowing it was a good career move.

The job of pouring through resumes, interviewing, and onboarding 13 new employees all by itself was a feat I hadn’t anticipated.  This, in addition to the actual workload, travel, training, and stress (for both new and old employees), was truly unmanageable on my own… but the thought of failing or giving up was contrary to my personality.  Three months in, I did gather the courage to speak to my Supervisor about the workload.  He nodded, acknowledged, and then did nothing.  Five months in, I consulted with the Worldwide Controller.  I admitted the workload was too great and although every effort was put forth to accomplish the goal, including extremely long hours, deadlines were being missed and employee work was not receiving proper review.  His solution: “Just don’t work the long hours.”  Finally, eight months in, I gathered the courage to write a letter to my Supervisor, the Worldwide Controller, and the CFO.  I was slowly dying, and I was desperate. 

The CFO took action.  She immediately provided budget and approval to hire another manager to assist with team oversight and work review.  But by the time the new manager was onboard, it was too late for me.  Less than a year in, I experienced what I label ‘medical burnout’ which consisted of agitation, anger, depression, anxiety, emotional exhaustion, and an inability to concentrate, to name a few.  Before I knew it, I found myself on anti-anxiety and anti-depressant medications.  But I was grateful to have help.  Unfortunately, the new manager worked for only two months before quitting.  Before he left, he looked at me with regret and said, “I don’t know how you have been doing this.  It’s just too much.  I’m sorry.” 

Thankfully, though much damage had already been done, I finally had enough sense to quit that job and started finding my way back to a healthy lifestyle, at which point I had a short reprieve from further challenges.  During this time, I met my husband, Joe.  After a rather long absence from dating, I was excited to meet someone who was running the same Christian race as I was, not one of perfection (obviously) but one of desire.  This was a time of blessing.       

Nine months into my relationship with Joe, I began experiencing sleep deprivation related to very frequent awakenings and, most days, I found myself feeling ill or simply too tired to do anything.  While I was blessed to have an extremely patient and understanding boyfriend, this was a trying time for both Joe and me.  My lack of energy was not only debilitating for me, but it robbed someone who had energy of enjoying life with me.  To this day, I continue to be grateful for Joe’s godly perseverance and long-suffering.  We married after 18 months of dating, and my sleep deprivation greatly impacted my ability to fully enjoy both planning and attending my own wedding.  I come from an exceptionally large extended family.  The guest list on its own caused me a huge amount of anxiety.  After discussing my decreased capacity to manage stress, we discarded the guest list and went with immediate family and wedding party only.  While I was sad to exclude people I loved from my wedding, I was relieved by our choice of simplicity. 

It took close to a year following my sleep challenge onset before I was diagnosed with a condition called Hypopnea which results in frequent awakenings due to decreased oxygen while sleeping.  It essentially prevents you from having the kind of deep REM sleep we all need to be rested.  Two months following our wedding, I found myself sleeping through use of a CPAP machine and a very unattractive face mask, less than desirable for this newlywed… but, ah, I was sleeping!  

I could go on…  Suffice to say, these were not the happiest years of my life, but they were also not without their blessings.  I did, indeed, learn… and grow. 

As a human who experiences pain and suffering just like you do, I found out that I DID, in fact, care how much the pruning hurt and I DID, in fact, care how long it lasted.  Even more humbling, I discovered that “I” couldn’t handle anything.  While I did cling to God for strength during these times, I could plainly see that I overestimated my ability to be a consistent representative of Him during the hard times.  There were times when people could clearly see that God was guiding my hope and actions, but there were other times when my responses were less than God-like.  I was not as strong in my faith walk as I had imagined.  And this was a part of my pruning.  Talk about a growing ‘moment’!

Some of you may be thinking, “Hey, we all go through hard times… what makes your challenges any different and what makes you so certain that God was answering your prayer for pruning?”  I know that God was answering my prayer because of the numerous and continuous challenges I experienced, only some of which have been shared here.  These challenges were far beyond (in duration and number) anything I had ever before experienced.  But that doesn’t mean pruning doesn’t come without a request for it. 

The Father prunes as He sees fit.  God’s will for us is to become the people He created us to be, which includes growing in maturity and character… becoming more like Jesus.  And God knows that we often cannot obtain that growth without going through the fire that burns away our impurities.  Sound mean?  Let’s take an example of a three-year-old child.  Left undisciplined, that child becomes a person of extremely poor manners.  Given everything he or she desires, that child becomes spoiled, lacking appreciation for anything.  I don’t know about you, but I generally prefer NOT to be around undisciplined and spoiled children (or adults)!  God created us.  We are His children and He wants us to be the best we can possibly be and He wants us to represent His character well.  God’s pruning (and His discipline… which I’ll reserve for a future post) comes completely out of His love for us.

Others may be asking, “Did God ‘cause’ the burnout?”  Absolutely not!  God gives us free will… but we humans do not always make the best free will choices.  God could interfere and make everything perfect but then we would no longer have free will and those would be His choices instead of our own.  So God simply ‘allows’ our choices to have their natural consequences.  In my case, He allowed sin, both my sin and the sin of others, to have its natural consequences… and, through sin and circumstances, God allowed me to see my weaknesses so that I would know where I needed to grow.  For example, had I analyzed my work experience properly, I would have seen my sin of ‘pride’ in not wanting to be seen as a failure when, clearly, I should have quit long before I experienced burnout.  Pressing on to succeed at a task that was too big for me lead to the natural consequence of my burnout.        

I learned some other things as well.  In experiencing anxiety and depression, God equipped me to better understand others who struggle with these things on a chronic basis.  By suffering from extreme exhaustion stemming from my sleep disorder, I am better able to understand those with insomnia and other sleep conditions.  My empathy for others in these areas increased.  Empathy for the pain and suffering of others is, definitely, a characteristic of Jesus. 

Finally, I would be remiss not to point out God’s grace in my suffering.  While my few years of pruning were extremely painful, God never allowed more than He knew I could handle.  While simultaneously honoring my prayer request, He gave me moments of hope and sunshine to sustain me through the next challenge.  These intermittent bursts of reprieve showed God’s love and care throughout the entire process… and He is a God I will never let go of. 

Jesus speaking: “I am the true vine, and My Father is the gardener.  He cuts off every branch in Me that bears no fruit, while every branch that does bear fruit He prunes so that it will be even more fruitful.” (John 15:1-2 NIV)

Share this:

  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
June 15, 2020 4 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Load More Posts

Most Popular Page

  • About This Blog

Recent Posts

  • Your Place
  • The Gift
  • Crucial Connection
  • Pathway to Peace Part III – Gratitude
  • Pathway to Peace, Part II – Grace and Forgiveness

Categories

  • Growing Pains
  • Hopeful Future
  • Intro
  • Looking Back
  • Reflections
  • Still Growing
  • Uncategorized

Archives

  • April 2024
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • August 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • February 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • January 2022
  • November 2021
  • October 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • August 2020
  • July 2020
  • June 2020
  • May 2020

Subscribe

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 14 other subscribers

About Me

About Me

Hi, I'm Tracy!

Woman of Faith in Jesus, Wife to Joe, Daughter to David, Friend to many. CPA by Trade, Outdoor Enthusiast, Part Time Blogger.

Third Day, ‘Offering’

"Magnificent, Holy Father, I stand in awe of all I see. Of all the things You have created, still You choose to think of me. And who am I that You should suffer, Your very life to set me free? The only thing that I can give You is the life You gave to me. This is my offering, dear Lord. This is my offering to You, God. I will give You my life, for it's all I have to give because You gave Your life for me."

Top Posts & Pages

  • Your Place
  • The Gift
  • Crucial Connection
  • Pathway to Peace Part III - Gratitude
  • Pathway to Peace, Part II - Grace and Forgiveness

@2019 - All Right Reserved. Designed and Developed by PenciDesign


Back To Top
Wake-up Call
  • Home
  • About This Blog
  • Looking Back
  • Still Growing
  • Hopeful Future
  • Reflections