Six (plus a few) impossible things
So, I think my post from Alice in Wonderland, below, may have been a little obscure. In my mind, practising believing the "impossible things" actually meant meditating on some of the truths of the gospel, and of God's dealings with us. I started formulating my own six point list, and in the process was reminded of this brilliant little article from the back of the book Disciplines of a Godly Woman, by Barbara Hughes. So, I have decided to give you the article in entirety (it's only ten points). If it means nothing to you now, file it away for the time that's sure to come when it will (I find #8 especially good - and especially "impossible"):
What I Do With the Hard Things in My Life
Written for the Gospel Women Study at College Church by Mary Duvel
1. Immerse myself in the Word of God. His divine power has given me everything I need for life and godliness through the knowledge of Him (2 Peter 1:3).
2. Realise:
a. He is in sovereign control of all that concerns me. His child.
Everything is sifted through His fingers first.
b. God has given each of us our own race to run. We are to keep our eyes fixed on him and stay in our own lane, not comparing our lives or the life of someone we love to the lives of others (1 Corinthians 7:17; Hebrews 12:1-2).
c. God does not give us grace for someone else's race.
d. God does not ask us to understand His ways, but He asks us to trust Him implicitly. He sees the whole, eternal picture.
e. My lack of faith does not nullify His faithfulness (Romans 3:3).
f. I am not the point - He is. It is not about me getting out of suffocating pain; it is about His Son being revealed in me, about God's image being released in me. (This idea is from Finding God by Larry Crabb).
3. Yield to the instrument of refinement He has chosen in my life. God cannot fulfill His purpose in me when I am kicking and screaming.
4. Confess that I don't know how to yield, that I am helpless and angry. God is big enough to take it.
5. Confirm that I am willing to be taught in the midst of this pain and difficulty.
6. Ask in the disappointment, loss, isolation, and pain that the Holy Spirit will teach me through the Word to trust God and understand who God is in all His mercy and love.
7. Seek to walk in obedience through the storm and not waste my energy fretting.
8. Know that the secret is Christ in me, not me in a different set of circumstances. (This thought is from Keep a Quiet Heart by Elisabeth Elliott.)
9. Remain hopeful that through all of life's changes, we are secure in the knowledge that we will see His face and be fully satisfied (Psalm 17:15).
10. Press on to take hold of that for which Christ took hold of us (Philippians 3:12; Acts 20:24)!