Tag Archives: God

The Fruit of the Spirit is: Self-Control

selfcontrol_fruitsOSPBut the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. ~Galatians 5:22-23

Self-control. To control one’s self is definitely easier said than done. I cringe just thinking about how many times in the past day I’ve failed to control my intake of sweets, my selfish attitudes, the hurtful words that have escaped my mouth…how often I procrastinated sitting down to write this post. For some people (of whom I am jealous) self-control seems to come more easily. You know the ones. They exercise religiously, have their lives scheduled to the “t” and live in an impenetrable bubble of peace…as long as everything goes according to plan. This type of self-control isn’t really what the apostle Paul is talking about, though there are aspects of that to it.

The self-control that Paul mentions in Galatians is a fruit of the Holy Spirit. What often doesn’t come across in our English translations is that “the fruit of the Spirit” is singular in the Greek. That means it’s one thing. A set. You can’t have one without the others. They are all intermingled and growing together in the lives of those who are indwelt by the Holy Spirit (i.e. believers). All of these “fruits” are expressions of love—showing joy in our interactions with others is loving to them, being at peace with others is showing love, being patient with others is loving…you catch my drift. It’s no coincidence that love is the first fruit that’s listed. God is love (1 John 4:16); therefore his followers should also be people characterized by love.

Earlier, in the same chapter as our “fruit of the Spirit” verse, the apostle Paul says that “only faith working through love” counts for anything (Galatians 5:5). And later in verses 13-14, we read that we should not use our “freedom as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: ‘You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’” Much of the Christian life is about putting others before ourselves in servanthood and labors of love. And anything that requires us to turn our attention away from our sinful selves is going to take a lot of self-control.

Cultivating self-control  shows love for God and love for others. For instance, it is loving for me to get up at the crack of dawn so that I can spend time in the Word with the Lord (this takes much, much self-control, two alarm clocks and a husband that won’t let me go back to sleep…he’s a very helpful addition to the routine). Or to exert self-control by limiting my spending so that I can give sacrificially to others in need. Or to stop and listen to someone who is hurting when I have a million things piling up on my plate. Or to drop everything to go hang out with a friend who needs to get out of the house. Self-control does not always mean having all the laundry done and the dishes put away. It’s about discerning what is best and doing it (which may in fact be the dishes and the laundry). 

So how do we grow in this area? In another one of his letters, Paul instructed the older women to teach the younger women “to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God” (Titus 2:5, emphasis mine). In other words, this can be learned. It is a spiritual fruit so prayer is essential. Ask for it! (Self-control has been on my prayer list for a long time. I’m growing but it’s a work in progress.) When you fall, repent and get back to it. Seek the Lord in his Word, memorize, study, and just read.  

Then read books that help with ordering your life. Disciplines of the Beautiful Woman by Anne Ortlund is a helpful, practical guide for growing in self-control. Find a mentor and/or someone to hold you accountable. After all, it is the older women who are to teach this to the younger. But let me encourage you, growing in self-control is a process. If it isn’t a natural bent for you (like me) then it’s probably going to be slow going…but don’t give up. Keep at it and someday you’ll look back and see that you are a different person than you were—a more self-controlled, loving, Christ-like person.

Carrie Kelly

Archive April: Say Instagram!

Originally Posted on January 23, 2013.

teen_girlThis time last year, I noticed that I was struggling to have a solid daily quiet time with God. “Why is this so difficult?” I would ask myself. So I began to pray and ask God to show me what it was that I had been doing lately that distracted me from spending time with him. So then I noticed that I was spending a hefty amount of time (like 1-2 hours a day) on Instagram. And not just Instagram….Facebook and Twitter, too. (so that’s 1-2 hours on each app a day). But honestly, my problem, was Instragam. Let’s just say after praying about Instagram, God convicted me of the amount of time I was spending on there. In the beginning, I decided to just delete the app from my phone. This helped me not get distracted as easily. Especially if you are a digital person like me and use YouVersion’s devotional plans. After about 2 months, I felt that I could install Instagram again onto my phone. It hasn’t been as hard to get distracted by it. It’s a great app and can be used for the glory of God, but I think that a lot of us (me included) have been or are using it in the wrong manner.

One of the things I’ve woman_selfienoticed is that people tend to post a lot of pictures of themselves or what we know to be ‘selfies’. You probably know what I am talking about. You can agree or disagree with me but I just want to share with you what I’ve been thinking.

Just imagine if I walked up to you at church and held out my camera…took a picture of myself…then gave it you? Wouldn’t that seem weird? Not to mention awkward? And then to top it off, I told you to sign it with your signature of  approval…”Like”. We do things on social media that we would never do in real life. Here’s just a few Instagram Photo-Types:

- Kids Doing Lame Stuff.

- Cute Baby Photos in Rapid Succession.

- Delicious Food Photos.

- Disgusting Food Photos.

- Self Portraits.

- Landscapes, Cityscapes and Travel Photos.

- Fingers and Toes. (why oh why?!)

- Clocks and Weather.

We can post countless pictures of ourselves smiling or eating or whatever and feel totally normal about it. I’m not saying its wrong…(I have some up myself). What I am saying is…when you look at it from an different perspective, doesn’t this seem a bit strange to you? I came across this quote on gotquestions.org and thought they summarized it pretty well.

Christians should be aware of the danger of the narcissism (excessive self-love and preoccupation with self) inherent in self-oriented sites. Studies have shown that overuse or wrong motives in social media participation can breed narcissism. When we rely on social media sites primarily to promote ourselves or draw attention to ourselves, it is time to take a step back.

Narcissism is the term used in psychology to describe a preoccupation with self. It is a Greek term taken from the name of the mythological Narcissus, who fell in love with his own image and was doomed to die because he would not turn away from it. A narcissist is a person who displays a high level of selfishness, vanity, and pride. He sees everything from a “how does this affect me?” perspective. Empathy is impossible for the narcissist because his only perspective is the one centered on self.

Besides the issue of social media in general being a time-waster, I think narcissism can be one of our biggest problems. We post pictures of ourselves and wait. For what? Wait for the compliments to flow in. Why? So that we feel good—(who doesn’t love it when people tell them how pretty or beautiful they look?) Just double-tap it and it adds another number next to the little heart. But could these selfies be another way we are focusing our attention and time on ourselves rather than focusing on God? I can’t help but think of this verse:

“So, whether you eat or drink, or whatever you do, do all to the glory of God.” 1 Corinthians 10:31

  • Do I spend more time on Instagram than I do in God’s word?
  • Is Instagram being used as a tool to promote God or just myself?
  • What is my goal within Instagram and posting a “selfie”?

I think Instagram is a great app. But I want to challenge you to take a step back and evaluate your time and what you post on Instagram, like I did. When I stepped back, I noticed there were definitely some things wrong with it in my own life. But don’t get me wrong…I still love Instagram!

So…what do you girls think about Instagram? Share your thoughts.

Karina Lopez

Archive April: A Decade Later

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Originally Posted on: Feb 26, 2013

It has been a decade since I was a teenager (whew that was weird for me to say) and I can say my teenage years were filled with many highs and many lows. Being a high school teacher and a youth volunteer at my church I am able to observe how teens interact with each other on a daily basis. I see how boys and girls interact with each other, I see how you treat others, how you treat and talk about your parents but mostly what I see is a NEED to feel loved and accepted. I see it in you just like I saw it in myself 10 years ago.

I wanted my peers to like me. I wanted my parents to be proud of me and trust me. I wanted to make good grades and excel in sports. I wanted the cute boy to notice me. I wanted to feel pretty. I wanted to look skinny. I wanted to have a date for prom and homecoming and maybe even a Friday night football game. I wanted to have friends. I wanted to get in to a good college so I could have a good job and makes lots of money (haha and now I teach). Just reading this list now stresses me out! Being a teenager I know is NOT easy. It wasn’t easy 10 years ago and it certainly is not easy today. Many times as teens and even some as adults we tend to “want” to do and “be” a lot of different things in order to feel loved and accepted by people in our lives…or possibly by someone who isn’t even in your life (a dad that left or a mom who is at home but works so much you don’t ever see her). This feeling of striving to feel love and acceptance is not of the Lord.

To all the teens (and even the adults) reading this today may I remind you of Who loves and accepts you unconditionally…Jesus Christ. It doesn’t matter if you make all A’s, it doesn’t matter if you aren’t a size two or if your last attempt at a sports victory ended in failure. Regardless of your Friday or Saturday night plans you are Loved and accepted by Jesus. Jesus will ALWAYS be for you; HE will NEVER leave nor forsake you. He loves you so much He came to this earth to die for your sins so you could spend eternity with Him in heaven. Here are some scriptures to remind you of how much you are loved and accepted by Jesus.

John 1:12 – I am God’s Child.
John 15:15- I am Christ’s Friend.
Romans 5:1- I have been justified.
1 Cor. 6:19-20- I am bought with a price; I belong to God.
Eph. 1:1- I am a saint.
Eph. 1:5- I have been adopted as God’s child.
Eph. 2:18 – I have access to God thru the Holy Spirit.
Col 1:14- I have been redeemed and forgiven.
Col. 2:10 – I am complete in Christ.

Take a moment to reflect on how you are living your life. Are you living your life based on who you are in Christ-loved and accepted? Do your actions, attitude and words reflect a daughter of the King? Or are you living your life striving, and doing, and wanting things that aren’t of the Lord in hopes to feel love and acceptance from others? If your life is a reflection of the latter, take heart! The Lord has come to set you free from that bondage. Ask Him—He will reveal Himself to you in a way that will cause you to feel the most satisfying and unconditional love and acceptance ever. Come just as you are and leave the rest up to Him! Take it from me—a decade later—HIS love and acceptance is the Only One that is able to withstand the test of time and eternity for that matter! He. Loves. You.

Holli Howard

Archive April: The Rewards of Waiting

Originally Posted on: August 29, 2012

“It came to pass in the process of time that Hannah conceived and bore a son, and called his name Samuel, saying, “Because I have asked for him from the Lord.” 1 Samuel 1:20

The story of Hannah and the birth of her son, Samuel found in 1 Samuel 1:1-28 stirs up many emotions within me. Encouragement-that the Lord does hear and answers my prayers. Conviction - am I as persistent as Hannah was in my prayer life? And also, the dreadful feeling of waiting. I am however, again encouraged (isn’t that how it goes? The Word encourages your soul more than anything) that I am not the only one who finds waiting to be difficult. Whether it is waiting for a job, a home, a husband, a child, direction from the Lord or an answer– waiting is a hard thing in our society. If you are like me, I daily have to surrender my will and my tendency to want to control situations over to the Lord. I will repeat DAILY surrender.  It’s hard, friends, but through a sweet word from Charles Stanley’s book I Lift Up My Soul, he uses an analogy that resonates in my soul to remind me of the reward of waiting. It is about cake– I have sweet teeth, not just one…they are all sweet!!

You’ve just finished gathering all the ingredients for baking, and you mix them together carefully in a large bowl. Then you pour the batter evenly in two round pans and slide them gently onto the oven rack. You set the timer and sit back for a while to enjoy the delicious smells coming from the kitchen.

Suppose that twenty minutes before the timer rings you decide you want to take the cake out of the oven anyway. It’s only partially baked, with gooey spots everywhere, and obviously isn’t fit for consumption.

Such a decision would be ridiculous, wouldn’t it? Yet in an interesting way that scenario parallels what we do as believers when we try to outrun God’s timing and take ourselves out of His preparation time too soon. We do not give Him time to reveal His purposes in the way He knows best.

Hannah is an inspiration in the area of spiritual patience. She knew that God was the One in charge of whether she would conceive a child, and she took her sorrows and fears to Him daily. We don’t know how long Hannah waited on the Lord.  All the Bible says in 1 Samuel 1:7 is “year by year.” What a wearying process, especially with the taunts of Peninnah.

God knows what you need. Don’t give up and try to satisfy that need your own way. Wait on Him, and He will take care of you according to His goodness.

Today my prayer is that we will rest in the assurance that our Heavenly Father knows exactly what we need and when we need it. May we trust in His goodness and his sovereignty as we wait. May we learn from Hannah and take our sorrows and our fears to the only One who’s perfect love can drive those fears away.(1 John 4:18)

“Wait for the Lord; be strong and do not lose heart and wait for the Lord.” Ps. 27:14

Holli Howard

Archive April: Who Gives This Woman?

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Originally Posted on: December 10, 2012

I was never a girl scout, but I like to be prepared. I’m not a spontaneous, fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kind of girl. So I make lists, lots of lists.  I have to-do lists, grocery lists, prayer lists, reading lists, packing lists, hit lists (I’m kidding on that last one… just seeing if you’re paying attention).  My favorite list is my annual Christmas list of gifts for my family and friends. I have another list, too. It’s a list of the characteristics I desire in my husband. Before you chastise me for being picky, let me explain – and go ahead and own it, you know you have your own list, even if it’s only a mental one! My list is not superficial. It’s essentially a prayer list and has everything to do with my future husband’s character and nothing to do with his material possessions, social status, or stunning good looks.

Throughout Scripture, God reveals numerous characteristics of manhood that he desires his adopted sons to develop, and we as their sisters in Christ should encourage and seek these God-honoring qualities in the men we date and eventually marry. So, I ask God to develop these characteristics in my future husband, knowing that they will be good for him and eventually for our family, and I pray that God will protect him from temptations that hinder these characteristics, such as greed, pornography, laziness, arrogance, and the wiles of unscrupulous women. Amelia wrote about praying for our future husbands in a post on Our Single Purpose earlier this year, so I won’t re-hash it here. If you’re wondering where to begin praying for your husband, check out Amelia’s post.

In addition to the list of characteristics that I want in my future husband, there’s something that I ask for him when I talk with the Lord about him. I ask that God will shape me into a gift for him, a blessing, a treasure to be cherished and guarded (Prov. 5.18; 12.4; 31.10). So often our expectations for our husbands both before and after marriage can be self-centered, even if the characteristics we seek are good. We want their strength, leadership, love, and protection. While these are qualities our husbands should possess and cultivate, if we merely see them as how they will benefit us, we will neglect cultivating our own characters in ways that will bless and encourage them. If marriage is a reflection of Christ’s relationship to the church, then asking God to prepare us for marriage can be something of a reflection of how he is sanctifying the church to prepare her for Christ’s return, when he will present her spotless before the Father (Rev. 19.7-8; 2 Corinthians 11.2).

So I pray that the Lord will teach me to be humble, not quarrelsome but peaceable, and gentle. I pray that he will give me inner beauty that comes from resting in Christ, peace, courage, understanding, wisdom, discernment, strength, resourcefulness, faithfulness, and a number of other qualities of womanhood we find in God’s Word. I ask God to make me fit for my husband, so that I’ll be a help to him and not a hindrance, eager to serve God beside him. I pray that he is shaping me even in small ways that I may not notice now but will be essential to a marriage that reflects Jesus’ relationship to the Church and will stand firm in a culture that devalues marriage at every turn (Eph. 5.22-33). When my husband thinks longingly of his earthly home, I want him to think, not of his man cave, but of me and find comfort and peace there.

Four Old Testament couples inspired me to begin praying this way: Adam and Eve, Isaac and Rebekah, Jacob and Rachel, and Boaz and Ruth. First, I love how God placed each of these women in her husband’s life. He formed Eve out of raw material and brought her to a sleeping Adam. He led Abraham’s servant directly to Rebekah, who willingly hopped on a camel against her family’s desires for her to linger, and rode to Isaac while he prayed in a field. God brought Rachel to the well to meet Jacob at the end of a tense escape from his twin’s murderous intents. Through sorrow and difficulty he led Ruth straight to Boaz’s fields. But what moves me even more is how each man reacted to God’s gift of his wife.

When God awakened Adam and he saw Eve for the first time, he rejoiced and worshiped God. After naming all the animals and seeing none that was an appropriate companion for him, he recognized God’s perfectly formed creation, made just for him, in Eve (Gen. 2.18-23). When Isaac saw Rebekah riding up in the caravan, he married her right away, loved her, and was comforted by her presence after mourning his mother’s death (Gen. 24). Jacob kissed Rachel at first sight and wept. He wept! Then he worked 14 years for the privilege of marrying her (Gen. 27.41-45; 29.9-30). Boaz, a little slower to come around than the other three, protected Ruth in her vulnerability, saw the beauty of her resourcefulness and strength in caring for her mother-in-law in a foreign country, and honorably pursued her by working through the proper channels to make her his wife (Ruth 2-4).

These feminine qualities aren’t just for marriage, though. They are becoming of any woman who follows Jesus. So while they will be a gift for a future husband, they are also a gift to the church, my brothers and sisters, married and single, old and young. The womanly qualities I pray for only come through the sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit; they certainly don’t come naturally to me! I should grow in these qualities of godly womanhood as I mature in my discipleship, regardless of whether I marry, and if I marry, these are the qualities I want my husband to see in me and find attractive. May he see God’s work, and may that drive him to worship God, rejoice, and pursue me with gentlemanly honor. Weeping is optional.

                                                                                              Bethany Wester

Archive April: Single and Content

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Originally Posted on: March 11, 2013

For years, no, my entire non-child life, I have been challenged by what it means to be “content” in my singleness. You see, I haven’t just been single here and there between boyfriends; I’ve been single for…well, my entire life. The only relationship I’ve ever had wasn’t what God wanted for me so it was a disaster and shouldn’t have come to be in the first place.  “Single” isn’t just a term I throw out there to describe my status in-between boyfriends. Singleness has been my life. It’s very real to me. It’s not just a fleeting season. And so, the topic of being content in my singleness has been one I’ve gone round and round and round with.

God has ordained my life to include singleness. While, I’ve had those times where I blamed the cause of my singleness on anything and everything pertaining to my appearance, personality and faith, maturity has taught me there is no definitive “cause” of singleness in one’s life. There is only God and His ways. Who am I to challenge them? Whether for just now, or for the rest of my life, singleness is His way in my life and God simply asks me to worship Him. To worship Him means to choose Him as my God and worship Him above all things and in all seasons. Because I believe this and have set my life in line with this truth, I embrace that when 1 Corinthians 10:31 says “whatever you do, do it all for the glory of God” this includes my singleness. Thus, there is a way to live in my singleness to the glory of God. There is a way to bring my desires and my unmet dreams regarding love, a husband and children under the authority of Christ.

In my studies and time with the Lord over this topic, I have come to understand that bringing glory to God in my singleness most simply means embracing what God has given me and offering Him worship and obedience in it. We are able to do this because God is sufficient. And, because He is sufficient, he has given us exactly what and all that we need. Now, I know what you’re thinking: the needs of singleness are to not be single. How then, are one’s needs being met in singleness if they are still single?

Turning to the Word of God to answer this, the scriptures make it very clear that our deepest need is to be in right relationship with God. So, even in the midst of singleness, our need is not for our singleness to be met but for our need for God to be met. The good news here is that God freely and abundantly gives of Himself, and because of the work of Christ on the cross, we can freely and abundantly receive Him. Psalm 73:25-26 says it this way: “Whom have I in heaven but you? And there is nothing on earth that I desire besides you. My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever.” God is our portion, our satisfaction. We don’t have to look to this world or to a man to satisfy our singleness; we merely have to look to God and worship Him as our portion, our fill, our sufficiency even in our singleness. Because He is El Shaddai, we can be satisfied in His sufficiency even if our lives and our dreams don’t feel sufficiently satisfied.

Single lady friends, I just want to encourage you today that it’s not about becoming content in your singleness; it’s about becoming content with God in your singleness and trusting Him with the rest. In the greatness of His sufficiency, we are fully satisfied. In the completeness of his sufficiency, we are content. Contentment is not a great mystery to figure out; contentment is choosing to worship God because He alone is enough.

Amanda Schulze


Amanda is a 20-something living in Virginia. She is a committed follower of Jesus Christ who seeks daily to live a life of worship and obedience in order to give God glory in all things (1 Cor. 10:31). She loves the Bible, theology and commentaries and has a B.S. in Psychology and a M.Div. in Biblical Counseling. She currently works for a large private Christian university and serves as a Lay Counselor with her church’s counseling ministry. She is passionate about teaching and equipping women to love on and live in God’s Word. She also loves photography, leading worship, traveling, and spending time with her wonderful family, friends and precious dog, Chaps. www.despitethat.wordpress.com

Archive April: Praying For Your Future Husband

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Originally Posted on: April 16, 2012

Proverbs 31:12  states that a wife of noble character is to bring her husband “good not harm all the days of her life.” This verse does not only apply to women who have already met their spouses, but to single women as well. We should be living our life in a way that ultimately glorifies the Lord, and also in a way that would be faithful to a future husband. One way to live this out is by praying for your future husband even before you meet him.

Several years ago I was reminded of the power of prayer in this area after hearing a friend’s testimony.  She shared that one night she woke up at 3am and felt the Lord telling her to pray for her future husband. She spent the remainder of the night in prayer because she knew he was in trouble.  She continued to pray for him daily after that.  A year later, when she was getting to know the man who now is her husband, he told her that he was involved in a car accident that almost took his life.  As he told her the details of how it happened, it was exactly the date and time that the Lord woke her up to pray.  When I heard this story I was reminded that God values and honors our prayers for a husband even when we cannot see what He is doing.

Recently, I read a book  titled “Praying For Your Future Husband,” by Robin Jones Gunn and Tricia Goyer.  In this, the authors share Biblical encouragement and wisdom on how to pray for your husband and prepare your heart for his.  It also gives ways to pray for your sisters in Christ. I would like to share some of these, and I encourage you to spend some time this week in prayer for your future husband as well as your fellow sisters as we are trying to be the women God has called us to be.

  • Pray for his Heart - Pray that your future husband will give his heart to Jesus Christ. Pray that he will trust the Lord each day to get him through whatever life may bring, and for his thoughts and actions to reflect the love of Christ.   Pray these things also for yourself and your friends.
  • Pray for Strength - Pray that your future husband will have inner-spiritual strength and that the Lord will give him strength to fight temptations and difficulties.  Pray that the Lord will mold him into the leader he needs to be. Also, pray the same things for yourself and your friends. Pray that God will give you strength in areas where you are weakest and allow His strength to make you strong.
  • Pray for Loyalty and Faithfulness - Pray that your future husband will be faithful to the Lord in every area of his life.  Pray also that he is loyal to the friendships that God has already given him, and pray that he is already faithful to you.  Pray these things for yourself and your friends.
  • Pray for Protection - Pray that your future husband will be protected from the evil one.  Pray that he puts on the armor of God each day and for the Lord to help him fight not only the outward sources that try to bring him down but also the sin nature inside.  Also, pray the same protection each day for yourself and your friends.
  •  Pray for Contentment - Pray that your future husband will be content, and have patience as he waits for God to lead him to you.  Pray that his heart will not be hardened during this time, but instead that he grow closer in his relationship with Christ. Pray that he spends his time focusing on serving Christ and others, and not dwelling on being single.  Pray that Christ alone will always be enough.  Pray for the same contentment for yourself and your friends.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                 Amelia McNeilly

Archive April: Questions.

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Originally Posted on: July 23, 2012

I have come to know a great young lady by the name of Katie Strandlund through Twitter. (I love social media by the way!) Anyways, Katie is such an awesome and lovely person. We email and Tweet each other with updates on our lives and what we could pray for each other about. Its really a cool thing. Remember having pen-pals? Well, its just like that but only way faster and cooler! :)

Well Katie recently posted on her blog, CautiousCreative, about Waiting for Answers to Un-Asked Questions. I want to share it with you because its seems to be exactly where I am right now. She has such a great way of writing, that I wouldn’t have even come close:

2 months. That’s how long it’s been since I’ve written anything new on here. I’ve created a pressure to write in my head & that’s been looming over me. But every time I sat down to do so, one of two things happened: nothing came out or what did come out just sounded depressing.

I opened up twitter tonight to find this from the one & only Gary Molander:
“Blessed are you who write words from the weariness of your own souls, for in those words, you offer readers a taste of authentic life.” 

I was convicted. I haven’t written because the only place I had to offer words from was the weariness of my own soul & I didn’t think that was enough. 

But tonight I believe that perhaps it is. And so I write…without answers, without agenda, with an authenticity evidenced by the tears falling onto the keys as I type…with questions offered from a weary soul. A soul that is wondering why friends leave. Why life has to feel so heavy. Why family can’t understand. Why I am suddenly fighting more insecurity than I have…maybe ever. Why community is so hard. Why I can’t bring myself to be vulnerable. Why God can’t work a miracle so I don’t have to fight aching hands & painful joints on a daily basis. Why I feel like I have nothing more to give. Why I can’t just make myself get over it all & be happy.

Why.

Why.

Why.

And in this moment I’m realizing that up to this point I haven’t even had the courage to ask those questions. I’ve been waiting for answers to questions I haven’t been willing to ask. And perhaps asking questions is the first step because it is by its very nature humbling…admitting I don’t know everything…don’t have it all under control.

And although I don’t always get it right, I’ve learned that as long as I try to control this life of mine it’s going to feel out of alignment.

But what next? What do you do when you have more questions than answers? When you’re restless to the point that you’re certain you are going crazy with a soul weary to the point of exhaustion?

I chase the sunset. I listen to music. I go for a drive. I cry. I cry out. And tonight, I write.  - Katie Strandlund, Cautious Creative

While it’s easy for me to focus simply on the things directly around me, I know that God always sees the entire story. My view is limited. Sometimes events in life may look disappointing. But I know God sees the entire picture from beginning to end, and knowing this gives me hope.

Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us.  -Romans 5:3-5

                                                                                                   Karina Lopez

Archive April: O Love That Will Not Let Me Go

Originally Posted on: October 29, 2012 
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O Love That Will Not Let Me Go 
This is a title to a hymn written by George Matheson in 1882. I recently heard the story behind this old beautiful hymn and it touched me so deeply. I love hearing the meaning behind songs because it makes them even that much more meaningful. George Matheson wrote this as a single man on the day of his sisters wedding. Yep, you guessed it. He was lonely. Here is what he wrote in his journal about that day.
“My hymn was composed in the manse of Inellan on the evening of June 6, 1882.  I was at that time alone.  It was the day of my sister’s marriage, and the rest of my family were staying overnight in Glasgow.  Something had happened to me which was known only to myself, and which caused me the most severe mental suffering.  The hymn was the fruit of that suffering.  It was the quickest bit of work I ever did in my life.  I had the impression of having it dictated to me by some inward voice than of working it out myself.  I am quite sure that the whole work was completed in five minutes, and equally sure that it never received at my hands any retouching or correction.”

He didn’t mention in his journal what had caused him this “most sever mental suffering”, but most have suspected it had to do with the heartbreak he experienced from a woman he loved. Matheson struggled with poor eyesight his entire life and it increasingly became worse the older he became. His fiancee had broken her engagement to him, telling him that she couldn’t see herself going through life married to a blind man.  Matheson never married, and it seems likely that his sister’s wedding brought to memory the woman that he had loved and the wedding that he had never enjoyed. Take a minute and read this beautiful hymn.

O Love that wilt not let me go,
I rest my weary soul in thee;
I give thee back the life I owe,
That in thine ocean depths its flow
May richer, fuller be.

O light that foll’west all my way,
I yield my flick’ring torch to thee;
My heart restores its borrowed ray,
That in thy sunshine’s blaze its day
May brighter, fairer be.

O Joy that seekest me through pain,
I cannot close my heart to thee;
I trace the rainbow through the rain,
And feel the promise is not vain,
That morn shall tearless be.
O Cross that liftest up my head,
I dare not ask to fly from thee;
I lay in dust life’s glory dead,
And from the ground there blossoms red
Life that shall endless be.

How many of us would write such beautiful truths on the loneliest night of our lives? I think we would more likely write something to the effect of, “Poor me. I am always going to be alone. God why are you looking down upon me and not blessing me with a mate? I will never be happy. Woe is me.”

Matheson could have done this. Easily. Instead, he chose to celebrate the consistency of God’s love – “love that wilt not let me go” – “light that follow’st all my way” – “joy that seekest me through pain.”

As this hymn reveals, it was his faith in God that kept him going through the heartbreak that he suffered.  He believed that God’s love would not let him go, and that God’s light would follow him all his way, and that God’s joy would seek him through his pain, and that faith made all the difference.
I don’t know about you…but that sure is convicting to me.

                                                                                                Marlana Kaye

Archive April!!

Today we celebrate our One Year Anniversary here at OurSinglePurpose! God has blessed and exceeded our expectations way beyond we could ever imagine! Here are just a few testimonies of how we have seen God work over the past year:

I just wanted to let you know just how much “Our Single Purpose” blog has been such a tremendous blessing to me.  Although I am now 26 years old and at the prime age to be married, I have found comfort through single friends that are in the same boat as I am in but also through sisters in Christ that I do not know.  God is working in me especially in this season of singleness, and I have finally found contentment in Christ that I cannot describe.  I know that this blog has been a part of helping me find the contentment that Christ so desperately has been trying to offer me for years! Thank you to all the contributors for allowing the Lord to use you and sharing your hearts because you have encouraged me and so many other ladies that are in this season of life.

I thought that what you wrote on OurSinglePurpose was encouraging and reminded me of the place I was in for such a long time…! However, within the past few months, the Lord has really given me peace and a renewed spirit of joy for where He has me at this season in my life. I am so glad that He is sovereign and that I am not in control because I would definitely mess everything up! Praise the Lord for His comfort and peace that passes all understanding! Even for something as “trivial” as a past relationship.

I just wanted you to know that I do read the blog that you contribute to. I have really benefited from reading it. I have recently felt like I’ve turned a new leaf in my life, becoming more independent in the Lord and realizing that I don’t need a man to make my life complete. I am excited about what God is doing in my life and the change he is bringing to the person who I am. Thank you for addressing the need of many women these days; the need to know that life doesn’t start at the beginning of a relationship, rather at the beginning of the relationship we have with Christ.

I want to say a thank you to all of our contributors! I cannot tell you how amazing they are. They have had so much courage over the past year to be honest and transparent. Time and time again, they have written from their heart about their own personal walk with the Lord and singleness. God has blessed me tremendously with not only their encouragement through OSP, but their incredible friendship.

I want to especially take the time to thank you for being a part of this amazing ministry. We are in the process of praying and planning the future of OSP. Please say a special prayer for this blog and where the Lord is leading us. Ephesians 3:20-21 will be our focus prayer,

“Lord we know you are able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, according to the power at work within us. We desire for You receive glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen”

archiveapril

During the month of Archive April we will celebrate by bringing back our favorite posts from the past year! We pray that you will be encouraged through these posts whether you are a new follower, or have been a follower from the very beginning. May God continue to bless you and your desire to glorify Him in your singleness!

Marlana Kaye