Sunday, February 9, 2020

Living from Overflow

As I read over my weekly notes this morning one idea rose to the surface.  That idea is that our self-sacrifice should come from fullness.  Here these words from L. William Countryman's book, Living on the Border of the Holy after he dispels the value of martyr or co-dependent self-sacrifice:

"That is not to deny the reality or the value of genuinely self-giving love, generosity, and altruism.  It exists, and when we find ourselves in its presence, we are moved with wonder that this splendor could be a part of human existence.  This is the kind of self-sacrifice that flows from a sense of great fullness, of having riches to share-riches of energy, wisdom, property, even life itself.  It is not pale, helpless, or self-pitying, but impresses us with its vitality and openhandedness."
As I sat reflecting on such an wonderful idea, and of course wanting to experience this kind of giving in my own life, I thought of the old hymn  "Spirit of the Living God" and looked up the lyrics of the chorus:

"Spirit of the living God, fall fresh on me. Spirit of the living God, fall fresh on me.  Melt me, mold me, fill me, use me.  Spirit of the Living God fall fresh on me."

I thought about Jesus and how he left the riches of heaven to come to earth.  Did he not lose in a sense his place next to the Father (melt me), and become a man (mold me), determined to do the Father's will (fill me), and walk on the earth doing good to all (use me).  Surely the self-sacrifice of Jesus was of the healthy type Countryman talks of. 

This week I had an awesome opportunity to spend time with a younger woman I have known since she was in utero.   I could recognize during our conversation that I wasn't just shooting from the hip, the conversation overflowed from a fullness of the life I have lived.  You can't plan out conversations like this.  It overflowed the borders of my soul and yet I left her house all the more overflowing.  I thanked her for the life-giving conversation.

In contrast I had a woman over this week who is about my age.  She told me of growing up in a Christian home and going to church each week.  And yet, there was no overflow of God into her home life.  How I'd describe it is God was tacked onto life but did not pervade life.  And today that woman wants nothing to do with religion. 

My conclusion of thought for this post is this:  Keep reading, keep thinking, keep getting with people, keep asking God to melt you, mold you, fill you, and use you.  You will overflow with Him to others. 

I want this to be happening all the time, don't you?
 
 

 



5 comments:

  1. I get it! I hope it continues for you for a LONG time to come!!

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  2. Karen, I appreciated your blog. I am a bit envious of course because I don't proceed through book after book after book that enriches me. I wish I were like you in that sense. I crawl at a snail's pace thru a book, marking it up, and read parts of books. I feel like my life doesn't overflow with God, but I do sense at times.... especially when I am with people that I don't know well and I sprinkle in references to God or spirituality...., I sense that I am fostering God awareness. I hope so. I get the contrast that you depicted, between the two conversations and their effect on you. I wonder if the contrast in these two women/talks has to do with openness of heart, or not so open? Don't really know, just speculating. Thanks for sharing.

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  3. Thanks for responding. I think there a lot of things besides books can go into a person so they have overflow. I just happen to be a reader. ;) Also, I thoroughly enjoyed my conversation with the other person and it bordered on life giving itself because it was so transparent. The point I was trying to make is that I don't think her folks were overflowing but instead just church goers. Now indicting them but just saying the effect that tacking religion onto a life can do to those who are experiencing it. I feel like I grew up in a home like that. My mom really tried BUT it really came across as religion vs. relationship.

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