I have lived in Wollongong the
majority of my life and the local place that I shop at has been the same for
many years. So, when they decided to change the entrance and exit and remark
the paths to get into the parking lots, I have been surprised how hard it has
been for me to change. It feels like
every day I keep driving up the wrong lane and as a result disobey the arrows
on the ground. I get stuck and can’t get to where I want to go, because the way
I have gone for so long is imprinted in my brain and I can’t seem to retrain my
brain to change. I find myself getting frustrated, thinking to myself, this is
not logical, questioning why they changed this because I can’t see how it is
better and then being a little head strong and doing it the old way anyway!
This does go against my deep desire to be obedient and do the right thing, so
each day as I drive up the wrong lane, against the arrows I think to myself
...wow, change is really hard !
Change is hard when you have been doing
something for so long a particular way, your pathways in your brain are marked
out very clearly and to retrain or make new pathways is a hard process. And
that is even when you want to change!
When it comes to obeying the arrows at my local shopping spot, clearly I
don’t want to change. So the theory of “28 times to change a habit” is not
working for me yet.
But when it comes to something that
really matters, it has reminded me how important it is to make sure we get the
right foundational pathways in our brain to start with. One, because if we get
it wrong, change is so much harder later on, and two, because if we get it
right in the first place, it creates a firm foundation that helps us NOT to
change and go with whatever new fad the world wants to try and convince us is
right at the time.
In a shifting world of values, rules,
behaviours and TRUTH, one can become very unbalanced very quickly without a
firm, strong foundation which I believe is BEST when it is based on God’s truth
and worldview. Even within Christendom today I have been disturbed by the
shakiness of peoples’ interpretation of God’s TRUTH and the constant change in
worldview that is in our face daily. As a parent and Christ follower I am
struggling with the changing view of what is God’s TRUTH as I hear biblical
scholars I have loved and respected now changing their view of God’s TRUTH.
I am someone who sees the value of
CHANGE, having been an agent of change in my ministry field for many years, but
I do believe when it comes to God’s TRUTH, it (HE) has never changed. How we
deliver the message must always change, but His truth always was, always is and
always will be TRUTH. It is firmly embedded as a foundation upon which I base
my daily life, yet I acknowledge I have
changed and grown over the years, which I am hoping is maturity, as God teaches
me more and more deeply who He is and who I am in HIM.
But given how clearly stubborn I am
when it comes to changing the way I drive into a parking lot, it has caused me
to step back and make sure I am not being open to change that is simply a part
of life and necessary or being sure of some changes that we must resist in
order to live in a way that HONOURS God’s truth?
It begs the questions......
Q: When is
change necessary and when is God’s TRUTH, as the foundation by which we make
our daily decisions, the key to helping us navigate change?
Q:
What never changes and what is always changing and how do we know the
difference?
I think someone much wiser than me
has prayed that for some time now. American theologian Reinhold
Niebuhr (1892–1971) penned this prayer in the 1930’s.
This prayer is still our prayer
today, in the rapid times of change....
God,
grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The
courage to change the things I can,
And
the wisdom to know the difference
As a parent I want to ground my
children in God’s foundational TRUTH that never changes, so that when the winds
of secularism blow through, they know when NOT to change and when to be OPEN to
change. As a Pastor and Leader, I long
to know when God’s foundational TRUTH gives me strength to hold onto what is
important, when to show grace and love and when to stand firm. In my own personal faith walk I long to know
GOD’s foundational TRUTH in such a way that I know when to be silent and
listen, when and how to speak of issues which arise daily that we can no longer
avoid or sit on the fence about.
To "change or not to change?" that is a
REAL question.