battleground

*This is an excerpt from Oh My Soul: Encountering God in Honest, Unconventional (and Sometimes Messy) Prayer, available on Amazon and everywhere books are sold.

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You’ve probably seen the headlines, too. They’ve been pretty much the same for the past several weeks, only louder, larger, and more looming.

Ebola. ISIS. Spongy borders. Other illnesses. Other enemies.

For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms. Therefore put on the full armor of God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your ground, and after you have done everything, to stand.

– Ephesians 6:12-13, ESV

battleground: standing firm in the struggle

Sometimes it’s all I can do just to keep our kids from throwing things at each other; I really have a hard time wrapping my mind around the bigger, broader issues outside my door. And I feel guilty, even, for praying for what seem to be comparatively small needs in our home when there are immensely huge things happening out there. It feels like we have to choose, and it feels urgent, and what if something tragic is happening to issue B while I’m still praying over issue A?

That’s just me. You are probably far more calm and level-headed about all this.

But I find myself slipping into this anxiety over prayer – which is really ridiculous, since that is the opposite of what prayer really does – and it takes me a while to realize that it’s just another slimy ploy of the enemy to make what is productive and powerful seem burdensome and impotent.

And that’s a lie.

Like most lies, and like most doubts, it is a half-truth.  It’s true that terrible things are happening all over the world and we can’t possibly pray over all of them at once with the proper urgency to pick them all off one at a time, as though we were playing some sort of spiritual Galaga or whack-a-mole.

But God is not limited to our time frame, either. Otherwise, He would be limited to making us take our turns so he could listen and respond to us one at a time, which sorta defeats the point of praying without ceasing.

If you picture Time as a straight line along which we have to travel, then you must picture God as the whole page on which the line is drawn. We come to the parts of the line one by one: we have to leave A behind before we get to B, and cannot reach C until we leave B behind. God, from above or outside or all round, contains the whole line, and sees it all.

– C.S. Lewis, Mere Christianity

The enemy is a liar who is afraid of God’s people praying. He will do whatever he can to convince us not to do it, which is a very good reason to do it without ceasing.

And this isn’t neat and pretty – I’ve been sick for eight days and have strict orders to get to bed before, oh, 2 am tonight – but there’s one more thing I want to share before I go there, before we wake up to more headlines in the morning, before we feel overwhelmed by the struggle. It’s from the story of Perseus in Greek mythology (and if you have qualms about studying ancient myths, please consider this and this), when he was first given a glimpse of the calling on his life, before he saved lives and slew monsters:

But to the souls of fire I give more fire, and to those who are manful I give a might more than a man’s. These are the heroes, the sons of the Immortals, who are blest, but not like the souls of clay. For I drive them forth by strange paths, Perseus, that they may fight the Titans and the monsters, the enemies of Gods and men.

– Charles Kingsley, The Heroes

Oddly, I feel that it is for us, too. We are the children of God, we are the blest, we are the souls of fire. We are those who do not shrink back.

Lord, our country is in dire need of You tonight. Give our leaders wisdom and repentance; make them go back and regain ground lost due to foolishness and error; we pray for the safety of towns and cities and homes on our borders. We pray for healing for the sick and peace for the scared. We pray for health and joy in our families and protection over our churches.

Our nations are at a pivotal moment, and your prayers – for small things, for big things – make a difference. He hears and moves because your prayer is powerful and productive. Keep going, and pray from victory, not fear. Years from now, we will look back on these days and know that we saved lives and slew monsters through relentless intercession.

without ceasing button

This is day 9 of Without Ceasing: 31 Days of Relentless Prayer. Find the other posts here. To get new posts right in your inbox, subscribe here.

without ceasing: 31 days of relentless prayer

without ceasing: relentless prayer (31 days series from Copperlight Wood)

*Most of this series is now found in Oh My Soul: Encountering God in Honest, Unconventional (and Sometimes Messy) Prayer and is available for purchase at Amazon and anywhere books are sold.

day 2: every second

day 3: gentle dynamite

day 4: lighting a fire

day 5: prepared for us

day 6: stirred, not shaken

day 7: this peace is for you

day 8: storming the castle

day 9: battleground

day 10: leap, and trust

day 11: give me a sign

day 12: wait

day 13: aloud

day 14: a union full of grace

day 15: before Jericho

day 16: turn it over

day 17: tell me where to go

day 18: a path which few can tell

day 19: steadfast

day 20: all things for good

day 21: on our watch

day 22: for a generation to come

day 23: about time

day 24: behold, we live

day 25: patience with joy

day 26: finishing well

day 27: filling the house

day 28: grace note

day 29: epic: when God redeems your story

day 30: called: who we are at the end of our story

day 31: redirect: He speaks in the surrender

on the same side

I love avocados. They’re expensive here, often a few dollars each just for one good organic one – so we don’t get them very often. But maybe the real reason we don’t get them very often is that Vince thinks they’re disgusting, slimy green vegetables that sneak into otherwise perfectly good sandwiches and tacos, rendering them completely inedible. Something like that.

So, in our grand gardening experiment, he was not real impressed when he saw this little guy. The conversation went like this:

Vin: You’re growing an avocado plant?
Me: Um…yes.
Vin: This is Alaska.
Me: I know. I’m kinda from here.
Vin: It won’t grow in Alaska.
Me: It’s okay, we’re growing it inside. It’s science, see?
Vin: You realize that avocados grow on trees, don’t you?
Me: Mm-hmm. I’ll trim it…and it will be shrubby.
Vin: And it will grow avocados in the house?
Me: In five to seven years, maybe.
Vin: You’re growing…an avocado tree…in our house, for at least five years?
Me: Um…(looks at other small avocado starts that he hasn’t noticed yet) Actually…three of them.

Imagine me flashing my most adorable and winning smile. See?

Only one of them is growing so far – it took weeks (maybe a couple of months?) to get roots and a shoot, so we’re patient with these other two, also.

Well, I am patient. The kids are patient. Vince is patient…with me.

We tease each other, but really, we are on the same side. I give him a hard time about eating pig guts (otherwise known as chorizo) and we’re even.

Teasing each other is okay when the trust level is high. Ours is high…it has been low before, it bottomed out at one point, but half our marriage ago we learned to be on the same side. We’re trying to teach our kids the same thing.

They are learning that trust is something that has to be earned, and once lost, it has emptied their tank of credence. It takes many deposits of goodness, sensitivity, and believing the best in each other to earn it back. It takes a long time to refill the tank, and there’s no teasing in the meantime. In the mean…time.

It’s been a year (or two, or more) of battles, from within and without. We’re learning to fight the good fight with many and various special needs and special circumstances, and our family is learning that we have to be a team in ways we’ve never had to before.

Conflicts come up with our kids. Between our kids, between us and the kids, and this is something we’ve been trying to teach them: we are on the same side. We’re for them. We’re not fighting them. They’re not (really) fighting each other.

We’re moving from this mindset of being in trouble to being corrected in love, and we both need to remember it. Both sides. Because we’re really on the same side.

Mom and Dad are on their side. We’re trying. And sometimes, despite that, we still have some convincing to do:

Chamberlain: Look at the bug! Dis is his bottom.
Me: We don’t talk about bottoms.
Cham: We only talk about bottoms in the baffwoom?
Me: Yep.
Cham: An’ we don’t talk about bottoms when we’re not in the baffwoom?
Me: Right.
Cham: Not even about bugs bottoms?
Me: (laughing hysterically)
Cham: Hey! Stop waffin’ at me!!
Me: I’m trying! (stifled laughter, turning into squeaks)
Cham, running off to closet: Now you’re fake waffin’ at me!
Me: I’m sorry. (snort, cough) Come here and give me kisses.
Cham, shaking head: You’re still waffing at me.

We’re trying to remember that a gentle correction brings a gentle response, so they will learn that a gentle answer brings a gentle correction. Because we’re not mad. Because they’re not perfect, and we know that, and we’re all learning. Together. On the same side.

The sun went down on a brilliant victory for the Confederates. Yet the night brought disaster for them.

Eager to find out what the Federals were doing, General Jackson rode out towards their lines in the gathering darkness…

“The danger is all over,” he said carelessly. “The enemy is routed. Go back and tell Hill to press right on.”

Soon after giving this order, Jackson himself turned, and rode back with his staff at a quick trot. But in the dim light his men mistook the little party for a company of Federals charging, and they fired. Many of his officers were killed, Jackson himself was sorely wounded and fell from his horse into the arms of one of his officers.

“General,” asked someone anxiously, “are you much hurt?”

“I think I am,” replied Jackson. “And all my wounds are from my own men,” he added sadly.

As tenderly as might be he was carried to the rear, and all that could be done was done. But Stonewall Jackson had fought his last victorious fight. Eight days later the Conqueror of all men laid His hand upon him, and he passed to the land of perfect peace.

– H. E. Marshall, This Country of Ours

He’s been talking to me about this a lot lately.

I wrote a piece recently for another site (scroll past all the linky icons), and it was supposed to be sort of short…er…but it didn’t turn out that way, because He’s been talking to me about this for a while. Apparently He had a lot to say, and He’s still talking. It’s an important message and I’d love for you to read it.

The friendly-fire among the family, among the church, among the troops, is born of fear and self-defense. Confusion, insecurity, and panic, and our deepest wounds have been from our own men. But what if our aim was truer because our vision was clear, and we realized that we were on the same side?

We would stop letting fear have its heyday with us.

We would choose to believe the best in each other.

We would trust that He made us for a special purpose with all of our special needs (because we are all special needs) and we would realize that we don’t need to fit into either the ideals or the insecurities of someone else. We don’t even need to try, and we don’t need to apologize for not trying, either.

He gently leads those who are with young…

We would trust that He knows what He’s gotten us into.

He’s on our side, too, you know. He’s for us. He’s not mad, because we’re not perfect, and He knows that.