Notes of Faith March 22, 2022

When you came to know Jesus, you weren’t just rescued from your old path; you were invited into a new spiritual journey.

 

Jesus’ first words to His disciples were:

 

Come, follow Me. —Matthew 4:19

 

Following implies growth, change, learning, and giving space in our lives for God to refine and shape us until

 

Christ is formed in [us].—Galatians 4:19

 

Every day is an opportunity to be covered in His dust.

 

This journey wasn’t meant to be traveled alone, but rather with people who are dustier than you. Do you have someone like this in your life? A coach? A mentor? A pastor? A spiritual director?

  • Like a garden, your soul can’t flourish if there is no one to tend it.

You need people who can roll up their sleeves, get their hands dirty, and dig into the thorny issues, hardened ground, and weed-infested patches you’d rather ignore.

 

Because God knows soul-care is arduous work, He gives us the gift of others. He also gives us the gift of His Word.

 

Every time you read the Bible, you’re introduced to men and women who’ve gone before you and navigated dark and grueling seasons. They’ve battled weariness, discouragement, soul-numbing depression, and betrayal, but were sustained by God’s un-abating grace. The highs and lows of their lives are examples for us to learn from (Philippians 3:17).

 

For me, that dusty person is Peter. He was quite the colorful character: feisty, assertive, courageous, insecure, and notoriously unpredictable. One moment he was walking on water, and the next he was drowning. One moment he boldly declared Jesus was the Messiah, and the next he lectured Jesus for predicting the cross. Jesus’ reply? “Get behind me, Satan” (Matthew 16:23). Can you imagine? Peter was doubtless called a lot of things in life, but Satan was a new low. Did you know Peter was the only disciple who was interrupted by the entire Trinity? It’s true. (See also Matthew 17:5 and Acts 10:44.) Peter was the only one who denied he knew Jesus. But he was also the only one Jesus pursued to restore back to ministry (John 21).

 

Peter’s journey of the soul is one of calling, near catastrophic burn-out, and a slow migration toward flourishing. In his early days, people called him Simon. Simon means “to hear.” Later he was given the name Peter, which means “rock.” It’s an interesting combination of names because Jesus once used these words in a parable to describe inner growth. He said the spiritually unformed person “hears” the word but does nothing with it. Their life is like someone who builds a house on sand. When winds and rain come, it collapses because it has no foundation. But the person who obeys God’s Word builds a house on a rock. Even though the storms of life beat against it, the house endures because its foundation is robust (Matthew 7:24–27).

 

Every one of us is on a journey from Simon to Peter. It’s a rigorous, humbling, and exhilarating path to walk, and we’ll need all the help we can get. But that’s why God gives us guides. Peter is wonderful to learn from because his life exemplifies that no matter how fractured our lives are, they can still become rocks. Look how far he came: he began as an exhausted, impetuous fisherman with an undeveloped soul, but he ended as a mature, Spirit-drenched disciple in a prison cell writing about seven ways our souls can flourish. That’s quite the turnaround.

 

Let’s sit at His feet awhile and see what we can learn.

 

1.Rumi, The Essential Rumi, trans. Coleman Barks (New York: HarperCollins, 1995), 142.

 

Excerpted from Your Longing Has A Name by Dominic Done, copyright Dominic Done.

 

Do you have a mentor? Who is helping you tend to your soul and grow in your faith? Get in the Word of God today! It is the Bread of Life!

 

Pastor Dale