I am a proud Clemson Tiger, born and raised in the south, lover of all things pink, orange, and preppy, fan of college football and basketball, preacher's kid, daugher and sister in a loving family of 4, talk with a southern accent, hoping to be a pharmacist, college senior, about to move to Charleston, SC to go to pharmacy school for the next four years. Join me on my adventure through life as an undergrad/grad student living and loving the southern life.


"And I will give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear me for ever, for the good of them, and of their children after them..." -Jeremiah 32:39



Wednesday, June 2, 2010

The Shack

I am currently reading the third book on my summer reading list - The Shack by William Paul Young. I have heard so many wonderful things about this book and have always wanted to read it, and now I have a lot of free time that permits me to do so! So I picked up this book a couple of days ago when my dad and I took a small road trip to a small Georgia town where is teaching at a youth camp this week. The hour and fifteen minute drive there and back gave me plenty of time to read, and once I got started reading I just couldn't stop! This book has a lot of food for thought, and I am only about halfway through it right now.

I won't divulge too many plot details, but what I would like to do is to share some quotes from the book that have really struck me and that have challenged my thinking and beliefs.

"Humans have a great capacity for declaring something good or evil, without truly knowing."
I read this sentence, and re-read it and re-read it. How true is this?! I mean, think about it! Everything that we know and judge is based on our own ideas of right and wrong, good and bad, fair and unfair, often by our own standards and not necessarily by the standards presented in the Bible. The character to whom this was told acknowledges this:
"I guess I would say that something is good when I like it - when it makes me feel good or gives me a sense of security. Conversely, I'd call something evil that causes me pain or costs me something I want."
"So it is pretty subjective then?"
"I guess it is."

The character then begins to realize how individualized our perceptions of good/evil and right/wrong are.
"To be honest...I tend to sound justifiably angry when somebody is threatening my 'good,' you know, what I think I deserve. But I'm not really sure I have any logical ground for deciding what is actually good or evil, except how something or someone affects me."

Taking this into consideration, I began to think about how I discern good from evil and I realized that I do this same thing - I base the good or evil in something on how I am affected. And this is not how the Lord intends for us to measure good and evil.
The character to whom Mack is talking (Sarayu) then responds:
"Then it is you who determines good and evil. You become the judge. And to make things more confusing, that which you determine to be good will change over time and circumstance. And then beyond that and even worse, there are billions of you each determining what is good and what is evil. So when your good and evil clashes with your neighbor's, fights and arguments enure and even wars break out..."
So on my terms, cancer is bad. Death is bad. But I measure that by how it affects me. If someone close to me were to have cancer and die, I would think that it was awful and terrible because of the suffering that that person and myself and others around me were experiencing. But does that necessarily mean that God wants any of us to suffer? I don't think so. I think that God has more things going on than we can realize and that they are all working together for our good.

Mack later confesses:
"I can see now...that I spend most of my time and energy trying to acquire what I have determined to be good, whether it's financial security or health or retirement or whatever. And I spend a huge amount of energy and worry fearing what I've determined to be evil..."
Wow. Punch in the gut. I don't think that the author is necessarily putting down our desires and efforts to do things that are "good" (or that we perceive to be good), but maybe he is asking us to examine where we expend our energy and time and if we have the right focus and right intentions.

"So is there a way to fix it?" asked Mack (and Tonya!).
"You must give up your right to decide what is good and evil on your own terms. That is a hard pill to swallow; choosing to only live in me (the Holy Spirit). To do that you must know me enough to trust me and learn to rest in my inherent goodness."

Can we do that? Can I do that? Can I really give up my ideas of good and evil and live completely guided by the Holy Spirit? Thinking about that is scary, but it also seems a bit liberating, to think that I don't have to take the time and effort to figure out what is "good and evil" - I just have to rely on the Holy Spirit to guide me.

What seems right to me may not be right, or vice versa. But it's not my job to figure that out. Romans 8:28 says that GOD causes all things to work together for the good of those who love him and are called according to his purpose for them. It doesn't say that Tonya works all things out, or whomever. God does! Look at Hosea. What he did by taking a prostitute as his wife and loving her was probably viewed as something absolutely crazy by the people around him. And even if this were to happen today...can you imagine what people to do if someone who we considered to be holy and good said that God told him to marry a prostitute? Would we believe him? Probably not, unfortunately, even if God really had told him to do so. But Hosea was focused on the bigger plan and bigger purpose.

So the big question is......What would we be able to accomplish for God and show to others if we learned to be so sensitive to the Holy Spirit that we let Him decide what is good and evil for us?

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