I get email updates form Ransomed Heart Ministries every day and this one really spoke to me.....
True strength does not come out of bravado. Until we are broken, our  life will be self-centered, self-reliant; our strength will be our own.  So long as you think you are really something in and of yourself, what  will you need God for? I don't trust a man who hasn't suffered; I don't  let a man get close to me who hasn't faced his wound. Think of the  posers you know-are they the kind of man you would call at 2:00 A.M.,  when life is collapsing around you? Not me. I don't want cliches; I want  deep, soulful truth, and that only comes when a man has walked the road  I've been   talking about. As Frederick Buechner says, 
To do for yourself  the best that you have it in you to do-to grit your teeth and clench  your fists in order to survive the world at its harshest and worst-is,  by that very act, to be unable to let something be done for you and in  you that is more wonderful still. The trouble with steeling yourself  against the harshness of reality is that the same steel that secures  your life against being destroyed secures your life also against being  opened up and transformed. (The Sacred Journey) 
Only when we enter our wound will we discover our true glory. As Robert Bly says, "Where a man's wound is, that is where his genius will be." There are two reasons for this. First, the wound was given in the place of your true strength, as an effort to take you out. Until you go there you are still posing, offering something more shallow and insubstantial. And therefore, second, it is out of your brokenness that you discover what you have to offer the community. The false self is never wholly false. Those gifts we've been using are often quite true about us, but we've used them to hide behind. We thought that the power of our life was in the golden bat, but the power is in us. When we begin to offer not merely our gifts but our true selves, that is when we become powerful.
Only when we enter our wound will we discover our true glory. As Robert Bly says, "Where a man's wound is, that is where his genius will be." There are two reasons for this. First, the wound was given in the place of your true strength, as an effort to take you out. Until you go there you are still posing, offering something more shallow and insubstantial. And therefore, second, it is out of your brokenness that you discover what you have to offer the community. The false self is never wholly false. Those gifts we've been using are often quite true about us, but we've used them to hide behind. We thought that the power of our life was in the golden bat, but the power is in us. When we begin to offer not merely our gifts but our true selves, that is when we become powerful.
(Wild at Heart , 137-38)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment