How to Let Go of The Past and Live for Today

HowtoLetGoofthePast


I was sixteen years old and had just broken up with a serious boyfriend in high school. I went on a one-woman road trip with a huge box in my trunk that contained only one thing: hundreds of letters from him.

In those days I had quite a dramatic flare, so I drove several hours to clear my mind of him (while shouting out favorite liberating songs in the car ride) and stopped at the Natural Bridge near the state border.

I opened my trunk, pulled out the letters and walked to a place under the bridge where no one was around. I dug a hole and buried the letters there, covering them with enough heavy Georgia clay to ensure they would never be unearthed again.

I did this for one reason: in my teenage brain, the letters represented a part of my life that I was declaring as “FINISHED.” I wanted those memories buried forever so that I wouldn’t read them again and somehow convince myself that “it really wasn’t that bad” because I now knew the truth: he was wrong for me and I didn’t want to look back.

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Forgetting What is Behind

When God calls us forward on our journey with Him to something new, different, and better – it can be scary. We can be tempted to look behind us and think, “it was better back there.”

An example in Scripture is Lots wife. When God sent angels to lead Lot and his family out of Sodom (because He was going to destroy it due to the pervasive evil there) Lots wife picked the wrong moment to be nostalgic. She looked back and became a pillar of salt.

We can learn one thing from Lots wife – don’t look back longingly on something God has forsaken.

If God has forsaken something and told you to move on, take His hand, walk forward, and don’t look back.

Giving God “The Good Old Days”

Sometimes, however, our past memories aren’t that bad. In fact, when we look back we may say, “I was doing great things for God then and my life was wonderful!” 

There are many times when I am faced with screaming children and dirty diapers that I am tempted to look back longingly on seasons of past “glory days”: You know – those days when the sun was shining, you got 8 hours of sleep, and it seemed that all you touched turned to gold? 

The problem with this kind of reflection is that it only serves to cast a discontented shadow on the present (which God has clearly provided) – and this is not okay.

While it is right and helpful to reflect on and treasure good memories of your past, remember: What God has called you to do today is your greatest gift and you must esteem your work highly. 

Release the painful parts of your past to your Heavenly Father – He has redeemed you and made you a “new creation” in Christ Jesus (2 Corinthians 5:17).

Refuse to live in your past. Your greatest times in life, your greatest adventures and stories have yet to be written. 

Shake off the dust, stand on the starting block, fix your gaze on Christ, and run where He is calling you!

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The Journals of Jim Elliot

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I have begun reading The Journals of Jim Elliot. For those of you who don’t know who Jim Elliot is, here’s a brief bio from Wikipedia:

Philip James “Jim” Elliot (October 8, 1927 – January 8, 1956) was an evangelical Christian who was one of five missionaries killed while participating in Operation Auca, an attempt to evangelize the Huaorani people of Ecuador.

The Journals provide an intimate window into the spiritual walk of an ordinary man that God used in extraordinary ways – a man who was asked to pay the ultimate price for his Gospel witness.

One of my favorite quotes so far from his journals is this: “I pray, light these idle sticks of my life and may I burn up for Thee. Consume my life, my God, for it is Thine. I seek not a long life, but a full one like yours, Lord Jesus.” ~ Jim Elliot

5 Ways to Really Love Your Neighbor As Yourself

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Who is My Neighbor?

Jesus answers this question with a famous story ~ He shares about a man who “was going down from Jerusalem to Jericho, and he fell among robbers, who stripped him and beat him and departed, leaving him half dead” (Luke 10:30) A priest, a Levite, and a Samaritan all saw the man lying on the road in need of help, but only the Samaritan stopped to help him. 

Matthew Henry reflects, “He was slighted by those who should have been his friends, and was cared for by a stranger, a Samaritan, of the nation which the Jews most despised and detested, and would have no dealings with.”

While his own people deserted him, help came to this wounded man from a most unlikely source. 

This story suggests to us that anyone God puts on our path in life should be considered our neighbor.

Not just the folks we go to church with…

Not just the folks our kids play with…

Not just the people who live beside us…

Not just the people who look like, act like, talk like, and think like us….

Preparing Our Hearts to Love Our Neighbors

Whenever the children in my daughter’s class stopped listening to their teacher this past year, they had to sing this little song:

My eyes are watching , My ears are listening ,

My hands and body are still, and my mouth is quiet (shh!)

We will only notice our neighbors and their needs if we do a few things:

1) Keep Our Eyes Open – I’m sure that the Good Samaritan story plays itself out numerous times every day in this world and lots of people are so distracted they never see the person in need. Let’s keep our eyes open to the people around us. That might mean putting our smartphones away for awhile.

2) Keep Our Ears Open – When people talk to you, really look them in the eyes and listen to them. We live in a very distracted culture. Many of us are juggling several balls at once. I know I am often looking at my almost-two-year-old out of the corner of my eye just to make sure she doesn’t drown at the pool…and that’s okay! But I can still focus on what the person in front of me is saying.

3) Don’t Judge Them – As Matthew Henry says, we should love them “without regard to nation, party, or any other distinction.”

4) Ask Yourself, “What can I do?”and Then DO IT! – What is in your hand? You may be able to provide groceries or a meal to someone who is hungry. You may be able to open up your door (and schedule) to someone who needs a friend. You may be able to watch someone’s child to give them a much-needed break. Like Nike says, “Just do it.”

5) Pray for Them – Spiritual needs are just as important as practical needs. Praying for your neighbors – those whom God puts in your path each day – points them to the True Provider who can supply all their needs (spiritual, emotional, social, physical). 

How can you better recognize and meet the needs of those in need around you? What do you think “loving your neighbor” really looks like?

Image Credit: Love Colour by Thor

 

 

 

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