The God of Inconvenience

This article originally appeared in the Winter 2008 Issue of the Blueprint HomeLife Newsletter

 

My sleep was interrupted again last night.  After getting four kids (now ages 7-15) through their needy preschool years, I had finally gotten used to having at least a good seven hours of uninterrupted sleep on most nights.  With a new baby in our house, it has been a bit...elusive lately.

 

We are now two months into the adventure of welcoming Madeline Kate into our home.  God willing, the adoption should be finalized by the time you read this.   But our adventure includes all those things that go along with raising a newborn baby: restless nights, endless diaper changes, pesky little ailments, fussy moments where nothing seems to make her happy.  Parenthood isn’t easy.  And it certainly isn’t convenient.

 

This leads me to what is perhaps the greatest lesson that God has taught me through this process.  Over the past few months, God has revealed to me a hidden characteristic of my heart that has significant potential to limit His ability to work in and through my life.

 

As I mentioned in this column back in the fall, I spent a good six weeks arguing with God about this whole adoption thing.  Though I certainly wouldn’t admit it at the time, most of my reasons for why another baby didn’t make sense were based upon the fact that it would severely complicate our lives.  Almost two years into our transition to Georgia, we had finally entered a time of relative ease.  Our lives were quite comfortable.  A new baby would only add stress to our time, our wallets and our futures.  In a nutshell, it wouldn’t be convenient.

 

What God revealed to me was that my tendency had been to run my decisions through my “easy filter.” One of the key components of my decision-making process was to figure out how hard it would be.  Over the past few months He has reminded me that He has not called me to a life of convenience.  Rarely should a choice be made because it is the path of least resistance, especially on decisions related to following Christ (which should be most every decision I make).

 

As we have experienced the immeasurable joy of having Maddie Kate in our family, God has showed me that choosing what is hard will often result in the greatest satisfaction.  She is a little miracle that we get to witness and enjoy in a hundred different ways every day.  She is a regular reminder of God’s activity that I would have missed out on had I chosen the easy way.

 

When we are obedient to step outside our comfort zone in any area of life, God meets us there, enriches our lives, and brings about much needed change in us.  It is choices like these that make life interesting and our story compelling to others.  When we choose the easy path, we just get easy…and boring.  And our lives aren’t the least bit compelling to a world looking for something different in those of us who call ourselves Christians.

 

I have a newfound appreciation for the difficult things in life.  Every day my kids teach me that my life is better and God is more glorified when I have to depend upon Him to get through the tough stuff.  And when He is in the middle of it, even the most challenging things are laced with the joy of knowing that God is working out His perfect will in me and those who are following so closely behind me.

 

Commit to something inconvenient today!