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Helen
Keller once said, “A bend in the road is not the end of the road … unless you
fail to make the turn.” Change for many people is a “four-letter word” – we
resist it, deny it, fight it, avoid it … we do everything but embrace it as a
chance for something new tomorrow. Solomon, the wisest man to ever walk the
earth according to Scripture, in Ecclesiastes 3 said “To everything there is a
season” (verse 1). He adds to that in verse 4 “A time to weep, and a time to
laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance.” Change can often be both a time
to weep and laugh. As I transition and experience great change in my life, my
hope is that you and I would not spend time weeping over the things that were,
that could’ve been, or should’ve been, but that we would take joy in the things
that are. Locations change; friendships remain. Relationships change;
friendships remain. Vocations and callings change, friendships remain. People
fail. Sometimes they fail you or someone else or themselves or God and it is
difficult to embrace their actions or where they are in life … but true
friendships remain.
The
earth has four seasons, and we all tend to have our favorite season. I love
both Spring and Fall because they both represent change. In Spring there is new
life everywhere and there are a beautiful array of shades of green. In Fall
change is very evident as things come to an end. There is a beautiful array of
yellows, and oranges, and reds. Fall is such a beautiful season that people
will travel great lengths to see the change in person.
As
my “season” of ministry comes to an end I think of the second half of verse 4
when Solomon says, “A time to mourn, a time to dance.” This change can play out
one of two ways. We can mourn and long for what was or was can dance because of
what has been and will be. I would ask you not to focus on what will not be
anymore but what will be in the future. Some might mourn because I am no longer
their pastor but let me free you to dance. Dance about all of the wonderful
things God has allowed us to experience through the years. Dance about all God
has planned in the future. I have seen so often in my life that God does not
take something, without replacing it with something better. Wait on the Lord.
Allow the church to go through the process of searching for the next pastor.
And when that pastor comes dance for what will be as you and he walk the
seasons of life together.
I was reading about the great painter Gauguin.
He at one point in his life was a banker and a fairly successful one at that.
But he came to the conclusion that he was no longer a banker; that he was now a
painter. He changed course midstream and the world was different because of it.
You and I have a right to experiment with our lives. We will make mistakes. At
times I think we resist change because of the rigid pattern that is thrust upon
us by the expectations of others. We graduate and are then supposed to know our
“forever” vocation. Our vocation is fixed, and maybe ten years later you find
you are not a teacher anymore or you're not a painter anymore. It may happen.
It has happened. I think we have a right to change course. To say we can never
change is to limit God in our lives. Peter was a fisherman and Matthew a tax
collector yet both experienced midseason changes because of the call of God.
The same God who calls one to a certain vocation has the power to release them
from that and call them to something new.
Change
is not always bad nor is it always good. But here’s what I do know. Jeremiah
29:11, “For I know
the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of
peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope.”
Tom
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