In Just Courage, Gary Haugen asked, “Do you want to be safe or brave?” And then ever so subtly, he asked, “What do you think God wants for you? Safety or bravery?”
These are disturbing questions if you examine them. Let me combine some of Haugen’s thoughts with some ideas of my own that have surfaced. Safety is about control. Safety is about doing life “just so” so that we can predict and determine the outcomes of our lives, our jobs, our families. The desire for safety for the Christian is like the boiling pot for the proverbial frog. It will be the spiritual death of us because it calculates and manipulates all the Life out of us.
We resign ourselves to these small endeavors that are easily managed by our own efforts and rarely tap into the need for an Almighty God. We call this spiritual success because we have planned and prepared, avoided and outmaneuvered any real threat to our well being. We are, deep sigh, safe. We pacify our hunger for more by applauding ourselves with being “responsible.”
Yet all through scripture the only place of safety is in God Himself. Do you think Jesus was calling the disciples to safety or bravery? He said simply, “Follow Me.” Was that responsible? Did they hit the safety wall while following Jesus? You bet. But they also got to experience life beyond the grocery store and ATM. The feeding of the 5,000. The taxes in a fish’s mouth. You don’t need faith and miracles if you have everything under control.
So then is bravery a reckless abandon, without care or thought of future? Not at all. Bravery is following God where God is working and knowing that apart from God, you cannot possibly make it happen. Bravery is laying aside the comforts of life for the compassion of God. Bravery is dependence on God born of a desperate heart. It is the deep understanding that the attempted work is so much beyond the individual, that only God could pull it off. Yet the insanity is, being in His presence doing what only He could accomplish is beyond any man-made satisfaction. Talk about exhilarating.
You know the disciples were scared, but you also know they were blown away by what they saw and experienced of God. Sure it was hard, but our desire for “easy” is an American curse.
To make matters worse, Haugen asked, “How are you raising your children? To be safe or brave?” Safe in the cocoon of don’t-get-too-close-to-the-dirty-world because it might rub off? Or brave so that they are equipped and desirous of charging the gates of hell in the name of Jesus?
Assess your life. Ask hard questions and let God answer them. Do you want your lattes? Or do you want to see His Kingdom come on earth as it is in Heaven?
“I run in the path of Your commands for You have set my heart free.” Psalm 119:32
Love this! You’re right – in all the scripture I can think of, the Lord says, “Be of good courage” or “Be not afraid.” Not “Be safe.”
When it comes to safety, He just says He’s the rock of our salvation; always with us.
Thanks for spurring us on. 🙂
You know what has been on my heart!! I have been back from my mission trip to Haiti for a week now and this has been one of the many questions I have been pondering. I felt more free and serving my purpose when I was being brave to go to Haiti where God called me to serve. Now that I’m back in the usual routine I’m asking God to show me what being “brave” looks like in my everyday life! Thanks, Jana for sharing!!
I think the part we as Christians confuse is like you said, it’s not “reckless abandon”, it is surrendering to His guiding of me into the situation, and though the situation may not be the safest feeling/circumstance(discipling your children, talking about painful things in marriage,going overseas, Your insert here. etc.) He is safe. That is the beauty of Him. That is true rest.
p.s. I love that verse from Psalm. I want that tattooed on my life. Period.
YES to the challenges from a real, living, dangerous, and entirely good God. Praise Him! and thank you for your blogs.