Hey, you want to go grab a cup of coffee?
Yes, you. All of you.
Well...most of you ;)
How at times I wish we could. We have so much to talk about.
I have so many things spinning through my head. Time and time again I have sat down to write them here, and they just get clumped up into a big jumbled mess of words.
Deep thoughts and meaningful questions that I wish we could share...in real time...in real conversation.
I'm sure you've got some of those things too...things that are filling your thoughts and tearing at your heart. Words you are longing to share with a friend.
So, I'll get the coffee started, and you can pull up a chair, and we’ll do the best that we can with the space between us.
One of the things that has been filling my thoughts lately is success, and how differently we all define success in our lives.
Or, to be more specific, how I feel this word often makes me stick out of the crowd like a sore thumb...
...even when the crowd is friends and family and church family.
There are the things I am praying about, steps I am hoping to take, and I wonder if these people and their views of success are playing a role in the choices I am making, or, more accurately, not making. I don't want to walk in their human will for my life; I want to walk in God's will for my life.
And that’s hard when God's way looks a lot like failure in their eyes.
To paraphrase the definition of success, it would be "the achievement of something desired."
When looking at this definition, it makes me rethink that maybe we are not so different in what we believe success is, but rather, what we desire.
The more I grow in my relationship with Christ, and the more I open up my eyes to the people around me, the more poverty tears my heart apart.
I desire to be a warrior against the physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects of poverty. I desire to live in community with the poor and love with every ounce of me.
I will never drive that fancy car or have that house on the beach, or possibly any house. I will probably never have that extra money to spend on clothes or hair or vacations. In fact, I will likely live my life day by day in faith, trusting that God will provide enough. I will always be the outsider.
And what makes me sad is this; most of the people I know, even most of the people who love me, will likely see my life as a failure because of this. I am pretty sure most of them do now. And although I don't want their desires to define me, it still hurts. And on some days more than others, it makes me feel far away from some of the people I should feel the closest to.
Now I breathe deeply and thank you for listening, and I’ll sip my coffee and listen closely as you share about you. I want to hear your thoughts on success and failure, your hurts, and your desires.

Yes, you. All of you.
Well...most of you ;)
How at times I wish we could. We have so much to talk about.
I have so many things spinning through my head. Time and time again I have sat down to write them here, and they just get clumped up into a big jumbled mess of words.
Deep thoughts and meaningful questions that I wish we could share...in real time...in real conversation.
I'm sure you've got some of those things too...things that are filling your thoughts and tearing at your heart. Words you are longing to share with a friend.
So, I'll get the coffee started, and you can pull up a chair, and we’ll do the best that we can with the space between us.
One of the things that has been filling my thoughts lately is success, and how differently we all define success in our lives.
Or, to be more specific, how I feel this word often makes me stick out of the crowd like a sore thumb...
...even when the crowd is friends and family and church family.
There are the things I am praying about, steps I am hoping to take, and I wonder if these people and their views of success are playing a role in the choices I am making, or, more accurately, not making. I don't want to walk in their human will for my life; I want to walk in God's will for my life.
And that’s hard when God's way looks a lot like failure in their eyes.
To paraphrase the definition of success, it would be "the achievement of something desired."
When looking at this definition, it makes me rethink that maybe we are not so different in what we believe success is, but rather, what we desire.
The more I grow in my relationship with Christ, and the more I open up my eyes to the people around me, the more poverty tears my heart apart.
I desire to be a warrior against the physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects of poverty. I desire to live in community with the poor and love with every ounce of me.
I will never drive that fancy car or have that house on the beach, or possibly any house. I will probably never have that extra money to spend on clothes or hair or vacations. In fact, I will likely live my life day by day in faith, trusting that God will provide enough. I will always be the outsider.
And what makes me sad is this; most of the people I know, even most of the people who love me, will likely see my life as a failure because of this. I am pretty sure most of them do now. And although I don't want their desires to define me, it still hurts. And on some days more than others, it makes me feel far away from some of the people I should feel the closest to.
Now I breathe deeply and thank you for listening, and I’ll sip my coffee and listen closely as you share about you. I want to hear your thoughts on success and failure, your hurts, and your desires.
Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal…





