Daddy Issues Part 3

“But to all who did receive him, to those believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God-children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God.” John 1:12

When we returned from our long trip to visit family, our toddler squealed and smiled as we crossed the threshold of our home. Surprised, I looked at my husband and said, “He recognizes we’re home!” I was amazed by his familiarity with his surroundings at such a young age. 

As our family has grown, I’ve watched my husband faithfully father our children. The way he looks into our daughter’s eyes. The times he holds her hand as she navigates the stairs. The smiles he gives when she leans in to give him a goodbye kiss and runs to him with her arms wide open when he returns from work. I was 14 months old when my parents divorced. 

I wonder if I missed the deep sound of his voice or the strong embrace of his arms.

I wonder if I missed the playful tosses into the air or the loving gazes I see my husband give my little girls.

I certainly relished in the love of my mother and won’t discount all the ways she built me.  Still, I wonder if I recognized, even then, how my dad’s absence changed my environment and how that affected me. As I watch my toddlers interact with family and their environment, I’m sure I recognized change. Life without dad would become the new normal; the only normal I have ever known. 

Two years ago I had the pleasure of doing Beth Moore’s study, “The Quest.” I totally recommend it! In one of the beginning chapters she asks questions that are found in scripture to help the reader orient themselves in life’s journey. These  questions are a powerful tool in acknowledging and examining where we are in order to continue on the “quest” with our Heavenly Father. 

The first question is taken from God in the garden with Adam and Eve. After they sinned by disobeying God, He asked them, “Where are you?” (Genesis 3:9) This is a great question to ask ourselves to stop and evaluate where we truly are in life. However, it was Beth’s second question that struck me the most. Adam responds to God’s first questions with a confession. “I heard you in the garden, and I was afraid because I was naked; so I hid.” God responds, “Who told you that you were naked?”  This is the basis for the second orienting question: “Who told you that?”  My eyes froze on the question as the simplicity struck me. What we’re told is only as good as the source is honest and trustworthy who spoke it. It was the enemy, and what he told them was a lie. 

What I have discovered is that, like Adam and Eve, I have also been lied to by the enemy. The absence of my father told me a few things about myself: I wasn’t valuable enough to stay around, I wasn’t worth the struggle or sacrifice, and I wasn’t good enough to win his love. Every negative experience I have had with people as I grew only confirmed these lies as I navigated life. 

I want to say something really important here: I’m not blaming my dad or others for my wounds. I’m saying that without somebody speaking my true identity as a daughter of God into me as I grew, my lens was warped. The evidence supporting the lies was all around me. I interpreted my value through the actions and words of other human beings. How I was received or rejected told me more about myself than anything else.  I measured my value by my experience with human beings. This is never solid ground to stand on. 

Who, by their words or actions, told you that you were not valuable? Who told you that you weren’t worth it? That you would never be good enough? Who told you that? As I examined the broken areas of my heart, I found there were many lies I believed. They became my identity. I needed to work for approval. I needed to be good at something to be valuable. I needed to be perfect to be loved… Until God showed me otherwise. 

He brings the healing we need from the wounds we receive. We desperately need to fill our hearts with the truth of who God says we are in His word. We are His beloved daughters. If we don’t establish our identities in who He says we are, we find something or someone to tell us who we are. We become imprisoned in their lies. 

In John 1:12, we see that if we have received and believed in Him we have been given the right to be His children. There is no other condition but belief. As children, we have a natural desire to want to please our earthly fathers and earn their affection. The affection of God, however, is freely given and  cannot be earned. 

In fact, no past failure could ever deter Him from pursuing you. His heart for you is unlike even the most wonderful love we receive from our faithful human father’s in this life. It is better. It is perfect. God’s love is freely given for us to receive and believe,even while He knew how we would sin. He knew we would love ourselves more than anything else. He knew how we would fail and fall, and that we would betray Him. That did not stop His journey to the cross. (Romans 5:8) If we  believe, where we’ve come from and what we’ve done has no say. We have the right to become children of God! In being called children, we inherit everything the scriptures teach as true about children of God. There is endless goodness found in our inheritance!

Our identities are founded on truth. Our value as humans is established by God and not by any circumstance. We were created in His image. (Genesis 1:27) We are carefully crafted in our mother’s wombs by His hand. (Psalm 139:13-14)

What I believed about my value because of the absence of my father was not true. Whether you have a present and engaged dad or not, these lies try to rob us of our true identity as daughters of God. What lies have you believed and WHO TOLD YOU THAT?

Friends, even our best, present and faithful fathers fall short of saving us from mistaken identity. 

The truth is… 

We are perfectly loved. (John 3:16)

We are saved. (Ephesians 2:8)

We are forgiven. (Colossians 1:13-14)

We are new creations. (2  Corinthians 5:17)

We are free. (John 8:36)

Who told you that? God Himself.

Cheering you on always,

Sited from above: Moore, Beth. The Quest. Nashville, Lifeway Press, 2017.

 

Daddy Issues Part 2

“The LORD himself goes before you and will be with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged.” Deuteronomy 31:6, Hebrews 13:5b

Day after day, he slept. Machines breathing for him. Medicines pumping into him. Monitors keeping track of it all. The grueling experience of watching our precious 5 year old boy waste away, lying motionless in a medically induced coma that was necessary to save his life was too much to bear. As time slowly passed, we saw muscle tone leave his face, abdomen, arms and legs. Judah defied doctors’ expectations, continuing to show atypical responses to conventional therapies and trials for the monster seizures that stormed his brain. Moment by moment we prayed, begging God to lift the natural course of the mysterious condition and heal our boy. 

I laid my hands on him to pray again. I was only a few words into the prayer when I saw another massive seizure begin on the monitor. I broke. My husband put his hands on my shoulders.

“I just feel like He’s turned His back on us; like He has turned His face away. Why isn’t He doing something?” I uttered the words through tears as I poured out my heart. We had been struggling through our son’s health crisis for more than a month. 

My feelings at the time were leading me to believe God did not care. He was not acting because, like I had experienced with my earthly dad, He had left. He had abandoned us in our greatest time of need. Something I had done had made Him look unfavorably on me, or even worse, I just wasn’t valuable enough for Him to help.

These feelings could not be further from the truth.

It is said that your first ideas about who God is and what He is like come from your experiences with your first caretakers, usually your parents. What we experience with them is what we tend to attribute to God. Whether we are shamed by them,  compelled to meet an unattainable standard of perfection, mistreated or abandoned, it all impacts the lens through which we look at our heavenly parent. We subconsciously expect Him to act the same way as our earthly examples.

This makes sense. When I think about the deeper issues of the heart, I can trace back to the earliest time I remember feeling rejected or devalued and who was involved. This helps me to track down the lies my experiences lead me to believe in order to replace them with the truth God gives in scripture.

There was so much I needed in those moments of disorienting devastation. Truthfully, I still have moments of wondering why He does not act. God knew exactly what I needed, and He graciously met me in the middle of my pain and confusion. He still does. Although He often does not act as we hope, pray for, or expect, He is always doing good work; Infinitely more than we can see or comprehend. His Word, which continuously promises me His Presence, is a balm to my soul. “I am with you always.” (Matthew 28:20) “I will never leave you or forsake you.” (Deuteronomy 31:6)

The scriptures open my eyes to the truth that suffering and affliction don’t only come to children He does not value or who have disappointed Him, I search the scriptures. I have to remind myself that He indeed, “makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just and on the unjust. (Matt. 5:45) I see Job. I see Paul. I see Christ. I see endless examples of people He loved suffering.

In Matthew 14, Jesus made His disciples get into a boat and knowingly sent them off into a scary situation. I can imagine this was not what any of them prayed in their morning requests for protection and calm waters. “The boat was already a considerable distance from land, buffeted by the waves because the wind was against it.” (Matt. 14:24) When they feared for their lives in those moments, they must have felt abandoned. “Why isn’t He doing something?” Yet Jesus knew he would reveal Himself as the son of God in the midst of their most terrifying moment. He went to meet them on the water in the midst of the chaos, and they did not recognize Him. At the end of this story in particular, there is a profession of faith: “Truly you are the son of God.” God still has not responded to our prayers as we have hoped, but He has revealed Himself to us as the true Son of God in remarkable ways.

I soak in the truth of Psalm 23. “He leads me on paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.” (Ps. 23:3) Although this path in particular does not feel like a path of righteousness to me, whatever path He leads His children down always is. Whether that is a path of suffering or ease, I can trust Him to choose best because He is truly a good Father.

I share all this today to remind you, dear friend: that the feeling that He has turned His back on you is simply not true. God has not turned His back on you. He has not abandoned you, acting on some fickle form of conditional human love. He has loved us with an everlasting love from which nothing can separate us. (Romans 8:38-39) NOTHING.

Choose to believe that your good Father is working when we don’t see it. These are His promises. He is purifying in the midst of the fire. (Malachi 3:3) You will not be burned. He is transforming in the flood. The waters will not sweep over you. He is perfecting through endurance of the trial. (Isaiah 43:2) You will be mature and complete, lacking nothing. (James 1:3-4)

“God is not man, that he should lie, or a son of man, that he should change his mind. Has he said, and will he not do it? Or has he spoken, and will he not fulfill it?” (Numbers 23:19)

He values us so passionately, that He came near and gave Himself completely, that He might never have to leave us again. (Romans 5:8) Preach that to your soul when the lies come. He never leaves.

Cheering you on always,