Have you ever been in a restaurant when the lights suddenly dimmed and the softer, more ambient light began to glow, cluing you in to the fact that it was no longer day time, but evening had arrived? In fact, the restaurant may have even changed menus at about this same point, transitioning from smaller portions and reasonable prices to the larger entrees and equally enormous price tags.
My husband and I were recently at an Outback Steakhouse when this happened. We noticed the transition, felt it. But then it passed and our eyes adjusted and we moved on with our conversation. We had been in the light of day, but suddenly we were in the shadows of the evening. No big deal.
But while we may actually enjoy the shift from light to candlelight in a restaurant, the same transition sometimes occurs in our lives and we best take notice when it does.
Today I read in 1 John 1:5-7:
- I had secrets.
- I didn’t disclose all the facts at times.
- I insisted on privacy and resisted situations where I would need to be transparent.
- I balked at other people’s questions — simple questions like, “Where were you?” or “Who was on the phone?” or “When did you get that dress?”
- I kept my relationships shallow and surfacey.
- I lived in a shroud of guilt and secrecy and shame, but it was my normal so I didn’t try to remove it.
And when I lived in the dark, this one thing I knew: I was still under the watchful and omniscient gaze of my God, but I was not in fellowship with Him. And I wasn’t in fellowship with other believers either…not true, intimate fellowship.
But the darkness felt like a warm and comfortable blanket, heavy as it may have been. And if someone, even God, tried to lift it from me and pull me out of that dark cocoon, I would become angry, resentful, self-protective.
In time, however, I did, by the grace of God, step out into the glaring, blinding light again. It was a shock to my senses, uncomfortable and very exposing. But there I stood…until my eyes adjusted and I saw what I’d been missing.
- freedom
- fresh air
- fellowship with other believers…healthy people who are alive and living genuine, authentic lives
- peace with God
- relief
- wisdom, real wisdom, not that shady, mysterious, twisted stuff we call wisdom but which is in fact nothing but worldly foolishness, vanity and arrogance
- perspective, the big picture
- integrity
- authenticity
- grace for others
The truth is, life in the light is so much better. But somehow, in the shroud of dimly lit darkness we are fooled into believing that the life we are living is in fact superior to those in the simplicity of the light. I’ve lived in both. The light is where true life is.
And when you walk in transparency with others and humility with the one true God, you will walk in the light. He is in the light. And it’s good here, really it is.
I’ve found that I have to make a conscious effort to walk in the light. Here’s how I stay in the light:
- I keep in constant contact with Christ. I have a daily quiet time in which I read His Word and share with Him from my heart.
- I go to church. I engage with a body of believers and call them my family.
- I confess my sins as quickly as I’m convicted of them. I try my best (and it is difficult) to own them as “my sins” and not brush them off as anything else.
- I work really hard to tell the truth about every little thing. Once again, this is not always easy for me.
- I don’t allow myself to hide anything. When I catch myself hiding away some money, stashing away a favorite candy bar, tucking away a little memento even, I stop myself and ask why I’m doing that. If my reasons aren’t completely honorable (for instance, I think it’s fine to stash away $40 to buy my husband a birthday gift), I don’t let myself follow through. I can keep things; I just don’t let myself hide them. Once again, I’m sort of a bury-the-bone-in-the-backyard kind of dog, so this one’s hard for me. But it’s worth it to live in the light.
- I stay accountable about where I’m going. I tell someone when I’m going to the mall, for instance.
- I don’t have passwords on my phone, my computer, my television, etc. My family can see what I’m doing in those places. No secrets here.
- I enlist an accountability partner when I find myself struggling with a particular hang-up, e.g. watching too much television, over-eating, spending too much money on clothes, etc.
How about you? How do you stay in the light instead of drifting into the darkness? This is one of those areas where I can always use another helpful tip. In fact, I think we all could use an occasional shining from a fellow believer’s flashlight, helping to point the way back to the wide open spaces of living in the light. So, do share. After all, that’s what living in the light is largely about…keeping each other in the corner of our eye, so we’re less prone to get into something we never meant to get into.
Let’s live in the light!
Hi Kay!
I think "light" must be a theme this week. My Wed post was on light, and I've read 2 or 3 other bloggers thoughts on light. The Lord is speaking to us!
As far as staying in the light: when I see something in someone else that rubs me the wrong way, I ask the Lord to reveal that same thing in me. I don't want to be staring at others' splinters when I've got planks in my own eye.
Blessings from VA!
~Susan