By: Donna Bucher
Reluctantly, I admit despite the exhortation in Galatians 6:9, I grow weary in well-doing. Helping others,
investing in the Kingdom of God and committing time to my own spiritual growth sometimes
brings weariness.
Earnestly seeking God's wisdom, along with a petition for
relief yielded an unexpected answer.
Containing two elements, my answer seemed disconnected.
Pointing me to Galatians 6:9, made sense; maintain steadfastness in doing
good works, even when results seem delayed. But equating the daily spiritual
battle with well-doing?
Somehow I never made that connection.
An often
overlooked area of well-doing involves enduring hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ.
(2 Timothy 2:3)
Grasping a fuller understanding of well-doing in my Christian
life helped me gain the proper perspective on my daily spiritual battles.
Enduring hardness as a good soldier, is
well-doing. If we engage in works of service, attention to
personal spiritual growth, and obedience to God's call on our lives; fleshly
revolts and attacks from the enemy of our souls is inevitable.
OVERCOMING
WEARINESS IN THE CHRISTIAN WALK
Facing the relentless spiritual battle, revealed my attitude
of entitlement, sprinkled with a lack of meekness, patience, and fortitude in
my life.
Recognition and repentance for my entitlement attitude moved
me into position for cultivating these much needed traits. Though seemingly
unrelated, these three "virtues" boast an inter-dependence which
remains as strong as a three-fold cord.
Fortitude
A simple definition of fortitude according to the Webster's
1828 dictionary is, "That
strength or firmness of mind or soul which enables a person to encounter danger
with coolness and courage, or to bear pain or adversity without murmuring,
depression or despondency."
Characteristics
of Fortitude:
Steadfastness. While I
demonstrated courage in facing down adversity, it remained a short-lived courage.
True fortitude focuses on the goals and sees difficulties through to
the end.
Resolve.
Courage takes the first step, but resolve carries you to the end. True fortitude
stays the course regardless of obstacles, without complaint, melancholy or loss
of faith.
Patience
Today's culture often views patience simply as a stance we
take upon waiting for an outcome or answer. But Webster's 1828 dictionary gives
a fuller definition: "The suffering of
afflictions, pain, toil, calamity, provocation or other evil, with a
calm, unruffled temper; endurance without
murmuring or fretfulness." Webster further adds the
nuance, "patience may spring from constitutional
fortitude, or from Christian submission to the divine will.
Characteristics
of Patience:
Self-discipline.
The
patience I exhibit has a form of self-control in that I contain my annoyance or
displeasure outwardly. Inwardly and towards God, I harbor complaints and
impatience for my desired outcome. True patience reflects a steady, calm
influence maintaining equanimity in the face of difficulty.
Commitment.
While I exhibit patience as my initial response, many trials and spiritual
attacks stretch on, testing my commitment, resulting in my wavering and
faltering. True patience remains steadily and contentedly committed to
the faith, trusting in the truth of God's Word.
Webster's 1828 dictionary defines meekness as follows: "Softness of temper; mildness; gentleness;
forbearance under injuries and provocations." Adding the
clarification statement, "humility; resignation; submission to the divine
will, without murmuring or peevishness; opposed to pride, arrogance and
refractoriness."
Characteristics
of Meekness:
Power under control. While
I submit to trials and hardships, underneath, my pride chafes at injustice,
often spilling out as righteous indignation. True meekness mitigates
anger with gentleness, maintaining authority over pride and selfish ambition.
Submission
without discontent. Yes, I submit to God's chosen will in trials and His
permissive will in spiritual attack, but not without discontent. True meekness
willingly, cheerfully and peacefully submits to God, trusting Him fully with
any injustice.
Reviewing the definitions of fortitude, patience, and meekness
reveals their connection. But a deeper scrutiny unveils their inter-dependence.
All three words display tremendous strength; bound together, they possess an
invincible force for the Christian.
Fortitude endows us with courage to face hardness, its
steadfastness and resolve find endurance through the self-discipline of
patience. Meekness brings the fire of fortitude under submission to the divine
will, guarding it from selfish ambition. Empowering both the courage of
fortitude and the commitment of patience with the settled joy of God's
sovereignty and justice.
How do you struggle with weariness in your Christian walk?
Find more encouragement and FREE Resources at Serenity in Suffering!
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