Permission Granted

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Hosea 2:14-23, 2 Corinthians 1:19-22

Text: Hosea 2:14-23, 2 Corinthians 1:19-22

I’ve been a believer in Jesus since I was five years old.

We were standing toward the front of our United Methodist chapel, singing from a hymnbook in the pews, my mom and my brother and me. I don’t remember what preceded the moment, but I remember feeling sure that Jesus was real. And I remember feeling sure that I wanted to serve Him. So I closed my eyes and held out my hands, palms up, like I was holding a serving tray. It was exhilarating.

This was my version of Moses’ “Here I am” (Exod. 3:4). This was childlike faith in its uncomplicated beauty.

As I grew, my faith grew too. We attended church regularly, and I was as involved as I could be. I went to Sunday school and Bible studies and summer youth trips. I read the Bible outside of church too. I began to journal my prayers. But even as I became more sure of who God was, I became less sure of who I was in relation to Him. The little girl who stood unabashedly before God, eager hands ready to serve, became a teenager who hid like Mother Eve beneath fig leaves of shame.

It was no longer Moses’ “Here I am” that I echoed in my heart. It was also his disbelief: “Who am I that I should go?” Or, as was more accurate to my line of thinking at the time: who am I that I am worth loving?

The fullness of the gospel had saved me, but I only seemed to remember half of it.

I knew I needed to be forgiven, but I couldn’t believe I was.

I knew God’s love was deep, but I thought my sin was deeper.

I knew Christ accepted me, but I didn’t imagine He’d accepted all of me.

I was a work in process, and I assumed the work was mine to complete. I was a well-intentioned mess, and I thought the mess was mine to clean up.

But guess what? That wasn’t Truth. God never said I have to clean myself up before I come to Him, to get it right before I trust in Him. He never said I could not or would not be a work in process. Search for these commands in the Bible, and you will come up short.

In fact, God says the opposite.

The Bible is full of in-process people, those whom Christ pursued and loved exactly as they were, well-intentioned messes like me. Like you. If we need permission to be in process, we can look to Scripture.

I am the woman at the well, taken aback that this man would dare to be seen with me.
I am Zaccheus, standing at a distance and hoping to catch a glimpse of the Messiah.
I am Peter, promising I would never deny Him and then turning around to do exactly that.
I am Peter, weeping when I meet Jesus’ eyes and realize that I have failed and failed big, again.
I am Martha, running around trying to guarantee my worth and everyone else’s happiness.
I am Mary, collapsing at His feet because I am so desperate for His presence.
I am the adulterous woman, standing guilty for all the world to see.
I am the bleeding woman, utterly incapable of healing what ails me.
I am a mess, in process, just like all of them. Looking through its pages, I see pieces of me all through God’s Book.

In God’s Word I’m reminded that I don’t secure my standing before Him by any guarantees I make, or even those I manage to keep. I am secure because He holds me in the safety of His covenant, the same covenant He has kept for generations past and will keep for generations to come.

The above is an excerpt from Chapter 3 of the book She Reads Truth: Holding Tight to Permanent in a World That’s Passing Away, written by Raechel Myers and Amanda Bible Williams. Find She Reads Truth, the book, on Amazon or anywhere books are sold.SRT-Book16-instagram3s

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288 thoughts on "Permission Granted"

  1. Damaris Resto Black says:

    I can relate at this point in my life. I have demons attacking me left and right. BUT GOD IS BIGGER!

  2. Erin Dillard says:

    I relate so much to this. I remember vividly and clearly the day I gave my life to Christ. I was 10 years old and I was with my sister in church, she was 9. I walked up to the pulpit and prayed and asked Jesus into my heart. My sister followed and did the same. I remember my 5th grade teacher was there and there were hugs all around from the adults. I remember being baptized with my sister shortly after. I felt so joyous and happy and right with the world at the time. As a teenager I struggled. I warred with myself over my faith and my fear of rejection. I always knew I believed but I kept my faith to myself. Sometimes I would try to witness and give testimony. Often it was met with scorn or ridicule. So I kept my mouth shut. This pattern has followed me into adulthood. I share my faith on social media but struggle with sharing in person. My sister lost her faith quickly in her teenage years and as an adult has outright rejected the Gospel as truth. She’s in a very bad place in life now in her mid thirties and it breaks my heart to see it. I treasure that time we were baptized together in my heart and yet my sister has lost her belief in God and has rejected Jesus as her savior. I pray for her often to come back to Him. I still struggle myself every day. I ask God to make my heart better and my faith stronger. I cry out to him to help me see Him more clearly. I want to be a good servant but I often feel so lost and don’t know where to start.

  3. Donnica Holmes says:

    Thank you Lord for the confirmation that I have permission!!! Thank you for what you are doing in my mess life Amen

  4. Lizzy Butterfield says:

    “She shall sing there” Hosea 2:15 ❤️

  5. Kathleen KillebrewCalhoun says:

    ❤️

  6. Ana Grace Demayo says:

    God reminding me today that He loves me just as I am – flawed, broken and a mess. And that His promise to continually restore me still stands and will continue to be for the days to come.

  7. Rachel Blessum says:

    I needed to hear this message today! I often find myself in the “I need to fix myself” boat and I know I need to lean into Jesus instead.

  8. Christene Chavez says:

    This scripture reading reminds me of the song Come As You Are by The Worship Initiative. God is constantly reshaping us through lessons. And unfortunately it involves the process of laying out our burdens and shame to him