Saturday, September 5, 2015

Have a Good Walk

"Keep walking" Most mornings I feel like Dori in Finding Nemo when she urges "keep swimming" or that mechanical voice in a large airport that subliminally urges travelers to "keep walking."  This week is the two year anniversary of Mickey and Molly joining our family.  The puppies are still in training, as I mention to those who pass by us on our daily walks.  They are better, I keep telling myself.

After months of "jerk and pull" and a few weeks of my self-designed chaos method(I'll describe it in a future blog), I finally enjoy the walks and for the past two days have declared them "good walks."

I keep distractions to a minimum.  We walk in the early morning. It's just the puppies-I haven't added our third dog Makena.  When we encounter other dogs we cross the street and I turn on  my Dori voice - keep walking.

When we meet humans on the path, I take plenty of time to pull them to the side and give the sit and stay.  Now more often than not, they stay as the human passes.   Early on, I mentioned "we're still in training."  Now we often get a "well-trained" compliment.

We walk the exact same route every day.   I know the obstacles and don't feel we are prepared for the unknown.

When I read Mark 3:7-12 I noticed three similar "bullet points."  Jesus took His disciples to the lake and a large crowd followed. They came from everywhere, Galilee to Tyre and Sidon.  To keep these people from crowding Him, He told His disciples to have a small boat ready.  He healed many as they pushed forward to touch Him.  When the evil spirits cried out "You are the Son of God",  He gave them strict orders not to  tell who He was.

Jesus knew these crowds could distract Him from His mission and distract others from hearing His message.  So

ü  Jesus kept His core group, His disciples, close. 
ü  He handled the curious by healing their disease, and
ü  He was strict with the evil.

(I've always been curious as to why Jesus was so strict about the evil spirits keeping silent.  Now during the political campaigns I have a glimmer of understanding.  Candidates spend far too much time answering and defending the negative comments.  Who knows what they stand for?  Instead we keep lists of their negatives and argue which is worse.  Jesus knew this was a waste of time and energy.  Unlike today's politicians, He had the authority to silence them because He didn't need their kind of advertising. He knew it would only distract the crowds from hearing His message of grace and understanding His gift of love.)

These three points remind me how to have a good daily walk with Jesus.  When circumstances beyond my control become part of my life, I need to keep my focus on my mission, my relationship with God. When I face challenges

ü  I should enlist the assistance of my core group, my family and my friends in the Lord.  They "get me" and have my interests as their goal. 
ü  I need to be "real" with the crowds of the world and live out  my relationship before them.  If others see how God gets me through a challenge, they will be attracted to God, not distracted. 
ü  Finally,  I need to keep evil in check.  This world presents far too many opportunities for evil, opportunities to focus, not on God and our relationship, but on distractions, emotions, gain, loss, pleasure, pain....

Each morning the puppies start the walk with a few moments to calm down.  First they sit calmly to have me connect the leashes.  Then at the end of the driveway, they sit again and I'll say "good walk" as I remind them of our mission.


Today I am reminded that each day I need to start with a few moments to focus on my mission for that day, the mission God has for me, not my "to do" list of activities and chores. I must learn to keep the distractions of life challenges from crowding my day and keeping me from my real mission. Each day I interact with people that may need to see or hear God and  I might be the instrument.  Each day my goal is to have a good walk with God.

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