Being awkward and chubby as an adolescent didn’t do much for my position in the social hierarchy of my elementary school. Being the only kid in school to wear homemade polyester slacks and scuffed wingtips didn’t help either.
Looking back, those years prepared me more for adulthood than
any other single thing. They taught me to have tough skin, to understand,
fundamentally, that though sticks and stones may break my bones, words would
never hurt me and that bullies will bully until you resist them. I also learned
that how people view you is on them and not on you. If you can’t see past the pinstripes
and the button-down collar on an eleven-year-old, that’s a you problem, not a
me problem.
It’s not that my parents were pacifists, but I think they had
a mild form of PTSD from all the times the police showed up on our doorstep in
the middle of the night asking to inspect the home to ensure that we were not
in possession of any illicit materials. By illicit materials, they meant Bibles,
and although most often there were Bibles in the house, they never seemed to
find them, but that’s another story for another time.
Both my mom and dad were of the keep your head down and don’t
make waves mindset. We were fresh off the boat, so to speak, and they didn’t
want or need any trouble. My grandpa, on the other hand, was a bit more direct,
and when I told him that a couple of the boys had set their hearts on making my
days less than sunny, he put his hand on my shoulder and said, “it will stop
when you want it to stop.”
That sounded mighty esoteric to me at a couple of years shy
of being a teenager. Looking back, I know he was right, and the profundity of
the statement, although simplistic on its surface, has me returning to that
moment over thirty-five years later.
I was hoping for an easy fix. I was hoping someone else would
fight my battles for me. I was hoping my grandpa would show up to the school,
broomstick in hand, and give me justice. Although my grandpa loved me, and I
knew he did, he knew that my hoping for someone else to fight my battles was no
way to go through life.
A few days later, after a bloody nose and a lump on the head
from a rage-swung backpack, Ramon and Felix never bothered me again. Since it
happened after school while on my way home, my parents didn’t even have to
endure the terror of having to show up at the school because they had been
summoned.
It’s easy to see how past traumas affect people presently, most
often in how they react to everyday interactions with individuals they deem the
face of their persecutor. The one time my mom got pulled over because she’d
crossed a double yellow line, she almost had a panic attack.
I’m sure the chickadee quartet will pipe in and point out that
she should have gotten deliverance or had Benny Hinn blow the spirit of courage
upon her, but you suffer through decades of not knowing if your father or
husband will come home from an interrogation, or constantly being on high alert
because at any moment you could have men with guns and grim looks on their
faces turn your world upside down. Do that; then, we can have the conversation.
It’s easy to let words fall out of your mouth without
considering the context or the situation the individual was in. I got why my
mom was scared of authority figures, especially people in uniform. I understood
her instinctual reaction toward flight. Once bitten, twice shy is a thing.
It got better with time; eventually, she, too, decided it was
time for the fear to stop, and it did.
James 4:7, “Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the
devil, and he will flee from you.”
If the devil is not resisted, he will keep pressing. He does
not retreat when he has no reason to because, at heart, the devil is a bully.
He seeks out easy prey, then attacks it until what he deems easy game fights
back.
The onus is on you to resist him. I know it’s a lot simpler
if God were to fight our battles for us, and because we take one verse in
Exodus out of context, some people believe this to be the case. Read the whole
chapter through, and you’ll see it settles differently than how most modern
preachers insist that it does.
It wasn’t God that said I will fight for you; it was Moses
trying to bolster the flailing courage of the people who said the Lord will
fight for you.
Then, in the next verse, we see God speaking to Moses, not
enthusiastically backing Moses’ play.
Exodus 14:15, “And the Lord said to Moses, “Why do you cry to
Me? Tell the children of Israel to go forward.”
Go forward. Don’t just sit in the dust waiting for things to
fall into place, don’t let fear paralyze you, and don’t let yourself be bogged
down by a thousand voices saying a thousand different things. Go forward!
Yes, the sea is before you, the enemy is behind you, you see
no way out, you want to quit, and you have no fight left in you, but you still
need to go forward. Only when the people of Israel advanced did the sea begin
to part. If they’d just sat there indulging in their pity party, they would
have been overrun by the Egyptian chariots.
The devil isn’t the only thing that will flee when you resist.
Fear will flee, doubt will flee, uncertainty will flee, and all the things that
negatively impact you have no power once you resist them.
Stand up to the bullies in your life. It will stop when you
want it to stop, and no one can stop it for you.
Yes, God will do what you cannot. No amount of people could have parted the sea. He won’t, however, do for you what you can do for yourself. The people needed to go forward of their own volition. No magic carpet rides then, and no magic carpet rides now.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
1 comment:
Highlighting this one for future reference.
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