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Trust Is The Key

This is a regular beach walk of mine but often, when there have been big storms, of which we had many over the last few months, the stones and gullies have been changed. It can be a very different walk. I need to remember that we are all different as people depending on our personalities and maybe too the storms we have ridden.

Last night was youth group night. It was a new group and I didn’t want to presume that just because they had come to a church youth group that they all believed in God so our first question of the year was “Would you identify as a Christian? If yes why? If no why?”

Only three young people came and all said they would tell their friends they were Christians or that their friends knew this already. It was the “why?” question that challenged me the most.

For myself, I had a very powerful experience which brought me to really want to follow God in the big way. I would say I “became a Christian”. So for myself it is all about the experiential experience. One of the group said that when she prayers she can feel a presence sat beside her. But the other two, and the vicar, all said they just believed and struggled to say why they believed. The answer from all three of them was “I just do”. No wavering. No changing.

When we talked about what things it meant to be a Christian the main one was that God was centre of our lives. We didn’t get into tenants of faith. Nothing about what you had/had not to believe or do to be a Christian but just that God and Jesus were a major presences in our lives who encouraged us to think and behave in a different way.

The first church I attended, and many others I have been to that have shaped my beliefs, have been very much of the ilk that to be a Christian one had to do and say certain things, believe in certain things, accept certain things.

I’ve also studies not just the Reformation but many of the points in history where Christians have persecuted Christians because they have done things in a different way. Things we would now see as trivial. But as the vicar reminded me, even now [and I experienced in other churches] though there may not be actual burnings at the stake, there can often be judgements against those not have “prayed the prayer”, been “properly” baptised, and also the issues of gender and sexuality, care for the planet, who leads the congregations, etc, etc.

What struck me greatly was that we are all different in who we are but that makes us all different in how we approach God, how we behave about God and with God. For me I needed that experiential experience, something tangible to hold on to as I unraveled and rebuilt my life. But for others it is just that believing and that knowing that that is enough.

But what came out of if for me is that however we experience God and however God is out worked in our lives, that important bit is that we keep God and Jesus central and trust them enough to lean on them no matter what is going on around us. Through that can we show God in our lives to others. Then when we take God’s love to others it is something tangible not something we are just saying.

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By dianewoodrow

I married Ian in 2007. I have two grown up children, who I home schooled until they were 16. My son has just joined the army, my daughter has just moved to Cardiff.
I have a degree in History and Creative writing and a PGDip in using Creative Writing for Therapeutic Purposes.
Until Feb 2016 I lived in a beautiful part of England and now I live in a beautiful part of North Wales where my time is filled with welcoming Airbnb rental guests, running writing workshops, writing, serving in my local Welsh Anglican Church, going for long walks with my little dog, Renly, and drinking coffee and chatting with friends

5 replies on “Trust Is The Key”

Hi Beth, I certainly agree with your post but one of the things that is central to the faith is repentance and the transformation it brings when we truly believe in God and the the one whom He sent, Jesus. And remember what Jesus stated, those who claimed to be Jews but weren’t. Which means there are those who will claim to be Christian but really aren’t. It’s only through the need of knowing we need a Savior. God bless you and great post. Robin

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HI Robin, Thank you for commenting. Firstly my name is Diane. Beth is the lovely lady who comments regularly on my posts 🙂
Yes I do agree with what you say but I think before we forgive, repent, accept forgiveness, be transformed, it helps to have a trust in God and have God central in our lives. I am working on a “cart before the horse” post in which I’ll explore how, from my opinion, I think we sometimes put expecting people to repent before we help them realise that they are loved by God unconditionally.
But yes totally agree that we do need to keep repentance and transformation and all that Jesus did for us central to our lives and our faith. Again thank you so much for commenting. Diane 🙂

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Thank you so much Diane I’m sorry I mistook you for Beth. Personally, as for as the repentance portion, if the good news is truly being taught, than love is an automatic first step. Meaning, we provide the scriptures such as John 3:16 which speaks of God’s love and if need be, rely on other scriptures as well which speaks of God’s love. But, you can’t have God as central in your lives, if you don’t truly love Him and you haven’t asked for repentance. That’s unbiblical and it can lead one down a dangerous path to accepting another who has come in the name of Jesus. It’s through realizing what Jesus our Lord and Savior did on the cross that opens ones eyes which involves the love of the Father and Son. But this is basic good news teaching and anything else is just non biblical. Repentance must come first once one hears what God and the Lord Jesus did for us. At least, that’s the way the scriptures read.

Good luck to you and God bless you…Robin

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