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Why Your Story Matters More Than You Think

Why Your Story Matters More Than You Think

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The Wake-Up Call is a daily encouragement to shake off the slumber of our busy lives and turn our eyes toward Jesus.

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PRAYER OF CONSECRATION

Wake up, sleeper, rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you. 

Jesus, I belong to you.

I lift up my heart to you.
I set my mind on you.
I fix my eyes on you.
I offer my body to you as a living sacrifice.

Jesus, we belong to you. 

Praying in the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, amen. 

Acts 27:1–8

When it was decided that we would sail for Italy, Paul and some other prisoners were handed over to a centurion named Julius, who belonged to the Imperial Regiment. We boarded a ship from Adramyttium about to sail for ports along the coast of the province of Asia, and we put out to sea. Aristarchus, a Macedonian from Thessalonica, was with us.

The next day we landed at Sidon; and Julius, in kindness to Paul, allowed him to go to his friends so they might provide for his needs. From there we put out to sea again and passed to the lee of Cyprus because the winds were against us. When we had sailed across the open sea off the coast of Cilicia and Pamphylia, we landed at Myra in Lycia. There the centurion found an Alexandrian ship sailing for Italy and put us on board. We made slow headway for many days and had difficulty arriving off Cnidus. When the wind did not allow us to hold our course, we sailed to the lee of Crete, opposite Salmone. We moved along the coast with difficulty and came to a place called Fair Havens, near the town of Lasea.

CONSIDER THIS

If you’ve been with me for any length of time, you know by now I am a master of the obvious insight. Here’s another one:

Chances are, your autobiography will never be written unless you write it. And chances are you will never write it.

We’ve been tracking Paul for weeks now and the journey is coming to a close. Today, after more than two years, he finally sets sail for Rome.

As I turned the page into chapter 27, I found myself wanting to have a big-picture view of Paul’s life. Sure, we get two years here and three years there along the way from the text, but the Bible doesn’t offer us a nice and neat autobiographical timeline. I want to know how old Paul was when he held those coats at the stoning of Stephen. What was his age when he saw the blinding light on the Damascus Road?

To track a person’s journey, accomplishments, and achievements alongside their age always fascinates me. It’s fun to think about what Paul did by a certain age and compare it to all I hadn’t even come close to doing by that same age.

I thought it might be helpful to map it out in a simple way here. Note: scholars will debate timelines and dates until Jesus returns so I do not offer this as definitive. It’s a guideline to give us a sense of his life’s unfolding.

  • Born somewhere around AD 2 to 4 
  • From around age 10 to around 13 he was trained by Gamaliel in Jerusalem
  • Around the age of 29 he found himself holding the coats at the stoning of Stephen
  • From 29 to 30 he became the chief persecutor of Christians
  • At 30 he “saw the light” on the Damascus Road
  • From 30 to 33 he was in Arabia, growing in his discipleship to Jesus
  • At 33 he returned to Jerusalem
  • From 33 to 40 he is in Tarsus
  • At 40 he goes with Barnabas on the first missionary journey
  • At 41 he goes on the second missionary journey
  • At 44 he goes on the third missionary journey
  • At 47 he’s back in Jerusalem and arrested and imprisoned in Casarea for two years
  • At 49 he is sent on the ship to Rome (today’s reading)
  • From 50 to 52 he’s imprisoned in Rome when he begins to write his letters
  • From 53 to 56 he’s free again and at work
  • At 57 he’s imprisoned for the last time in Rome
  • At around the age of 60 he was executed

It gives perspective, doesn’t it? I’m 57 at the moment. When Paul was my age he was in prison and writing letters to churches. In other words, things were going pretty badly for Paul at a prime season of his life. At the same time, his most important and enduring work of writing letters to churches continues to unfold.

Life is short and yet life is long. Sometimes what seem like the longest and most difficult (and even wasted) seasons in life turn out, in retrospect, to be both the shortest and most significant. It takes perspective to see it.

So back to your autobiography that you will probably never get around to writing. Here’s a helpful and somewhat easy step to take in that direction. Timeline your life. Pick the key moments, seasons, relationships, and events. Write them linearly across a page and simply put your age next to each of them. Who mattered most in your life and when and why? Now write a sentence or two about where you see God at work across the spectrum of your life. Where was he whispering, shouting, singing, guiding, blessing, and so forth? After scrolling out the table of contents, take a stab at drafting a short paragraph or three for each chapter.

Why do this? It is a powerful exercise in remembrance and reflection, two things we are in short supply of these days. The quiet and often unseen work of the Holy Spirit often becomes visible and clear through this kind of practice. Your story matters. It really does, and it is not over. God has not wasted a day of your life. Get in touch with the scope and sweep of it all. Regardless, it will give much-needed perspective, and, who knows, it could lead to some pretty significant decisions, maybe a course correction, or maybe just a long pause of gratitude. In the end, you aren’t writing it for someone else. You aren’t even writing it for yourself. You are writing it for Jesus. Something tells me it matters to him and he will use it to bless his kingdom. 

I did this for the first time when I was 27. It profoundly impacted me and my future. A lot has happened since then. I’m going to do it again. Will you join me?

THE PRAYER OF TRANSFORMATION

Lord Jesus, I am your witness. I long to be like you. 

I receive your righteousness and release my sinfulness.
I receive your wholeness and release my brokenness.
I receive your fullness and release my emptiness.
I receive your peace and release my anxiety.
I receive your joy and release my despair.
I receive your healing and release my sickness.
I receive your love and release my selfishness.

Come, Holy Spirit, transform my heart, mind, soul, and strength so that my consecration becomes your demonstration; that our lives become your sanctuary. For the glory of God our Father, amen.

THE JOURNAL PROMPTS

Will you consider taking a stab at starting to write your spiritual autobiography? If yes, then when? If not, why not?

THE HYMN

Today we will sing “Bringing in the Sheaves” (hymn 464) from our Seedbed hymnal, Our Great Redeemer’s Praise. Get your copy here. 

For the Awakening,
J.D. Walt

P.S. ORDER YOUR WAKE-UP CALL EXODUS SERIES JOURNAL TODAY: Here’s a deal just for you.

Yes, friends. We are diving into Exodus beginning September 2 and running right up to Advent. It is going to be a wild ride—forty chapters in thirteen weeks. The journal is an essential resource to optimize the journey. See what I did there—journal the journey. Order your journal today so we can make sure to have it in your hands for the starting line. I had faith and ordered a lot so don’t prove me wrong and turn them into toilet paper! Here’s the opportunity. It’s called BUY ONE SOW ONE. If you buy one journal, I will send you two—one for the person you are praying about inviting to join the Wake-Up Call for the Exodus series. Use the code SOWEXODUS

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Comments

3 Responses

  1. I woke up with this running through my heart and I haven’t even read today’s WUC yet. I’ve got to share this with you, before I read it.

    “If the risen Jesus has become real to you, it’s important that you open your heart and tell people how that happened.”

    1. Just read it! Awesome post! If you are a Christ-follower your autobiography is your testimony about how Jesus has worked in your life. One of the ways the early Christians overcame the devil is by “the word of their testimony.” (See Revelation 12:11.)

      Great advice today, JD, on how to get in closer touch with what Christ has done in your life. When I remember how Jesus became real to me, I’m, often moved to tears. When I share my salvation testimony with other people it touches their heart.

      The word of our testimony is a mighty spiritual weapon that Jesus has given to all of His followers. We need to use that awe-inspiring weapon much more often than we do. It is time that Christ-followers stop criticizing others and instead begin to witness to the glorious things that the risen Jesus has done (and is doing) in our individual life.

      I was an agnostic, and a Christian kept inviting me to an informal gathering of believers on my college campus. I finally went and I heard two different guys each give a short (2 or 3 minute) version of his salvation testimony. As they opened their heart and shared, something amazing happened deep within me. Like switching a switch, the Jesus I didn’t believe in became real to me, more real than my physical environment. Ever since that moment, through all my ups and downs, I’ve been continually aware of and blessed by His presence, His love, and His reality.

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