Excellent post from Mark Buchanan sent to me from my wife. Great thoughts and a challenge. This is one of those posts that I kept saying, "Ya, I can totally relate!"
"Like a city whose walls are broken down is a man who lacks self-control." Proverbs 25:28
Little Guy didn’t want to leave.
At first he ignored her, then he
defied her, then he assailed her.
To her credit, she remained calm.
She spoke quietly. She stood her
ground. She didn’t bargain.
In the end, magnificently composed,
she carried Little Guy out the door, a wild banshee of a boy, thrashing and
wailing as he went.
It got me thinking about the
difference between control and
self-control.
These two things – control and self-control – stand at
opposite ends of the maturity spectrum.
The toddler was a live-action reel
of a fierce effort to control his mother.
And he was a spectacle of
immaturity.
The mom was a breathtaking portrait of impeccable self-control. And she was the epitome of maturity.
Toddlers brim with the impulse to
control (even as they bungle the execution). A 3-year-old will resort to
wild-eyed tantrums, incessant whining, ear-piercing screams, coy manipulation,
and flat-out demand to try to get their way: to control their parent, or
sibling, or playmate, or the situation at hand.
But as the toddler’s attempts to
control things
escalate, his ability to control himself
deteriorates. His need to
be in control makes him more and more out-of-control. The
results are not pretty.
This all looks different in adults –
usually.
Of course, we’ve all met 28- or 33-
or 59-year olds (sometimes in the mirror) who, in an increasingly desperate
effort to control people or situations, throw tantrums, power up, make threats,
emotionally blackmail, withdraw into icy silence, and so on.
But most of us, by age 19 or so,
have an epiphany of sorts: that
the louder we shout, the less others listen.
That the more we manipulate, the further others back away.
That the more we toss a fit, the
more others look at us and think, “What a sad strange little man,” or, “What a
drama queen.”
That's the epiphany.
The truly wise become deeply humble. They realize that the only kind of control the Bible endorses -- indeed, commands -- is self-control.
The New Testament has 16 separate exhortations to be self-controlled. It's a major theme.
So the wise heed that, and work with
the Holy Spirit to get a grip on themselves. They receive the comfort, the
rebuke, the strength, and the instruction of God himself to discipline their
thoughts, emotions, attitudes, and actions.
They give up trying to control others and step up being in control of themselves.
The lovely irony is that the self-controlled exert wide influence. People
listen to them. Heed them. Seek them. Follow them.
In other words, the self-controlled
accomplish the very thing the controlling desperately want but only ever
sabotage.
Here’s what I’ve learned: Every impulse to seize control — is the
Holy Spirit’s invitation to practice self-control.
Every nerve jolt to freak out, melt
down, start yelling, fly into rage or panic is
a divine cue to slow down, breathe deep, start praying, and lean into God.
Every instinct to control something is God's nudge to control myself.
I don’t always get it right. When I
don’t, I not only lose self-control: I lose influence. I lose respect. I lose
dignity.
When I do get it right, I gain all
around.
Lord, help me get a grip on myself.
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