
By Jill Briscoe
I was really busy. That was a good feeling. In fact it was almost a necessity,
seeing that my husband was on the road most of the time. We were in
Britain in full-time Christian work where one of the sayings of our mission
was, "Soldiers of Jesus Christ are on duty twenty-four hours a day, seven
days a week." Maybe this sounds a bit extreme, but my husband, Stuart,
and I were in a Christian culture whose favorite hymn was, "Let us burn
out for Thee, Lord Jesus."
It wasn't until I came to America and saw seminars on burnout that I
recognized what was happening to me over and over again. I had burned
out spiritually. This was no one's fault but my own. The mission leaders
certainly had spoken strongly about keeping fresh in ministry and had given
us all the encouragement in the world to do so.
Every week during the short-term Bible schools that were run in the
center, a guest speaker would teach the Bible, and the staff were always welcome
to take advantage of this. I hardly ever did. My excuses ranged from
not being able to find a baby-sitter for our three children to busying myself
with my own ministry to the women and youth in the area.
I had three translations of the Bible on my shelves and a library of
Christian books. Few had been read. As a result, I felt like a flat camel! The
nourishment that should have been stored in my hump was gone! I would
be on duty during the church service so I would seldom even get into the
chapel to participate in the corporate worship.
I was busy with spiritual stuff, but it was all output and no intake. The
inevitable result was a desert experience.
The drier I got, the more irritating my children became. "My kids are
driving me crazy," I complained to a friend. "Jill," she said gently, "your
children don't create your attitude, they reveal it!" I knew she was right.
When you are thirsty, you can see mirages. Satan aided in this. "Everything
is fine," he assured me. "You have a meeting every night of the week, and
people are coming to the house day and night to get help. Don't stop doing
what you are doing," he intoned in my ear. "In fact you could squeeze a
couple of more things in on your only day off." I listened and complied, not
recognizing his voice. After all, surely there was spiritual merit in burning
out for Jesus.
"Actually there is greater merit in burning on for Jesus," whispered the
Spirit of God in my ear, but I thought the still, small whisper was the wind.
Busyness doesn't have to be wrong. It is busyness God has not authorized
that is wrong. Jesus said, "I must work the works of Him that sent Me while
it is day; the night comes when no one can work." At the end of His life He
was able to say, "I have finished the work You gave Me to do." Note that
He finished the work His Father had given Him to do. Not the work His
Father had given everyone else to do! It is from the Word of God that
we find out what work God wants us to do! We can't
figure it out for ourselves. If we are not in the Word of
God then the "tyranny of the urgent" will rule. Once
when Jesus' disciples were strung out with the demands
of ministry, Jesus said, "Come apart and rest awhile"
(see Mk. 6:31). He knew that if they didn't come apart
they would surely come apart! How do we draw aside
and leave things undone in order that the greater thing
be done? I didn't know, and I didn't do it until trouble
forced me to confront the issue.
Trouble came to me in a series of difficult things. First
my dad got cancer. This was incredibly painful; watching
a beloved parent slowly disintegrate before your
eyes. Then our daughter broke her arm the day after Stuart
left for a long trip. I hurt my back quite seriously,
and on top of all this we had a series of threats from
some dangerous kids we had been working with. Suddenly
the long absences of my husband on ministry business
became overwhelming, and I found out that I was
not the good little missionary wife I had thought I was!
Unresolved issues that had been festering in my heart
began to surface and I realized a whole lot of issues lay
unresolved. Of course I hadn't taken time out with the
Lord to resolve them, so they had steadily built up and
now began to spill over into my daily life. They began to
be vented on my friends and family who seemed powerless
to help me.
This desert of spiritual despondency was dry and
hot and made me oh-so-thirsty for a cup of cold water
from the spring of living waters. God brought the story
of Hagar to mind. My hands busy, my mind rehearsed
the narrative. This woman, pregnant and alone, was in a
tough spot, having run away from Sarai, who was mistreating
her. A desert without water is serious business,
and Hagar ran on till she found a well. It was providential
because, pregnant and alone, Hagar was prey
to dehydration and marauders. It was in a desert of her
own making that she found the life giving water. It
was at the well that she heard the voice of the Lord,
"Hagar, where have you come from, and where are you
going?" (Gen. 16:8). It was not that God was ignorant
of her movements; He wanted to engage her in dialogue.
Hagar drank at the well. Water—life-giving, sustaining water—saved her life,
and she went home to less-than-favorable circumstances, refreshed by the
incredible experience of meeting the "living God" who knew her by name.
As I tied a small, wiggling child's shoelaces I knew I needed a "Hagar"
experience. I couldn't remember how long it had been since I had really
heard His voice. I would not perhaps have come to this place if it hadn't
been for the problems that God had allowed into my life. So I allowed the
hurts to drive me to God, and He dealt with me as gently as He dealt with
Hagar, and so my healing began.
The first thing I did was reinstate my time with God that had fallen into
disrepair. I began to visit the Well on a daily basis. It was a matter of reforming
a habit.
Discipline came hard to me, especially after such a long
dry spell, but I set myself down after lunch every
day. It wasn't long before I heard the still,
small voice whisper, "You should have come
sooner." But then it often takes pain or pressure
to drive us to God. I read, "How shall we escape
if we neglect so great a salvation?" (Heb. 2:3).
This passage convicted me. It was the start of a
brand-new day!
The Word leaped to life as God and I
began to talk about many things together.
I couldn't wait until lunchtime. I found
corners around the house where I could
leave a Bible open with a
notebook and I wrote
God little notes of appreciation,
captured a Scripture
that came to mind, or
jotted down a child's need
on the run. My desert began
to blossom like a rose. And
I was not the only one who
noticed the difference. "You
are a nicer mommy," Judy
commented one day. I was
discovering that being a nice
mommy under pressure takes
as much power as preaching
to thousands of people, and
I have done both. I learned
the secret of contentment in
those days. As Paul found,
the content of contentment
is Christ! (Phil. 4:12-13). I
knew in my head that no man
could ever love me enough,
no child could ever need me
enough, no friend could ever
befriend me enough—only Jesus
could! But now I began to
know that fact
in my heart.
I remember sitting by our fire in our small house. I
should have been really lonely, as Stuart had just gone
on a three-month worldwide ministry tour. Yet, Jesus
was far too near and far too dear to me in those wonderful
days of spiritual reality to let me feel sorry for myself.
My soul was laughing and my spirit tap-dancing! Only
God can dig a well that deep in your soul!
It was on that particular night that our friend from
youth group, who had just gotten out of prison, chose
to do a bit of "Jill terrorizing," and I heard knocking
on the windows. My heart raced and I prayed, "Help,
Lord." "Surely," He replied. I found myself incredibly
calm. When he got around to my side of the house I
opened the door in his face, screamed at him at the top
of my lungs, and went for him with a fire poker. It connected
with his backside as he ran into the bushes. I
went back inside and called the police. "He won't bother
you again," the officer said, and he didn't. That night I
had one of the sweetest times of my life with the Lord.
His presence was so evident in my little room that I kept
looking around to see Him there. To be as happy with
the problems of life as without them is to find the oasis
of the Spirit in the deserts of your life.
Not long after this, I allowed my spiritual disciplines
to slip again. I stopped visiting the Well and allowed
the barrenness of busyness to take over one more time.
I added all sorts of activities to an already overloaded
schedule and set to work. I enjoyed everything and
shut my ears to the still, small voice telling me I had
become more enamored with the work of the Lord than
with the Lord of the work! Like Martha in Luke 10:40,
I had allowed myself to become "distracted with much
serving."
But I plowed on regardless, ignoring the warning
signs of spiritual fatigue that surfaced. One day, driven
by guilt to have a rare quiet time, I read the story of
Elijah under his proverbial broom tree and recognized
myself.
"I have had enough, Lord," Elijah complained, and
I echoed his sentiments (see 1 Kings 19:4). I, too, "had
had it, Lord," with the mission, with the long absences
of my husband, with the struggle of raising three small
children. I had a growing consciousness that I had failed
everyone, including God Himself. Flat on my face in my
desert of despair I gave up, whereupon I heard a cheerful
"At last!" from the general vicinity of heaven!
In my desert of despondency I learned the life message
that the basis of all spiritual strength is helplessness
and dependence, and so God had been waiting to see me
come to "wit's end corner" and throw myself on Him.
I discovered right then that He would bake me bread
and quench my thirst just as He did for Elijah (1 Kings
19:6-8). Being busy had become synonymous with being
spiritual. Yet I handled all the outside activity moderately well. It was the inactivity in my spirit that took
me down. When God is busy in your life, the service
flows out naturally. You are renewed day by day. It is
simple then to know when to say no and when to say
yes. When the Bible is open again and you are open to
it, then the dynamism of the Spirit drives the engine,
and not self-power. The difference is dramatic.
I didn't stay under the broom tree long. I was refreshed
by the Lord's loving concern, "The journey is
too great for you" (1 Kings 19:7). I journeyed on in His
power, reminded that I could not live the Christian life
by myself, but rather by Him and through Him. Deserts
would come and go. The desert of death, the desert
of opposition and criticism, the desert of fear and pain,
the desert of obsessive worry about my kids. But no
desert was as important as this one was. The desert of
"doing" would be my undoing before any of the other
places of testing. "Doing without being" could finish
me off all together.
So a great prayer adventure began all those years
ago in England, and is still going on. For prayer, I
knew, would be the means of attaining a freshness in
the Spirit as the cry of my heart was this: "I want to
know Christ and the power of His resurrection and the
fellowship of sharing in His sufferings, becoming like
Him in His death" (Phil. 3:10).
Knowing Christ doesn't mean 'coming' to know
Him, it means 'getting' to know Him until you are
down on your knees with your face to the rising Son
and never wanting to get up again. Power to minister
grace to a hurt and dying world. Grace to have words
of comfort not a curse, words of healing not of hurt,
words of fire and life. And knowing Christ means being
Christ-centric and not egocentric. Dying to yourself
and living to Him, for Him, and through Him. It
all comes down to today. After all, we only have today.
We don't have all the yesterdays when we learned our
desert lessons or all the tomorrows when we may well
find ourselves under some broom tree or other. We
make a daily choice to meet with Him about the day
He has gifted us with! Will we do it?
I went to the Well today. It was wonderful. We
talked secrets He and I, the Lover of my soul. And He
thanked me for coming. "You should have come sooner,"
He said. He was right, of course; I should have. My
loss! What a Savior, what a Friend, what an incredible
Jesus!
Adapted from The Desert Experience: Personal Reflections
on Finding God's Presence and Promise in
Hard Times ©2001 by Thomas Nelson Publishers in
Nashville, Tennessee. Used with permission.
Jill Briscoe is executive editor of Just Between Us magazine.
Additionally, she has served on the board of directors for World
Relief and Christianity Today, Inc., and is a popular speaker at
Christian events around the world. Jill and her husband, Stuart,
have three grown children and 13 grandchildren.
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