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“Five foot, six inches,” The nurse stated, scribbling it down on her chart.
“I’m five-seven. I have been five-seven since I was sixteen years old! Want to see my driver’s license?” I demanded while rummaging through my purse.
Refusing my documentation, the nurse obliged to measure me one more time.
“Five foot, six inches on the dot. Sometimes people shrink, my dear.”
I rolled my eyes, writing the poor lady off as incompetent.
Even though I’m still in denial, the human body reaches its maximum height when we hit 20 years old. Our skeletal systems are fully formed and most of our bones have finished growing by the time we can legally drink our first margarita.
Inevitably,we stop growing and start shrinking.
Our mind, on the other hand, continues to mature. Scientists have concluded our brains reach full maturity around the age of twenty-five. I once heard a graduation speech where the principal informed the seniors it was acceptable for them to make impulsive decisions because the prefrontal cortex of their brain was not fully developed yet.
(News Flash: Teenagers don’t need our permission to do stupid things.)
All the parents—including myself—wanted to boo her off the stage.
Eventually our physical bodies cease to grow (height-wise, width-wise may be a different story) and our minds stop maturing, but what about our spirits?
If the Holy Spirit lives within us—we have unlimited potential.
Yet when was the last time your spirit has been stretched? When was the last time you tossed and turned at night with spiritual growing pains? When was the last time you ran into someone you hadn’t seen in awhile and they stop you mid-sentence to say, “Wow! I don’t even recognize you. Your faith has grown so much!”
In 2 Timothy 1:6, Paul encourages his protege Timothy from a Roman prison cell to “fan into flame the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of hands.”
Paul saw Timothy’s potential.
Timothy saw his limits.
Yet Paul knew a secret—you can’t keep running hard after God without a fan. The flickering embers of your “first love” will die out unless you continually fan them into flames.
When my family has a camp fire we don’t just blow on the fire to get it going. We are “Go Big or Go Home” kind of people. My husband pulls out the leaf blower and pummels that thing with O2 whenever the fire starts to die down.
What about you?
There used to be something in you that burned for God.
A gift inside of you that is dying to be released into the world.
A melody trapped within you that only you can sing.
But slowly burning is not enough. You must grab the leaf blower and go to town.
Why?
Because making a decision to accept Jesus occurs on an exact day, in a definitive location, at a specific moment in time, and is purely a conscious choice.
But falling away from Jesus is quite the opposite—it occurs gradually, over time, at a snails-pace, and is largely an unconscious choice.
Without intentionally tracking our spiritual growth—we drift. Just as you could never stay in one place while floating in the middle of the ocean, there is no status quo in Christianity. If we aren’t actively rowing our hearts out, we drift further and further from the human envisioned when God gathered a lump of clay with you on his mind.
Growing pains suck.
Sometimes they hurt.
Sometimes you look awkward and gangly when you walk.
Sometimes people laugh at your baby steps of faith.
But as you grow, it’s almost as if God reaches down from heaven and cranks the volume knob on your life exclaiming, “Turn her up. I love this song.”