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It was an ordinary day. But God is always on the edge of heaven waiting to transform your ordinary into something extraordinary.
I’m a creature of habit. Each morning, I satisfy my caffeine addiction by venturing to Tim Horton’s.
“Medium regular.”
I whipped out my wallet, barely acknowledging the human on the other side of the window. As I grabbed the coffee, my eyes met those of the young employee.
Tell that man he’s a good dad.
Like an email notification, the thought popped in my mind with a bing. It was not my thought. I wondered if he was even old enough to have kids.
At that moment, I had a choice. I could swipe left and drag the crazy thought to the trash and continue on with my super-important day filled with super-important things—or I could double click on it and believe God was speaking to me.
“God wants you to know you’re a good dad,” I blurted out awkwardly.
And just when I thought he was going to certify me as insane, the man’s eyes welled with tears. Trying to hide his emotion, he looked down and fumbled with my coffee lid.
“I’m a single dad. I had no clue what I was doing the first year, but I’m getting the hang of it,” he smiled and thanked me repeatedly.
As I drove away, I felt a sensation I had not experienced in a long time—I felt full. Jesus refers to this sentiment as “spiritual food”. In John Chapter 4, his friends are worried about Jesus’ physical well-being. I can picture the disciple John sporting his fanny pack and acting like a Karen:
"Jesus, it’s been twelve hours since your last meal. You look famished. Did you eat the snack pack of figs I brought? Have you had enough electrolytes today?”
Jesus’ response?
“I have food to eat you know nothing about.”
His friends foolishly concluded Jesus must have a secret stash, like the bag of M&M’s hidden in your underwear drawer which only emerges when the kids are fast asleep. Yet Jesus wasn’t talking about literal food. He was referring to a fullness in one’s soul, which only occurs from hearing God’s voice and obeying.
What if the empty feeling we struggle with isn’t because our life doesn’t measure up? Maybe emptiness is a compass, an inner voice screaming: “There is more!” Maybe emptiness is the hunger pains of a soul created for purpose and that purpose isn’t satisfied by slick cars, fancy lattes, and trips to Disney. Maybe the void is a result of consuming empty calories that don’t nourish our spirits.
God once showed me a picture of my life. I found myself alone in a cave consumed by darkness. I spent years staring at the cave wall, wallowing in self pity, waiting for someone to save me. At some point, I heard a voice whisper, “Turn around.”
I ignored this voice—paralyzed by fear—until I mustered the nerve to move. As I turned, sunlight rushed toward me. The opening of the cave laid up ahead and all that was required was for me to walk toward the light.
How many years have we wasted staring at a cave wall? Emptiness is the echo we hear in the cavern of selfish living. We were created to be loved and to love.
The word repentance in the Bible means to turn around—to change direction— and when you catch a glimmer of his light, it changes everything.