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Our church recently hosted an amazing women’s conference. I kept thinking to myself, “So-and-so needs to be here. She would love this!” But I realized my friends who needed this conference the most, were the very ones avoiding it like the plague.
Isn’t that how we operate as humans?
The things we desperately need—we refuse to do.
The Apostle Paul put it this way, “I don’t understand myself, for I want to do what is right, but I don’t do it. Instead, I do what I hate.” (Romans 7:15 NLT)
The counseling we never seek.
The prayer we never ask for.
The church we never plug into.
It’s almost like we’re hiding.
As a kid, I was an expert at hide-and-seek. I had a knack for securing the best spots. On one occasion, I perched on top of my fridge for an hour. I watched from above while my cousins scurried around the house. Unfortunately, the prolonged crick in my neck put a damper on my victory.
You see, being good at hide-and-seek does have its downfalls.
When you are an expert at hiding, no one ever finds you.
Maybe this is you.
Maybe you have been hiding for years in such an elusive spot, things got dark. Maybe everyone you loved gave up, went home, and you found yourself alone.
You shy from the limelight.
You run from intimate relationships.
You sugar-coat your conversations and chat about the weather.
And maybe – the greatest tragedy of all – you are hiding from the One who created you.
The problem is, if you hide long enough, you start to believe all sorts of lies:
No one cares.
I’m too far gone.
There must be something wrong with me.
Like a lawyer who stacks up evidence and sets out to defend one’s case, you convince yourself that your life doesn’t warrant an all-out search. Time passes and all that remains is a remnant of the person you once were.
Congratulations, my friend. You are now an expert at hiding.
When my son was a toddler, he loved to play hide-and-seek. He always hid in plain view. Behind a chair. Under the dinning room table. Peering through his chubby fingers believing he was invisible. As a good mommy, I would wander around the house calling, “Isaac? Isaac? Where are you?”
Like God when Adam hid in the Garden of Eden, I knew exactly where my son was.
God knows exactly where you’re hiding.
God knows exactly why you’re hiding.
He doesn’t ask “Where are you?” in order to find you.
He asks, “Where are you?” in order for you to find yourself.
One of my favorite quotes is by the Danish theologian Soren Kierkegaard, “With God’s help, I shall become myself.”
This is my heartfelt prayer for you.
Settle it in your mind right now:
You matter.
Stop hiding.
Your life is a gift the world has yet to open.