Leaving Seasons

“‘ … Come now; let us leave.’” (John 14:31).

 

Leaving seasons.

Have you had one lately? A moment when you’ve distinctly heard the voice of your Savior calling out his command for you “to come and to leave”?

They go together … coming and leaving. Moving on to a “next” requires the relinquishment of the “prior.” Obedience is the bridge that stands between the two. Otherwise, we remain stuck—trapped in the comfortable, wrapped in the familiar. Little does it matter if that familiar is draped in difficulty; often we reason it better than the risk of the unknown. Accordingly, we’re stuck.

Staying stuck is a deliberate choice; we may think differently. We may conclude our options as limited; it’s a rational response when our walls begin to shrink and our resources know depletion. Rather than move beyond our safety zone, we choose the confinement of its comfort, hoping for a better outcome; believing that in our hiding and through our tearful pleas we will be able to manifest a change in the situation.

The problem with this thinking is that change almost always initiates from another location. Another direction and another understanding. Change comes with a knock on the other side of the door and offers its voice of invitation and hope.

Come now; let us leave.

Not, come, it’s time for you to leave, but come now; let us leave.

There is a difference between the two; so often we miss the mark in the matter. We forget that when God issues his command for us to the leave the cloaking of our current, he does so with an “us” in mind. Never does he vacate the process; rather, he initiates it and asks us for faith enough to open up the door and to walk through to the other side.

For the disciples it meant leaving the confinement of a holy moment—a night’s long dialogue and final meal with the man they called friend … Jesus … Christ—the Son of the living God. It would be a difficult leaving; the uncertainty about what awaited them on the other side of the door was enough to warrant their concern, at least some confusion.

As far as their minds could reason, the situation wasn’t matching up with their imagination … with how they envisioned this journey with their Jesus to end. The painful resignation to the truth of what they were hearing was a difficult swallow. Talk of death and sorrow and returning to a Father’s glory sounded heavy and weighed fully upon their hearts.

Jesus understood; it weighed fully and in heavier measure upon his. Like the disciples, Jesus wrestled with the conclusion. Still and yet, he came to earth to do what his Father asked him to do; everything else—every feeling, desire, fleshly want and temporal satisfaction—fell prey to this overriding mission.

Accordingly, Jesus opened that door, and in doing so, made a way for us to mirror the same. Jesus walked his faith; he intends for us to follow his lead.

Come now; let us leave.
Come now; let us get on with the “getting on.”
Come now; let us be about the business of our Father.
Come now; let us take to the road of faith, believing that as we go and while we trust, we will behold the truth of a better moment.
Come now; let us not be afraid of an unseen obedience.
Come now; let us move forward, leaving the past where it remains.
Come now; let us believe in the One who made us, who loves us, who shapes us, and who keeps us.
Come now; let us take hold of all of that for which I have taken hold of you.
Come now; let us hope. Let us live the truth of our salvation. Let us move beyond the comfort of our today to embrace the wide and the wild of a trusting grace that was always meant to walk; not hide.

I don’t how if you needed to hear this today. I did. I’m experiencing my own sort of “leaving season” right now. I thank God for the courage that he has given me to walk through a pretty heavy door. My comfortable “difficult” was no longer a cup I could abide; it was keeping me stuck, friends, and I don’t like being stuck inside when there’s so much life to live beyond its confinement.

Can I clearly see the road ahead? No. In fact, very little. But there is someone who visions quite clearly. My Jesus. My companion. My faithful friend whose gentle knocking was recently replaced by his firm command.

Come now, elaine; let us leave. It’s time for the “getting on” and the moving forward.

Maybe today, you’re hearing his voice more clearly than before. Maybe today marks the beginning of your leaving season. If so, I walk it with you. I understand the amount of faith that’s been required to get you to this point of trusting our God; I applaud your confidence in his holiness. So does he. Nothing pleases God more than watching your faith blossom into an intentional obedience. This is what the “ancients” were commended for—believing when they couldn’t see, but always certain that, one day, they would see.

They have seen, friends, and so shall we. Come now, and let us leave our “prior” and move on with our God to his next. His intention for our lives exceeds our own. May we all have the willing trust and the certain faith to take him at his word. Thus, I pray…

Give us courage to move beyond our shut doors, Father. May the unexplored and promised vistas of a forward faith be the anchor that moves us outward in obedience. Clearly sound your voice so that we might be able to discern your truth. Where we are comfortable, prod us. Where are complacent, poke us. Where we are fearful, calm us. Where we are weak, strengthen us, and where we are faithless, show us … teach us what it means to walk in sacred trust. Shape us, Lord, for we are a people longing for more. Amen.

Copyright © May 2009 – Elaine Olsen

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PS: In honor of all the women that we will be celebrating this upcoming weekend, I will be giving away a copy of Celia Whitler’s “One Wish for You”–a beautifully illustrated book paying tribute to the women in our lives, along with a CD that includes five songs written and performed by Celia. You can click here to listen to a sample of Celia’s music. She’s new to me, but I love her earthy, raw voice that beautifully weaves its tender chords into the accompanying music. Celia also has a book/CD combo for graduates and others. Please take time to visit her website and leave a comment here to enter the drawing. Have a blessed and “full of Jesus” kind of weekend. I love you, friends. Shalom.

18 Responses to Leaving Seasons

  1. This post has blessed me, Mrs. Elaine, I think I still have your e-mail, I will try and send you updates as I get them on my in vitro. As of now, I go in for my egg retrieval surgery tom. morning:):)

    Blessed day to you,

    katiegfromtennessee

  2. Wow…need to chew on this…there is a challenege before me but if “to leave” is needed, I’m okay with it. At peace.

    Blessings to you my friend.

    Nothing to report. Leadership team met without us…? I will keep you posted.

    In His Graces~Pamela

  3. Well, you just read my heart. Eric and I just arrived to our new home…in a new state. Not home in New York. Is it easy being here not knowing the whys or hows or whens? No. Is it worth it to walk in this obedience-love as an offering of praise to our King? Oh yes.

    I tell you this, I don’t know much but I do know I want my life to be one marked by the fingerprints of Christ. I want to be one who follows hard after Him.

    It is my prayer I would not delay when He speaks, “Come…let us leave.”

  4. Wow, lots to ponder here, lady. My husband and I were just talking about this very thing last night…I’m going to share this with him. It appears as though we both…(he especially) may be approaching a leaving season. Not sure what is ahead, but we’re praying for discernment and obedience…thank you my friend for sharing this confirmation from the Lord… I’ll be praying for you as well in your leaving season.

    Have a wonderful Mother’s Day!

    Love,
    Tracy

  5. So preciously expressed, Elaine. I have experienced my own season of leaving in the past, and I’m sure I will again.

    The 11th chapter of Hebrews was my touchstone during my last transition, especially verse 8: “By faith Abraham, when called to go to a place he would later receive as his inheritance, obeyed and went, even though he did not know where he was going.”Rarely do I know where I am going, but the Lord graciously guides me, giving me enough light for every step I take, and exceeding my expectations every time. 🙂

    May He richly bless your leaving, Elaine, as He guides you into your inheritance, and may you be covered in His peace for your journey.

    (And Happy Mother’s Day!) 🙂

  6. My last “leaving season” was going on last year at this time. I needed some pretty clear direction before leaving, and He blessedly gave it. So good to trust in Him and go forward in peace…

    Have a wonderful Mother’s Day weekend, Elaine!

  7. Elaine, I am with you. You are absolutely correct about being stuck being our deliberate choice. I am choosing to leave now. With the Savior.

  8. I’m always touched when God gives us the same message in different ways! I am right there with you and will watch with interest where He leads each of us.

    (And please don’t enter me in the drawing, I’ve received so much already!)

    Blessings,
    Mary

  9. Why is it when we are told “come now; let us leave” we miss the most important word – us?

    I know for myself, when I am asked to leave I fumble. I want clarity. He wants obedience. I want knowledge. He wants trust. I want a plan. He wants faith. He doesn’t tell us to step ahead alone. He is coming with.

    Having just recently experienced a similar doorway, I know that hesitation brings nothing good, nothing profitable, nothing promising. Hesitation brings stagnation – a moldy imprint of what was once grace. The leaving doesn’t bring emptiness. Leaving brings a fullness – fullness of God.

    I am so grateful for the pondering’s your post always bring! I always leave here better than I came!

    Shalom,
    Denise

  10. Elaine, I am sitting here stunned and in awe! The Lord so clearly spoke two words to me on Saturday, April 18th, just three weeks ago..”move on”! To be honest, I have sat on that directive saying, “OK..I will when…” This morning I hear His ‘now’.

    Expect an e-mail :o)

    Thanks for your visit last night. You bless my heart in so many ways. I am praying for you and so very excited at all God is doing in your life. This new season is going to cause many dreams to bloom, I just know it!!!! Remember that the storms that will come, must water His dream seeds in you. It’s all for your good and His glory.

    Hugs,
    Joy

  11. Rejoicing in your ‘moving on’, Elaine and echoing your prayer for my own life…
    Love, Sita

  12. Happy Mother’s Day to you dear friend. I so enjoyed reading this and can relate to the call to “come and leave” they indeed go hand in hand in my life.

    Love you.

  13. Well, in all honesty, I was relieved at the end of the post that God hasn’t asked you to move on from blogging!

    I keep trying to fill my time with things I think God wants me to do… fearful of moving ahead… into greater things… I must go ahead… with Him… together… US…

    Okay… here I go…

  14. a heart-felt thank you for this post, which is very timely in my life & a reminder of what the Lord is speaking. I've been thinking more of 'me' moving instead of 'us'! I've linked to this post on my sidebar if that's okay.
    thanks again!

  15. Elaine, you’ve truly gotten to the crux of the matter. The “us” REALLY stood out to me in your thoughts – no fear if He is there. Thank you for this, dear friend.

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