I Scream Inside for the Simple


GodReflection: Power Words

garyguarujaI am tired with complexity. I want simple to be a word of power in my life.

There was a time I could turn to my rotary dial telephone, move my index finger in a circle five times, and find the answer to my inquiry—oh happy days.

Complexity adds anxiety to life.

I confess I am a closet geek.

I love the convenience of new technology. To have my phone and internet in my pocket places knowledge and relationships within easy reach. It frees an entire bookshelf of residential and yellow pages phone books from the cities of my past.

simple4However, when a gadget breaks simplicity leaves the room. I search for days for someone who lives on the backside of Venus knowing that chances are slim I will encounter a competent problem solver.

A seventeen-step process holds me hostage to fix a phone bill, my computer, or a dysfunctional microwave. My only key to the fix is garbled interaction with an English language learner who is a beginner from another nation.

However prior to contact I get to listen to and shout at multiple levels of automated menus. Simplicity would only lower my blood pressure and turn a two-week task into a one-day victory.

simple7As I remember it—with my rotary dial phone—there was always a human at the end of three or four rings with a kindly, “How may I help you?”

It is not just gadgets—it is life.

Today’s medical puzzle brings the strong to their knees. The maze of social security, retirement benefits, and future healthcare has reduced me to the competence of a lab rat.

The search for cheese in the form of simple answers seems futile.

Twenty-five years ago, returning from morning chapel while teaching at a Christian University, three or four of us found ourselves mired in the deep mud of a theological debate. My colleague, Dr. Dan Coker, alway asks the one profound question needed for clarification.

simple3 His question—I never forgot—”I believe when we arrive in God’s presence he will ask us, ‘Why did you make it so hard?'”

A part of me identifies with today’s youth who long for a simple and direct relation with Jesus. They see the church as extra baggage. My generation with our invention of traditions and programs Christianity—not known to the first Jesus followers—bears responsibility for some of the bad press.

When I became a Christ-follower, Jesus added me to his church. I did not join nor did I get a vote. The church is the body of Christ. I cannot be his disciple without being included in his church.

In previous reflections I highlighted the reality of God’s perfect church reflecting imperfection in its earthly manifestation because its membership still has a lot of post Eden’s dust on their clothing.

As a descendent of the tainted garden, I don’t do earthly church well.

However, at this point in my walk with Jesus I want church to be simple not simplistic.

I too want to focus on being like Jesus.

As directly, and as simply as possible, I want to enhance my relationships with God, fellow disciples, and with those who have yet to bind their lives to the Savior of the world.

Jesus set the example. His life was not easy neither was it complex.

simple2With simplicity and purpose, he moved through his earthly life taking care of his relationship with God, with his disciples, and with all who needed a physician.

Jesus answers his phone every time. He is always ready to hear from his disciple. He never refers me to someone else.  I think he would say, “Gary don’t make it so hard, follow me and commit to simple discipleship.”

I anoint ‘simple’ as a power word to guide my walk.

Stay tuned.

Dr. Gary J. Sorrells – A GodReflection on Simple as a Power Word.

Gary@GodReflection.org

2 thoughts on “I Scream Inside for the Simple

  1. I can relate to simple . Ken and I loved West Virginia because they understood simple. The Christians were not rich in worldly goods, but rich in God. They shared their simple meals with us with love and friendship. They never worried if the house, dishes, etc. was good enough for a Texas preacher, they welcomed us anyway. I look back on the four summers we worked with the church there as the most stress free, relaxing time of our life together. Thank you for reminding me that simple is a power word.

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