We live in
the smallest house in our entire subdivision.
The smallest. It’s a pretty big
subdivision and we live in the smallest.
A family of 6 lives in a 1400 square foot home. The surprise baby shares a room with us…no
attachment parenting here…just necessity.
This is where God called us to live a little over two years ago. We moved from double income, 3000 sq. feet,
two living rooms, a dining room, a piano, breakfast area, fireplace, guest room
type home to 1400 square feet and added another human to the mix along the
way. My pantry doubles as my laundry
room. If you dry clothes without the fan
on it will melt or begin a process of rapid decay. Every piece of furniture bears the
responsibility of being functional…our lovely hallway cabinet holds my boys’
sweatshirts because there was no more room in the closet or drawers. The piano was replaced with a keyboard tucked
under Jude’s bed. The dining room table
and chairs are in my parent’s storage.
The antique desk in our bedroom is filled with Skylanders and other
video gaming things…It’s crazy. It makes
me laugh sometimes. It is what God
wanted for us…this house…my husband prayed and prayed and prayed that we would
live in obedience when choosing our house in Katy, TX. This is the place God chose. This is where we live. All close together in this little house we
rent with a great kitchen and granite counter tops (I had never had granite
counter tops before) and all the slices of humble pie you can eat.
You see, I
know, I know what God wants for us. He
wants our family to live in financial freedom.
He wants us to be able to share easily with others. When you go from two incomes to one, you
should actually downsize, right?
Right. God wants us to sleep peacefully
each night, and not have credit card bills dancing through our heads. I know.
I’ve done Financial Peace University.
I get it. We all do. But it doesn’t make it easy all the
time. It’s not hard all the time
either. I am a girl, though, and I have
these moments when what everyone else has seems so much more impressive than
what I have to offer. We used to be the
house that did all the entertaining. We
now have to eat in shifts if we have a large group…not enough room or tables to
eat all at once. It is what it is. But I would be a liar if I didn’t tell you
that the thought of a “playroom” or a guest bedroom sounds so good to me at
times that I am willing to sell my soul to get it. When the baby came along I truly thought God
would move us to a place with another bedroom…more space for the tiny human
that takes up no room at all. But He had
better plans. The crib and changing
table fit perfectly in our room. We made
space for Joshua’s clothes in our closet.
There is no arguing with the obvious.
This is where God wants us.
And I smiled into my
obedience, and patted Jesus on the back and told Him thank you for the way He
takes care of us.
I wish.
The truth of
the matter is, this past spring, I became slightly obsessed with getting out of
this little house. I told myself, it’s
the smallest house we have ever lived in during our 14 years of wedded
bliss. God doesn’t want us to stay here. I looked online at other houses several times
a day. I looked for signs in every
neighborhood. I became convinced that we
needed more…more space…more space to move around…the kids were getting
bigger…the baby was growing daily…clearly we needed more. People asked often if we were going to move
because of the baby. Family asked when
we were getting a bigger house. My kids
wanted a two story house so desperately all of a sudden. Grace started talking constantly about living
on a farm, and her dreams of moving to the country became a small narrative
which included a goat named Rosa and a cow too.
We talked about moving daily.
People would say to me that they didn’t know how we did it with all of
us in this little house. I listened as
my son’s friend, while spending the night for the first time, noted that our
house was, well, just really small.
Another child asked where the rest of my house was, and a friend while
on the very short tour said, “That’s it?”
I honestly
was foolish enough to believe that the hard part of our downsizing journey
would be giving away our things in order to move into a house half the
size. I honestly thought Jesus had
stripped all the materialism and ego out of us as we handed bedroom furniture,
extra sets of Christmas dishes, desks, coffee tables and sofas over to friends
and strangers. I honestly thought that
as we made decisions based upon what we absolutely needed and what would
actually fit that Jesus had worked it all out, and there would not be a shred
of envy left in my precious little heart.
I was wrong.
It wasn’t the giving up and going away that hurt as much as the
staying and not going back that was killing me.
You see, I
wanted God’s plan for my life to be for a short time. I wanted God’s plan for our home and finances
to last just until I couldn’t stand it anymore, and then He would bring us back
to a bigger house and more income with coordinating couches and loveseats and
an upstairs playroom to boot. I wanted
His plan to include a return trip where we got back to “normal”, but with a
much more reverent attitude full of gratefulness and plenty of stories of life
in the little house to fill a Bible Study.
But there is no return
trip, y’all.
God’s plan is moving
forward.
And I can feel Him
whisper that there is nothing worth going back to anyway.
His plan is
better. Here is better. With Him is better.
For the past
month I have been completely stuck in the story of Joseph. Joseph, the favorite son of Jacob, from the
book of Genesis. I have read this
account numerous times. I have read
commentaries on Joseph. I have heard a
sermon on Joseph, and talked about Joseph with his coat- of- many- colors-
tragic- life- story to no end. The
amazing and detailed story in a very, very unworthy nutshell is this:
Joseph is the favored and spoiled son of
Jacob. Jacob makes no bones about
this…all the other sons work in the fields and tend the flocks while Joseph (who
is 17 years old) stays at home with his dad.
He has this unbelievable coat that is colorful and ornate and super
special which his father had made for him.
He is sent to check on his brothers and tattle if they are not doing
what they are supposed to do. They
despise Joseph, and sell him into slavery.
The brothers kill an animal and put its blood on the fancy coat telling
their father that Joseph is dead. Joseph
is taken to Egypt as a slave. He is smart
and God is with him so, he is a slave in an important household. However, the lady of the house wants to have
an affair with Joseph and when he refuses she frames him for attempted sexual
assault and Joseph winds up in prison.
But God is with Joseph in prison.
God interprets dreams through Joseph, and eventually after two years in
prison, he interprets two dreams for Pharaoh warning him of an upcoming famine,
and he becomes second in command over all of Egypt. During the famine Joseph’s family must come
to Egypt to buy grain since people everywhere are gravely affected by the
famine. Joseph sees his brothers again,
the same ones who sold him into slavery, and after some tests to reveal their
character and a meal he reveals he is Joseph and forgives them. He not only forgives them, but states that what
they had intended for evil (selling their brother into slavery), God had
intended for good (saving the lives of nations throughout the famine). Jacob is reunited with his son. The family moves to Egypt. And they live happily ever after, right? (Genesis 37-Genesis 50).
So the account in Genesis ends well enough, wouldn’t you say? Joseph was 30 when his family arrived in
Egypt. Thirteen years of slavery and
prison before he is made second in command under Pharaoh. Thirteen years until he can hug his father
and tell him he was alive all that time.
We learn in the book of Genesis that when Jacob dies, Joseph leaves
Egypt to bury his father in Canaan…his homeland. Then Joseph returns to Egypt and lives there
until he is 110 years old. He makes a statement of faith at the very end of his
life asking his brothers to swear an oath saying, “God will surely come to your
aid and then you must carry my bones up from this place.” He dies in Egypt and
is buried in Egypt. It is not until Moses is leading the Exodus some 400 years
later that Joseph’s bones are carried out of Egypt.
And here is what I am left thinking: a 17 year old young man sold into slavery
begs God to release him and send him home again. A young man wrongfully accused and sentenced
to imprisonment begs God to reveal his innocence, set him free and then send
him home again. A man of 30 who is
surprisingly reunited with his family and miraculously forgives all the wrong
they have done in his life, surely must ask God if today is the day that he is
allowed to return home again. When that
same young man heads back to his homeland to bury his beloved father after
years of separation, surely he prays that Pharaoh will say it’s ok to not
return and just go home…go back to the way life was…tend some sheep and get it
“right” this time. Surely.
I want the “do over”.
I want the, “Sorry we got really caught up and spent money frivolously
for a long time, but you taught us a lesson and I sure won’t forget this season
in a little house.” I want my promises
to be true… I WOULD do it better the second time around with exactly the same
circumstances. I want God’s plan to be a
needed redirection, but one that leads to the same place I remember. Not a totally new path that leads to a
totally new place with a totally new outcome.
Even if that outcome is way better…I just want my cake, and I want to
eat it too with a big ol’ spoon and maybe a tall glass of chocolate milk with a
side of pride somewhere on the table.
And there it is, y’all…
My pride.
God loved Joseph, but He didn’t love his pride. God had people to save…nations actually…but
I’m pretty sure that the pride of the young man checking on his brothers
wearing a crazy fancy coat which none of them had ever received might have
gotten in the way of some nation saving.
God loved Joseph, but His plan meant Joseph would have to be obedient
enough to allow God to accurately interpret dreams through him and give some
pretty bad news to the Pharaoh of Egypt.
And I hate to break it to myself, but radical obedience requires a
humble heart. Radical obedience requires
a heart that is surrendered to the path chosen for them by the God of the
universe, and not a prideful woman in Katy, TX yelling “do over” every time she
ends up squished in the bathroom with her four children. Radical obedience means that at some point I
stop begging God for the playroom edition, and start thanking Him for the house
He chose for us. The house that is cozy. The house that allows me to stay home with my
baby, and write. The house filled with
voices and chaos and little footsteps in the middle of the night that don’t
travel far at all to find me. The house
that has been filled to the brim over and over with women seeking to live
radical too. The house drenched in
prayer. The house God chose. The house where I will finally ask
forgiveness for all my foolish pride, and quit picking up yesterday’s news, and
quit packing for my return trip.
And I will ache here and there, but I know what Joseph knew
as he made his way back to Egypt: God is
good. He loves His people. Our pride will get in the way of His plan. And
His path will definitely destroy our pride.
But in the end, what good are fancy coats and upstairs playrooms when
there are nations in need of saving…and hearts in need of humbling.
“You intended to harm me, but God
intended it for good to accomplish what is now being done, the saving of many
lives.” (Genesis 50:20)
so good. I relate, I agree, I need to repent (again) of my pride....always. But God is good and in control.
ReplyDeleteI feel ya. We just recently moved to DC and the downsizing from 4000 sq ft to under a 1000 for 5x the price was humbling. FP University was also a big factor in downsizing here, Dave R has touched so many lives and enabled so many to give after reaching freedom from debt. Eight days ago I found out I was going to be a father, I never knew what that was going to meant to me until we had a miscarage today. It is hard but I know God has a plan, bigger than ours, better than ours. Thank you for sharing your beautiful story, I know many ofwegone thru the same thing and so have many others, bless you for having the courage to follow his calling.
ReplyDeleteYes! Thank you for bearing your soul. Keep writing, my friend! We need to read it.
ReplyDeleteWherever you live, dear Jackie, the windows are heart-shaped.
ReplyDelete