Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Craving Connection

The following devotional is from Proverbs 31 Ministries and it touched my heart this morning as I read it. We have so many people around us looking for a connection - a friend, perhaps it is even us. We have so many opportunities to get together as a ministry yet women sometimes hesitate to come for fear of rejection, fear of the unknown, or a feeling of past disappointments.

Take time to reach out to these women. Invite someone to the next women's event - or for a cup of coffee and conversation. If you ever find yourself, like the women in this devotional, where you are looking for a friend please give me a call. I am always up for some girl talk and would enjoy getting to know each of you better. Here is the devotional on connecting ...


“Let us not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another — and all the more as you see the Day approaching.” Hebrews 10:25 (NIV)

Do you ever catch yourself checking email repeatedly? One morning I checked my email as soon as I woke up. Then I made breakfast and checked it again. Had my devotional time and checked it again. Ran some errands and when I got home, checked it once more. Now, I admit I have a thing about keeping white space in my inbox, but this was about more than managing emails.

I was going back for a reason. I sensed the Holy Spirit nudging me to pause and ask myself, “Why do you keep checking your email?” I sat there and let my heart respond honestly. I wasn’t sure if it was God or me answering, but my thoughts intertwined with His Spirit whispered: You keep coming back because your heart longs for connection with a friend. Yet no matter how many times I checked email, it was never enough to satisfy my craving.

Somewhere in the busyness of life I had let many of my friendships reduce to quick connections via email. Over the past year my schedule had gotten so full with kids, school projects, family needs, investing time in my marriage, and new responsibilities at work that something had to give. I didn’t want it to be my family, so I asked God to help me find balance. I had sensed Him leading me to cut back on the amount of time I spent talking on the phone, socializing with neighbors and hanging out with friends.

Although I hadn’t completely cut out my friendships, my face-to-face connection time with friends had been reduced to a minimum. That morning as I sat at my computer, I realized I had not found balance. The pendulum had swung too far. Here I was checking email repeatedly, trying to fill a God-created need for relationships with a white screen and black alphabet keys. My heart was craving more.

God had revealed the source of my incessant email checking and shown me that I needed to fill the lonely place in my spirit with friends I could talk to and share life with — in person. That day I called one of my closest friends. She happened to be available so I turned off my computer and took a break from work to spontaneously meet her at a coffee shop. It was just what I needed: face-to-face, heart-to-heart, eye-to-eye connection and conversation. I know friendships are not easy to build. They take time. And time is limited with lives that keep us so busy. But in this age of technology, it’s important to evaluate things in our lives that create a false sense of connection like email, television, text messaging and overboard activities. Although these things are okay in moderation, they can’t substitute real-life relationships.

So what about long-distance and internet friendships? Aren’t they important, too? Yes, they are. But God created us for relationships where we can see each other, hug each other and talk to each other face-to-face. We need to pull away from our computers and televisions to intentionally carve out time for friends that are in close proximity. Times where we can meet face-to-face to share what’s going on in our lives.

Today’s key verse instructs us not to give up meeting together to worship and encourage one another. As we see here and throughout the Bible “meeting together” is important to God. Jesus needed face-to-face connections, too. So He surrounded Himself with intimate friends — first His Father, then His close friends John, Peter and James and then the other nine disciples. He also had friends like Mary, Martha and Lazarus. People He spent time with sharing meals and having conversations about spiritual truths that applied to their everyday lives.

Through His example we see how important it is to satisfy our craving for connections by spending face-to-face time with friends. So, who will you connect with face-to-face this week?

3 comments:

  1. This is so true. In this day and age, we make the excuse that we just don't have time, so we tell ourselves it's enough to drop an e-mail to a friend or post on her Facebook wall. Thank you for sharing. (And I'm one of those who sometimes avoids in-person things for fear that I won't fit in, or people won't like me. I'll make an effort to get out more in the future. :) )

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  2. I'm right there with you Lisa. One Sunday, a friend and I were texting back and forth about preparing for Bible Fellowship that morning. I was half way through a reply text when the phone rang .. it was her! We both laughed, finished our conversation, and felt better starting our day having heard the others voice and not just reading their words!

    Come visit with us on Monday night at the Hillcrest student building. A small group of women meet the 2nd Monday each month to just talk about life. We are there from 6:30 - 8:30 PM but it's really informal so come and go as you need. But, no email or texting while we are there! :-)

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  3. I missed the last one! I'll put the next one on my calendar. :)

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