Artwork for podcast Wisdom-Trek © - Archive 1
Day 91 – Hiking With a Limp (1)
30th August 2015 • Wisdom-Trek © - Archive 1 • H. Guthrie Chamberlain, III
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Wisdom-Trek / Creating a Legacy

Welcome to Day 91 of our Wisdom-Trek, and thank you for joining me.

This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to Wisdom.

Hiking With a Limp (1)

Thank you for joining us for our 7 day a week, 7 minutes of wisdom podcast. This is Day 91 of our Trek. Yesterday we finished exploring our trail with 10 waypoints on making wise decisions.  For the next few days, we will consider what it means to hike with a limp.

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Hiking with a Limp

We are recording our podcast from our studio at The Big House in Marietta, Ohio. I spent Saturday working in our formal dining room, stripping the old varnish off of the wood work, which is a lot of wood as there is quartersawn oak wainscoting about ¼ of the way up around the room as well as on the doors, windows, and two built-in cabinets. In other rooms that I have already completed, I used paint and varnish remover, which is quite caustic and messy.  For this room, I decided to try a different tactic and use Scotch Bright pan scrubbers and mineral spirits. While it does not strip it quite as clean down to the bare wood, it did do a good job removing the varnish without as much of a mess, clean up, and toxic fumes.

With each room that I work on, I have come up with some slight way of improving the process. With the size of the house and the renovations left to do, I still have many opportunities for improvements. As with all the skills that we possess, if we continue to learn and practice, we can improve our craft. This is part of the refining process.

It is time now to head out on our Trek for today. As we climb a steep and very rugged trail, I want you to think about how difficult it would be to hike if you were recovering from a broken hip or a hip replacement?  I have a few friends that have gone through this painful surgery and recovery.  Some even within our Wisdom-Trek team that travels with us each day. While I have not personally experienced hip issues, from my understanding, it leaves many with a permanent limp and pain that may never fully go away.

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Recovering is Painful

All of us go through trials and tribulations in life that can leave us with a limp that affects us throughout our lives. This can be a very humbling and refining process for us. From a figurative standpoint, ask yourself, “What has caused me to limp, and what have I learned from it?” Has this situation changed who you are?

There is a saying that we should “Never trust a leader who doesn’t walk with a limp.” This saying comes from the story of the start of the nation of Israel and is recorded in the Bible in the book of Genesis Chapter 32 verses 22-32 where Jacob, the grandson of Abraham and son of Isaac, wrestled with God. This is the story:

“During the night Jacob got up and took his two wives, his two servant wives, and his eleven sons and crossed the Jabbok River with them. After taking them to the other side, he sent over all his possessions. This left Jacob all alone in the camp, and a man came and wrestled with him until the dawn began to break. When the man saw that he would not win the match, he touched Jacob’s hip and wrenched it out of its socket. Then the man said, ‘Let me go, for the dawn is breaking!’ But Jacob said, ‘I will not let you go unless you bless me.’  ‘What is your name?’ the man asked. He replied, ‘Jacob.’  ‘Your name will no longer be Jacob,’ the man told him. ‘From now on you will be called Israel, because you have fought with God and with men and have won.’  ‘Please tell me your name,’ Jacob said. ‘Why do you want to know my name?’ the man replied. Then he blessed Jacob there. Jacob named the place Peniel (which means ‘face of God’), for he said, ‘I have seen God face to face, yet my life has been spared.’ The sun was rising as Jacob left Peniel, and he was limping because of the injury to his hip. (Even today the people of Israel don’t eat the tendon near the hip socket because of what happened that night when the man strained the tendon of Jacob’s hip.)”

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Jacob wrestles with God.

At the end of Jacob’s all-night struggle, God touched the socket of Jacob’s hip and damaged it so that from that time forward Jacob always walked with a limp. This encounter with God changed him in other ways too. He got a new name and moved into a new phase of his life. He was now fit to lead a new nation that exist to this very day.

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There is a remarkable quality that can come from the lives of people after they have wrestled with God or life’s issues, and the resulting limp is a sign to themselves and to others that God has humbled them.

We have some pithy little statements that we throw about, like “When life sends you lemons, make lemonade.” It makes tough times sound so easy, but life isn’t always so simple. Lightweight phrases do little to recognize the challenges we wrestle with.

I was on the wrestling team in high school, so I understand firsthand how strenuous and difficult physical wrestling can be. It requires a lot of discipline to develop skill and agility, sacrifice to burn off fat, and determination to promote muscle growth, strength, and focus, which is required to become refined enough to be victorious.

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Wrestling is difficult.

Paula and I have also had to wrestle with life’s issues in the form of business loss, financial downturns, death of loved ones who were very close to us, and moving for work that we would have never chosen ourselves. All of these experiences and others have been a refining fire in our lives to burn off that which is impure so that the fine gold could become evident, and we realize that there may be other times of such trials in our future.

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Gold is refined by fire.

All of us experience seasons of wrestling, testing, discipline, and sifting such as is described in the book of Hebrews 12:1-13. We may wrestle with health issues, financial stress, depression, relational difficulties, brokenness, failure, loss, grief, and desert-type seasons in our lives and spiritual journey. If we don’t anticipate and expect it, we will be surprised and confused when it comes. For the next few days, we will travel on some key trails as we prepare ourselves for these seasons of life.

We begin with the first trail.

Trail #1 – Perspective is everything.

Our perspective of the place of sickness, pain and challenges in our lives probably needs some thought. We are well served if we take some time to develop healthy theology around pain and the hard things in the life of a Christ follower. As John Wimber frequently said, “If our theology doesn’t work in real life, then we need to rethink our theology.”

When we experience difficult seasons, it doesn’t mean God isn’t present or has stopped loving us. It doesn’t necessarily mean we lack faith or have brought this upon ourselves through doing something wrong. Following Jesus doesn’t exclude us from encountering pain and challenges in our lives. In fact, we are told in scripture to expect it.

A robust theology equips us with the knowledge and expectation that when pain comes, God walks with us through it.

These difficult realities are part of living in the now and not fully experiencing His kingdom. They are also a reminder of God’s commitment to us as His children so that we grow up into Him. Our perspective is important because it affects how we respond to hard things.

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Will we see these seasons as a reminder of God’s lordship and loving activity in our lives that can lead us to greater intimacy with Him, or will we see it as evidence of His absence and lack of love which leads to bitterness, fear, and isolation from Him and others?

CS Lewis reminds us that, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks to our conscience, but shouts in our pains: it is His megaphone to rouse a deaf world.”

Pain and suffering can help us put things in perspective, value what is truly valuable, and be transformative tools in God’s hands.

Perspective

We have barely scratched the surface of our Trek that we embarked on today, but that is the end of this trail. So, come along on our hike tomorrow for another day on our Wisdom-Trek, Creating a Legacy. Tomorrow we will learn how to prepare for hiking with a limp while we build on today’s Trek realizing that we are not alone.

Well, that will finish our podcast for today. If you missed any of our previous podcasts, please check out Wisdom-Trek on iTunes, Stitcher, SoundCloud, Spreaker, YouTube, or Wisdom-Trek.com.

If you enjoy our daily doses of wisdom, I encourage you to take the time to invest yourself.

  1. Invest in improving Wisdom-Trek by leaving your name, email address, and a comment on our website, so we can provide you with wisdom and insights that best fit your needs.
  2. Invest in yourself by listening to our 7 minutes of wisdom each day.
  3. Invest in the lives of others by encouraging your family and friends to journey with us on our Wisdom-Trek.

Thank you!

The journal from this podcast can be found at Wisdom-Trek.com, where we also have pictures, tweetable quotes, wisdom nuggets, and free resources.

Thank you for allowing me to be your guide, mentor, and most of all your friend as I serve you through the Wisdom-Trek podcast and journal each day. 

As we take this Trek together, let us always:

  1. Live Abundantly (Fully)
  2. Love Unconditionally
  3. Listen Intentionally
  4. Learn Continuously
  5. Lend Generously
  6. Lead with Integrity
  7. Leave a Living Legacy Each Day

This is Guthrie Chamberlain reminding you to Keep Moving Forward, Enjoy the Journey, and Create a Great Day! See you tomorrow!

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