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New
Year's Resolution
by
Judith MacNutt
taken from the Jan/Feb 2004 issue
   
Filled
with great hope, many of us return each January to the ritual of
making New Year's resolutions: lose weight, stop smoking,
exercise more, stop getting angry and losing control, be a
little kinder, be a better person, etc. There's something about
a brand new year that fills us with hope that this year will be
different - successful. A giant amnesia overtakes us, and for a
few hopeful days we forget the failed resolutions of our past.
As we slip back into failure again, we border on discouragement:
"Why can't I change?"
What many
struggling Christians don't realize is that they are dealing
with a shattered will. Traumatic childhood events have a
shattering effect on the will. Once the will has been damaged by
sin or trauma, the individual no longer has the strength or
ability to lead a disciplined, healthy, Christ-centered life.
When you can't stop yourself from making self-destructive
choices, it's a sign that the will has been weakened. When this
occurs, we rely on our own strength to change. This almost
always leads to failure and for some, depression or despair.
Many popular teachings emphasize "my ability" to change - to do
it in my own strength.
Discipline
is necessary in our daily life, but what happens when the larger
moral issues are out of control, weakened by sin or trauma? What
if I keep falling into the same old pits: adultery, promiscuity,
addictions, greed, abuse, etc.? This is when I need to turn to
God, who has the power to bring about the change our hearts cry
out for. Only God's power through the work of the Holy Spirit,
can heal our memories, forgive sin, and restore the shattered
soul. Jesus brings His fire to heal us to live in freedom! Whom
the Son sets free is free indeed.
I want to
tell you a personal story. I had asthma when I was growing up.
Then, when I was 16, I started smoking. Of course, I did
everything to hide it: I ate onions before I went home at night,
or I chewed gum, or sprayed perfume. I did all the things
teenagers do to hide their smoking.
My mother
hated smoking. She hated alcohol, too, but she especially hated
cigarettes, and most especially because I had asthma.
A few
years later when I was in my early 20s, a man came over from
Israel. I had lived in Israel, and a friend of mine sent him
over. The man's name was Ralph. I picked him up at the
Lexington, KY, airport, which was two hours away from my
hometown. I didn't know this man, but he was planning on staying
at my home for a few days. After we got into my car, I started
to light a cigarette. Our of courtesy, I said, "You don't mind
if I smoke, do you?" He said, "Yes, I do." I almost threw him
out of the car. But he was the friend of a friend, so I thought,
"I'll just wait 'til I get home."
On the way
home, Ralph began to tell me about how the power of God could
free me from my addiction to smoking. And I thought, "M-m-m.
Yes, yes." Now, as a serious addiction, nicotine is right up
there with crack. As a matter of fact, it is actually more
difficult to quit smoking, but I didn't really want to quit,
anyway. I liked to smoke. I thought it made me look cool - like
an adult.
Ralph said
to me, "I'll tell you what. I'll make a deal with you." (He was
going to be in our home for three days.) "Every time you want a
cigarette, come and talk to me, and I will pray for you." I
said, "Okay." We had two bedrooms in the back of my home next to
the kitchen, and he was staying in the other bedroom. So this
one time, when I wanted a cigarette, I went into his room where
I found him reading the Bible. I said, "Ralph, I want a
cigarette."
The minute
I spoke to him, he dropped to the floor on his knees - just
dropped straight to the floor - threw his arms straight up to
the heavens and started shouting, "Lord, deliver her! Free her!
Free my sister!" I didn't know what to do. I had never seen
anyone pray like that. I thought he was going to say a sweet
little prayer to encourage me.
Finally, I
left the room after about ten minutes, because he just went on
and on - he was in there forever - and I walked into the
kitchen. Well, my mother was dying laughing. She was dying
laughing. She said, "M-m-m. God sent someone." After that, I was
afraid to tell Ralph in public when I wanted a cigarette. Once,
when I was at a friend's house, I told him I wanted a cigarette.
He dropped to the floor, and all my friends (they were dentists
and doctors) looked at me and said, "What is he doing?" I said,
"He's praying for me to quit smoking."
You can
imagine how I just couldn't wait for him to leave. I really
wanted a cigarette, and I hadn't had one for three days, but I
thought, "I can survive one more day and humor him."
After his
visit was over, I drove Ralph back to the airport, put him on
the plane and was glad to see him fly back to Israel. Then I ran
back into the airport lobby, put my money in the machine and
bought a pack of cigarettes (because, in addition to everything
else, he had stomped on all of my cigarettes and shredded them).
I didn't
even wait until I got out of the lobby. I lit one - but it
tasted awful. I can't tell you how bad it tasted. It was as if I
had never smoked. Everything in me -my taste buds, my lungs -
rejected it. I looked up at that plane. The sad thing was, I
couldn't even be thankful at that point, because all my friends
smoked, and now I was going to look uncool.
When I got
home, my mom said, "It didn't taste good, did it?" She knew.
I haven't
smoked one cigarette since that day. The amazing thing to me is
that I know God can free those who really get serious with Him.
I've gotten numerous letters from people who have been freed
from smoking through one prayer. And I've gotten letters from
others who have said, "You have prayed fro me now for five years
in a row, and I am still smoking." Now, what's the difference?
Is there something within us that blocks our healing? Is there a
need for more inner healing? I think we tend to look at some
healings as being really hard for God because they are hard for
us. They are not hard for God; He created us, and He can handle
our problems.
So, if you
have trouble keeping your New Year's resolutions, pray for God's
help. Pray yourself or, better yet, tell your married partner or
a friend and ask them to pray that God would help free you and
transform your broken will and wounded desires. |