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I wonder if we resist change because it leads to the ‘unknown’? It may not be change that we fear but rather a fear of the unknown. We may not like what we are enduring in the present, but at least we understand it and know it. Change may be something we desire but, because of the unknown it harbours, we resist it. Change, even in the face of the unknown, may be a good thing though. Change almost always brings growth like a seed that becomes a tree or a baby changes into a boy and then a man. With change we are forced to grow wiser, grow stronger, grow better than before, we are forced to grow. This is good! I heard a story recently about a boy who watched a butterfly struggling to free itself from a cocoon. It wriggled and strained, making slow progress. The boy felt bad for the butterfly, so in an effort to help the butterfly, he took a small pair of scissors and snipped the cocoon to free the butterfly. What emerged was a twisted, stunted, colourless, and weak butterfly that died soon after. The butterfly needed the struggle to get out of the cocoon, a struggle that squeezed life-giving juices into the wings that would give them colour and strength to fly. Change for the butterfly was a difficult struggle that also meant growth and becoming what God intended it to be. To escape that change meant losing out on what it was created for. Dear friend, you may be facing or experiencing change right now. It may involve your church, your family, your marriage, your work, or even your health. It may invoke feelings of fear or frustration because of an unknown future, but could I encourage you in this way:
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The LORD is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. (Psalm 18:2) |