10.29.2006

The Ride of Your Life

Do you ride roller coasters much? If so, what are the two things you remember about all the rides you've ridden?

Well, if you're like me (which could be a ride all by itself), the first thing I think of is the gut-wrenching anticipation that I get as I strap myself into the seat of a roller coaster that I've never ridden before and begin the roll-out or ascent to the first drop. I'm especially anxious if the ride happens to be named something like "The Terrifying Black Dragon of Doom and Fire," or if it advertises itself to be "the fastest, most terrifying ride in the known universe." I mean, what if I suddenly enter the inverted spiral that tortures my body with a force of -9 G's and my insides decide that they've had enough of this and they're going to implode? These are the kinds of things that go through my mind as I anticipate squandering my healthy young adulthood on an outrageously priced thrill ride.

The second thing I remember about my roller coaster experiences is the following thought:

WWAAAAAAAAAAHHHHOOOOOOHOOOOOOHOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Strange as it may sound, that thought is probably my favorite part of the entire experience. You see, I live for the thrill of the moment, for the unbidden cry of intense emotion that rushes past my lips, for the extraordinary sensation of my heart leaping into my throat in an attempt to escape the rush of adrenaline that sweeps through the core of my very being. I live from one high to the next, anxiously awaiting the next sudden drop, the next inverted corkscrew, the next unanticipated acceleration.

That sounds like a fantastic way to live, doesn't it? It guarantees a surfeit of exciting moments, for as we seek this intensity, so we shall find it. We shall be granted the desires of our hearts, for life is far from monotonous and adventure is always imminent.

Unfortunately, we never pause to remember the negatives inherent in this way of thinking. All too often, we transfer our desire for endless thrills to our spiritual lives. We expect the gratification of an unceasing "mountain-top" experience with God, and when it does not occur, we become bored. We give up on our daily walks with God because they are simply walks. We lose sight of the realization that our spiritual lives were not designed for relentless, exhilarating adventure but were instead fitted for the steadiness and continuity of a walk -- a walk with ups and downs and twists and turns, but a walk nonetheless.

One of the most fitting verses in the Bible says, "They that wait upon the Lord. . . ." Am I willing to wait on God, or do I insist on desiring only the thrills that life brings me? May God save us from bowing before this roller coaster idol - the idol of thrills.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

this is so true that we tend to do this w/ our walk with God (and often w/ other people in our lives as well). yet how can we prevent this cycle of being on the mountain top w/ God to being in the valley trying to walk it all alone? What can we do to keep walking w/ God and not getting board with it?

Anonymous said...

Dude, you rock :)

I definately need to wait on God more too ;) I'm praying for ya dude, keep up the race!

ngolden said...

If you have a boyfriend or girlfriend, you can understand the concept of a relationship. There are times when the exhilaration of your relationship with that person is overwhelming. There is nothing that can compare to those times.

But you also understand that there will be times that are not so exhilarating. Those are the times where the relationship is truly built, piece by piece. If you focus only on the exciting stuff, you miss the opportunity to strengthen your relationship with that person during those very important in-between times.

The same is true with God. If you build your relationship with God only on those highs and breath-taking moments, the real walk won't seem very exciting at all. The key is in how you build that relationship.

Anonymous said...

nathan, you definitely hit the nail on the head buddy.. but it's almost like we're conditioned to live life for the thrill.. ya know, it's kinda like, if it ain't exciting, I don't want it..but it's a shame that with this mindset some people waste their entire life waiting on that one big moment.. you always challenge me nathan <3 mchianumba

kiralei "avenue" said...

SWEET! I'm not insane! So...I'm the type of person that doesn't stop until I'm sick...bad...a friend, Perry Baird, once told me that the goal of a Christian in this aspect should be to make the high's not so high, and the low's not so low. For a very long time I didn't agree with him. "THERE IS SO MUCH MORE THAN MEDIOCRITY! GOD IS ABLE, IT HAS TO BE POSSIBLE!" Then I thought about it, it doesn't have to be the dead center, just a constant. Praise God! The more I just relax and say, "I trust You, where to now?" the more constant, peaceful, and joyful life is. The surrender doesn't nulify the complex events of life, the surrender simply teaches the life liver once again that he is dead...yet that he lives...except it's not him...it's Christ. Begining to end, He's not surprised. With each situation, the question is asked again, "Do you trust me?" and with each situation comes another chance to remember and realign.