Wednesday, November 8, 2017

on turning 25: embracing my quarter-life crisis

My name is Paige. Today, I am 25. 
Two things I know to be true, in the midst of an existential, quarter-life crisis (wish I were kidding)
Deconstruction and reconstruction
was 
not 
prepared 
for 
this 
depth 
of 
unnerving 
freedom
And yet, somehow I feel more alive then ever. 
Don’t worry. I haven’t gone off the deep end… yet
But I’m definitely peering over the edge. 
Because what if, what if, in the endless mass of mystery... resides faith, hope, and love.

Yes
I know God and His revealed will through the Hebrew Scriptures and coming of Jesus Christ 
(to the extent of my education and interpretation of the Bible and experience of the Church)
I know that my experience (thus far) is a mere morsel of the radical life Jesus intended for His wild bride
I know He meant what He said in the Gospels: 
sell everything, 
feed the hungry, 
clothe the naked, 
visit the imprisoned, 
care for the sick, 
MAKE DISCIPLES
I don’t think He meant “write a check” to the people who are doing that. 
Sure, support their work if you have the means to, but what are YOU doing to 
love your neighbor as yourself

So, maybe I do know some things. 
But the more I know, the more I know that I actually don’t know much at all. 
The 
never
ending 
cycle 
of 
frustration.  
A slap in the face of the Western mindset that equates knowledge and diligence with understanding. UNDERSTANDING?
I’m finding that knowledge and diligence equals more questions. 

But I guess that’s why faith, hope, and love are so beautiful. Miraculous, even.
Those essences, which can only be revealed through belief and reflected in action, have transformative power

I can philosophize for years, but without faith, hope, and love, everything I conjecture still remains lacking. 
Dare I say, meaningless
Some things cannot be rationalized. 

I refuse to maintain a dichotomy that separates conviction and responsibility. There’s too much at stake. On judgement day, I will be held responsible for what I did with what I knew. That rattles me. 

It’s hard to see the light sometimes. 
So how do I stay afloat? 
or better yet…
what
if 
I’m 
already 
drowning?
And what is that’s a really good thing?

A god I could figure out and wrap my mind around, wouldn’t be that big or impressive or powerful.
So I guess that means I have to embrace the mystery

This year (and hopefully the years to come), I will welcome the questions.
I will wrestle with pain and anguish and the fear of messing things up.
I will take radical risks to know this Jesus of the Gospels and follow what He says. 
And I will choose to embrace
faith
hope
and love.

Because somewhere along the way, there is peace for my soul

2 comments:

  1. SO SO SO GOOD PAIGE. Oh my goodness I’m blown away! You should really think about doing some spoken word, or just readings of your work ;) it’s seriously incredible and it hits the depths of my soul and the marrow of my bones! SO GOOD. Wisdom my sweet friend is your middle name ;)
    -Steph

    ReplyDelete
  2. Well said. Well said indeed. So much I can relate to, even though I'm in a different season with my existential MID-life crisis ��. Miss you, baby sister. ~ Jedi

    ReplyDelete

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