There’s nothing wrong with the words, it’s just the way she says them.
Write those words out in pen and ink and they’d look just fine. But why spoken into the air–by her–do they feel like little jabs? I can’t put my finger on it, but somewhere in my heart there’s a bee sting. I can feel it.
I come in out of the cold, kick off my boots and check the fire. It’s still lit but it’s cooled. I can see glowing embers down below, but the logs lay heavy on top and not much heat is coming out.
I grab the poker and remove the screen. This is my favorite part of wood-stove heat. Stoking the fire. I wield my poker and shove it deep under the logs, flip them over and poke around at the glowing embers beneath. Instantly heat rushes out, envelopes me in warmth. It’s so hot I have to put the poker down, replace the screen and sit back a bit. I lean against my old quilted pillows, close my eyes, remember these words:
And let us consider how we may spur one another on toward love and good deeds. (Hebrews 10:24)
Of course.
We know this verse, know we’re called to spur one another on, but do we understand what it means to spur?
That word, translated “spur” is paroxusmos which literally means “to irritate.” Consider: How do you spur on a horse? By nudging it with your spurs! That is, applying just enough pressure, or irritation, to get its attention and make it move.
Isn’t this how I’d just stoked the fire? By poking it. By digging, jabbing that poker down into the embers, letting sparks fly, flipping over the logs, stirring it up a bit with some strategic irritation.
Every day I partake in my beloved stoking ritual. I poke and prod and stir up warmth to keep our house heated.
To keep the fire burning.
Aren’t we supposed to do the same for each other? And truly, isn’t that what this person had done for me? I’d felt a little unnerved, a little irritated. And didn’t this stir me up a bit?
Didn’t it flip over my log and expose the underside that desperately needed attention? Didn’t it turn a cold side over and let it find flame?
White-hot purifying flame that burns the impurities away?
It did just that.
If we only love people who don’t poke us, would we eventually just cool, slow, stagnate? If we only love people who don’t irritate us will we ever have our superficial shallow love spurred onto something greater, some agape?
True Christian fellowship always involves some form of irritation, sooner or later.
Our lives are purified by people-pokes. Dozens of them. Isn’t it the loving hand of the Father who wields the poker? And hasn’t He ordained that we would live, grow, be sanctified and made like Him in community?
But all this poking is not what we had in mind when we signed up for “community” is it? In the words of Dietrich Bonhoeffer,
“He who loves his dream of community more than the Christian community itself becomes a destroyer of the latter, even though his personal intentions may be ever so honest and earnest and sacrificial.”
Let’s be honest: Our dream Christian community doesn’t involve stokes, pokes, and irritations. We keep looking around for the people we want to love, right?
But real Christian community does the irritations. In fact, biblical Christian community does. Because it doesn’t keep shopping around for lovable people to love, it embraces those in front of us, knowing God will use it all to make us more like Him.
And so, if I must be spurred, poked, and irritated, in order to keep the flame of love growing strong, growing real … then fine:
Let sparks fly.
~
{Who has irritated you lately? How might this have been the gentle prodding of a loving Father? How can you be spurred on toward love because of it? Thanks for reading, for grace, and for sanctified spurs — one saint to another.}
One thought on “When sparks fly…”
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What truth, Kari! I have been dealing with pokes and spurs for awhile (mostly just trying to ignore!) and this is a great way to look at it…maybe a little irritating to digest, but truth nonetheless 🙂