A while ago, for a blog run by Durham Inter-Collegiate
Christian Union, I wrote 500 words under the title, ‘Why I am a Christian.’ But
I found that 500 words didn’t cut it. It couldn’t express the struggle, the
confusion, the resistance I had to following Jesus, to letting myself surrender
to his call in my heart, to be fully free and changed in Him. It did not
express the pain of bullying, and the pain of be becoming a bully, of how I
victimised others and myself. It could not get to the depths of my emotional recklessness,
the seething anger borne out of intense insecurity in my identity. Therefore, I
don’t think it did Jesus justice. He deserves more glory than 500 words can
express.
This is going to be long. Find the short version here.
Eight years ago, I gave my life to Christ. An imperfect
girl finally realised that living a good life and trying to be perfect wasn’t
enough and could never be enough, and that I could never be enough no matter
how hard I tried. Struggle didn’t end at that point, in fact I think it really
kicked off then, because when I rejected God, reading his word, prayer, his
power over my horrific sin for the next few years, I did it with eyes wide open
and a heart that wanted to be hard. I suppose this is my story.
Most people assume that a girl like me, enthusiastic to the
point of insanity and who currently desires to work full-time in a church or
mission context, must have been brainwashed by her parents into this Jesus
thing. Truth is, there was Christian influence around me from my mum and from some
of my extended family, but I didn’t enjoy it. I went to half-term Bible clubs
and did the worksheets for the prizes, not because I was enthralled by the
stories. And when the prizes were Bible stories I didn’t let my mum read them
to me – no way! I avidly remember telling my mum exactly what I thought about
church: dull, boring, full of old ladies. And when I didn’t get the answers
right, couldn’t prove myself, I kicked off. Being a church kid was about being
a good kid. Bring your bible, get a point. 10 points and you get extra sweets.
Learn a memory verse (in the car on the way), get a point, get 5 points and you
get a prize. I was in church because I wanted rewards for my good acts.
Aged 9, I remember being moved by a story told to me at church.
I went home and hid behind the sofa. I prayed a prayer of sorts and thought ‘job
done.’ I’d done the ceremony. I was a Christian, right? I believed that I
really was a Christian and reassured myself with all my knowledge of the Bible.
But my heart was bruised. Bullied from around the same age, I retaliated with
violence. I remember dragging kids by the hair, thumping them with books,
hitting with those rubber skipping ropes. It was satisfying, getting someone
back who had done you wrong. I didn’t understand the gospel message – Jesus forgave
every sin, theirs and mine, and calls us to forgive. It might be hard for a 9
year old to even contemplate this, but in my moments of anger, where was Jesus?
He was for Sundays and he helped me win prizes.
Bullying led to rocky friendships, constant suspicion that I
wasn’t liked, doubt in my abilities which led to an unhealthy attitude of
perfectionism. In my Year 6 SATS I had to be seated in a separate room because
I would get so anxious of everyone around me writing and think that I was
useless, driving me to panic attacks and tears. I can’t even count the amount
of times I walked out of class to find a corner where I could be alone and
breathe. I had friends, but it took a long time. Some of the friends from the
past had become those who bullied me, or bullied my new friends. But I was
clever enough, and I was striving to go to that better school. I also danced,
and I was good at that, better than them at least, and that’s what I pursued. I
was in pantomimes and did auditions for the West End. That’s where my hope lay.
I wanted to be celebrated.
I moved to secondary school, a girl’s grammar school, hoping
that I would change now. No one would remember who I was from my first school.
I didn’t have to get angry here, I just had to work hard and make friends and
it sounded so simple. No boys around to make me feel even more uncomfortable. This
school taught dance in PE, even better. I saw that this was a place where I
could thrive.
Within a month or so, I realised that I couldn’t just change.
I was already frustrated that I was coming bottom in maths – why were these
girls all so clever? Why didn’t I know how to do long division at all (I still
don’t know how to do it!)? The friends I had made might have accidentally left
me behind to go to lunch and I would have a paranoia party – ‘They left me deliberately,
they don’t like me, how could they treat me like this?’. I wallowed in my own
self-pity and sunk down deep into insecurity again. It wasn’t long before I
became the bully. I was tired of feeling insecure and paranoid, of having no
one to sit with at lunch and not even getting the grades I wanted to make up
for it. I wrote a note ‘I hate you’ and put it in a jumper for her to find when
they came out of the canteen. That will show them. I used one of the only forms
of social network we had back in 06’ (Stardoll), made an anonymous account, and
wrote hate. I used school e-mail, too. I even remember getting people’s
passwords and checking if they had also misused their IT class to write e-mails
to one another to check that they weren’t about me. I was sly, but I was
caught. It was obvious.
You can’t force people to forgive a bully. I would never
have called myself that then. In my eyes, I was the one being hurt by people
neglecting me. Really, there was a wider heart issue. Even at church, I wouldn’t
speak in case I got answers wrong, wouldn’t even read aloud. I was no good. I
carried on dancing and those extra activities in a place where I was successful
got me through all my bad homework. I still would have called myself a
Christian. In RE I knew the answers, answered the debates. I had it all at my
fingertips, all except what it was like to be in relationship with the living
Jesus, the living Lord, the Saviour who forgives and transforms hearts. I was
so much further than I realised.
To top off a first few terms of secondary school, I
attempted to strangle a fellow classmate. It was a trivial issue. Every year 7
class did a dance for our Gym & Dance display. I wanted my group to have
the best section in our dance. Another girl wanted to take control. Dance was
my area, I was good at it, her thoughts are wrong, why is she messing with
this? I got angry over a few weeks, and then I exploded. I ran away in such
shame and guilt. After an act of violence, from throwing a pen or storming out
of class to the more extreme incidents, there was always shame and guilt and
tears and a lot of running to cold, dark corners or the end of the field where
I would be alone. Sometimes I tried to call out to God but he never came. He
didn’t fix me so why should I call on him? Why did he make me like this? I was
trying to control myself and it wasn’t working, and now everyone hates me even
more, they are scared of me, the few friends I might have made won’t talk to me
now. Yet I also couldn’t deny that again, getting my own back was satisfying. A
moment of violence was also a strange pacifier for all my insecurity.
I was invited to go to a Christian conference by a friend,
and I said yes, mainly because at 12 the idea of a holiday in Butlins where
there were water slides sounded fun. I thought I had the Christian thing
sorted, anyway, so it was no big deal. It was very different to what I was used
to. The meetings had long periods of standing up and singing, which was fine
for me as a performer. I quite enjoyed it, apart from the fact that all the
songs were new and I didn’t know them. I think the unfamiliarity of these songs
meant that when I did sing, I sang for the first time in years actually having
to think about what I was singing about God. I learned over the first few days
to truly delight in singing these amazing words. I took notes in the talks as I
always did at home, not that I ever really looked at them again. But, it was really
uplifting.
It got to day 3 or 4, I can’t remember. It was a Tuesday
evening, drawing to the end of the 5 days, and I didn’t want to listen to the
talks anymore – I had friends and these friends had sweets. Sitting on the
floor, chatting in hushed tones in a circle, we weren’t really being told off. It was quite the
rebellion for this 12 year old. There was paper at the back of the room and we
were told to go and write down behaviour that we wanted to change. We were
being encouraged to be more Christ-like, yet I walked over, saw other people’s
ideas and judged them. I don’t gossip like they do, I’m kind to my sister. I
sat down, thinking that I was good enough. I didn’t really understand what it was to
come broken, helpless and sinful at the cross of Jesus, overwhelmed by my own
sin until I sat down. It flooded onto my shoulders and I spent the next few
minutes (though it felt like ages) scribbling down everything I could think of. My anger being the big issue, but then it rumbled down into the small, everyday
ways in which I rejected God. I saw the extent to which I was running away. Whenever I sat back down, something else struck me and I ran back to write it.
It
wasn’t just that I realised I wasn’t a good girl, it was that I realised for
the first time how much I needed grace. I needed Jesus to help me overcome all
of this. He did to overcome all of this, for me, the girl who thought she had
it sorted and didn’t need anything but a good knowledge and religious looking
actions to be right with God.
The room gathered and we ran through this piece of paper,
symbolising Jesus breaking the chains of our sin. I was elated like nothing
else. People sang and I grabbed bits of paper and ripped them apart. It was an
inexpressible joy and freedom that I suddenly felt. The best dance performance,
the loudest applause, never topped it. When we got back to our chalet, the
people I was staying with asked me, ‘So are you a Christian now?’ after I had
chatted excitedly with them about what had happened. I paused. I realised that
I actually hadn’t been a Christian before I had grasped all of that. It shocked me,
but thrilled me. I answered a confident ‘yes’ and was welcomed into the family
by a hug that I won’t forget.
Not everyone has such a moment to speak of, and it is
amazing to see how that moment when I was trying to be cool, not listen,
actually became a moment where I grasped the gospel, the 'good news', I had been hearing from childhood for the first time. It was the moment where I saw the folly in my
goodness from God’s eyes. But it didn’t change me instantly. I’m not sure I
leaped home and told everyone like so many in the Bible seem to do when they
encounter Jesus like that. I’m not even sure I told my mum! It was a slow slog
from there. There were too many issues that still seemed too big for Jesus to
handle. I wanted to read my Bible, but there was still a wrong attitude. I read
verses on anxiety and anger and found them patronising, and to be honest read
the Bible to confirm that I was still good, doing the right thing, plodding
along nicely.
I still struggled with anger. I was in counselling, and then
I was in therapy. I didn’t understand why I still struggled. I had a real
faith, but real doubts too. Puberty, hormones, endless streams of problematic
friendships and my own perfectionism were a constant battle. I struggled to see
how Jesus could help me if my friends were ignoring me, or if a friend was
self-harming, or if I still couldn’t stop having panic attacks in class. It was
a turbulent time, and I was still very insecure. Jesus wasn’t a quick-fix 'solution': I still had lots to learn and understand.
June 2009: I reached a tipping point. A netball game got a
bit intense. I was losing, I was forced to accept my failure and the failure of
my team, and a friend who had been causing me a lot of anxiety was on the
winning team and loving it. She jibed in jest, but I snapped. How could she?
Did she know what her problems were putting me through? I ran at her, there was
a violent attack that I mercifully can’t remember the details of. I ran to the
empty PE cupboard, bright red, face hot with anger and shame. I cried, I was
shaken, I hated myself, I hated this anger that seemed to be controlling me. I
didn’t know what to do with myself. I started banging my head against the wall,
contemplated self-harm momentarily, but it ended on my knees. I was praying for
forgiveness. I knew that I needed a saviour because my efforts to be good, to be god in my own life and take control, were failing.
In all my violent incidents, or insecurity, I never blamed
myself or saw myself as a problem. It was always other people that triggered
me. The people around that knew all the answers when I didn’t, or a comment made
which tipped me over... Why could I never take the blame? I had to write
reports of my actions and it would always start with a scapegoat clause, an
attempted defence. It wasn’t just me. By deflecting all my problems as other
people’s problems, I had in my eyes escaped calling it ‘sin’, that word of
dread. But it was, and now I knew it. I was crushed. I was stuck dumb. I was so
ashamed. I saw that for years people had been scared of me – the only friends I
made I eventually let down somehow. I recommitted to following Jesus, and it
wasn’t on the agreement that I was fixed up or would fix myself up, but on the agreement that I would
surrender.
I faced girls turning away from me, and kindness from a few
who took pity and didn’t follow the crowd (still great friends today!). My
summer was my ‘summer of darkness’. No friends to hang out with, six weeks of
family time and lots of visits to Shakeaway! In the nights I read my bible and
prayed with more understanding. I prayed for those that I thought had hurt me,
as Jesus commanded us to do. I prayed that I might forgive as he forgave me. I
didn’t expect that a few weeks into the next school year it would really
happen. I was reconciled to Jesus and reconciled to my friends. My heart, too,
was slowly changing. Within a year, the counselling and therapy was no longer
needed. It was nothing to do with me. I couldn’t change myself – I had been
trying for years and falling flat. He alone orchestrated the change in my heart
by His Spirit as I read his word with open eyes and a longing to know more of
Jesus. He alone could rescue me from the depths of my insecurity, inadequacy,
anger, anxiety.
On a bus one day in October, having seen how God had
completely turned my thinking about and changed my heart, my thoughts turned to
baptism. Before, it was a weird ritual, but now it had a whole new meaning, and
I wanted to proclaim that I was died and raised with Christ, raised to a new
body, made a new creation because of his death. I wanted to proclaim his
victory over sin and death in my life and for others to see and be encouraged.
January 3rd, 2010.
Those are the 'big bits', I guess, although that is only just the beginning. I continue to grow and
change and fail and fear and pray and stumble and pray a lot more... and fall
again. I’ve taken the gospel message out, the good news has been proclaimed
with my words and hopefully in my life. It’s why I took a year between school and
University to work for free, live on little, so that I could share the love of
God and the message of Jesus’ death to the most marginalised in society. It’s
why I am always rushing around at University and am so glad to be taking on
roles in CU at Durham next term. What good news we have to share!
It’s why I want to give my whole life to Jesus. We owe a
debt of love we can never repay. We are still weak and helpless, yet our sins
are remembered no more and we are clothed in His righteousness – set apart for
His glory. We have been adopted by the Creator of the Universe, who calls
himself Father. This will hurt, this will cost. This will be worth it.
But I echo Paul in my life (with trembling lips): ‘But whatever were gains to me I now
consider loss for the sake of Christ. What is more, I consider everything as
loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord... I want
to know Christ, yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in
his sufferings...one thing I do: forgetting what is behind and straining towards
what is ahead, I press onwards the goal to win the prize for which God has called
me heavenwards in Christ Jesus.’
And I follow Jesus, who calls me to ‘Go’.
To Him be the glory.