I’m Meg. I’m an alcoholic and drug addict. I was a liar, a thief, a murderer, a prostitute, and adultress. I’m a former atheist, former agnostic, former “believer” in Jesus, and current follower of Jesus. How I got there, why I chose to live there, how I escaped, how I came Home, and the transformation that has occurred is the story of my life … But it’s not the whole story.
I’m a sinner who on her brightest day and during her darkest hour, was passionately, persistently, and feverishly pursued by the Living God. Manning refers to it as “the furious longing of God” and I’m far too unoriginal to challenge a notion so perfect as the one term that is as descriptive as that. It’s because of that “furious longing” that I’m alive and forever dedicated to following the One who never gave up on me, never stopped chasing me.
In our flesh, there’s something so intensely alluring and all-consuming when it comes to “the pursuit”, isn’t there? At least that’s how it’s been in my life. Truth be told, I’ve never done anything halfway. Gradually, I began to develop a reckless pattern in my life, a way of throwing all caution and reason to the wind in my attempt to “live fully”. I remember making a conscious decision right around junior high to live with abandon in the hopes of experiencing a richer, more exciting life, but all that ever did was leave me empty, troubled, broken, and more wounded than I could ever have foreseen.
I know all too much about pursuit. I’ve pursued everything under the sun and paid deeply for it.
My father’s attention
My mother’s approval
Grades
Friends
Alcohol
Boys
Excitement
Sex
Drugs
Physical
perfection
Men
Scholastic achievement
Adventure
Pleasure
I chased them all and did so like there was no tomorrow, because in the grand scheme of things, there really wasn’t. In a life consumed by the pursuit of things, people, pleasure, and a peace and joy that I could never seem to attain, no one told me I had a Pursuer … No one told me that He was chasing me.
Manning writes, “The closer I get to death, the less inclined I am to limit the wisdom and infinity of God”, so even though the Bible doesn’t specifically give the name “Pursuer” to our God, the Scriptures are laden with enough hints and intimations to make this understanding perfectly clear. I know my experiences and relationship with Him are enough to solidify this reality in my heart and mind, but if ever I needed confirmation, I would have to look no further than poet Francis Thompson’s epic work, “Hound of Heaven”.
The first time I read it, I was once again a broken, humbled, and grateful, sobbing before my computer and my Lord, swimming in a sea of painful, ugly, old memories given new life, clarity, and purpose. In words I could never begin to replicate about the years lost to my flight from Christ, Thompson writes:
“I fled Him, down the nights and down the days;
I fled Him down the arches of the years.”
Leaving me nothing to reflect upon but my own pursuit of everything but the only real Satisfaction there is, I was horrified, shattered, and broken to realize that I’d spent the better part of my life – EVEN MY CHRISTIAN LIFE – chasing a world and existence that was nothing but disappointing, temporary, barren of purpose, without satisfaction, void of any real contribution, and entirely absent of the joy, peace, love, and fulfillment I’d spent a lifetime longing and looking for. And then the world betrayed me, as it always does.
Thompson brilliantly writes about how the betrayal of everything we pursue leads us to the One we have betrayed … The complexity of this whole notion of our pursuit of Him overwhelms and confuses me, while the absolute simplicity is nothing less than brilliant and reassuring.
God never follows after us with a frustrated, impatient, annoyed spirit that is forever glancing at the clock that never ceases to stop ticking, but instead “with unhurrying chase and unperturbed pace.” We have a lifetime in which to come to Him … A lifetime in which we discover, hopefully sooner and in more personal ways, that our purpose is to turn the tables on Him and pursue our Pursuer with passionate abandon. Only in our quest of and for Him will we finally find REAL rest. I absolutely love this paradox!
I am convinced, however, that our pursuit of God has far more reaching consequences and rewards, and it extends far beyond the rest that He promises us in Matthew 11:29. It has everything to do with our ability and capacity to love, forgive, be merciful, patient, compassionate, graceful, seek out justice, and experience joy and peace. We cannot lead if we are unwilling to follow and there is a world out there longing to see and desperately in need of more than the legalism, apathy, and impotence that our unhealed souls have led people to believe our faith, and thus our God, characterizes.
How has He been chasing you?
How have you been responding?
What does your pursuit of our Savior, our Jesus, look like?
Is it relentless, passionate, committed, limitless, intense, all-consuming, fierce, satisfying, focused, and as tireless as His pursuit of us? Does it wake you in the middle of the night and lull you back to sleep in the early hours of the dawn? Perhaps we think this is unattainable in the reality of the grand scheme of life and amidst all of it’s responsibilities, but nothing could be further from the Truth. There is no greater pursuit than that of the One who pursues us.
To learn more about Meg and Abeni, visit www.abenionline.org