| GROWING
EDGES In
recent months, without trying to or even wanting to, Carolynn and I have been
experiencing the Prayer of Relinquishment in intimate detail. The Bible is full
of this form of prayer, the most dramatic being the unparalleled experience of
our Lord in the garden where he cried out, "If possible let this cup pass . .
. nevertheless . . . not my will but Thine be done!" Severing
Precious Roots In the winter of 1990 prophetic utterance was
spoken over me the first half of which relates to our family and has been occurring
in the most encouraging and faith-building ways. The second half of this message
had to do with some deep trials we would go through which would result in our
being catapulted into a whole new realm of effective ministry. I
did not know what to think of this last half of the message until last February
when I received an unusual revelation from God the gist of which indicated that
I would be severing some very precious roots in my life. At first I misunderstood
these words, assuming that they referred to my relationship with a national group
of writers I was with at the time and to which I give leadership. (The fact
that God speaks to us is no guarantee that we hear or understand correctly!) In
time I came to see that God was speaking about the deep roots we had in Wichita
and our beloved Friends University. This was confirmed by numerous circumstances
and the wise counsel of many from around the country. Only
the Beginning But it was only the beginning of our experience
of the Prayer of Relinquishment. We were releasing far more than the warm friendships
of more than a dozen years, far more than the base from which Renovaré
has been birthed and nurtured. I
am the Executive Director of a think tank for writers called The Milton Center.
I founded this Center five years ago, and I continue to have very high hopes for
its future. I have had to relinquish it. For years Carolynn and I dreamed of building
a toxin-free home in hopes of gaining an upper hand on her rather severe allergies.
Carolynn spent one entire year designing and overseeing the building of it. We
moved in only last February. We have had to relinquish it. And so much more. The
Necessity of Struggle These decisions have not come easily.
We prayed. We struggled. We wept. We went back and forth, back and forth, weighing
option after option. We prayed again, struggled again, wept again. Struggle,
you see, is an essential feature of the Prayer of Relinquishment. Jesus struggled
in the garden, so much so that his sweat became like great drops of blood. All
of the luminaries in Scripture struggled as well: Abraham as he relinquished his
son Isaac; Moses as he relinquished his understanding of how the Deliverer of
Israel should function; David as he relinquished the son given to him by Bathsheba;
Mary as she relinquished control over her future. Struggle
is important because the Prayer of Relinquishment is Christian prayer and not
Fatalism. We do not resign ourselves to fate. We are not locked into a pre-set,
determinist future. Ours is an open, not a closed, universe. We are "co-laborers
with God" as the Apostle Paul put it--working with God to determine the outcome
of events. Therefore our prayer efforts are a genuine give and take, a true dialogue
with God. And relinquishment is our full and wholehearted agreement with God that
his way is altogether right and good. Release
with Hope The Prayer of Relinquishment is a bona fide letting
go, but it is a release with hope. We have no fatalist resignation. We are buoyed
up by a confident trust in the character of God. Even when all we are able to
see is the tangled threads on the backside of life's tapestry, we know that God
is good and is out to do us good always. And that gives us hope to believe that
we are the winners regardless of what we are being called upon to relinquish.
God is inviting us deeper in and higher up. There is training in righteousness,
transforming power, new joys, deeper intimacy. Besides, often we hold so tightly
to the good that we do know that we cannot receive the greater good that we do
not know. And God has to help us let go of our tiny vision in order to release
the greater reality he has in store for us. Farewell
and God Speed And so the coming year will be a time of transition.
We say farewell and God speed to the University and friends who have given so
much support, nurture, and joy to our lives. We will always be grateful for our
years here. We express our heart-felt thanks to the board, administration, faculty,
and staff of Friends University who have believed in us and encouraged us.
We hope to relocate the Renovaré offices and have a new address in place
by July 1, 1992. Where that will be is yet to be determined. Already we have some
exciting possibilities both in this country and beyond. Pray with us that we will
be discerning, wise, prudent, and adventuresome! And that in God's time the Prayer
of Relinquishment will turn into the Prayer of Celebration. Peace
and joy, Richard J. Foster
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