What I’ve Learned About Seeking God

What I've Learned About Seeking God
photo by Maarten Van Den Heuvel

Ah, the word of the year. Such a great way to say, “You know what? I stink at resolutions. I will make only one, and it will be somewhat vague in the form of a word so that no one can say I actually didn’t do it.”

Still, I tried. My word of 2016 was Seek. It encompasses phrases God kept putting on my heart over time: watch, pray, seek, find, wait, hope, look. All of them calling me to seek him more deeply.

To be honest, initially I thought it just meant I should pray more. But seeking is about more than just time with God. It’s about how I seek and what I seek as well. So though I am still growing into someone who seeks earnestly, this is what I have learned this year about seeking:

Seek expectantly 

We will not seek if we do not believe we lack something. If we lack something, we will not seek it outside ourselves until we trust we will find what we need. I can live from the lie that I have to rely on myself, that no one’s going to rescue me. I try to be my own savior (super small s). The more I am aware of my desperate need for a Savior (giant S), and the more I believe he longs to help me, that he will fight for me, the more I will seek.

To do this requires hope, and hope is vulnerable. It opens us to disappointment, because God does always answer in the ways we think he should. He’s a lot like Aslan, from the Chronicles of Narnia-we never know when or how he will show up, but he will, because he is good. Seeking expectantly requires us to put our hope in his goodness. 

Seek continually

I had this erroneous idea that by the end of the year, I would be done seeking, and could move on. As though there’s some end to seeking God.

We keep finding God over and over, in every circumstance, trial, doubt, and need. Our lives are meant to be lived with a posture of seeking. We stay aware of our deep needs and let them drive us to seek his strength. Look for him at work in the world. Watch for his goodness. Seek day after day, moment after moment, ways to put our hope back in him. The more we seek, the more we will find.

We seek his face

Honestly, this is the most challenging for me. This year God has led me to ask more audaciously, to depend on him more for areas where previously I was inclined to trust in my own meager resources. But this idea of seeking his face is to simply be with him in his presence, and enjoy him for who he is, not what he gives. It’s not about prayer so much as it is about his presence.

God asks us to seek his face because we are his children and he wants to spend time with us. What?? Seriously, this blows my mind. I’m the poster child for doing over being, so I come to God with my lists and prayers and scripture I want to read. Then I miss just being with him, looking at him face to face.

What I’ve realized this year is that God could answer all of my prayers. He could give me everything I want and I would not be satisfied, because what my soul is really seeking is him.

I want to learn to be a child sitting at his feet, content to simply be there with him, delighting in him and he in me. My next word of the year might need to be “sit” or “stay.” (Good Gina).

Keep seeking, friends. He promises we’ll find him. 

“But if from there you seek the Lord your God, you will find him if you seek him with all your heart and with all your soul.” Deuteronomy 4:29

Related posts:

I Don’t Need Rescuing (Except I Do)

The Battle Belongs to Him 

Ask for the Pony

never miss a post

This Post Has 2 Comments

  1. Stephanie Thompson

    Great reminder, Gina. “To do this requires hope, and hope is vulnerable. It opens us to disappointment, because God does always answer in the ways we think he should. He’s a lot like Aslan, from the Chronicles of Narnia-you never know when or how he will show up, but he will, because he is good.” That is the core of the issue-to trust outside of myself requires absolute hope in what I know to be true of God’s character. It is not trusting that I will receive what I want. And I love that passage about Aslan. “Course he isn’t safe but he’s good.”

    1. Gina

      Thanks Stephanie!

Comments are closed.