"Does your spiritual life sometimes seem more like a burden than a blessing? Does your spirituality seem to exhaust you as often as it refreshes you? Have your spiritual practices become "just another thing to do" in an already overcrowded, stress-filled schedules? If so, then you need to simplify your spiritual life." ~Donald S. WhitneyHave you ever blown an engine? We did, once. It was embarrassing... it was a very, very old vehicle and we had gone a few additional weeks than we should've without checking (and then recognizing the need to replenish) the oil supply. The effects are disastrous-- once you blow an engine, it is pretty much worthless, all because the oil wasn't properly maintained and things weren't able to move and flow like they should've.
After telling the story of a time he blew an engine, Stephen W. Smith, author of Embracing Soul Care, puts it this way:
"The blown engine became an important symbol in our lives. In the midst of busyness and ministry, I had not maintained my van. It was now too late to simply get a read on the engine by checking the dipstick. It was an expensive mistake. The van needed a replacement engine. That weekend, as the van's engine was replaced, I looked at my own internal engine. The state of my soul was crying out for some serious maintenance. The soul functions much like a car's engine. If we want to function properly for life's long haul, we need to check our soul's dipstick."
In what ways could you rescue your souls from burnout by performing regular "dipstick checks" and keeping up more intentional "maintenance" of your soul? Do you need to do like Donald Whitney wrote, and "simplify your spiritual life"?
"Let us test and examine our ways
and return to the Lord!"
~Lamentations 3:40~
Image: hinnamsaisuy / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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