Everything ached. Muscles I didn’t know I had throbbed within me. Pain bloomed in my neck, my hip, my left knee. I gasped as I got out of bed. I hadn’t done anything mighty or heroic; all I’d done was go skiing. Truth be told, I’d spent far less time on the skis and far more time skyrocketing down the hill towards a face plant.
When I had strapped on those skis and glanced at the hill, I realized I somehow needed to get down. Panic rushed inside of my chest, and fear filled my lungs. I shuddered.
“You can do this,” I pep-talked myself. “It’s just a little snow on a bit of an incline. Besides, you have no choice. You have to get down this hill.”
I’m Canadian. Knowing how to ski ought to be embedded within me. I watched young kids fly past me as I inched my way down the slope. My friend waited patiently for me at the bottom. I was terrified. I regretted my choice of embracing a Canadian winter. I should’ve stayed home with a book.
I began to pick up traction down the hill and, much to my dismay, started moving faster and faster. I lost control. I tried to stop, but instead my body flew, crashing into the snow face first.
“Ow,” I moaned. I looked like the abominable snow monster, my face cold and covered in snow. Somehow my ski poles had landed on opposite sides of the hill.
The next morning, each step I took reminded me of the many crashes I had the day earlier. I ached and ached.
I hate the feeling of being weak. I don’t like being bad at new things. It was ridiculous for me to assume skiing would have somehow been easy or that I could have had the grace of an Olympian after a few tries. But I wanted to be great. I think of Amy March’s words from the recent movie adaption of Little Women, “I want to be great or nothing!”
It’s a trap I fall into over and over — believing I need to be great in order to be loved, thinking I need to be interesting in order to be liked. I convince myself I need to perform a song and dance to prove to people I’m worth sticking around for. I want to be special and significant, to make a mark on the world, to leave a lasting legacy. Like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, I want to take a shortcut and become like God. Over and over, I find myself thinking, “Okay, God, I can take it from here and do this on my own now.”
Instead, I am reminded of how weak I am, how finite and how ordinary. How much a tumble down a ski hill hurts the next morning.
God doesn’t need our bravado, charisma, or strength. He doesn’t need a blue checkmark on Instagram, a book deal, or a decent salary. He doesn’t need us to perform, pretend, or produce in order to ensure He’ll stick around.
He wants us to come exactly as we are — limping and weary. It turns out God can do a lot with ordinary and finite and weak. Jesus said the man who prayed from his heart, repenting in his utter weakness, was the prayer He preferred, and the widow who gave a penny away gave more than the rich who’d given plenty. In the upside-down kingdom we reside in, weakness is exactly what Jesus wants.
Paul said in 2 Corinthians 12:9, “But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.”
The thought of boasting in my weakness makes me cringe. A friend recently told me, “I think I’m meant to wear my weakness instead of hiding it.”
Wear my weakness? It’s exactly what Jesus did time and time again. God chose a teenage girl to give birth to His Son. A couple of lowly shepherds to be the first disciples. A woman to be the first preacher of the gospel.
And most of all, God Himself hung on a cross, wearing our pain and our shame and our weakness.
There’s no need for greatness at the foot of the cross. It’s not about us anyway. Instead, we can come exactly as we are, knowing all the glory belongs to Jesus.
Your weakness is the best spot for you to be. Come to God in your neediness, limping and tired, and surrender every part of you.
Then just watch what God can do.
Listen to Aliza’s words below or wherever you stream podcasts!
Leave a Comment
Darlene Slon says
Thank you for this beautiful post! I too can relate with this Aliza, wanting to do it on my own. This is something he is certainly teaching me, not to make me stronger and stronger, but weaker and weaker! The scripture, “ not to think we are sufficient in ourselves but our sufficiency comes from God.” 2 Corth. 3:5. This has been a verse that comes to me often. Learning to depend and lean into Jesus, as He is ALL we need! Lord help us as we surrender to you today to be reminded of your power made perfect in our weakness! Thank you Jesus for your faithfulness as you are always there to help in our time of need.
Aliza Latta says
I love that Scripture – such a beautiful reminder. Thank you, Darlene.
MaryMargaret says
Needed this. Been having nerve pain in my legs, and now I have covid which puts me out of running track for a little while. (College student). I’m just an average runner on the team, but very good, but I love to run. He has been showing me my weakness.
MaryMargaret says
*NOT very good lol
Aliza Latta says
I love how you continue to run, just because you love it. That is beautiful!
Madeline says
Well each morning I am reminded of my weakness as the bones creak and the muscles ache. But on the upside, I know I am alive! And now, with the words you shared this morning, I can look at my weakness as a way to focus on God. This can be my daily reminder that I cannot do it alone.
Aliza Latta says
I love that attitude — a reminder that you are alive, and that God is with you for every single step. Beautiful.
Irene says
Thanks, Aliza! Encouraging words!
Becky Keife says
“There’s no need for greatness at the foot of the cross. It’s not about us anyway. Instead, we can come exactly as we are, knowing all the glory belongs to Jesus.” Oh, friend, Yes. This is what it all comes down to. Thank you. xoxo
Stephanie says
I’ve never thought of it before, but maybe this is because of my weakness…
Romans 8:28 – “And we know that God causes everything to work together for the good of those who love God and are called according to his purpose for them.”
Specifically, my wonderful Christian mom has dementia and how exactly is dementia working for the GOOD OF MY MOM? She doesn’t even remember much of what she knows of God anymore. How is this working for HER good?
Maybe this is a weakness in my trust of God.
Maybe my faith is weak…
KC says
This is not something I have what I think is a satisfactory answer to, and this may sound cliched/trite and if it does, I apologize because that is 100% not my intention. But after a decade of debilitating chronic illness (and its accompanying “uselessness”), I have been having my eye caught in the Bible by more of the pieces where God pulls good things out of occurrences that are baffling to people, or that took a lot of pain, or took a long wait (waiting in exile; waiting for the Messiah; the entire story of Job, which has brought encouragement to several millennia of people at this point; everyone Jesus and the apostles healed, most of whom had been in their pain for years or decades). Every once in a while, we get to see bits of the glorious things God brings out of terrible things either historically or now – but that’s only every once in a while, and in our own lives, it’s usually only after a chunk of time has passed (either because that’s how long it takes for our previous pain to become useful, or because that’s how long it takes for us to learn about the other story that we couldn’t see but that was going along beside ours).
(all of that is in my interpretative context of reading the Bible as saying “God does not *make* most of the unpleasant things in the world happen – most of them happen because the world and the people in it are broken and because Satan is having a field day – but God *allows* them to happen and God brings good out of everything he allows us to suffer” – if you believed God directly and personally sent your mom’s dementia, then that would be a lot harder.)(I also believe that some highly unpleasant things are directly sent by God as a course-correction or a wake-up call, but more of those are group-based rather than individual, and when they are individual, the person knows why [i.e. Nebuchadnezzar is told why he is being humbled], so I would assume this isn’t one of those.)
(Also, God can deal with us yelling sometimes, if that is encouraging. There is a lot of being upset in the Psalms: how long? why me? heeeeelp! Hang on to what you already have; God can haul you through and out to the other side, and God can haul your mother through and out to the other side.)
I’m sorry you and your mom are going through this. *hugs* to you!
Stephanie says
I know you mean well, but I am talking about this verse in particular, and God has clearly promised (at least that is what it says) something FOR MY MOM (“all things work together for good to those who love the Lord”) and dementia will NEVER work for MY MOM’s good.
No, I have never thought God sent dementia, but this verse is speaking about something else entirely.
The only way I can come to grips with this verse is that either God is lying when he says it, or we are misinterpreting God’s meaning in this verse.
KC says
I have assumed that for the good of those who love him isn’t limited to within our lifespan – that if, when we die and finally get to see all the connections, we are delighted with the ripple effects of how God has allowed other peoples’ lives to be touched through our suffering, then that is for our good. But it’s hard to imagine some things ever being worth it; but our imagination is smaller than God is; so I don’t know.
(I learned a lot of valuable things when an older friend of mine was walking her mom through dementia some years ago; she was generous enough to talk about the journey with me, and… yeah. That is most emphatically very much not a path I would want to be on, on either side! But some of those truths sank deep because I *knew* – in that inescapable, can’t-weasel-around-it, gut way – that she knew what she was talking about.)(although I also feel like the things she taught me were not at all “worth” the pain my friend and her mother had been through. But my standards for what I’m worth and for what lessons are worth are askew, so there is that.)
kimmieg says
I was a substitute teacher for over 8 years. I got sassy and got knocked down so many times. I’m an intervention reading aide now. I’m more careful now but still bite off more than I can handle some days. This post will definitely get saved in my bookmarks. God’s got me.
Nancy Ruegg says
AMEN, Aliza! “God can do a lot with ordinary and finite and weak.” Your post includes a number of wise nuggets like this one–worthy to pray back to God as we surrender ourselves to Him, that we might be used by Him in the ways HE chooses. Thank you!
ELMorehead says
Thank you, I needed to remember this!
Robin Dance says
There’s so much I love about this, Aliza, but maybe most is the reminder that God can use anything in our lives to point us to our need for Him! A literal fall or anything that reveals a weakness or imperfection. Well told story, friend, relatable and encouraging! xoxo
Beth Williams says
Aliza,
This post reminds me of the song “Give Thanks”. Chorus: “And now let the weak say I am strong. Let the poor say I am rich because of what the Lord has done for us.” Yes we are rich & strong, but not in our own strength. It is by God’s design. He wants us to come just as we are to the foot of the cross & allow Him to do a mighty work in us. Then when we go out into the world & do His bidding He will get the glory.
Blessings 🙂