
January
2005
Making the Most of Failure
By Graham
Cooke
What we think about God is the
single, most important, thing in the world. How we perceive Him will dictate
how we live our life. How we see ourselves in relation to Him will orchestrate
all that we are and do in this world.
We live in a success driven world.
So, in particular, seeing any failure in relation to the heart of God is
absolutely vital. God is love and the nature of that love must be the driving
force behind everything that we do or attempt.
God is not human. He is the sum of
everything. He is not just the Creator of the world. He is the Creator of all
things, including love. He does all things well, including love. His standard
for everything is excellence. The benchmark for success in the Kingdom of God
is so high no one can reach it without His input. And yet He chooses mostly
failures to represent Him.
'For you see your calling,
brethren, that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many
noble, are called. But God has chosen the foolish things of this world to
shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to put to
shame the things which are mighty; and the base things of the world and the
things which are despised God has chosen, and the things which are not, to
bring to nothing the things that are, so that no flesh should glory in Hs
presence. But of Him you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from
God - and righteousness and sanctification and redemption - that, as it is
written 'He who glories, let him glory in the Lord.'
(1 Cor 1:26-31. NKJV)
So it's official. God loves a
failure!
He did not want the beauty of His
nature and the glory of His kingdom solely to be represented by the great, the
good and the clever. He did not want a Who's Who of humanity to portray His
own magnificence.
He does not need to be seen in the
right places with the right people. Jesus was criticized viciously for hanging
out with the very people that society detested. He chose to become despised
and rejected. God does not have an image problem.
He chose people who had a history
of failure. He picked people who had a history of not learning and who
repeated their mistakes continuously.
God chooses people who were
despised as being stupid, by people who should know better. He accepted people
who would require lots of training just to be normal, let alone successful.
He chose them because He wanted to
love them in such a way that they would always be safe and whole … whether
they were successful or not.
He chose them so that His love for
them could heal them of their foolishness. He has a wonderful capacity to
enjoy us in our weaknesses. He has a plan to make us successful through
failure.
We can fail successfully or we can fail badly.
To fail successfully we need to
know who we are in Jesus.
We are in Christ and He is in us.
The Father has a plan for our personality as much as He has a design for
changing our character. To make us more like himself. A big part of that plan
therefore is to love us in exactly the same way that He loves Jesus. We are
not loved when we succeed in Christ. We are loved fully because we are in Him.
God loved us powerfully when we were lost in sin.
We fail successfully when we
realize that our mistakes are already covered. No matter how well or badly our
life is going we learn to live under the smile of God. Know that in the love
of God we cannot fail, we can only make mistakes and every mistake has already
been covered by the cross.
Where were you when Jesus died?
You had no existence. All our sins and mistakes were in the future, and they
were covered by that one incredible act of sacrificial love. All our past,
present and future sins and mistakes have already been covered. Our future has
been secured in the love of God. Shame is not on God's agenda for us. He
allows us the wonder and joy of repentance. Literally "to think again", to
think differently, and to become what we think about.
We fail successfully when we
discover that God wants us to love the learning that exists in every
situation. All forms of accountability are about loving the learning that is
present in every circumstance. That learning produces the fruit of self
control which in turn guarantees lasting change.
God knows that when we do things
for the first time we learn how not to do it. Loving the learning in every
situation enables us to become wise and also beloved. Wise because we learn
from our mistakes and grow. Beloved, because our sense of acceptance comes
from being in Christ and not from our ability or performance. Therefore, if we
fail at something we can still grow in the love of God. The joy of repentance
and the beauty of God's unchanging nature guarantees forgiveness and
acceptance.
We fail successfully when we
realize that God is not even remotely embarrassed by our weaknesses. He
defends us to all our detractors. He is not ashamed to call us brethren. We
are in Christ and cannot be condemned (Romans 8). The One who loves us the
best, knows us the best. God does not get disillusioned with us, because He
had no illusions in the first place!
We fail successfully when we allow
ourselves to be comforted. Our mentor is the Holy Spirit who helps us to laugh
at ourselves. He is the Comforter sent to lead us into all truth. When we are
embarrassed at the truth of our current mindset or behavior He comforts us so
that we are not paranoid about screwing up. Then He helps us with the
learning. Every test is repeatable. We cannot fail the tests of God because we
get to take them again … and again … and again, until we pass. Even in the
consequences of our action the love of God reaches out to cover, protect and
nurture us in our wounded-ness.
The biggest thing we get to learn
is that God loves me for me! Not for what I can do. God's love helps us to
relax about ourselves. The grace of God is given to us to enable us to feel
loved when we mess up. God's grace enables us to feel good about God and
therefore to have mercy on ourselves and others. We are a work in progress.
No-one condemns the artist of an unfinished picture. Instead we look at what
is there and we picture what it could become. We wonder, we imagine, and we
are excited by the possibilities.
In my weakness I am lovely to God.
It's the sheer beauty of God that sets me free to be loved outrageously. He
allows us to fail when He could have prevented it … maybe because He wants us
to see how much we are loved when we can't do anything right. He gives us
freedom to fail and His intention is to show us that we are still His beloved.
His love for us is not based on how well we do. We desire excellence because
He is excellent. No wonder then that David said, "This one thing I ask … that
I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life. To behold the
beauty of the Lord and to (think about Him and all that He is) meditate in His
temple" (Psalm 27:4)
In failure we can understand
how lovely we are to the Lord. That is failing successfully.
We fail badly when we imagine that
failure should not be part of our inheritance. When we believe that failure is
not a part of God's plan. Does God cause us to fail? No. Does He allows us to
fail? Obviously. Does He use our failure to improve our relationship with Him?
Everything God does is relational. Every circumstance can be turned around so
that we discover the height, depth, length and breadth of God's love.
When we hit the heights God's love
is present. When we hit the depths of despair, sin and ugliness, His love
covers everything we hate about ourselves. In the pit of depression God's
loving kindness builds a stairway to recovery. No pit is so deep He is not
deeper still. His love is high enough to lift us above everything, deep enough
to rescue anyone from anything, long enough to last for eternity and broad
enough to cover every failure.
We fail badly when we choose not
to look into the face of Jesus. In failure, God always moves closer to us.
People distance themselves from failure and failures. Not so God. His heart
beats for us. He has given us a comforter so that we can feel his heartbeat.
In recent times I have gone through some of the most painful things in my
life, but I have discovered the Comforter afresh.
My current failures do not haunt me because the Holy Spirit has exorcised the
ghost of shame and dishonor. I am comforted. I am learning. I am the beloved
of God. My name is Graham and I am a man greatly beloved of God.
He does hide from us occasionally,
but that is to draw us into His realm. He manifests Himself to us when He
invades our time-space world. When He hides it is to teach us wisdom by
revelation. God's hiddenness is always about us discovering deep truth. (For
further information see 'Hiddenness and Manifestation' from the Being with God
series.)
Failure is not so much falling
down as refusing to get up once we have fallen. We fail badly when we imagine
that God is annoyed by our failings and will punish us or make us pay for
messing up.
In the process of discipling us God has budgeted for our failure. Our failure
cannot diminish the Kingdom therefore it cannot diminish us. In failure the
Father budgets to be to us exactly what we need at that precise moment. I Am
is with us. Intentional love is present and it is more lavish than we can
imagine. His love can be so extravagant that it picks us up and makes us want
to try again.
God's glory is not enhanced by our
success nor can it be tarnished by our failure. God is simply above all of
that. What if most of God's glory is derived from people who are astonished
and amazed to be loved so fully in the face of their own inabilities and
weaknesses? What if it is part of our own glory in the Lord for us to be loved
so wonderfully when we are at our most brainless and ignorant?
My own failures are many. My
capacity for weakness on days seems undiminished. I am an embarrassment to
myself and yet I am loved so wonderfully. There is perhaps one difference that
my experiences with God have given me. I no longer weep tears of shame. I cry
tears of joy and wonder. I am amazed by God and His power to love me. He makes
all things work together for good. I'm not much of a challenge to His genius
and creativity.
We can discover God just as much
in failure as we can in success, because God never changes. He is the same
whether we succeed or fail. We will all fail at times, we must learn to do so
more successfully!
God's love makes us free to fail
…. Fail in a way that makes you whole and makes the Lord smile!
(Used by permission of Future
Training Institute; Vacaville, CA 95687)
Graham Cooke is a popular
conference speaker and is well known for his training programs on the
prophetic, spiritual warfare, intimacy with God, leadership, and spirituality.
He divides his time between Southampton, England and Vacaville, CA. He will be
one of the speakers at the February 4-5, 2005 Equipping Conference in St.
Paul, MN