This is a book folks.
I think people think of me sometimes as a guy who pretty much has it all together. If you are of that opinion, you are sadly mistaken.
In September of 2002 (or was it August) AHQ does this tour thing where we went as far back east as Ohio. I have a terrible chronological memory, so the details might be a little inaccurate. But we went to a Sharon Mennonite Bible Institute Choir Tour reunion, which involved David. I was very impressed and it got me to thinking that I’d like to go to SMBI. I’m also interested (sorry about the change in verb tense) at that point in going to China for a month with Global Tribes Outreach. Sure, it would do weird things to my school plans, but hey, we could work around them.
Fast forward a week or two, and I’m riding high because my advisor at school didn’t seem to mind this idea too much (she just scheduled school around it, even though it would now take longer) and my parents are fairly encouraging.
Fast forward another 6 or 7 months. I’m now at OSU and all of the sudden this idea’s not looking quite so rosy, considering the stretching out of my undergraduate career and possibly missing some school-related opportunities. But I stick with it, because I’m still convinced that God was leading in that way.
I struggle on and off with it throughout the Spring, Summer, and into this Fall, especially when I find out that I can’t go to SMBI for two terms like I had been planning. I never really consider chucking the whole idea because I still think that I’ve set my course, God worked it out, and I need to go. Somewhere in there, I decided to drop the China thing because that would involve missing two terms of school and I decided I only wanted to miss one.
But I continue to struggle, and it’s getting bad. So bad that it’s even affecting my focus and motivation in my current classes. It was advising week so I went in to see my new advisor and he was sort of blunt. “It’ll mess you up,” he said, of missing this key winter term.
It’s about then that I started considering not going to SMBI at all. See, from the outside looking in this may not seem to be such a big deal, and in the overall scheme of things it isn’t, but we’re dealing with more than just the bare facts here, at least from my perspective. I didn’t want to have to tell people that I was changing plans, because, hey, I’m Byran and I’m the guy that appears sure of myself and my future and it would be embarrassing to tell everyone that plans are changing so momentously, to do such an abrupt about-face. Pride, folks.
But then I had to ask myself, “Why am I going to SMBI?” and when I looked at the reasons for and against, it was hardly a question.
Reasons to go:
1. I thought that’s what God wanted me to do back when I made my initial decision.
2. People (my cousin Heidi in particular) were expecting me to go.
3. I had just told people that I was going, I’d have to eat my words.
Not a particularly strong bunch of reasons, especially when stacked against the reasons to stay.
1. I felt really not good about going, I would feel a lot better if I stayed.
2. The whole flow of life thing. SMBI seemed like unnatural break that would set me back school-wise. If I’m going to school, let’s go to school, you know?
3. Relationships at school. It’s my desire to witness to people by learning to know them and involving myself in their lives, and if I left in the winter it would totally mess that up.
You know what, though, it almost makes me a little cynical about this hearing-from-God thing, though, because during those times of uncertainty and feeling very unsure of my charted course (SMBI and before that China), I had (manufactured?) reasons why it was God’s will and how even then He was leading and affirming my path. Like back in the Spring when I was in an Anthropology class and I got help with a project on a small Chinese village or when I thought about the fact that at SMBI I’d be taking a couple of evangelism classes (urban and Moslem) which was really down my line.
I was walking on air this afternoon after I registered for Winter Term.