The Altar of Surrender
Автор: Killebrew
Загружено: 2026-02-21
Просмотров: 17
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Welcome back, my friends, we are talking about the one thing we all struggle with but desperately need: The Altar of Surrender.
Romans 12:1 (https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/...) states, “And so, dear brothers and sisters, I plead with you to give your bodies to God because of all he has done for you. Let them be a living and holy sacrifice–the kind he will find acceptable. This is truly the way to worship him.”
So we are called to be "living sacrifices." But the problem with being a living sacrifice is that we may want to crawl off the altar of surrender the moment things get uncomfortable. Yet surrender is a daily choice to climb back onto that altar and say, "Not my will, but yours, be done." Luke 22:42
Surrendering means acknowledging that our emotions are indicators, not dictators. It takes immense courage to tell yourself, "I hear you, self, but I am going to move in the direction of God's word anyway." This is where faith becomes tangible because surrendering is the courage to obey despite our emotions or fears. It’s about trading our stress and control for God’s peace. Our true freedom is found only when we stop fighting for control and start surrendering to God's better plan.
But why is it so hard to let go and surrender our all to God?
Sometimes, I think in the quietness of faith, we often live under a profound misunderstanding of power. We are taught from the world at a young age that to survive and to succeed is to maintain control. We carry the weights of our anxieties, our past mistakes, and our fears like armor, believing that if we set them down, we will be left vulnerable. However, a deeper spiritual truth reveals that surrender is a gift, not a weakness. It is the courageous act of trusting that God’s hands are far stronger than our own.
My friends, so much of our spiritual and physical exhaustion stems from trying to manage what was never meant to rest in our hands. These "heavy things" may include:
The Weight of Performance: which could be the exhausting need to prove our worth through religious legalism or the illusion of "perfect" living.
We may carry The Burden of Control, which is the anxiety that comes from trying to orchestrate outcomes we cannot influence.
And then there is The Sack of Regret: Carrying past sins, disappointments or failures that God has already offered to redeem.
When we hold onto these heavy burdens, our hands are too full to receive the "new things" God wants to provide.
In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus offers each one of us a radical exchange and invitation. He says, "Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest". This is not a call to passivity but a call to partnership. A surrender of ourselves to His yoke. By taking on His "yoke," we aren't abandoning all responsibility; rather, we are aligning ourselves with a Master who pulls the weight with us. To take the yoke of Jesus means to become His disciple, aligning our life with His teachings and presence.
My friend, Surrender, is "giving over" rather than "giving up". It is the realization that our weakness is actually the doorway through which divine grace flows most freely—for as the Apostle Paul recorded, God's power is "made perfect in weakness" (2 Corinthians 12:9).
To lay down the heavy things of “performance, control, and regret” is to finally accept that we are not autonomous. When we stop striving, we allow God to start moving in ways we could never orchestrate on our own.
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