What a Year! Can I Tell You About it?
Hey guys! I can鈥檛 believe this is my last blog of the school year! I鈥檓 a very sentimental person, so whenever a season of my life comes to a close I tend to reflect on what I learned and how I鈥檝e changed.
So, as my way of signing off, I鈥檓 going to recall and share with you some of the most prominent life lessons I learned during my first year at Biola.
Community
Within Biola鈥檚 95 acre campus, I鈥檝e been surrounded by a community of other Christians. I know this unique opportunity won鈥檛 last forever, but I鈥檓 glad I鈥檝e been able to experience it.
Living in such close proximity to others, specifically in a dorm, has taught me how to be more generous with my time and attention. I think that I鈥檝e become more patient when people 鈥渋nterrupt鈥 me and my to-do list, because I鈥檝e found that some of the most meaningful and impactful moments can happen unexpectedly. Some positively life-changing conversations have happened between me and the girls in my dorm room. These can happen at any hour of the day and often don鈥檛 come with much warning. Conversations like these have occasionally happened outside of the dorm as well.
Through this, God has been urging me to be more emotionally present in every moment, because any conversation can be an opportunity to encourage someone, be encouraged, or be challenged and sharpened in our faith.
Wisdom & Diversity
Along these lines, I鈥檝e been realizing that, within community, there are so many wise and unique people around me! I tend to be a little bit prideful in my thinking and assume that I know more than I do. Having this mindset can make me closed off to hearing new ideas and receiving advice. But through multiple conversations with professors, faculty, and peers, I鈥檝e been recognizing the value of listening to others鈥 perspectives and stories. I鈥檓 gleaning so much wisdom and being so challenged by those around me! I love how diversely God has made everyone and shaped their life stories!
Words
God has also been showing me how powerful words are. I鈥檝e felt incredibly blessed and empowered by precise feedback and specific encouragement from my professors. Affirmations, prayers, and prophetic words from my peers have also been reshaping my thought patterns in a positive way.
The power of words also became evident after the death of one of my professors this semester. He was the most verbally encouraging person I鈥檝e ever met. Since he passed, I鈥檝e learned that he impacted and changed several people鈥檚 lives with his generous affirmations. To live his legacy, I鈥檝e felt compelled to be more generous with my words of encouragement to others.
Identity
I鈥檝e always known that I鈥檓 God鈥檚 child and have always believed that he has good plans for me. Yet, I鈥檝e struggled to let those truths change the way I think about myself and affect my attitude and daily decisions. It has always been more natural for me to get a sense of my identity and worth (and look for direction) from things and people鈥ntil this semester at Biola.
I feel that I鈥檓 starting to really 鈥済et it鈥 on a deeper level. I understand the significance of being God鈥檚 child and being born again. I think that this is because I鈥檝e heard statements about my identity in Christ repeated and expounded on by chapel and conference speakers, professors, and classmates in my theology classes. The more I read and study Scripture, the more everything sinks in
I鈥檝e enjoyed being able to remind myself that I鈥檓 God鈥檚 beloved child; that I was created to worship and enjoy him; that he calls me to be an ambassador/representative in his earthly Kingdom; and that he has called and elected me to do certain things.
I鈥檓 enjoying the freedom that comes from thinking about myself and talking to myself as God does, rather than how the world may think of or label me.
The more I embrace the fact that God made me uniquely and has a special purpose for me, the less afraid I am for the future. I recognize now that my time at Biola is a time to discover what God might be calling me to, what I鈥檓 passionate about, and what my niche is. I don鈥檛 fear 鈥渕essing up鈥 my future or appearing imperfect to other people as much as I used to.
Jesus VS. Self-Help
I鈥檓 quite a perfectionist, and I like to improve things wherever I go. Unfortunately, when I direct my energy towards trying to 鈥渋mprove鈥 and even 鈥減erfect鈥 myself, it can be unhealthy. Thankfully, God has been showing me this semester that unless Jesus is my focal point, I can鈥檛 really become a better version of myself or feel a sense of wholeness.
Moving to Biola in the Fall was my biggest life transition yet, and it triggered feelings of uncertainty and inadequacy in me. I tried to soothe those feelings through methods of self-improvement: eating 鈥減erfectly,鈥 making sure I got 鈥渆nough鈥 exercise each week, studying hard enough to get A鈥檚, reading self-help books, and listening to podcasts by non-Christian influencers about how to be 鈥渂etter鈥 in various ways.
Now, striving to be healthy and live a good life are not bad things! But, long story short, these self-improvement strategies haven鈥檛 made me feel deeply satisfied or at peace. The feelings of accomplishment have been short-lived. My self-reliant endeavors don鈥檛 fill me up or bring me a ton of joy鈥攔ather, they leave me wanting more.
What has really made me feel satisfied is looking outside of myself鈥攁t Jesus. Knowing and loving Jesus better and keeping his words in my mind has lead to moments of deeper peace and fulfillment.
My theme verse for this school year is John 15:5: Jesus says, 鈥淎part from me you can do nothing.鈥 When I first encountered that verse this semester, it really stood out to me. Since then, I鈥檝e been learning what it looks like to truly 鈥渁bide鈥 in Jesus (Jn. 15:4).
I鈥檝e discovered that when I truly put Jesus on the throne of my heart, my life is a lot more fruitful and satisfying, and I become more of who I was created to be. Looking to Christ as my supreme role model has brought healthy improvement to my life, and the Bible has been the best self-help book there is. ;)
In Conclusion鈥
Thank you for joining me on my journey to 鈥淏ecoming Biola鈥! I appreciate you being my audience and reading my reflections from my junior year at Biola. I hope you feel encouraged by the lessons that God has been teaching me and that you鈥檝e even learned something new about Biola or God himself.
Until next time,
Jessica