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THE PRAYER JONATHAN EDWARDS WAS AFRAID TO SAY — AND THAT CHANGED HIS DESTINY

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There are prayers we love to sing

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because they sound beautiful and safe.

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Bless me, guide me, open doors for me.

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And there are prayers quitly we avoid

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even while calling ourselves

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surrendered. Do whatever you must do in

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me even if it breaks me. We rarely say

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it out loud, but deep in the soul there

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is a line we do not want God to cross.

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We want to be transformed, but not at

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any cost. We want holiness as long as it

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does not touch the parts of our life we

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still secretly hope to keep. Imagine

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then a man like Jonathan Edwards,

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brilliant theologian, pastor, and

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instrument in the hands of God during a

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season of awakening. We admire him from

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a distance as if he lived permanently on

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some higher spiritual mountain. But the

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Jonathan Edwards who walked alone with

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God was not made of marble. He was a man

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who trembled at what the holiness of God

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might require. He knew that to really

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pray, "Search me, oh God," was to invite

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a fire that would not stop at the

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surface. It would burn down into

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motives, affections, ambitions, desires.

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Edwards believed that the human heart is

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deceitful above all things, not only in

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its obvious sins, but in its ability to

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dress self-love in spiritual language.

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He feared not only gross outward evil,

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but the subtle corruption that could

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wrap itself in sermons, success, and

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even religious fervor. And so there was

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a particular kind of prayer that stood

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before him like a doorway he was almost

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afraid to walk through. The prayer that

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gives God permission, not that he needs

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it, but that we acknowledge it to do

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whatever is necessary to purify the

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soul. No matter the cost to comfort,

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reputation or plans, you know more of

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this fear than you might admit. There

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are moments when the spirit nudges you

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toward deeper surrender and something in

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you pulls back. You sense that if you

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really said, "Lord, [music] take away

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what keeps me from you, he might

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actually do it." What if it is a

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relationship? What if it is a hidden sin

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that has quietly become your refuge?

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What if it is a dream you have carried

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for years? We are comfortable asking God

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to bless our path. We are far less

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comfortable asking him to overturn the

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table of our plans if they stand in the

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way of our sanctification.

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Jonathan Edwards stood in that tension.

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He had tasted enough of God to know that

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his presence is better than anything

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this world can offer. But he had also

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seen enough of his own heart to know

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that it would cling to lesser loves

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unless God intervened. The prayer he

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feared was simple in words and

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terrifying in implication. Lord, do with

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me whatever will most glorify you and

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conform me to Christ, [music]

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even if it means undoing the life I

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would have chosen.

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It is one thing to affirm that sentence

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in a theology book. It is another to

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kneel down and whisper it into the ear

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of the living God. This is where the

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story begins for us. Not with a

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spiritual giant striding confidently

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into sacrifice, but with a man who knows

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that God's love is not tame. Divine love

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does not merely comfort. It cleanses. It

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does not only soothe, it sometimes

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wounds in order to heal. To truly invite

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that love to have its way is to

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surrender control over the script of

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your own story.

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Edwards hesitated at that threshold, not

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because he doubted God's goodness, but

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because he understood it too well. A

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good God will not leave a single idol

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standing if he has set his love upon a

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soul. Maybe you are standing at a

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similar doorway. You believe in God. You

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serve him. You sing about surrender, but

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there is still a quiet line you hope he

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will not cross. As we walk through this

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message, we are going to step into

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Jonathan Edward's fear and into the

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moment when he finally bowed under that

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dangerous prayer. Not to make a legend

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out of him, but to hold up a mirror to

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our own half surreners. Because

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somewhere in your story, there is a

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sentence you have avoided praying. And

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it may be that the destiny you keep

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asking God to fulfill on your terms will

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only be unlocked when you dare to say

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with open hands, "Do in me whatever you

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must, even if it is nothing like what I

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planned." Jonathan Edwards did not fear

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that prayer because he thought God was

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cruel. He feared it because he knew God

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was serious. When a holy God takes a

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soul at its word, he does not sign a

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contract to improve your life slightly.

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He commits himself to conforming you to

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the image of his son. And that process

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will not politely avoid your idols.

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Edwards had seen in scripture that when

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God answers the prayer, "Search me," he

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often does it through circumstances that

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dismantle false security, expose hidden

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motives, and strip away the comforts we

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secretly love more than him. He also

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knew how skilled the heart is at

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bargaining. We say, "Lord, use me," but

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we mean, "Use me in ways that affirm

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me." We say, "Take my life." But we

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quietly add footnotes. Just do not touch

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this relationship, this dream, [music]

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this reputation.

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Edwards wrote about the terrifying

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capacity of the soul to love God for his

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benefits while still clinging to itself

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as the ultimate center. To pray, do what

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you must without conditions was to

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invite God to test whether his love was

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truly God- centered or still orbiting

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around his own comfort and success.

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This is where the fear sharpens. What if

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God answers that prayer by closing doors

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that everyone else calls opportunities?

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What if he allows seasons of dryness

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where no emotion carries you and all you

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have is naked faith? What if he uses

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criticism to crush your dependence on

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human praise or loss to detach your

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fingers from a dream you made into an

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idol? Edwards had read [music] Hebrews

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12 6. For the Lord disciplines the one

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he loves and chastises every son whom he

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receives. He understood [music] that

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discipline is not theoretical. It lands

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in real events, real losses, real tears.

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At the same time, he could not escape

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another truth. To refuse that prayer was

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also to choose a path. Saying do not do

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whatever it takes [music] is itself a

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kind of request. It is a plea to be left

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alone at certain depths to be improved

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but not remade.

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Edward saw that [music] as the most

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dangerous wish a believer could

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entertain. To be left with comfortable

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sins, unchallenged idols and untested

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[music] loyalties is not mercy. It is a

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slow judgment. The very thing that felt

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scary, God's willingness to intervene at

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any cost, was also the only guarantee

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that he would not drift into a polished

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religious ruin. So for a time he lived

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in that inner standoff. His theology

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pulled him toward full surrender. His

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humanity pulled him back toward a safer

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devotion. He preached about the

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deceitfulness of the heart and felt his

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own dodging conviction. He expounded on

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sanctification and felt the spirit

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aiming the same truth at him. The prayer

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he feared was like a line written at the

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bottom of a page he was reluctant to

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sign. Lord, do not obey my instincts.

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Obey your wisdom. Do not preserve what

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you know must die. Do not protect the

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parts of me I would protect. Make me

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holy no matter what it costs. You have

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felt that same tug of war. Perhaps you

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have already mouthed words like have

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your way in me and then felt a quiet

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panic. What if he really does? Maybe you

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have seen what happens when God takes

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someone seriously. [music] He calls them

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out of relationships that were

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convenient, out of careers that were

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comfortable, out of patterns that felt

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safe. From the outside, we call it

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obedience and admire the story. From the

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inside, it looks like being led where

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you would never have walked if you had

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been allowed to stay in control. It is

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understandable that part of you resists

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