There is a general unwillingness to give up.
In our culture giving up is considered failure. Giving up is for losers, those that can’t cut it. Attached with shame, embarrassment and weakness, it is unthinkable.
So we fight against it at all cost.
At all cost.
In other words, whatever needs to suffer, be compromised or given up in the process, we do.
We fight.
We sacrifice.
We tolerate.
Inevitably, at some point the cost ends up exceeding the value of what we are fighting for and yet we dig deeper, we get stubborn and then purely unreasonable in our strife.
There is nothing and no one that can convince us otherwise.
And when we’re deep down, we hit the vein. We feel the pain. It is the knowing. It is the confession that wants to erupt because we see the folly in our efforts. We know the struggle is fruitless. We know that what we are giving, we can never recover or redeem. And yet, we press on, until the question we refuse to ask slowly begins to rise up.
When is it ok to give up?
When you have begun to discount yourself.
Give it up.
When you hold the “thing” greater than your worth and well-being.
Give it up.
When it becomes more valuable than your marriage, your family, your relationships, people in general.
Give it up.
Giving something up for the redemption of a person is always the greater good. It is always the greater choice.
Even when the person is you.
Christ gave it up for people. On the cross He bowed His head and gave up His spirit to the Father in heaven.
His shame.
His burden.
His sorrow.
Your pain.
Your sin.
Your shame.
It was not expected. Not how we would have thought he would go about it. Dying on a cross did not appear to be the actions of a Savior. It did not seem like he had saved or redeemed them. It looked a lot like defeat.
But it wasn’t the end.
In John 10:18 Jesus said “I have the power to lay it down.”
The power.
He obtained a victory greater than what we could even fathom. Accomplishing more for eternity than any earthly toiling, struggle or battle could have obtained. Not because he was weak or defeated, but because he had the power to lay it down and give it up.
He gave it up, and He won.
In many cases, giving takes more strength than fighting. What seemed to be weakness was strength unbridled and everlasting.
A voluntary surrender can be the threshold to redemption.
Give it up.