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Katie Westenberg

I Choose Brave

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Maximizing and Minimalism and Everything in Between

by Katie

I don’t know about you, but I find myself caught in this tug-o-war this time of year. There is a push to do all the things, make all the memories, and this equally loud cry to pull back, pare down, simplify and trim. Where do maximizing and minimalism meet? If you are wondering, you’re not alone.

 

The advent devotional I planned to read this year showed up late. And yet, somehow, right on time. That sentence should have a familiar ring to it this time of year. The long waiting, the silence, the perfect arrival. I don’t want to miss any of the small ways to see and remember this year, friend.

So I cracked open the late, but perfectly timed, devotion this morning and read these words.

Jesus knew he had come not just to preach the gospel of sacrifice, but also to be that sacrifice, yet he was perfectly willing. 

And this is one reason I chose a Paul Tripp devotional this year. His simple sentences are stunningly convicting.

I let the words settle. Preach sacrifice. Be sacrifice. Perfectly willing.

In a season where we want to pare down, simplify and pursue minimalism and yet make the most of every moment, pack in all the memories - what gives? How do we balance the two? The key to deciding what matters most.

 

Often times I take in the gospel story in bits and pieces. Maybe it’s the magnitude of it all – a virgin birth, the Son of God in humble human skin, angels, shepherds, wise men, years of humanity, growing, temptation, miracles, leading, teaching, betrayal, heartbreak, tears of blood, death and life. It’s just so much to wrap my finite brain around. 

And then the devotion reminds me, in it all, through it all, He was perfectly willing. My mind stops shorts here, like an error code on a calculator. I simply cannot compute.

I’ve done a few hard things in my life, I think. I’ve nibbled the edges of sacrifice. Comparatively, I probably rank low, but I know better than to play those comparison games. If I sift through what I know, what I’ve seen, I can form a low level understanding of sacrifice.

But that perfectly willing part makes me incredibly uncomfortable.

I wash clothes and pick up messes, mostly willing, most of the time.

Every day I cook meals and make my bed, willing much of the time.

I teach and I learn and I try new things with varying degrees of willingness, more so when it benefits me. But to swim in an ocean of sacrifice, sacrifice that is the most humbling, the most painful, the most lonely and to be perfectly willing is something I have never even come close to knowing.

Maximizing vs. Minimalism

This time of year I weigh maximizing and minimalism carefully. I’m a girl who likes to do all the things. Left to my own devices I can run life ragged, empty. Maturity (and a wise husband) has helped me steer that fervor a little more wisely over the years, but sometimes I still become this pendulum that swings heavy one direction or the other. 

Plus minimalism is trendy now, right?

Okay, let’s not do all the things. Not go all the places. Less is more. I can do this!

But in seeking balance, in finding a good fit for our families – it’s also easy to lose sight of the bigger picture. When we drink in the story in bits and pieces, the fragments don’t always resound of the greater truth. Paul Tripp puts it this way:

We have tended to reduce the active field of our concern down to the tiny confines of our wants, our needs, our plans, our satisfaction, and our happiness. (Come Let Us Adore Him)

Ouch.

What if we don’t need to join either camp, maximizing or minimizing? What if our pursuit of such too often makes everything all about…us? We strategize and maneuver for picture perfect outcomes and yet the real work has already been done. With perfectly willingness, done.

In this season, this year, this life, we live to bring glory to God – with our schedules and our homes, in our relationships and at our Christmas parties, with our decor and our meals and gifting and receiving it all. These aren’t bits and pieces, this is all of it. Our mission plain and simple is to glorify Him. Honor Him. 

The challenge is not to minimize or maximize any of it. But rather to see Him here, to follow Him here, to honor Him here, to obey Him here.

The challenge isn't to be a minimalist, paring down. Or a maximizer, make the most of it. The challenge is, eyes up, following Him here. #advent

Rather than looking for a camp to join, let’s look to a God to follow. Let’s look to a God who put skin on, who gets real work and real relationship and the nuances and challenges of all of it.

What if we stepped away from the distraction of less and more, a tug-o-war than grounds our eyes, and instead used that energy to lift our chins and focus on the only One who has ever been perfectly willing to meet us and lead us, right where we are?

God, help me see you here. Help me stand in awe of the work you have done, be captivated by your perfect willingness here. You entered a broken world and continue to enter broken hearts like mine. Fill the spaces, Jesus. All the peace and order I seek, let it be You.

Giving me a heart that is willing, not for all that I see, but for what You see. Make me willing to obey, willing to love, willing to engage and serve and be vulnerable that You may be glorified. Thank you for your perfect willingness, a willingness that I can’t even fathom but one that makes me want to know you even more. I am so grateful.  In Jesus name, Amen.

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Katie Westenberg

Hey, friend, I’m glad you’re here! I’m Katie. One girl determined to do life bravely. One girl determined to Fear God and Live Brave, to parent well, live authentically and work hard for all the things that matter. I Choose Brave and I hope you will too!

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This is fun news! For a limited time, buy a copy o This is fun news! For a limited time, buy a copy of But Then She Remembered for MOM and we’ll send YOU a copy of the audiobook for free!

Distraction is a multi-generational struggle. Remembering is a multi-generational command. Let’s do this, together. Here are the details:

Purchase your copy of But Then She Remembered from any retailer and then head to my website (link in bio) to get your free copy of the audiobook. It’s that simple.
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Available while supplies last. (Note: the offer says buy a copy for mom, not necessarily YOUR mom. Buy a copy for a woman who is a mom, or a woman who has a mom. 😊 They all qualify. Just grab it before they’re gone!}
I scanned a post shared by a friend awhile back an I scanned a post shared by a friend awhile back and the words quickly wooed me. I’ve long been a sucker for words.
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The writer spun them expertly, thoughtfully, vividly, and I was glad to drink of her craft, greedy for story drawn artfully, delivered thoughtfully, from a deep well.

Until I realized, the words weren’t true. The author was believing a well woven lie and carefully threading mistruth into her own kind of gospel. Her mastery, a thin veil for mistruth.
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I was reminded, friend, perhaps the apple looks a bit different today. The shape and size, delivery method, have gone modern but the Truth is still the same - sin is crouching, desiring us and we are commanded to rule over it. Still, today.
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We must know Truth to spot lies. We must remember it, to recognize the difference. We must be aware of our weaknesses and the sticky compulsion of temptation. It’s our responsibility to rule here. May we do so, bravely..
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{Genesis 4:7 
And more like this in the newly released, But Then She Remembered.}
This morning, remember. This morning, remember.
Just a little PSA to remind you - it’s possible. Just a little PSA to remind you - it’s possible. 

It’s possible to be aware of the news and the world, of foreign relations and politics, and not be obsessed about it.

It’s possible to feel the real hurt of real trouble and not be possessed by it.

It’s possible to be in the world and not of it. To remember who God was, and is, and always will be, above it.

It’s possible to remember Him here.

May we learn to do so, bravely.
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{Beautifully modeled in Psalm 77. See for yourself, friend.❤️}
Slow processor over here. But this little book lau Slow processor over here. But this little book launched into the world on Tuesday and I’m still reeling from the beauty of celebrating side by side with so many sisters, the grace of what it looks like when so many women offer their gifts for His glory (fishes and loaves never looked so good!), and the incredible support of my local community. I’ll never forget it.
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If you want to join us as women determined to remember the goodness of God in this wildly distracting world, grab yourself a copy of the book and LET’S GO! We are ready for it.❤️
HOW SWEET IS THIS? My dear friend @jodie_berndt an HOW SWEET IS THIS? My dear friend @jodie_berndt and I get to release books on the very same day - tomorrow! To celebrate @growthrootsco (another dear friend and creator of the loveliest journals) is giving YOU a chance to win copies of them all!

Here’s the offering:

1. My book - But then she remembered (how to give God your full attention in a distracted world)
2. Jodie’s book - Praying the scriptures for your marriage (trusting God with your most important relationship)
3. A growth book! 
4. Jodie’s favorite pens!
5. An Amazon gift card!! 
6. Marriage conversation cards! 

Beautiful, right? I know these women, their love for Jesus, their work and their words. You will LOVE these books, friend (and the extra goodies too). 

Here’s how to enter:

1. Follow @jodie_berndt, @katie_westenberg and @growthrootsco

2. Tag 3 friends (or more 😉 each tag or share gives you another entry) 

3. Like this post.

That’s it! The giveaway will close Wednesday night and the winner will be announced Thursday! 

*Giveaway open to U.S residents only. As per Instagram’s rules, this promotion is not sponsored, administered, or associated with Instagram in any way.*
The humanity of Jesus Christ is an indispensable g The humanity of Jesus Christ is an indispensable gift to us as believers. Every challenge we face He met and mastered. The Bible doesn’t speak of endless notifications and group texts, but it does speak of people with real needs showing up in Christ’s path constantly. 
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Wherever He went crowds followed with needs and questions and frustrations and problems. He got in a boat to cross to the other side of the sea, and people would race to meet Him there. 

Can you even imagine?

And His most common response? He was moved with compassion. 
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Over and over again, He stopped what He was doing, paused from the task at hand, and tended to the needy hearts - the bleeding woman, the woman at the well - right in front of Him.
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Far too often I find I’m happy to entertain distractions - anything that prevents me from giving my full attention to something else - and yet annoyed by interruptions. Perhaps it is because one I choose, while the other I do not?
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Discerning the difference between a distraction and an interruption has been a helpful tool to me. I want to love like Christ. I want to be interruptible, but I want to give my full attention to what He places in my path.
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What about you? Are you more frustrated by distractions or interruptions?
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{excerpt from But Then She Remembered: How to Give God Your Full Attention in a Distracted World.}
UPDATE: You all scooped up dozens of copies in min UPDATE: You all scooped up dozens of copies in minutes! 🎉 Well done! You know how to love your leaders well. I wish we had another case of books to give away! We are closing this giveaway for now. If you sent us a message watch for a reply soon!
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I need your help with something fun! 
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This little book is making its way out into the world and instead of sending all of the marketing copies to all of the “influencer” people, we’ve held a supply back for the real people on the ground. 
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These copies are for the women’s ministry leaders and the Bible study leaders. The small group leaders and women out there mentoring and serving others in quiet and unseen places. The women without a platform or audience in the world’s currency, but willing to do good and important work for the women right in front of them.
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I’m convinced this work of leading and serving face to face is more important than ever and I want to say thank you! And keep going! Your work matters.
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So here is how it works: If you are a local leader or know of one who you would like me to send a copy of my hot-off-the-press book, But Then She Remembered: How to Give God Your Full Attention in a Distracted World, DM me with a name and mailing address. I’ll send them a copy of the book with a personal thank you note for the good work they are doing.
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Crash my inbox. We’ll send ‘em out while supplies last!

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