by Ramesh Richard

Slogans of spiritual surrender remind us to “let go and let God,” to “sit loose to things,” to “not hold things too tightly because when God pries open our fists, it hurts.” These powerful phrases address critical heart issues about our proneness to worry, our acquisitive greed, and our desire to control our lives. Most take-control, can-do, self-sufficient people need such pastoral correction.

However, a simple turn of the catchphrases could endanger spiritually lazy believers who do not take responsibility for their role in interacting with the initiatives of God’s Spirit and directives of God’s Word. They sit, rest, and wait when they should stand, act, and obey. In short, there’s both a “sit loosely” and “sit tightly” aspect to Christian life and ministry.

Forged from Scripture, theology, and experience, you may benefit from this listing of what I must “sit loose to” as well as “sit tight to.” Note that the “sit loose to” entries are not bad in themselves; they just are not best by themselves. They can obstruct “sit tight to” vitality.

Sit Loose To Sit Tight To
Possessions Generosity
What you desire (and what you think you deserve) What God has already done and to what God can do
The need to control things Pursuing order in everything
Demanding clarity and certainty of life direction Obedience—to increase clarity and certainty of conviction as you obey
Tasks, to-do lists, and tactics Relationships, people’s needs, and objectives
Existential definitions of happiness—well feeling Biblical definitions of joy—well-being
Short-term, temporal perspectives The long view of success
Size and numbers Weight and influence as indices to effectiveness
Results as your mission Your purpose as mission
Public image A godly reputation
The need for recognition The privilege of inclusion in any  aspect of God’s plan
Ministry projects and methods Biblical and personal mandates
Strategic plans, especially if they seem to predict the future Strategic frameworks built on God’s gifts, calling, and history as a prism for planning
Past successes and setbacks Gratitude, faithfulness, and hidden initiatives in all these situations
Human beings as sources of provision God as the source, with humans as  mere means, of His provision
Your understanding of your best usefulness to God God’s leading through Scripture, history, counsel, and circumstance for next steps
Personal rights Personal responsibilities
Selfish ambition—running fast and independently without consulting God Godly ambition—seeking God first in all things
Doing God’s work in man’s way Doing God’s work in God’s way—often relating to matters of manner and motive

We must hold to many of these good things loosely, that is, not tightly. But we don’t hold any of them lightly. “Nothing lightly” means we are responsible agents in life and ministry. An enhanced spiritual life slogan would read, “Everything loosely, nothing lightly.” Perhaps the list above practically applies Paul’s injunction to set our minds on the things above and not on the things of the earth (Col 3:2). We can then sit loose to the earth and sit tight to the Eternal.