Ah, hobbies... What are they again?
Not long after my divorce, I invited a pair of elders to my house to do a "spiritual cleansing" and blessing. Once upon a time, I used to do cross stitch, and had literally poured hundreds, if not thousands of hours and dollars into what I had found to be a relaxing, creative outlet. But thanks to these people and their strong faith in God, it was not meant to be.
This couple had strong beliefs in not having anything around that was supposedly attached to demons, including any images of animals that were "creatures of the night," such as bats, or animals involved in negative events written about in the Bible, such as frogs (which were part of The Ten Plagues.)
Years later, a good friend pointed out to me that cats are also creatures of the night, and that many a Christian person owns cats, but I digress. I wish I would have had to good sense to stand up for myself back then.
And so, these people came across some of my cross stitch works of angels and insisted that this one in particular had a demon behind it: (This is a picture of the pattern I pulled up from the internet.) I know when most people think of cross stitch, they think of little samplers of homey sayings in their Grandma's kitchen, but I can assure you that the kinds of designs I was interested in were a little bit more than that.
This couple insisted that there was a demon "behind" (attached to) this picture, and that it was the same, or a similar one as the scene in The Passion of the Christ in which Satan walks by, holding a deformed, aging baby. They insisted I get rid of all my pictures, and it wasn't good enough to just throw them away, but that we should cut them up so that, "No one would find them and take them home, accidentally inviting a demon behind these pictures into their house."
And so I blindly followed, because something else another leader in this church had successfully done was tell me that I was rebellious and wouldn't listen to the directions God was trying to give me through other people (meaning, the leaders in the church, of course.)
For this and many other reasons, I usually don't take what people say "in the name of the Lord" at face value until I can fairly solidly determine how much of their own interpretation they have inserted into their "word from the Lord," no matter how sincerely they believe -- in themselves.
But at the time, I was young and naive and just went with what I was told -- and was later utterly heartbroken. Even my parents talked about how they had watched me working so hard on those pictures as a kid, saving up my allowances and later, money from jobs, and how it broke their heart that someone would tell me to get rid of them "as God's will."
The woman who designed this pattern would make a new one every year for something like 20 years, and each pattern became more and more complex. This was something that really drew me to her designs -- you had to learn to grow your own skills right along with hers as her design skills expanded and she experimented with new materials (in the last few years, she was even incorporating beads.) And these were projects that literally cost hundreds of dollars to make, as they require hundreds of different colors of threads, along with specialty metallic threads and supplies that are a pain in the butt to work with, but boy do they add incredible dimension to the design.
The other big project of hers was this Nativity Scene:
This was one whopper of a project and I had completed the shepherd boy on the left, and the camel on the right. That camel was a BEAR to do, but it had little 3D tassels that stood out from the picture, and boy did it ever stretch my stitching skills.
But "just in case," these people insisted I get rid of it all.
And to tell you the truth, I have never really picked up anything so passionately ever since, because I told God, "Why bother? I am never going to pour my heart or resources into something again that one of 'your people' is just going to come along and say I have to get rid of because of what THEY believe -- and call it Your will."
For a long time, I figured that maybe God was punishing me over some sense of pride I felt in finishing those pieces, so I told myself that I had to follow His will for my life. I am not the type who is naturally good at anything -- I have to really work for whatever I try to do, and I've told myself for years that maybe God doesn't want me to work on anything so I have more time to focus on study and prayer, or that maybe He wants to keep me from being prideful and so I shouldn't try these hobbies again.
These days, I'm a lot more cautious about trying to find the dividing line between what PEOPLE will for me in what they call God's will because it goes along with THEIR beliefs, vs. what is truly God's will for my life.
But it's left a permanent scar, and I've just never found the will to get into something like that ever since, even though every now and then I do have the longing. But I no longer have the interest, even though I considered rebuying the patterns (I threw EVERYTHING away at the time, thinking this was what God wanted me to do.) But the patterns have been out of print for years and some are considered collector's items, it would literally cost several thousands of dollars for me to reacquire all the supplies I would need.
One of the prayers I have had for many years is that if by some chance, these people were wrong, that one of the things God might have waiting for me in heaven would be this exact same set of patterns and supplies in order to redo this project.
I would see it as God showing me what His ultimate will was in that situation -- possibly in the form of me finally getting a chance to complete this set, and instead of passing it down among my family as I had hoped, this time, it would last for all eternity.