The Simple Truth
Get back to your huddle is a thought process that unifies the spirit, mind, and body. Line it up with the Bible in a way that is open, honest, and truthful—with a little creative fun in the storytelling. The goal of getting back to your huddle is to get us to be familiar with letting go of things that hold us down. I hope it helps to identify the thought process of bad things we hold on to. We know these things are harmful— even destructive—but they are familiar and sometimes in a crisis; that makes all the difference. Some people hate that they use drugs, but in stressful times they are familiar with drugs making them feel better, even though they are destructive. The most powerful combination of all destruction is doubt and fear. This brings forth guilt, and if guilt is processed completely and unchecked, then it can produce a paralyzed state of mind.
Not getting back to the place God instructed us to be—which is staying in his spirit— usually comes from the shock factor of a thought or thing that we have experienced or entertained, which caused us to lose focus.
Think about Adam, being shocked that he all of a sudden knows the difference between good and evil. What a shocker! Then comes the shocker of looking at their bodies and understanding nakedness. We do the same thing when something happens in our lives that doesn’t line up with God’s purpose. We are unconsciously and consciously shocked at ourselves. Sometimes if a person or event happens to cause fear or hurt in our lives, we’ll say, “OMG, I’m shocked at this!” And that fear or hurt of being shocked starts to be integrated into our system—spiritually, mentally, physically, and even financially. It continues to travel to the point that the people who love us and share their lives with us can see the manifestation of a dropped ball. We don’t let it dissolve, and it can end up controlling our lives. Our loved ones may not know the details at first, but they always ask that famous question, “Is everything okay?”
To get back to your huddle is to understand the agreement God (our Father) and Jesus (the Sacrificial Lamb) came to. Jesus said, “They will make mistakes—let’s make a way they can get back to us daily.”
In the huddle, the spirit is the chief engineer that knows just how we act and react. Staying out of the huddle is not allowing the agreement to stay in use and not allowing the spirit to do its job. We are trying to do a job we’re not qualified for. God desires for us to be forgiven and to move forward. Let’s forgive ourselves, get back, and indeed, move forward.