Showing posts with label faithfulness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faithfulness. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2008

Beholding the Diamond

I recently had a friend experience God's faithfulness in a long season of patiently waiting on His guidance. The following are some thoughts I had while considering his circumstances:

The more I experience life, the more I realize God's faithfulness is most richly evident and divinely sweet in the seasons of waiting. Actually, is faithfulness faithfulness without a wait? Not that God's faithfulness isn't faithfulness apart from a season of waiting, but we don't percieve it as such -or perhaps a different attribute altogether is manifested, or emphasized. If you have request A, and God provides the answer directly, is it His faithfulness that you appreciate most?

Let me explain it this way... Pretend you’re two again. It’s summertime. You’re on vacation with the family, and towheaded mini-you takes a wild, leap of bravado into the lake. No longer sure of your superior swimming abilities, you begin to panic. Water starts to fill your lungs and you begin to sink. You are sure the end is near when two strong arms suddenly wrap around your squirming body and take you safely to shore. Your rescuer is none other than good, ol' dad.

You always knew your father to be protective, but never before had you experienced it like that. Fact became felt reality. At the same time, your dad is still loving and gentle –and every other quality that comprises his character– but his protection is the only thing your little mind is consumed with at this moment. He kept you from drowning! So it is with the faithfulness of the Lord during and after a long season of waiting. You read and sang about His steadfast love all your life. But now you've seen it. Touched it. Been held by it.

Our God is a great and glorious diamond, with innumerable facets –and it is His gifts of life experiences which shine on those divine facets He has declared to us in His Word, giving them breathtaking beauty. In joy and trial, may you taste the splendor.

Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Nothing But a Promise

Then the high priest said, “Are these things so?” And [Stephen] said, “Brethren and fathers, listen: The God of glory appeared to our father Abraham when he was in Mesopotamia, before he dwelt in Haran, and said to him, ‘Get out of your country and from your relatives, and come to a land that I will show you.’ Then he came out of the land of the Chaldeans and dwelt in Haran. And from there, when his father was dead, He moved him to this land in which you now dwell. And God gave him no inheritance in it, not even enough to set his foot on. But even when Abraham had no child, He promised to give it to him for a possession, and to his descendants after him.

Acts 7:1-5

Nothing but a promise. Those were the words that went through my head as I read these verses yesterday morning –especially verse 5. God called Abraham to leave everything and follow him. Abraham obeyed. Even then, God didn’t give an inheritance. No land. No possessions. “Not even enough to set his foot on.” Nothing. But God did give a promise. A promise that Abraham’s descendants would receive the blessing.

I’ve always loved the faith of Abraham. But this retelling of his story by Stephen really resonated with me at this point in my life. I feel like I’ve left my country and relatives to come to the land God showed me. But when I arrived, there was no inheritance. No fruition of my plans. No job. It feels like, for all I came for, I have nothing. Not even enough to set my foot on. No tangible “proof” to affirm my decision to come here. But I do have a promise. A promise that the Lord, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, is working for my good. (Romans 8:28) A promise that He knows the plans He has for me, plans to give me a future and a hope. (Jeremiah 29:11) A promise that He delights to give me the kingdom. (Luke 12:32) Actually, I have 100 promises. 200 promises. Enough promises to fill my cup and overflow.

The question I have to ask myself is if that is enough. The TRUTH is that it is more than enough. It was enough for Abraham. He didn’t even have a child when God made a promise to His descendants. How easy is it to believe a promise based on something that was nonexistent? Bottom line: Abraham gave up everything, had nothing, and God’s promise was all he needed.

No matter what I feel, I cannot escape that truth. I have much. My cup overflows with the goodness of the promises of God. And more than that, I have the Promise who came in the Flesh. I have Jesus. And I have the Promise indwelling. I have the Holy Spirit.

I’ve grown to love the old spiritual “Give Me Jesus.” Imagine the life of an American slave. They go to bed from a long day of sweat and toil in the stifling heat. Sometimes they’re beaten and bloody. Sometimes they’ve seen a family member sold. Never to be seen again. Yet those whose God is the Lord would fall asleep singing, “In the morning, when I rise, give me Jesus. You can have all this world, but give me Jesus.” In the morning, when I rise to return to the sweat and the toil, and the heat and the whip, and the pain and the loss, give me Jesus. He’s what I need. He’s all I need. That’s what they said. They believed it facing the trials of every day. They believed it facing the loneliness of separation. They believed it facing death. Nothing but a promise. But that’s all they needed.

Across the ages, from Genesis to now, many have followed the Lord when they had nothing but a promise. Consider for a moment that not one child of God has been abandoned. The faithfulness of God is great and immutable. We need not doubt it.

Dear brother or sister, you may have nothing. Not even enough to set your foot on. But you have a promise. A host of promises. Believe them. You have Jesus. He’s all you need.