Tag Archives: bible

Don’t Think God Won’t!

dontthinkgodwont
Hosea 12:9
I have been the LORD your God ever since you came out of Egypt; I will make you live in tents again, as in the days of your appointed festivals.

God speaks through Hosea (one of the Minor Prophets) in the verses before this one, outlining the major flaw in Israel’s national thinking: the Israelites think they don’t need Him anymore. But here, God reminds them sharply that no matter how much power they’ve invested in other things, HE is still in control.

Israel During the Time of Hosea

Wealth and other gods have replaced God in importance in Israel at the time of Hosea’s writing, and no Israelite thinks to turn aside from this course, which is proving destructive and near-catastrophic to the social and political systems (not to mention the spiritual system!). Things are falling apart faster than the Israelites can put them back together; during this time, 4 kings of the Northern Kingdom were assassinated by their eventual successors, and Assyria (east of Israel) was beginning to dissect the land, leading to the total dissolution of the Northern Kingdom within a short time.

God’s Reasoning

In other parts of the Book of Hosea, God explains why He is allowing this to happen. God is not disowning His people permanently; rather, this is akin to a divine spanking. Israel has been unfaithful and blasphemous, following false gods and forgetting the name of God. God, as the divine parent, realizes that this is a self-destructive course for His people. Thus, He must try to turn Israel’s thinking through prophets (like Hosea).

Much like today’s parents struggle to help their children when they become addicted to substances, God wanted Israel to become whole and healthy again and drop its addiction to other gods. But it had to have a wake-up call first, a true “divine intervention;” Israel had to see that it had sinned as a nation when it turned aside from God.

God will never force His way into our lives, but He will use even the Satan-caused tragedies in our lives to teach us how much we need Him, turning sorrow to a good end by showing us how much He wants us to rely on Him and how much He longs for us to return to Him. God speaks in this book as a brokenhearted parent, reminiscing about Israel before its addiction to other gods, childlike and faithful; He longs for that time to return, and knows that it can, but only when Israel’s mindset changes.

The Occasional Hard Lesson

Sometimes, God has to remind us just Who’s in charge, especially when we start thinking we control all of what happens in our lives. When we rely on power, money, social esteem, or even our own “good judgment” to determine our life’s course, we almost inevitably turn away from what God wills. Sometimes, we are as willful as the ancient nation of Israel, and we forget that God does not hesitate to use discipline against us, even if He uses Satan’s chaos as a disciplinary tool. Satan simply looks to turn our lives into chaotic messes; God uses those messes to teach us that we need Him. (I certainly saw this in my failed teaching career–Satan surely had me by the back of the neck, shaking me around, and God was right there, showing me that if I was to be free of that depression and pain, I had to trust God again. I did so, and the depression has been evaporating from my life ever since.)

Don’t think God won’t use whatever He has to use to get through to you. He wants to be reconciled with you, wants to be in your life, wants to be your Heavenly Father. And trust me, it is a much easier road when He is allowed to be that!

When God Speaks Straight To You

whengodspeaksstraighttoyou
Acts 26:15-18
15 “Then I asked, ‘Who are you, Lord?’

“ ‘I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting,’ the Lord replied. 16 ‘Now get up and stand on your feet. I have appeared to you to appoint you as a servant and as a witness of what you have seen and will see of me. 17 I will rescue you from your own people and from the Gentiles. I am sending you to them 18 to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.’

This is Paul’s retelling of what happened to him on the road to Damascus, when Jesus appeared to him and his life was changed forever. Before that fateful trip, he had been Saul, a Pharisee who went around collecting and persecuting Christians; afterwards, he was Paul, an inspired missionary and witness for Christ who planted many churches and spoke to many people of what had happened to him.

In these verses, Paul is retelling his conversion story to King Agrippa, after many days of court trials and hearings, to prove his case of Christianity to the king. His conversion tale, however, is but a small thread of his larger defense: that he is still of sound mind, and that he firmly believes what he is saying. He wouldn’t consciously choose to speak blasphemy, because he had once been the arm of the law as far as persecuting blasphemers was concerned. Now he believes that what he has witnessed proves Christianity is not blasphemy.

A Personal, Modern-Day Example

This kind of story seems to belong only in the Bible–certainly, people don’t hear God speaking to them anymore (at least not sane people). Because of this mindset, some people have passed this story off as a metaphorical device, an oratorical embellishment, perhaps. I beg to differ.

When God Spoke Straight to Me

I was at home, convalescing after my disastrous 8-month service as a middle-school teacher, regaining the physical and mental strength I had lost during those trying months. Not the least of my troubles was my consuming depression, which literally left me unable to do anything except what absolutely had to be done; in the last days of my teaching career, I had fought to get out of bed, fought to stay on my feet for 7 hours, fought to regain control of classroom discipline. I had almost no motivation to do much of anything except to be with the people who loved me best–my parents, my boyfriend, his parents, and my friends at church and in the community.

Though I felt buoyed by my supportive net of people around me, I still was at a loss as to what to do with my life. Since teaching was gone, cut away like some diseased gangrenous flesh from the rest of me, what was I going to become? What was I “going to do when I grew up,” whenever that might be? This terrible indecision about my future, which I had never experienced before, was maddening and depressing in the same moment.

I spent a lot of time on my laptop in bed in those days–though we had no wireless internet at home, I had plenty of things I wanted to work on. But it seemed I had no energy to do much writing or thinking, either. That is, until I opened a file I hadn’t touched in almost a year.

It had been just a dribble of a story, about 30 pages worth of aimless thinking about a role-play character I had developed in the days when I still thought positively about my future. It seemed much too hopeful for me now. And yet, as I read over it, I felt a strange tug in my chest; as I reached the end of the story, where the train of thought ended abruptly, I had a thought which did not feel like mine: “Continue the story.”

I resisted this idea. Continue this terrible, piddling story, born of a mind trying to escape its confines of schoolwork and career prep? Bah. It was too much to do, and I was tired. I wanted to sleep, not write.

Then came the thought again. “Continue…the story.” Much firmer and clearer this time, and it brooked no argument. Sighing, I began to type a few sentences. Then, reading over what I had just written, I fixed a few words, and wrote a few more sentences to explain what was going on.

This pattern continued not just for the rest of that day, but for the next few weeks, and then a month afterward, and even several months afterward. I continued the story, expanding and editing, and as I wrote the story, my life began to resume a more normal course. I had something to do again, something to work for again, though I wasn’t quite sure what it was becoming.

What Resulted

As regular readers of my blog might have guessed, what I am speaking of is the beginnings of my first novel, which is now well over 150,000 words. That command, to “continue my story,” was the impetus for me to push the accelerator on my life and move it forward, however tentative and inching its progress.

Looking back, I do believe God spoke to me to encourage me in launching a new creative project–after all, He had made me and knew that my true joys lay in nurturing new ideas to life. Maybe my story is not quite the conversion tale that Paul’s story is, but based on this experience, I don’t think God’s lost his touch for reaching out to His children when they need Him!

In The Shadows, God Is Still There

intheshadowsgodisstillthere
Psalm 23:4
4 Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.

Psalm 23, written by David, endures as one of the most comforting psalms in the Bible. David had certainly been through enough trials during his life, trials in which God had rescued him and preserved him, so he knew firsthand the supporting love of God. He had had to run from the first king of Israel who planned to kill him (Saul); he had had to lead the Israelite nation back to God amid much dissent. So David knew, both as a God-fearing king and as a human being, that God could reach through the shadows he felt around him and be with him.

This psalm depicts God as a shepherd, and us as His flock; the images of the rod and staff, symbolizing leadership and guidance, show God’s characteristics as a fair and just God, as well as a loving and forgiving God. We, as spiritual “sheep,” tend to scatter sometimes and find ourselves in unfamiliar and scary places; this verse reminds us that God is still very close by, even when we feel terribly afraid and alone.

There have been times when I have been lost (literally), unable to find my way home or find my way to the place I was heading to. In those moments, I felt that shadows loomed up around me, shadows of fear and of possibly never getting back to safety. And yet, in each situation, just the right people showed up at just the right time to point me towards the right road to take. Spiritually, this has happened to me several times as well–guidance shows up at the moment when I am feeling isolated and in pain. This is God’s doing; in each case, He knew my need and answered it, both to show that He exists and to remind me that I need to trust in Him.

All of us need a reminder sometimes that God is still with us, even in the shadows where we think He won’t come to us. Even when you are the creator of the shadows around you, even when you think God won’t even see fit to look at you, He will. He passes through the walls of misunderstandings and pain as if they are not there, because to Him, they aren’t. He sees the soul in us and offers help, if we but trust Him; after all, He is the One who created us and knew us before we were even born.

When It Comes to Worship, Posers Need Not Apply

posersneednotapply
Ezra 4:1-3
1 When the enemies of Judah and Benjamin heard that the exiles were building a template for the Lord, the God of Israel, 2 they came to Zerubbabel and to the heads of the families and said, “Let is help you build, because, like, you, we seek your God and have been sacrificing to him since the time of Esarhaddon King of Assyria, who brought us here.” 3 But Zerubbabel, Jeshua and the rest of the heads of the families of Israel answered, “You have no part with us in building a temple to our God. We alone will build it for the Lord, the God of Israel, as King Cyrus, the king of Persia, commanded us.”

Here, we see the enemies of two of the tribes of Israel trying to get in on the temple-building action–they seem to want to ingratiate themselves with whoever has the most power in the region. Either that, or they are looking to sunder Israel from within, insinuating themselves (and thus their gods) into Israel’s worship.

Well, Israel had already had enough trouble with that (as the Book of Judges can attest, with all its alternating Baal and God worship). Zerubbabel, the popular leader at the time, is not willing to put up with any more waffling on the worship of God. He and the heads of all the tribes answer in unison, basically saying, “Get out of here, you’re not really interested in worshipping our God anyway.”

When the enemies hear that, they start trying to undermine the worship in other ways, intimidating the prophets, discouraging the builders, etc. They are actually opposed to the temple being built and God being worshipped, but that didn’t stop them from trying to pass themselves off as fellow believers.

Modern-Day Christian Posers

We may know people like the enemies of Judah and Benjamin in our lives even today. They might go to church every Sunday bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, might be able to quote a few more verses of Scripture than just John 3:16, and they might even try to pass themselves off as “more righteous” than we are. But inside, they don’t truly believe in or know God, and that falseness shows through in the way they conduct their lives–in the way they intimidate rather than encourage others, and the way they undermine others’ worship.

Though the word “poser” isn’t an ancient word, I think it perfectly describes false Christians–they are trying to “pose” long enough to fool God, but they forget Who God is. God can’t be fooled; He knows everything in our hearts, even the stuff we don’t want Him to see. If we are going to dishonor Him by false worship, we might as well not bother trying.

Sometimes, Suffering IS Necessary

sufferingnecessary
Acts 1:15-17
15 In those days Peter stood up among the believers (a group numbering about a hundred and twenty) 16 and said, “Brothers, the Scripture had to be fulfilled which the Holy Spirit spoke long ago through the mouth of David concerning Judas, who served as guide for those who arrested Jesus–17 he was one of our number and shared in this ministry.”

In this first chapter of Acts, the remaining 11 disciples have just seen Jesus ascend into Heaven, and they are feeling a bit bereft, trying to choose a replacement for Judas and continue their ministry without their Shepherd. They are also reeling from the shock of recent days–some of them are having trouble making sense of the reasons why Jesus had to be crucified, or why He had to return to Heaven. You can imagine the questions going around in their minds: “Why did God let this happen? And why is Jesus now ascended rather than staying with us?”

At this point, Peter intervenes, reminding them that Jesus’ birth, betrayal by Judas, and death were all foretold for thousands of years in the Old Testament (the Scriptures referenced here). All of Jesus’ suffering, as well as the betrayals and failures that led up to His ultimate sacrifice on the cross, were all necessary, not just to fulfill some old words, but to gather God’s people back to Him. In a way, the disciples, even Judas, did what they were supposed to do. (Hard to conceive of Judas doing something he was supposed to do, isn’t it?)

We, too, have a hard time reconciling how God could let us suffer, especially if we view ourselves to be faithful and righteous believers. “How could God let this happen to me?” we ask. “Maybe God just doesn’t exist, because I’m suffering and nothing seems to be getting better.” Hard times can drive believers away from God, as they sit insulated by their own grief and pain, feeling bereft by God. And yet, suffering can develop us in ways we never expected, and can shape us for the better as we struggle to cope with our current situation.

For instance, during my failed attempt at becoming a teacher in 2009, I wondered at times what–if any–good could come from the series of unexpected difficulties and failures I faced. Eventually I had to quit or risk becoming even more suicidal than I already was. Yet since I quit my teaching degree program, I have seen how that time of suffering developed me, even though it was unconscionable at the time to me. I needed to be shown that I indeed COULD fail, that I was NOT perfect, and that God (and my human loved ones) loved me anyway. Just as the disciples had to be reminded that Jesus’ great sacrifice was for the betterment of all, I had to be reminded that I needed to rely on God for wisdom in choosing my life’s course. It was not an easy, comfortable reminding process, but it was necessary.

Glassics: Wednesday in the Word

This is a complete topic review of all the posts in the Wednesday in the Word category. I see by this list I need to add a few more posts about what God does for us–because He does quite a bit for us every day. He certainly protects this fool several times a day!

The Nature of God

Don’t Forget, God’s in Control
No One is a Foreigner to God
God Is Omniscient, Yet Close By
God Is, Has Always Been, and Always Will Be
The Law Ain’t Changed None!

What God Does for Us

God Blesses Us in His Time
God Brings Us Victory
God’s Still Working With You!
We Complain, God Provides

Christian Living

Encourage and Empower Others in Faith
Don’t Fear to Talk About God
Help All, Not Just Some
Believe in God’s Power
Seek Out Ways to Revive Your Faith
Submission Is Not Docile Silence
Don’t Get Desperate, Trust God
Be Ready to Share Your Experience of God
Do Everything for God’s Glory
When and How Do We Cry to the Lord?
What Do We Offer God These Days?

Non-Christian Living

What Do We Worship in Place of God?
What Do We Allow to Drag Us Away from God?
Sometimes, We DO Have Other Gods

Don’t Forget, God’s In Control

dontforgetgodsincontrol
Nahum 1:7-8
“7 The Lord is good, a refuge in times of trouble. He cares for those who trust in Him, but with an overwhelming flood he will make an end of Nineveh; he will pursue his foes into darkness.”

These two verses don’t mess around! If you have faith in God, He will care for you. But if you act against God, He will be quick to discipline you. (Nineveh, a city which continually acted against God, was finally and utterly destroyed after several years so that not even its foundations could be discovered.)

This verse does not, however, contradict other Biblical depictions of God as loving Father. God is just, fair, and loving, but He is also quite the disciplinarian. He guards us, just as He guarded Israel from attacks, but that protection requires us to trust in Him. When we don’t trust and believe, and when we act against Him, we can find ourselves suddenly out of that protection and thrust into a world we’re not ready to deal with. Just like a parent guides and protects his or her child, God does the same for all believers. But God also admonishes us and reminds us just Who is in control of the world.

There is nothing on earth that God does not know about, nor anything that God is not able to control. Our free will, given by God, simply enables us to make the choice to be faithful or unfaithful to God, and these two verses remind us of the results of each choice. …I think I know which choice I’d rather go with!

God Blesses Us In His Time

godblessesinhistime
Joshua 19:24-31
“The fifth lot came out for the tribe of Asher, clan by clan. 25 Their territory included: Helkath, Hali, Beten, Acshaph, 26 Allammelech, Amad and Mishal. On the west the boundary touched Carmel and Shihor Libnath. 27 It then turned east toward Beth Dagon, touched Zebulun and the Valley of Iphtah El, and went north to Beth Emek and Neiel, passing Cabul on the left. 28 It went to Abdon, Rehob, Hammon and Kanah, as far as Greater Sidon. 29 The boundary then turned back toward Ramah and went to the fortified city of Tyre, turned toward Hosah and came out at the sea in the region of Aczib, 30 Ummah, Aphek and Rehob. There were twenty-two towns and their villages. 31 These towns and their villages were the inheritance of the tribe of Asher, clan by clan.”

This section of Joshua is one of many “land allotment statements,” dividing up the Promised Land (ancient Canaan, which covers present-day Israel, Jordan, Palestine, etc.) between the 12 tribes of Israel. After Joshua’s last precise military victory in the Promised Land, he sets about this business as quickly as possible, since Asher and the other eight and a half tribes are still waiting on their allotment west of the Jordan River. (The tribes of Reuben, Gad, and half of Manasseh had already received their allotment east of the Jordan when Moses was still alive.)

I can imagine that the members of the waiting tribes might have felt a bit indignant and even left out as they watched the tribes of Reuben, Gad, and half of Manasseh settle their land. “Why have they gotten their allotment already?” they might have asked. “Haven’t we been faithful, too? Haven’t we fought enough for Joshua, and he’s just NOW getting around to giving us our land?” There had already been tensions enough on the trip to the Promised Land, and indeed Joshua might have had to fend off still more nasty rumors and accusations as he conquered the Promised Land piece by piece.

The point here is that now they are getting the reward promised them so long ago. As the Lord had promised, so had He done–He had rescued them from enslavement in Egypt, helped Moses lead them on, and had helped Joshua claim the land. Now the Israelites would have a land to call their own instead of having to be a nomadic people.

We, too, might get a bit impatient with God when we don’t receive the blessings we think we’ve earned. Maybe we’re having to wait too long for a new job to come around; maybe we’re waiting on that special someone to show up in our lives, and keep getting our hopes dashed. Maybe we’re experiencing setbacks or facing a layoff at work; we might even be facing serious illness or family crisis. In times when we think God has forgotten to bless us, we have to remember that we are being cared for, and God will bless us when the time is right. This part of the Book of Joshua is about patience being rewarded at long last; we have to maintain that patience longer than we like sometimes, but God will come through for us, too.

Encourage and Empower Others in Faith

encourageempower
Proverbs 11:30
The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life, and he who wins souls is wise.

This verse is from a larger part of Proverbs which describes the spiritual makeup of a righteous person, and it reminds us that when we are living in God’s will, our works will encourage others and help us grow spiritually as well. And, when we help others grow in knowledge and wisdom according to the Word of God, we are wiser for having done so. Just as when you help somebody else study in school, and end up learning the material better for having taught it, you become stronger in your faith as you guide a new person in discovering theirs.

One important point to remember: it is not our works that make us righteous in God’s sight, nor is any Christian somehow “more righteous” than any other. We are saved only by Christ’s great sacrifice for us, and the way we show gratitude for that is to adhere as closely as possible to what God has asked of us. When we start focusing on all the good we think we’re doing, and how awesome we are, then we’re forgetting that God is the source of any goodness and righteousness, not our actions. Pride turns righteousness upside-down, so subtly that sometimes we don’t even recognize it. Let’s not rot the tree of life with our own pride!

Help All, Not Just Some

helpallnotsome
Romans 12:13
13 Share with God’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.

Paul doesn’t mince words–he tells us, in his straightforward manner, that we need to be concerned with the welfare of other believers. But the second part of the verse expands that concept into practicing hospitality, which is a much wider-reaching act.

Hospitality is not just reserved for those who are “good enough” Christians or “close enough” to your family. It’s also for those who don’t know God, those who have turned away from God, and those who believe He doesn’t even exist. We are called by God to show His grace and mercy to every person–not just tell about that grace and do nothing.

My NIV translation notes that “the Christian has a social responsibility” to help others, because showing God’s forgiveness and mercy is a wonderful witness. For a believer to receive help from their church family after storm damage is an astounding blessing, for instance. But for someone who doesn’t know God–or doesn’t care to know Him–that act of help could be the one thing that changes their minds about Christians and our faith.

Paul tells us to share with other believers in need as part of expressing our Christian love for them, as Christ expressed His love for us. But Christ also reached out to those whom the disciples would not listen to, whom the disciples tried to turn away–He ate with tax collectors, touched lepers, and spoke kindly to those accused of crimes, all to show that God still loved them. We need to do the same, if we call ourselves Christians.