Monday, February 25, 2019

The Tent Peg

 


“From Judah will come the
cornerstone, from him the tent peg.”
—Zechariah 10:4

The nation of Israel certainly knew about tent pegs. In their forty years of wandering the desert, and until the “permanent” temple in Jerusalem was built, they worshipped in a large tent or tabernacle.

In the Book of Exodus, we read that these tent pegs were crafted of bronze. They were mentioned throughout that Book and into the Book of Numbers. These tent pegs had a significant purpose in maintaining the stability of the tabernacle.

We all have our tent pegs. Our tent pegs consist of those things we have crafted, or more likely received as a gift of God’s grace, that help us feel stable in the unfolding of our daily lives.

As a child, I felt secure because I had loving Christian parents and large Christian extended family. I lived in the same house until I left for college. I went to the same church, to the same school, and so forth, all through those years.

As an adult, I may not think I rely so heavily anymore on “earthly” tent pegs, but I guess that I do. I get stability from my home, my husband, my family, my church, my friends, and more.

Furthermore, each of us has likely suffered loss of something we have relied upon as a “tent peg.” The circumstances of our lives have caused us to lose something or someone we held dear that provided stability in our lives.

Sometimes, as God did with the Israelites, He asks us to pull up our tent pegs because He has a new venture for us. We may be thrust into a new situation that feels so new and unstable to us. Yet, God wants to show us that He is the unchangeable tent peg of our lives on which we need to rely. He provides the rock-solid stability upon which we need to depend.

Though the Psalmist used somewhat different images, in Psalm 46:1-7 we read the same sentiment:

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble. Therefore, we will not fear, though the earth gives way and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam and the mountains quake with their surging.

There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God, the holy place where the Most High dwells. God is within her, she will not fall; God will help her at break of day.

Nations are in uproar, kingdoms fall; he lifts his voice, the earth melts. The Lord Almighty is with us; the God of Jacob is our fortress.

Whether you want to think of God as a refuge and a fortress in the storm when everything falls around you, or the stable tent peg that keeps the tent upright and stable, we do our best when we rely on Him, rather than on those earthly tent pegs of which we tend to expect too much.

 

 

Monday, February 18, 2019

"I'll Be Okay!"

 


Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego replied
to the king, “O Nebuchadnezzar,
we do not need to defend ourselves before
you in this matter. If we are thrown into
the blazing furnace, the God we serve is
able to save us from it, and he will rescue
us from your hand, O king. But even if he
does not, we want you to know, O king,
that we will not serve your gods or worship
the image of gold you have set up.”
—Daniel 3:16-18

The three Hebrew men had determined to serve the Lord. They had trusted Him to act in their behalf according to His powerful will. The king had ordered everyone in the Persian kingdom to bow before the large golden image he had erected of himself. Those who disobeyed would be thrown into the fiery furnace. These three refused to bow to anyone or anything except to their God.

This story from ancient times reminds me of the trial-by-fire my younger sister went through. Five years ago, she received the staggering diagnosis of multiple myeloma, a rare cancer of the blood plasma cells. She certainly did not know if the long, painful process ahead would mean life or death for her. When she told her weeping grandchildren of the diagnosis, she comforted them with these words: “I’ll be okay. And, even if I’m not, I’ll be okay.”

Mixed with all the distressful and discouraging days she went through were also days of hope and seeming progress toward a restoration to full health. During all of the months of not knowing what would happen, she remained stalwart in her faith and never waivered from a solid trust in God that drove her to remark: “I’ll be okay.”

Time passed. The doctors harvested her stem cells, subjected her to horrific chemotherapy to kill all the cancer cells, and transplanted her harvested stem cells back into her body. For a short time, it appeared this therapy had worked. Then, the devastating news told her the cancer was back with a ferocity that startled everyone. As she lost her battle with cancer, she gained new strength to submit her life to the wisdom and care of her Heavenly Father. And soon, He welcomed her to her heavenly home.

Plenty of Christians have suffered loss and terrible life circumstances without losing their faith. Yet others, when life’s trials come, seem to lose their connection to the sure foundation we have in Christ Jesus our Lord. Some, finding themselves disappointed with God, create a new god and even re-frame the tenets of Christianity to transform the historic faith into one more of their liking.

In contrast to those who seemingly abandon their faith, when Christian businessman, Horatio G. Spafford, lost all four of his daughters in a sinking ship in the Atlantic Ocean, he wrote the words to a beloved gospel hymn, that begins with these words:1

When peace like a river attendeth my way,
When sorrows like sea billows roll;
Whatever my lot, Thou hast taught me to say,
“It is well. It is well with my soul.”

Refrain: It is well with my soul.
It is well, it is well with my soul.

Casting all our cares and concerns on God allows Him to work His will powerfully in us, regardless of the earthly outcome of our circumstances. Whether God comes to the rescue, as He did for the Hebrew men, or chooses that which we fear most, as He did with my sister, may He always be praised! And, may we be comforted and given strong assurance that His will for us is always, always perfect beyond our ability to comprehend.

______________________

1 Spafford, Horatio G. “It is Well with My Soul.” Public Domain.

 

 

Monday, February 11, 2019

Welcome

 


“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”
—Matthew 11:28 KJV

I know that plenty of children do not find their fathers approachable—especially when connecting with their dads means reporting on some bad news. Having borne the brunt of numerous angry, abusive responses, they shy away from intimate relationships with their fathers.

This phenomenon is not limited to childhood. Even approaching people with whom we work, or with whom we volunteer, or to whom we are related can bring the same kind of reticence. If the individuals we intend to approach have rebuffed us in the past, we may stew a bit before we try to connect with them.

I think of two Bible stories that clearly demonstrate this kind of fear:

  • In certain chapters of Scripture—Genesis 27 - 33—we read the stories of Jacob and his first-born brother Esau. Due to Jacob’s deceptions, he received the blessing of his father instead of Esau. This resulted in anger and hatred from Esau and a plan to kill his brother. Jacob eventually moved to Hiran, to get away from his brother and with the intent of finding a wife.

    After leaving Hiran many years later, richer and blessed with sons and daughters, he struggled when he considered whether or not to arrange a meeting with Esau again after all the intervening years. Jacob prayed and wrestled with God all night before the confrontation with Esau the next day.

    God heard his prayers and Esau greeted Jacob with a warm welcome. However, because Jacob feared that his brother would seem unapproachable, Jacob suffered great fear of that meeting.

  • As recorded in the Book of Esther, the queen feared the king because of the edict he had issued that no one could come into his presence without his invitation. Anyone violating this decree would be killed. But, Queen Esther had agreed to approach the king on behalf of her people, the Jews. So, Queen Esther prayed and fasted, asking God to preserve her as she approached the king. God heard and answered her prayers.

Our God does not treat us in such a way that we need to fear coming to Him with our requests. A. W. Tozer writes:1

God never changes moods or cools off in His affections or loses enthusiasm. His attitude toward sin is now the same as it was when He drove out the sinful man from the eastward garden, and His attitude toward the sinner the same as when He stretched forth His hands and cried, “Come unto me.”…He is always receptive to misery and need, as well as to love and faith. He does not keep office hours nor set aside periods when He will see no one.

When it comes to approaching God in our times of need, His welcome mat will always greet us. Yes, He welcomes us, just as He did in both Old Testament times and in New Testament times—as He welcomed the children in Mark 10:13-16. And, in various other passages of Scripture, just as He welcomed the beggars and sick.

We must never consider that we are interrupting God to come to Him. We must never consider that our needs are too small for Him to meet. Instead, we must accept His gracious welcome and know that He never changes.

______________________

1 Tozer, A. W. The Knowledge of the Holy. New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1961. p. 53.

 

 

Monday, February 4, 2019

I'm late! I'm late!

 


“I’m late, I’m late, for a very important date.
No time to say, ‘Hello, Goodbye.’
I’m late, I’m late.
I’m late, I’m late, for a very important date.
No time to say, ‘Hello, Goodbye.’
I’m late, I’m late.”
—The White Rabbit

Nearly everyone recognizes the scene in the story from Lewis Carroll’s (Charles Lutwidge Dodgson) delightful book, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland in which the White Rabbit, in a panic, races down the road and into the rabbit hole. Alice, in bewilderment follows him down the hole, and experiences all the adventures in Wonderland.

I must confess, I am rather like the White Rabbit. I hate to arrive late, and don’t like anything to get in my way when I’m heading for an appointment. We can probably all name a handful of people in our churches who would also fit that description. We also know which friends will almost always come late to a worship service, or a meeting.

While I believe that to make a habit of arriving late shows rude behavior, I need to also realize that insisting on getting somewhere on time, no matter what kind of interruption comes up, can show potential disobedience to the Holy Spirit. Let me illustrate this latter point using Jesus as an example.

One day Jesus was interrupted by a sickly woman as He hurried off to heal a little girl. (Luke 8:40-56). Instead of ignoring her, or brushing her aside, even telling her He’d come back to listen to her, He stopped, heard her plea and healed her.

Another day, Jesus and a crowd of followers left Jericho together on the way to Jerusalem. Jesus knew His days were numbered before the crucifixion as He headed out to Jerusalem. Some Scriptures say that He had set His face steadfastly toward Jerusalem (Luke 9:51). On the way, He encountered a blind man, Bartimaeus. Jesus stopped, cared for, and healed the man. (Mark 10:46-52.)

On still another occasion, when Jesus taught about loving our neighbors, He used the story of the Priest, the Levite, and the Samaritan (Luke 10:30-37). This story serves as an illustration of Christian love, the kind that Jesus would want His disciples to possess. I presume each man in the story had something important for which he traveled this road. Perhaps each was concerned about safety for himself on this road known for its bandits.

Nevertheless, the busy Priest and Levite (God’s holy men) avoided the interruption presented by an injured man by walking on the other side of the road. Instead of helping, they purposely walked away from this wounded man, who hadn’t been fortunate enough to travel in safety. The Samaritan, however, went near and took the time to listen, tend to, and help the man in an extraordinary way. Jesus used him as an illustration as the one who pleased God.

The Lesson for me today: I must get out of my “zone” of the importance of arriving on time if it causes me to disregard anyone God might put in my way. This person, this interruption, may just be the most important thing I will do all day, or all week.

Please join me in this prayer:

Lord, make us all aware of how we use the time You have given us. Let us be careful to arrive on time as often as we can. But, remind us to look for the ways You might be leading us to minister to others, regardless of how much time it might take.