“And Jacob fled into the county of Syria, and Israel
served for a wife, and for a wife he kept sheep. And by a prophet the LORD
brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet he was preserved.” Hosea 12:12-13
Last week’s Sunday school lesson was on Hosea 12. The
teacher compared the verse where Israel the guy tries to take care of his own
problem (wifelessness), which doesn't work out so well (Laben cheated him with
the ol’ daughter switcheroo), with Israel the nation having their problem
(freedomlessness) solved by God (and Charlton Heston). Pastor B went on to say
that the whole America ideal of self-reliance and pull yourself up by the boot
straps is really the antithesis of faith.
But, argued a good American in the class, does that mean
we should just sit on our butts and wait around for God to solve all of our
problems? Of course not, Pastor B explained. Do what is in your capacity to do
but leave the impossible to God.
That has stuck with me this week as I watched both of our
cars break down, warranting expensive repairs, and Eli's hours being severely
cut back. A host of other small crises made life feel as heavy as the sullen
grey sky that has persisted stubbornly for weeks. Sometimes this magical journey
of life is more of a slog.
About a month ago, I was standing in a ballroom praying
for rain. I traveled to Southern California for my company's annual fall
conference and all 600 or so attendees gathered together on Sunday morning for
worship. The president of the district delivered a powerful sermon and at the
end mentioned the terrible drought in the area and together we all prayed that
some much needed relief would fall from the heavens.
I didn't think another thing about it until I opened my
news feed yesterday and read an article about power outages in California due
to the torrential rains they are experiencing. It gave me the shivers. I remembered
that God really does hear us when we cry out to him.
Not ten minutes later my boss called me into his office
and thanked me for some extra work I had taken on recently and gave me a bonus.
More than enough to cover all those mechanic’s bills.
Again I stopped, amazed. And remembered that God really does hear
the quiet whimpery sound I make from underneath a crushing pile of life.
I don't know what you carry that is too heavy, or the
problems you face that sucked the life from your bones till you feel dryer than
the California desert. But I do know who has your back. And when it comes to
total clusterfart crap storms (you know what I mean), He is kind of a
specialist.
Do what you can do and leave the impossible to God.
1. YEA GOD!!! How amazing about the rain and the bonus.
ReplyDelete2. Thanks for sharing...I needed the reminder and the challenge
First, Praise God for the bonus! For the rain! For answering prayers! For being Before Us with His perfect plan.
ReplyDeleteSecond, thank you Liz, for sharing your mind and your heart and your beautiful family with us.
Third, I love following the way God has worked in your life - and the lives of all those lovely single men and women at Hope Chapel. I'm so blessed to know you all and to follow your lives. God is more than awesomely good! Love and prayers..
I read this in the midst of a lot of craziness, so I didn't comment at the time, but it brought tears to my eyes and reminded me just how faithful God is to meet us in our times of desperation. Thanks be to God.
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