Sunday, December 6, 2009

And Iron Entered His Soul

I have been meditating a lot on the life of Joseph. He is one who early on in life had a sense of God's calling him to a high purpose in life. He had dreams. He had a position of favor in his family. I wonder how many times Joseph asked himself, "What happened?" ...Why did his family turn on him and reject him? How could he end up in a dungeon when he had tried so serve and walked in integrity, even in captivity? How had his life spun so wildly out of control? I can identify so much with Joseph and the questions that undoubtedly entered into his mind in those dark days of imprisonment. Yet, we've read Joseph's story from beginning to end and we know that those days were part of God's plan. God never lost control and He never made a mistake in moving Joseph into exactly the place He wanted him to be for His purposes. Psalm 105:17-19 has an interesting insight regarding this time that Joseph spent in prison. It says that this was a testing time for Joseph. F.B. Meyer notes that where it says, "His soul entered into iron," we also might translate this into our language as saying, "Iron entered into his soul." I often think of God's testing as one in which He seeks to find our weaknesses, but in fact, a study of God's testing reveals that in these times, as we yield to Him, He creates in us strength. It is when we go through a trial that God is able to forge His strength in the place of our weaknesses. Without the times of trial and testing we would happily go along on our own strength, never realizing we are ill-prepared for the next phase of our lives.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

Cosmic Battle in the Heavenlies

Click on this picture to see full size version!

This amazing picture is not from a science fiction movie, it was taken by the Spitzer Space Telescope, which lifted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida on August 25, 2003. This picture is of several generations of stars amid curtains of clouds in a region called W5, about 6,500 light-years away. I am fascinated with photographs of microscopic or the telescopic that reveal a universe to us that is beyond our own ability to see! We cannot see this with our naked eye, but that does not mean that it does not exist. Until recently we did not have a way to even imagine such a picture! But, it also reminds me of a cosmic battle in the heavenlies, described in the Bible, which is also beyond our ability to see or even really comprehend. The Bible reveals times in which a certain person's eyes were opened to see the angelic hosts, but we are told that there is a place in the heavenlies where the armies of the LORD battle with the hosts of darkness. Seeing this picture makes one realize that we can never discount what our eyes cannot see!

Saturday, August 16, 2008

A Little Bit of Whimsy

Moose are God's Creatures, too

 

Moose have always fascinated me!!  Do you ever wonder what God was thinking when He created the moose?  He is such a contrast to the elegant and so symmetrical cousin, the deer!!  One has to wonder how those who believe in evolution can explain how two such different and yet similar species emerged from the same glob of goo!!  The moose, with his hind legs shorter than his front, and his oddly shaped face, little eyes and big nose and antlers that look like a science experiment gone awry, all point to a God who is incredibly diverse in His creation and a God who has a sense of humor!!  He does all things well, and in the moose we see that He created an animal that is powerfully strong, massive in size and with a neck built to hold up those fierce antlers.  It amazes me that those antlers can span 6 feet across and that he grows a new pair every year!!  The male moose  stands six feet tall at the shoulders and can weigh up to 1600 pounds!!  Isn't that incredible? 

 

A moose can be very dangerous, and my sister, Peggy, who lives in Alaska has had several close run-ins with a moose.  But they do have their tender side, too.  I love this video, and could not figure out how to embed it in this blog, so just click on the link, and enjoy. 

 

http://www.maniacworld.com/twin-baby-moose-in-sprinkler.html

Friday, August 15, 2008

El Shaddai

The Hebrew name "El Shaddai" is one of the most beautiful names of all the LORD found in the Old Testament. In our English translations, El Shaddai is usually translated,"Almighty God" which I think carries the sense of great might or power. This is not wrong, but it really only gives us a small part of the picture. El Shaddai literally means, 'many-breasted one." It is always associated with God's great might or power to bless His people and make bountiful provision for them. You will notice the name El Shaddai is used in those contexts of a promised blessing. It is a covenant name that He gives to His children as a promise of blessings that often are not yet seen. He is truly the LORD who does abundantly beyond all we can ask or think!!

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Poem written by unknown believer in Russia



David Benson has selflessly served the Christians of Russia for many, many years. I have been a subscriber of his newsletter, "Russia for Christ," for the past twenty years or more. This past issue he shared about a visit he made to the Red Square, in which a young man approached him, and stuffed his pocket with a crumpled fistful of papers, saying, "You will know what to do with these. When he returned to his room he found that they were poems, one of which he shared in the newsletter. I am sharing it with you, because it so touched my heart. If you would like more information about this ministry, drop me an email and I will send you the contact information.

When someone suffers...


Amy Carmichael wrote a wonderful book, called "Rose from Brier" during a period of prolonged illness. I have turned to this book time and time again when going through trials. She has placed a tiny little poem in her introduction which I have thought of so many times, because it speaks so succinctly of the well intentioned words of others in times of our suffering.

The toad beneath the harrow knows
Exactly where each tooth point goes;
The butterfly upon the road
Preaches contentment to that toad.

How many times have I, with well-meaning intentions, offered cheap platitudes in the face of the crushing suffering another was going through? How often have my words, rather than bringing comfort as I desired, further burden the sufferer with words that totally lacked understanding of what they were going through? In 1988, I prayed, "Lord, help me never to offer empty words that offer no comfort. Protect me from speaking that which I do not understand, but only that which Your Spirit and Word has illumined to me." Now I would add the prayer, "Lord, help me to be kind to those whose intentions are kind, and merciful to forgive their ignorant, stock phrases!!'

I remember when, I found myself sitting at the side of an aunt, knowing that her husband of 30 or more years had only hours to live. She wanted to know why, she wanted to know how she could survive and I knew that I could not answer her on a superficial level. And then I felt the LORD give me the words, "I don't know why you are going through this trial, I don't know what God's plans are for you, but this I do know: He loves you very much, and He will never leave you, or fail you, or forsake you. You are not alone." I drove home that day, not knowing that those few words would be what the LORD would use to sustain her through the days of the funeral, the days of grieving, and the days when she sought to learn how to live alone. Then, several years later, she told me, on the day of her wedding to a wonderful man, that not a day had gone by that those words had not echoed in her mind and given her comfort and encouragement and strength to go on.

There are times when someone suffers that no words can suffice, when words cannot ease the pain, or make the problems better. The person suffering can recognize a hollow or superficial word with uncanny discernment. To be told that what we are going through is God's will, or part of God's plan may be perfectly true, but the words themselves can do nothing to shift the reality of the trial. I have found in Christian circles in America, that we love words, ideas, and lofty ideals, and are most willing to offer them to one another, but we are far less generous when it comes to tangible support. To tell a starving person that God intends it for good, while one sits at a table laden with food, is to make a mockery of the LORD and His Word. When a friend suffers, are we willing to suffer with them, are we willing to try to relieve that suffering? Just how far are we willing to try to help carry another person's burdens? Do we offer words because we want to make their problem go away and rid ourselves of the discomfort we feel in the face of suffering?

Amy Carmichael expressed this frustration over the misguided, "helpful" words of others so well in "Rose from Briar" and how their words "rankled like a thorn." I love the heart and the understanding that she arrived at, which offers true comfort to the sufferer! She said that friends seemed to think her physical suffering was meant to crush her in order to make her more usable. She says, "and was the Father breaking, crushing, forcing by weight of sheer physical misery, a child, who only longed to obey His lightest wish?" She described the peace she had in her time of trial before the words came, and the loss of peace that such words brought to her spirit. She said she felt no peace until this word from the LORD came to her saying, 'let not your heart be troubled, do I not understand? What dosuch words matter to Me or to thee?" And then I knew that the Father understood His child, and the child, her Father, and all was peace again."

We must be careful not to let the voices of others obscure what God is speaking to our hearts! We must not lean on our own understanding, and certainly not the understanding of others, but allow the voice of the Master to make things clear in His time and in His way. He understands, and that is what really matters. "Let it be, and think of Me."