Your Brother Daniel
For more great blogs as
this one go to Daniel’s blog site at: www.Mannsword.blogspot.com
Waiting for God, even
through the Tears
Thirty five years ago, a
young man made an altar call. He was very troubled about his new life in Christ
and prayed:
- Lord, I’m willing to serve you, but I just don’t see
how I can. I don’t have any desire to serve. It all seems too burdensome
to me.
He made this same altar
call on numerous occasions. Not only didn’t he have the desire to serve, but he
also felt entirely alienated from other Christians. They seemed to think
differently than he. Their experiences didn’t match his own. It felt as if he
occupied an entirely different world from theirs.
This also contributed to
his sense of isolation from Jesus and his doubts that he was even saved. All of
this tormented him, and he wondered why his new found Savior wasn’t answering
his prayers. Was there something irremediably wrong with him?
He was sure that there
was. He had suffered from years of depression and panic attacks, and it
therefore seemed that either God really didn’t love him that much or that He
couldn’t do anything about his weaknesses.
However, imperceptibly,
things began to change. Jesus told a parable about growth. He compared it to
seeds that grow by themselves without the knowledge and assistance of the
farmer (Mark 4:26-28). It didn’t matter whether the farmer remained awake or
asleep, this mysterious growth would continue. And it has!
Surprisingly, now there
is nothing I’d rather do than to serve my God. I am consumed by this endeavor.
Every joy I have is somehow connected to this occupation. Every hope is
enslaved by it. However, this doesn’t mean that I no longer have struggles. In fact,
He continues to give growth to His seed through my weakness (2 Cor. 12:9-10),
even my incomprehension (2 Cor. 4:1-11).
Consequently, I remain a
man of many weaknesses. I struggle with my highly negative, irritable,
critical, anxious and angry nature. This hasn’t made me easy to live with; nor
has it made me the ideal husband. For years I’ve prayed that I wouldn’t be so
negative towards my wife and instead cherish her as the precious gift God had
given me.
Oddly, I’d feel very
tender and warm towards her when we were apart, even for a few hours. She would
appear so lovely to me. But when we’d reconnect, I’d find that the spell had
been broken, and I was helpless to change this.
However, the seed of
God’s planting continued to grow and the warm glow I’d experience when we were
apart began to invade our times together.
How could such a thing
happen? Certainly not by my manipulations! It happened as I sleep; it grew even
as I doubted.
Why
do I write about this now? To glorify our Savior and to pass onto you the
encouragement of the Psalmist:
- As the eyes of slaves look to
the hand of their master, as the eyes of a maid look to the hand of her
mistress, so our eyes look to the Lord
our God, till he shows us his mercy. (Psalm 123:2)
Just wait for Him! Praise the Lord!
No comments:
Post a Comment