Sunday, March 19, 2017

Trust in the Lord and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways, acknowledge him and he will make your paths straight. 
Proverbs 3:5-6

I've been struggling with this one all of my life. Trusting him. And once I get past a rough part...there is another challenge to face. Fire. Quicksand. Flood. Desert. Okay...not literally. I've never faced any of those. I just like figurative speech. I have a thing for analogies and metaphors. 

I finally came to the conclusion that life is not about living happily and comfortably after. It is not about meeting someone special, falling in love, getting a good education and career, buying a house, having a family, saving for a comfortable retirement....And then when you are old, and good and ready to die, you do...but in your sleep without any pain or suffering. It is really about learning to trust the Lord in everything. It is also learning to love those around you.

We all know that life isn't wrapped neatly in beautiful packages and tied with bows. Sometimes when a package is opened, we don't like what we see, we say, "What is this, Lord? I didn't want this one. Can I exchange it for something better?" It reminds me of that old show we used to watch when we were kids. The Price is Right. There were always three doors to choose from. You never knew if you would end up on a cruise in the Bahamas and a brand new sports car or the dud gift-like a lifetime supply of frozen peas. Should you choose door number one? Door number two? Or door number three? There was always a mixture of anticipation and trepidation when we watched contestants make their choice. But...don't get me wrong. I don't think that the Lord is really back stage chuckling at our disappointments. 

If everything fell exactly into place in my life...what would cause me to feel a need for the Lord? Nothing, that's what! I'd have it all together. Life is challenging. We meet new challenges all the time. Jamie and I are facing some of our own. Is this anything unique to the human experience? No. Worldwide, we have that in common with people everywhere facing challenges. There is nothing new under the sun. That is what Solomon wrote in his old age. He had a lifetime to draw wisdom from. I'm getting smarter as the years roll by, but that is not always a consolation.

One consistent truth has come back again and again. "Everything is going to be all right." We've always been taken care of. We always have enough to eat, clothing to wear and money to pay the bills. Even in the face of death- yes...that has happened too. My brother when I was only 16, my father and my mother. In the face of illness...things are going to be all right. In the face of setbacks....things are going to be all right. 

"Because He lives, I can face the future. Because He Lives, all fear is Gone....Because I know He holds the future, and life is worth the living just because He lives." I can hear my father singing this in my memory and it is reassuring. My parents were great people of faith and I will be forever grateful for the examples they were to me.

5 comments:

Martha said...

I have a thing for analogies and metaphors too. Sometimes they're so good that even I don't know what I was talking about.

I have had many of these same thoughts, and find my self over and over again thankful for the gift of watching my father die, and die well. He was a gift in both life and death, a gift I will treasure for eternity. Life often seems to be a series of progressively harder challenges. Thank God he hasn't left us to it alone.

Priscilla said...

Mom died well too. She chose to count her blessings up until the day she passed away. She had lost much of her health...and her mental sharpness, but she was sharp where it counted. In the Lord.

Ruthie said...

That's my greatest hope: to die well. I hope always to love Jesus, even if I lose my mind. I hope not to cling to life and waste resources that could be expended for the Kingdom, only to keep a shell of a body alive at great expense.

I think yesterday was the anniversary of John Piper's great sermon on not wasting your life. This reminded me that I need to listen to it.

Priscilla said...

Is there a link to the sermon? I'd like to listen.

My mother did lose much of her mental faculties. She was often confused and forgetful. She forgot how to do some of the things she had always done....like cook. Sometimes she said things that didn't make sense. Quite often she didn't know her own grandchildren...and we're not entirely sure that she always knew us. She lost some of her personality, but she always spoke of the Lord in great reverence. She still prayed regularly.

Ruthie said...

http://www.desiringgod.org/messages/dont-waste-your-life--2