It can be somewhat frustrating when we cannot
discern what it is that God is doing in our lives. We feel that we are
being held in suspense by our Father. The Psalmist David found that, you
know, and so have his countless servants throughout the running centuries. God
is mysterious, and His doings are equally mysterious.
In such times, what are we to do? We are to
do the only thing it is proper for us to do in these circumstances, and that it
to repose our lives confidently in His Word. What else have we? He is faithful Who promised. We cast
ourselves and our burdens unreservedly upon His grace and mercy.
Now, the last thing we ought to do, and the first
thing we are often tempted to do, is to look for the consolations of the
world. How foolish that would be! It is vanity to look to the empty
and perverse world to help and succour us when in difficulties. The world
has absolutely nothing to offer. Indeed, this is exactly what worldlings
do - they look around them everywhere to find something from the world that
will mitigate their miseries. But there's nothing there. At times
of difficulty, they may drown their sorrows with alcohol, but they still have
them when they sober up. They may use some kind of escapism, yet that is
OK only for the short time they have 'escaped.' But they still have to
return to the real world.
No, the world and its ways have nothing to offer
the child of God. They mock us, deride us, and make fun of us.
I tried the broken cisterns, Lord,
But, ah, the waters failed!
E’en as I stooped to drink they fled,
And mocked me as I wailed.
But, ah, the waters failed!
E’en as I stooped to drink they fled,
And mocked me as I wailed.
The world’s broken cisterns have nothing to offer
the child of God when he or she is going through life-threatening
difficulties. We have all tried them,
and some of us have seen through them.
Even the positive thinking attitude, while good so far as it goes, is
inadequate, and I’ve seen people being devastated by this outlook.
However, we have found something that does work
in all circumstances – having a positive faith in Christ the sovereign Lord and
Comforter of the weak. It’s not just
about being positive; it’s about being positive in Christ; it’s about being
positive in Him because of Who He is – the One Who suffered and bled and died
for us, and Who rose again on the third day to demonstrate that the Father had
accepted all He had done on the Cross and therefore accepts all who trust in
Him.
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