Three Fear-Exterminating Promises to Meditate On

by Kyle Green

Did you know that termites cause billions of dollars worth of property damage each year? I’ll never forget what a colony of those silent destroyers did to a corner of my childhood home. As it turns out, my favorite room of the house was also the favorite room of a wood-munching army. Thankfully, I knew someone I could rely on to exterminate our unwelcome guests.

Fear is a lot like these termites. Without invitation it can creep in and do severe damage to our spiritual condition. The tribulation and circumstances around us can be intimidating, especially when they are beyond our control. Fear can be paralyzing, especially if we don’t know who to call on for deliverance and provision of hope. These words from Proverbs 13:12 ring loud and true: “Hope deferred makes the heart sick, but a desire fulfilled is a tree of life.”

The Bible clearly teaches us who we can rely on to exterminate sinful fear. God’s Word gives us three promises to exterminate fear in Psalm 46:1-3.

“God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling. Selah”‬

Fear-Exterminating Promise #1: God Is Our Refuge

The promise to believe here is you have supernatural protection; this is divine defense.

In the Old Testament a city of refuge was a safe place for a person who accidentally killed someone to flee to. The city provided asylum to the fugitive by sheltering and protecting them until a trial could be held to determine their guilt or innocence. If, in the judgment of the city elders, the death had occurred accidentally and without intent, the person was allowed to stay there without fear of harm or revenge by the dead person’s relatives (Joshua 20:2-6).

The innocent one who fled to such a city would be well defended by man. In contrast, O Christian, you are supernaturally defended by God himself. Wow! The immovable, invisible God is our Refuge!

This is good news for those who are in Christ. No matter how intense the turbulence gets in our lives, our divine shelter will stand firm. A billion launched nuclear missiles are like peanuts up against our Refuge. The Fortress of Jesus Christ, where God’s children have permanent asylum, cannot be collapsed! Therefore, there is always hope for you!

Fear Exterminating Promise #2: God Is Our Strength

The promise to believe here is your Protector has supernatural power; this is divine offense.

King David’s faith-filled declaration that “God is our strength” is an affirmation that those belonging to him have the benefit of having God’s unmatched fire-power with them. King David was a mere man, but with God behind him he was like an Israeli wrecking ball at war; he won military battle after battle after battle (1 Chronicles 18:1-13). To defend his sheep he even killed bears and lions, with his hands! Not to mention, he is the man responsible for slaying the Philistine giant Goliath (1 Samuel 17). I think King David knows what he is talking about.

Think about how large and powerful the seas of our world are. As intimidating as it can be when the earth’s waters “roar and foam,” they are no match for the God who is our strength.

Compared to God, the mighty forces of earth are like teething infants. For example:

1. When the Israelites were trapped between the Red Sea and Pharaoh’s army God parted the waters and saved them easier than you can blink an eye (Exodus 14:21-31, Jude 1:5).

2. By God’s Almighty hand, the sea “ceased from its raging” after fear-stricken sailors hurled Jonah overboard (Jonah 1:4, 15).

3. While Christ and his disciples were on the Sea of Galilea a great windstorm arose. Then Jesus arose from his power nap and showed his power! Mark 4:39 says, “And he awoke and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, ‘Peace! Be still!’ And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm.”

It’s comforting to remember that the very things we often find ourselves fearing actually have reason to fear our God; they are no match for his omnipotence. Therefore, when we believe and fill our hearts with the promise that “God is our strength,” fear has no room to remain.

What are you afraid of? Everything we fear is cub-sized compared to our Strength, Jesus, the Lion of Judah.

Fear Exterminating Promise #3: God Is A Very Present Help in Trouble

The promise to believe here is our Omnipotent Protector is always with us in times of trouble; this is divine presence.

It would matter little if we had a supernatural protector with unlimited power, if he had a tendency to flee when danger arose. We have the guarantee that he is not only present in our midst, but able and willing to help in times of trouble. This is good news because it highlights God’s unwavering commitment to those He loves (Psalm 117). Look what our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ said about himself:

“I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. He who is a hired hand and not a shepherd, who does not own the sheep, sees the wolf coming and leaves the sheep and flees, and the wolf snatches them and scatters them. He flees because he is a hired hand and cares nothing for the sheep. I am the good shepherd. I know my own and my own know me, just as the Father knows me and I know the Father; and I lay down my life for the sheep.” —John 10:11‭-‬15 ESV

Fill in the what’s missing here from Psalm 23:4: “Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil, _________________________; your rod and your staff, they comfort me.”

Believe the Good News

Jesus Christ has already defeated the most feared of foes! God himself declared the gospel first saying, “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your offspring and her offspring; he shall bruise your head, and you shall bruise his heel” (Genesis 3:15). The excruciating death of our Lord Jesus Christ on the cross was skull obliterating for Satan. He is a defeated foe! Then, God more than aced the stress test of his power when he performed Jesus Christ’s death-defeating resurrection.

If Jesus has already defeated our greatest enemies, surely He has enough power to deliver us from all the remaining, present, lesser foes. Not only that, the Lord Jesus Christ is soon to return and will permanently exterminate sin and evil. Until then, believe and rely on this:

Jesus Christ is our refuge and strength. Through the Holy Spirit he is a very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear though the earth gives way, though the mountains be moved into the heart of the sea, though its waters roar and foam, though the mountains tremble at its swelling. Selah‬

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2020/04/three-fear-exterminating-promises/

God’s Forgiveness to Us: Unconditional?

BY BRAD HAMBRICK 

This article is one post in a series entitled “When Talking about Forgiveness.”

Let’s return to the phrase “as God in Christ forgave you” (Ephesians 4:32). How we interpret this phrase will determine whether our conversations about forgiveness are a healing balm or an infection to a wound.

This phrase also means that everything we say about forgiveness is a direct reflection of the character of God. We often articulate this truth one way – “We are never more like Christ than when we forgive” – without understanding the inverse implication of this truth – “How we understand forgiveness is how we portray Christ.” If our life goal is to be more like Christ and make Christ known, this discussion has life-permeating implications.

From my experience in talking with people, this phrase about God’s forgiveness has the profound implications for someone’s spiritual-relational-emotional health.

  • Some use this phrase to treat God like a blank check writing grandfather. They tend to be enablers who are really “nice” people who have a hard time taking a stand on anything important… because… you know… love.

  • Others use it as a “break only in case of emergency” clause in the salvation contract. These tend to be legalists with strong convictions who have the integrity to be just as hard on themselves as they are on everybody else.

  • Some go so theologically “deep” with phrases like this that everything becomes “muddy.” These are people who believe God is most satisfied when the masses are most confused.

  • Others stare at it in bewilderment. They don’t know what it means, so they just do the best they can in any given situation and try not to blame God for much of anything that goes wrong?

Before we reflect further, which of these describes you best? Self-awareness is an essential part of biblical application. If we don’t see ourselves accurately, then we are likely to misapply the Bible to our lives.

Now let’s engage the question that is behind the bulleted examples above.

Is God’s Forgiveness Unconditional?

Does the fact that there is no sin so great that it is beyond God’s ability to forgive mean that “unconditional” is the best adjective to describe God’s forgiveness? No, this truth is about God’s capacity to forgive. It is limitless. That is different from unconditional.

Does the reality that God delights in forgiving mean that his forgiveness is “unconditional”? No, this truth is about God’s willingness to forgive. It brings him the most joy (Luke 15:7). That is different from unconditional.

Do we get to set the terms of relationship with God? No. Unless we repent (a condition) God does not forgive. God is not mocked (Galatians 6:7). We can’t fake God out with tears or sorrowful language that is void of fruit in keeping with repentance (Matthew 3:7-10). If we try to convince God our sin is not wrong (changing the conditions), God doesn’t budge. God admitted that the terms he sets are narrow (Matthew 7:14). Those who will not accept God’s terms, even if they try to play nice with God, eventually run out of chances to accept his offer (Matthew 7:21-23).

God is infinitely generous in his forgiveness, but he is not unconditional. We have no reason to fear our sincere request for forgiveness will be denied. But we should have no sense of entitlement or cavalier attitude towards God’s forgiveness.

God’s Condition of Forgiveness is Lordship.

God’s forgiveness is not an “ollie, ollie oxen free” for everyone to go back to playing the game of life like they were before. God’s forgiveness is an invitation to a new way of life. Those who reject this new way of life, reject the terms of forgiveness.

Let’s return to our simple definition of forgiveness – cancelling a debt. God is not a banker who cancels a debt and says, “Keep running your business in the way that led to bankruptcy. Better luck next time.” God will cancel the debt and says “Call me Lord. Follow the plan I have for life.” If you are committed to bankruptcy, the most loving thing God can do is limit how far into debt you go.

What Does this Mean for Us?

We will draw two implications from this reflection: one vertical and one horizontal.

First, vertically, we have no reason to fear God withholding forgiveness. No one who owns the wrongfulness of their sin, accepts Christ’s payment for their sin, and embrace their need to follow Jesus as Lord will be denied. God understands his children follow him like clumsy toddlers. We fall often. But he delights when we follow him like children who imitate a loving father (Ephesians 5:1). Our soul can rest in this.

Second, horizontally, if God is not duped when he forgives, we do not have to fear being forced into foolish forgiveness based on a theological technicality. We will not forgive perfectly like God forgives.

  • We do not know the heart of the person we’re forgiving like God does.

  • Our ability to remove our hurt from the forefront of our mind is not like God’s.

  • Our desire to forgive is not as constant and benevolent as God’s.

  • Our ability to be hurt again may make the restoration process slower than it is for an omni-powerful God who has no relational needs.

These things may mean our forgiveness is a process – like every other part of our spiritual life. But, too often, our fear that forgiving will unwisely places us in a position to be hurt again causes us to resist the possibility of forgiving. Much of this mistrust is rooted in the misunderstanding of God’s forgiveness being unconditional. We begin to think God is being weak and foolish, and therefore, is calling us to be weak and foolish like him.

God is not a fool and he does forgive. God does not ask us to be a fool, but he does ask us to forgive. As we reflect further in this series, we will seek to further separate forgiveness from folly. The purpose of this reflection was simply to help you be able to trust that God’s call to forgive is not an expectation that you be relationally reckless.

Questions for Reflection

  1. What are examples of when you’ve used the idea of God’s forgiveness being unconditional misapplied? When was the other person trying to say something accurate, but not being precise with their words? When was the person misrepresenting God’s forgiveness?

  2. What are the greatest points of comfort and reassurance that you took from this reflection?

Posted at: http://bradhambrick.com/forgiveness09/

Receive the Day

Yana Conner 

A few years ago, a good friend of mine named Josh asked, “Yana, how might you experience more joy and peace in your life if you stopped trying to ‘seize the day’ and instead received the day?”

When I would complain about how my day wasn’t going my way to his wife, Jacelyn, she would often sing to me: This is the day that the Lord has made, I will rejoice and be glad in it. It was wonderfully annoying.

Then there was this one day. The day when in response to one of my anxious rant, Jacelyn had the audacity to ask me, "Friend, when are you going to surrender?" I was hot! I didn’t appreciate how she came for me at that moment, but now I often ask myself that same question when my days and weeks don't go as planned: Yana, when are you going to surrender?

Enter stage left: the coronavirus.

LIFE ON HOLD

No one could've imagined 2020 would start out with the NBA postponing their seasons, major corporations closing their doors, and kids being out of school for two months or more. This pandemic has completely altered the content of our days.

We had plans! Booked flights! Applied for Internships! Planned weddings!

Now our plans are on hold . . . indefinitely.

The coronavirus has literally forced us into a “receive-the-day” mentality. Every day is an adventure filled with new updates, more restrictions, and an endless amount of unanswered questions.

I don't know when the leadership cohort I've been leading will be rescheduled. I have no idea when the book project I was so excited to start this month will be put back on the table. My heart dropped when I got the emails that these projects (and the resulting compensation) would be on hold. I have savings, but they were supposed to be for a rainy day or spur-of-the-moment trip to St. Thomas with friends—not a pandemic!

But before I threw a full-on adult tantrum, the Spirit reminded me to receive the day rather than seeking to seize it.

CORNERED

When things aren't going my way, and I'm seeking to seize the day, I become like a boxer stuck in a corner, frantically trying to fight my way out. They say a boxer naturally panics when they get pinned in the corner. For a moment, they forget their training. All they want to do is get out. They don’t like having someone assert their power over them, inhibiting their movements.

The coronavirus has us cornered. These unseen particles are asserting their power over our plans, schedules, and comforts, inhibiting our ability to move freely in the world. We’re panicking like a boxer in a corner trying to find their way out.

And we’re doing this now because it’s what we always do.

IF THE LORD WILLS . . .

James, writing to people who assumed their plans were certain, said,

Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will travel to such a city and spend a year there and do business and make a profit.” Yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring—what your life will be! For you are like a vapor that appears for a little while, then vanishes. Instead, you should say, “If the Lord wills, we will live and do this or that.” But as it is, you boast in your arrogance. All such boasting is evil. So it is sin to know the good and yet not do it. (Jas. 5:13–17)

When’s the last time you said, “If the Lord wills, the kids will go to school tomorrow, we will have church on Sunday, or I will get paid on Friday”? When’s the last time, you willingly leaned into the uncertainty of life?

Pastor John Onwuchekwa says, "Many of us spend our days trying to manipulate the details of our lives to get the lives of our dreams." In doing this, we live a lie and believe we have control over what happens in our lives. But, we don’t!

We wake up with a "seize-the-day" mentality only for our day to be derailed by a flat tire, a neighbor calling with a pressing need, or the unexpected death of a loved one. In these moments, we are reminded of the fragility of our plans, rhythms, and schedules.

How has the coronavirus interrupted your plans? How has it wreaked havoc on your family's daily rhythms? What sacred habits has it disrupted?

And how are you responding to this disruption? Are you in the corner, frantically looking for ways to seize the day and regain your false sense of control? Or are you receiving the days as they unfold?

THREE TRUTHS TO HELP YOU RECEIVE THE DAY

Let me put some truths before you—truths that invite you to surrender and receive the limitations placed on us with joy.

God works in all things for the good of those who love him and are called according to his purposes (Rom. 8:28). If you have placed your faith in Jesus Christ, he is working in all things for your good. God is working when you’re home alone or in a house full of people who won't stop calling your name. He is working right now to bring about his definition of good in you, which is this: "For those he foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son” (Rom. 8:29).

The good God is always working to transform you into the image of Christ. How might God be using this massive interruption to work Christlikeness in you? How is he inviting you to demonstrate Christlike love and generosity towards those around you (2 Cor. 8:1–9; 1 Jn. 1:16–18)?

The Lord is your Shepherd, so you have everything you need (Ps. 23:1). You might not have everything you want, but if the all-knowing, forever-loving, all-powerful, everywhere-at-all-times God is your Shepherd, you have everything you need. Why? Because he knew what needed before the coronavirus ever hit (see Matt. 6:8). Because he loves you so much that if you ask for a piece of bread, he will not give you a stone (Matt. 7:9). Because he is literally holding the cosmos together and has you and the whole world in his hands (Col. 1:17).

So yes, Amazon is suspending all unnecessary shipping and there isn't any toilet paper at your local Target. But if God is your Shepherd, then you have everything you need.

You live in this world with God and with hope (Eph. 2:12). Believers live in this world with God’s abiding presence and an eternal hope. Therefore, you can be confident that the God of all grace, who is with you, will himself strengthen and support you in any way you may need (1 Pet. 5:10). If you need an extra measure of patience not to yell at your child who continues to interrupt you while you work, the God of all grace is with you and will strengthen you. If you’re struggling with anxiety or loneliness, the God of all grace is with you and will support you.

You can be confident that one day you will escape the physical and spiritual pandemics of this world. You will be tempted to be fearful about a lot of things over the next few weeks (or however long this will be). But if the worst-case scenario is death, there is no need to fear! Death for us means life and eternity with God. Death for us means no more crying, no more pain, and no more pandemics.

RECEIVE THE DAY

If the statements above are false, we have every reason to wake up with a “seize-the-day” mentality and frantically advocate for our well-being.

But if these things are true, we have every reason to receive our days because we have accepted that we are not in control and that the One who is, genuinely loves and cares for us.

Now it’s your turn to answer the question: When are you going to surrender?

Yana Conner is a proud St. Louis native residing in Durham, NC. After fifteen years of full-time ministry in both the parachurch and church context, she still can’t get over the fact she gets to dedicate her life to making disciples. She recently graduated with a Master of Divinity in Christian Ministry from Southeastern Theological Seminary and serves as an Associate Campus Director at the Downtown Durham Campus of the Summit Church. You can follow her on Twitter (@yanajenay).

Posted at: https://gcdiscipleship.com/article-feed/2020/3/30/receive-the-day

In the Pandemic, Give Thanks...

Gethin Jones

In Paul's first epistle to the Thessalonians, the Lord commands us, saying, "In all things, give thanks, for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you" (1 Thessalonians 5:18).

As I write these words right in the heart of Paris, the novel coronavirus has been spreading rapidly — especially in the Paris region — and the whole of France has just been placed under quarantine for a minimum of two weeks. We may leave our homes for one of five reasons, and each time, we have to print or write out a signed declaration explaining our reason for going out, or risk being fined. As President Macron declared in announcing the quarantine, "We are at war." And this after a draining winter of mass strikes, and a year of occasional unrest.

In 387 AD, after a period of crisis and social upheaval in Antioch, John Chrysostom said the following in his Homilies on the Statutes:

“Not only did he rescue us from shipwreck, but he allowed us to fall into such distress and permitted such an extreme peril to hang over us. Thus also Paul bids us 'in every thing give thanks.' But when he says, 'In every thing give thanks,' he means not only in our deliverance from evils but also at the time when we suffer those evils.”[1]

So while we stay indoors, and wash our hands, and look out for each other and our neighbours, and keep our distance, and pray for the sick and the bereaved and the "at-risk," how do we also give thanks? 

Here are some reflections:

1) Let us give thanks, because this is from the Father's hand.

In the preface to his commentary on the Psalms, John Calvin writes that the psalter “teaches us and leads us to bear the cross, which is a true test of obedience.” And what does it mean to bear the cross? It means that, “as we renounce our own affections, we submit ourselves entirely to God, and so let him govern us and arrange our lives that the miseries that are the most sore and bitter to our nature become sweet to us, because they proceed from him.”[2]

When God gives, whatever he gives, we give thanks. He has revealed himself to be that good, and that trustworthy. We can know that all that he has given is working together for good for those who love him, and are called according to his purpose (Romans 8:28). So let us give thanks because this is from the Father's hand.

2) Let us give thanks because it is good to give thanks to God.

In Psalm 92:1 we read and sing, "It is good to give thanks to the Lord." The Psalmist doesn't merely say that it is polite, or correct manners, to give thanks to the Lord — it is a good thing. Why is that? Let's consider what's going on. The Father gives, and we thank him. What is that other than communion and fellowship? It is a simple expression of our glorifying and enjoying God.

3) Let us give thanks to God for our daily bread.

We mostly do thank him for providing for our needs, and yet many of us in the so-called developed world have not had to worry all that much about where to find food. Often, when we hear sermons on the Lord's Prayer, some comment is made on how many of us don't have to worry about this kind of thing all that much in our affluent societies, but that we should remember how the Lord provides anyway. But as many around us panic buy, those who have abstained, and those who are "at risk," even while having the means to buy food, have had to be more concerned about how to find it. Let us pray that, as the Lord continues to provide for our needs, he will instil in us an ever-deepening gratitude for all his good gifts.

4) Let us thank God for the wonder of being made in his image.

As we find ourselves further apart from other people, whether strangers or loved ones, even the most introverted among us can feel a certain sting at the prospect of isolation. Why is this? We are being deprived of the company of beings that have been made in the image of God. It is an incredible thing — and it can be sore to be without it. So let us thank God for such a wonder, and for the relatives and friends that we have been able to enjoy, and, Lord-willing, will enjoy again one day soon.

5) Let us thank God for the Church.

As we find ourselves unable to gather physically, and having to make do virtually, let us consider the countless times we have been able to gather with God's people at the Heavenly Mount Zion and worship Him over our lifetimes so far. Let us thank God for that. Let us also pray that the day will come soon when we can resume doing so, and especially the day when we will do so once for eternity at Christ's return. Let us pray for this period of isolation to have a positive impact on those who, until now, may have been half-hearted in their involvement in the local church. It could result in people saying "See, we all did just fine without gathering." But let's pray that many more would say, "I missed this. This is wonderful. How could I have been comfortable skipping this?" And let us pray for such enthusiasm to pique the curiosity of our, and their, neighbours.

6) Let us thank God "for such redemption."

The first question and answer of the Heidelberg Catechism make it clear that Christians are the people who have an unshakeable comfort in both life and death. The second question and answer lists the three things we need to know "in order to live and die in the joy of this comfort" — guilt, grace, and gratitude. In particular, I need to know "how I am to be thankful to God for such redemption."

So what do we need to thank God for? All the things I've mentioned above, or redemption? The answer, of course, is, "Yes." Or rather, the answer is "Don't separate them too sharply." There is a sense, of course, in which our redemption is a particular thing for which we thank God. But, while not everything we have to give thanks for is redemption per se, everything we have to give thanks for is because of redemption. And that in at least two ways:

a) The reason anyone receives and enjoys anything good in this world is that the Lord is restraining evil in his common grace, and exercising great patience. And why is that? Because God "is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentance." (2 Peter 3:9) He is patient, and he is restraining evil, and maintaining order and goodness, all so that more people may have the opportunity to repent.

b) As we noted above — why does our Father give us any good thing? So that we may enjoy it, and return thanks to him. So that we may have communion, or fellowship, with him. And that is what redemption is for. He doesn't redeem us for the sake of redeeming us. He redeems us for the sake of communing with him.

So even in these difficult, dark, sore days, let us give thanks. Let us gratefully commune with God as redeemed ones, united to Christ Jesus — for that is what God wants.

Gethin Jones is a minister in the International Presbyterian Church. He’s serving with UFM Worldwide alongside La Chapelle de Nesle, a reformed evangelical church in central Paris.

Related Links

"Home Visitation: The Worst of Times, the Best of Times" by Chad Van Dixhoorn

"Ten Ways COVID-19 Can Work for Our Good" by Brian Najapfour

"I Am Thy Shield: Calvin on Genesis 15" by Aaron Denlinger

"Facets of Faith in Crisis" by Bruce Lowe

My Portion Forever: Finding God's Joy in Our Pain [ Download ]

Amidst Darkness: Suffering, Solace, and the Psalms by James Boice [ Download ]

Notes

[1] Peter Gorday, ed., Colossians, 1–2 Thessalonians, 1–2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon (Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture; Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2000), 99.

[2] Jean Calvin, Commentaires de M. Jean Calvin Sur le Livre des Pseaumes, (Geneva: Conrad Badius, 1561),  Vol. I, ii-iii; Author’s translation.

Posted at: https://www.reformation21.org/blog/in-the-pandemic-give-thanks

Resources for Anxiety, Fear, and Worry

by Paul Tautges

Since requests for resource recommendations are received regularly, these Resource Lists will hopefully make it easier for you to find what you are looking for. If you are aware of additional resources that would be helpful in the ministry of counseling one another in the truth of God’s Word, please do not hesitate to recommend them.

BOOKS/MINI-BOOKS

AUDIO

Posted at: https://counselingoneanother.com/2020/03/27/resources-anxiety-fear-panic/

The Right Question to Ask Yourself Today

Colin Smith

Losing a loved one had really hit her hard.

Christ had stood with her in her sorrow and entered into her tears, but then he did something completely unexpected. In a demonstration of the power by which, on that great day, he will raise the dead and usher his people into a life of unending joy, he called out to her brother, who had been buried some days before: “Lazarus come forth!” And to her complete astonishment, he did.

A Costly Gift

A few days later, Mary was sitting with her sister and her miraculously restored brother at a dinner given in honor of Jesus. As her eyes moved from her brother to Jesus and back again, she felt that she must find a way of expressing the gratitude and love for Christ that was overflowing in her heart.

An idea came to her. She had an alabaster box of expensive perfume. It was a nest egg, worth an entire year’s wages; something that a person would save and perhaps pass on to their children. But it occurred to Mary that there could be no better use of this prized asset than to pour it out, in its entirety, over Jesus, and that there would be no better time to do this than now. So she poured the perfume over the head of Jesus.

As she continued pouring, the costly gift ran down over Jesus’ shoulders, soaked into his robe and eventually dripped down onto his feet. When the last drop had been poured from the bottle, Mary knelt before her Lord and wiped his feet with her hair.

A Calculated Restraint

You might think that a person who lavished a costly gift on Jesus could count on the support and approval of other believers. But when Mary got up she realized that a cold chill of disapproval had spread around the room. Even our Lord’s disciples felt that her lavish act of devotion had been a waste (Matthew 26:8).

Their mistake was in asking the wrong question. Looking at an asset that was worth a year’s wages, they asked, “What could be done with that?” and of course there are endless answers to that question. But when Mary looked at her asset, she did not ask, “What can I do with what I have?” but, “How can I honor Jesus Christ with what I have?” She was looking for a way to show Christ how much she loved him. She wanted to convey the depth of her gratitude for all he had done for her, and this led her to a beautiful, creative, outpouring of her most valuable asset.

For the disciples, the cost of Mary’s perfume made what she did wrong. For Mary, the cost of the perfume made what she did right.

The Right Question to Ask

Think for a moment about the assets of time, talent, and treasure that God has entrusted to you in this season of your life: If you ask, “What can I do with what I have?” you will immediately be confronted with a vast array of possibilities. There are so many places in which you could spend this season of your life, so many ways in which you could spend your money, and so many opportunities for you to use your gifts and talents. Ask what you can do with what you have, and you will soon find yourself drowning in a sea of endless possibilities.

So instead of asking, “What can I do with what I have?” learn to ask, “How can I honor Jesus Christ with what I have?” What would it look like if you were to pour out the assets of time, treasure, and talent that God has trusted to you in this season of your life?

Responding to these questions will help you to move beyond the calculating restraint of the disciples, and it may lead you to acts of sheer extravagance that demonstrate the depth of your love for Christ. In his death, Christ poured himself out for us. In our lives, we have the opportunity to pour ourselves out for him.

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2017/03/the-right-question-to-ask-yourself-today/

Three Ways to Grow While You Wait

Colin Smith

Waiting is not wasted time.

Often, though, it seems to be! I am waiting for the train. I am waiting for my appointment. I am waiting in a long queue. Sound familiar? Waiting can seem futile, so we look for something to do while we are waiting. This is why there are magazines in the doctor’s waiting room. We try to fill up the time with something useful while we are waiting.

Some of you are searching for a job, but what you are looking for has not opened up; you are waiting. Some of you are looking for that special person to be your life partner, but you haven’t found them; you are waiting. Couples long for a child, but nothing has happened; you are waiting. Others are longing to see a deep change in a person you love. You have prayed for it. But you are still waiting.

All of these instances can make waiting seem futile at best and frustratingly difficult at worst. But what if we were thinking about waiting in all the wrong ways? What if waiting was not wasted time, but valuable time in the life of the Christian?

We think of waiting as something we endure in order to get what we want. But God speaks about waiting as the way that we grow when we don’t have what we want. So waiting is not wasted time. In fact, waiting can be the greatest growth opportunity of your life.

I want to suggest three ways in which you can grow while you wait.

Grow in Patience

Patience is what you need when things have not worked out as you hoped.

Somewhere deep within every heart there is a dream of life as we would want it to be. Our culture is sold out in the pursuit of paradise now. I’ve been thinking about designing a sign that could be very useful for some of us. It would have just four words on it: “This is not paradise.”

There are a lot of places where you could put that sign. You might want to hang it over your front door at home.  It would help because some of us are so intent on a perfect family life that we are reaching for what cannot be attained in this world, and it becomes crushing for everybody.

Some couples ought to put that sign on the door to your bedroom. It would take a great deal of pressure off you. Perhaps you need to put that over your desk at work. Or what about in your car? It will help you when you are in a traffic jam.

I’d be very happy to have the sign over the entrance to the church. This is not paradise. If you came here looking for a perfect Christian community, you won’t find it.

Friends, if you give yourself to the pursuit of paradise now, you will be disappointed. When that happens you will be angry with God because he has seemingly let you down. But this life is not paradise. And the sooner you discover that, the sooner you will be able to break free from the pursuit of an advertiser’s dream that will always elude you.

When God does not give what you eagerly desire, a door opens for spiritual growth. Embrace the pain. Love God in the disappointment. Detach yourself from the pursuit of paradise in this world, and set yourself apart for the Lord. Paul says, “For in this hope we were saved. But hope that is seen is no hope at all. Who hopes for what he already has?” (Rom 8:24).

Embrace the disappointments of life as opportunities for spiritual growth.

Grow in Hope

As you embrace disappointment, ask yourself this: Do you honestly anticipate heaven? All that you can experience in the Christian life is only a taste of what Christ has in store for you. There is much, much more to come! This is why we are to grow in hope while we wait.

The Bible speaks about the Holy Spirit being like a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come. Think about when you bought your first house. How much was the deposit? How much was the mortgage? Though it may have seemed large at the time, the deposit was only a tiny fraction of what you had to pay. Similarly, all that you experience of God in this life – every good gift, every blessing, every pleasure – is only a tiny advance on what God has in store for you in heaven.

As you wait for eternity with God, use both the disappointments and the joys of your life to cultivate a healthy anticipation of what God has promised. Are you in pain or alone? Have you shed tears? Does this life seem empty to you? Wait upon the Lord: “God will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain. For the old order of things has passed away” (Rev 21:4).

Grow in Worship

Waiting on God is equally a wonderful expression of worship.

My calling is to wait on God. Your calling is to wait on God. The purpose of our lives is to make ourselves wholly available to Jesus Christ, who has come into this world to die for our sins. But often, we forget this wonderful truth and make ourselves the center of attention. We want God to wait on us!

Jesus gives us the perfect model of what waiting on God looks like. He delights in the will of the Father, and He is ready to do it even when it involves a cross. He tells us plainly that if we follow Him, we should not expect a trouble-free life. Jesus is not offering us paradise now.

Saying ‘yes’ to Jesus in the disappointments of life will be the highest worship you can offer. We learn this from the story of Job who lost everything, and in the middle of his pain he worshipped. We learn it from Jesus who, in the agony of the cross and with His “why” unanswered, committed Himself into the hands of His Father.

Worshipping God through disappointment will be the greatest evidence that you love God for Himself and not just for His gifts. If all your dreams were fulfilled, and if all your prayers were answered, there would be no way of knowing if you loved God for Himself.

So I want you to think of the great disappointments and the great joys of your life. I want you to think about all the waiting you are doing right now, and how you are perceiving that waiting. I want you to hear God saying to you, “I want to make this waiting useful. I want to use it to grow you in my likeness – in patience, hope, and worship.”

Posted at: https://unlockingthebible.org/2020/01/three-ways-to-grow-while-you-wait/

GRACE - Past, Present, Future

By Joe Miller

Beloved (loved) of God, in light of our present momentary afflictions [i.e. all of the seen and unseen implications of the Coronavirus Pandemic] (2 Cor 4:17-18), John Newton’s timeless hymn, Amazing Grace, reminds us of the magnificent and boundless sufficiency of the past, present, and future grace of God in our lives.

Past Grace (Salvation):

Amazing grace! how sweet the sound, That saved a wretch; like me!

I once was lost, but now am found, Was blind, but now I see.

’Twas grace that taught my heart to fear, And grace my fears relieved;

How precious did that grace appear The hour I first believed!

Present Grace (Sanctification):

The Lord hath promised good to me, His word my hope secures;

He will my shield and portion be As long as life endures.

Future Grace (Glorification) :

When we’ve been there ten thousand years, Bright shining as the sun,

We’ve no less days to sing God’s praise Then when we first begun.

While it seems like we live in a world dominated by fear, worry, and anxiety (Prov 24:10), God’s all-empowering grace remains our sufficient source of help and hope! John Newton experienced this same help and hope of God’s grace:

My faith upholds me under all trials, by assuring me that every event is under the direction of my Lord; that disciplines and suffering are a token of God’s love; that the season, measure, and continuation of light momentary afflictions (2 Cor 4:16-17) in my life, are appointed by an infinite and all-wise God, and designed to work for my everlasting good; and that God’s grace and strength will be provided for me, according to the challenges of the day. (Memoirs, 1:169)

Newton’s unshakable confidence in the all-governing sovereign grace of God animated his heart to not fear but sing... Tis grace has brought me safe thus far, and GRACE will lead me home.

Beloved, our strength in God’s grace is what animates and empowers our hearts today to live out the Great Commandment (Matt 22:36-40), as we lean into Christ while coming alongside one- another and our community whose lives have been turned upside down.

GRACE... a sweet-sounding word!

But what is grace?

Grace tends to be a word that many of us do not fully understand, resulting in life’s momentary afflictions overwhelming us ! Many define grace as “God's unmerited favor.” Now while this is, in part true, the theologian Louis Berkhof provides us with a more comprehensive and truly satisfying definition that refines our understanding of God’s amazing grace - Grace is the unmerited operation of God in the heart of man, effected through the agency of the Holy Spirit. Clearly, God’s grace is a priceless and unfathomable, active gift to sinners who deserve God’s judgment and wrath (Eph 1:5-6), but who are now saved from the penalty of our sin and empowered, moment-by-moment, by God to make much of Him in our daily lives!

So grace is not just a past act of salvation for sinners, but grace is also a present active gift that empowers God’s people to live the Great Commandment life that is beyond our natural means (Titus 2:11-12)! In the midst of the Pandemic, as Christ’s ambassadors in this crooked and perverse world, we stand in present grace (Rom 5:2), which enables us to "deny ungodliness and worldly desires" (Titus 2:12), in order to live a life that makes much of Him - "For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them" (Eph 2:10). So when Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15:10, “By the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God that is with me”... he is saying that God’s empowering grace effects every word, deed, emotion, and thought of his life in Christ.

This week, may we be motivated by God’s past grace of salvation and be empowered by his present grace to accomplish great things in us, for us, and through us, as a reflection of our love for Him and desire to make much of Christ!

So beloved, when we consider the work and ministry God has purposed for us at CHCC; when we come alongside others who are battling another day of sickness, or working through a difficult marriage, or a troubled child, financial hardship, or even a day of great blessing, may we encourage one-another to cling to the reality that God's grace is the most powerful, provision, mercy, and wisdom for everything He desires for us to do in the next ten minutes, ten weeks, ten months, and ten years (2 Cor 9:8). And it will be the future grace of God that will one day set us forever free from the influences of sin (1 John 2:16), and unleash us to make much of God, even when we’ve been there ten thousand years!

This Week - Practically Apply God’s Past, Present, and Future Grace:

Past Grace: Reflect and rejoice in the wondrous truths of what the Gospel saved your from and what it saved you for (Recommendation: Gospel Primer by Milton Vincent)

Present Grace: While it matters what we think about the coronavirus, it matters most is God thinks and says to us from His Word:

o “The grass withers, and the flower falls, but the word of the Lord remains forever” (1 Pet 1:24–25).

o His words in Scripture “cannot be broken” (John 10:35).
o Hearing and doing God’s Word is like building your house on a rock, not sand

(Matt 7:24).
o His Word is true and perfectly wise for every situation. “He is wonderful in

counsel and excellent in wisdom” (Isa 28:29).
o God’s words in these times are not only true and wise; they are also precious and

sweet. “More to be desired are they than gold . . . sweeter also than honey and

drippings of the honeycomb” (Ps 19:10).
o The sweetness is not lost in this moment of bitter providence — not if we have

learned the secret of “sorrowful, yet always rejoicing” (2 Cor 6:10). The secret is this: Knowing that the same sovereignty that could stop the coronavirus and doesn’t, is the very sovereignty that sustains the soul in it. Indeed, more than sustains — sweetens with hope that, for those who trust him, his purposes are kind, even in death.

o “Behold the kindness and severity of God” (Rom 11:22). His providence is both sweet and bitter because he “works all things according to the counsel of his will” (Eph 1:11). Nothing just happens. Everything flows from the eternal counsels of God.

Future Grace: Look forward to and fixate your hope in the future inheritance of the new heavens and the new earth – Read and Meditate on Revelation chapters 21-22

When You Fear Not Being in Control

BY KRISTEN WETHERELL

Households across the world are aglow from screens delivering coronavirus updates. They’re also replete with fear. 

Leslie worries about her aging husband, whose health has been in slow decline since he turned 65. Tom knows he has no control over his pregnant wife’s health (or their baby’s) and goes to sleep nervous every night. Jessica is scared about her kids’ safety when they have to run to the grocery store, and Ron fears contracting the disease when he goes to work at the nursing home. Brittany can’t seem to control her anxiety over the virus, but it comes on full force at random moments, and she fears the next unexpected attack.

Then there are fears surrounding policies and quarantines, as people anxiously await the choices their leaders will make, choices that are out of their hands. And there’s the fear of tragedy, the worst-case scenario coming to pass, as sudden harm visits our family members—even us.

As finite creatures living in a world affected by sin, we fear anything out of our control.

Why We Fear Being Out of Control

To get to the root of this universal fear, we must start at the beginning. In the garden, sin corrupted our fear of the Lord, turning awe of God into terror before him; worship of God into idolatry of created things; and reverence into rebellion against him. Now, our human predicament is dire: We’ve rebelled against the only One who’s in control, crowned ourselves as little sovereigns, and discovered we’re terribly inadequate for the task. 

As finite creatures living in a world affected by sin, we fear anything out of our control.

We fear what we can’t control because we’ve tried to control it, but can’t because we aren’t God.

In the Old Testament, we read of the Israelites repeatedly falling prey to this uneasy attempt at self-sovereignty as they take refuge from their enemies in other nations and in idols. In Isaiah 46, Israel has been exiled to Babylon, and God rebukes the Israelites for their worship of false deities: 

To whom will you liken me and make me equal,

and compare me, that we may be alike?

Those who lavish gold from the purse,

and weigh out silver in the scales,

hire a goldsmith, and he makes it into a god;

then they fall down and worship! . . . 

If one cries to it, it does not answer

or save him from his trouble. (Isa. 46:5–7, italics added)

God describes Babylon’s idols as dead and worthless substitutes for him, mere inanimate objects that are unable to save the Israelites. We may think, Who in their right mind would think a statue could help them? But we’re more like Babylon than we’d like to admit.

We may not craft gold and silver into gods, but we do try to control our money for stability and power. We tremble in fear when the stock market crashes.

We may not fall down and worship statues, but we do worship ourselves and other people, as preserving our health—even our very lives—becomes an ultimate pursuit.

We reason that we would never cry out to an immovable object to save us from our troubles––but then we look to medicine, doctors, news media, political leaders, right habits, and anything else we think will give us some semblance of reassurance, of peace––of salvation from our circumstances.

Trying to take control of what can’t be ultimately controlled, we set ourselves up for fearfulness in times of inevitable trouble.

But in making idols of these things, and trying to take control of what can’t be ultimately controlled, we set ourselves up for fearfulness in times of inevitable trouble.

What Sovereignty Means for Fear

We see God’s remedy for fearful and rebellious self-sovereigns in what he says next:

I am God, and there is no other;

I am God, and there is none like me,

declaring the end from the beginning

and from ancient times things not yet done,

saying, “My counsel shall stand,

and I will accomplish all my purpose.” (Isa. 46:9–10, italics added)

Throughout the book of Isaiah, God’s boundless wisdom and endless power are displayed, as he unveils to his people his sovereign plan to save them, both historically from Babylonian captivity and also eternally from the captivity of sin. He announces the coming of a Savior, One who would give up his heavenly crown to wear a crown of thorns, fulfilling God’s sovereign plan of salvation for his people (Isa. 53:10Acts 2:23).

Since Jesus is Lord, we don’t have to be. Because Christ is on his throne, ruling all things with perfect wisdom and power, we are freed from the crushing pressure and fearfulness of trying to rule ourselves, other people, and the circumstances that expose how out of control we are: our health and safety, the welfare of family and friends, the salvation of loved ones, the future, money and possessions, political powers, and nature. Even the mysteries of evil and suffering submit to the lordship of Christ and are no mystery to him.  

When we feel out of control, we choose to rest in his perfect control.

Ultimately our sovereign God calls us to trust him. Trusting him means we walk by faith, not by sight. It means we seek him for wisdom to steward the resources and responsibilities he has given us. It means we believe his sovereign wisdom is right and best, even when we can’t make sense of it. It means that when we feel out of control, we choose to rest in his perfect control: 

Clap your hands, all peoples!

Shout to God with loud songs of joy!

For the LORD, the Most High, is to be feared,

a great king over all the earth. (Ps. 47:1–2, italics added)

Editors’ note: 

This article is adapted from Fight Your Fears: Trusting God’s Character and Promises When You Are Afraid by Kristen Wetherell (Bethany House, 2020).

Kristen Wetherell is a wife, mother, and writer. She is the author of Fight Your Fears and co-author of the award-winning book Hope When It Hurts. She writes regularly for digital publications and enjoys teaching the Bible to women at conferences and retreats. Read Kristen’s writing on her website and connect with her on InstagramTwitter, and Facebook.

Posted at: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/fear-not-being-control/

Come What May

David Mathis

A slow-moving calamity rolled through the ancient world, now more than 2,500 years ago, crawling, at a haunting pace, through one nation after another.

Unlike Pearl Harbor, or a terrorist attack, or a tsunami along the Pacific Rim, this plague caught very few off guard. Every king, every nation, every citizen saw it coming. They heard the reports. They lived under the specter. The world’s greatest city at the time, Nineveh, didn’t fall overnight, but over painful weeks and weeks, even months. Jerusalem came next. Waves of destruction came to the holy city, first in 605 BC, then eight years later in 597, and finally total decimation eleven years later in 586.

What threat paralyzed the world’s great cities not just for hours and days, but for weeks and months, even years? The rising power of Babylon and the slow march of its army from one capital to the next, setting up months-long sieges, and toppling the world’s leading cities as their supply lines ran out and the people began to starve.

And all the more, the coming calamity should have been no surprise to God’s first-covenant people. Even in the middle of the seventh century before Christ, while Assyria was the reigning world power, and Babylon was only slowly on the rise, God’s prophets, like Isaiah, told of the coming disaster decades ahead of time. As did a far less prominent prophet named Habakkuk, who may have an especially striking word for us in our present slow-moving distress.

God Does Not Look on Idly

Unlike any other Hebrew prophet, Habakkuk never turns and speaks directly to the people in his short, three-chapter book. He reports his dialogue with God and God’s surprising work in him, leaving personal application to the reader. The book’s outline is rather simple, as far as Hebrew prophecies go.

First, Habakkuk begins with his seemingly righteous frustrations, perhaps slightly overstated. He asks, “How long, O Lord?” to the rampant wickedness he sees around him, among God’s own people, in an era of spiritual decline (Habakkuk 1:2–4). God responds with a revelation the prophet not at all anticipated (1:5–11). Essentially: Yes, little prophet, my people have become wicked — and I am not looking idly at it. In fact, I am raising up the Babylonians to destroy them.

Habakkuk reels and rocks. He thought he had justice problems before. Now all the more. He responds with a second complaint (1:12–2:1). How can God “idly look at traitors” (Habakkuk 1:13), Babylonians even more wicked than God’s backslidden people? The prophet becomes more defiant: “I will take my stand . . . and look out to see what [God] will say to me, and what I will answer concerning my complaint” (Habakkuk 2:1). He presumes God’s response to his second complaint will not suffice, and he’ll be ready to answer back.

But God’s second response (2:2–20) does silence him. The prophet never registers a third complaint. God will not leave Babylon unpunished. His full justice — his fivefold woe — will be served in his perfect timing. The hand of justice indeed will fall, destroying the prideful and rescuing the righteous who live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4).

How Do We Live by Faith?

The core of the book’s message, from the voice of God to the hearts of his people, is live by faith in unprecedented days, come what may. God doesn’t promise the anxious prophet that soon he’ll make things better. In fact, he promises to make things much worse before they get better. Utter devastation will come first, then deliverance. First total ruin, then final rescue.

To the disoriented, panicked prophet, God exposes the folly of human pride, and issues a fresh call to humility and faith, to patiently receive God’s mysterious “work” of judgment (Habakkuk 1:53:2). To trust the divine in the toughest of times, in days of looming trouble. Here we have God’s timeless call to his people in mysterious times, Habakkuk’s and ours: live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4).

But what does that mean? “Living by faith” can sound so vague and general. What might it mean for us here on the ground, under the present (and coming) threat?

Will We Wait Quietly?

After he has been silenced, Habakkuk speaks again in chapter 3, but now in prayer, not complaint. He has heard and heeded the divine voice and now celebrates God’s unstoppable power and uncompromised justice. The prophet’s prayer concludes with two “Yet I will” statements. First, he says he will exercise patience. The prideful and unbelieving may ride it out with all sorts of panic and noise, but Habakkuk will wait quietly:

Yet I will quietly wait for the day of trouble
     to come upon people who invade us. (Habakkuk 3:16)

His faith in God’s perfect justice has been renewed. He will adjust the clock of his soul to God’s timetable, not presume the converse. God is not standing idly by, of this we can be sure. He is watching. He is attentive. He sees every movement, every detail. In the end, the world will see that he has done right, never treating any creature with injustice.

And as prone as we are, in our finitude and sin and anxiety, to want to force on God our own timetable for resolution, he calls us to quiet patience, even as painfully slow as the present distress may unfold.

Will We Rejoice?

The second and final “Yet I will . . .” comes in verse 18: “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation.” And the prophet says so precisely with the worst-case scenarios on the table:

Though the fig tree should not blossom,
     nor fruit be on the vines,
the produce of the olive fail
     and the fields yield no food,
the flock be cut off from the fold
     and there be no herd in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the Lord;
     I will take joy in the God of my salvation. (Habakkuk 3:17–18)

In other words, though the supply lines should fail, and the shelves be bare, and the economy tank, and the virus come to our own city, and street, and even home, yet — even then — this newly humbled prophet will rejoice in the Lord. Will we? Not in our supplies. Not in our health. Not in our own security. Not even in the defeat of the enemy. There is one constant, one unassailable surety, one utter security, one haven for true joy in the most challenging of journeys: God himself. He holds himself out to us as he removes our other joys. Will we lean anew into him?

Those puffed up in pride will certainly be destroyed in time, whether sooner or later. But those who welcome God’s humbling hand and bow in faith — in quiet patience and trans-circumstantial joy — will find God himself to be “my strength” in such days (Habakkuk 3:19). So too for us, living by faith in such times will come to expression in patience and joy. But what again might that look like?

Will We Rise in Song?

Among the many ways God may inspire his church in the coming days, we at least have one clue from Habakkuk what such patience and joy sounds like: singing. That’s the stunning and unusual way this short interaction between the prophet and God ends — with the prophet singing praise. That’s why he ends with directions for corporate worship: “To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.” These final lines are not only a prayer. They are a song for others to join.

There’s not anything else quite like this in all the prophets. Habakkuk begins with as much feistiness and (what seems like) defiance as we find anywhere else. And yet God graciously moves his soul from protest to praise. Which should be an encouragement to those honest enough to admit to finding this pandemic tripping up the feet of our faith so far.

As we’ve seen, Habakkuk didn’t come into the news gracefully. Yet God met him there, in his pride and defiance and fear. The little prophet foolishly took his stand, and God mercifully brought him to his knees. God humbled him, and the prophet received it, humbling himself. He received the disorienting, inconvenient, painful purposes of God in the coming judgment, and he abandoned his protest, bowed in prayer, and rose in praise.

Will we do the same in the lingering confusion and disorientation of the slow-moving uncertainty we’re living in? Will our protests, however justly conceived, lead to bent knees? And will our prayers lead us to sing?

David Mathis (@davidcmathis) is executive editor for desiringGod.org and pastor at Cities Church in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is a husband, father of four, and author of Habits of Grace: Enjoying Jesus through the Spiritual Disciplines.

Posted at: A slow-moving calamity rolled through the ancient world, now more than 2,500 years ago, crawling, at a haunting pace, through one nation after another.

Unlike Pearl Harbor, or a terrorist attack, or a tsunami along the Pacific Rim, this plague caught very few off guard. Every king, every nation, every citizen saw it coming. They heard the reports. They lived under the specter. The world’s greatest city at the time, Nineveh, didn’t fall overnight, but over painful weeks and weeks, even months. Jerusalem came next. Waves of destruction came to the holy city, first in 605 BC, then eight years later in 597, and finally total decimation eleven years later in 586.

What threat paralyzed the world’s great cities not just for hours and days, but for weeks and months, even years? The rising power of Babylon and the slow march of its army from one capital to the next, setting up months-long sieges, and toppling the world’s leading cities as their supply lines ran out and the people began to starve.

And all the more, the coming calamity should have been no surprise to God’s first-covenant people. Even in the middle of the seventh century before Christ, while Assyria was the reigning world power, and Babylon was only slowly on the rise, God’s prophets, like Isaiah, told of the coming disaster decades ahead of time. As did a far less prominent prophet named Habakkuk, who may have an especially striking word for us in our present slow-moving distress.

God Does Not Look on Idly

Unlike any other Hebrew prophet, Habakkuk never turns and speaks directly to the people in his short, three-chapter book. He reports his dialogue with God and God’s surprising work in him, leaving personal application to the reader. The book’s outline is rather simple, as far as Hebrew prophecies go.

First, Habakkuk begins with his seemingly righteous frustrations, perhaps slightly overstated. He asks, “How long, O Lord?” to the rampant wickedness he sees around him, among God’s own people, in an era of spiritual decline (Habakkuk 1:2–4). God responds with a revelation the prophet not at all anticipated (1:5–11). Essentially: Yes, little prophet, my people have become wicked — and I am not looking idly at it. In fact, I am raising up the Babylonians to destroy them.

Habakkuk reels and rocks. He thought he had justice problems before. Now all the more. He responds with a second complaint (1:12–2:1). How can God “idly look at traitors” (Habakkuk 1:13), Babylonians even more wicked than God’s backslidden people? The prophet becomes more defiant: “I will take my stand . . . and look out to see what [God] will say to me, and what I will answer concerning my complaint” (Habakkuk 2:1). He presumes God’s response to his second complaint will not suffice, and he’ll be ready to answer back.

But God’s second response (2:2–20) does silence him. The prophet never registers a third complaint. God will not leave Babylon unpunished. His full justice — his fivefold woe — will be served in his perfect timing. The hand of justice indeed will fall, destroying the prideful and rescuing the righteous who live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4).

How Do We Live by Faith?

The core of the book’s message, from the voice of God to the hearts of his people, is live by faith in unprecedented days, come what may. God doesn’t promise the anxious prophet that soon he’ll make things better. In fact, he promises to make things much worse before they get better. Utter devastation will come first, then deliverance. First total ruin, then final rescue.

To the disoriented, panicked prophet, God exposes the folly of human pride, and issues a fresh call to humility and faith, to patiently receive God’s mysterious “work” of judgment (Habakkuk 1:53:2). To trust the divine in the toughest of times, in days of looming trouble. Here we have God’s timeless call to his people in mysterious times, Habakkuk’s and ours: live by faith (Habakkuk 2:4).

But what does that mean? “Living by faith” can sound so vague and general. What might it mean for us here on the ground, under the present (and coming) threat?

Will We Wait Quietly?

After he has been silenced, Habakkuk speaks again in chapter 3, but now in prayer, not complaint. He has heard and heeded the divine voice and now celebrates God’s unstoppable power and uncompromised justice. The prophet’s prayer concludes with two “Yet I will” statements. First, he says he will exercise patience. The prideful and unbelieving may ride it out with all sorts of panic and noise, but Habakkuk will wait quietly:

Yet I will quietly wait for the day of trouble
     to come upon people who invade us. (Habakkuk 3:16)

His faith in God’s perfect justice has been renewed. He will adjust the clock of his soul to God’s timetable, not presume the converse. God is not standing idly by, of this we can be sure. He is watching. He is attentive. He sees every movement, every detail. In the end, the world will see that he has done right, never treating any creature with injustice.

And as prone as we are, in our finitude and sin and anxiety, to want to force on God our own timetable for resolution, he calls us to quiet patience, even as painfully slow as the present distress may unfold.

Will We Rejoice?

The second and final “Yet I will . . .” comes in verse 18: “Yet I will rejoice in the Lord; I will take joy in the God of my salvation.” And the prophet says so precisely with the worst-case scenarios on the table:

Though the fig tree should not blossom,
     nor fruit be on the vines,
the produce of the olive fail
     and the fields yield no food,
the flock be cut off from the fold
     and there be no herd in the stalls,
yet I will rejoice in the Lord;
     I will take joy in the God of my salvation. (Habakkuk 3:17–18)

In other words, though the supply lines should fail, and the shelves be bare, and the economy tank, and the virus come to our own city, and street, and even home, yet — even then — this newly humbled prophet will rejoice in the Lord. Will we? Not in our supplies. Not in our health. Not in our own security. Not even in the defeat of the enemy. There is one constant, one unassailable surety, one utter security, one haven for true joy in the most challenging of journeys: God himself. He holds himself out to us as he removes our other joys. Will we lean anew into him?

Those puffed up in pride will certainly be destroyed in time, whether sooner or later. But those who welcome God’s humbling hand and bow in faith — in quiet patience and trans-circumstantial joy — will find God himself to be “my strength” in such days (Habakkuk 3:19). So too for us, living by faith in such times will come to expression in patience and joy. But what again might that look like?

Will We Rise in Song?

Among the many ways God may inspire his church in the coming days, we at least have one clue from Habakkuk what such patience and joy sounds like: singing. That’s the stunning and unusual way this short interaction between the prophet and God ends — with the prophet singing praise. That’s why he ends with directions for corporate worship: “To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.” These final lines are not only a prayer. They are a song for others to join.

There’s not anything else quite like this in all the prophets. Habakkuk begins with as much feistiness and (what seems like) defiance as we find anywhere else. And yet God graciously moves his soul from protest to praise. Which should be an encouragement to those honest enough to admit to finding this pandemic tripping up the feet of our faith so far.

As we’ve seen, Habakkuk didn’t come into the news gracefully. Yet God met him there, in his pride and defiance and fear. The little prophet foolishly took his stand, and God mercifully brought him to his knees. God humbled him, and the prophet received it, humbling himself. He received the disorienting, inconvenient, painful purposes of God in the coming judgment, and he abandoned his protest, bowed in prayer, and rose in praise.

Will we do the same in the lingering confusion and disorientation of the slow-moving uncertainty we’re living in? Will our protests, however justly conceived, lead to bent knees? And will our prayers lead us to sing?

David Mathis (@davidcmathis) is executive editor for desiringGod.org and pastor at Cities Church in Minneapolis/St. Paul. He is a husband, father of four, and author of Habits of Grace: Enjoying Jesus through the Spiritual Disciplines.

Posted at: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/come-what-may?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=3d5aed12-b135-4144-9fb6-5e111c5e4906&utm_content=article&utm_campaign=new+teaching&fbclid=IwAR0q8qBa0e7tqQfoorREPuDrytVh-Mz_ZzidflHonY1U7auwzzHVE_s-VGI