Read: Job 2 [note: 11-13], and 2 Samuel 12 [note: 15-17]
Something we talk about when we’re frazzled; in seasons of
busyness and full-throttle forward-motion.
Something we ascribe to monastics, to clerics, to desert-dwelling
mothers and fathers of the faith.
Something a bit lost in mainstream evangelicalism. For, no matter the circumstances, we are to
wear ourselves out with service.
Whatever trial we’re in, we either need to be serving our way through
it; or teaching from it. There are great
lesson of faith and perseverance tucked into our trials, to be sure. And each is a testament to God’s great and
abiding love and faithfulness.
Certainly, others who are walking a similar road can benefit from our
experience, when told in the spirit of transparency, so that God may be
glorified, even in the midst of the storm.
Yet, in times of difficulty; times when the path you’re on is
failing to rise to meet your feet, when you want the conductor of the
rollercoaster of your days to stop it so you can recover your equilibrium, when
the waiting has stretched you so thin that it feels like there is nothing of
you left, in those times, are we supposed to try to serve and give? Or are we meant to rest and to be attended
to?
In the second chapter of Job, we find that not only has he
lost his fortune, his children, and his health, but his wife has basically
abandoned him as well. [When a loved one’s
advice is, “curse God and die,” I don’t think they’re emotionally or
spiritually present with you anymore.]
But Job doesn’t get up and start preaching to her, trying to show her
the folly of her words. Instead, he
sits. His friends come to visit him,
knowing he needs support. But Job doesn’t
jump up and play the host. They sit with
him in his mourning; and he doesn’t move.
He rests solely in the truth with which he had answered his wife, “Shall
we accept good from God and not trouble?”
Job rests in the fact that no matter the situation, God is sovereign
over all.
In the twelfth chapter of 2 Samuel, we find David, confronted
with his sin [stealing another man’s wife, having her husband killed, and then
marrying the woman he seduced] by the prophet Nathan. David admits his sin, yet still his son is
struck ill. David stops all activity,
spending nights lying on the ground in sackcloth [remember, he’s the king] and
pleading with God. His servants stand at
the ready to help him to his feet. But
David doesn’t move. Though he’s crying
out for intervention, he is also resting in God’s sovereignty; knowing that the
outcome of his situation is entirely in the Lord’s hands.
Neither men relent in their rest. They don’t eventually go back to work; they
don’t preach from their pulpit of ash and misery. They wait.
They cry out. They rest in the
fact that God is in control. For one,
things eventually turn out more joyously than they began; for the other, they
ended with death. But the truth is that
God is sovereign over both the happy and sad endings.
God is God.
A friend recently illuminated that I was in such a
season. But, I argued with her as I had
already with God, I need to be doing
something. I can’t just sit. Not with all that I’ve been given; not with
all that’s at stake for so many. I have
to do
something. She smiled with gentle warmth
and proffered, “Might this not be what you’re supposed to be doing right
now? Learning to rest?”
It’s certainly not the rest of Sabbath; a joy-filled
worship-full repose beside still waters.
Yet, it is a rest from the daily busyness and rushing. It is restful for my spirit to spend more
time in prayer, more time in the word, more time with God. So perhaps the waiting is the purpose, so
that I [or David or Job or even you, dear one] may draw nearer to God. And that we might all rest in His
sovereignty.
It's too bad there is no "love" button, or I would have clicked it several times by now. This is fantastic. You are fantastic. Love you!
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