If you’re anything like me, you might get caught up in ‘do-loops’ from time to time. That’s when you can’t stop thinking about a problem or difficult situation and you go ’round and ’round, without getting anywhere.
I have let myself get mired down in a situation like that – even though I have a teaching contract for next year, I keep thinking about other job possibilities. The problem is – no doors have opened and few suitable situations loom – at least THAT I CAN SEE!
But what happens when you think about a problem? You FEEL weighted down and depressed. Joyce Meyer, a popular Christian speaker, has some advice:
But does that go far enough? No! If we don’t replace the now-forbidden topic with something else to think about, we’ll just go back to worrying about the same old problem!
The solution is to fix our gaze (our mind’s eye) on something else beside the problem. This is what the Hebrew people experienced early in their desert wanderings with Moses. In Numbers 21 the Jews complained about the food and water situation. That was their problem. And in their bitter recriminations – a blatant slap in the face to God who had sprung them from Egyptian slavery, they looked at their lacks.
So God sent a worse problem – lethal biting snakes and many died. But along with this punishment, God provided a way out for those who would alter the direction of their gaze. Moses was instructed to cast a snake replica and fix it on top of a pole and hold it up. Those who TRUSTED God’s instructions did what they were bidden, looked up at something other than their circumstances and were healed.
- The people came to Moses and said, “We sinned when we spoke against the Lord and against you. Pray that the Lord will take the snakes away from us.” So Moses prayed for the people. The Lord said to Moses, “Make a snake and put it up on a pole; anyone who is bitten can look at it and live.” So Moses made a bronze snake and put it up on a pole. Then when anyone was bitten by a snake and looked at the bronze snake, they lived. Numbers 21: 7 to 9
So, too, with us – if we want healing, we have to think about something else.
This account in Numbers is actually a picture of the Gospel in the Old Testament. Just like those ‘wandering Jews’, we 21st century men and women are also practiced complainers against God. And because of this inexcusable disobedience against our Maker, we are headed toward everlasting death. But God has sent a remedy. If we look up at Jesus and forsake our own attempts to save ourselves, we can be healed. The Son of God took the punishment we deserved by submitting to death on a cross. His murder and resurrection produced 2 gifts for us:
One……
- His death is both proof that the Father deemed the payment for OUR sins sufficient
- Our trust in that ‘fait accompli’ means the payment applies to us
Two….
- His resurrection to new life is proof that we too will also be raised
- Our first-step trust** means we are now included IN Christ and are guaranteed to be raised to the New Heavens as well
(**Jesus’ death in our place only counts for us if we TRUST what God says about our dire condition and His Son’s work FOR us and if we STOP trying to save ourselves through what WE do)
Given all that (and that’s a lot), Paul tells us how to live in this sorrow-filled world:
- Rejoice in what the triune God (Christ, the Father and the Holy Spirit) has done for you
- Give God all your problems
- Don’t think any more about those problems but INSTEAD about what is…true, noble, right and just, pure, lovely, acceptable, excellent and praiseworthy
The bottom line is this: We become what we behold.
Who wants to look like one of his or her problems!!!!
Jun 17, 2014 @ 04:17:35
Thanks! I needed that two-by-four!!
Jun 17, 2014 @ 12:39:59
And I need to re-read it too!
Jun 23, 2014 @ 13:20:11
The idea of becoming what you think about was a recent discussion in my house. We were trying to decide whether we could afford a vacation. We decided it isn’t a luxury to vacate the premises- it’s a necessity for health. Of course, the days of Cayman Island vacations are over, but we can do a long weekend in our area of the country. It’s like pressing the reset button. Then upon return, fixing our eyes on the Lord and prioritizing once again.
Jun 23, 2014 @ 18:39:04
Good for you all for seeing it as a health priority – family & physical as well as mental, emotional. Just finished reading the book Margins – Graham gave it to me for mother’s day. A very timely reminder that we live in the land of the DOERS instead of BE-ers.