Is it just me, or do you find that living by faith and not by sight grows HARDER and HARDER as the years go by? The ‘pop quizzes’ that used to land on me every few weeks now seem to show up every couple of days.
Not one to spot my unbelief right away, I sense God gently but firmly taking my face between his hands (so to speak!) to make me look at my unbelief. My pride recoils at yet more evidence for my lack of trust in the Lord as Good Father, Faithful Shepherd, Wise Counselor.
This past week has been that kind of personal attention or ‘handling’. I have struggled to let go of persistent worry. It’s not that I have been anxious about anything, rather I have OBSESSIVELY ‘angsted’. My personalized version of Phil 4:6 is now “Do not OBSESS over anything!” rather than the tame ‘do not be anxious’.
I KNOW what I’m supposed to do and I do try!
- Daily I hand over my needs à la ‘Cast your cares on Him….’
- Hourly I pray with much fervor à la ‘The fervent prayers of a righteous man…..’
- I recollect many blessings, the good things about God, who He is and what He has done and the promises laid up for me……
Yet, I feel bound up in worry.
So, it was no surprise to me that the Sovereign Lord, the One who reigns over all creation, used a portion of yesterday’s assigned Scripture from 2 Sam 19: 1-8 to show me exactly what happens when I make a created thing PRE-EMINENT in my life.
Just so you’ll know how I recognize something as being preeminent in my life, it’s those occasions when my thoughts ‘glom’ onto a created thing like sewing pins sticking to a magnet.
Here’s a synopsis of events 2 Samuel 19:
- King David’s rebel son Absalom has been killed by David’s men and the coup squelched. David acts ‘un-kingly’ as he indulges his natural grief in an unceasing, over-the-top inconsolable fashion.
- He does not publicly thank the valiant ones who risked their lives and their homes to flee Jerusalem and side with him. He does not acknowledge the cost to his loyal citizens who probably fought against some family members supportive of Absalom.
- He obsessively wails to such an extent, to such a danger point that General Joab, his chief of the army, has to shock him into acting like a king. Joab point blank tells him that if he doesn’t stop crying about his son and get back to doing his job as God’s anointed king, then he’ll find himself at the end of EVERYONE’s spear.
That’s the narrative in a nutshell. In what way did I see this biblical example as a gentle rebuke from God to abandon my anxious obsession? Reading this account revealed the evil of disobedience. God had appointed David to shepherd God’s people for Him. David courted danger, almost to the point of no return, when he inverted God’s priorities. This observation is what convicted me.
The king harmed good people when he made his son more valuable, more meaningful than the welfare of those in his care.
I do the same when I place a created thing over the Creator.
Our pastor’s sermons on the preeminence of Christ have bathed my thoughts over the past several weeks (when I wasn’t anxiously obsessing!) The Greek word for preeminence ‘proteuo’ is described in two ways:
- Ranking first
- Exercising the most influence
So even as I have struggled with handing over a particular problem to God and then taking it back, I’ve been asking myself:
“Maria, who or what is preeminent in your life?”
It’s a piercing question that demands honesty. I have felt bound up in the time I’ve invested in trying to ‘solve this suffering’ of a loved one. And God keeps throwing me reminders to ‘JUST STOP IT!’ (you’ll smile if you’re old enough to remember TV actor Bob Newhart as the UN-empathetic counselor). Our good Father gave me the very same counsel but from a different source.
Dr. Richard Swenson, an author whose book about regaining margin I’m re-reading, penned this arresting statement
‘The purpose of life is not to solve suffering but righteousness.’
Bolstering that truth has been the realization that EVERY single human being on earth in every epoch has lived or is experiencing now a life of suffering. The purpose of life cannot then be to ‘solve’ suffering. I have known this but now I KNOW it more deeply. My purpose, your purpose if you belong to Christ, is to be content in Him, to enjoy Him, to seek to please Him, to sing new songs of who He is and what He has done. In the midst of suffering.
I think we can fall into the trap of making an idol out of a problem-free life, a life without suffering. At least I am beginning to see that about me. And if that is my or your goal, then we are setting ourselves up for misery.
May God help us all to be joyful obedient servants of our loving God.
May 20, 2019 @ 20:45:47
Another good post, my friend. Terry
May 20, 2019 @ 20:49:44
Thank you! I prune and prune to make myself more easily understood and I make an effort to present the Lord as faithfully as possible.