Friday brought me to a
place of choice. I was confronted with a depression so deep that I had to
decide if I really wanted to trust in God. It was a test. I don’t know exactly who or what initiated
this trust confrontation but I knew I had come to a decision point.
I’m not unusual (at
least not in this area.) I think all Christians come to a point of decision. Things
go great for a time and then we are hit with a chance to trust God while things
are not going so great.
We get hit with
circumstances that many say are not supposed to happen to the believer. I was
reminded of a dear elderly lady named Rosie whose body was racked with pain.
While I was with her she had a visitor (a young new Christian with not enough
life experience) who told her that she could be healed if she just had enough
trust. It just didn't seem right or fair that this godly lady who had followed
the Lord for so many years should have to go through this. Did she not trust
enough? If she was trusting God then why did she have to endure this suffering?
Then gracious godly
Rosie said with love and kindness to this little pip squeak that the greatest
trust comes in the middle of great trials. God brought this remembrance to my
mind during my down in the pit time this week. It’s been years since I thought
about Rosie.
God also led me to 1
Peter 1:6-9:
In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you
have been grieved by various trials, so
that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes
though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and
honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Though you have not seen him, you love
him. Though you do not now see him, you believe in him and rejoice with joy
that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining
the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls.
We, Christians, go
through trials of all kinds and colors (that’s what the Greek word for various
means.) What may be a trial for me may not be a trial for you. What is grieving
your soul may not be what I’m dealing with. But all of this unfair, painful,
not supposed to happen to us stuff is really a test to the genuineness of our
faith. Do we still trust after all this junk that happens to us?
When people watch our
life through tragedy do they see us praise and glorify our Lord? Do they wonder
what makes us love and worship a God we haven’t seen? Do they wonder at our
commitment to His leading and Lordship when it looks like there isn't a reason? Does it lead them to Jesus?
And then a Facebook friend (My Minister of Praise and Worship Josh) posted
on Facebook a song by Meredith Andrews – Not
for a Moment (After All.)Here are some of the words that spoke to my heart:
And every step every
breath You are there
Every tear every cry
every prayer
In my hurt at my worst
When my world falls
apart
Not for a moment will
You forsake me
Even in the dark
Even when it’s hard
You will never leave me
After all You are
constant
After all You are good
After all You are
sovereign
Not for a moment will
You forsake me
Not for a moment will
You forsake me
My answer to the trust issue was like dear
Rosie (who is enjoying heaven now.) Yes,
I will trust My God because after all and through it all He is constant, good,
and sovereign. I will love and trust Him because not for a moment during all
the mess I will go through will He forsake me.
Thank you Rosie, Apostle Peter, and Facebook Friend.
Thank You Lord Jesus.
Thank You Lord Jesus.
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