Showing posts with label all things together. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all things together. Show all posts

Thursday, March 23, 2023

Grief's Anguished Cry






 
Life is filled with daily miracles, joys that thrill our hearts and gifts to look for and to be grateful.  But the reality is that there are also those moments that forever change our course, happenings that blindside us and send us reeling. There is sickness, it's-not-supposed-to-be-this way scenarios, rejections, etc.  These moments leave us with a cry, a deep, heart-rending cry that ascends upward and into our Father's presence.

Jesus knows all about this.  He too, uttered a heart-rending cry that ascended up, up to His Father.

These cries come from deep within our souls and leave us gasping for air and searching for a footing, a place to ground our flailing emotions and land.  Sometimes it seems these cries go no further than the ceiling and other times they seem to connect with our Father.

Jesus knows such a moment.   A moment of 'where are you,God?'. A moment of silence, alone in grief, carrying a load all alone. 
He cried, "My God, my God, why did You forsake me?"
To me, this is one of the most heart wrenching moments when such a deep cry is left loose and goes up, upwards toward the Father. 
Scripture doesn't tell us God turned His face  away. It doesn't say He deserted His Son, but Jesus felt it, His cry echoes and our sometimes matches it. And sometimes it's as if our cry is only to be met with what feels like God turning His face away. 

Alone. Alone.

Why??  
As I sat with that, wrestling with a moment in my fifth grade year at school, wondering where was God in that moment, a moment that left its mark deeply embedded in my soul and I thought of the moment Jesus had on the cross.

I have often heard that this moment of being forsaken, a seemingly turning from His Son, Jesus, as He hung on the cross, was because of sin.

I wrestle with that and questioned it's validity as I thought of my day in school.  If God turned His face away, forsaking Jesus because He couldn't tolerate sin, would He have not done that me and to the many sacrifices that the children of Israel offered over the years?  Would He still not turn away from my sin and yours?

As I thought of Jesus seeing me that day, watching what was happening and knowing what it would do to my soul and what I would do with it for many years following, my question was/is, "How could He stand and watch it?"  "Why doesn't He intervene?"

There were a couple of thoughts that came to me... One is that hard, heartbreak, and sin is the natural consequence of choosing the tree of knowledge of good and evil.  Two, Jesus wants to redeem all things and sometimes the hardest situations are where we find Him the deepest and experience the deepest redemption.  But He can't stand to watch it happen, so it's as if He turns His face away. He doesn't intervene, but He doesn't leave. He stays because He knows and sees all things and desperatelylongs for vus to find Him in deeply redemptive ways. 

Jesus, hanging on the cross, in deep physical pain, had prayed hours before that this cup would pass from Him, this walking out a deeply hard path.  His heart-rending cry was left unanswered but it's result would be the last sacrifice needed for eternal redemption. It was a needed hard for an ultimate good, but it was also so hard for God to not intervene and I can only imagine, not to rescue Jesus. To rescue Jesus would have left us deserted.

Sometimes the best and good can only be by walking the path of hard hard.

I don't have many words for this or able to explain it, but I do know that out of my deep, deep unanswered cries and wondering where God was, I have found Him very deeply and personally, that I can see it all as a gift.  And I really wonder if that is why God sometimes seems to turn His face away and to us it seems like He doesn't care, when really, He cares oh so deeply.  It's a risk He takes because we may choose to allow it to turn our hearts away from Him instead of toward Him for redemption.

This Easter season, this remembering of His sacrifice, remember it is for our own redemption, initally when we choose to believe Him and accept His salvation, but also on-going, redeeming our hearts through each and every hard we experience and walk through.

Nothing happens that He can't redeem.  He wants our hearts.  Just like it was before the reaching and eating off the one tree Adam and Eve were told not too. Before the bite they walked with God.

God wants us to walk with Him and discover Him to be sufficient strength. To find Him as the Way, the Truth, and the Life. To let His love go deep in our souls, redeeming all things. 

God promised a Saviour the moment they took and ate the fruit. Jesus fulfilled that promise and I am deeply grateful for His redemption in so many ways. 

Jesus is our Advocate, our Immanuel, and He gets our deep heart rending cries that ascend up, up and up. Stay with Him, trusting and believing that He sees and hears. The Holy Spirit interprets our groaning cries. 

Jesus, our Redeemer, our Saviour, our Friend. 

Monday, October 10, 2022

The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil






As I sat one day in a Sunday School class and listened to the struggles of 'Why am I struggling with wanting more, when I have so much already?'  'Why does another's possessions make me want more when all I really want is Jesus?'

I think we all have also struggled with the questions of...
Why does God let this bad or hard thing happen to me?
Why doesn't God answer my prayer?
 
We blame God... looking for a place to land our aching hearts with the hard.

Let me ask another question, "What did God create in the beginning?"

He created all things GOOD.
He created beauty and life.  He created no bad or evil.

Satan, many 'years' prior, wanted to be like God and created a rebellion; which God had to remove.  So, God removed Satan from heaven.  Satan is the beginning of all things ugly.

When God created the world and placed Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden, He made all sorts of trees to grow - trees that were beautiful and produced delicious fruit. Genesis 2:9  He placed two trees in the middle of the Garden - the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.

He told Man, "You may freely eat the fruit of every tree in the garden, Except the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.  If you eat its fruit , you are sure to die."  Genesis 2:16-17 

We have GOOD and EVIL.
Two choices.  Two consequences.

God, the author of good.  Satan the beginning of evil.
A tree - the Knowledge of Good and Evil.

At this point Adam only knew good.  He did not know evil.
At this point it seems that Adam is alone.  The Bible isn't clear on the sequence.

In verses 21-22, God made woman, out of man.

If Adam was alone, then I have another set of questions, "Did Adam forget to tell Eve about the tree?  Did he tell her and then not have the courage to take a stand against the deception of Satan?"  The Bible doesn't give us those details.

We only know that one day, one moment, they were both presented with a choice...
Genesis 3:1 Now the serpent was more subtle (shrewd) than any beast of the field which the LORD God had made.  And he said unto the woman, Yea, had God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?
vv. 4-5, And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die;
For God doth know that in the day ye eat thereof then your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods, knowing good and evil.

A choice.

GOD DID NOT CREATE EVIL.  IT'S A RESULT OF A CHOICE.

With the choice of Adam and Eve, they now know GOOD and EVIL.  They know good and bad.  They know love and hate.  They know freedom and shame.

God did not leave them in that state.  God never leaves bad alone.  He REDEEMS.
He set in motion a promise of a Redeemer and gave specific instructions that point to the Redeemer.

They took fig leaves to cover themselves.  But God made clothing from animal skins. Fig leaves were not sufficient. Life was forever changed.  Blood was shed for forgiveness and redemption.

Just like Adam and Eve experienced redemption in the midst of bad, so today God will always redeem the bad and painful experiences; if we seek Him.

I believe all bad falls through the hand of God and that can be hard to wrestle with.  So, why doesn't God simply close His hand and not let it happen??
We blame God for allowing it to happen, when it's simply a part of the brokenness that happened as a result of taking from the tree of knowledge of good and evil.  We now know GOOD and EVIL.

I believe it's back to the choice and consequences that happened.  Free will or choice comes with a price, a cost, a consequence of good or hard.

God cannot go back on His Word of saying that death will happen if the fruit was eaten, but He can redeem!  And redeem He wants to do and will do if we turn our hearts toward Him in repentance.

Right from that first moment of a wrong choice, God spoke words of redeeming along with the consequences.  

There is a mystery to the hard to those who love God.  Romans 8:28 says, God uses all things for good.  He doesn't say all things are good, but all of the happenings, God weaves it all in a tapestry that is good.  And in the moments when we're drowning in the hard, we can simply choose to stay with God.  Choosing to remember God.  Choosing to trust His heart of redemption and walk with Him in the mystery of hard and its redemption. 

Really, redemption is a very underserving gift.  To think that God cares so much for who He created, to not let them sit in the results of their wrong choices and to offer redemption.

I pause and bow, struck by the awesome gravity of this.  
Have you accepted and received God's redemption for you?