Tag Archives: Job

Where is God in your place of emptiness?

 

Years ago, a team of astronomers at the University of Minnesota announced they found a hole in the universe in the Eridanus constellation. They say it has no galaxies, few stars, not even dark matter. It’s just an empty place they say is a billion light years across.  I think it means that IF you could travel at the speed of light, it would take one billion human years to go from one end of this hole to another. Who can comprehend it? Only God, because he created that hole and the entire universe and everything in it. His divine power and wisdom keeps it running.

 

I’ve reading through the book of Job lately. Job knew something about empty places. As you may recall, Job was a wealthy and well respected man. But then he lost all his possessions, his children, and his health. He was only left with his criticizing ‘friends’ and a nagging wife. Covered in boils, he was in unspeakable pain every day. Yet Job accepted his condition as allowed by his sovereign God. He spoke truth about God to his so-called friends despite their constant battling against him. What a vast empty place that must have been!

 

After repeated discourses between Job and his accusers, the Lord spoke to Job, reminding him of who was God and who wasn’t. “Where you were when I laid the earth’s foundations? Who marked off its dimensions? Can you bind the chain of the Pleiades? Can you loosen Orion’s Belt?” (Interesting that God points Job, in his place of emptiness, to the Orion constellation which borders the Eridanus constellation where this large empty hole was found.)  Essentially, God brought Job to the end of himself. Job turned to God and God restored him. Not only him but twice his wealth and more sons and daughters.

 

Can you associate with Job in your suffering? And after your endless questions and cries for help, after all your own reasoning and you find yourself in a dark empty place…can you surrender everything to God? I know this is painful because I’ve gone there myself. But when we tell God, “I’m tired of being bitter, angry, lonely, always in pain, full of grief, always anxious and afraid, I desperately need your help,” he is ready to change us. When we stop resisting his leading and going our own way, he will restore us. It’s a matter of telling ourselves every day (and throughout the day), “Yet still I will believe you Lord. Yet still I will trust you. Yet still I will claim your promise of assurance, peace, love and so much more. I will let your goodness replace my harmful thoughts and actions. My beliefs will be made evident through my thoughts, words, and behaviors. I will walk out of my self-imposed prison of rebellion and find freedom in following you.”

 

The choice is ours. Where are you going to turn in your place of emptiness?

 

 

Why does God allow tragedy?

 

April 19, 1995. Twenty years ago today, a senseless act of evil took the live of 168 people as a bomb ripped through the Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City. Many cried out “Why?” And even today we cry out “Why, God?” when tragedy strikes our own lives. Why does God allow tragedy in our lives?

 

Reflect on some of the key points that Billy Graham made in answer to this question when he spoke at a statewide prayer service twenty years ago.

 

I appreciate reverend Graham’s honesty is first saying, “I don’t know ‘why’. I only know there are lessons to learn.” One of those lessons is that life is a mystery. We don’t understand all things. Job didn’t understand why he lost his wife and family, his good health, and all his possessions. His wife’s advice to him was “Curse God and die!” But in the face of tragedy and intense ongoing pain, Job remained faithful. He believed that despite his circumstances that God was a loving and good God.

 

Another lesson of tragedy is a reminder that evil remains in the world – for a time. It is the essence of the dEVIL’s name. In the face of evil, you and I have two choices: 1) We can become bitter and angry at God or 2) We can turn to Him in trust Him, even when we don’t have the answer to all our questions. It is the essence of our faith, to believe when we cannot see clearly.

 

A third lesson of suffering is that it brings together the real community of God. Job missed this. Maybe you’ve missed this as your own tragic circumstances have left you isolated. But suffering produces an environment that invites community to flourish. It invites each of us to BE that community. We saw this as a nation, if if only short-lived, following the Oklahoma City bombing and 9/11. We see it today in community-wide disasters. People come together, not because they can solve a problem, but as a reminder that God cares for us. He promises that those who mourn will be comforted. His compassions never fail. His mercies are new every morning.

 

We should be comforted that even Jesus asked, “Why?” He cried out in agony, “Why, God have you forsaken me?” And His answer was quick in coming. The message of Easter is that hope follows tragedy. There is hope for your suffering, hope for your pain, and hope for your despair. We are minded in tragedy that life is brief and uncertain. None of us know which moment will be our last. But the hope remains for those who love God that His comfort, compassion, love, and forgiveness are available to us today even in the face of tragedy.

 

If you haven’t surrendered the control of your life to Jesus, what better time than today – while time remains?

 

Watch the 8 minute video of Billy Graham’s 1995 message here:

http://billygraham.org/video/hope-for-oklahoma-2/?SOURCE=BY154ANL2&utm_source=BGEA+Today+email&utm_medium=bgemail&utm_campaign=bgemailnewsletter&utm_content=04.16.2015+email+1

 

Finding Treasure

Do you like treasure hunts? As a child I was captivated by pirate stories and their adventurous pursuits of buried treasure. ‘X’ always marked the spot on some deserted island, if you could only find the ‘X’.

Did you know God has a lot to say about treasures and even treasure hunts? In Matthew 13:44, Jesus tells a parable of a man who discovers treasure: “The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had and bought that field.” I imagine most of would do that too, if we found a hidden treasure of great worth, sell everything to possess it.

Job was a pretty well-to-do guy before and after his trials. In his sufferings he reflected that all a man’s treasures cannot save him. (Job 20:20) And despite his extreme suffering Job said he treasured God’s word more than his own daily bread. (Job 23:12)

Proverbs 2:4 advises us to live lives of adventure and pursue the treasure of understanding God’s word. Elsewhere, we are counseled to pursue the treasure of wisdom. And there is much more in the bible about treasures gained and treasures lost.

Did you know that YOU are God’s treasure? Exodus 19:5 tells us that we are treasured by God, if in fact we are his children. Jesus tells us that we should store up treasures in heaven. Unlike our earthy treasures, heavenly treasures can’t be ruined by a falling stock market or destroyed or stolen.

I suppose everyone pursues treasures of various kinds, hoping they will bring happiness. Even when our heart desires to pursue Jesus, we still have a tendency to cling to our earthly possessions. This was the case of the rich young ruler who wanted to inherit the kingdom of God. Jesus knew the man’s heart was obsessed with his riches and told him to sell everything he had, give to the poor, pursue riches in heaven, and follow him (Jesus). (Mark 10:20)

It seems that God is not so much concerned that we come to possess treasures, but what kind of treasures we seek and what we do with them. A common theme when people experience life changing crises is that they come to evaluate the things, people and relationships they treasure. Better yet that we discover and meditate of the quality of our treasures before crisis comes upon us.

As you think about your daily routines and your life ambitions, what treasures are you choosing to seek? As the old knight said in the Indiana Jones movie, “Choose wisely.”