Many Times, Many Ways - Part 2
Last week,
Hebrews prompted me to celebrate the nature of our communicative God. It is the
foundation that must underlie so many other questions—but there are other
questions that come up….
My sister
recently traveled to Israel, and while there met a traveling evangelist who
prayed for her—very specifically, without having been told any details. She
later found his website with a video
of his story—quite amazing in the way that God spoke to him and through him. It
sparked two things in me: a longing and a question.
I long to
be so close to God that I see him and hear him in that way! Thirst! Thirst that
the limitless heavens cannot quench. A thirst so great, designed for an
infinite God. Thirst for a personal interaction. Desire for him. Desire for
union, consummation. And even, me of little faith, affirmation that he cares
that much about me. Speck me.
But like
trees trying to hold the full moon, the ungrasped longing provokes questions as
well. Why, why are there not more stories like the evangelist’s, where people
have so clearly heard from God, where God does the impossible to communicate?
Why in my dark night is there not a burning bush? Why is my friend still stumbling
for answers and guidance?
After
reflection, sitting inside staring out at the dark night sky pierced with light—for
our good.
Our good?
But I feel
alone.
Dark.
Dear Lord,
I long to hear you more intimately, deeply. Don’t you want that too? But sometimes
you seem silent? For my good?
Protection—sometimes
we can desire the experience more than him. He will not be a cheap genie,
throwing out golden tokens to delight our whims. Glory is Hebrew kabod, carrying the idea of weight, and
Greek doxa, with the connotation of
beauty. Importance and value, weight and beauty. This is our God. Not a genie.
He alone can satisfy, rather than a mere passing experience.
An
invitation—we may walk in unbelief, distraction, not willing to obey his voice
if it did come. His silence and distance is then an invitation to turn back to
him, to seek him with all of our heart. We often do not miss something until it
is taken from us. Will we treat lightly the Word of God? God told the Israelites
he would strip them and lead them to the empty wilderness—there, in the desert,
he would allure them. Their need would wake them to himself (Hosea 2).
An act of
grace—thus, if we find ourselves in the above, it is an act of grace—to whom
much is given, much is required (Lk.
12:48). If he speaks to us, and we are not willing to obey and spurn his
word, woe on us! And we long for it, but do we truly know the holiness and
awesomeness of our God, before whom mountains tremble and flames of fire
accompany him? Before whom death comes upon any who touches the mountain or the
ark of the sign of his presence? On this side of the Jordan, who can truly see
him and live? Who could touch the surface of a burning star?
A
provocation and stirring—longing! Lack of water sparks thirst. Distance stirs a
heart-yearning to be with. The vast heavens provoke a desire to grasp and grow
beyond ourselves. And the rarity of the voice of God and the impossibles, the
silence, the dark nights of the soul provoke such a longing for him. He is
lifted up as valuable! We treasure light when it is dark, for then we give it
value. The ancients loved the stars as light in dark, and systems of navigation
to the lost. Need sparked value. May we value God! Long for him, lifting him up
as our treasure!
To speak of
the value of the mundane—but the beauty is our God who causes galaxies to quake
and the burning sun to rise is in the minute, mundane. In a muddy manger. In a
boat by the Sea of Galilee. Eating at a dinner table and cooking fish on the
beach. He enters our time and space and speaks to us in the everyday
circumstances, the quiet routine of our devotions, through the casual
conversation with another Christian. The daily is limned in sacred beauty by
the presence of Emmanuel.
Growth—without
faith it is impossible to please God (Heb.
11:6). It is the ones who have not seen but believe that are blessed (John
20:29). And oh! I long to please him! This silence, lack of clear guidance,
lack of definite voice is his sanctifying work for my good. Building me up in
faith. Giving me what I truly need. Without the clear audible voice or the
miraculous interventions that I wish would pepper each day, I grow in faith and
in childlike trust. I search more
deeply for him and his voice. I turn to him. A training. Is this not what I truly
want? Is faith not what he truly wants? To navigate by the stars requires far
more training, intent study, gazing to know the stars than to be guided by a
GPS system that automatically spits out guidance. There is a greater maturity
on the navigator’s part; a deeper “relationship” with the stars. So, too, a
silence can cause us to grow and cause us to study his heart and his ways more.
To tune us
to his heart—does a husband always bring out a megaphone and an air blimp to
communicate? It shows the poor relationship if so. Is there not a much greater
union of heart when husband and wife just know?
May I study his ways so much that I sense him in the silence, that I don’t need
those audible voices and impossibilities to know him, hear him, see him, sense
my Lord with me. May his mere whisper steer my heart and feet. May his stars
pour forth speech to a receptive heart. May the Spirit breathe freshly through
the Scriptures because I am so tuned to him. Like the fine balance of planets
and gravity dancing around the sun, may I move so in harmony with him!
Yes, for my
good! To know him, his heart, deeper—rather than just the experience. May the
darkness drive us to seek him! And he will be found, as certain as the stars
are there, even if hidden by clouds.
“But from there you
will seek the Lord your God and you will find him, if you search after him with
all your heart and with all your soul” (Deut. 4:29).
“You will seek me and
find me, when you seek me with all your heart” (Jeremiah 29:13).
Each of us hears the Shepherd's voice in a different manner at different times in our lives. The man your sister met heard directions in his thoughts which he needed in order to fully come to faith. Some of us "hear" God's voice through people whom God has placed in or lives. Balaam heard it from a donkey!
ReplyDeleteYou, my friend, clearly hear his voice through the Bible. The way on which you eloquently compose your blogs, threaded together with portions of Scripture, could not be accomplished unless God were speaking to you!
I understand your desire to hear His voice more clearly. He will honor your request. As Jesus said, "If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him?" (Luke 11:13). Keep asking! And listen in expectation.
Each of us hears the Shepherd's voice in a different manner at different times in our lives. The man your sister met heard directions in his thoughts which he needed in order to fully come to faith. Some of us "hear" God's voice through people whom God has placed in or lives. Balaam heard it from a donkey!
ReplyDeleteYou, my friend, clearly hear his voice through the Bible. The way on which you eloquently compose your blogs, threaded together with portions of Scripture, could not be accomplished unless God were speaking to you!
I understand your desire to hear His voice more clearly. He will honor your request. As Jesus said, "If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him?" (Luke 11:13). Keep asking! And listen in expectation.