Last spring, I struggled a lot with trusting that God was in control of my life, that He wanted what was best for me, and that He was still faithful. During May, I really got a lot of answers for that, and really saw God come through with incredible, and unfathomable faithfulness that made me ashamed to even question. But since I’ve been here, it’s now trusting God not only with His character, but also His sovereign will, His purpose, and His ability to speak to us-actually, my ability to listen.
Yesterday, a new friend I’ve made here, Patrick, came to our hotel, to talk about music and God. He asked me why I thought that God told the Israelites to go a longer route when escaping from the Egyptians through the Red Sea in Exodus: I think it’s no accident I read that story the day before. I showed him how the bible says that God led them, not through the Phillistine country which was shorter, because He feared they would give up and turn back if they faced opposition. It’s funny how that begins to apply to our team, and it’s amazing to imagine all of the details that He divinely appoints, even that He leads us away from so that we don’t give up and try to go back to the familiar.
Then he asked why God led them through the wilderness for 40 years, and next thing I know, we were talking about Job. He had never heard or read the story of Job, so I explained that Job was a man who won God’s favor, and because of his faithfulness and obedience, God richly blessed him. God gave him more than he needed, and Job still woke up every morning to pray; he even prayed for atonement for his kid’s sins so they might be blameless before God too. Until one day, the Devil told God that Job only loved God because of the blessings He had given him, and God allowed the Devil to test Job to show Job’s heart was really in it. He lost his family, his livestock, he got sores all over his body, and he was in misery, and God did not answer him or explain why this was happening. To make it worse, his friends were trying to convince him he deserved it or he did something wrong, but Job wouldn’t believe it and he stayed faithful to God without slandering Him. Finally, God spoke and He didn’t apologize, He didn’t justify His decision, He didn’t even explain the torture was from the Devil, He simply said, I am God.
And to that, Patrick gave me an incredible metaphor that I’m sure will stick with me for the rest of my life: It’s like if you have a friend who has always been kind to you, always given you good things, always loved you. If one day, they hurt you, or they do something you don’t like, or they leave you for a while, you wouldn’t deem them a bad person. Would you suddenly betray them, despite all of the wonderful things they’ve done for you, despite your wonderful relationship? I realized, I would of course forgive them. How much more is this true for God? His faithfulness and His goodness endures even when we can’t see Him working, even when He can’t feel Him moving, and even when He doesn’t act the way we want Him to. And it’s good that we can’t put our God in a box like that. It really challenged me to remember all of the incredible things God has done, and not to doubt all the things He will do.