A Test Of Faith

This morning we looked at Genesis 22:1-19, at a test of faith as Abraham was called by God to sacrifice his promised son, Isaac. It’s in this incident that we see how much Abraham has matured and grown in faith, as he responds to God without procrastination and with faith, declaring words of faith (that both he and his son will go and worship and he and his son will return and that God will provide the lamb for the sacrifice) rather than the lies which he had spoken when afraid for his life earlier (saying that Sarah was his sister and not his wife.) Speaking in faith is the key to unlocking the miraculous in our lives.

We do not like tests and trials, but James reminds us such things are necessary to bring us to maturity. (James 1:3-4) God does not test us because He is cruel or wants us to stumble, but so that we grow and learn to trust Him more. (2 Cor 1:1-8) Abraham discovered a new name for God from this incident (‘The Lord Will Provide’) and received renewed promises of blessing because of his obedience and devotion.

Speaking words of truth and faith over our doubts enables us to grow and to see the miraculous in our lives. Often, the miraculous may look very ordinary (a ram caught in a thicket is nothing special in itself), but God’s timing and provision, even when wrapped in ordinary clothes, are miraculous. God is able to intervene in our lives in ways that others may call ‘coincidence’ but which we know reflect His favour and grace.

Being A Gardener

I am no gardener, but I enjoy beautiful gardens and love walking among flowers. Yesterday I had the joy of spending the day at Woldie’s Lavender and Nature Farm and seeing loads of lavender, wild flowers, bees, butterflies and birds.
 
Wherever there is a beautiful garden, you will find someone who has cared enough to plant beautiful things and someone who has worked hard to bring this beauty to completion.
 
The mundane tasks of weeding, cutting grass, hoeing and tidying must be done regularly to keep a garden looking smart and neat. Careful attention and hard work are essential to a garden.
 
It’s much easier to do this on a reguar basis: as with so many things in life, ‘little and often’ is a gardener’s motto. It’s much easier to remove small weeds than to procrastinate and thus face the problems of more deeply rooted ones!
 
Hosea tells God’s people to ‘sow righteousness for yourselves, reap the fruit of unfailing love and break up your unploughed land.’ (Hos 10;12) We have to ensure we show good things in our lives if we want to reap good fruit. Bad attitudes, careless words and wrong thuoghts have to be dug out with determination and ruthlessness. Good attitudes, kind words and true thoughts must be planted and nurtured. (Phil 4:8, Col 3:15-17, Gal 5:17-23)
 
There is never room for complacency and inaction in a garden. Spiritual growth similarly is something we must nurture, doing our best to provide good soil (breaking up the unploughed ground) and caring for growth with the devotion of a gardener. Effort and ongoing work are always required.

Creative Prayer

There are many different ways to pray! Yesterday at our ‘Churches Together’, we focussed on different Scriptures looking at Jesus as our living water and also painted representations of these verses to help us to focus our minds on these truths. We drank water and thought about how important it is to quench our thirst (particularly apt after the recent hot weather.) We listened to songs on these themes and we asked God to pour out His Spirit on us and on our land. We prayed for those who have lost their homes recently because of fires and thought about the power of water.

Here are some of the artwork we created:

Waiting In The ‘In-Between’ Times

In January 2013 I sat in our church building and heard a sermon from Stephen Burgin from Luke 9, when Jesus sent out His disciples. God spoke to me through verse 2: ‘Take nothing for the journey—no staff, no bag, no bread, no money, no extra shirt.’ (Luke 9:2) I did not fully understand what God was saying at that point, but I knew He was calling me to set off on another journey with Him, one that would lead to me leaving the job He had provided for me at Hope House School, a job I loved, working among people I cared for deeply. At that point, Mark Burgin was the pastor here and I thought he would be here for ever. I had to take the scary step of talking to Garry about this call, of talking to my boss about no longer feeling I could stay at the school, and I was probably more shocked by their acceptance of these conversations than I was by God speaking! What made this even scarier at this point was I knew that I was being called to give up things, but I had absolutely no idea what I was being called to. So I identify very much with Abram setting off on a journey, knowing he had to leave all they had acquired and accumulated in Harran but not knowing where he was going or why. It is not a comfortable thing to have God speak to us. Though there is the promise of blessing here – great blessing, the promise that ‘all peoples on earth will be blessed through you’ (Gen 12:3) – there is also much uncertainty, doubt and questions when God speaks to us. We do not have all the answers to our questions; we do not have all the answers to other people’s questions! We simply know that God has spoken, and this speaking revolutionises our lives.

God speaking to people is a miracle in itself, but it is interesting that there is often a long period between this speaking and the fulfilment of His promise. Such was the case for David (anointed king of Israel as a young man but not crowned over the whole country until the age of 37) and for Abraham (whose journey of faith started, it seems, at 75 but who did not see a son born to him and Sarah until he was 100.) During this period between the promise and its fulfilment, it can be difficult to hold on to God. There were many days of doubt and frustration for me between handing in my notice at school and being appointed as one of the pastors here, and most days I had to go about my ‘ordinary’ life, doing mundane things. Yet what God promises, He also does, and so on 4th January 2014, Garry and I were inducted as pastors here. If you are in the season of the mundane and wonder when you will ever see the miracles happen again, you are called to serve God, to worship Him, to keep on running the race and not give up in that difficult ‘in-between’ time, but keep holding on to God’s promises in faith. The mundane may make up the majority of our lives, but if we will do what God tells us to do, if we will listen to the voice of the Lord and obey it, then we too will see the miraculous in our everyday lives.

From Partial To Complete Fulfilment

Dave spoke this morning from 2 Samuel 5:1-5, a very significant passage in the history of David, for it was during this period that he was finally appointed king, first of all over Judah and then over Israel. David, one of the most popular Old Testament characters, may not have got everything right all the time, but he was a man after God’s own heart, and the heart matters to God. David was 30 when he first became king, but then had to wait another 7 1/2 years before he was crowned king of all Israel.

He had not had an easy life, and there was a long period between Samuel’s anointing of him and this moment. During those long years, he not only had to endure problems in his own family (with his brothers scorning him) but also opposition from Saul, who tried on more than one occasion to kill him. David refused to lift his hand against Saul, despite having the opportunity to kill him on at least two occasions. He was prepared to wait for God’s timing. This is a valuable lesson all of us need to learn. Moreover, we have to acknowledge that sometimes we do not always see the promises fulfilled (see Heb 11:39-40); there is a need to wait for the revelation to come to pass (Hab 2:3).

We have seen this in our own church’s history, from the early beginnings in the 1950s when a few people met in rented rooms before believing God and building on Beever Street. Frequently, God’s promises came that these premises were too small, leading to an extension being built and then ultimately to our move to Market Street in 2010. We have seen God do miracle after miracle of provision, but still there is so much more He has promised us. We believe there is much more to come, that this is a period of partial fulfilment of God’s many promises to us, but we long for that complete fulfilment which God has promised and which David saw. May we not grow weary of waiting, but continue in faith as we wait for the appointed time to come.

Ears To Hear

Listening to God is probably the most important thing we can do. John makes this clear in the letters to the 7 churches of Asia where the phrase ‘Whoever has ears, let them hear what the Spirit says to the churches’ (Rev 2:7, 11, 17, 29, 3:6, 13, 22) is the conclusion to each letter. This merely echoes what Jesus also said when He was on earth (Matt 13:9, Mark 4:9, Mark 4:23-25) and also the message God frequently gave to the prophets (see Jer 23:3-6, Ezek 3:7)
Listening is more than simply hearing; we have a proverb reflecting this when we say something ‘goes in one ear and out the other.’ Ezekiel makes it clear that the problem is often being unwilling to hear what God is saying; Is 28:23 reminds us that we need to ‘pay attention’ to what we hear.
Communication needs active, alert listening as well as articulate, clear speech for it to be successful. If we are to pay attention and really hear God speak to us (something John 10 makes clear is God’s desire for us), then we will have to slow down sufficiently enough to listen and rid ourselves of all distractions. Background noise can crowd out God’s voice; we have to learn to be still before God long enough to hear His gentle whispers to our souls.