Good Morning to All,
Genesis
32:24; “And Jacob was left alone. And a man wrestled with him until the
breaking of the day.”
This
is a passage from one of those stories in Genesis that many people
remember. This is where Jacob wrestled
with God. As daylight began to break, God
touched Jacob’s hip and the socket popped out.
Jacob holds on for a blessing and then also receives the name of Israel
which means “striven with God and men and prevailed.” This is always one of those interesting stories,
imagine wrestling with God, all night, and then winning. This goes against what most of us think. God is this all powerful being that would
never lose to a mere man in anything.
But here we have it.
So we have Jacob wrestling with God, all
night. This is kind of amazing but I
would guess that most of us have at one time or another wrestled with God all
night. Have you ever sat up all night
while a loved one was in the emergency room or even having emergency
surgery? Have you ever felt that total
loss of control in a situation and just sat there helplessly? Have you ever looked out on the crops that
you were growing and watch them wilt to nothing over a few days? Have you ever had the job that you loved
eliminated in a “restructuring” of the company?
Most of us have spent a night wrestling with God.
What form that wrestling takes is always
interesting. It often has, at some
level, our bargaining with God. Just as
we think that there is no way Jacob could actually wrestle with the all-powerful
Creator, we do the same thing. We think
we can offer God something that he doesn’t have, but we do, and then he must
want it so we offer it up. We can do
this all night. We struggle and wrestle
with God all night. If we struggle hard
enough, we will be emotionally, physically and spiritually drained.
The amazing thing is that God allows us to
do this. He does this so we will see
that, in the end, we are not really struggling with God but we are struggling
with ourselves. It is our sinful nature
that leads us to think we have a better alternative to offer God. It is often at these times that we experience
what Paul speaks of when we see that God’s strength is revealed in our
weakness. In our time of greatest
weakness, we see that we can only rely on God’s mercy to survive.
That is what Jacob really received; he
received God’s mercy. We do as
well. God shows us his mercy even when
we choose to wrestle with him and try to convince him that somehow we know
better. He lets us wrestle until we see
that he is our only hope. So as you find
yourself wrestling with God know that his mercy will sustain you and will bring
to you the comfort that you seek.
Father
of all mercy, there are so many times that I struggle with you but your grace
keeps me in your arms. Continue to
protect me from the devil’s arrows. Be
with those who are especially struggling at this time and lead them to know your
love. In Jesus’ precious name we pray,
amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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