Good
Morning All,
Psalm 18:6; “In
my distress I called upon the Lord; to my God I
cried for help. From his temple he heard my voice, and my cry to him reached
his ears”
When I was in college, I had
a couple of classes with an instructor whose methods and manners were quite
different from my thoughts of what they should be. He could have just walked of the local
commune. He had hair that looked like it
hadn’t been (or couldn’t be) combed in a few weeks. He shaved once a week whether he wanted to or
not. We had an 8:00 am class; it was not
unusual for him to be 10-15 minutes late; most of the students did not
wait. A few of us did because we had the
next class across the hall. He would
come in late, make excuses and then begin his lecture. I really struggled with the way he presented
himself. The man he replaced was a clean-shaven
suit and tie kind of guy.
For about three weeks, I told anyone who
listened what I thought about this guy.
I told how poor an instructor he was.
I told how his preparation was weak and his classroom etiquette was a
little under par. While griping to a
classmate, he asked me if I ever listened to the guy teach? Why? I asked.
Because the guy is a genius, and he was.
He was one of the top men in his field in the upper Midwest. So, the problem that I had with him were the
results of my assumptions and presumptions.
When I let the man teach, he was amazing.
How often do we do that? How often do we place so many structures and
restrictions on our relationships that they often go bad before we even try? Sometimes we go to great lengths to complain
about them to others. Sometimes when we
have stress in any of our relationships, we complain to anyone who will listen
except to the one who can matter the most.
We need to take our distress to God.
We often do not think of going to God with
our disappointments or our anger. We
think that this is a form of sin, so we won’t do it. We go to God with platitudes and half-baked
verbiage that we hear in church. But God
doesn’t want flowery language or “church words”; God wants us to have an honest
and open, prayerful conversation with him.
God already knows our thoughts, fears, desires, and worries. Even if we do not express it, God knows our
heart. The thing is that by expressing
it; we will know our heart. Had I really
listened to my comments about my instructor, I would have heard the distance in
the relationship was mine.
God will hear your cries, even your cries
of distress and anger. He will use his
Spirit to help you if you are faithful in your prayers. A huge part of faithfulness is total honesty
on your part when praying to God.
Anything less will void your cry.
It will come off as sinful selfishness.
Yet God does desire to have a relationship with you and for you to have
relationships with your fellow man.
Trust God to help you build them.
Gracious Father, too often we hold our distress out of fear and
sadness. In doing so we hold onto the
pain of our sin. Give us the strength to
bring our cries to you. Be with those
who are in deep pain and distress. Lead
them by your Spirit to call upon your Name.
In Jesus’ precious name we pray, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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