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In A World of Uncertainty, We Have Assurance in Christ

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“In peace I will both lie down and sleep, For you alone, O Lord, make me dwell in safety.” Psalm 4:8

“Rejoice always, pray without ceasing, give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you. Do not quench the Spirit. Do not despise prophecies, but test everything; hold fast what is good. Abstain from every form of evil. Now may the God of peace himself sanctify you completely and may your whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. He who calls you is faithful; he will surely do it. Brothers pray for us.” (1 Thessalonians 5:16-25)

In reading these two passages of scripture in my quiet time, it dawned on me that, through God’s grace, He is my assurance and my certainty in times when things are not. This is something I know, but for some reason, I need the reminder because I let stress and anxiety overshadow that fact.

Now, please read all of Psalm 4 to really appreciate that statement, especially verses 6 and 7. Go ahead … I will wait …  Now that you have read Psalm 4, do you understand? 

In the Psalms, David tells us not to sin if we get angry but to ponder the things in our hearts, offer the right sacrifices, put our trust in the Lord, and lastly to sleep and dwell in safety.  When we read 1 Thessalonians we read commands - commands to rejoice always, pray all the time, give thanks in all things, avoid stress and strife, not to despise, to test all things, hold on to what is good, and stay away from evil. The Lord calls us to be faithful and blameless. 

How do these two passages bring us assurances in Christ and tie together? In 1 Thessalonians 5:24, we see that God is faithful. We see this in Psalms 4 as well, which is why David was able to sleep and dwell in safety. David knew where his safety came from. He knew who he could count on, even though he had lots of reasons to be fearful. David – who ran from enemies, lived in caves at times, and made massive mistakes – knew who to turn to for forgiveness, for help, for security, and for safety. The Lord was faithful to David each time, too. Just like we see in 1 Thessalonians. We have hope because we have a Lord who is one of hope and truth, who is holy and sovereign, and full of grace and love. He just asks that we come to Him in faith, repent of our sins, and walk-in obedience with Him. He desires us to have a relationship with Him and to be close to Him. In this time of uncertainty, are you clinging to Christ the King? Are you walking close to our Lord and Savior? 

Things are hard right now. They are scary, unnerving, and even frustrating; but we serve and love a Lord who never changes, never gives up, and who knows what tomorrow holds. The Lord who created our universe created you and desires you to come to Him in right sacrifice, by confessing your sins and walking with Him. 

How are you dealing with those feelings and those things? Are you getting angry or are you going to you Lord and seeking His face in all of this? Are you seeking His will?  Most importantly, are you asking Him what He wants you to learn or know in what is going on?  What is the Lord teaching you in this time or asking you to do? 

If you are seeking ways to grow closer to Christ, reach out to someone you look up to who can show you the right ways to read your Bible and pray. If you do not have such a person in your life, reach out to the church or women’s ministry to help you find someone so that you may be discipled as Christ commanded us to go and do (Matthew 28:16-20). There is nothing sweeter than spending time with the Lord, and the more you do, the more you will dwell in His safety and peace – even if the world around you is not.

Meaghan Hart

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in Hope

Learning to Live with Open Hands During Seasons of Change

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See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland. (Isaiah 43:19)

Change. None of us like it. Rarely do we seek it. Even the word can strike fear in our hearts. Yet life is full of it.

Recently, I have undergone many changes in my life. So much so that it has seemed not one thing has stayed the same. My health has dramatically changed. My extended family has gone through turmoil and looks nothing like it did several years ago. The ministries I have been involved in for many years have been stripped away, and I’m having to rethink where God would have me serve. The house I have lived in for 21 years – the one I raised all of my children in - is about to be sold. My husband’s job of 18 years changed, which meant that our finances changed, our insurance changed, our doctors had to change, our daily routine changed, etc. And I left a church that I had been attending for 25 years, which meant friends and relationships are changing even as I write this.

So, what do you do when faced with that much change? Does your foundation shake? Do you crawl into a ball and retreat? Do you put your best foot forward and bravely push on? What is the answer?

But God.

Hebrews 13:8 says, “Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and forever.” Wow! What great news! Despite all the changes going on around me, there is One who never changes! One whom I can cling to who is always the same.

Psalm 18:2 says, “The Lord is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.” That is a foundation that will not shake! He is a rock, a fortress, a deliverer, a stronghold! What an amazing truth!

These changes have stripped away parts of me that I had come to rely on. Things of this world that I had equated with who I was, good things - ministries, friends, family, health. etc. Through the years, we get comfortable with the ways in which God is using us. The things we are involved in become who we are, and the way people see us becomes who we think we are. Through these changes, God began showing me a new way to see myself. A way where change doesn’t have a say - a new stream in the desert.

During this season of change, I have been cleaning out and getting rid of things to prepare to move. On one hand, this has been another source of change, to get rid of things that have defined and been a part of our family for years; yet on another hand, this has been a cleansing process. I have learned that, through the years, we all allow “junk” to gather in our hearts, just like we allow it to clutter our closets. Sometimes these are even good things, but we begin to let them define us instead of being defined by who we are in Christ. We accept labels such as prayer warrior, Sunday School teacher, caring friend, church member, mission advocate, responsible family member, etc.

None of those are bad things, but they are not who we are. They might be what we do, or how God is using us at a moment in time, but our identity is truly defined by who we are in Christ and that can never change! A person bought with a price, one who has been saved by grace, redeemed by the blood of the Lamb – that is a person who is the same regardless of any outward changes going on around them. They are a servant of the King, and what they do or where they live or who their family is or who their friends are or the state their health is in – all of that can change, yet everything in Christ still remains the same!

We are just passing through this earthly life. This is not our final destination, so cling not to things that change. Hold loosely to the blessings and pleasures of this world. Live with open hands to what God gives and what God takes away. Yet hold tightly to the One who never changes! Grasp on to the One who is steadfast and sure! He is faithful!

Paula Folsom

 

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