Saturday, December 10, 2022

Are You Tired?

 "Today, if you hear his voice, do not harden your hearts as in the rebellion, on the day of testing in the wilderness, where you fathers put me to the test and saw my works for forty years. Therefore I was provoked with that generation, and said 'They always go astray in their heart; they have not known my ways.' As I swore in my wrath, 'They shall not enter my rest.'"

Hebrews 3:7b-11 (emphasis mine)


If you're familiar with the biblical narrative, you may be aware of the story of the Israelites. They spent centuries in Egypt, growing in number, then eventually being forced into slavery. Through a series of miracles, God freed them from slavery and led them through the wilderness for 40 years, eventually bringing them into the land of Canaan, which we now frequently refer to as the Promised Land.

When I read this passage in Hebrews a few weeks ago, I was wandering through my own spiritual, emotional and mental wilderness. I had spent nearly two decades cherishing the self-reliance that had come from building my life around a commitment to singleness. But last April, the Lord broke my spirit of pride, asked me to surrender that self-reliance, and start to pray that He would send me a husband. I felt immediate freedom, but a year and a half into the journey, I found myself questioning whether that was really from Him, whether my wisdom and own careful plans might be more sufficient than waiting in trust for something that may never happen. Wasn't it better for me to just want singleness if I'm never getting married anyway? But then I read this verse, and the warning not to harden my heart, that if I hardened my heart I would not "enter the rest."

Digging into what that actually meant took me down a much longer path, with much deeper implications than me trusting the Lord with my singleness and desire for marriage, and I'm excited to share what the Lord has been teaching me over a series of blog posts. But given the season that we're in as a people - a season of war and division and brokenness and fear - I wanted to give some encouragement from the Hebrews passage before I dive into the much deeper richness of the wilderness narrative.

"For if Joshua had given them rest, God would not have spoken of another day later on. So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for whoever has entered God's rest has also rested from his works as God did from his." Hebrews 4:8-10

Our rest is ultimately found in the finished work of Christ on the cross. Without knowing and understanding and abiding in this, we will never find rest. In John 19:20, when Jesus dies, he says "It is finished." What was finished? Prior to Jesus, the Israelites observed an elaborate series of ceremonial rituals called the sacrificial system to atone for sin. Christ was the ultimate sacrifice, taking the penalty for sin once and for all.

Although so many of us know this at an intellectual level, we also need to constantly remind ourselves to abide in Jesus and in His rest. The Hebrews passage gives us several practical ways to experience this rest:

  • Worship: This passage in Hebrews is quoting Psalm 95, which starts off with praise to our Lord. "Come let us worship and bow down, let us kneel before the Lord our God our maker." (v1) When we are having trouble experiencing rest, we can take our eyes off ourselves and put them on the One who is "a great King above all gods" (v3), who holds the depths of the earth in his hand (v4) and who made the sea and the dry land (v5).
  • Community: Hebrews 3:13 tells us to "exhort one another every day, as long as it is called 'today'." If you find it easy to grow tired, to lose faith, to forget your identity in Christ, this is normal! It's why we're commanded to keep telling each other. So we need to draw into a community of believers who can remind us that we can rest in the finished work of Christ.
  • Serving: In Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus tells us to come to him when we labor and are heavy laden, and he will give us rest. But he doesn't give us a couch and a Netflix subscription when we come to him, he gives us an easier yoke and a lighter burden. Isaiah 55:2 says "Why do you spend... your labor for that which does not satisfy?" One way to find rest is to take on the work that Jesus calls us to, doing it together with Him. (Side note*: this does actually tie into the Hebrews passage, but it would take longer to explain, so see the footnote at the bottom if you're interested.)
  • Repentance: Hebrews 3:13 tells us to exhort one another "that none of [us] may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin." Having a regular rhythm of confession and repentance allows us to continue marveling at God's grace (and our rest), and also keeps us from being deceived by sin. In Psalm 139:23-24, David asks the Lord to search him and know his heart. Likewise, we should be asking the Lord to reveal the sin that we can't see. 
  • Scripture: Hebrews 4:12 talks about how the word of God is living and active, discerning the thoughts and intentions of the heart. We must be plugged into the Bible (the written word of God), and abiding in Christ (the Word of God - John 1:1).
  • Prayer: I am careful to define prayer here as a two-way street. In Psalm 95, we are referred to as the sheep of his pasture, and then there is a reference to hearing his voice. In John 10, Jesus says his sheep hear his voice. When we pray, we draw close to God in fellowship, and we learn to hear his voice.
There is deep hope for us, no matter how vast the wilderness seems. One of the most striking learnings that came from digging into the wilderness narrative is that it could have ended after two years. After only two years, the Lord showed the people the land He has for them, but they saw the giants in the land and they forgot the strength of their Lord. So he took them through the wilderness for another 38 years until every military-aged Israelite except for Caleb and Joshua (the two spies who saw the giants but also saw their all-powerful God and argued it was time to go conquer Canaan) had died. We are in the Promised Land because of what Christ has done on the cross, but understanding that at a deeper level is necessary for us to learn to truly experience it.

* Hebrews 4:8 talks about how Joshua was not the ultimate Sabbath rest. There is a link between Joshua bringing the people into the Promised Land so that they are not like a "sheep without a shepherd" (Numbers 27:17) and Jesus being the fulfillment of that (Matthew 9:36). Immediately after the link is a verse about praying earnestly for the Lord to send out laborers into his harvest.

Saturday, June 11, 2022

Surrender to the Surrendered Lord

 The themes of confession, repentance and surrender have been prominently swirling through my mind and out into my conversations over the past few months. I've been finding myself wanting to exhort both those who are walking with Christ, and those who are not, to just surrender your life to the only One worth surrendering to, and the focus of that exhortation (in my mind) has been to showcase the benefits of surrendering, to talk about how hard it is, to encourage people to persevere.

But as I was walking and contemplating what I wanted to write, I realized we need to start with something far more important.

A lot of people, Christians or otherwise, have this view of God being up in heaven creating arbitrary rules for his own amusement and looking down at us and being like "dance monkey, dance!" We see God as being much like us when we play the Sims: directing our Sim into a swimming pool, going into build mode, and removing the ladder in order to see the animations that come as the Sim helplessly drowns. It's understandable why, with this view, we would be unwilling to climb into the metaphorical pool.

Is this an accurate view of God?

Let's start with the word "Lord." The clearest verse in Scripture that describes what it takes to "become a Christian" might be Romans 10:9, which says "because, if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved." Strong's defines the word translated as Lord as "he to whom a person or thing belongs... the owner; one who has control of a person." And so there are two key takeaways: 1) being saved requires a transfer of control over my life from ME to someone else and 2) the one who is Lord is Jesus. It's important that we know that all throughout the New Testament, it is consistently Jesus who is referred to as Lord, and not God the Father.

This is important because...

Back around Christmas I started reading my 4-year-old nephew stories from the Jesus Storybook Bible. As we read, he started to grow really fond of Jesus, and would get excited when we'd get to the end of a story and I would ask "and who is the warrior God was going to send?" (etc. etc. depending on whether we were talking about David and Goliath or Daniel in the Lions' Den) Shortly after Easter, it seemed like it was time to read about what happened to Jesus on Easter, and I had a slight worry about whether I was going to traumatize this poor 4-year-old boy when I had to tell him that his beloved Jesus was going to die, but I trusted the author of the book and the 20 parents who had recommended it, so I read him the stories.

Throughout the entire story, there are references to the fact that Jesus' death by crucifixion was:

  • planned long before it happened
  • the only way that God could restore His relationship with humanity
  • going to be very difficult for Jesus
  • the very reason that Jesus came into the world
  • an act of surrender: He could have chosen not to go through with it, or to come down from the cross at any moment
And so, when God says "the way to be saved is to surrender to Jesus", He is asking us to surrender to the one who surrendered. We are not surrendering to a God who asks us to obey for His pleasure or amusement; we are surrendering to the Lord who gave far more than what He could ever ask us to give in return.

***

Since this is supposed to be a blog about singleness, I'm going to just awkwardly tack this on here to make it relevant. One of the ways in which many believers are unwilling to surrender is in their behaviors and attitudes around dating, marriage and sex. We don't believe that Jesus satisfies, we think He has forgotten us, and so we justify sin. I could expand on this a lot here but all I want to say for now is: Stop it.