| (AgapePress) - That
Jennifer Wilbanks was found alive and well is cause for relief. That
the runaway bride was not charged with criminal stupidity at the
least, or for giving a false report to the police, at the most, is
cause for head scratching. But
the issue which brings me to the word processor today is, lessons on
prayer as taught by the man who was to perform her wedding, the
Reverend Alan Jones.
The Rev. Mr. Jones said they were all
praying, "Let her be a runaway bride." She was found -- a runaway
bride. "So," Jones said, "God was faithful."
And boy that chaps my old
control-alt-delete.
We have made God into a puppet. Or
worse, a vending machine. Pull His strings, and He dances. Put a
request in the slot, push the button, and He delivers.
If He does what we asked, He is
faithful.
And if He does not?
God is faithful whether or not He
does what I ask Him to do. God is faithful whether Jennifer Wilbanks
was a victim of cold feet, or the victim of a cold-blooded killer.
When Job had more money than anyone
in his neighborhood, God was faithful.
When Job's entire fortune was wiped
out, God was faithful.
When Job had ten children, God was
faithful.
When Job stood by ten fresh graves,
God was faithful.
Totally misunderstanding where the
attacks on his family originated, and perhaps never understanding
the reason for those attacks, Job said, "Naked I came from my
mother's womb, and naked shall I return there. The Lord gave, and
the Lord has taken away; Blessed be the name of the Lord."
And then the God-inspired author
shouted, "In all this Job did not sin nor charge God with wrong!"
(Job 1:22-23).
What did you say, Job?
God is faithful!
When Job's health was assaulted, his
wife told him that his integrity had failed to protect him and
therefore he should abandon it, Job said, "You speak as one of the
foolish women speaks."
How's that Job?
God is faithful!
"Shall we accept good from God," he
asked his wife, "and shall we not accept adversity?" (Job 2:10).
Did the heroes of faith of Hebrews 11
ask for deliverance when they were persecuted? You bet your
soft-soled sandals they did.
Was God unfaithful because they were
"tortured ... had trial of mockings and scourgings ... chains and
imprisonment ... [when they] were stoned ... sawn in two .. slain
with the sword ... [and were] destitute, afflicted, [and]
tormented"? (Hebrews 11:35-37)
You bet your soft-soled sandals He
was not.
Josh Long and Troy Driscoll were
fishing in a sail boat without a sail on April 25 when a riptide
swept them out to sea. When they were rescued a week later, Eddie
Long, Josh's father, said, "We always held out there was going to be
a miracle."
Thank God -- He sent a rescue boat.
If the two teenagers had died, would
God have been unfaithful?
The Psalmist said, "And those who
know your name will put their trust in you; For you, Lord, have not
forsaken those who seek you" (Psalm 9:10).
Does He answer every prayer we pray,
every seeking of His face, with, "Yes?"
No.
Is He faithful?
Yes?
Connected with the idea of
faithfulness is the idea of trust. When we decide that a "No"
answered prayer violates us, we decide that we cannot trust God. At
that point He ceases to be faithful and becomes untrustworthy.
In Gethsemane, Jesus uttered the
greatest prayer ever prayed: "Father, let this cup pass from me!"
The answer to that prayer was, "No, Son. You must drink the cup!"
And that denial of Jesus' heart-felt,
sweat-drenched, blood-covered prayer was a demonstration of the
faithfulness of the Lord God Almighty.
Why would we think that a God who
dances to our tune is a God we can trust? Why would we think that a
God who works His sovereign will in our lives, regardless of our
wishes, is a God we cannot trust?
Do you think that every prayer you
conclude with the words, "In Jesus' name," guarantees the positive
answer to that prayer?
It does not!
And when God does not answer that
prayer, does He prove himself unfaithful?
The clear message of all of Jesus'
teaching about prayer is that when we are properly asking in His
name, we are asking the same thing He would ask. If He would not ask
that prayer himself, then He won't answer that prayer from us, no
matter what mantra we chant. And it is time we grow up and learn
that.
His faithfulness is never more
apparent than when He says, "No. That is not My will for you. Trust
Me."
To teach otherwise is to rob God of
His sovereignty, and to rob us of our security.
God is faithful, even if He breaks my
heart. |