Washed by the Rain

Living in Southern California, you learn to be wary of the rain.

It’s not that the rain is bad – more often than not, we are in desperate need of more precipitation. However, if it rains too hard, for too long, all at once, we quickly have problems. That’s because our cities aren’t built to handle the rain. Mudslides and flooding ensue. What at first seemed like a minor inconvenience, quickly turns into a catastrophe.
The same can happen in our personal lives. The storms seem to build on top of each other and before you know it, the downpour you thought you could handle, spirals out of control. The water floods our lives.

However, as I was recently reminded by a Need to Breathe song, the same water that can cause the floods and mudslides, can wash us. In other words, God often uses the tough times in our lives to purify us, to sanctify us, and to draw us closer to Him. The rain may be overwhelming, but His grace is even more so. And it’s often during the torrent of tears that we experience this most profoundly.

The rain can sweep us away, or the rain can wash us clean. It’s in our response to the bad times that this is determined.

We can choose to let God use the pain, or we can choose to let the pain consume us.

We can choose whether to praise Him through the storm, or oppose Him because of it.

We can choose whether the storm will refine us, or whether the water will drown us.

Our response may not change whether we experience pain, but it will determine whether we draw closer to God as a result of it.

May we increasingly allow the rain to purify us, sanctify us, and make us more like Christ. May we not be awashed in it, but instead, may we be washed by the rain.

 

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Heart’s Delight

Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart.”Ps. 37:4

There are some verses in the Bible that seem to be made for greeting cards and Christian college campuses. Jeremiah 29:11 is one of them. Psalm 37:4 is another. These oft-quoted verses are used as a band-aid to heal hurting hearts. We repeat them as assurance that the pain or uncertainty we are currently suffering from will not endure forever.

And like many things that are frequently repeated, over time, I fear that these verses may have been misconstured. Consider Psalm 37:4. What it states is:

Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart.

What people hear is:

If you like God enough, He will give you what you want.

However, just as with most things in life, we have to understand what comes first, in order to understand what comes second.

First – Delight yourself in the Lord.

What does this mean? It means that we find our pleasure in Him. Like a schoolgirl who marvels at every action that her young crush makes, we are finding our joys and our meaning in the words and actions of our Savior. We are thrilled to learn more about Him. Every chance we have to spend with Him, we take it.  Apart from Him, our lives mean nothing. With Him, we have everything.

Second- He will give the desires of your heart.

Follow me here (because I’m hoping this translates in writing.)….If we’re finding our pleasure in the Lord, what then is the desire of our heart?

What is that we long for? What are we striving towards? What is that we want?

Our desire is for Him.

If we’re finding our pleasure in God, then what our hearts want is more of Him.

And He’s promised that this is what we’ll be given.

As our joy increasingly grows in Him, He’ll give us more of that joy (See John 15:9-11, Acts 2:28).

As our hearts are more in love with Him, He’ll give us more of that love. (See Romans 5:5)

As our minds are increasingly focused on Him, He’ll give us more of His wisdom (James 1:5-8).

Because in receiving more of Him, our hearts are truly delighted.

And we have everything we’ve ever wanted…. And needed.


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