This week I was sent a PowerPoint titled “Someone Cares”. The PowerPoint contained various pictures of people, along with the following words, and background music “It’s too good to be true, I can’t keep my eyes off of you.”  The words? -   “Had a bad day? Feel alone and abandoned? Convinced nobody cares about you? Think no one cares about your life; your work? Are you sure nobody sees your success or failure, and doesn’t care if you live or die? You are wrong. Somebody is very interested in everything you do. When everybody else quits on you…we never stop thinking of you.” The PowerPoint concluded with the logo of the Inland Revenue.

From this we see that the PowerPoint is not really about love or care at all; it’s a threat and a reminder that you can’t get away with anything. Unfortunately sometimes we can view God this way: as if He does not really care at all.

When things get tough, or things go wrong, we can feel that God must be out to get us. The truth is that things don’t always go wrong because God wants them to, but in all things God can challenge us and encourage us in our relationship with Him.

God is not out to get us; He is not out to trip us up. Neither is our heavenly Father prepared to be sidelined simply because, dare we say it, we have become too familiar with our view of Him. He is out to make us His. He’s out to challenge us with His awesome presence: He’s out to encourage us. Let’s think about that as we read the following verses.

2 Thessalonians 2:16-17 May our Lord Jesus Christ himself and God our Father, who loved us and by his grace gave us eternal encouragement and good hope, encourage your hearts and strengthen you in every good deed and word.”

Paul wrote these words to a church that in a worldly sense should not have been there.  When Paul had initially gone to the Thessalonians and preached the gospel for three weeks, he’d ended up in a lot of trouble. People were attacked and the whole city was in uproar. Paul had to do a runner and ended up preaching in Berea. Some of the Thessalonians from ‘the city in uproar’ also did a runner and came after him. Yet a church was still birthed in both Thessalonica and Berea; that’s encouraging.  The church was going to have its share of problems, as can all fellowships; but one thing was certain. It was God’s church, and grew under the guidance of a heavenly Father, in the power of the Holy Spirit, and because of the work of Jesus whom the Spirit clearly pointed to in all things. As well as this, the individuals indwelt by the Spirit were going to be able to reach out to each other and the community with the fruit and particular gifts of the Spirit that God graciously gives to each person.

In light of this, and by way of encouragement we now look at three snapshot pictures to see some of the gracious ways God helps His children to trust in Him more fully.

(1) A man who had to let go

Once upon a time there was a man who thought he was dead. His friends were concerned that he might go along to the cemetery one day and bury himself and so they took him to a doctor.  This doctor spent a few hours with him, showing him all sorts of slides and diagrams to prove to the man that dead men did not bleed. Finally, the man who thought he was dead said, “Yes I can see that its absolutely true: dead men do not bleed.”  With that the doctor took a pin and pricked the man’s finger. The man looked at his finger in horror and then at the doctor and said,  “Doc”, you’ve got it wrong! Dead men do bleed.”

Throughout the Bible God challenges us to let go of our autonomous, fragmented thinking and totally rely on the Lord. This should be an encouragement to us. God will challenge us, and in His grace and mercy He does work and will continue to work in all manner of ways to encourage us to let go of all that hinders and holds us back. His desire for us is that we lay hold of all He provides by way of relationship and encouragement as we learn to rely on Him for everything.

One man who was encouraged and challenged in this way was Jacob, and in Genesis 32 we pick up the story at a point in his life when he was struggling badly. At this point in time Jacob is a 97-year-old schemer. Now picture what’s going on in your mind’s eye, and put yourself in his shoes, so to speak.

Many years ago you’d been a little dishonest in seeking to bring about God’s blessing your own way. The result of this was that you ended up having to run from your brother Esau. Many years had now passed, and through the ups and downs of life you now had a large family. In that family unit were wives who were jealous of each other and slave girls who’d given you more children, yet had been little more than tools used by your wives as a means of getting at each other and trying to earn your love.  You knew God, and you listened to God, but at times you spent a little too much time listening to self. Now, at our entry point into the story, you are, about to go back into the Promised Land.

As you move towards the Promised Land you are met by a group of angels, and call the place Mahanaim, meaning ‘double-camp.’  In this encounter you have a timely reminder that God was with you; yet this encouragement was about to go right out of your mind.

Apart from this, you’d sent word ahead of your entourage to inform Esau of your imminent arrival, and then heard that Esau (a man who’d wanted to kill your: Gen 27:41), was on his way to meet you with 400 men.

Not surprisingly Jacob was worried about all that was going on, as I am sure we would all be. But the main thing that Jacob needed to learn was to trust God completely and stop adding his own interpretation to what God was saying and doing.  That night, because God is gracious, Jacob ends up wrestling with the Angel of the Lord But why?

Jacob had not grasped the concept that God’s gifts are gifts of grace and that the land he is going to claim is also a gift from God that cannot be earned. He also needed to realise that God really did know what was best. In Jacob’s wrestling we see, in a spiritual sense, the role-playing concerning what his life had been like up to that point.

Jacob was a schemer who had often sought to bring about things his own way. Although he had sought God at times, and was not always in error, there were times when it seems as if there was just a smattering of God added to his picture of life, for good measure.  Jacob kept on and on wrestling and eventually God crippled him.

Jacob was now powerless and dependent. He was faced with the glaring fact that he was crippled and unable to overcome in his own strength. Ye Jacob still clung on. The good thing that this desperate man realised was this: He needed a blessing.  So what happened?

The angel said to Jacob, “What is your name” (despite the fact that he would have already known his name).  In giving his name, Jacob had to confess his nature, “heel catcher”  – a manipulator and a schemer. Let’s think about that for a moment.

Imagine what it would be like if, as a baby boy you’d been named ‘Rosebud’ by your parents, or ‘Butch’ when you were a baby girl. All your life you’d kept this secret from your friends, but on you wedding day you had to give your real name. Think of how embarrassing you would find this. In a sense you were exposed.

Jacob was a worried, tired, struggling man, and had to face up to what he’d been like. He had to confess who he was, yet this was not because God wanted to ridicule Jacob; it was a time to encourage him. The angel then gives Jacob a new name, calling him Israel., meaning, ‘Prince / One who prevails with God’.  Jacob now has a prophetic name. He’s not yet there, but is learning to allow God to have complete authority over his life, and not add his own ten-penny-worth to what God says and does.

When we find ourselves in difficult situations we can all panic at times, and wonder what is going on. We can be desperate to find a way out of the difficulty and make plan after plan about how things need to change. Yet in the midst of our difficulty we need to hold on to the word of the Lord, and continue to come to Him in prayer. We need to allow Him to strip away all that, deep down in our lives, we know should not really be there.

We are chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation. This is our position through Christ; yet it is also prophetic; it speaks of what we become in nature and character as we grow in our position in Christ.  But maybe we need to give up adding our own ten-penny-worth to God’s word. For example we need to stop thinking God doesn’t really mind when we don’t deal with things in our lives. We need to stop thinking that God doesn’t really mind when we continue to chug along our own train track of thinking and forget about praying or meditating on His word.  God did not say that “apart from Him we can do nothing” for fun (remembering that this refers to nothing in the ways of God in our own strength alone).  God did not send His Spirit into our lives so that we could neglect Him, or get His Spirit to work to bring about our take on life.

God does mind and has given us His Spirit, and thus, in Him, the ability to do all things in accordance with His Will. As Paul says, “I can do everything through him who gives me strength.” Phil 4:13.

God knows that we don’t always have the confidence or ability to do what He asks us to do; but He still asks us because He wants us to learn to trust Him. Therefore, “I can’t”, should not be added to anything He says; neither should “God understands what I’m going through, He doesn’t mind about this or that, which isn’t quite right,” when His word clearly reveals that He does. Maybe we are struggling with God because He wants us to be more open and honest about our feelings of inadequacy, or even apathy, and genuinely seek His help.

Then again, perhaps we struggle with God because when we read, “I can do everything through him who gives me strength,” we build pictures of ourselves healing the sick, raising the dead, getting better jobs and so on.  When this does not come about we think that God isn’t really there for us.  We have forgotten that asking God to help us desire what is right and hate what is wrong opens the door of fellowship with Him much wider than we can image.

All too often we can say ‘yes’ to God like Jacob did on many occasions, and then add our ten pence worth of thinking. Deep down in our hearts,, if we are open and honest, we know this doesn’t really work. Yet, we go on wrestling our way through life and wrestling with God’s word as if we can make it fit what we want it do.  We need to let go of everything that hinders, because Jesus has come to make us His – totally His.  Jesus did not come to save us out of pity, and He did not come to make us great, and He certainly did not come to make us religious in the sense that the Pharisees and Sadducees were religious.. He came to make us Holy, and in Him we see what holiness means for man – He came to make us His.

In Psalm 20 we read, “May the Lord answer you when you are in distress, may the name of the God of

Jacob  protect you”

The God who helped Jacob to face up to what he was really like, and take on all that he was able to become, will also help us if we really want to give up and let go of some of our own thinking, plans and agendas. Perhaps He is already encouraging us to do so.

(2) Lay Hold

In scripture we see that God is in the business of helping people to trust Him. That’s encouraging, and one such person who was encouraged was Gideon.  Think of the prevailing mindset among the Israelites just prior to God speaking with Gideon, and put yourself in their place.

In a modern day local setting what had been happening was something like this (albeit on a much larger scale). You and your family and neighbours would often go out to allotments and plant vegetables. You’d also look after your homes and cars and families. However, every so often a large group of misfits would attack the area and take all your produce as they wrecked the allotments. They’d graffiti your freshly painted homes and smash the windows in your cars; and there was nothing anybody could do to prevent this from happening again and again.  You were too small to deal with the situation, and there were problems within your own community as well. How would you feel?

Israel was in trouble with marauding Midianites who’d teamed up with some of the Amalakites. However their biggest problem was really the strength of their own mindset as they allowed others gods to be worshipped in their midst as well as offering a token service to the God of Israel. But then God, in His grace and mercy, came on the scene; the God of all good things, the One who can encourage even in the darkest of situations.

In Judges 6:13 we read of these words being spoken to Gideon. “The Lord is with you courageous warrior.”  Those words are prophetic, and from Gideon’s response we see that he was very much caught up with the issues of the day.

Yet the words speak of what Gideon is going to be able to become because God is with him. This is ultimately because of God’s grace and mercy seen in that Christ was slain from the foundation of the world (Rev 13:8). Let us also remember that the word ‘Lord’ speaks of one who provides for and protects those under his charge.

Through the actions of the Angel of the Lord, Gideon understands that it is the God of Israel who has come on the scene, and so Gideon names the place of sacrifice, “The Lord is Peace.” Things were about to change.

The first thing Gideon was called to do was deal with some of the idolatry, which had crept into the nation. In one way, the greatest protection we will need is from our old ways that can creep in, and the way we can panic and struggle as we forget the basic need we have to spend time with our heavenly Father.

Then, in Judges 7 we read of how God reduced Gideon’s ‘self-preservation army’ of 30,000 down to 300. With such a powerful enemy to face, it was hardly surprising that Gideon wanted to feel as comfortable as possible in the confrontation; But God knew best, and we read the words, “You have too many men for me – Israel might brag that she did this (defeat the Midianites).  Gideon really needed to see that all was of God, and not personal expertise or achievement; there might be times when he felt totally incapable of doing anything, and would need to remember that God can do everything.

We need to lay hold of the fact that God is in the business of making us His, and we are not always going to feel comfortable about that; but we need to be encouraged. His challenges are because He loves us; the stripping away of some of the things we rely on is because He cares for us; the way He works with us is because He wants to encourage us.

No wonder, David could write:  (Ps 18:30-36) “The one true God acts in a faithful manner; the Lord’s promise is reliable; he is a shield to all who take shelter in him. Indeed, who is God besides the Lord? Who is a protector besides our God? The one true God gives me strength;  He removes the obstacles in my way. He gives me the agility of a deer; he enables me to negotiate the rugged terrain. He trains my hands for battle; my arms can bend even the strongest bow. You give me your protective shield; your right hand supports me; your willingness to help enables me to prevail.  You widen my path; my feet do not slip.”

All too often we can become over familiar with God and in our vulnerabilities build a life that is unsatisfactory and crippling. In light of this, have we ever thought about praying such things as, “I want to see more of you so that I can be in awe of you.”  (A thought process that is totally in line with the thinking in God’s word.) Think about it.

Seeing God as He reveals Himself invokes awe in our lives, and a healthy understanding concerning His greatness. The fear of the Lord is said to bring: wisdom: (Proverbs 9:10), knowledge. (Proverbs 2:5), hatred of evil (8:13), prolonging of days (10:27) and strong confidence (14:26). The fear of the Lord is: a fountain of life (14:27), instruction of wisdom (15:33), and a way out of evil. (16:6). The fear of the Lord leads to life (19:23.), and brings riches and honour (22:4). All these things are ultimately ours because of God’s grace shown to us in the life, death and resurrection of His Son.  When things get tough and we struggle with all that goes on in our minds and find it hard to do what is right, let’s pray that God helps us to be in awe of Him, and not just look for a worldly peace that makes us say, “It’s ok now,” when in actual fact God wanted to do a much deeper work.

Grow well

Time after time Israel sought to stand in her own strength, precariously building on her own ideas. On occasion this resulted in God dealing with her in various ways, so that Israel would learn to stand in the strength of the One who always wants the very best for us.

On one occasion, circa 500 years before Christ, there was a time when Israel ended up in Babylonian captivity due to relying on her own ways and trusting in her own strength. Whilst in Babylonian captivity God worked with Daniel. In one way God was saying, “You as a nation could not withstand the Babylonians in your strength; I can work with one man to change the outlook of the most powerful leader in a pagan nation with my strength.” Think about it.

Pagan leaders often felt that the god or gods of nations favoured their own leaders above all else. Perhaps this is why, on one occasion, the astrologers did not tackle Daniel (Daniel 3), whom they may have seen as a favoured leader among the Israelites. The pagan astrologers picked on Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego instead.  Yet look at what happened, and how it must have spoken to anyone who bothered to think about it.

When thrown into the fire by pagan soldiers, the soldiers, who were employed to protect the King died, whilst Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego remained very much alive. Another person (Angel of the Lord – Pre-Incarnate Christ) was also seen walking with them in the fire; their hair was not singed, and yet the cords that bound them were burnt away.

Nebuchadnezzar and the astrologers were learning something new.  The God of Israel cares for all His people; the God of Israel is with His people, and everyone is important to Him. A pagan king had given Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego Babylonian names, this being a way of saying, “I own you.” In all that God does, our Father says, “no you don’t; they are mine, and one day you too will bow the knee.” Sometime we allow our wrong thinking to own us in that it dictates how we live our lives. Why become enslaved to that which is not going to last, is offensive to God, and, in the long run, doesn’t treat self very well either.

God wants us to grow well, and we need to realise that no matter what we think, nothing on this planet can stop us growing in the Lord except ourselves.

Everything that we will ever need from our heavenly Father is ours because of Jesus; and all things can be overcome in Him.

For example take a look at how the church in Thessalonica came into being. As we have already stated, it seemed, on the outside, to have had no chance of being birthed, let alone surviving. Yet the young believers who made up the church were able to grow because God’s Spirit was with them.

Acts 17:2-9 “Paul went to the Jews in the synagogue, as he customarily did, and on three Sabbath days he addressed them from the scriptures, explaining and demonstrating that the Christ had to suffer and to rise from the dead, saying, “This Jesus I am proclaiming to you is the Christ.”  Some of them were persuaded and joined Paul and Silas, along with a large group of God-fearing Greeks and quite a few prominent women. But the Jews became jealous, and gathering together some worthless men from the rabble in the marketplace, they formed a mob and set the city in an uproar. They attacked Jason’s house, trying to find Paul and Silas to bring them out to the assembly. When they did not find them, they dragged Jason and some of the brothers before the city officials, screaming, “These people who have stirred up trouble throughout the world have come here too, and Jason has welcomed them as guests! They are all acting against Caesar’s decrees, saying there is another king named Jesus!” They caused confusion among the crowd and the city officials who heard these things. After the city officials had received bail from Jason and the others, they released them.”

Paul escaped to Berea, and started preaching the gospel there. People soon turned up from Thessalonica to cause trouble. Yet later on, we find Paul writing to the church at Thessalonica. It was not a church without it’s problems, but was a church nonetheless: people growing in Jesus under the empowerment of the Holy Spirit and through seeking to live out the word of God.

Scripture speaks of us as His workmanship (Eph 2:10), living stones (1 Peter 2:5), and a royal priesthood  (1 Peter 2:9), we being those who receive blessing from the Lord (Numbers 6:24), and are to pass that blessing on to others. We are spoken of as a holy nation (1 Peter 2:9), in that through Jesus we belong to God and are to be like Him. Holiness begins with an encounter and leads to maturity through the working of His Spirit. We are those who have been created for growth (2 Peter 1:5-8), and are spoken of as fellow citizens; indwelt by His Spirit (Eph 2:19-22).  We are those called to serve the living God (Heb 9:14). We are spoken of as the body of Christ (1 Cor 12), and led by the Spirit (Gal 5:16) to become Christ-like in all ways, and using the particular gifts that God has given us by the Spirit ( 1 Cor 3:16), for His glory alone.

Concluding thoughts

Be encouraged. Although Jacob was, at times, a caring and godly man, there were occasions when he added his ten-penny-worth of thinking to what God said.  At times Jacob struggled, and at times he doubted, as can be seen by some of his actions; yet God did not give up on Jacob. In grace and mercy our heavenly Father encouraged Jacob to stop relying on self and place his full trust in God.

Be encouraged. Gideon felt useless before God, and struggled with the circumstances Israel found herself in. Gideon sought to protect his insecurities with such things as a big army (and most of us would probably have done the same!!). Our heavenly Father gently prized Gideon away from his way of feeling secure and overcoming opposition,, and helped Gideon trust God. Life is not always easy and we can feel insecure and vulnerable and ending up building that which we think makes us feel better; but does it really work? Ultimately security comes from putting God first in every situation as we confess our weaknesses, knowing that our Father will not castigate us for being weak, butt will help us to walk more fully by His Spirit. Be encouraged.

Be encouraged. Israel often thought she was strong, and could cut the corners, and get involved in wrong belief systems. Yet look at the events surrounding the life of Daniel. God, in an act of grace and mercy, allowed a powerful nation to imprison many Israelites, and then worked with ones and twos to show that His strength is the real way to overcome all that oppresses. God also revealed that he is with all people (remember Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego), and not just a select few. Don’t drift from God through over familiarity and lack of vision concerning who God is, and what He can do. “Lord, in your grace and mercy, help us to remain in awe of you ” Be encouraged.

Finally, Paul is able to write to a church that had risen out of a rioting town, with vindictive enemies who’d followed him in order to discredit his ministry. As the following verses reveal, life was not always easy for Paul, and he did not always know what was happening; yet He knew the presence and power of His heavenly Father.  Be encouraged.

2 Cor 4:7-10 “But we have this treasure in clay jars, so that the extraordinary power belongs to God and does not come from us. We are experiencing trouble on every side, but are not crushed; we are perplexed, but not driven to despair; we are persecuted, but not abandoned; we are knocked down, but not destroyed, always carrying around in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be made visible in our body.”

Paul, like us, was indwelt by the Spirit, and was aware that God always knew what was best. Even in the midst of great difficulty, God was still present, and always and ever the master of every situation. Paul must have struggled and felt very low on occasion, yet was always able to grow in the ways of the Lord, because of our Father’s grace and mercy.

Be encouraged.

Related Posts