Your Brother Daniel
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Confessions:
Struggling to Truly Trust in God
It seems that when we most need
to trust in our Savior, trust says, “hasta luego, baby,” abandoning us to our
torment. I presently face the prospect of losing all my teeth, and I don’t know
which way to turn. I try to trust that the Lord will guide me, but I am
experiencing obstacles. I reason within myself, “God has let others down – How
can I know that He won’t let me down also?” In light of this concern, can I
truly embrace His promises like:
·
Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by
prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the
peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and
your minds in Christ Jesus. (Phil. 4:6-7)
However, instead of peace, I have
been experiencing torment. I sought God to understand how I could fully trust
Him in light of the disappointments I see among Christians. While many of the
brethren reaffirm that they have found God completely trustworthy, I remain
haunted by those few cases where I can find no redeeming explanation for their
tragedy. I’ve repeatedly asked my Lord for wisdom in this area, but it seemed
that none was forthcoming.
Perhaps I was not yet open to the
wisdom that He was giving me. I was repeatedly reminded of the famous passage
from Proverbs 3:5-8:
·
Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own
understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and he will make
your paths straight. Do not be wise in your own eyes;
fear the Lord and shun evil. This will bring health to your
body and nourishment to your bones.
Perhaps I have been leaning too
much to my own understanding. I had been allowing my understanding –
“insisting” that I first have to have an answer to my question before I would
commit myself to fully trusting Christ – interfere with trust. Consequently, instead
of finding “nourishment to [my] bones,” I was reaping the torment of fear.
While our Lord promises that He
will liberally grant wisdom (James 1:5), He doesn’t guarantee that He will
answer our every question. Peter had asked Jesus about the fate of John.
Jesus answered hypothetically: ““If I want him to remain alive until I return,
what is that to you? You must follow me” (John 21:22). And even with only this
minimal response, the disciples misunderstood Jesus and concluded that Jesus
would return before John died. Clearly, we cannot handle certain knowledge,
even glorious knowledge.
Years ago, before I knew Christ,
He encountered me in the midst of a pool of blood. I was dying from a horrible
chainsaw injury. In an instance, He revealed Himself to me. Suddenly, I knew
that He was love, power-to-the-highest, and that He would see me through this
debacle. I was so certain of what He had revealed that when my surgeon informed
me that I would have to immediately begin exercising my half-cut-off wrist, I
blew him off, certain of this unknown God’s sovereignty over my life. Even
though I had been correct about His sovereignty, I made a wrong assumption –
that my efforts didn’t matter at all. As a result of this, I lost the mobility
of my hand.
We cannot handle some knowledge
without it mishandling us. Therefore, in His wisdom, Jesus withholds it from us
until we can handle it. Instead, faith and trust must be our source of light
and evidence (Romans 11:1). This certainly doesn’t mean that wisdom and evidences
are for naught. God gladly provides us with evidences (Acts 1:3; 2:22; Deut.
4:34-38; Exodus 4) and encourages us to seek wisdom.
However, there are doors that
wisdom alone cannot open. I had been standing in the dark outside of one
such door, demanding an answer before I would step into the light of trust. God
had been giving me an answer, but I wasn’t hearing it.
God had also been giving Job such
an answer, but Job too was having a hard time hearing it. The prophetic Elihu
tried to bring his problem home to him:
·
Why do you complain to him that he responds to no one’s
words? For God does speak—now one way, now another—though no
one perceives it. (Job 33:13-14).
Why wasn’t Job perceiving God’s
answer? I think that, often, it is because we think more of ourselves – our own
righteousness and reasoning – than we ought. Consequently, we are not always
receptive. Job was convinced that God had treated him unjustly.
Consequently, he was only responsive to proving that he had been righteous. He
therefore required a divine confrontation to knock some sense into his head.
God had asked him a series of questions regarding what he knew and what he
could do (Job 38-41). It soon became apparent that Job failed on every account.
If Job could not answer any of God’s questions, why did he feel confident in
his indictment of God? The conclusion was inescapable – Job lacked the wisdom
and knowledge by which to bring any indictments against God! Job therefore
confessed:
·
“You asked, ‘Who is this that obscures my plans without
knowledge?’ Surely I spoke of things I did not understand, things too wonderful
for me to know. You said, ‘Listen now, and I will speak; I will question you,
and you shall answer me.’ My ears had heard of you but now my
eyes have seen you. Therefore I despise myself and repent in
dust and ashes.” (Job 42:3-6)
There is nothing the matter with
wisdom. However, when we have too high of a regard for our own “wisdom,”
we lose receptivity, like a dirty pair of eyeglasses. Job had had too high
regards for his own reasoning. Ironically, this prevented him from trusting in
God and hardened him against hearing. However, God mercifully chastens us with
our own opinions to show us how our pride and its prickly fruit cost us:
·
“He [God] may speak in their ears and terrify them with
warnings, to turn them from wrongdoing and keep them from
pride, to preserve them from the pit.” (Job 33:16-18)
The more we trust in ourselves,
the less we trust in God. Unless our Lord chastens us, it is inevitable that we
will lean to our own tragic and depressing understanding, and with this,
away from God’s comforting understanding.
How could I trust in God in view
of certain tragedies that I couldn’t reconcile with such trust? I had
unconsciously assumed that if I couldn’t reconcile trusting in God with these
“tragedies,” I couldn’t really trust in God. In this, I had been placing too
much trust in my understanding. I was committing the same fallacy as I have
often accused the atheists of making. I would tell them:
·
Just because you fail to find a purpose for suffering, it
doesn’t mean that there isn’t one. Instead, it is just possible
(understatement) that God’s wisdom might be greater than your own.
In fact, God often warns us that
He will place us in situations where our understanding will fail us – like when
He asked Abraham to sacrifice Isaac (Gen. 22) - and where our faith must be
exercised to a greater extent:
·
Dear friends, do not be surprised at the fiery ordeal that
has come on you to test you, as though something strange were happening to you.
But rejoice inasmuch as you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that
you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed. (1 Peter 4:12-13)
These trials turn us away from a
self-trust and a self-focus to a God-only preoccupation, and I know that I –
and you too – need trials. Without them, there is a great risk that we will
become too comfortable in this world and will not “be overjoyed” when He comes
back for us. Lord, thank You for the trials!
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