Salvation

Meditating on Exhaustion

Meditating on Exhaustion

The weary mom of young children, the fatigued father working long hours to provide for his family, the strained student faced with constant deadlines, the worn-out nurse on a 24+ hour shift, the tired farmer up all night with a sick animal, the young person with daily physical or mental challenges, the older person whose body is worn out but who has to keep going somehow.

Does it all seem relentless and meaningless? Days are endless with work.  Nights may not always render refreshment, and then we awake to meet the same demands and exhaustion.

Remembering that all things work together for good to those who love God and who are called according to His purpose (Romans 8:28), what is so good about exhaustion? Today I read a devotional about exhaustion from Teri Ong’s Prayer Therapy Book, Chambers College Press. She references the Israelites’ exhausting burdens caused by the demands of Pharaoh, “Do more, do more, do more!! And I will also force you to do more all on your own!  You will not have resources to help you fill your quota of bricks!! Work, work, work!!”  What cruelty!! How utterly impossible to meet this extreme demand!! What unmitigated exhaustion!! What a hopeless situation!! Well did the Israelites cry out for relief!!

My friend, this is exactly the hopeless situation we are in when we try to meet the exhausting demands of the Law. The Law, rightly so, says “Do more, do more!! You are required to fulfill every aspect of my demands!! Though you do not have the resources to fulfill my commands, you must still satisfy my every word, or else you will die!!” How exhausting. How hopeless. How impossible. Well do we to cry out for relief!!

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Believer, your physical exhaustion may be there to remind you that Jesus has fulfilled the demands of the law for you. In His 33 years of life on this earth, Jesus exhausted Himself in perfectly obeying the law. He sweated out his labor of love in the hot streets of Jerusalem and in the cool garden of Gethsemane. He toiled for you on the splintered cross of agony and shame. All this so He could say to you, “Come unto me, all ye who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you for my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” Praise God for our own exhaustion if it reminds us of Jesus’ great exhausting work for us and for our salvation!

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Unbeliever, if you are weary and heavy laden in trying to make things right with God through your own works and efforts to fulfill the law of God, you are like the Israelites seeking to serve the cruel taskmaster who demanded that they make thousands of bricks but who did not provide a way for them to do that. The Israelites were truly stuck in a hopeless situation, and so are you. You absolutely cannot fulfill the demands of the law. But Jesus absolutely can and absolutely did. He is the way. Seek Him. Seek His saving work and His forgiving mercy.

Once we understand that Jesus has done the truly, and agonizingly exhaustive work for us, then what?

Live for Him in thankfulness. This means seeking to obey His Word, not to earn salvation, but to show thankfulness.

But after that the kindness and love of God our Savior toward man appeared, not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ghost; which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Savior; Titus 3:5

Knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified. Galatians 2:16

May each of you rejoice and rest in the saving work of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ and then live for Him, with thankful obedience.

Mrs. Mary Brown, Principal

Stand Still and See the Salvation of the Lord

Stand still and see the Salvation of the Lord.  Do you remember when Moses said that? In front of him to the east was the Red Sea, shimmering in the sun, over one hundred miles wide, thousands of feet deep. Behind Moses to the west were thousands of Israelites, as far as the eye could see, - weary mothers clinging to their young children’s hands, older children watching for direction from their fathers, fathers keeping an eye on their family and flocks, the elderly leaning on their walking sticks – all stopped dead in their dusty, desperate escape from the tyranny and cruelty of Egypt by this vast, deep, unyielding expanse of water.  And behind this group of refugees, galloping closer and closer, Pharaoh and his thousands of horses and chariots, with a cruel and confident thirst to reconquer. What were the hounded, tired, and now trapped Israelites to do? There indeed seemed to be no escape, no way out. Where was the Lord? Had they come this far in their trust of Him only to find Him no-where, and perhaps not even true?

Do you ever feel that way? How often have we and other believers over the ages wondered where God was in our trials? Or worse yet, how often has our heart told us that maybe He is not trustworthy after all? In some way or another, these feelings and thoughts of ours are determined to falsely dictate God’s character to us daily as we experience either the small irritations of life or the intensity of the trials that buffet and threaten to, and sometimes do, overwhelm us.

Stand still and see the salvation of the Lord. Our faith in God needs to be revived by the One Who gave us that faith. We don’t have faith in and of ourselves.  It is a gift of God. It is supernatural. How is it that we believe that God created the world in 6 days? How is it that we believe the virgin birth? How is it we believe that Jesus rose from the dead? Yes, we have the Word of God that tells us these truths, and yet, there are some who have read the Bible and have heard these things, and still don’t believe. God gives to his children a living faith to believe. And though we can falter in our faith and even sometimes not believe that God can help -  just like the Israelites who let their eyes determine the situation (walking by sight, not by faith) - we can also ask God to give us faith, to renew our faith, to strengthen our faith to believe that what He says is true and to believe that He will never leave us nor forsake us. God does not turn a deaf ear to the cries of His children who are seeking to be strengthened in their faith.

When your faith falters, or is dim, cry out to your faithful Heavenly Father. Be bold to believe in Him. And then...

Stand still and see the salvation of the Lord!

Mrs. Mary Brown, Principal