This week has been
one of worry and even a sense of panic for many people on our island of Grand
Bahama. We have all watched the devastation of Hurricane Harvey in south Texas,
and now there is Hurricane Irma breathing down our necks. Many of us have
barely recovered from Hurricane Matthew, and many have not recovered yet. The
question that keeps coming up over and over again is, “Where is God in all of
this?” Some theologians have suggested that it is the failure to answer this
question adequately that has led to so much apathy and agnosticism about God
and faith in our world today.
Whenever
I deal with this issue in a sermon or Bible study, people are eager and anxious
to get answers to the questions they have been wrestling with, sometimes for
years. This is no exception. How and why are we seeing one hurricane right on
the heels of another?
You
all know I don’t believe in coincidences. I believe God guides our steps and
orders our path. This week, we looked at Romans 8:35, where Paul says, “Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?” An
excellent question, to which Oswald Chambers responds, “God does not keep His
child immune from trouble; He promises, “I will be with him in trouble . . .” (Psalm 91:15).
It doesn’t matter how real or intense the adversities may be; nothing can ever
separate him from his relationship to God. “In all these things we are more than conquerors . . .” (Romans 8:37).
Paul was not referring here to imaginary things, but to things that are
dangerously real. And he said we are “super-victors” in the midst of them, not
because of our own ingenuity, nor because of our courage, but because none of
them affects our essential relationship with God in Jesus Christ. I feel sorry
for the Christian who doesn’t have something in the circumstances of his life
that he wishes were not there.
“Shall tribulation
. . . ?” Tribulation is never a grand, highly welcomed event; but whatever it
may be— whether exhausting, irritating, or simply causing some weakness— it is
not able to “separate us from the love of Christ.” Never allow tribulations or
the “cares of this world” to separate you from remembering that God loves you (Matthew 13:22).
“Shall . . .
distress . . . ?” Can God’s love continue to hold fast, even when everyone and
everything around us seems to be saying that His love is a lie, and that there
is no such thing as justice?
“Shall . . .
famine . . . ?” Can we not only believe in the love of God but also be “more
than conquerors,” even while we are being starved?
Either Jesus
Christ is a deceiver, having deceived even Paul, or else some extraordinary
thing happens to someone who holds on to the love of God when the odds are
totally against him. Logic is silenced in the face of each of these things
which come against him. Only one thing can account for it— the love of God in Christ Jesus.
“Out of the wreck I rise” every time.
The thing to hold
on to as we face difficult and uncertain times is that God is with us, even in
the midst of the storm. When we ask, “Where is God?” the answer is, “He is
right by our side.”
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