Wednesday, December 13, 2023

The Jesus Who Will Bake your Cake

 I'm in the habit of reading Dr. Charles Stanley's devotionals (sign up at InTouch.org - they are free, and greatly useful).  Today's was entitled "Our Trials" and it immediately caught my attention (by divine design, I'm sure, since I'm currently up to my eyeballs dealing with little life challenges).

The devotional mentions that we all have trials, both the believer and the unbeliever, and outlines that these troubles can come from various sources:

1) Other peoples' sin.  I've always envisioned this as someone jumping up and down in the "mud-puddle of sin" and anyone nearby is going to get splashed to a certain degree.  The closer you are to the sin, the muddier you're going to get.

2) Spiritual Warfare - Satan attacks anyone who is a threat to his mission, so I guess when Satan trips you up and frustrates your work, that's a good thing.  Looking at the big picture, that is.  You're valuable enough to God to warrant Satan's attention.

3) Our own sin.  Kind of a no-brainer.  It's going to come back and bite us sooner or later.

4) Trials from God Himself.  You can be sitting there minding your own business, and along comes trouble.  

The overall message in the devotional is that no matter what the source of your difficulties, God has a reason and a purpose for allowing them.  He will take them and use them to accomplish something good.  Maybe in you.  Maybe in someone else.  Maybe in a lot of people.  And He will always bless you for your faithfulness in going through the trials in the right way - His way.

I was imagining baking a cake.  All these raw ingredients are in The Bowl That Is You.  You've got some raw eggs, some flour, some sugar, some baking powder...  And it's neither tasty nor useful.   But beat up those ingredients a little bit, and put them through the fire, and they change.  You end up with something really good.  As long as you don't forget the leavening agent, which is Jesus Christ, who makes sure the whole mess is raised up properly, your cake won't fall flat. And personally, if I'm going to get beat up by life and go through the fire, I'd rather not fall flat.

As you enter into a time of trial, don't forget God is allowing it for a reason and a purpose, will limit it to the shortest amount of time necessary, and He will never leave your side as you walk through it.  Trusting Him is a choice.  Keep your eyes on Him and take it one step at a time.  There's blessing on the other side of this.


Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Clay in the Potter's Hands, Part II

Our women's Bible study group at church is currently doing "Giving God Your Future" by Christa Kinde.  It's an excellent study and I highly recommend it.  We're nearly done and as a person who tends to be a worrywart, I've learned a lot about the peace and serenity that comes from trusting a most trustworthy God.

As we go through the attributes of God and why He is more than capable that we are of directing our futures, I've also been looking at how God has directed my past, which I believe is necessary to feel comfortable in totally entrusting my future to Him.  

Looking back at the top three or four really hard stretches of my life, I can see exactly how I was blessed on the other side of each of those challenges.  And while the hardships were tough to bear at times, the blessing far outweighed the difficulties, so much so that I'd go through it again if I needed to in order to get what I got.  The blessing has been more than commensurate with the hardship involved.

While each tribulation has resulted in blessing, collectively the experiences are changing me. Looking back on how I reacted to various periods of crisis, I find myself more content to accept that God has a plan and purpose rather than to complain and bemoan the situation.  I find myself more comfortable not having to know exactly what is coming and how God plans to provide for me through it, and just accepting that my role is to keep my eyes on Him and trust that He will make a way even when -- no, especially when -- I don't see it.

I love to feel these changes as they are happening.  That edifying and uplifting feeling of being the clay under the Potter's skillful and all-knowing hands is more valuable than anything else I've ever experienced.