Strength in the Lord

The LORD is my strength and my shield; in him my heart trusts, and I am helped;
my heart exults, and with my song I give thanks to him.
(Psalm 28:7)

Here in Cherokee we continue the ongoing work of Flood Relief, now in the middle of our third week.  We are making progress, moving houses off the clean-up list, but there is still a lot to do.  The community has really come together to provide financial relief to the flood victims, and we are doing our best to meet the needs that we know about.  The need is great, but our God is greater still, and by His grace we will continue to help those in need.

Still, in the middle of helping others, I thought it might be good to take a moment to write about helping the helpers.  After three weeks of blood, sweat, and tears, our volunteers are exhausted, physically, emotionally, and spiritually.  How do you nurture your own spirit when day in and day out you are nurturing others?  How do you keep your love of neighbor from drying up like the caked mud we’ve been mucking out of basements?

Here are a few thoughts to encourage the encouragers:

You are not the Savior

When you show up to help someone in need, the gratitude and kindness you receive can often be payment enough.  But it can also go to your head.  You are providing something that they cannot do for themselves, you are a much needed kindness, you are a light in a time of darkness, but you are not the Light, you are not their Savior.

The desire to help those in need is good, the longing to give in love as Christ has given to you is beautiful, but you must always remember, you cannot meet their greatest need.  You can give everything you have, but they will still need more.  You can even lay down your life, but there is only one life that was sufficient to meet the needs of a hungry and broken world.

Remind yourself of this: “The people don’t need me, they need Christ.”  Your work should ultimately show others his goodness, his strength, the sufficiency of his care and provision

You are not strong enough

Okay, so that may not sound very encouraging, but bear with me for a moment.

In whatever you do, it is good to know your limitations.  Trying to do more than you are able can lead to disaster, both for you and for those you are trying to help.  The fact of the matter is, on your own you are not strong enough to carry the load of those around you.  If you try you will be crushed under their burden.  On your own you are not wise enough to sort out all the problems of those you are trying to help.  On your own you are inadequate for the situation at hand.

But you are not on your own.

Paul writes in 2 Corinthians, “Such is the confidence we have through Christ toward God.  Not that we are sufficient in ourselves to claim anything as coming from us, but our sufficiency is from God, who has made us competent, to be ministers of a new covenant” (2 Cor 3:4-5).  He is the one who makes you adequate.  He is the one who makes you strong.

When God called Moses to deliver Israel from slavery, Moses was quick to point out his inadequacies for the job, saying, “Who am I that I should go?”  But God reminded him, “I will be with you…” (Exodus 3:11-12).

When you walk with the Lord and serve one another, the very presence of God is your strength and your shield.  His shoulders are strong enough for the burdens you carry, His wisdom is great enough for the problems you face, His arms reach to the farthest corners of the world, His hands have never failed.

Psalm 118:14  The LORD is my strength and my song; he has become my salvation.

Find your joy in the Lord

I think it is safe to say that if you don’t have joy in what you are doing, you won’t do it for very long.  No one willing stays at a job that makes him miserable.  When you are wading through the rubble of people’s lives, crying with them as you realize the magnitude of their loss, all joy can quickly fade.  Love in action hurts, and it can often rob you of your joy.

Don’t let it.  Keep your eyes on Christ, and remember all that He has done for you.  He sought you out when you were lost.  He love you when you were unlovable.  He was faithful to you when you rebelled against Him.  He bore the weight of God’s wrath for your sins though He was sinless.  He died the death that was meant for you, and rose from the dead to give you eternal life.  You couldn’t ask for a greater friend, a greater love, a stronger Savior.

When you consider the “breadth and length and height and depth… the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge,” such a love will fill you with joy; joy overflowing into the lives of those around you.  Keep your eyes on Jesus, keep your mind on his love, his grace, his mercy; and let that be the foundation of yours.

SDG

Majesty up Close

“Bless the LORD, O my soul! O LORD my God, you are very great!
You are clothed with splendor and majesty”
(Psalm 104:1)

 As a kid, I never saw a lot of Bald Eagles, except in picture books or on TV, or maybe at the zoo.  The Majestic Bald Eagles the captions would always read; our national symbol, regal and dignified, representing the aspirations of a nation, soaring on the wings of eagles…

You can imagine, then, the sheer excitement and wonder that overwhelmed me a couple of years ago when I actually saw my first Bald Eagle in the wild, right here over Cherokee.  There was a little terror in the event, it swooped right in front of my car, but it was thrilling nonetheless.  This year, especially, I’ve seen several in the area, and it is really a wonderful sight.

Until you get up close.  From a distance these are majestic and awesome creatures, but up close we see what they really are – big, dirty, birds.  Eagles primarily eat fish, but since the rivers and lakes here are pretty well frozen over, the eagles turn to other sources – small animals (even pets), and carrion, what they find dead or steal from other predators.  Then I saw a video (link here) of one town in Alaska where the Bald Eagles have actually become quite a pest.  The more I see, the less majestic they get.  If you want to keep that young, innocent, aura surrounding our national symbol, it’s better to keep them at a distance.

This got me to thinking about our use of the word “Majesty.”  What do we mean when we say that?  Look it up in the dictionary, and majesty refers to the splendor, dignity, and authority of a person or object.  “For purple mountains majesty…” we sing, and truly the mountains are awesomely large and very impressive.

Throughout the Scriptures and in our worship we declare that God is Majestic, that God is clothed with splendor and majesty.  Listen to some of the Psalm as they describe the majesty of God:

Psalm 29:4 “The voice of the Lord is powerful; the voice of the Lord is full of majesty.”

Psalm 93:1–2 “The LORD reigns; he is robed in majesty; the LORD is robed; he has put on strength as his belt. Yes, the world is established; it shall never be moved.  Your throne is established from of old; you are from everlasting.”

God is truly majestic, and all His works display the splendor of His majesty:

Psalm 111:3 “Full of splendor and majesty is his work, and his righteousness endures forever.”

The beauty of God’s majesty, however – that which separates the majesty of God from any other thing we might call majestic – is that God’s majesty doesn’t alter even when you are up close and personal.  Unlike the Eagles, who are better at a distance, when God reveals himself to you personally, in the life, love, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, His majesty is magnified in our eyes.

In 1 Peter1:16-18, Peter describes how the majesty of God was revealed in the person of Jesus, especially remembering the Transfiguration, where the majesty of God was fully revealed in Christ, and the voice from heaven declared, “This is my beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased.  Listen to him.”  Jesus lived for the glory of God by giving his life in love for fallen man.  Nothing could reveal the heart of God more clearly, nothing could demonstrate God’s wisdom and power more simply, nothing could express God’s love more personally.

When you come to the Father through Jesus His Son, you come face to face with His majesty.  The closer you get to God, the more beautiful He becomes, the more glorious his grace, the more majestic his splendor.

Were the world a scroll and my life a pen it would be impossible to fully describe the beauty of God’s love for us in Jesus Christ, impossible to exhaust the riches of God’s mercy in the cross of Christ, impossible to say too much about the Majesty of God.

May my every thought, word, and deed, may every sermon and every song, may every prayer and post, may my life be lived to ascribe to God the majesty due His name!