Fuel for Your Journeyنموونە
Look to God
“Turn full your soul’s vision to Jesus, and look and look at Him, and a strange dimness will come over all that is apart from Him.” These words were written in a diary by a woman named Lilias during the early 1900’s. Lilias had just finished up a very long and hard year of work and was recharging on a vacation with friends. She had sought out a quiet place to be alone and reflect when she noticed something. She wrote in her diary, “It was just a dandelion, & half-withered – but it was full face to the sun, & had caught into its heart all the glory it could hold.”
Exhausted, weak, and running on empty, Lilias saw a picture of herself in this half-withered flower. But Lilias was inspired by the fact that the flower had turned to the sun, absorbing its rays to restore its life. This picture reminded her that in her exhaustion, she had only to turn her face to God, soaking in his love and life.
In Exodus, the Israelites find themselves in a similar state as Lilias. In their journey through the desert to the Promised Land, they are without water. However, unlike Lilias, they do not look to God in their exhaustion and despair. Instead, they complain to and attack their leader, Moses. They even question whether God is really with them!
In response to the people’s complaints, Moses turns to God for help. God leads Moses to a rock and tells him to strike it with his staff, the same staff that brought plagues of judgment upon Egypt. When Moses does so, water flows out of the rock, and the people are provided for.
From this story, we learn that in our exhaustion and need, all we must do is look to God. Like God’s people in Exodus, we often sin by putting God to the test. “Prove you’re really with us by making our difficult circumstances go away,” we demand from God. God responded to the Israelites sin by graciously providing them with life-giving water. And God responds to our sin by mercifully giving us life in Christ.
Just as the rock in Exodus was struck with Moses’s staff, the staff that was a vessel of judgment, so Jesus was struck with God’s judgment. Jesus died for our sin, our sin of questioning God and putting him to the test. And he did so that we might receive mercy, that we might receive life.
In light of this provision, we can continue looking to Christ for life. When we are drained by school, work, or parenting, we can look to God who sustains us. When we are fighting battles in relational conflicts, physical illnesses, or unemployment, we can look to God for direction and strength. God won’t always answer our prayers in exactly the ways we asked, but he knows exactly what we need.
As a song based on the line in Lilia’s journal sings,
“Turn your eyes upon Jesus
Look full in His wonderful face
And the things of earth will grow strangely dim
In the light of his glory and grace”
Scripture
About this Plan
Are you anxious about the direction your life is headed? Do you feel too weak and exhausted to face the next stretch ahead? In examining the Israelites’ journey in Exodus, we learn how God takes care of us in our own journeys! God wisely leads us. He gives us strength in our weakness. He provides for our daily needs. And He revitalizes us in our exhaustion.
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