Navigating UncertaintyPavyzdys

Navigating Uncertainty

8 diena iš 16

Asaph wrote Psalm 73. We don't know very much about him, but we learn from the Psalm that he maintained his personal integrity and blamelessness at great cost. While his efforts to be righteous seemed futile in the light of his circumstances, he also had a battle raging in his heart when he saw how carefree and trouble-free the wicked people around him seemed to be.

One can almost feel the anger building up inside him, and he admits at the beginning of the Psalm that he almost lost his grip:
- But as for me, my feet had almost slipped
- I had nearly lost my foothold.
- For I envied the arrogant when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.

You can almost hear him shouting: "It's not fair. It's not FAIR! IT'S NOT FAIR!!!!"

But something arrested his slide down the slippery slope of discontent. Something prevented him from plunging into the abyss of self-pity and the mire of comparisons.
What was that something? Asaph went to worship.

That's what going to the sanctuary was all about:
Being reminded that God is greater and longer than our circumstances.
- We see the here and now - God sees it all.
- We think it will never end - God knows when it will.
- We think the wicked are invincible - God knows about their downfall.
- We think we are all alone - in worship, we experience God's presence and concern.
- We think that we have to cope on our own - in worship, God empowers us.

I find it tragic that one of the first things people who have a hard time do is stop attending church. This is a big mistake - it is precisely when we have doubts and are being swamped that we should go to worship. When we don't understand, when the reality of evil seems overwhelming, and when we feel like we are out of strength, let us turn to worship.

Steve Wiggins says: "Take the biggest thing that's got you down and stand it upright next to God - anyone can see who's bigger now!"

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Navigating Uncertainty

During and after the Pandemic, we have found ourselves in uncertain waters. Familiar landmarks are gone, the surroundings have changed, and everything we thought would never change has had to change. How do we cope with all this uncertainty? These 16 devotions offer a couple of perspectives.

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