God Surprises

My wife, Wendy, says she doesn’t like surprises. It wasn’t always this way. When we were younger, I’d say, “Road…” and she’d say, “…Trip?” and then we’d be off on an adventure. We would jump into the car and go, just for the fun of being together in a new place. With every child we added, however, (six times!), spontaneity became more difficult. Right before adding our fourth child, I secretly planned a surprise for Wendy, and God moved in such a way that none of us will ever forget it.

This was back in 2004, when we were about to travel as a family to China to pick up our first adopted daughter, Darcy, who would be 13 months old. Wendy was neck deep in preparations, and obsessed with constant thoughts for this baby who had been selected for us. Will she be afraid of us? Will she bond with us? What special needs might she have? And on, and on. I felt like we needed to get away for a few days as a couple before going to China, as our lives were about to change forever with the new baby, but I knew she would never agree to a getaway. Another trip to plan? Fuhgeddaboudit!

She’d have to be kidnapped. So that’s what I planned.

Unbeknownst to her, I canceled my upcoming seminar in Boston the next month, and made reservations for two at The Grove Park Inn, in the mountains of North Carolina, for the same days. I would just not tell her that I cancelled my seminar, so that we’d all have to get into the van on the day of our trip to “drop Daddy at the airport.” After all, I had written the details onto the calendar beforehand…I just never crossed them out.

My two biggest problems? What to do with the kids, and how to pack Wendy’s bags with her necessaries without her knowing…

And I had brilliant solutions—BRILLIANT!!!

For the kids, I arranged with two families to meet our family at an exit beyond the airport—after I intentionally drive past and miss both airport exits to drop me off for my flight—and they would take care of the kids, and Wendy and I would continue on from there to Asheville. Little by little, over a few weeks’ time, I squirreled away some of the kids’ clothes to a rarely used closet, and into small suitcases for their sleepover with friends. The slow disappearance of clothes would go unnoticed.

For Wendy, the solution was elegant. I needed to know what makeups and skin and hair products to bring, but also what clothes and shoes would be comfortable for her, and I would have to pack most of her bags at almost the last minute. (It’s one thing to steal children’s clothes from clean laundry baskets over a few weeks, but taking my wife’s favorite makeup before she puts it on, that very last day? The surprise would be over before we even left the house). And now, cue my brilliance:

Hey, let’s make a checklist ahead of time, for our trip to China, so that we can be sure we have everything we need when we pack.”

Wendy likes the idea of organization, so I thought she’d jump all over that one. Not so fast. Making a checklist required more work for Wendy, and she was sweating out a lot of details with the adoption agency, and the Chinese and American governments, and she was focused on jumping through all the hoops to complete the official requirements and paperwork to expedite the adoption. She wasn’t going to take the time to make up a checklist for her makeup—she was just going to put off making those decisions until the night before jumping on the plane to Beijing.

Cue Brilliant Plan B: “I see you’re busy with a lot of stuff… how about I make an inventory list of the items you might need from your drawers and cabinets, and then you can just highlight the ones you want to take to China, and check them off when you’re packing?”

She seemed to be okay with that. (Honestly, I don’t think she was paying much attention to packing details. In the middle of January, we were still a month and half out from going to China in early March. My Grove Park Inn reservations were for three days near Valentines’ Day)…

I quickly discovered that a plan can be both brilliant and stupid at the same time. I realized this when I opened Wendy’s makeup drawer, ready to catalog her items. Husbands, have you ever looked inside your wives’ makeup drawers? Wendy had hers neatly arranged into compartments, but there was a dizzying array of tools and makeups. And I would have to assign names to them, like “eyelash curler/crimper,” and “eyebrow tweezer,” and “scissor handled tweezer,” and “foundation brush.” I had to catalog lipsticks by color—“red lipstick in ribbed silver case,” and “natural red-brown lipstick in black case,” and list them separate from chapsticks or “moisturizing lip balm…”

Travel size Q-tips and cotton balls and facial soaps and mascaras and makeup removers and facial lotions and skin lotions and six different types of shampoos and conditioners. Hair driers and curlers and straighteners. Feminine products of different shape and size. I catalogued them all!!! It took me a few hours to go through the cabinets, and the resulting checklist was shocking in detail and length. I typed it up and put little blanks beside each item, (for the check mark), and proudly presented it to Wendy.

She was very nice about it, but I could see that the list was way “over the top” for the need it was supposed to fulfill. She set the list aside for “later.” Much later. In fact, I don’t think she ever looked at it again. So much for my brilliant plan to pack Wendy’s essentials. So far, the only one getting surprised was me!

Time was running out, and Wendy’s avoidance to the first checklist kept me from wasting hours in the closet. I had no brilliant plan for packing Wendy’s clothes. I tried to pay attention to what shoes she preferred, the clothes she slept in, the dresses and blouses and pants and accessories, and the jewelry she wore. But I couldn’t pack those things ahead of time, and certainly couldn’t pack the things that she would reach for on the day of the trip. If she reached for particular shoes to get out the door, and I had already packed them, that would be a sure giveaway. And I realized that she would choose different shoes and clothes for a getaway to the mountains in February, and depending on the weather and the type of activity that we would be doing. What a dilemma!

In the meantime, the kids were awesome… I told them my plans, and told them not to tell Mommy. It was a risk, I know, but I wanted them to be in on the surprise. I wanted them to feel a part of something big and wonderful, and to experience the joy of preparing something happy for someone else, and I wanted to let them know ahead of time that they would also be staying with their wonderful friends. This way, the whole family would have a part of blessing Mommy, and something to look forward to.

(Also, they would probably see me taking extra suitcases down the back stairwell to the garage on that Saturday morning, or doing other strange things, and I didn’t want them asking me in front of Mommy what I was doing, or asking Mommy directly).

Well, the big day arrived, and the kids did their part to get themselves extra ready, and to collect their own toothpaste and toothbrushes. I finished packing my things as Wendy was getting ready, so I could be sure that she was going through her whole routine. While she was showering, and since our closet was separate from the bathroom, I was able to collect her clothes and underthings, sweaters, socks, hoses, and shoes without her noticing. I had reminded her and everyone else what time we needed to leave, and tried to instill some urgency for her to get ready quickly. Maybe I shouldn’t have done that, in retrospect, but I really needed her to get done and out of the bathroom for good so that I would have time to grab all her bathroom necessaries.

When she came out, I asked if she could help get the kids something quick to eat before we go, as we were down to the ten minute mark. I mentioned I needed to get a few more things, and then I would join everyone downstairs, ready to go. So she went. Finally! My heart was beating fast now, as I had very little time to make a lot of important decisions.

Secure in the knowledge that Wendy was done with the bathroom, I enacted another brilliant idea. I would take ALL the items in the bathroom drawers. I opened each drawer and took each compartmented tray out, stacking them up, and I grabbed the hairdryer and a couple of other loose implements to throw on top. I was just getting ready to pick up the trays in my arms when I heard footsteps coming right up to the bathroom door. I grabbed a newspaper and placed it on top of the pile of trays and bathroom items and swooped everything into my arms to face away from the door.

Wendy opened the door and started heading past me to the toilet, and I pivoted around her to keep my back to her. Miracle #1: She didn’t ask me why I had an armful of stuff, and she didn’t see what I had in my arms…

Heading out the bathroom door, I called over my shoulder that we needed to hurry. “I’m going to miss my plane!” (True statement). And I prayed that she wouldn’t need any last makeup after she used the bathroom.

I ran the load in my arms down to the minivan and got the kids into their seats. I had everything taken care of, but I grew concerned that Wendy wasn’t out already to get into the van. I ran back inside… “Come ON, honey—we’ve got to GO!” I yelled, from the foot of the stairs. Anyone in the house would have heard that yell, no matter where they were.

For a few breathless moments, I didn’t hear anything, and then she responded, sounding confused. “I… I can’t find my lipstick!”

OH. NO. She’s looking through her drawers! Not only will she not find her lipstick—those drawers are as bare as the day before we moved in! There is nothing in them!!!

The realization that “the gig is up” hit me, and I burst out laughing, and the only thing I could think to say is, “I got it already!” I was sure she would say, “What?” and want me to explain how all of the bathroom items completely disappeared, but instead, she said, “Oh! Okay!”

I was stunned. Miracle #2: God must have put a holy fog over Wendy’s mind as she stared at an empty drawer, looking for lipstick… and my assertion that I already had her lipstick? Yeah, that’s never happened before, and probably will never happen again. That was Miracle #3, that she didn’t think it was strange for me to have thought ahead for her and brought her lipstick in the van with me.

She has to know something… maybe she’s just playing along, I thought. Just in case the gig was still “on,” I ran out to the car and fished her lipstick out of the back before she came out, and jumped into the driver’s seat. Moments later, she came out into the garage like everything was fine.

All RIGHT, God!!!! I don’t know how You did it, but we’re still going, here! Thank You!!!

I think the kids were about to burst during the twenty-five minute drive to the airport… The next stage of the plan was coming up… I had to make sure I was so deep into telling something complicated to Wendy that I “accidentally” miss the exit to the airport.

Fast approaching the airport exit, I eased the van into the right lane so that she would assume I was going to take the exit until the last second. I launched into some intricate logistics explanation, and I ignored Wendy saying softly that I needed to get over into the exit lane. She interrupted me at the last second, “Jeff, move over!” but it was too late.

Oh, I’m sorry, I was distracted.” (True statement… I was distracted by all the complicated interactions that had to happen perfectly until just the right moment).

Okay, fine!” she said, “There’s another exit coming up in a mile… make sure you take that one or you’re going to miss your plane!” So I started talking again, immediately deep into the description again, except this time, Wendy kept giving me directions while I was talking. “Okay, stay in this lane. Okay, the exit is coming up.” I kept talking over her directions. “Okay, get into the exit lane… Get INTO the exit lane… JEFF! MOVE OVER!!!” I kept talking over her escalating demands.

and… we missed the last exit to the airport.

JEFF!!! What are you THINKING!?! YOU’RE GOING TO MISS YOUR PLANE!!! I can’t BELIEVE you MISSED THE EXIT AGAIN!!!

The combination of me looking like an idiot, and Mom’s outrage, was too much for the kids. We all erupted with laughter, giddy that the miraculous surprise went the entire distance.

WHAT IS GOING ON HERE!?!” Wendy was giving me the “you’ve got some ‘splainin to do” look.

I began with, “Surprise!” And then I explained that we were not dropping me off at the airport, but that, in fact, we were dropping the kids off at the next exit, where the Knights and Brights were waiting to receive them… And that I had packed everyone’s things so I could “kidnap” her and continue on to a surprise destination for three days and two nights.

We pulled into a parking lot to meet our friends. They all had big smiles as I told the short version of the story about how it all came together. Dazed, Wendy heard my side of the morning’s events, and how God had orchestrated the final steps of the plan. None of what happened registered at the time as odd, but looking back, Wendy was amazed at the number and size of the clues that were left.

We laughed for the next hour in the car, until we reached Winston-Salem, at all the preparations and the coordination of people and events to pull off the surprise. We stopped at Hanes Mall so that Wendy could look over what I had brought for her, and yes, we needed to go in and do some supplemental shopping. I don’t remember what we had to buy, whether it was clothes, or shoes, or some combination, but it was a small price to pay for the element of surprise.

The Grove Park Inn was amazing. The shingle style architecture, with lots of natural wood and stone, and built in the 1930’s, is one-of-a-kind, and the mountain setting and views were special. The package came with dinner both nights, and breakfast each morning. The best part is that we could choose to eat at their highest-end restaurant, The Horizons, for one of the two dinners.

When we went to Horizons, we were almost the only customers that night, and the waitress encouraged us to enjoy ourselves, and take our time. We ordered the cheese tray as an appetizer, and were both shocked by the size of the tray, and all the different kinds of specialty cheeses and crackers on it. There was some wonderful shrimp bisque soup, and fruit, and salad, and Ostrich medallions, and for the main course, Surf and Turf, featuring Lobster and Kobe Beef Steak! The profiterole desserts were fantastic, too. When I saw what the meal would have cost if it wasn’t included in the package, my jaw dropped. We never would have spent that kind of money on a meal. How wonderful to spend three hours together, delighting in each other’s presence over a gourmet meal—we will never forget it.

In reflecting on our experience, I am struck with some spiritual parallels. God is constantly thinking about you, and me, and all people, everywhere, all through history. And He arranges little secret surprises for us. Sometimes He uses nature. A starry sky, a golden sunset, a friendly animal. Sometimes He brings us a friend, or uses a smile, or help, from a stranger. Sometimes He involves food… a delicious meal or a refreshing snack; or a smell—laced with nostalgia—of coffee, or flowers, or a tobacco pipe. There are simple pleasures all around us.

Sometimes it takes suffering to call the heart home, or pain to find a depth of fellowship with Him that we would have missed, otherwise.

He is constantly inviting us to trade the distracted and harried lives we live for a more intimate, deeply spiritual one. We were created for fellowship with Him, and with each other, and yet we can be in the same space, and look right past, hardly noticing. There are times in marriage when we look right past our spouse, because we are so distracted. We’re “there,” but not “all there,” if you know what I mean. This can happen with a friend, with a son or daughter… with anyone. And it most certainly happens with God.

God’s not asking for a 3 day getaway, or even a 3 hour meal. You can “get away” with Him in the moment, but it does take intention—to wrestle the heart free from the grip of distraction and obsession, and to look with it into the eyes of the LORD.  God surprises, but we have to look for Him to see that the action is His, and to appreciate the love and care He puts into every moment, every detail of life.

Second Surrender: Split-Second Surrender to the Holy Spirit

“Whe-yelp…” Lemuel lifted his baseball cap and scratched high up on his forehead. “You’re gon’ take a raht down’t the secont laht, bah the Pigg-ly Wigg-ly, an’ keep a-goin’, oh, ’bout three mahl an’ sommat, ’til you see the ol’ mi-yill on the layeft. Hayaf a mahl mower, you’re gon’ see a whaht feyance on the raht, and a yeller dawg is gon’ chase ya… jus’ keep a-goin’ ’til the dawg stops, look to the layeft and you gon’ see a reyed barn up the hiyill. Turn leyeft raht theyer…”

I never liked asking someone for directions. In the first place, I didn’t want to trouble others, and in the second, I couldn’t be sure that the people I was asking really knew their way around. Third…I might misunderstand what they were sayan.

Like it or not, that’s the way it was, before smartphones. You had to consult someone as you traveled—and all you had was an address and a folded paper map—and you depended on others to help you fill in the details that were in between the squiggly lines. Best thing was to call someone at your destination before you even set out, and write out the directions. If you got lost, you’d stop at a gas station land look for someone that had been there as long as the fuel pumps out front…

And that’s where you’d meet the Lemuels. You could trust them. Anyone that could tell you what to look for when you take that raht turn—and where the yeller dawg lies in wait behind the whaht feyance—knew what he was talking about. Back then, you needed visual cues, because country roads didn’t have green metal labels. Maybe they still don’t.

But now, roads have invisible data tags, so that an internet search can show you where you’re going. Just type in the address on your smartphone and do what it tells you. Satellites track your position and tell you how many minutes remain until you reach your destination. We can even see traffic congestion on our phones, so that we can choose an alternate route if the usual one has the snuffles.

Our lives depend on where, and on Whom, we put our trust.

Life itself is like going on a trip, and the ultimate destination is “fellowship with GOD.” See First Surrender: The Gospel, (“Good News”), About a Relationship with GOD, in Four Points. The most important aspect of the trip is not physical, involving physical nearness, but rather, spiritual, involving spiritual intimacy. Our souls move vast spiritual distances each day, running from God in different directions, or turning to Him, whenever we notice and own up to forgetting or ignoring Him.

The enemy is real and clever. The enemy is Satan, (the Devil), and the fallen angels, (which are demons). He, and the demons under Him, have organized a vast right wing and left wing conspiracy against God, and seek to keep God’s crown of creation—people—from ever reaching “fellowship with GOD.” (Ephesians 6:11-12). They pose as other gods, or aliens, or angels of light, pulling us away, (through enticements), or pushing us away, (chasing us with unmasked evil). (See 2 Corinthians 11:14-15, for pulling, 1 Peter 5:8, for pushing). They will use every means to give people false directions, so that those who don’t know Christ stay “lost,” and those who do find Christ get distracted and absorbed by the physical world—forgetting where we are, how we were made to travel, and where GOD is, in the spiritual one.

Their words, their advice, their directions—none of them can be trusted—they are lies designed to put spiritual distance between you and God. (See John 8:44-45). Like the Pied Piper of Hamelin, Satan seeks to draw you off, away from God, to himself, luring you to some high clifftop so it’s easy to pull or push you over. “Yes, this is the way! Just look at that scenery! Here, give me your hand. I’ll lift you up. OOPS—Buddafingas! LOOK OUT BELOW!!!”

Or they are like the gang on the wrong side of town, when you take a wrong turn and you find yourself in a dark and unfamiliar place full of eyes. You wouldn’t dare to step out of the car to look for a Lemuel, and all the street lights were busted long ago. Instead, you crack your window next to a shadowy figure in the road, and ask for the way out. The glow from his cigarette bobs and blinks in the vice of a right side smirk, while smoke and half truths signal from the left. He’s sure of himself, this one…but he’s not telling you the way out. His instructions are precise, with a key misdirection to a dead end, where eyes and bared teeth sharpen in anticipation of victims. If only it was just a yeller dawg!

You drift forward into the night as narrowing eyes follow, watching to make sure you take the turn. Melting into the shadows, the stranger whips out a smartphone and makes a call. “We got one.  He’s alone.”

None of us is truly alone, of course, though we may feel we are, (or we are persuaded by lies that we are). And even if we walk through the valley, (or drive through the alley), of the shadow of death, God is with us. (Psalm 23:4). He can be trusted more than any Lemuel, and He most definitely has been around longer than the gas pumps. Acts 17:24-28. 2 Chronicles 16:9. This doesn’t mean that we will avoid trouble, and it doesn’t mean that we will not suffer harm, or even death, but it does mean that our God is with us, and for us, and that if we trust in Him, we already have reached our ultimate destination, “fellowship with God,” so that we don’t need to fear death they way we used to.

…And we have an opportunity for fellowship with God that is deeper and more intimate than just asking for directions, or talking to a friend. When we received Christ, we also received a gift beyond forgiveness of all sins, in addition to a future in Heaven with Joy in the presence of the LORD forevermore, even more personal than the gift of communication and fellowship with the King of Kings… and yet many Christians misunderstand or pay little attention to the gift.

The gift is the power of God, in the person of the Holy Spirit, working around you, and from within you.

Jesus said:

“And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever–the Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you. I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you. Before long, the world will not see me anymore, but you will see me. Because I live, you also will live. On that day you will realize that I am in my Father, and you are in me, and I am in you.” John 14:16-20. NIV 1984.

How do we know that we have been given the Holy Spirit? Because Jesus promised to give us (believers in Christ) the Holy Spirit. The entire Godhead—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—participates in the filling of each believer, as the Trinity is “three-in-one.” The Father gives the Holy Spirit to live within us, and Jesus is in us, and we are in Him, and He is in the Father. The Spirit is a Counselor and Helper, and is placed in us permanently, at the moment we believed in Christ.

Paul wrote about this permanence:

And you also were included in Christ when you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation. Having believed, you were marked in him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit, who is a deposit guaranteeing our inheritance until the redemption of those who are God’s possession—to the praise of his glory. Ephesians 1:13-14. NIV 1984.

We are sealed, at the moment of belief, with the Holy Spirit, as a non-refundable deposit from GOD, guaranteeing our salvation. This verse presents strong evidence that salvation can’t be lost. There is not a case in the New Testament where God un-seals a believer, taking back the deposit and guarantee that the Holy Spirit is. If God were to take back the deposit, the promised “guarantee” would be a lie, and God’s glory would be tarnished. God can’t lie, nor does He break promises.

Paul writes in 2 Corinthians about the effect of the Spirit:

Now it is God who makes both us and you stand firm in Christ. He anointed us, set his seal of ownership on us, and put his Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come. 2 Corinthians 1:21-22.

“The Spirit is placed ‘in our hearts,’ καρδία, ας, ἡ, ‘kardia,’ the center and seat of spiritual life, ‘the soul or mind, as it is the fountain and seat of the thoughts, passions, desires, appetites, affections, purposes, endeavors.'”THAYER’S GREEK LEXICON, Electronic Database. Copyright © 2002, 2003, 2006, 2011 by Biblesoft, Inc.

The Spirit searches all things, even the deep things of God. For who among men knows the thoughts of a man except the man’s spirit within him? In the same way no one knows the thoughts of God except the Spirit of God. We have not received the spirit of the world but the Spirit who is from God, that we may understand what God has freely given us. This is what we speak, not in words taught us by human wisdom but in words taught by the Spirit, expressing spiritual truths in spiritual words. The man without the Spirit does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him, and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually discerned. The spiritual man makes judgments about all things, but he himself is not subject to any man’s judgment: “For who has known the mind of the Lord that he may instruct him?” But we have the mind of Christ. 1 Corinthians 2:11-16. NIV 1984. (The Holy Spirit can speak through us, so that the mind of Christ is employed, if we are yielded to Him).

He is working moment-by-moment, whether you’re complicit or rebellious.

Do not get drunk on wine, which leads to debauchery. Instead, be filled with the Spirit. Ephesians 5:18. NIV 1984. (The idea is to be complicit with the Spirit—be filled—(extend an invitation to God to work through you right in the moment)—and keep being re-filled, moment to moment).

In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groans that words cannot express. And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for the saints in accordance with God’s will. And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. Romans 8:26-28. NIV 1984. (He intercedes, and keeps interceding, even when we are not praying, or when we don’t know what to pray, or even when we are rebellious. He intercedes according to God’s will, not the will of man. We don’t even understand what the Spirit prays for us, but we do know that it is for our good).

“When you are brought before synagogues, rulers and authorities, do not worry about how you will defend yourselves or what you will say, for the Holy Spirit will teach you at that time what you should say.” Luke 12:11-12. NIV 1984. (The Holy Spirit will speak through surrendered people).

We proclaim Him, admonishing every man and teaching every man with all wisdom, so that we may present every man complete in Christ. For this purpose also I labor, striving according to His power, which mightily works within me. Colossians 1:28-29. NASB. (We can strive, within the power of the Holy Spirit, according to God’s purposes).

So I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh. For the flesh desires what is contrary to the Spirit, and the Spirit what is contrary to the flesh. They are in conflict with each other, so that you are not to do whatever you want. But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law.
The acts of the flesh are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; idolatry and witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition, dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies, and the like. I warn you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the kingdom of God.
But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. Those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires. Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit. Let us not become conceited, provoking and envying each other. Galatians 5:16-26. NIV. (“Walk by the Spirit,” and “keep in step with the Spirit”… This is the idea of taking a step in the Spirit, and taking another one, and another one. This is what I’ve been teaching as “The Surrendered Moment.” Surrender to the Spirit in the moment, and do it again, and again. Keep on doing this—it is the spiritual life that God has provided for us to live, if we choose).

Jesus said:

“I have much more to say to you, more than you can now bear. But when he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth. He will not speak on his own; he will speak only what he hears, and he will tell you what is yet to come. He will glorify me because it is from me that he will receive what he will make known to you. All that belongs to the Father is mine. That is why I said the Spirit will receive from me what he will make known to you.”
John 16:12-15. NIV. The Holy Spirit will lead you in truth, and He will give you truth to share with others that points to our ultimate destination: “fellowship with God,” and He will empower you to do things you can’t do in your own power.

As I mentioned at the beginning, I never liked asking for directions. We all tend to try and find our own way as our default way of life, rather than put our lives into the hands of someone else. It is a trust issue. When things get desperate, when we find ourselves on the wrong side of town, we begin looking for help. At that point, we almost have no other choice than to trust others in order to make it out of the trouble we’re in.

How much better it is, to fellowship with the King of Kings, and Lord of Lords, and to develop a moment-to-moment trust in Him! I have been there, but I can’t say that “I’ve arrived…” My trust waxes and wanes, and my attention to God, and my intention to function within the power of the Holy Spirit, is inconstant. But I know that, in any and every moment, my God is with me, and I can give up my desperate and exhausting desire to control and accomplish everything my own way, and open my life up to The Ancient of Days, to be carried along in the Spirit. When I do, I’m able to do things that would be impossible for me to do, (it’s the Spirit within me), and able to see and say truths that were inaccessible to my feeble mind.

When we surrender to God in the moment, He saves us in the moment. One second, we feel lost, and the next, we understand where we are. And though we may still be in a tight spot, on foreign soil, or enduring incredible pain, we are reminded that we are “home again” in the Spiritin the strong and loving hands of the Father.  In a split second, we can see and feel the shining light from God, Our Comforter, in the darkness, and draw on infinite resources, so that others may also see Him with eyes of faith. To this end we journey, every moment a new beginning.

 

Waiting For An Answer

“I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you.” John 15:5, NIV.

One of my biggest disappointments with this earthly life is that I can’t see the Lord face to face while I am living it.

Every one of us loves to spend time with a special friend. When I’m together with that person, I know I’m accepted and loved just as I am, and I don’t have to pretend to be someone else to win approval. The conversation we have is stimulating, encouraging, insightful… and meaningful!

Oftentimes, a friend will have a viewpoint and experience outside my own that I find refreshing or relieving, and there comes a lightening of my burdens through our being vulnerable and sharing together. Sometimes my friend can sympathize with me and comfort me, or help me break out of the despondence that threatens to overwhelm. Sometimes my friend can help me laugh in the middle of my struggles, or remind me that better days are coming. Sometimes a friend can say something very challenging, and it may take me days, weeks, or months to wrestle with that truth to come to a place of deeper understanding.

Nowadays, we can get a fairly instant response from a friend if we really need to. We can call them on a smart phone, or message them, or tweet, or email, etc., etc. We can post to our walls on Facebook, and many friends can chime in with a response at one time. It’s comforting to have such instant means to connect to someone.

Even now, though, it’s sometimes hard to reach a friend. Perhaps you’ve left a voicemail for a friend, with an expression of urgent need, and then you don’t hear back from the friend for a week. We have such an expectation of instant feedback that we might be tempted to think less of the friend somehow, forgetting that our friends have burdens and responsibilities, and sometimes are forgetful, just as we do, and are.

In the year 1776, in the American colonies, you couldn’t just pick up a phone and call that special friend. You’d have to either get out and walk, or saddle up your horse and ride, or get out your quill and ink to write a letter, in order to at least convey a message to your friends. If you could only write, and depending how far the letter would have to be carried by horse, it could be weeks before your friend could come to you personally, or return a letter.

With the Lord, it is different. I can’t go out and walk or ride to where He is, and see Him face to face. I can’t call Him on my cell phone, and hear the sound of His voice responding to what I say. He doesn’t send me instant tweets or write on my Facebook wall, or “poke” me. I can’t even send a letter by horse, and receive one back from from a heavenly rider.

When I ask God specific questions, He doesn’t speak audibly. When I have a major decision to make, and I have the time to go to Him, again and again, before having to make a choice, He doesn’t write His answer in the sky. Sometimes, I’m tempted to wonder if He is even listening, as when I talk with a friend that dozes completely off while we’re talking. (I’ve been that dozing friend on too many occasions, when exhaustion and comfortable surroundings conspire to slay me with sleep).

Too often, we grow impatient with our “slumbering” Friend. We distrust the One who does not seem to check His voicemail. We grow tired of having a Father Who seems to consistently return silence when we “poke” Him. Did He miss my snapchat—I thought He sees everything?

But our God does not slumber, nor sleep. He hears my voice when I call, no matter how far away I can imagine He is from me, and He knows my every thought, before I think it. Through the prophets of old, He has spoken, and still speaks, into every situation and experience known to mankind.

The real issue is this: how far will I trouble myself to hear from Him? Will I walk across a room and pick up a Bible and search the words He has given to us all? Will I take a moment and ask Him to show me something in His word or in my heart, to open my eyes, to His Truth and His Presence? Will I try, again and again, to hear from Him if I remain perplexed or feel alone?

God absolutely loves it when we treat Him as Someone worth being pursued, sought after, and praised, no matter what life circumstances come. If there is a perceptible distance between me and God, I know it is I who created that distance, it is I who turned away, it is I who wronged the greatest Friend I’ll ever have.

Sometimes it takes awhile to recognize that we’ve left our God out of our lives. Since we are creatures of routine and pattern, we can coast within our roles and our rituals, thinking all the while that we are including God in what we are doing. We can even serve, pray, think, speak and act spiritual, but deep down, have what God must know is a casual indifference in our heart of hearts.

Oftentimes, it is a period of suffering that wakes me up to the reality that I’m just coasting on the powerlessness of my own gas. What a blessing it is to suffer, if I reconnect with God in a more desperate way! It is a privilege to see my own limitations, to peer over the edge of the abyss, and realize that I am at the end of myself… and that God must absolutely save me from myself, and work in power, with resources that I cannot possess apart from Him.

At moments like these, I gain my clearest picture of Him, because what happens next allows me to experience Him, and to see the beautiful and complex mosaic that He is working out. Sometimes He saves me within my circumstances in a dramatic fashion, sometimes in a quiet way, and sometimes I have to look around and wonder if anything is different, only to find that my heart towards Him is tender, and that my craving for His nearness and life is deeper than before. It is this last salvation that is the most precious, when I realize I have everything I truly need in Him, even if life circumstances should grow harder.

And this is the heart God is after… this is the Life He wants to grow in me. It is invisible to the naked eye, undetectable in the sight of the world, and oftentimes forgotten, or overlooked, by the people who are called by His name.

This invisible life is what God loves and rewards. He sees the heart that longs for Him, that looks for Him, that begs Him to BE the difference. He has determined that the righteous shall live by faith, and not by sight.

I said before that one of my biggest disappointments in this earthly life is that I cannot see the Lord face to face… well, my greatest opportunity to bless the Lord is to cultivate a heart that sees Him despite having eyes of flesh, and that values Him above all else that parades before me.

Lamentations 3:18-26. “So I say, ‘My splendor is gone and all that I had hoped from the LORD.’ I remember my affliction and my wandering, the bitterness and the gall. I well remember them, and my soul is downcast within me. Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the LORD’s great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is your faithfulness. I say to myself, ‘The LORD is my portion; therefore I will wait for Him.’ The LORD is good to those whose hope is in Him, to the one who seeks Him; it is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the LORD.”