I am currently leading a Bible study on faith, in which we are looking at men and women in the Bible who have exhibited faith. This past week, most of our group was unable to attend. I wrote up my notes into a devotional form, intending to post it as a note on Facebook for everyone to read. But Facebook's note input form is having issues. I can't type anything into the text box, and Facebook doesn't seem to be in any hurry to fix it. So, I'm posting it here with a link in the hopes that my Bible study ladies can read it over if they would like to do so. And, as always, it is my prayer that this post will speak to anyone who reads it, and that it is God's words that are heard and not mine. If I get some time, I will try to write up my notes from other sessions into devotional form and post them as well.
We are going to begin our study
this week by looking at the example of Rahab. Before you dive on in,
read her story in Joshua 2, Joshua 6:15-23, and then read what the
author of Hebrews had to say about her faith in Hebrews 11:23.
Rahab was not only a prostitute,
but a pagan as well. She had not grown up knowing God. More than
likely, the religion she had been born into had many gods with one
“patron god” for the city she lived in. However, she had heard
the rumors about what the God of the Israelites had done. She had
heard about the plagues brought upon the Egyptians. She had heard
about how God had parted the Red Sea. She had heard about the
incredible victories the Israelites had won over powerful armies when
the odds seemed against them. And this pagan woman came to the
conclusion that the God of the Israelites must be the one and only
God in heaven above and on earth below.
Joshua, who was the leader of the
Israelites at the time, sent two spies into Jericho ahead of the
army's arrival. They went into Rahab's house. Why they turned there
instead of elsewhere, we do not know. Perhaps the nature of her
business would have made their entrance into her house less
conspicuous. What we do know is that Rahab did not turn them away.
Instead, she risked the wrath of her own government officials and her
own people and turned traitor by hiding the spies and lying about
their presence when Jericho's soldiers came looking for them. Then,
she told the spies exactly what they had come to find out (that her
people were all melting in fear because of what they had heard about
Israel's victories), declared that she believed their God was the one
and only God, and pleaded with them to spare her life and the lives
of her family when they came back to destroy Jericho. Her request
was granted. The spies gave her very specific instructions regarding
what she was to do on the day of Jericho's destruction, and she in
turn gave them very specific instructions about what they were to do
in order to ensure they returned to Israel's camp unharmed. Then she
helped them escape the city by letting them out of her window, which
was part of the city wall. She believed that the spies would keep
their word, and she made preparations for their return. Some time
later, the Israelite army returned en force, and made their famous
conquest of Jericho. They marched seven times around the city each
day for seven days, and when the final march ended, they shouted and
blew trumpets, and the city walls fell down! Every single person in
the city was killed except Rahab and those who were in her house with
her at the time. Joshua gave very specific orders regarding Rahab,
telling the spies to go into the city as soon as the wall fell in
order to bring Rahab and her family out of the city to a safe place
outside the Israelite camp. Thus, Rahab saved not only herself, but
her family as well. And she was given a new life among the people of
Israel, who accepted her as one of their own. She married, had
children, and we read in genealogies later on in scripture that she
was actually part of the family line of King David and of Jesus!
When you look at Rahab in depth,
you will find an amazing picture of faith. I find it absolutely
incredible that this pagan woman who had not even heard of God prior
to the rumors that began trickling in from Egypt came to the
conclusion on her own (surely by God's design, as she was part of His
plan) that the God of the Israelites was the one and only God. While
her own people were melting in fear, she acted upon this realization,
knowing she and her family were doomed to destruction. She decided
to place her faith in God and in the compassion of the Israelites,
and out of desperation to save herself and her family, she turned
traitor and jumped upon the opportunity to help the nation of Israel
when it was handed to her. In the end, that act of faith in the
character of God and in that of the Israelites saved her and her
family.
But it is not only this faith that
amazes me. As a recent college graduate, I interned for one summer
with a mission organization called Global Women, which is dedicated
to helping women all over the world overcome oppression and poverty.
One event we attended was a conference in Wisconsin for recovering
prostitutes. While there, we presented the Gospel message to them,
reassuring them that God could turn the dark tragedies of their pasts
into beautiful victories that would glorify Him. I have to say this
was quite possibly one of the most eye-opening experiences of my
life. I think many of us have this idea that prostitutes choose
their profession and that they can get out of it at any time. That
simply is not the case. Most of them are sold into prostitution as
sex slaves. Those who aren't sold into it typically come from a
background rife with sexual abuse. They have been led to believe
that this is the only thing they are capable of doing. They enter
the profession from a position of desperation. I remember hearing
one woman's heartbreaking testimony. She had grown up in an abusive
home, and had been told all her life that sex was the only thing she
was good for. As an adult, she thought she had finally escaped her
torturous situation, but found herself utterly poverty stricken and
unable to find a job. Without knowing the God who provides, she saw
selling herself as her only means of putting food on the table. Her
first customer paid well, and when the money from that job ran out,
she did it again. Before long, she found she had a group of regulars
and a steady income. She tried to get out time and time again. But
each time, found herself incapable of leaving the lifestyle she had
made for herself. It was as though she had created a trap for
herself. In the end, successfully leaving the trade took the
transforming power of the Holy Spirit, leaving her home country, and
gaining the skills necessary to market herself for a different type
of job. Other women who are sold into prostitution have no say in
the matter. Poverty-stricken parents sell their young daughters in
order to survive. These girls have no way out unless they die or
somehow escape.
Regardless of the way they get into
the profession, it is incredibly damaging to a woman emotionally, as
well as physically. Think about the guilt you feel when you do
something wrong. Sometimes it takes years before you are able to
forgive yourself. These women have spent years trapped in a cycle of
sexual immorality, often forced upon them against their will. They
have been told for years by respectable, moral people that they are
dirty and the scum of the earth. They have been led to believe that
they are worth something only when they are being used by men. They
have come to believe that they only way they are capable of
supporting themselves (and their children in some cases) is to
practice prostitution. No prostitute enjoys her profession. At some
point, they all try to get out. Some succeed. Many more do not.
Why? Because when they do attempt to get out, they find those who
know their pasts continue to throw it into their faces, their own
consciences refuse to allow them to move past the guilt and shame of
their dark histories, and if they have heard of God at all, they
simply cannot believe that a righteous, holy God who cannot look upon
sin would forgive them, let alone truly care for them.
Rahab had this history. Her story
is the same as any modern prostitute when it comes to abuse and low
self-esteem. We have no reason to believe that she was any different
from the many prostitutes that came before her or the many that
followed. The fact that she had the faith to believe that God would
have compassion on her is even more incredible when viewed in this
light. Not only that, but she had the faith to believe that God
could and would give her a fresh start in life and rewrite her story.
God honored her faith in a HUGE way. Not only was her life spared,
but she was given a husband and children . . . and God honored her
further still by singling out her family line as the one from which
the kings of Israel and Messiah Himself would come.
We learn several lessons from
Rahab. First, the lesson we learned last week regarding the fact
that faith takes risks is confirmed. Faith takes risks. Rahab had
no assurance that the Israelites would have compassion on her. She
had no assurance that they would keep their word. Furthermore, she
had no assurance that the Israelites would indeed prevail or that she
would not be found out before they returned. Had they failed or had
her betrayal been discovered before their return, she would have been
executed by her government for treason. But she took that risk,
believing wholeheartedly that the God of the Israelites was the one
true God, that He and His people would have compassion on her, that
they would conquer Jericho, and that they would keep their promise to
her. Our second lesson is that God honors faith. Trusting God pays
HUGE dividends because He will NEVER let us down. If we will place
our faith in Him, He will bless us beyond our wildest dreams.
Thirdly, our past does not dictate God's likelihood of answering our
prayers. We can come from the darkest of circumstances, having
committed the grisliest of sins. Yet God, who sees into the dark
spaces, longs to gather us into His arms, fill our hearts with His
light, heal the wounds we have inflicted upon ourselves or which have
been inflicted upon us by others, and reassure us of His love for us.
If we will have faith in Him to heal our wounds, forgive our worst
sins, and lead us into a better life, He will honor that faith and
will not let us down.
Our second example of faith for
this week is that of Samson's mother. We are never told her name, as
she is referred to as “Manoah's wife,” but her example of faith
is such a blessing to see! Read her story in Judges 13 before you
read any further.
Her first display of faith comes
when she took the angel of God at his word. She did not ask his name
or where he had come from, and he did not give it. He just told her
what would happen to her, and she believed him in spite of years of
hoping for a child yet receiving none. She ran to tell her husband,
insisting that the man she had just spoken to was a messenger sent by
God, and wholeheartedly believing that his message was true and that
all would turn out the way he said it would. But Manoah did not
believe her. Instead, he prayed to God to send the man to tell HIM
the same thing he'd told his wife. God listened, and sent His
messenger yet again. The angel of the Lord told Manoah the exact
same thing he'd told his wife, yet still not believing he was really
sent by God, he asked the man to stay for a meal. The angel refused
to eat it, telling him to offer it to God instead, and as the fire
burned the offering, the angel ascended to heaven in the flame. Then
and only then did Manoah begin to believe that this man was truly
sent by God. He panicked, saying “we have seen God! We're going
to die!” But his steady, faith-filled wife spoke such wisdom and
encouragement to her husband! She told him that if God had intended
to kill them, He would not have gone to the trouble to send someone
to tell them all these things that were to happen to them.
While Samson's mother's simple
faith in the angel's first message bears an example for us in and of
itself, I just love that last bit where she tells her husband exactly
how it is! Here her husband is panicking because they saw the angel
of the Lord and he is certain they will die because of it, but she
speaks so confidently, just as she did when the angel first appeared
to her! She knew that God would not have revealed all of this to them
had He intended to kill them. She was certain not only that she and
her husband would live, but she also had faith that God would keep
His word and she would have a son exactly as the angel of the Lord
had said she would.
I think Hebrews 11:1 sums up the
lesson we learn from Manoah's wife perfectly. “Now sfaith is
confidence in what we hope for and assurance about what we do not
see.” She could not see the future. But she had hope that she
would indeed have a son. She was assured of God's trustworthiness
and compassion, knew the man she had seen was really, truly sent by
God, and knew everything would turn out exactly as she had been told
it would.
Her conversation with her husband
reminds me of conversations I have had with my own husband. At the
moment, we are still waiting to hear whether or not my husband has
received the promotion he needs in order to remain in the military.
If he has not received it, he has to get out. And we have no idea
where we will go or what we will do if that happens. If he does
receive it, we will have exactly three months in which to secure new
orders and move. Either way, the future is very much uncertain and
poses very real difficulties when you have a family to support. I
have had so many conversations with my husband in recent days in
which he has gone back and forth between hoping he doesn't get the
promotion so that he doesn't have to deal with the politics or
separations that come with a military career, and asserting that he
NEEDS this promotion because he doesn't know how else he will support
us if he doesn't get it. I have told him time and time again that we
need to have faith that God will provide for us no matter what
happens. He knows our needs, He knows our desires, and He also has a
plan for our family that is a perfect fit and beyond our wildest
dreams. My husband knows this too, but sometimes, he needs that
reassurance that God will take care of us . . . that God has indeed
promised in scripture that He will provide all our needs, and that He
can be trusted to keep those promises. Indeed, we all need that reminder at times. It is hard to have faith when things are uncertain or look bleak. But we know that God cares about the sparrow that falls from the sky, and that He clothes the lilies of the field. We must have faith that He will take care of us as well. Matthew 6:25-34 is among my favorite passages of scripture. We can lean upon these verses when the going gets tough, and rest in the knowledge that God will provide all our needs.
As Christian women, I think it is
so important for us to strive to think and speak with an attitude of
faith in God. Our husbands, children, family, and friends all look
to us for encouragement when the going gets tough. It is up to us to
speak God's wisdom and encouragement into their lives as crises
develop, not to put more pressure upon them to perform to our own
standards. As our husbands strive to provide for us and hit points
in their careers where adequate provision for a family seems
difficult, if not impossible, we should encourage them with our own
unshakable faith in God's promises. How many of us put pressure on
our husbands to get or keep a job, get that promotion, get that
raise, etc.? Perhaps we should instead be encouraging them to look
to God for the answers and for provision. How many of us put
pressure on our kids to perform to their best in academics, sports,
music, whatever they put their minds and effort to? Perhaps we
should instead be encouraging them to look to God for strength, for direction in the activities they are to pursue, and
for the wisdom that only He can give. It is easy to encourage a
friend who is going through a crisis, but I think we are hardest on
those closest to us, expecting them to perform at their best, relying
on themselves rather than on God in order to meet our expectations.
Manoah's wife knew this fact, and knew that what her husband needed
to hear when he was certain they would be struck dead on the spot was
that she had faith that God would have mercy on them and would keep
His word.
While we are in Judges, let's take
a look at Samson. I think most of you know his story, but let me
fill you in on some back information before I send you to hunt for
his story in the Bible. Samson is now a grown man, and quite
possibly the strongest man who has ever walked the earth. This was a
man who could kill a lion with his own bare hands, defeat an army
with only the jawbone of a donkey, catch foxes and tie their tales
together single-handedly, and tear out the enormously heavy, solid
gates and posts out of a city wall and carry them a mile before
setting them down. This was a man who had not met a challenge he
could not overcome. He was prideful, conceited, arrogant, a bit
spoiled, and boastful. Then he met Delilah. She proved to be his
undoing. She coaxed him to tell her the secret of his great
strength. After numerous attempts and failures, you'd think Samson
would have caught on to her tricks, but he eventually caved and told
her the truth. She cut off his hair, and then set the Philistines
upon him. Samson's strength was gone, and he was easily detained.
The Philistines tied him up, gouged out his eyes, and threw him in
prison. Some time later, the Philistines were celebrating their
victory over Samson in the temple of their god, Dagon. They were all
drunk and brought out Samson so they could “watch him perform”
and laugh at him. This is where we find Samson in the part of his
story that highlights his faith. Take a moment now to read Judges
16:23-31.
Samson was completely defeated. He
had been utterly humiliated and completely humbled. He had once been
the strongest man on the face of the earth, and this strength
combined with his numerous victories had puffed him up with pride.
Now he found himself defeated by his enemies, his strength gone, and
he was standing before his enemies, probably attempting to pick up
heavy things and failing, and they were laughing at him. Any mom of
boys, sister of brothers, wife, or indeed any woman who has ever
worked with boys, knows that the absolute worst thing you can do to
any man or boy is to laugh at his weaknesses. When they fail, they
are keenly aware of it. To point out the obvious or to make fun of
their failings is to crush them and nurture a fear of failure that
will render them incapable of taking risks or trying something new
later on down the road. Samson was in such a spot as he stood in
that temple. He was at rock bottom. He was keenly aware of his
shortcomings, his failure, his mistakes, and the fact that he was now
as weak as any other man. He was hurting. His spirit had been
effectively crushed and he had been completely humbled before his
enemies. But while most of us would likely sink deeper and deeper
into despair during a situation such as this, fearing for certain
that God had abandoned us because we'd been led off the narrow path,
Samson knew God was still watching out for him. He prayed, knowing
God would hear and would grant his request. And God gave him enough
strength to knock down a building, bringing his enemies down with
him, and ushering him into God's presence!
Samson's story reminds me of Psalm
139:1-12. Take a moment to read it. Even when things look bleak, we
should cling to the knowledge that no place is too dark or too deep
for God to see and reach us. We must have faith that God will hear
and answer even when we feel He has turned His back on us because we
have failed Him in some way. We are God's children. God will never
turn His back on us as long as the Holy Spirit resides within us.
God hears our prayers and will answer them no matter how low we sink
or how bleak our circumstances seem. Yes, we still have to bear the
consequences of our sins. But God can and will take our failings and
turn them into victories that are glorifying to Him if we will but
have faith in His ability to rescue us and allow Him to work in and
through us.
As I close, I want to do a quick
recap of these three faith-filled individuals. First, from Rahab, we
learn that faith takes risks and that God honors faith by blessing
our socks off! Secondly, we learn from Manoah's wife, Samson's
mother, that faith believes God's promises even when the future is
uncertain and our past or the world around us seems to scream that
God's truth is a lie. We also find a poignant example in Manoah's
wife for those of us who are married, leading us to encourage our
husbands with the truth of God's promises and faithfulness. Finally,
we learn from Samson that God hears our prayers when we cry out to
Him in faith, even from the darkest of places. We also learn that
God can take our worst mistakes and turn them into incredible
victories that are glorifying to Him if we will trust Him to work in
and trough us.
No comments:
Post a Comment