1/25/2012
Today was one of those days that starts with a
baseline dread and ends with a greater measure of blessing. Looking ahead I saw hours in the therapy room
lounge (worked out to be five hours, and no, no Marmalade Lady) and uncertain
effects on my system. The effects may
still come (but I ate like a horse upon my return home) but the time flew by
(sometimes a bit drowsily due to an antihistamine infusion). And the time had a focus the object of which
was set by two passages in Scripture and a remembrance of past adventure.
The first passage was suggested by my ride in
today in the gracious hands of BFCF’s pastor David. He told me he would be covering me in prayer
guided by Psalm 20. Needless to say it
was the first place I went once settled in the lounge. It begin with:
May
the LORD answer you when you are in distress,
may
the name of the God of Jacob protect
you…
It concludes with verses 6&7:
Now I know that the LORD saves his
anointed
He answers
him from his holy heaven with the saving power of his righteous
right hand.
Some trust in chariots and some in
horses,
but we will trust in the name f the LORD our God.
A very encouraging Psalm, to say the least, but then I went
on to where I’ve been reading of late and that is from the book of the prophet
Isaiah, specifically chapters 35-38.
This piece of Isaiah is more narrative than prophecy. It tells the tale
of the Assyrian field commander of
Assyria’s, up to this point overwhelmingly triumphant king Sennacherib. The commander taunts the agent of the godly
king in Jerusalem, Hezekiah – a king who has restored right worship and worked
to rid the nation of its idols and “high places” of unholy sacrifice. His taunts include an accusation that he was
trusting in the “broken reed” of Egypt for his safety. He then scoffs that Hezekiah might be
trusting in the one known as “the LORD our God” when everyone knows that
Hezekiah has torn down the high places (well, I didn’t say the field commander
was a good theologian) and everyone also knows that Sennacherib has overthrown
every god he’s encountered to this point on his romp through the Near East – no
god has delivered anyone.
Hezekiah’s response is prayer (chapter 37)(there are other
details but you can read them for yourself).
His prayer starts with praise to God for his creation. It moves on to a realistic assessment of the
situation – he’s knows what he’s up against. It finishes with the request:
“Now, O
LORD our God, deliver us from his hand, so that all kingdoms on earth may know
that you alone, O LORD are God.”
In other words – God you cover this and show your name strong. Pretty close to where I started in Psalm 20.
So, then I got to remembering the craziest English Camp I’ve
ever had the privilege and responsibility to direct. We were way understaffed and everyone was
doing double or triple duty. Very few of
the staff knew each other at the start so teambuilding was an on the job
affair. The kids were one of our wilder
bunches. The temperature was hot, hot,
hot and the flies were the worst I’d ever experienced at camp (I remember our
Bible teacher swatting flies, a weapon in each hand, during morning staff
prayer). Injuries were unusually high
staff and campers alike.
One night during the Bible teaching one of our campers sort
of screamed in a terror stricken way and then passed out in her seat. Well, well – what do you do? We pulled her into the side room where two of
our leg injures people were already laid out.
The doc [Larry P for those who know him] had already been see them and
was on his way back with medical supplies – was he surprised to see a third
body laid out! But we knew this case was
less medical and more spiritual so we surrounded her with a handful of staff
and the hands of the wounded and I told folks to pray out loud whatever they
felt they were called to pray. We all
did and what came to my mind to pray was this:
Show your name strong God, show your name
strong!
In all this, show
your name strong! David, when he
trusted in God’s name, often saw the God of Jacob deliver him. Hezekiah, when he trusted in in the name of
the LORD our God, saw deliverance. Our
camper as we together called on God’s name saw deliverance from a particular
memory that was haunting her.
I felt a buoyancy within and in leaving the treatment room that
I did not have going in. I’ve heard of
people being “uplifted” by the prayers of God’s people. Now (well, not for the first time but plainly
evident today) I’m one of those people.
Diane is another. Thanks to all
who pray and thanks to the name of the LORD our God.
Don’t stop tomorrow for there are toxic chemicals awaiting
me.
3 comments:
Thanks for sharing these thoughts from God's word. Another nice nugget of truth to consider. Our prayers continue.
Now THAT'S power!! and so we pray on....
Funny, I've been thinking on that 'name thing' lately. Powerful stuff - thanks for sharing your thoughts. Prayers will continue!
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