Monday, March 31, 2014
"The Lord said to him, what is that in your
hand?" "A staff”, he replied". (Exodus 4:2)
Hey Gang: Many years ago, our Board
President felt we needed a little rest and relaxation so he provided a
scholarship for us to spend a week at the Christian Retreat Center in
Bradenton, Florida. During our R & R months there over the next several years
there we were privileged to sit under
the teachings of such people as Gerald Derstine, Iverna Thompkins, Judson
Cornwell and many other anointed teachers.
But one that I would place at the top of
the list was a pastor by the name of Jamie Buckingham. Jamie had spent
many weeks in the Sinai learning what God would teach him the desert. He wrote
a book, that graces my library, titled A way Through the Wilderness.
When I find myself in the midst of a
wilderness experience, more times than not, I return to the pages of this book
for encouragement and perhaps a better understanding of what I am going
through. He, like Jesus, Paul and James, he is a teacher who uses the
simple things of the desert to teach us profound truths.
For example, he points out that when God is
looking for something for His service, He usually looks for something common to
us. An old country preacher once said, "When God needs something
done, He looks for a broken vessel and smashes it and then places it on the
potter’s wheel for molding into the image of His Son and preparation for what
lies ahead.
In Exodus 4:2 we find such an example:
Moses was not red-hot on the idea of going back to the land of Pharaoh who had
placed a price on his head for bumping off one of their citizens. He,
like most of us, opened his bag of excuses as to why we do not want to do
something. ‘I mean, Lord, I don't talk so good; I mean, Lord, I
am a minimally educated, a hillbilly from the sticks; I mean, Lord, there are
mega people more qualified than I.’
I wonder if Saul might have come up with
similar excuses as to why he did not want to become Paul the missionary to the
Gentiles? But God gave him no opportunity to open his excuse bag - He
(God) looked down and said, "I'll take that one” and knocked
him off his donkey".
I wonder if God was not becoming a wee bit
impatient with Moses when He said to him, "Hey, Moses, what do you
have in your hand?” Moses answer, "A rod". "Throw
it on the ground". We know the story, the rod turned into a
serpent. God said pick it up by the tail. The serpent turned back to a
rod but without the serpent in it.
Soooo, my young friends, we know, from seeing
all the movies about Moses, that he was never without that rod. Why?
Because the rod represents authority! Moses was now a man under
authority. Does that mean we should all go and get a rod? No!, I do
not think that is the focus of the story; but rather that God can use anything that is given to Him. Keep
in mind God honors simple things.
Blessings,
Gramps
No comments:
Post a Comment