When Is Enough?

My mouth is filled with Your praise and with Your glory all day long. Do not cast me off in the time of old age; do not forsake me when my strength fails. Psalm 71:8-9 NASB

Not forsake – Hebrew poetry puts words in order of importance, not English syntax. Our translations rearrange the words for proper English, but when we do so we can lose the author’s emphasis. That’s what’s happening here. The verse actually reads, “when is finished (spent) my strength do not forsake me.” The emphasis is not on forsaking. It is on the fact that a day will come when you and I are no longer able to put up the good fight. David pleads that in that day, when he is depleted, he will not be cast away as an expendable soldier.

I’m not dead yet, but I know the day of powerlessness. I know the day when I could no longer fight. I know the day when I was spent, finished, incapacitated, done. I know that day when I realized that I no longer had the resources to continue the battle for righteousness. And just like David, I needed to plead, “Lord, even though I am empty, please don’t forsake me.”

We often overlook the possibility that God might be finished with us before we are finished with Him. Perhaps we are so accustomed to the idea of God’s continual faithfulness that we simply push aside any feelings of uselessness. In the evangelical Christian world, most of us were taught that God will never abandon us. While all of this is theologically true, that is not David’s concern. David’s concern is how he feels in the moment of exhaustion. Your head might be telling you that God will never leave you or forsake you, but you don’t live in your head. David is a man after God’s heart and sometimes the heart is so depleted that it feels as if we are no longer any use to God. Sometimes we are so tired, so weary, so drained that there is just nothing left to give. In those moments, it is possible to believe that God is like those pagan idols. If you can’t perform, what good are you? Just a throw-away.

Everyone comes to the limit sometime, but not everyone is willing to recognize the challenge to the relationship with God that emptiness brings. The man or woman of faith is not immune. In fact, this is the moment of greatest intimacy! When I am filled with vigor, when I am strong, when I have the world within my grasp, God is often an afterthought. Even if He is present, I am inclined to think of Him as helper rather than rescuer. But take away all my strength, all my reserves, all my expectant hopes, and my relationship with God changes dramatically. Now I begin to realize what I really am—broken pottery, empty vessel, cast-aside garments. Now God becomes the real creator of me, the author and finisher of my faith.

We avoid the brokenness of our exhaustion at our own peril. God lives in the wilderness where no man can survive on his own. Go find Him in the barren places.

Topical Index: forsake, strength, powerlessness, wilderness, Psalm 71:8-9

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carl roberts

Any Last Words?

Abiding in Christ

the Last Words of The Messiah to His Disciples

John 15 occupies a purposeful place in the Bible. Jesus never wasted any words and these are the last words of a man who is about to die.

Every eternal word Jesus spoke was pure and straight from the heart of God. He was (and is!) Prophet-Priest-King, the Eternal Representative of the triune God as Man to man. He is the Word of God in human flesh. John chapter 15 is the special summary-teaching of the Anointed One to His disciples. It is the final instruction of the Master-Teacher (Rabbi) to those who are willing to learn. This is the living will of the Lamb of God to those who would follow in His steps.

“Abide in me.”

Exceedingly rich and fertile words.

[for] “Without me you can do nothing.” – Empty, vain and futile words.

These are the covenant (yet conditional) words of Christ: “If you abide in me and my words abide in you..” -These are the living Words of the Son of the living God

Invitational words. Relational words.Transformational words.
The words of God.

Refreshing words. Renewing words. Reviving words.
The words of God.

Words of unity. Words of harmony. Words of destiny.
The words of God.

Intense words. Immense words.Immeasurable words.
The life-giving words of God.

He has spoken. It is written. Have we heard His Word?

“Speak LORD, for your servant heareth.”

How well we hear will determine how well we live.
The quality of our hearing will determine the quality of our living.

Today,.. if you will hear His voice..

John Miesel

Carl, I am in total agreement with the words you have panned, with the exception of the triune God. If that phrase where found in the Old or New Covenant, I would be in100% agreement.

laurita hayes

If I am a sheep, then safety is my largest need (thank you so much, Skip, for the teaching on Psalm 23: it changed my life!). Why? Because sheep are the most helpless of creatures. The secular world is consumed with safety. Insecurity drives the yetzer ha-ra. Pride covers the shame of our helplessness. Self-interest attempts to fill in the gaps where a Shepherd is needed. Competition, which is a form of covetousness, a form of believing that its going to be either Me or Them, is a knee jerk reaction to the intolerable vacuum of the truth of my helplessness in that aloneness that sets me up against the whole universe; and survival is the watchword of the loner. There at the edge I battled to survive, all alone in my self-perceived paradigm of abandonment. I fought the world from the edge of the insanity that isolation ALWAYS produces. I was thinking yesterday why solitary confinement is considered the worst of punishments, and it is because self ceases to exist without others. I am not a me, if there is not a you, too.

So what is safety? We say that there is “safety in numbers”. We perceive safety as insurance against the Unknown. We talk about ‘safety nets’ and are consumed on national levels with Defense. In a world of fracture, where Others look like a threat to safety instead of looking like what we need most for the unity that produces strength, that very apartness creates a need for what it destroys, which is the safety of unity. Sheep like to feel safe in the middle of a flock, where there are layers upon layers of Others that are standing between themselves and danger. A flock has to be separated before a predator can grab a sheep. (A shepherd has to round up that flock to be able to move it, too!) A sense of my helplessness, then, is a sense of the truth of my fracture from the whole. And it is an intolerable place. The very literal edge of insanity. Insanity, at a very fundamental level, by definition, is where I am no longer operating from a sense of my identity. Who I am, however, is a function of my connection with others. Without that connection, either by wicked intervention or heart-shattering trauma from without, or by rejection from within, who I am in my very identity wavers, and in that wavering, the torment of my very real helplessness, my vulnerability to the danger of Me apart from Them, becomes overwhelming. That sense of helplessness, in a very real way, is the driving force behind the yetzer ha-ra. “There is no peace, sayeth the LORD, unto the wicked”. Peace of what? Peace of unity.

That sense of helplessness however, I am finding out is also the driving force behind the yetzer ha-Tov. Surprisingly, it is from the place of my very real already-apartness, caused by the sin of fracture that already exists in my life, that I must operate from on a continual basis because it is the only place in which I can be fully honest. In fact, it is when I am feeling most at ease that I am running the biggest danger of delusion, for there are many temptations that are based on convincing myself that I already am in the middle of G-d’s favor. Wealth Theology depends on convincing people that they are SAFE through the abundance of things that the world perceives as safety nets and insurance and ‘proof’ of Belonging. If we were to be given a choice of insanities; a choice of suffering from either the torment of abandonment, or the delusions of the grandeur of Belonging, (when, in fact, we really don’t), which do you think you would choose? The anesthetic the devil offers to the sinner is that delusion that he is ‘safe’ by belonging to the world, but the world, which is running on the elemental fracture of singular Selves that are competing for survival against all other Selves, drives a real devil’s bargain with those who join the Church of Self; that Synagogue of Satan. You get to belong to the Church of Self in return for giving up your true identity. In the Earth made New I am promised a secret stone with my real name written on it. My real identity is a secret from me, because I believe it to be composed of the complete roll call of all the Others who have made it to eternity with me. It is hidden from me now to the extent that I am still fractured from who they are. That desperate place of fracture, the sense of my very real helplessness, created by that fracture, if I were to determine to walk in the truth, however, should be all that I can see in all my moments, for only in that place am I walking in the truth of that fracture.

If I do not know my problem, I cannot ask for help with that problem. If I do not ask for that help, my hand is not open to receive that help, for the help consists of rejoining my hand with the hand of my Shepherd, and with others around me. Now, I know how to grasp His hand: I just yelp for help. I also am getting a better idea of how to join my hand with His Body. I have to show up and be present and vulnerable and open and accounted for, but it has been a bit trickier to figure out how to join my hand with all those hostile Others who are still walking in the desperation of their fracture. How do you hug a porcupine? Now, I have been told in no uncertain terms not to join myself with sinners. Got it. That’s easy! But, I have also been told that anybody who is in need (fracture) is my neighbor. Problem. How do I reach out my hand to the drowning lost without being pulled under by their desperation? Well, paradoxically, I have been finding that if I stay present in each moment with as accurate a sense of my own desperation as I can tolerate, anyway, I also have the premier tool of connection with that neighbor in need. I can say “I have a problem, too. This is where I can commiserate with you. And, this is what I am finding works for me.” Witness. There is my hand to the lost world. Yeshua, in fact, came down into my very ditch with a True Witness from the Father to me, too. He came down to share my misery and torment so that He could also share His life and righteousness (connection) with me. And then He said, “Follow Me”. The Great Commission is where I was handed the purpose of my lostness and my sin, for it is from that place that I can speak to other lost sinners, of which Paul still says he has me beat as being chief (but it would not be for lack of trying, I can assure you!) from my own helplessness, and reach out a hand. My cure consists of ceasing to view G-d, myself and others as apart from myself, by making the effort of connection (righteousness). My helplessness is cured by helping those around me. By crying out to the Shepherd FROM that place of helplessness, I receive what I need to then turn around and help those around me, and helplessness then becomes transformed back into the power of unity.

It is true. The places where I become aware of my helplessness; the very edge of my insanity, in fact, is the place of my greatest source of power, for it is only there that my hand truly opens to help and to be helped. Asking for help from any other place does not work, for no other place opens my hand in the full honesty of that helplessness. And, you really do have to ask to receive! Halleluah!

Michael Stanley

Laurita, Again with the wisdom and insight, along with the ability and willingness to communicate it. Thank you. You get my Academy vote for best supporting role in a blog, non fiction category. Your “Yelp for help” quip is the current number one seed of the semi-finals (sweet 16) of the best of the best religious axioms of 2015. On a more serious note, I get that this wisdom doesn’t come from above like gentle rain, but hail the size of quail. Thanks for gasping, grasping, grappling and ….sharing.

laurita hayes

Dearest Michael, Thank you! I get up in the morn and don’t want to be visible or heard at all. There are all sorts of imaginations I have to cast down (now you can tell just how much fracture I am still laboring under) because I think all kinds of awful stuff, from I am not speaking to the glory of G-d, to stuff I am too ashamed to tell you. I don’t want to be perceived as trying to overshadow anybody, or make them feel I have any ‘answers’ (that’s laughable!) especially Skip, (see, I am wallowing in it right now!), either, as I am so grateful to him for giving me so many answers and inspiring me and challenging me, I don’t know what else to do with my gratitude, but I do still know how very much of the yetzer ha-ra is crippling me. The only thing I can do is apologize, but then I don’t want to get in the way of the Ruach HaKodesh (love that name!) or demean Him, either. It is a grinding place and I pretty much have to squirm and sweat my way through it, too, but I also don’t want to sail to Joppa, because I already went that way, and still have the seaweed in the ears to prove it. Now I am sorry for taking advantage of your very real gratitude to Him (because it sure isn’t me!) to whine, too. Now I feel it is time to crawl back under my log! LOL! I love, you, too, brother, very much, and if you get some relief, then I am going to be tickled to get up and do it again! Thanks for giving me all the best laughs for my day, too! May there be only shalom and fellowship in this neck of the sheep pasture for all us’ns. Amen.

Marsha

I think of Thomas. I can imagine that all the disciples were at the brink of “done’ when Jesus was laid in the tomb…a dead man. It’s my own imagination but I think it hit Thomas especially hard-and since our varied life experiences affect us in different ways..I can give him that. It didn’t encourage him in the least that the other disciples SAID He came and visited with them….he was really done. That’s when I’m so grateful that Father knows ALL that’s in my heart so He doesn’t give up nearly as quickly as people do..or even me….on myself. There was that little shred of “want to” still hanging in there but too afraid to be seen.
So Jesus came to him…didn’t send a note…or even speak from across the room with a disdainful tone. “Here Thomas..put your finger where the nail went in…and look..you can even put your whole hand in My side! I know, hard to believe isn’t it? But it’s true – and everything I have ever promised or taught you is true too. I’m FOR you….you can do this.” There’s no point in looking at Thomas like a failure…we’ve all been there. God…Creator of the Universe…cares that much….amazing! I think He watches for the times when He can communicate heart to heart.

David F.

I agree Marsha. I think its funny how we tend to identify someone (even) ourselves based upon a moment of past dysfunction. To me this is so with Thomas. Thomas is the one who, before going to see Lazarus raised, says, “Let us go with Him (Yeshua) that we may die also”. Doubting? I think not. Yet because of one moment of doubt due to extreme pain, and hopes and dreams being shattered, (like the other disciples might I add) he is forever “doubting Thomas.”

Ester

“We avoid the brokenness of our exhaustion at our own peril. God lives in the wilderness where no man can survive on his own.”
Moses wandered in the wilderness after killing an Egyptian, and settled for 40 years in the desert of Midian shepherding sheep, feeling the emptiness… BUT…
” During those 40 years, I’m sure Moses had alot of questions. He had alot of doubts. He had alot of humility thrust upon him. And while he may have felt like he was doing nothing with his life, God was busy. And I believe God was busy in at least 2 ways – one outside, and one inside.

In the outside, God was busy preparing Moses to know what life was like in the desert, which would come in pretty handy when he spent the NEXT 40 years of life wandering around there. The stuff he learned about finding water, sleeping arrangements, wildlife, plantlife – you name it – would be invaluable. Moses had no clue he was learning all this, but he was.

On the inside, God was also busy. He was busy helping Moses become the sort of person would could walk into the court of the most powerful man in the known world and say “Let my people go.” He was preparing him to be the kind of person who could deal with the impatience and bellyaching of a newly liberated people. He was preparing him to be someone who knew what it was like to depend on the work of God and walk deeply with Him. And Moses didn’t even know it. He was becoming someone in the desert, and he thought he was just herding sheep.

God is busy. He’s busy in the palace, and He’s busy in the desert. In our desert moments, in my desert moments, I wonder if I’m so busy being fixated on getting out of the desert that I forget that God is at work at all.”- Michael Kelley

Moses became the political and religious leader, lawmaker, judge, prophet, priest, poet, prince, shepherd, miracle worker — and the founder of a nation, that he was called to being fulfilled during those 40 years in the wilderness. Wow!
It was such a time of enriching in his life, a “moment of greatest intimacy!” with YHWH, “to recognize the challenge to the relationship with Him that emptiness brings.”
Shalom.