God of the Night

“Have I sinned? What have I done to You, O watcher of men? Why have You set me as Your target, so that I am a burden to myself?” Job 7:20 NASB

Watcher of men – May Your desire overtake my desperation, Lord, and when it does I will delight in You.

But not tonight. Tonight You haunt me with visions and dreams, the fear of Sheol, the absence of all I hold dear. Tonight I am afraid to sleep lest you demand my soul of me and I am yet unprepared to give it. Tonight I am still treading the road to Mordor, and there is no inn safe for me. Tonight, O Lord, I am alone.

The view from 30,000 feet is little comfort. An endless expanse of clouds obscure what small signs of population are scattered about the planet, itself a lonely ship careering through the vast emptiness of space. The stars are only dim reminders that You are the watcher of men. Remote in the heavens. Beyond comprehension. I am cast adrift on those clouds, traveling somewhere once again, carrying an inconsolable emptiness wrapped in rice paper veneer. “It is not good for man to be alone” is a truth that bears heartache in the vowels. I am the burden of myself, alone in a desperate search for Your peace, bloodied by the failures of the past. What navigation star offers the promise of a journey home? How can I atone for the roads that should not have been traveled?

Would the watcher of men become the rescuer of the unrighteous? Could the God of the holy cleanse the defiled? Notser ha-adam, are You not also the One who guards my soul to deliver me (Psalm 25:20)? Have you not promised perfect peace (Isaiah 26:3)? Am I to be undone because You see me? Are Job’s words to be my legacy? “What is man that You magnify him, and that You are concerned about him, that You examine him every morning and try him every moment?” “Why then do You not pardon my transgression and take away my iniquity?”

Is my sin so great that You turn Your face from me forever? All I have tonight is this: I hope in You. For I am unworthy of hope in myself. The watcher of men knows my secret self and has found me wanting. I am not Job, the righteous afflicted. I deserve the punishment You have allotted to me. I am guilty—and desperate. I know the searing embrace of regret, the piercing gaze of remorse. The savagery of the yetzer ha’ra executing me in delicate torture.

You, watcher of men, know my cry. You, watcher of men, know my helplessness. You, watcher of men, only You weep with me. Is it not enough?

Now is the time to remember ‘ayyeh.

Topical Index: Job 7:20, Psalm 25:20, Isaiah 26:3, Job 7:17, Job 7:21, natsar

 

A NOTE FROM MICHAEL MOEN
Hello again everyone, I want to say thank you all for the birthday prayers and emails! It was such a surprise to have been reached out to by so many on my birthday. Thank you all for your supportive words regarding the ministry I am involved with, the kids I work with need all the prayers they can get. I am blessed to have so many people putting me in their thoughts and prayers and can’t say enough how thankful I am for the kind words. I hope you all know my thoughts and prayers go out to you all. May Yeshua be with you in the coming months!  -Michael Moen

 

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Ric

I lie awake in the middle of the night having been awoken by a thunder storm. Unable to return to sleep — so I turn to TW and it appears as if someone has been able to draw out the jumbled mess of emotions I have been struggling with and posted them for me so that I can examine them and put words to my cries and moans (carrying an inconsolable emptiness wrapped in rice paper veneer). Thank you, Skip. It is comforting to know I am not alone (alone in a desperate search for Your peace, bloodied by the failures of the past).

Ester

“Is my sin so great that You turn Your face from me forever?” NO, never! It is us who have turned our backs to Him through transgressing in His ways in utter abandonment , or ignorant disobedience.
We are to blame, not Him, but He is watching over us waiting for us to turn back to His ways, when we acknowledge- “I deserve the punishment You have allotted to me. I am guilty—and desperate. I know the searing embrace of regret, the piercing gaze of remorse. The savagery of the yetzer ha’ra executing me in delicate torture.” He hears our cries of desperation, and understands our loneliness. HE is our amazing Redeemer and King. HalleluYAH.

laurita hayes

`The loneliness that heralds my separation has always been there. All the attempts of the yetzer ha-ra just end up attempts to deny, rationalize or cover over the chain that ties me to the body of that death, that fracture.

The great naturalist, Ernest Thompson Seton, who hunted the legendary ‘problem’ animals of the great West a century ago, but who also loved them and wrote some of the most illustrious and sensitive stories chronicling their lives, wrote one about a problem fox he was called in to deal with. No way that could be devised worked with this smartest of foxes, until he decided to find and raid her den. Upon that success, all the pups were killed save one, which they brought back and chained outside the chicken house, which this fox was wont to raid. All around this pup were buried traps and poison baits galore. Well, the mother came. She avoided all the traps and deigned the bait, and grabbed her pup by the scruff and tried to make off with him. Cruelly jerked short by the chain, she was finally forced to quit trying to rescue him. In her frustration, she instead successfully raided the hen house, and fed him. The next night she returned, avoided all the traps again, and tried to haul him off. Failing again, she proceeded to dig a huge mound of dirt over the chain. When the chain was completely buried, she tried again to grab him and take him away, but the buried chain still held. Frustrated again, she raided the hens for his supper, and retired. The third night she showed up, and, successfully avoiding all the traps for herself, but failing again to take him away, she then deliberately went over to a poison bait, picked it up, and took it back to feed her pup for his supper. She never returned again.

Don’t we also try all these ways to deal with the problem of sin? We try to haul off with what we need, but unless we are free, that chain jerks us short. We then attempt to bury the chain of Self with addictions and all sorts of mind, mood and spirit-altering behavior, in the vain hope that what we cannot see, does not exist, or at least does not matter. Then, failing that, so many times, don’t we just despair and eat the poison? These are desperate, heart-tearing attempts by the yetzer ha-ra to solve the problem, which is fracture. We are set against the sources of nourishment we need around us, as the enemy claims so many of those we need the most, including all the false gods, and those who are within our intimate circles are also captured and baited by the enemy, waiting for us to attempt to succeed in relationship, only to then cruelly separate us or bait us into sin. We are in a mess!

We are hard-wired for relationship, for love. All the desire of the yetzer ha-ra is for love, but because Self is opposed to the Gate, which is the only way in, the only other way Self can see to the nourishment it must have is over the wall. We come as a thief. We also attempt to pick the low-hanging fruit that hangs over that wall, but it sickens us instead. So we elect to stay in the City of Destruction, drugged by sin into mind and emotion-altering states that promise to separate us from the fear, loneliness and shame that should alert us to the fact of our fracture. The Way to wholeness of spirit, soul and body, we have been set in opposition to, by starting out with Self in the place of that Way. At the outset, our atlases got switched at the printers. Trying to re-write the code for our direction in our own image, we miss the mark of the High Calling. In our shame, we try to bury the chain that keeps us from the freedom of relationship. Tied to death, the flesh sees nothing but acquiescence to that death. Self is on a fast track to Sheol. Yes, it is.

To stand in the place of my loneliness, then, is to go back and stand again in the fork of the road. Broad is the way that leads to my destruction, but as I stand and ponder, perhaps this time the Way less traveled by will look correct, and perhaps this time I will choose that Way less traveled by, and that will make all the difference. To be burned by sin is also to have my eyes opened to that sin. The beating I got on that broad way of Self can be useful to remember why that way is really not a way. It is more like circling a drain!

Dawn McLaughlin

Oh Laurita you have such a way with words. The story of the fox and her kit makes me cry. This suffering because of man-not totally the point I know. I hate what is done to God’s creatures sometimes.
I can appreciate how you used this to illustrate your point of what we sometimes choose to enslave us rather than to free us. The things we think we MUST have in order to be “happy.”
Powerful message here.

Rich Pease

As a young man I was overwhelmed by the fear of God.

Now, as an older obedient follower of Him, His love
has overwhelmed that fear.

Marsha

A good thing for anyone going through this torment is to read again and remember John 10:10,
“The thief comes only in order to steal, kill and destroy; I have come so that they may have life, life in it’s fullest measure.” When he finds that he cannot keep a victim under his reality of death, he will then fill the mind with lies and torment. If he can’t have them he wants to at least keep them miserable so they will, in the end, be cheated of the true destiny God created for them to live out for Him.
Sins committed have absolutely NO bearing on the saving grace of the Blood of God…NOTHING can trump that Blood already given and waiting. Nothing is more powerful then the Blood of Messiah and no life story is more powerful then the one who says….NOW I AM COMPLETE BECAUSE OF HIM!
Peter explains very well (I Peter): “For the Messiah Himself died for sins, once and for all, a righteous person on behalf of unrighteous people, so that He might bring you to God. He was put to death in the flesh but brought to life by the Spirit; and in this form He went and made a proclamation to the imprisoned spirits, to those who were disobedient long ago, in the day of Noach, when God waited patiently during the building of the ark, in which a few people were delivered by means of water. This also prefigures what delivers us now, the water of immersion, which is not the removal of dirt from the body, but one’s pledge to keep a good conscience toward God, through the resurrection of Yeshua the Messiah. He has gone into heaven and is at the right hand of God, with angels, authorities and powers subject to Him.” He went to hell to give the lost a chance….how much more will He work alongside the living to bring them into complete deliverance? Accept His sacrifice in humble repentance and make the pledge.

Marsha

Because we are at – what would be the appointed “lamb selection day” I am sending my Passover and Triumphant Day greetings to all.
“Adonai spoke to Moshe and Aharon…”On the tenth day of this month, each man is to take a lamb or kid for his family,…without defect…you are to keep it until the fourteenth day of the month, and then the entire assembly of the community of Israel will slaughter it at dusk. They are to take some of the blood and smear it on the two sides and top of the door-frame at the entrance of the house in which they eat it…it is Adonai’s Passover…I will execute judgment against all the gods of Egypt…the blood will serve you as a sign marking the houses where you are..when I see the blood, I will pass over you.” Ex.12:1-15
Five days before Passover (10 Nisan) Jesus entered Jerusalem in the sight of all…(lamb selection day). He taught in the temple three days. At sundown Tuesday, He and His disciples celebrated the feast of Passover as God the Father had commanded 1500 years before. Here Jesus told His disciples, “This is My Body, this is My Blood of the covenant, which is to be shed on behalf of many.”
Jesus was arrested that night and nailed to a Roman cross at about 9 a.m. Wednesday-fulfilling the five days of inspection, He died at 3 p.m., the ninth hour. At that moment, historically, one Hebrew priest blew the shofar on the temple wall just as another priest slit the throat of the sacrificial lamb. Jesus very likely heard the trumpet blast as He cried out, “It is finished!”
Is it any wonder that the temple curtain -which was in place to signify the separation between God and man – tore from top to bottom at that moment?! Jesus, taking our sins on Himself, as the serpent in the wilderness (Numbers 21:9) was put away in the tomb on the first day of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. BUT GOD – He triumphed over sin and death when, as II Corinthians 5:21 explains, “God made this sinless man be a sin offering on our behalf, so that in union with Him we might fully share in God’s righteousness.”
Three days and three nights later, fulfilling the sign of Jonah, the morning after the Feast of First Fruits; the women arrived at Jesus’ tomb to anoint His Body. “He is not here, He is risen!” the angel told them. “Messiah the First Fruits, after that those who are Messiah’s at His coming!” I Cor. 15:23
“When He took the scroll, the four living beings and the 24 elders fell down in front of the Lamb. Each one held a harp and gold bowls filled with pieces of incense, which are the prayers of God’s people; and they sang a new song, “You are worthy to take the scroll and break its seals; because You were slaughtered; at the cost of blood You ransomed for God persons from every tribe, language, people and nation. You made them into a kingdom for God to rule, cohanim to serve Him; and they will rule over the earth!” Rev. 5 8-12
May you all be blessed in His keeping!