Robert & Kay Camenisch encouraging and equipping relationships

Are You Listening?

Are you listening? Many conflicting voices compete to be heard today. Who are you listening to? For example, in the pandemic crisis leaders must choose whom to listen to among their many experts. They must choose which advisor to heed. Likewise, as citizens must also choose whom to listen to and follow. And that’s just one segment of our lives.

Drama is heightened through constant reminders that our choice may determine life or death. Whom we listen to determines our quality of life—for today and future life on earth.

How much more is that true in the spiritual realm. Our choices determine our eternal destination as well as earthly matters.

In the middle of the pandemic, it’s important that we listen to our God, not just the cacophony of voices around us. Throughout history, when believers have been in crises, it’s usually because they haven’t been listening to God. In response, He says, “Listen to Me! Hear, O My people!”

Psalm 81 reveals God’s frustration when His children fail to hear His voice. It’s an apt word for today too.

Verse 8: “Hear, O My people, and I will  admonish you; O Israel, if you would listen to Me!” (Ps. 81:8) Note the identity, love, and compassion in His words, “O My people”, and the frustration—desperation?—in “O Israel, If you would listen!”

Our God wants the best for us. He’s instructed us about the path to prosperity and warned of the path to trouble. But if we don’t listen to Him, how can He direct us? He has chosen to allow us to make choices rather than treat us as puppets to keep us in the way..

Verse 10: “I the Lord, am your God, Who brought you up from the land of Egypt; open your mouth wide and I will fill it.”

First, He reminds us that He is the answer. He’s Lord, your God, the One who saves from trouble, even bondage. But what’s the open mouth about?

Picture a baby bird with an open mouth. That’s us when we’re rightly related to the Lord. We’re little bits of helplessness. We can’t do anything, but we do have big mouths that open wide. And we have a big God that’s promised to guard us, lead us, and provide all our needs. He told us to pen our mouths and He’ll fill them with goodness.

But we must open our mouths. A wide open mouth is a picture of expectant dependence on Him.

Verse 13 repeats the frustrated refrain, “Oh that My people would listen to Me, that Israel would walk in My ways!

This verse adds understanding that we miss in the translation from the Hebrew. The words for listen and hear mean more than just hearing. In the Hebrew, hearing includes understanding and obedience. When God says, “Listen to Me,” or “Hear Me,” He is also saying, “Walk in My ways, obey me. Act like My children.” The thought is repeated in this verse through the use of “listen” and “walk in My ways.”

Verse 9 essentially says the same thing, Let there be no strange god among you; nor shall you worship any foreign god.”

If we’re not listening to the God who made us, what strange god have we put before Him? How do we invest our time and energy? Who/what are we listening to and following?

Verses 13-14: “Oh that My people would listen to Me, that Israel would walk in My ways! I would quickly subdue their enemies and turn My hand against their adversaries.”

If we turn back to the living God, He will defeat those who are against us/Him. He will subdue our enemies—even the microscopic virus that brought us to our knees. (Does that mean that it will hang around until we do listen?)

In the midst of the cacophony of life, it’s easy to be distracted. But our God knows we get distracted. How many times in verses 8 -13 have we been reminded to listen to God? This is important.

Verse 15: “Those who hate the Lord would pretend obedience to Him, and their time of punishment would be forever.”

“Those who hate the Lord” seems like people who are hostile toward Him, but this refers to the hypocrites in the church, those who pretend obedience—but aren’t listening!.“Their time of punishment will be forever”! That sounds harsh, but keep reading; God still loves us if and when we’re pretenders.

Verse 16 “But I would feed you with the finest of the wheat, and with honey from the rock I would satisfy you.”

His desire is to bless even hypocrites, those who pretend obedience while they follow other gods, who say they follow, but they aren’t listening. He wants to pour His finest on all His children.

His desire is that we all be like little birds, with ears open to listen and mouths open wide to receive from Him. He wants to rescue us from the enemy. But first, He needs our attention.

Our hearts are deceptive. It’s easy to slide off the path without realizing it. Easy to become districted and assume we’re hearing Him when we aren’t.

It’s time to ask, “Am I listening?” Who am I listening to?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Hope That Will Not Disappoint

 

What are your hopes in the midst of bad-news headlines in the world today?Island in ocean agava (2)

News is full of threats of terrorist attacks, predictions of financial collapse, and alarming decline in morals. As if that isn’t enough, political and racial divides are increasingly hostile, and the integrity of the family unit is disintegrating. Many families people are struggling with their own crises.

It seems the world is spinning out of control. As individuals, what can we do? It seems hopeless. Must we move to a desert island or hide our head in the sand to find peace?

I’m reminded of the Matthew 14 account of the disciples in the boat, trying desperately to row across the lake, with the storm buffeting their boat so they could make no headway. Among them were fishermen who were accustomed to sudden storms on the sea, but even they were overwhelmed by the storm—until Jesus came to them, walking on the water.

Peter got out of the boat and walked to meet Him, but he sank when he took his eyes off Jesus and looked down at the waves.

Like Peter, as individuals, we are limited in what we can do to change the storm in the world around us. If we focus on the waves, we will be overcome by fear and will sink in despair and hopelessness.

But Peter didn’t drown. Instead, he lifted his eyes and his hand, crying out to Jesus, and Jesus lifted him up out of the waves. Furthermore, when Jesus got in the boat, the winds and waves calmed down.

Our hope is in the Lord. When it seems the world is falling apart or ready to self-destruct, He is still the King of kings and the Lord of lords. He is sovereign, the ruler of all, and more powerful than any calamity that can befall us.

It doesn’t matter whether our threat is from people who want to destroy us, the decline of our country because we’ve lost the way, a family crisis, or a combination of them all. If we cry out to Him, the almighty God will lift us out of the waves or give us peace in the midst of them.

The Lord is our rock, salvation, shield, fortress, refuge, stronghold, and deliverer (Ps. 18:2-3, 62:2). Furthermore, He “takes pleasure in those who fear him [and] hope in his steadfast love” (Ps. 147:11).

He will not forsake those who lean on Him. He will strengthen them to stand and to walk on the troubled waters. He is our bulwark in the storm.

Do not be dismayed. Hope in God does not disappoint. He is also worthy to be praised and is glorified through those who call upon Him.

“May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that by the power of the Holy Spirit you may abound in hope” (Rom 15:13).