Robert & Kay Camenisch encouraging and equipping relationships

Security in Troubling Times

 

Three-year-old Caitlin seemed oblivious to everything around her as she dug in the sand. However, if a wave got too close, she jumped and ran to safety.

Her brother and sisters were in the ocean, laughing as they welcomed incoming waves. But Caitlin kept her distance from tongues of water that threatened her security. She kept her distance, choosing to play safely in the sand.

However, on the third day at the beach, she summoned courage to brave the water and waves. She laughed as she stomped and splashed in the shallow water.

As she played, she held tightly to her daddy’s hand, moving closer to him when a wave approached. If a larger wave threatened, she stood still, holding her daddy’s hand until danger passed.

Her father was her shield, fortress, and shelter from the storm. Her frolicking was tempered only by her awareness of danger and tight grip on his hand.

I thought of Caitlin when I recently heard of a pastor that asked his congregation how many of them had become fearful because of the random attacks that are happening these days in unexpected places. Two thirds of those present raised their hands.

Two out of three people in the church are living in daily fear. And the percentage probably holds in other churches as well.

And yet, throughout Scripture, we’re told not to fear things of the world. In Psalm 118:6, the psalmist says, “The Lord is for me, I will not fear; what can man do to me?”

You may answer, “But men are doing terrible things to innocent people. What if I–or someone I love–is next?”

That was Caitlin’s reaction to the waves. Her fear of the waves kept her from enjoying the water for two days. What if the next one was too close, too big, or too (fill in the blank).

Like Caitlin, we can move beyond the bondage of fear and enjoy the moment.

To do that, we also need to cling to our father. Except, we need to look to our heavenly Father.

While holding His hand, we don’t need to fear the waves—or what man can do to us. He is our stronghold, our tower, defense, and deliverer. As long as we run to Him, He will guard us.

However, we’re not guaranteed safety just because we are God’s children. Because of sin, we are all partakers of pain and suffering, but we have a choice in how protected we are and how it affects us when tragedy does hit.

God warned us that, “When terror comes like a storm, and your destructions comes like a whirlwind, when distress and anguish come upon you, then they will call on me, but I will not answer: they will seek me diligently, but they will not find me, because they hated knowledge and did not choose the fear of the Lord. They would have none of my counsel and despised my every rebuke” (Prov. 1:27-30).

As a nation, we have despised His counsel and set ourselves up for storms of destruction. We have set ourselves up for God to turn our back on us.

On the other hand, He also says He wants to guard and protect us.

“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the one who kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to her! How often I wanted to gather your children together, as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, but you were not willing! . . . I say to you, you shall not see Me until the time comes when you say, `Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord!'” (Lk. 13:34-35).

Caitlin was like a little chick. When she perceived danger, she ran under her father’s wings and held tight. When a particularly high wave approached, she positioned herself close to him on his far side from the wave and looked him in the eye for reassurance and guidance.

She trusted her father for safety. She enjoyed the water as long as she was by his side. 
And she never ventured out on her own.

We live in troubling times, but we don’t need to live in fear. We have a God who’s told us that He is with us. He said, “Do not fear, for I am with you; Do not anxiously look about you, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, surely I will help you, Surely I will uphold you with My righteous right hand (Isa. 41:10).

God will uphold us, but we need to be sure that we look to Him. Then, we can rest secure and be at peace, even in troubling times.

 

The Danger of Clutter

For two months, I’ve been involved in cleaning out “stuff.” I’ve discovered that I’m more sentimental than I realized. Things connected with a special person or fond memory are hard to part with. In addition, I’m surprised by how many things I want to keep simply because I like them. Or maybe “I might need it” someday. Some things I’m not ready to part with things even though they are useless to me now.

It doesn’t matter whether it is pictures, papers, knickknacks, or kitchen items, if I don’t need them and won’t use them, they’re clutter. Superfluous stuff distracts me from my goals—much less God’s goals for me.

While going through a box this week, I realized I live with clutter in the spiritual realm too. I enjoy keeping up with friends through social media, but I also let it distract me when I need to be doing something else. I occasionally seek diversion in electronic games when tired and discouraged. I would gain much more by dipping into the Psalms or sitting quietly before God. There’s sports, entertainment, even food, and more. Those things are not necessarily bad, but it’s easy to let them clutter daily life and distract from goals and purposes.

We’re told to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness (Mt. 6:33), and to love God with all our being (Mt. 22:37). We know that we are “created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them (Eph. 2:10). Why keep “stuff” that doesn’t help reach those goals?

I don’t believe we need to throw out everything that isn’t “necessary” or “spiritual.” However, after going through boxes, closets, and drawers that haven’t been organized lately—much less cleaned out—I’m aware that I need to stop, make assessments, and de-clutter more often—in my spiritual life as well as the physical. When I don’t make conscious choices about what rules my life, clutter grows, and it can quickly create distraction and unbalance in my life.

More than once, as I’ve sat down to have time with the Lord, I’ve quickly checked my e-mail to see if I got a response from somebody. Then, I suddenly realize an hour passed and I still haven’t opened my Bible. That is “stuff” out of control.

If I truly want to seek first the kingdom of God, I need to be purposeful about it. If I want to love God more, I need to get rid of the stuff that interferes with that goal—even if it’s “good stuff” and even if it’s hard to turn it loose.

Clutter is dangerous because it blocks us from experiencing the full salvation of the Lord in our daily lives and from reaching our full potential. It’s easy to get so comfortable with our clutter that we don’t see the danger it presents.

“Therefore, if a man cleanses himself from these things, he will be a vessel for honor, sanctified, useful to the Master, prepared for every good work” (2 Tim. 2:21).