K-J
Account Closed
A few years ago, while attending a grief support group, a pastor friend of mine was speaking to us and he brought up a wonderful analysis about judging how "true" our faith in God is. I ran across it in some old papers I was sorting through, and thought it was something that might "hit home" with others here on the site. To summarize what he said:
You go to the doctor. He checks you over, says you need medicine. Scribbles down an illegible prescription, hands it to you and sends you on your way. You give the scribbled prescription to the pharmacist, who deciphers it and gives you a bottle of pills. Off you go to your home, you pour a glass of water. You open the pills, put the prescribed amount in your mouth and wash them down. You didn't have the doctor check to make sure the pharmacist read the prescription right - you didn't ask a chemist to verify what the pharmacist gave you was what was prescribed. You could have died instantly if it were not the correct medicine, yet you swallowed. You acted in absolute faith that everyone in the chain did their part correctly.
How then, he asked, if we say we believe in God and accept the salvation given to us through the death and resurrection of His Son, is it so hard for us to lay our burdens in His hands and LEAVE THEM. We exhibit unwavering faith in daily situations, but when it comes to the very core of what we say we believe, we hold back.
Perhaps our wait for answered prayer has a bit to do with the fact that we haven't totally surrendered the problem, we cannot bring ourselves to fully let go. I am making it my mission over the coming days to truly evaluate my depth of faith and work on making sure I am fully surrendered and in line with God's will. I am praying for everyone in this prayer family that they might take the time to evaluate their faith as well. May God's blessings flow when we can honestly say we trust Him more than the pharmacist.
Just a thought to ponder in some quiet moment - Have a blessed day in the Lord - and TRUST.
You go to the doctor. He checks you over, says you need medicine. Scribbles down an illegible prescription, hands it to you and sends you on your way. You give the scribbled prescription to the pharmacist, who deciphers it and gives you a bottle of pills. Off you go to your home, you pour a glass of water. You open the pills, put the prescribed amount in your mouth and wash them down. You didn't have the doctor check to make sure the pharmacist read the prescription right - you didn't ask a chemist to verify what the pharmacist gave you was what was prescribed. You could have died instantly if it were not the correct medicine, yet you swallowed. You acted in absolute faith that everyone in the chain did their part correctly.
How then, he asked, if we say we believe in God and accept the salvation given to us through the death and resurrection of His Son, is it so hard for us to lay our burdens in His hands and LEAVE THEM. We exhibit unwavering faith in daily situations, but when it comes to the very core of what we say we believe, we hold back.
Perhaps our wait for answered prayer has a bit to do with the fact that we haven't totally surrendered the problem, we cannot bring ourselves to fully let go. I am making it my mission over the coming days to truly evaluate my depth of faith and work on making sure I am fully surrendered and in line with God's will. I am praying for everyone in this prayer family that they might take the time to evaluate their faith as well. May God's blessings flow when we can honestly say we trust Him more than the pharmacist.
Just a thought to ponder in some quiet moment - Have a blessed day in the Lord - and TRUST.