Or maybe we’re too mad. Too full of despair. Too hopeless
and afraid.
Maybe we don’t seek God because we don’t need him enough. Or
maybe we need him too much, and it
doesn’t seem like he is there or even really cares.
Where is God when evil men cut off the heads of his
followers and shout their message of hate? Where is God when disease ravages a
continent already poor and desperate? Where is he when babies die and marriages
fall apart and bodies fail and people everywhere just suffer?
Where are you, God?
We need you, God.
I confess I do not understand. I feel angry
sometimes—a lot—and scared and desperate.
But maybe not desperate enough.
Maybe it’s easier to ignore the questions and pain, to just
duck down with my kids and my stuff and be comfortable. Or maybe I just want to
stay mad. Either way, I avoid God. I don’t talk to him at all, or I hurl
accusations like the fears that assault me.
But what if we just grabbed hold and clung on for dear life?
Like Jacob wrestling all night with a God he didn’t understand.
Like Daniel on
his face, mourning for his nation and crying out to God for three full weeks.
Like David crouching in caves, lifting words instead of weapons, sometimes in
praise, but just as often in bewildered questioning.
They took hold of God and begged for answers. And God didn’t
run from such confrontation. He came. He always comes. We’re the ones running
away.
Daniel was visited by an angel who revealed to him a world
we cannot imagine. The angel couldn’t even get to Daniel for 21 days because
the battle was so intense. Forces we cannot see are raging and fighting over
us. US. God’s beloved children.
A war storms around us while we play on our smartphones. Our
fellow believers are being slaughtered while we flip through channels. People in our own communities are captives to
fear, need, and loneliness. And we too are full of anger and fear, and maybe we want to change, maybe we want to do something, but don’t
know what to do.
I don’t know what
to do. How to fix this mess. How I fit. How it even matters that I care.
But I’m convinced he’s here, and he will hear. We can’t see
him because we aren’t really looking.
It’s time to fall on our faces before God. It’s time to take
all this anger and all these questions and give them to him, grab hold of him
and ask him to come. It’s time to stop waiting for answers and start looking for answers. Being the answers.
He won’t run from our questions. He won’t shy away from our
pleas for him to come. He won’t ignore our crying out. But it starts here. With
us. It begins with us moving toward him, pouring out our need for him,
repenting, mourning, and asking for him to come.
Do we know what it means to truly seek him? Do we really
want him to come? Are we ready for what that means, for what he will ask us to
do? Because we are his hands and feet. We are his voice. Do we really want to
be the answer to the questions?
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