Wednesday, October 11, 2017
Why, Lord?
Far too often I find my mind is a battle field - faith and doubt warring for supremacy. It says in Psalm 32:7:
"For You are my hiding place. You protect me from trouble. You surround me with songs of victory."
It brings me comfort...until that dart from the enemy finds its mark and I begin the inevitable round of questions.
"If that is true Father, why is there so much suffering? Why do those who love You so dearly and serve You so well have such trouble come into their lives? Why do little children suffer pain and sorrow? Why do evil people prosper? ......"
I fight back with the truth I know - that He loves us; that He is good. Sometimes the questions persist.
I read something today in my little devotional, "Joy and Strength" that answered the question in a way that could only be the gentle voice of the Spirit:
"Just as soon as we turn toward Him with loving confidence, and say, 'Thy will be done,' whatever chills or cripples or enslaves our spirits, clogs their powers, or hinders their development, melts away in the sunshine of His sympathy. He does not free us from the pain, but from its power to dull the sensibilities; not from poverty and care, but from their tendency to narrow and harden; not from calumny, but from the maddening poison in its sting, not from disappointment, but from the hopelessness and bitterness of thought which it so often engenders. We attain unto this perfect liberty when we rise superior to untoward circumstances, triumph over the pain and weakness of disease, over unjust criticism, the wreck of earthly hopes, over promptings to envy , every sordid and selfish desire, every unhallowed longing, every doubt of God's wisdom and love and kindly care, when we rise into an atmosphere of undaunted moral courage, of restful content, of child-like trust, of holy, all-conquering calm."
William W. Kinsley (b.1837)
I've written the rest of this devotional at Laced With Grace. Join me there?
Blessings,
Linda