Mourning,
anger, and fear. Shootings at schools and churches, in nightclubs, and holiday
parties. Where can God be in all of this? Would you believe, right there—beside
those who weep and the fearful? He has always been “there” and will always be “there.”
We often don’t understand His timetable, but His time is always the right time—in
the end. And the end is really what matters.
Several
thousand years ago a man named Jacob was running away from home for fear that
his twin brother, Esau, would find him and kill him. Jacob had a good reason to
fear Esau because he had traded a bowl of delectable stew for Esau’s birthright—Esau
definitely feeling food was most important. Then with a little help from his
mother, Jacob stole his brother’s blessing as the firstborn. And that was the
proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back.
In
the 28th chapter of Genesis we find Jacob running for his life,
camping out in the desert, so destitute of creature comforts he uses a rock for
a pillow. Somehow finding a comfortable crevice to fit his head, Jacob goes to
sleep—and then to dream. He sees a ladder stretching from earth to heaven with
angels going up and down. To add to this awesome setting, God is standing above
the ladder speaking directly to Jacob and identifying Himself as being the Lord
God of Abraham (Jacob’s grandfather) and the God of Isaac (Jacob’s father). God
goes on to say He is giving the land where Jacob is sleeping to him and his
descendants, the number of which will be as numerous as the dust of the earth. Most
importantly, God tells Jacob, “In you and your seed shall all the families of
the earth be blessed.”
Then
God says to Jacob, “I am with you and will keep you wherever you go....” When Jacob woke up he said, “Surely the Lord is
in this place, and I did not know it.” Not surprising since he was camping in a
pretty inhospitable area, not a spot one would consider God inhabiting.
Today
we may be wandering in our own kind of desert. Maybe it’s grief due to death of
loved ones or broken relationships, suffering from chronic illness, loss of a
job, or fear of life in general.
All
of God’s children can depend on His statement to Jacob—“I am with you”—no matter
the type of desert. The truth of that statement can also be based on an event about 2000 years ago when a baby was born in a Bethlehem stable. That
baby was Jesus—Immanuel—God with us. Announced by His heavenly messengers, the
angels sang of His birth, this One foretold to be of Jacob’s seed. For Jacob’s
son, Judah, founded the tribe of Judah from which came the Lion of Judah, the
Savior of the World.
God
IS with us!!
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