Monday, September 17, 2007

Morning Reflections: "Trusting God in the Emotional Trials"

Following the storm theme from last week, I was once again caught off guard by this passage today. I am called to not be anxious about anything. That means physical circumstances and emotional. When I am tempted to feel anxious or defensive because of someones observation, I must examine my heart to see if there is any truth and trust God to work in my heart or that other person's heart accordingly. I must not be negligent about it in a careless way, but trust Him with a God glorifying abandon. I'm not sure of what particular situation Elisabeth Elliot was thinking about when she wrote this, but the Lord has used it to speak to me concerning my trust in Him when I don't like or agree with what someone has to say. 'O Lord, help me to have a humble heart and to trust You! To work and watch but never to worry, to do gladly whatever I am given to do, and to leave all else with God'

"Jesus slept on a pillow in the midst of a raging storm. How could He? The terrified disciples, sure that the next wave would send them straight to the bottom, shook Him awake with rebuke. How could He be so careless of their fate?
He could because He slept in the calm assurance that His Father was in control. His was a quiet heart. We see Him move serenely through all the events of His life--when He was reviled, He did not revile in return. When He knew that He would suffer many things and be killed in Jerusalem, He never deviated from His course. He had set His face like flint. He sat at supper with one who would deny Him and another who would betray Him, yet He was able to eat with them, willing even to wash their feet. Jesus in the unbroken intimacy of His Father's love, kept a quiet heart.
None of us possesses a heart so perfectly at rest, for none lives in such divine unity, but we can learn a little more each day of what Jesus knew--what one writer called the negligence of that trust which carries God with it. Who would think of using the word negligence in regard to our Lord Jesus? To be negligent is to omit to do what a reasonable man would do. Would Jesus omit that? Yes, on occasion, when faith pierced beyond reason.
This "negligent" trust--is it careless, inattentive, indolent? No, not in His case. Jesus, because His will was one with His Father's, could be free from care. He had the blessed assurance of knowing that His Father would do the caring, would be attentive to His Son's need. Was Jesus indolent? No, never lazy, sluggish, or slothful, but He knew when to take action and when to leave things up to His Father. He taught us to work and watch but never to worry, to do gladly whatever we are given to do, and to leave all else with God."
~Elisabeth Elliot~

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