We submit to God even when it tramples our own desires. We submit to His authority and sovereignty in the storm just as readily as during calm seas. Consistency matters, and it’s in those days of testing that our commitment to the will and ways of God are put to the test, tried, and proven. It’s not about me, or my comfort, or what I think I deserve; it’s about His glory and His will, and once we come to terms with that singular reality, our perspective shifts, and we begin to understand the deeper truths necessary for us to have a vibrant, well rounded, and well-grounded relationship with Him.
It’s often in the storm that you see the value of obedience.
When God told Noah to build an ark and do so to His specifications, Noah could
have taken it upon himself to cut corners, change the layout, or not follow
through to the minutest of details. He could have shaved years off the project,
and no one would have been the wiser. Had he done so, he would have seen the
ark start to take on water and not be a sail-worthy vessel too late to do
anything about it. The Word tells us what a proper relationship with God is. It
tells us that being in His will and walking in His way is the only means by which
we attain a true and lasting foundation of faith, a foundation that is
unshakeable and timeless, and that sustains us through life’s storms.
It is essential to lay the foundation of Job’s faithfulness
and stress the continual relationship he had with God lest anyone think there
are any shortcuts, special prayers, incantations, mantras, or courses they can
avail themselves of to bypass growing their faith and being blameless and
upright in the sight of God. Some things just take time. There’s no way around it,
and no matter how many might want to fast pass their spiritual maturity,
there’s only one way, one queue, one formula, and one recipe. You build up your
most holy faith brick by spiritual brick. You start with the foundation, which
is Christ, and every day, your goal is to be stronger than the previous one.
That’s not to say there aren’t a seemingly limitless number
of people offering just such shortcuts, ceremonies, and rituals; it’s that they
don’t work, and that’s the crux of the problem. There’s a reason people clarify
the difference between a true friend, a Facebook friend, and a true friend with
which they are also friends on Facebook. They may be acquaintances, even people
you’re friendly with, but if they’ve never been over for dinner, or you don’t know
them well enough to trust them to babysit your kids, they’re not friends in the
truest sense of the word. Overuse of certain words water down and dilute their
meaning. If you don’t believe this to be the case, just take inventory of how many
people are calling themselves apostles and prophets today.
The same goes for people who have a superficial relationship
with God, know of God, and know God and have a relationship with Him. The three
are not the same or interchangeable. Knowing of God is acknowledging His
existence, while having a relationship with Him is actively seeking His
presence, understanding His character, and aligning your life with His will. We
aim to both know God and have a deep and abiding relationship with Him. Only in
knowing Him, His goodness, His love, and His desire to bring us into a more
perfect union with Him will we have the faith and trust necessary to walk
through the fire knowing He is there.
The more of Him you know, the deeper your love and obedience.
The deeper your love and obedience, the stronger your spiritual man becomes. It
doesn’t happen overnight, nor is it something we can expect to be fully formed
at the snap of a finger, but something that matures over time as His presence
and faithfulness are continually made known in our lives.
Psalm 116:1-7, “I love the Lord, because He has heard My
voice and my supplications. Because He has inclined His ear to me, therefore I
will call upon Him as long as I live. The pains of death surrounded me, and the
pangs of Sheol laid hold of me; I found trouble and sorrow. Then I called upon
the name of the Lord: “O Lord, I implore You, deliver my soul!” Gracious is the
Lord, and righteous; Yes, our God is merciful. The Lord Preserves the simple; I
was brought low, and He saved me. Return to your rest, O my soul, for the Lord
has dealt bountifully with you.”
David understood the value of establishing a relationship
with God. He understood that for God to hear his voice, God must first know him
as His. It’s difficult to reconcile the notion that some people have a hard
time spending twenty minutes in God’s presence, whether praying, reading the
Word, or meditating upon it, yet want to spend eternity in His presence.
I get that you want to go to heaven, but you do understand
that God will be there, too. If spending time with Him seems a chore to you,
and if you avoid it at every turn for the most trivial of reasons, why do you
want to go to heaven so badly? Your obedience to God cannot be independent of
love for God. Why would anyone want to spend eternity with someone they don’t love?
Well, to escape the alternative, brother. But don’t you see that God knows
whether men want a relationship in order to escape some future event or because
they genuinely love Him?
Would God not test and vet those who claim to love Him to ensure
that they not only have Him on their lips when all is problem-free but that
they retain Him in their hearts when their world crumbles around them?
Are you beginning to understand how hideously malformed what
currently passes as the gospel is when compared to the true Gospel?
Not one man worth his salt has ever claimed that God did not hear them, fail them, or fall short of their expectations because their expectations were His presence, His comfort, and His strength in the midst of their trials and tribulations. Their expectation wasn’t that they’d never have to go through anything uncomfortable, painful, or even catastrophic in this present life but that whatever trial or hardship they had to go through, God would be with them every step of the way, providing comfort and strength. There is sufficiency in His presence no matter the struggle or hardship, but that sufficiency is reserved for those who are truly His.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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