• Hard Stuff, Good God

    Map MIddle East

     

    Shall we receive good from God, and shall we not receive evil?” In all this Job did not sin with his lips. Job 2:10b

      The world is a hard place to live in right now. I recently read an article that broke my heart about Christian children being beheaded and their heads put on a stick for display by ISIS. Many of the parents have also lost their lives. Others have been forced to convert to Islam or lose their homes. (http://cnsnews.com/mrctv-blog/barbara-boland/leader-isis-systematically-beheading-children-christian-genocide?utm_source=Facebook&utm_medium=Marketing&utm_term=Facebook&utm_campaign=B-christian-holocaust)

    In an unrelated post I saw a short video of a fourteen year old American girl who had been seduced into prostitution by a young pimp. Another posted a testimony from someone outside an abortion mill trying to dissuade young women from making the horrible mistake of aborting their babies. She was ridiculed, cussed at, and even told she was wrong by a woman who said she attends an Evangelical church. This woman sees no problem with a mother making this decision. (What is she hearing on Sunday morning?)

    This all led me to a place of frustration as right after I listen to or read these messages the next one is someone complaining about food (like my own recent post), or delighting in a new baby, or pictures of a family vacation. Facebook is sending me on an emotional rollercoaster these days. There is nothing wrong with enjoying the pictures and fun posts, the complaints about food, or the news of a  new house or a new car. It’s just that they all seem to fade in comparison to what is happening to people all around the world. I feel guilty when I want to rejoice with someone.

    Our (sure) hope, of course, is that God is sovereign and He is not caught unaware, as I am, about what is happening in the world. I cannot see what He is doing in these things but I know He is not sitting by without judgment.

    The bigger problem for me is that I can see that I am doing very little. This is largely because I have no idea what to do beyond praying. I feel obligated to know these things and compelled to keep reading. I also feel clueless about how to help. Then, I read this article. “Crisis in Iraq – Five Things You Can Actually Do to Help”. Even these are things like sign a petition, speak to your legislators, send money, and put up posts on Facebook and Twitter. I don’t know how much they will help so I probably won’t do all of them, but I am grateful for some direction. http://www.christiantoday.com/index.php/article?a_id=39094&slug=crisis.in.iraq.six.things.you.can.actually.do.to.help&page

    Mostly, I am thankful for my faith in the Sovereign God of the universe to be in control.  Though I may do something from the list I am truly doubtful that they will make a difference. I might feel better for having tried.  I know that no one and nothing but our great God can change these situations.

    In fact, He is the One who has sovereignly given the good gifts I read about on Facebook. Romans 12:15 says that just as we are to weep with those who weep, we are also to rejoice with those who rejoice, (Romans 12:15) (as I am doing in my own new granddaughter!)