Labor Pain

As Mother’s Day approaches, I can’t help but think about what it took for me to become a mother. There was discomfort, morning sickness, and finally labor. And they don’t call it labor for nothing! It’s hard work to bring a new life into the world.

Childbirth isn’t just uncomfortable. It’s painful. But each time, the pain was washed away by the joy of holding my sweet baby. You see, labor is pain with a purpose. There is a goal, even though in the midst of labor you have no idea how much longer it will last, how much more intense it will be, and how much more you can bear. On the other side of the pain, there is joy.

All of us will encounter painful points in our lives, even though we do our best to avoid them. We can respond by attempting to anesthetize our pain through alcohol, drugs, sex, success, relationships. When the numbness of those epidurals wears off, the pain remains. This is because God tells us that sometimes He allows painful circumstances in our lives for a purpose.

Remember how the Lord your God led you through the wilderness for these forty years, humbling you and testing you to prove your character, and to find out whether or not you would obey his commands.         Deuteronomy 8:2

At times I might shut up the heavens so that no rain falls, or I might command locusts to devour your crops, or I might send plagues among you. Then if my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and heal their land.         2 Chronicles 8:13-14

God led the Israelites through the wilderness in order to develop and prove their character. He told Solomon that He would use hardship to cause His people to turn from their wicked ways and turn to Him.  The point wasn’t for them to suffer.  The point was to draw them to Him.

There is always purpose to the painful providences of God. How can we distinguish between pain that is part of God’s pruning process, and pain that is the result of living in a world under the curse of sin? Look at the fruit. Does your pain have a purpose?  What will it produce? If it does its work, what result will you see?

The things that are of God always produce the things of God. Love. Joy. Peace. Patience. Kindness. Goodness. Faithfulness. Gentleness. Self-control. Just as my labor during childbirth brought new life into the world, the work of God brings life. He is the One who makes dead things alive. He is the Creator and sustainer of life. He is Life itself.

Jesus was not immune to pain. As a matter of fact, His suffering is what gives Him such compassion for our suffering. He is not just sympathetic. He is empathetic – He knows our weakness because He has felt it Himself.

The Messiah was “beaten and bloodied, so disfigured one would scarcely know he was a person” (Isaiah 52:14). In the Garden of Gethsemane, Christ “was in such agony of spirit that his sweat fell to the ground like great drops of blood” (Luke 22:44). And His final words from the Cross are an anguished cry – “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Mark 15:34)

Jesus suffered. But Jesus’ suffering was pain with a purpose. By it, Jesus secured our salvation, peace, and freedom. “It was the Lord’s good plan to crush him and fill him with grief… When he sees all that is accomplished by his anguish, he will be satisfied. And because of what he has experienced, my righteous servant will make it possible for many to be counted righteous, for he will bear all their sins” (Isaiah 53:10-11, emphasis added).

I don’t know the purpose of your painful circumstance. But I know that if it is of God, it will produce the things of God in your life. It will accomplish the work of God. Right now, it might seem unfair, pointless even. But when God has finished His work, you will be satisfied.

Hee-Haw

As the Israelites prepared to enter the Promised Land, God told them they would have to fight for it. He wasn’t going to hand it to them on a silver platter. They had to want it, to earnestly desire it, to come to cherish it because of their effort, their blood, sweat and tears.

If you’re going around invading and claiming territory, word is going to spread. The Israelites took over the territory of the Amorites. The king of Moab heard of their victory, and knew that now the Israelites were camped nearby. “When they saw how many Israelites there were, he and his people were terrified” (Numbers 22:3).

So what did the king do? He reached out to Balaam. Balaam was the go-to guy in these kinds of situations because he was a sorcerer for hire. For the right price, he would confer with the appropriate god(s) and get back to you with their message – giving whatever blessings or curses the buyer was in the market for. He was a rubber stamp. A tarot card reader whose vague predictions could cover any circumstance.

That doesn’t mean that God couldn’t use him. The king sent messengers and money, asking Balaam to curse the Israelites so they wouldn’t be able to hurt the Moabites. When Balaam prayed, God answered and told him not to do it. So he sent the messengers away. But they came back, this time with offers of more money. And instead of sending them immediately on their way, Balaam said, “But stay here one more night to see if the Lord has anything else to say to me” (Numbers 22:19). Stay here one more night and see if God changes His mind and lets me accept the job (and the money).

Temptation comes from the lure of our own evil desires. These evil desires lead to evil actions, and evil actions lead to death.    James 1:14-15

God did allow Balaam to go. But I don’t think that God changed His mind. God’s intention never changed – Israel would not be cursed. Balaam’s greed actually placed him into a “but God” position – the Moab king hired him to curse Israel, but God eventually used him to bless Israel and curse Moab. I think God allowed Balaam to go because He gives free will. He showed Balaam the best way, what He wanted. And when Balaam didn’t do it, God intervened.

“He sent an angel of the Lord to stand in the road to block [Balaam’s] way” (Numbers 22:22). Balaam’s donkey was given the ability to see what Balaam could not – the angel of the Lord blocking the path with a drawn sword. The donkey tried to squeeze by, to go around, but eventually he could not. Every time the donkey changed course to protect Balaam, Balaam beat him for it, until eventually the donkey spoke.

“What have I done to you that deserves your beating me these three times?” it asked Balaam.

“Because you have made me look like a fool!” Balaam shouted. “If I had a sword with me, I would kill you!”

“But I am the same donkey you always ride on,” the donkey answered. “Have I ever done anything like this before?”

“No,” he admitted. Then the Lord opened Balaam’s eyes.”       Numbers 22:28-31

The miracle wasn’t the donkey speaking, it was Balaam’s eyes being opened. He had been blind but now he saw. God’s stubborn love and mercy confronted him when He blocked Balaam’s path and said, “You cannot pass. You can go no further in your wrong direction. The path you are on is headed for destruction and I can allow you to go no farther.

Our God does the same for us. When we follow our own desires that are in opposition to what God intends, God respects our free will. Sometimes, He causes our path to veer off the course we think is best, and we yell and shout and shake our fists at God, angry that He is not letting us go our own way. We are blind to His mercy.

Balaam was a different man by the time he reached his destination. Standing before the Moab king, he spoke the blessing over Israel God instructed him to give. His first words are: “This is the prophecy of Balaam son of Beor, the prophecy of the man whose eyes see clearly, who hears the words of God, who sees a vision from the Almighty, who falls down with eyes wide open” (Numbers 24:3-4).

Many years later, a tiny baby was laid in a donkey’s manger – God’s boldest intervention in all of history. Those who see Jesus see the heart of God. “I have come to give sight to the blind and to show those who think they see that they are blind” (John 9:39). Stop. I can let you go no further in your wrong direction. I have come to walk with you, to guide you and demonstrate for you the way you should go.

The Lord says, “I will guide you along the best pathway for your life. I will advise you and watch over you.”              Psalm 32:8