All used up

Yesterday was grocery day. Some weeks the cart is full enough I think pushing it should count as some kind of weight training. I got all the supplies. I bought everything on the list. And then it happened, just like every other week.  I no sooner got everything put away when someone discovered that there was something else we’d run out of.

But maybe this is just a reminder of how God intends it to be. Look at how the Israelites “shopped” in the desert after God rescued them from captivity in Egypt (Exodus 16). God took them to a place where there wasn’t any other source of food than what He supplied.  He gave them bread in the morning and meat in the evening. And then He set it up so that every day they used up what He had given. Every day they had to rely on God to give more.

I have to admit that there are some days when I feel I have used up every ounce that God has given me. I don’t have anything left to give. My supplies are all gone. And then I need to go back to the Supplier and ask for more. And maybe that’s exactly how He wants it – me recognizing my need, and going to Him right away to fulfill it.

Because God is a good dad who responds to our needs, we know that we can “come boldly to the throne of our gracious God. There we will receive his mercy, and we will find grace to help us when we need it” (Hebrews 4:16).  Too many times we come like we expect a tongue-lashing for asking.  Or like we can’t imagine that God would want to respond to our needs.  I imagine my kids asking me for deodorant the way I sometimes approach God – “Mom, I need some more deodorant.  But only if it’s your will.  If you don’t want me to have it, then I’ll be ok.  I don’t want it if it’s too much trouble.”

God says to come boldly, with confidence.  Not only that, He wants us keep coming.  We don’t just get a one-time audience before the throne. Whenever we need it, every time we need it, we will find grace. We know this because the Bible says “Keep on praying” (1 Thessalonians 5:17). And Jesus told us, “Keep on asking, and you will be given what you ask for. Keep on looking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened. For everyone who asks, receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And the door is opened to everyone who knocks” (Matthew 7:7-8).

So if you feel that you have used up all that God has given you, have the audacity to ask for more. Go to your good Daddy and tell Him you used up everything He gave you and now you need more. He isn’t keeping a list, waiting until there are enough things you’ve run out of before He goes to the store. He’s already purchased everything that you will ever need at Calvary.

Since God did not spare even his own Son but gave him up for us all, won’t God, who gave us Christ, also give us everything else?  Romans 8:32

When you come before Him, is God going to say, Weren’t you just here last week? Sorry, I’m all tapped out. Of course not! God paid for every need that will ever be on our list with the precious blood of Christ. What value could we possibly place on that? The amount of righteousness that was credited to our account when Christ died for our sins is infinite – it’s an open line of credit. We will never reach the end of God’s limitless supply of grace.

When Jesus fed the multitudes, He didn’t tell them to only take one small serving to be sure there was enough. He gave more and more bread until everyone was satisfied and there were leftovers (Matthew 14:20). That means there was enough for people to go back for a second helping. Maybe you’ve taken a small serving of grace, because you didn’t want to be too much of a bother.  God says, Take a big helping.  Come back for seconds.  And then thirds.  Come back as often as you can.  Keep on asking.  I have plenty to give.

Turn Here

About a month ago I passed a boy and his dad playing catch in their yard as I was driving through my neighborhood. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw the ball sail over the boy’s head. The next thing I saw was the ball hitting my windshield. There’s a white mark on the glass still.

Maybe you’ve never managed to collide with a baseball, but there’s a good chance something has hit you out of the clear blue. You were going along and something smashed into you. I’m not talking a bump in the road. I don’t mean a flat tire that you could fix and keep going. I mean something that slammed into you. It left a mark. It sent you in a whole new direction.

You had your eyes on a destination, a beautiful and desirable place. And then God said, “Turn left. Your path is to the left. The way I have planned for you is not the way you envisioned, but it is the best way for you to go because it is what I have planned. Because it is the way I have prepared for you. The provisions I have laid out for you are there, along that path to the left. The other path is not for you. The other path does not have all that I intend for you. It’s not that what you wanted is wrong – it’s just not the way I’m taking you. Turn your eyes to me. Trust me. Go the way that I have directed you.”

The question is, what will you do? Will you turn down the road to the left? It doesn’t look like it even goes any place you want to go. As a matter of fact, it’s pretty dark and scary looking. You might even say that it passes right through the valley of death’s dark shadow. So what will you do?

When the road ahead is closed, it’s usually not a good idea to ignore the signs and keep driving. It may be alright for a while, but eventually, you’ll find out why the barrier was there. We always have the choice to go our own way, but when we are no longer on the path God has laid out for us, we can be sure it will become a path that leads to destruction.

The Bible says that we walk by faith and not by sight (2 Corinthians 5:7). We can live in a way that our choices, and our actions, say we are convinced that what we can’t see is stronger and more real than what we can see. When all we can see is a dark and unexpected veering off, we need to walk by faith – to turn left because we are confident that all God’s promises to love us and care for us are true. That there really is no other way for us to go, no other path for us to follow, because any other path will lead us away from the heart of God.

As for God, His way is perfect. All the Lord’s promises prove true.   Psalm 18:30