Friday, April 22, 2016

Faith Through the Fire

This is another #On Coming Alive story. What stood out to me is that it talks of the story of Shadrach, Meshach and Abendego which I just wrote about yesterday from Mike Brunk's message.

Shadrach, Meshach and Abendego replied to the king, 'O Nebuchadnezzar, we do not need to defend ourselves before you in this matter. If we are thrown into the blazing furnace, the God we serve is able to save us from it, and He will rescue us from your hand, O king. But even if He does not, we want you to know, O king, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up.'

My family was thrown into the furnace last year. Benjamin was born...(many problems). He never knew life outside of the cardiac ICU, but I pray hard he knew the love of his parents. A fierce, gripping, powerful love that must only be tapped by a mom and dad fighting for the life of their innocent child as his breathing tube is removed and his pacemaker is disconnected, powering down just like every organ system in our little one's body did.

The story of the men mentioned above, who were threatened to be burned alive if they didn't follow the king's orders, is one I gleaned encouragement from before, during, and after losing Benjamin. I love the simplicity of these guys' faith--childlike, they believe their God can save them from anything--yet with wisdom beyond their years, they confess that "even if He does not," they will not waiver. If you went to Sunday School and remember the felt board illustration, then you remember how the story ends--Shadrach, Meshach, and Abendego (only underlines Abendego for possible misspelling every time) walk out, unharmed, likely with hearts pounding and fists pumping, praising God for following through.

Our story had a different climax, though. While these three guys professed to serve their God, no matter the outcome, they came out triumphant on the other side. The fire had not harmed their bodies, nor was a hair of their heads singed. Oh, how I wish our story was written along the same lines! Shadrach, Meshach and Abendego's triumph was in the fact that the God they served was able to, and did, rescue them from the blazing furnace. Our triumph is in the fact the "even if He does not..." Even if He does not, He is still good. Even if He does not, He still loves (Hayden), and loves us. Even if He does not, He is still worthy. Even if He does not on earth...He will in heaven.

I am living out the profession and proclamation of faith that Shadrach, Meschach, and Abendego fearlessly made. I am choosing to believe, clinging to truth, clutching to hope. It's ugly, it's messy, it's scary. It's shaky footing as I walk the balance beam of life between earth and heaven, but it's the story I've been cast for. It's not an easy read, and it probably won't be winning any awards. It doesn't have the happy ending we prayed for. But the beauty of the Gospel is that because Christ Himself came to earth, God in the form of man walked the balance beam (with sure, steady footing) between humanity and sovereignty, and granted us eternal life by dying in our places and raising again...the beauty of the Gospel story is that it doesn't end here. It doesn't end when the surgeries fail, the medications aren't cutting it, and our bodies betray us. The Gospel story breathes life into our rough drafts and makes legible sentences out of choppy words.

"But even if He does not..." Oh, I wish He had. I wish our testimony was mirror image to Shadrach's, Meshach's, and Abendego's, and I don't know why it's not. (Hayden) suffered and died, and while the heart of God is not, as Lamentations 3:33 says, willingly bring affliction on anyone, He allowed it, for reasons that are beyond me. But I have confidence that, while (Hayden's) beautiful body couldn't be fixed, he is now made complete; his earthly story ended, but his eternal story is just beginning. As for me and the rest of my story, I'm not sure what else lies ahead, but I know that the Author hasn't put the pen down yet. And when the day comes that my earthly story sees its final word, I know the good stuff begins with the flip of a page.

From Pete Greig's book "God on Mute": The Christian gospel is the story of a God who breaks the rules of plausibility--often when we least expect it and in ways we could never have predicted. Living with unanswered prayer, I need a big God; an awesome, unspeakable amazing God; a death-defying eternal God; a God who dies in Siberian concentration camps and senseless car crashes in order to destroy death and release an indestructible life. I need a God whose promises are certain; a God who's been there before and can walk with me and counsel me and pray for me and prepare a place for me and who can even make all things work together for good. This, then, is the confession we cannot afford to compromise, even when it propels us into the realms of mystery and confusion: Our God is our Father, loves us completely, is all-powerful and will ultimately make all things new.

Personal note: I just had an image from this excerpt of Jesus being at the wheel when you car hit the truck and dying in your place specifically. Even though he died on the cross for everyone, it's an interesting thought to put him actually in your place and anyone believer's place who died. That's what His death on the cross meant though. He took your place so you could live. Death is the punishment for our sins, but we don't have to take the punishment since He did for us. That reminds me of your verse, Romans 6:23: For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. Praise God for that! Love you!

No comments:

Post a Comment