Jana Spicka and Women Getting Real Ministries
Posts tagged God’s love
Elijah – Take 3
Feb 3rd
I heard a phrase a long time ago that God brings back to mind often: “When you don’t know what to do, you worship.”
This is the essence of Elijah’s next adventure with God. Elijah called for no rain which produces a draught. God provided for him in the middle of the draught through a remote brook and food from ravens every day. But the brook dried up. So God moved Elijah along on THEIR adventure together. He told Elijah to go to a widow’s home. But when he got there, the woman was preparing her last meal. She and her son only had enough food for one last meal then they would die from starvation because of the draught.
(Talk about economic distress? God has been rescuing people long before today’s health care mess….)
But Elijah called to the woman and told her to bake a cake for him first and to trust God because God was going to give her oil and flour every day until the draught ended.
Have you been there? Totally on empty and someone asks you for a ride? Or trying to scrape things out of the cabinet and someone says they are coming over for dinner? Maybe you are freaking out on how to pay one bill, and you get three more in the mail. Or maybe it’s not money related, but you are already dirt tired, and someone calls in crisis.
For me, God takes me to the very end of my resources, knowledge and strength and says, “Now Jana, let’s begin.” Begin? I feel more like the widow who is ready to lay down and die for lack of expectation that things will change. But oh the beauty of God! It is at the end of me, you, us, that He begins.
The widow had to believe that God was going to show up tomorrow when the cupboards were bare today. Don’t miss the day to day provision of the Lord in the story of Elijah. He depended and trusted and thanked God each day for the raven’s meals. Then he and the widow thanked God each day for the flour and oil. Belief in the little so you can learn to believe in the greater.
Jesus said in Luke 16 that “whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much.” This applies to money, faith, healing, the spirit, all of the God life. Are you trusting in the little for when you need to trust much?
After some time, the widow’s son died. More than daily bread now, they needed resurrection power. And Elijah and the widow saw God’s power poured out as God raised the son back to life. They went from little to much. Belief in the little, trusted with little so they could learn to believe in the greater, trusted with much.
My last thought for today is this: Are you more like the widow? Or Elijah? Where are you starting from — ready to quit or steadfast expectation?
The good news is, they both grew to believe God in all His goodness. They both learned to worship first before they received. They praised God regardless of the circumstances and saw Him move in their midst.
“Oh, worship the King, all glorious above.
Oh, gratefully sing His power and His love;
Our shield and defender, the Ancient of Days,
Pavilioned in splendor and girded with praise.”
Elijah – Take 2
Feb 2nd
So yesterday we talked about God feeding Elijah morning and evening through the ravens. A sweet time of rest, trust building, reflection. Perhaps. Or maybe it was a time of wrestling, arguing and doubting, waiting for God’s goodness to run out. Sound familiar?
Guess what happened? The brook dried up.
I love it when God brings us to these pivotal moments. The “Now what?” moments. The OMG, freakout moments. It is almost as if we think that God left the cosmos or something. Like He went off line or went to sleep.
For Elijah it was the brook drying up. For me it was the missed deadline for a deposit for Zimbabwe. Same reality: helpless to provide for myself. Same question: “God, You gonna take care of me?” But the good news is: it is the same God. “Then the word of the LORD came to him: ‘Go at once to Zarephath of Sidon and stay there. I have commanded a widow in that place to supply you with food.’” 1 Kings 17: 8-9.
The King James Version says: “Arise.” I love that. Get up and get going. God is on the move.
It reminds me of the Narnia stories when they would say, “We hear Aslan is on the move.” They didn’t know what that meant, or how Aslan would change the circumstance. But they were strengthened because they remembered that Aslan was the great high king over all Narnia. And everyone knew he had the power to do anything. Everything. Everyone knew he might not be a tame lion, but he was good.
So it is with God. He has a wild story that He is constantly telling. Our lives are the plots and twists, the reckless romance, the good vs. evil story played out by this great, untamed God. And what does He ask of us?
Belief.
“And without faith it is impossible to please God,
because anyone who comes to Him must believe that He exists,
and that He rewards those who earnestly seek him.” Hebrews 11:6
And what do we believe in? The power and goodness of God. “He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.” Colosians 1: 7
Finally, we believe in the Who of God. We trust that He empowers our cries, prayers, and praise. His Spirit is actively changing the world, and our hearts.
“Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective. Elijah was a man just like us. He prayed earnestly that it would not rain, and it did not rain on the land for three and a half years. Again he prayed, and the heavens gave rain, and the earth produced its crops.” James 5:16-18
Pray for rain; pray for God to heal and feed you. Praise Him for all things: ravens, dried up brooks, and widows. Pray and believe.
Between Morning and Evening
Feb 1st
The Lord has me sitting in the story of Elijah lately. I must be a slow learner because it seems like we have been here a while. But I confess, the longer I sit in these couple of chapters, 1 Kings 17- 19, the more I see of God, and the more I see of me.
What I like about Elijah is his utterly honest humanity. He walked with God when things were really, really bad; when it didn’t look like things would be improving soon. But still he depended on God. And he trusted God to not only understand his weaknesses but to CARE about them. This strengthens me. When all the wheels start coming off my life, it refreshes me to have a God that won’t despise my weaknesses but help me in them.
Look at Elijah as a flesh and blood example. He had just declared to Ahab, one of Israel’s most wicked kings, that “as the Lord lives, the God of Israel lives,” there would be no rain or even dew until Elijah says so. Talk about gumption. That is serious confidence in God. Elijah’s whole accusation against Ahab was that the king had turned to false idols and led the nation away also. Elijah was constantly pointing back to the clear evidence God was alive and well and willing to be their Loving God.
Now look what follows. God sent Elijah to a remote place where there was a brook and told Elijah that He had commanded the ravens to provide for him there. Draught on the land, provision for you. All through the Bible you see how God protects and provides for his own regardless of what is happening all around.
In this quiet place, equipped with fresh water, God sent ravens every morning and evening with meat and bread to feed Elijah.
This weekend in my own head, when the giants seem too big, the desert too hot, the needs too great, the bills too many — this weekend I was struck by the time between morning and evening for Elijah. Did he ever question that the ravens would come? Was he ever surprised day after day? Why didn’t the Lord just give him a small oven and flour? What was the Lord teaching Elijah (and us) in the space between meals?
Before every great battle and public encounter, there is a private battle and spiritual encounter. I think God used this time to teach Elijah that he could not take care of himself. Elijah had to look to God to provide, even for the food in his mouth. I think God was teaching Elijah how to faith in the space between meals. I think God was teaching Elijah how to Receive from His hand, in whatever way, by whatever means the Lord decided was best for Elijah. Even when that way was ravens. I think God was preparing Elijah in the quiet space for the battle that was on its way.
I am not going to rush through this story. But for today, I wonder, are you looking for the ravens? Are you receiving what the Lord is sending for your good? Are you waiting by the brook for your God or are you bustling about trying to feed yourself? “He leads me beside still waters, He restores my soul.”
The Wonders of Men
Jan 26th
Okay, so admit it. You know that you’re curious as to what this blog is about…Well I just finished a really powerful marriage retreat. (Thank you Lord for coming, and thank you friends for bringing your hearts!) And while I was prepping for that, I ran across this book, written by a man, that actually admitted that men “do goofy things.” His words. Goofy. Funny, inane and sometimes altogether inexplicable.
Shortly after reading this chapter, I had this telling experience. Chuck was flying around getting ready for work and he brought me a shirt that had some faint dirt marks on it. “Is there anything I can do for this?” he asked. I suggested a Clorox pen, but he said he was afraid the chemical would irritate his neck since the smudge was on the neck line.
“Got it.” I said. “So instead, spray some Shout on it, rub it to remove the dirt, then moisten a paper towel and dab it off.” Simple, to the point, clear and precise. He bustled off in search of the Shout spray.
“You good?” I hollered over my shoulder as I was finishing up the girls’ lunches.
“Yes,” he mumbled.
Several minutes passed and he came back in the kitchen in his t-shirt with his dress shirt still in his hand. “Did that not work?” I asked perplexed, being confident of my solution.
“No.”
“Really?”
“Well I couldn’t find the Shout so I sprayed Wrinkle Release on it and it didn’t seem to help any.”
I searched his face to see if he was making a joke. He was not.
I stood there dumbfounded myself; do I laugh out loud, or cry hysterically?
“Honey,” I began carefully, “what exactly did you think Wrinkle Release would do for the dirt? Help it stay fresh and crisp?”
Now he looked at me searching my face. We both cracked up. “Is it just a lot of fun being a man?” I asked.
“Yeah sometimes. This is how new discoveries are made you know.”
Goofy. That’s all I could think of it. But you know what I have discovered, I like goofy.
There are crazy differences about us, male and female. But both are in the image of God. And it is in these funny moments I see that God is so smart for making us so polar in some ways and then saying to us, “Okay, ya’ll, live together in the same house!”
But laughing with Chuck also made me think about how big God’s capacity must be when we do inane things ourselves with Him. He gives us clear instruction and we go off in left field and wonder why His plan isn’t working. We’re goofy. Plain and simple. I can just hear God say sometimes, “How is that working for ya? You are using the wrong remedy for the wrong issue, but still expecting the same good results. Want to try it My way this time?”
And even better, I really think God laughs too. I think He likes our goofy too.
Stop Fighting Part II – by Guest Blogger, Beth Hungerford
Jan 21st
Jana is preparing for a marriage retreat. But she will be back on Monday with a special blog about Wrinkle Release!! Some of Jana’s recent posts are available here.
Enjoy this great story from Beth.
So you would think that after my encounter with the ocean waves I would have learned my lesson about fighting against the Lord. Apparently I am a really slow learner.
About a month later, I went to one of my favorite places to spend time with the Lord…a large rock that hangs out over the river. I have many conversations with Him while out there picking pieces and sometimes large chunks off of the rock.
This time I was working particularly hard at trying to get off a large piece that was just loose enough to make me think I could get it. I heard Him again telling me that I was still fighting.
“But I really want to get this piece off.”
“Stop fighting. You don’t have to work that hard. Just worry about the really loose ones.”
I wouldn’t listen. He kept gently repeating Himself and even told me exactly where to go on the rock but I still insisted on trying to get the pieces that just weren’t ready to come off.
I think He finally got tired of me not listening and insisting on fighting so He let me suffer the consequences.
I was looking down at a lot of small cuts and nicks on my hands from where the rock kept breaking off (instead of coming off in chunks like it usually did). The Lord said, “Those hurt didn’t they?”
“Yes,” I said as I went back to pulling on a large piece of stubborn rock.
Then He said, “You know, you’re only getting hurt when you’re fighting. Just stop fighting.”
“I will just as soon as I get this…”
Right at that moment it gave way or at least part of it did…my hand slipped and my finger got cut deep enough that I now have a scar.
Now fast forward about a week. I went back to the rock this time fully committed to working where the Lord told me and only pulling on the pieces He gave me permission to pull on. At one point He said “look where you are.” I looked down to see that I was stretched out as far as I could over the water and that’s when it clicked. I had been upset and angry about cutting my finger because I really was going to obey once I had gotten that piece off. But… had the Lord not stopped me and allowed me to continue while I was still fighting and not listening, I would have been in the river. He had protected me until I was ready to handle what He had for me.