Wednesday, March 10, 2010

I am a dusty Israelite.

I have a confession: I have not often been respectful of the Israelites, especially in their wilderness wanderings.  In fact, during d-group when we have discussed their wandering my comments have bordered on downright disrespectful for slight comedic affect.  It seemed such a simple thing to me: after seeing God's amazing power in the plagues of Egypt, in the miracle of the parting of the Red Sea, of the provision in the manna and the quail, in water coming from a rock, they should have realized that God could overcome the Canaanites and lead them into the Promised Land with smooth sailing, right?  So simple!  Yet they never got it right, and they spent a great deal of time during the Exodus complaining about their lack.  Oh, the irony.

Currently, my husband and I are facing some financial trials.  For someone who grew up feeling safe and secure, this is rather difficult.  I know there were definitely some financial dry spells for my parents when I was growing up, but I never felt the strain myself.  Maybe I was too immature or just didn't care, or maybe my parents were really good at not allowing our finances to diminish our family life; maybe both.  But feeling precarious like this is new to me.  And I don't like it.

It isn't that I haven't seen the Lord provide.  In fact I can name a number of answered prayers.  My daughter is healthy and growing.  I have a good marriage. Once, I saw God quiet the wind after a communal prayer with my camping buddies so that we could have a campfire.  And then He broke our tent and sent us home amidst thunderstorms to avoid sleeping at our campsite which saw a lot of SNOW that next night.  (And yes, we were highly unprepared for that, seeing that it was Memorial Day weekend...)  And yet I am complaining about my lack.

I have a number of prayer requests, all of which I know would ease our financial burdens.  But some have come up with a direct "no" and others we are still waiting upon.  Of course, my timing means NOW.  Immediately.  25 seconds ago.  But God isn't working in that way, and I find myself petulant, worried, stressed, and anything but expecting a miracle.  A few times people have said to me, "The Lord will provide," and I have responded, "I know He can."  But I haven't always had the faith that He will be willing to.  Just as the Lord purposely led the Israelites into the wilderness to avoid a confrontation with the Canaanites that would have sent them screaming back to Egypt, I know that the Lord has directed our steps into this rather scary situation.  He has indeed provided for all our basic needs: we have a car (each, actually), we have a roof over our heads, and we have food.  What more could we want, right?  But I look at the medical bills, doctor visits with (at this time) no insurance, various debts we've been working so hard to pay off (like school loans) and I worry if we'll be able to meet them.  And what this will do to our credit.  And how that will affect us being able to get a home of our own.  And I worry.  And I complain.  Like the Israelites, I don't look back at past miracles of provision (and you can't tell me that the wind quieting in a Colorado-wind-tunnel of a valley just as we say "Amen" is not a miracle!).  I look at the future, where I can't see what's coming next and what the Lord might do, and I get tetchy.  Nervous.  Growly.

The Lord is teaching me a lesson here.  And maybe He's even testing me.  If God conducted His tests the way the schools do, I'd be failing and that just might be the end of it.  But thankfully, He is a Teacher who keeps teaching until you get it.  And will likely review at some future point.  Lord, I'm trying.  Thank You for your patience!

1 comment:

  1. Stacey...I feel your pain. Kyle and I are going through our own financial trials. We have been continually praying and hoping for Kyle to find a job. We certainly didn't plan for him to be on unemployment this long and my income simply is not enough. We too worry about not paying our bills and how it will affect our credit and a chance at a home of our own. Stay strong!! I know I'm trying to.

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