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Glimmers in the Fog

Finding Glimpses of Divine Providence in Everyday Life
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You May Wander, But You Can Never Be Lost

6/6/2018

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Jesus Pursues Us and Restores UsHover over image to share on Pinterest.
What goes through your mind in the first few seconds after you realize that you’ve lost your keys or misplaced your smartphone? In the moment of losing something valuable, we can find ourselves losing our minds trying to think of where we left it, retracing our steps, or calling everyone in our address book inquiring about the lost item (if you didn’t lose your phone, that is). Your mind may even be flooded with questions and doomsday scenarios, depending on what you’ve misplaced. Even if it’s something we can replace fairly easily, we can so quickly fall prey to losing track of time and wasting hours searching for it.
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Most of us also know that feeling of panic followed by frantic, sometimes irrational, searching. When I think I’ve lost something critical, like my wallet or my iPhone, I instantly turn into this comic book version of myself. Without stopping to think rationally or calmly, I start uncontrollably searching through my handbag, eventually getting to the point of dumping it all out into one big mess on the car seat or kitchen table. It’s truly an overblown, automatic frenzy. And one that makes me feel completely silly, and sometimes embarrassed if someone else is watching me, especially when I find the missing item in the pocket of a jacket or somewhere else I intentionally left it.

As you think about that feeling of losing something important, imagine magnifying the intensity of it a hundredfold… maybe even a thousandfold. At that scale, it would be an obsession that no human being could possibly manage, control or contain. If any of us remotely imagine that intensity, it would still give us just a glimpse of how much God longs for us to be close to Him, minus all the human weaknesses of panic, irrationality, and disorder.

This past Sunday, I was listening to our pastor’s sermon on the healing of the blind man in John 9, and though I have read the story many times, one particular verse jumped out at me with fresh meaning. The first part of verse 35 says, “Jesus heard that they had thrown him out, and went and found him.” Jesus went and found him. I just couldn’t stop thinking about the intentionality of Jesus’ actions. He had healed this man who had been born blind, but He was not content to leave it there.

The poor guy had been through the ringer since he had received his sight. Instead of celebrating with him, most of his family, friends, and community inundated him with accusatory questions. Verse 13 says, “They brought him” to the local synagogue for the religious leaders to inspect him and make sense of his story. That means that they forcibly dragged him there or tied him up for transport. I cannot even fathom the shock and betrayal he must’ve felt when he discovered that everyone he’d known since birth would rather him remain a blind, suffering beggar than to be given such an amazing gift. Verses 18-22 even tell us that his own parents refused to come to his defense because they were afraid of the power of the religious leaders. They gave up their son for the sake of their own comfort and community standing.

But Jesus wasn’t going to leave him there. He went and found him. With all the demands of His ministry and despite the massive throngs of people who were inundating Him, Jesus took a break and intentionally searched for one lonely outcast. This young man had been touched by the Almighty and there was no way Jesus was going to let the cruelty of others and the difficult circumstances swallow up the miracle. As I contemplated the difficult situation this young man faced, God planted three specific reasons in my mind as to why Jesus went looking for him.

First, God’s glory will never be hidden, and that’s exactly what the religious leaders were trying to do. By expelling the young man and casting seemingly authoritative doubt on the veracity of his claims, they were going to do everything they could to ruin his life, hide the evidence, strike fear in the hearts of the witnesses, and put an end to Jesus’ allure. When God does a miracle, the glory belongs to Him and Jesus wasn’t about to let the pious naysayers destroy the life of an innocent recipient and steal all the glory for themselves.

Second, I believe Jesus was going to complete the work He started. Yes, the man’s eyesight had been restored, but the more important healing was not complete. After spending most of his life in utter hardship and neglect, he needed emotional, mental and spiritual healing. And now that his family and neighbors had disowned him, he had no support network and no hope of creating a new life for himself. By seeking him out for a personal relationship, Jesus escorted him into a new community and a made him a new creation outfitted to thrive in a new calling. Once God’s light begins to shine in someone, Jesus always sees to it that the work is completed (Philippians 1:6).

Third, Jesus wanted to give him a new identity. Jesus went to invite the young man to complete the adoption process in becoming a child of God. When Jesus located him, He asked him if he believed in the Son of Man, which is what the Jews referred to as the Messiah. Although the previously blind man could now see, he had not recognized who Jesus was, up until this point. I can picture Jesus putting his hands on the guy’s shoulders, looking into his newly healthy eyes, and gently saying the words we find in scripture: “You have seen Him, and it is He who is speaking to you.” Probably falling to his knees in both gratitude and awe, his spiritual eyes were opened. We read in verse 38: “He said, ‘Lord, I believe,’ and he worshipped Him.”
All this week I have been struggling to put into words the renewed sense of awe I have for the fact that the King of the universe personally searches for the lowliest in His kingdom. That the One who is highest above all would come to get us in the deepest slimy pits. That our Heavenly Father pursues us to the ends of the earth to complete His work in us. It humbles me and reminds me that we shouldn’t spend so much time thinking about ourselves, because God thinks about us all the time. We were written on His heart since before we were born and will be on His mind forever into eternity.

In terms of Biblical real estate, stories of God’s pursuit of us takes up so many chapters. Of course, the entire book is His love story to draw us closer to Him. But just in case we could miss that fact, He calls out specific stories and makes huge promises to get our attention. As if John 9 wasn’t enough, we find another whole chapter — Luke 15 — which tells us in three different parables how passionate God is about pursuing us. We are like the one sheep that goes astray, and He will leave the others to bring us back. We are like the lost coin that a woman searches every nook and cranny to find. We are the prodigal son of a Father who continually searches the horizon for our return.

All other religions require that their followers search for divinity and earn their way to some kind of heaven, redemption, or nirvana. But our God comes for us every time. 2 Chronicles 16:9 says God looks throughout the earth to strengthen those who are committed to Him. Luke 19:10 says that the Son of Man came to seek and save the lost. There’s no doubt that Jesus was seeking the Samaritan woman at the well (another case of a social outcast considered undesirable by the religious leaders) in John 4. Jesus said to her, “But the hour is coming, and is now here, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him.” And that is exactly what He did when He sought out the healed blind man. When Jesus found him and gave him his spiritual sight, he immediately worshipped in spirit and truth. May that be our response as well.

Jesus always comes for His own.  Like the lost coin, a single precious soul might be forgotten by the world, hidden or lonely in the nooks and crannies of suffering and isolation, but the One who came to seek and to save will not rest until His child is found. 

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    Every life is a story, so the big question for every person is: "Who's writing your ending?" Majesty, mystery, and miracles are waiting for us to discover in the most ordinary days if we have the heart to see them. Glimmers in the Fog offers hope and inspiration with spiritual musings, heartfelt confessions, and timely encouragement from a hungry soul in pursuit of the One who set the stars in place yet calls me by name. 


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