I posted this yesterday on my facebook wall but it bears repeating.
During this adoption we have had so many times when we have cried out "God give us clarity" we have felt so alone at times and isolated on this journey because there is no such community where we live. This fuels my passion all the more to start something, anything so that other adoptive moms and dads don't have to feel this way.
I know there are online groups out there that offer amazing advice and support but there is just something about coming together with others who feel your pain and truly understand what you are going through.
After reading this devotional I know we don't need clarity anymore. We only need to have all of our trust placed in Jesus and to know that He put us here and He will never leave us.
We trusted Him when we signed up to do this thing and we WILL trust Him to see it to completion. It doesn't matter how hard, how painful and how hopeless or helpless we may feel at times (or will feel in the future). We can always trust He has the answer before the question is even on our tongue!!
Continuing to wait with CONFIDENT expectation!!!!!
Enoy and please pass it along!!
By Jim Liebelt
Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek His will in all you do, and He will show you which path to take.
Proverbs 3:5 (NLT)
The story has been told of John Kavanaugh, who spent three months in Calcutta, India serving the poor and trying to get a handle on how best to spend his life. He met Mother Teresa there, and she asked him if there was anything she could do for him. He requested that she pray for him. When she asked what she could pray for specifically, Kavanaugh asked that she pray that he would have clarity. Mother Teresa rejected his request. She told him, “Clarity is the last thing you are clinging to and must let go of.” Kavanaugh replied that he longed to have the same kind of clarity that Mother Teresa seemed to have. Hearing this, Mother Teresa laughed and said, “I have never had clarity; what I have always had is trust. So I will pray that you trust God.”
Many of us have made seeking clarity a higher priority than simply trusting God. In issues of faith, when we only seek the "safe path" and live on the basis of what we know and understand, we end up walking the Christian life by sight, not by faith. And this pathway is dangerous to our spiritual health.
Trust is faith in action. I love the example of Abraham. God called Abraham to move from his own country to another. God told Abraham that He would make him into a great nation. That was pretty much the extent of the direction that Abraham was given. Talk about lack of clarity. If I were in Abraham’s shoes, I would have wanted specific details on everything involved before setting out on the journey. I think I would have peppered God with questions like “Where, exactly, am I supposed to go?” and “What am I supposed to do?” Yet, that wasn’t the way Abraham responded. Instead, trusting God, Abraham went.
He just went.
This is why Abraham is called in the Scriptures the “father of all who believe.” Yet, taking a closer look into Abraham’s life, found in the Old Testament book of Genesis, we find that Abraham was also an average person who struggled with real life issues. He made risky decisions. And, he made a number of bad decisions along the way. Abraham did not live a safe life. Ignoring any desire for clarity, he pursued God’s calling on his life. He lived a life of trust.
Today, let’s take a step towards following the example of Abraham. Let’s take up the challenge of faith. Let’s begin to live with less clarity and more trust. Remember, the Bible tells us that we are to “live by faith, not by sight.” (2 Corinthians 5:7)
Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek His will in all you do, and He will show you which path to take.
Proverbs 3:5 (NLT)
The story has been told of John Kavanaugh, who spent three months in Calcutta, India serving the poor and trying to get a handle on how best to spend his life. He met Mother Teresa there, and she asked him if there was anything she could do for him. He requested that she pray for him. When she asked what she could pray for specifically, Kavanaugh asked that she pray that he would have clarity. Mother Teresa rejected his request. She told him, “Clarity is the last thing you are clinging to and must let go of.” Kavanaugh replied that he longed to have the same kind of clarity that Mother Teresa seemed to have. Hearing this, Mother Teresa laughed and said, “I have never had clarity; what I have always had is trust. So I will pray that you trust God.”
Many of us have made seeking clarity a higher priority than simply trusting God. In issues of faith, when we only seek the "safe path" and live on the basis of what we know and understand, we end up walking the Christian life by sight, not by faith. And this pathway is dangerous to our spiritual health.
Trust is faith in action. I love the example of Abraham. God called Abraham to move from his own country to another. God told Abraham that He would make him into a great nation. That was pretty much the extent of the direction that Abraham was given. Talk about lack of clarity. If I were in Abraham’s shoes, I would have wanted specific details on everything involved before setting out on the journey. I think I would have peppered God with questions like “Where, exactly, am I supposed to go?” and “What am I supposed to do?” Yet, that wasn’t the way Abraham responded. Instead, trusting God, Abraham went.
He just went.
This is why Abraham is called in the Scriptures the “father of all who believe.” Yet, taking a closer look into Abraham’s life, found in the Old Testament book of Genesis, we find that Abraham was also an average person who struggled with real life issues. He made risky decisions. And, he made a number of bad decisions along the way. Abraham did not live a safe life. Ignoring any desire for clarity, he pursued God’s calling on his life. He lived a life of trust.
Today, let’s take a step towards following the example of Abraham. Let’s take up the challenge of faith. Let’s begin to live with less clarity and more trust. Remember, the Bible tells us that we are to “live by faith, not by sight.” (2 Corinthians 5:7)
1 comment:
This is wonderful!!! I jumped over here after you left a comment on my blog to find out more about you. I am so glad that I did! I would love to be praying for you. I know just how you are feeling!!! Our first adoption from China was also such a long wait and there were times I wanted clarity and understanding. I love this post! You are right, we do not need clarity, we just need to trust! It is all about His time and this is why it is so painful at times!
Love to get to know you more. My email is thecuozzos@aol.com.
Naomi
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