Jesus
said to his followers, "Why are you afraid? Do you still have no
faith?"
--
Mark 4:40
“Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about itself. Each day has enough trouble of its own.”
It’s been about 2,000 years since Jesus’ first
disciples heard these assuring words of truth and wisdom. Isn’t it remarkable
that they’re just as relevant to modern-day Christ-followers like you and me?
Turn on the TV and surf the Web, and try to avoid the endless stories about politics,
crime and pollution. Likewise, who can escape the 24/7 coverage of natural
disasters and global unrest?
The point is that in one form or another, storms
are everywhere. And there’s
no way out — even after we’ve switched off the
smartphone and logged off of Facebook. For some folks, the storm might be a job
loss or bankruptcy. For others, it’s a chronic illness or the prospect of major
surgery. Maybe your storm involves family or relationship issues like a divorce
or the loss of a loved one. And this raises a logical question: Does God even care about our personal
hurricanes and flash floods? After all, the waters of life are choppy, and
the skies are dark and threatening.
Under such gloomy circumstances, let’s remember
that we worship a God who’s much greater than any natural disaster, economic
difficulty or international dispute. Ours is a God who literally spoke the
universe into creation, formed great mountain ranges with his hands and parted
the seas with a breath. With just a word, he calmed the stormy waters of Lake
Galilee that had threatened to drown Christ’s small band of followers. And even
more amazing is that he knows his creation (including you and me) by name.
“Is
anything too hard for the Lord?” asks the writer of Genesis,
the first book of the Bible.
Let’s take God at his word when he tells us
that through life’s turmoils, he works for the good of those who love him and have
been called according to his purpose. We should also keep in mind that we’re
not exempt from personal storms once we put our faith in Jesus and become his
follower. But what does change is that we gain access to a Power who helps us
endure any difficulty, great or small. What’s more, we become beneficiaries of
an eternal inheritance that will make our current troubles fade into oblivion.
The storms that seem so great today will become laughably insignificant
tomorrow.
Yes, there will be times when the lightning
flashes and thunder rumbles overhead. But we can rest assured that through faith
in our great God, blue skies are on the horizon.
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