There are some days when, frankly, I don't feel much like worshiping God. There are probably more days like that than I'd care to admit.
But usually those are days are when I'm staring at my circumstances and making faithless judgments about what I see around me. And I struggle with the God-truth that he is in the circumstances that surround my life all the circumstances.
Have you ever considered that heartbreak is part of God's plans for you, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future"? (Jeremiah 29:11 NIV) We put so much energy into avoiding the hurt when God would have us embrace it. He wants us to know that he can heal our hurts, even use our hurts for his benefit, and for us to faithfully believe that sometimes the circumstances we think are harming us are actually positive situations God is engineering.
God, who is omnipotent, sees the breadth and depth of our circumstances, and he knows his plans for our lives. Thinking, then, like Christ, we can slowly, ever so slowly, begin to understand that avoiding the pain in our lives is actually an act of faithlessness. God calls us to faith in him during difficult circumstances; we'd rather place our faith in avoiding the circumstances.
As always, Jesus shows us the way because he is the Way. Jesus embraced the pain of God's plan for his life, and he did it with full faith that God was still working the plan to bring a "hope and a future" to your life and mine. Christ was so sure that his grief would turn to joy that he showed a radiant certainty in God's faithfulness ("Radiant certainty" is a phrase William Barclay uses to describe the attitude of Jesus at the Last Supper).
Our Brother Jesus, who is also our King, was heading into a crisis that would cost him his life, yet he was so certain radiantly certain of God's faithfulness that not one of his disciples even discerned the gravity of the crisis! Jesus was so certain of God's faithfulness that it radiates throughout his whole being.
And we, too, can have this radiant certainty about God's hand in our lives. We can say, when it comes to God's faithfulness, "I know because I know that I know." That's radiant certainty! The cross was Christ's glory, not his penalty and the same is true of difficult circumstances in our lives.
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