God Is Too Great To Care – Fiction
by Admin ~ August 3rd, 2010
God is too Great to Care – Fiction.
God is too Great to Fail – Fact!
Our text today is taken from Isaiah 40. v 31. ‘But they that wait on the Lord shall renew their strength. They shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint.’
Isaiah, the son of Amos was dramatically called to the prophetic office in the year king Uzziah died, 740-739BC. He prophesied during the reign of Jotham, Ahaz and Hezikiah. Isaiah foretold the virgin birth of Christ. (Isaiah 7. 14) He also told king Hezikiah, who was dying, that God would extend his life by another 15 years. (Isaiah 38. v5) Isaiah paints a graphic picture of Christ, the suffering Servant. Isaiah 53.
For three long years the prophet went barefoot and in scant clothing, practising what he preached! (Isaiah 26-30) Ask yourself the question, does my lifestyle match my witness? God offers an attractive exchange, His power and strength in place of our weakness. (Isaiah 40. v29)
Verse 28: ‘Have you not known, do you not hear, that the everlasting God, the Lord, the Creator of the ends of the Earth, will not grow tired or weary?’ We struggle and strive in our own strength to achieve.
We glory in the power and strength of the flesh. We consider our own resources and ability are sufficient, but the truth is they are limited in duration and success. Do we recognise our our weakness?
Do we accept our human limitations? Heroes of faith had this testimony: ‘Out of weakness were made strong.’ (Hebrews 11. 34) Paul confessed that he was an expendable jar of clay who could only cope with adversity by the all surpassing power of God. (2 Corinthians 4. v7) God has left on record examples of those who exchanged their lack of strength for God’s superior power: ‘Through faith, Sarah
herself received strength to conceive seed and was delivered of a child when she was past child bearing age.’ (Hebrews 11. v11) Gideon expressed himself to the Lord in these words: ‘Lord, how shall I save Israel; my family is poor and I am the least in my father’s family.’ The Lord replied: ‘Go in this your might and you will save Israel from the Midianites.’ (Judges 6. v14-15) Gideon did just that with 300 men!
Having pointed out our limitations, God doesn’t leave us hanging in mid-ar. He provides a source of power. ‘They that wait on the Lord shall renew their strength.’ Here we have the grace and power of God interlocking and connecting with our human lives at the point of our mortal weakness.
v. 31. ‘They that WAIT on the Lord.’ Most of us suffer from impatience. Pause for thought is a redundant idea. We demand instant results. We want things done yesterday, not today or tomorrow.
WAITING on the Lord requires our concentration, with no interruptions. Exercising patience, remaining alert, awake. Practising expectation. Learning to be dependent, remaining wait, I say, on the Lord.’
The exodus of the Jews from Egypt was fraught with danger and obstacles. The Egyptian army was closing in on them from the rear, and the waters of the Red Sea barred the progress of the liberated Jews.
But God intervened in the crisis with these instructions: ‘Stand still, and see the salvation or rescue of the Lord.’ (Exodus 14. v13) The waters that parted for the Jews, drowned the advancing Egyptian army.
Christ spoke these words to the apostle Paul: ‘For My power is made perfect in your weakness.’ 2 Corinthians 12. v9. The same promise applies to us!
v 31. ‘They that wait on the Lord shall renew or change their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles, they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.’ Notice God’s order: Flying, running, walking. Humanly speaking the order is in the reverse. God put soaring, running and walking in that order for an important reason: Before you can run or walk you need to see where you are going! Eagles soar higher and as a result, see further. God wants you to soar first, so you can see the way ahead, better.
What the prophet Isaiah promised the Jews, has also been promised to us. Ephesians 2. v5-6. ‘It is by grace you have been saved, and God raised us up with Christ and seated us with Him in the Heavenly realms, in Christ Jesus.’ These verses underline the union of God’s people with Christ. Now, in reality we can experience resurrection life and walk the Blood sprinkled way into the throne room of God Almighty! On Christ’s return to Earth, we shall literally and physically experience resurrection and ascension. ‘Heavenly places’ – the unseen world of spiritual reality, which is available to us NOW!
God enables us to ‘mount up’ above our problems, circumstances, feelings, failures, needs, weariness and fears, and to see things from God’s angle.
v. 31 ‘They shall RUN and not be weary.’ Beware of coasting in the Christian life. We must practice a sense of urgency in our discipleship. Are we zealous for God and His Kingdom? 1 Samuel 21. v 8
‘The King’s business requires haste.’
v. 31. ‘They shall WALK and not faint.’ Movement, progress, keeping in step with Christ. Be prepared fore the long haul. Pilgrimage, faithfulness. Hymnwriter: ‘Oh for a closer walk with God, a calm and Heavenly frame. A light to shine upon the road that leads me to he Lamb. So shall my walk be close with God, calm and serene my frame. So purer light shall mark the road that leads me to the Lamb.’
CLIMAX: Having received God’s strength to soar in order to see clearly the way ahead, God give us the wisdom and sense to know when to run and when to walk.