Are you sure?

I’m a sucker for optical illusions. From time to time we all fall for a trick that enters our brains through our eyes and fools us into thinking something is, that isn’t.

Daredevil over Niagara Falls

For example, we can watch a movie of someone tight-roping across Niagara Falls and get all knotted up inside watching him take that  tremendous risk. Later we might learn it was just special effects and that the actor was actually walking on a tight rope only 3” off the floor during filming.

Ponzo illusion

Or, we might stare at a drawing for a long time trying to decide if parallel lines are the same length or if our eyes are fooling us. In reality, we’re fooling ourselves. We look at the lines and are sure they’re different lengths. Logic tells us that something farther away should be smaller, so the line located farther down the track must be longer. Actually, they’re the same length.

IMG_4168

I witnessed another illusion through my iPhone just this morning. Although I’m 4000 miles from Hans and his family of 6, they graciously send frequent pictures and videos to keep me current. Baby Andrew, only 7 weeks old, has begun to smile now, and today I received a picture that made him appear much older and bigger than his calendar age suggests.

I was taken aback when I opened the text, seeing how much he’d grown and changed since birth, and I haven’t even met him yet! Later, though, I saw other pictures of him on Facebook that included his bigger siblings and saw how really little Andrew still is, a reassuring discovery. His iPhone photo had just been taken at close range.

Magic

Life serves up illusions of all kinds. We’ve watched magic shows in which it seems the magician can perform real miracles! Our brains believe what our eyes see, but of course each of his tricks is just a ruse. When we’re told the how-to behind his “miracles”, we can’t believe we were so easily duped.

The absolute greatest of life’s illusions, though, can do some real damage. The magician behind them is an expert who delights in twisting truth into lies.

Let’s say we’re working hard to live righteously before God, but an opportunity comes along to fudge on something…. just a little. It would bring significant benefit to us, and so we seriously consider it. Eventually we decide to veer from a biblical standard and believe an illusion that seems trustworthy at the time.

There is, indeed, an immediate benefit, but it turns out to be short-lived. The lasting reality is that we’ve hurt ourselves and those we love by trusting in an illusion from the ultimate in deceivers, Satan. Every single time we’re tempted to do something shady, he is liar behind it.

So, the next time we’re marveling over an illusion, we’d better investigate its source. We just might save ourselves from a devastating encounter with the master-illusionist.

“The snake deceived Eve with his devious tricks,  ….the serpent of old who is called the devil and Satan, who deceives the whole world.” (2 Corinthians 11:3 & Revelation 12:9)

God’s Good Will

Dropping offOne of 6 stops on my errand list today was the local Goodwill store, not to shop, but to drop off. Usually a heap of guilt accompanies this process: (1) I shouldn’t buy so much; (2) the things I buy ought to be better used; (3) giving away partially used items might insult those taking them in; (4) I have too much, while others have too little.

What is the right way to decide what we do or don’t need?

Sinai DesertI love the scriptural description of God’s care for the Israelites as they wandered back and forth in harsh desert conditions for 40 years. Being the practical God he was, he knew they wouldn’t come across any markets during those years and wouldn’t have a way to find water, food, or shelter. So he provided everything they needed, even clothes.

sandals

For example, at the end of their journey, he pointed out that their clothes hadn’t aged in 4 decades. It wasn’t just good luck, he told them. It was his direct doing. And he had an important reason for preventing even one sandal strap from breaking. As he put it, “…so that you might know that I am the Lord your God.”  He wanted them to recognize him in action, to realize he was sustaining them personally through those difficult years. (Deuteronomy 29:6)

The Lord is still doing this kind of thing, not necessarily by way of miracle-clothes or super-sandals but by continuing to meet our needs. And that’s the key word: needs. He inspects our lives, each of us, and makes a divine analysis of what those are and then meets them.

In Philippians 4 Paul says, “My God shall supply all you need.” The obvious conclusion is that if we don’t have it, we didn’t need it. I remember my children asking for things unendingly and telling them, “But you don’t need that.”

Their responses were always the same: “But I waaaant it!”

We must sound much like wailing children to God when we complain about not having everything we want, especially if we point to someone else and say, “But why can she have it and I can’t?” He has his reasons.

He could have clothed the Israelites in new outfits that fell from heaven just like the manna and quails he sent exactly that way. Instead he let them make do with what they already had, causing each item to remain new-like instead, not as fun as new wardrobes but definitely a need met.

When we look for God’s near-presence in our lives, it’s best to remove our preconceived ideas of what he should be doing for us and let him decide what we need and how to provide it.

Goodwill store

Maybe he’ll even do it by directing us to purchase some gently-used clothing from a local Goodwill store.

“The Lord says, “During the forty years that I led you through the wilderness, your clothes did not wear out, nor did the sandals on your feet.” (Deuteronomy 29:5)

Do the Math

7 grandsToday I finally filled the last opening in my frame of 8 grandchildren, completing the group with a picture of newborn Andrew, who arrived at the end of May.

What a joy it was to put him on the family roster and also on my prayer list by name, though I’d talked to God about him well before we knew what his name would be.

8 grands

And he wasn’t the only unborn person in those conversations. Before Andrew had arrived and given us the answers to our wonderings, Linnea announced that my 9th grandbaby was on the way, too. Since God already knew the “who” about him or her just as he did about little Andrew ahead of time, he and I added that grandchild to our conversation.

For 9 grands

Then today, as I was praying through my list of 9, God asked a good question. It was as if he said, “Are you going to hunt for a 9-way picture frame now, or will you think bigger, like I do?” He was inviting me to pray with a new kind of math:

9 + X = G *

At that point he and I teamed up to have some fun, embarking on a conversation about all my grands: those born, the one in process, and those yet to be. None are unknown to him, and as I prayed, he privately filled in the blanks about those in a future generation.

I know I’m praying requests that are ok with him when I claim verses about my grands learning of God’s love early, running toward him and not away when troubles come, and trusting in the dark whatever he teaches them in the light.

Hundreds of his other scriptural promises and principles sit ready for any of us who desire to pray for our yet-to-be-born descendants. Since God is a Being outside space and time, he can easily reserve our prayers for the lives coming after us, applying them down the line. This holds true even if we’ve died before those births occur.

For 10 grandsFor 16 grands

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

All of us have heard the old motto, “Give the gift that keeps on giving.” I can’t think of a more long range, continually-giving gift than the supernatural activity of our mighty God in the lives of our relatives.

For 21 grands

And so, as I go shopping for a picture frame to hold my 9 grandchildren, maybe it should have 10 openings. Or maybe a dozen? Or 16? Or 20? Or maybe I should just earmark a big blank wall and buy a giant roll of tape? I’m not sure, but the one thing I am sure of is that praying for them all is going to be absolutely grand!

“This is my covenant with [those who love me],” says the Lord. “My Spirit will not leave them, and neither will these words I have given you. They will be on your lips and on the lips of your children and your children’s children forever. I, the Lord, have spoken!” (Isaiah 59:21)

* Grandchildren