Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Thoughts on Trust and Surrender




This morning, I took the time to read a little scripture. I didn't know where to begin and the phrase "present your bodies..." came to mind. 

"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, [which is] your reasonable service." 
[Romans 12:1]

Sacrifices are usually costly and unpleasant. Throughout scripture, a sacrifice was a bloody occasion. It's uncomfortable for the person doing the work of sacrificing something and then to the thing being sacrificed. In much the same way in life, WE are OFTEN faced with uncomfortable and sometimes frustrating situations. These won't go away. There are times and seasons for joy, and times and seasons for pain (Ecclesiastes 3:1-8). The challenge for us as believers (those who choose to follow God and all His ways) will be how we choose to RESPOND to life's challenges. Scripture offers us some insight into our response.

"...present your bodies..."

The word "present" comes from two Greek words that mean to proffer, to hold to out to someone for acceptance. But each one of those Greek words takes this idea even deeper. The first one means "to stand", but the next one is thought-provoking. It's the Greek word "Narkissos" where we derive our word "narcotic" which means "to make numb".  As I continued to think about this it reminded me of a scripture that describes Jesus as being quiet in the face of adversity.

"He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth"  [Isaiah 53:7]

This is not generally how we were taught to respond to challenges in life. I mean the first thought that comes to mind when someone accuses me is not to take it silently. But, the Bible often doesn't correspond to our natural (carnal) response. Indeed, we are admonished to be led by the Spirit and to NOT lean on our own understanding (Romans 8:1, 14; Proverbs 3:5). Yet Jesus leaves us an example of how to respond to our difficulties. The lamb being led to the slaughter gives us a picture of ABSOLUTE SURRENDER. This notion of absolute surrender could be a place of fear if we don't allow our minds to be trained by the Word of truth.

Surrendering to God is not enslavement, it's a place of TRUST. For Jesus to have left heaven to dwell among men, to be rejected, and brutally murdered was no easy task. I don't think we'll ever fully grasp the physical and emotional pain with which he dealt. The pains of life are unavoidable and hard to process at times. It is why often in our current society narcotics are used to deal with the pain. The interesting thing about narcotics is that the pain in your body doesn't go away. Narcotics attach themselves to the pain receptors and can block the feeling of pain. Jesus shows us a better way. He did NOT to depend on His feelings and emotions amid hard trials. He chose instead to daily trust.

"Though he were a Son, yet learned he obedience by the things which he suffered;"  [Hebrews 5:8]

Perhaps our "narcotic", when faced with troubling or uncomfortable situations, is TRUST. It doesn't take away sting and pain of life, it simply makes it easier for us to deal. We may have to yield to God things we long to hold onto, and we may have to embrace things that we don't want to embrace. In EVERY circumstance our Father is there.

"So that we may boldly say, The Lord [is] my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me." [Hebrews 13:6]

The Lord is with us to help us get through the trials of life. The question is, will we choose to fully trust Him?