Jump Start # 4004
Psalm 73:17 “Until I came into the sanctuary of God; then I perceived their end.”
Bryan Chapell in one of his books tells a story that takes place in the mining communities of Eastern Kentucky. A miner who was a strong believer was injured and paralyzed at a young age. He became an invalid. Over the years he watched through a window near his bed as life based him by. He watched fellow workers marry, raise families and have grandchildren. He watched the company he had served thrive without attempting to make adequate compensation for his injuries and losses. He watched as his body withered, his house crumbled and hope for better things in this life died.
Years passed. One day, the bedridden miner, now very old, had a visit by a younger man. “I hear that you believe in God and claim that He loves you,” said the young man. “How can you believe such things after all that has happened to you?”
The old, crippled miner replied, “There are days of doubt. Sometimes Satan comes calling on in this fallen-down old house of mine. He sits right there by my bed, where you are sitting now. He points out my window to the men I once worked with whose bodies are still strong, and Satan asks, ‘Does Jesus love you?’ Then, Satan makes me look at my tattered room as he points to the fine homes of my friends and asks again, ‘Does Jesus love you?’ Finally, Satan points to the grandchildren of a friend of mine—a man who has everything I do not—and Satan waits for the tear in my eye before he whispers in my ear, ‘Does Jesus really love you?’
Startled by the candor of the old man, the young man asked, ‘And what do you say when Satan speaks to you that way?’
The old miner said, ‘ I take Satan by the hand and I lead him to a hill far away called Calvary. There I point to the nail-pierced hands, the thorn-torn brow, and spear-pierced side. Then I say to Satan, ‘Doesn’t Jesus love me!’
The disappointments and defeats in life can make one feel unfortunate. It can make one believe that God has overlooked him. Others prosper while you struggle. Things seem to always work out for others and they never seem to work out for you. There are times when it feels like the faucets of blessings have been turned off. Oh, to have the faith like that crippled miner.
What can we learn?
First, the measure of God’s love is never in the amount of blessings that shower down. What we often call blessings may not be. Health, good fortune, wealth may seem wonderful to us, but those very things can take hearts away from the Lord. God loves you. God loves you if you are a prophet in a lion’s den, an apostle in a dark prison, or a scared fisherman in the midst of a storm. Children with demons, people with incurable diseases, those who were considered outcasts and out of luck were loved deeply by the Lord.
Second, Satan wants us to see what we don’t have. He wants us to feel cheated and ignored. Our old miner focused upon the cross. Look at what we do have. We have Jesus. Keeping your eyes on Jesus, found in Hebrews, and setting your mind on things above, found in Colossians, demonstrate where our attention needs to be. Everyone has bad days. Everyone has troubles. But, not everyone has the Lord. What a blessing it is.
The troubles of this life stay here. They do not cross over to the other side.
Third, in Chapell’s story of the old miner, nothing is said about what the young man learned. How we handle difficulties is much more than just about us. Our heart, our attitude, our words can make a big difference upon others who are near us. They watch us. They see how we handle adversity. They see what troubles do to our faith. For some, it is the end of their faith. For others, the troubles only make their faith deeper and sweeter.
In our passage today, the Psalmist was troubled by what he saw. The wicked prospered. They had few pains in life. It seemed that they were blessed even though they mocked God. These sights and thoughts nearly shipwrecked his faith. That is, until in our verse, he went into the sanctuary of God. There everything made sense. There Heaven prevailed. There hope was restored.
Taking Satan to Calvary—what a wonderful thought. Does Jesus love me? Yes, He does. The Bible tells me so.
Roger
