Does Faith become easier?
Reading through the book of exodus through to Joshua, I
often find myself wondering what in the world was wrong with the people of Israel . After
all the Lord did for them, after how he’d shown himself with undeniable
evidence to them; from the plagues
of Egypt to the parting of the red sea, to manna in the desert, but they still constantly
grumbled and doubted.
Apparently, what was wrong with them back then is exactly
what is wrong with us today. Most of us have seen God’s faithfulness and mercy
in our lives, maybe not with miraculous manifestations like the days of Exodus,
but even in subtlety there is still a strong conviction of God. We have seen
Him fulfill some promises; we have a bunch of answered prayer- maybe not all,
but a number nonetheless. We have occasionally felt so sure of God’s presence,
love, concern and deliverance.
But wait till the
next challenge comes our way, instead of putting our trust in God, we so soon
get lost in a forest of confusion and doubt. We are not sure if we can trust
the same God who gave us manna in the desert to give us clean water to drink.
We can’t be sure whether the God who delivered us from an accident that would
have resulted in death or disability will heal us from this recent diagnosis.
The God who lifted us from depression or addiction, well, we are not sure that
he’ll deliver us from this lawsuit.
Sometimes we think that it might be easier if God manifested
himself to us more strongly and constantly. That if he did, we might have greater
faith. But just read His story with the Israelites during their exodus from Egypt . They had
the undeniable evidence of God in the ever present glory cloud/pillar of fire, the daily
manna, even the fiery mountain when God descended on Mount Sinai .
And yet Aaron himself who was close to Moses, helped the people make an idol in
the form of a golden calf when Moses went away for forty days.
I’ve heard of people who’ve been miraculously saved from all
sorts of circumstances, people who’ve had close encounters with God and yet
forgot all about it in due time. How many times has God heard and answered our
prayers at desperate times, and yet after a while, we doubt the intervention of
God and attempt to apply reason to the outcome?
It seems that God is ever willing to come through for us,
but our double-mindedness always stands in His way. In exodus 32:35, God struck the people He
loved with a plague because of the golden calf Aaron had made. God hates sin,
and our sinning, and especially in trusting other things/people that appear
more ‘visibly real’, also known as idolatry, ends up in our suffering though most times we are
never aware of it.
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