The Never-Ending Battle; A Spiritual Intervention (14)

We get so weary of it all, the on-going never ending battle of keeping our head above water. And then there’s the spiritual side of it. Why does it have to be so hard? Why doesn’t God make it easier for us? Happiness seems to elude us and we truly want to live with a happy take on life.

But it takes some effort.

Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light. Matthew 11:28-30

Labor is up next. Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden. This seeks us where we live, those places of separation in our spiritual life where despair or pain keeps us distant from God.

Labor is common to all humanity. When giving birth, the labor is intense, painful, absorbing but with a purpose. We don’t mind the labor (for the most part) because we know the end result that will make it worth the struggle. Most labor is difficult, hard, sometimes punishing, sometimes lonely, sometimes more that we think we can bear, often demanding a lot of us. Usually, we don’t have much say or choice in the matter.

Labor requires effort. This is true in the spiritual realm. It is laborious and time consuming to work through our areas of struggle, pain, and past experiences. But we are laboring to get somewhere. We really are. But first we must recognize that the labor serves a purpose.

Labor is the daily struggle of life.

Labor is the burden, the self-effort, the redundancy. The first thing I think of as it relates to labor is being tired, tired of striving, weary of life, the endless circumstances of life. At times, the labor defines its burden, its hopelessness, its discouragement. It can be the result of pain and injustice; the unfairness, the lack of acknowledgement of our worth by those in our lives—family, co-workers, even people in our own church families who are abrupt, critical, disapproving, or angry with us.

There is a weariness with life. It is an empty feeling with a sense of running in place but getting nowhere, a sense of stagnation and loss. These are the threads that weave throughout our lives. God understands this. But He wants us to respond differently than the ordinary way. He wants us to turn, decidedly turn, to Him with all our stuff, not as a complaint but as a child to their parent who says, “Please help me. I need some help, please.” God desires for us to turn to Him with all our weariness and heartaches. It is because He is a great comforter. And He will never abandon us.

It’s purpose? Labor teaches us to depend on God to help us in the hard times. And, we learn that He is a sufficiency to us. We also learn that God is trustworthy. He will never forsake us even when the going is hard. In fact, if we open up to Him, by coming as a little child, He will prove to be a friend to us.

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But sometimes we get over-weary and over-burdened down. We all do, sometimes the problems rush up to meet us when we’re already down and struggling. In the next post in the series, we will talk about that. Topic: Heavy laden.

LINKS:

>Next post:  The painful truth:  A Spiritual Intervention (15)

<previous post:  Just come as you are:  A Spiritual Intervention (13)

|<<first post:  A Spiritual Intervention

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©N. L. Brumbaugh

Just Come as YOU Are; A Spiritual Intervention (13)

The first step in dealing with our pain and suffering is found in how we initially “come” to God. God tells us to come because He knows what is good for us. He is the father-to-a-child in this verse. He is saying that He will take care of us, and He will help us even though it will not be easy. As good parents, we teach our children to come to us because we know what is best for them because they are too young and inexperienced. God is the same with us.

Just come as you are.

Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light. Matthew 11:28-30

Let’s give some thought to this passage of scripture.

First we find an important word. Come means come.  Come to me, all who labor and are heavy laden.

This is a direct request in response to our human need. God asks for us to come. God is asking us to respond to His loving care. The first thing to note in this scripture is that “come unto me” denotes a request, one that is requiring action of us. Action is common to change if we sincerely want help.

It takes effort on our part, from our self, to begin a seeking of Him, seeking that is genuine, from the heart, and truthful in nature. Within this request, there is an underlying desire on our Father’s part to form a bond of trust between Him and us. Will we trust Him enough to come? It is up to us if we want to proceed or not.

Personal initiative is the beginning and the crucial first step. It is what God wants from us, every one of us. This is documented in story after story in the biblical narratives of Jesus as he helped people. He will ask the person to take a step of faith before He responds to their need. The Old Testament also has stories where God requires an act of faith by the person before the response from God will take place.

God is the object. Come unto “Me,” which is God. This is key if we want to find God in it all, in every circumstance of life, in every struggle, joy, and challenge. We are to come to Him even with our hurts and disappointments and discouragements.

The question is, how do we come?

The coming is dependent on openness, surrender, and willingness. We come with a willing spirit, that is,  we say what we mean and we mean what we say to Father God without holding back. We come to Him in total and complete awareness and honesty. We come with no pretending or hiding behind superficial, spiritual, do-gooder masks. It is like looking in a mirror without your face make-up on or clothing on for that matter. We quit being superficial.

We are naked before Jesus as we remove our self-protected ways of doing things. We must become ready and willing to receive the real truth as it is revealed to us. Do we dictate to God? How much do we let self, even hurt, dictate its agenda?

Come, requires trust, not reasons or explanations, excuses, justifications or self-vindication. It says, here I am. I’m ready. Okay, Father God, let’s get to work. Show me my hurt, my selfishness, my past. I trust You to help me.

There is the little problem of ‘hard work’ that is expected in response to our coming to God with our stuff. It’s worth it, though. The next post topic is ‘labor.’ We know a lot about labor. What we will learn is why labor is important in our spiritual journey.

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LINKS:

>Next post:  The never-ending battle:  A Spiritual Intervention (14)

<previous post:  The solution is in God: A Spiritual Intervention (12)

|<<first post:  A Spiritual Intervention

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©N. L. Brumbaugh