Asleep in a Storm

This morning, we are once more, right dead center in the track of another hurricane and making preparations to evacuate. I wish I could tell you that I have wonderful, sweet peace just trusting in Jesus: but that would be a fairy tale. In reality I am stressed and checking the forecast and radar images wondering when we should leave and what will become of our home. When Hurricane Helene passed by last week, it left flooding on a scale I have never seen. Thousands of people including several friends of ours have been forced to move out until they have major repairs done. One dear sister came to live with us a few days ago and last night all we began packing to move even further inland. While I was tossing and turning in bed, I began remembering three men who managed to sleep soundly in their storms. Today I just wanted to take a look at one of them, whose name was Jonah.

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But Jonah ran away from the LORD and headed for Tarshish. He went down to Joppa, where he found a ship bound for that port. After paying the fare, he went aboard and sailed for Tarshish to flee from the LORD...…But Jonah had gone below deck, where he lay down and fell into a deep sleep. Jonah 1:2;4b NIV

Sometimes we find ourselves in the middle of storms of our own choosing. The Bible calls the choices that lead to these kinds of storms sin. Like Jonah, we know what God wants, yet rather than obeying we, “Flee from the Lord.” Maybe like Jonah, we should have known better. After all, Jonah was a prophet, he knew the Bible backwards and forwards and had spent his entire adult life teaching other people how God wanted them to live. But when God came to Jonah with the assignment of preaching to people that weren’t his friends, his neighbors, or even from his own nation, he decided he had a better idea: run! Instead of heading where God called him, Jonah got on a boat going in the opposite direction and then went into his cabin and fell sound asleep. Now sleeping in a storm sounds like a wonderful privilege of those who love God, but Jonah was really just falling asleep at the switch. Jonah might have thought God would just let him off the hook, but he soon found out that running from God’s was a very poor business model, because God sent a storm. The funny thing about this part of the story is that everyone but Jonah figured out that something was wrong. The sailors were all doing their best to keep the ship from sinking, they were even urgently praying to their idols for help. Finally, when the captain of the boat went looking for this strange fellow who wasn’t helping out and found him snoozing in his hammock. The shocked captain grabbed Jonah by the shoulder asking, “How in the world can you sleep in this?” Isn’t it amazing how God sometimes sends the most unlikely person to confront us about our sins. The bartender tells us we have had too much to drink. The policeman pulls us over or the doctor asks why in the world we keep eating so much ice cream when our cholesterol is through the roof! You see God has ways of getting his way with or without our permission and sometimes He uses a storm. It isn’t that God likes to see us suffer or gets amusement by watching us run frantically in circles. The problems He sends put us in a corner because He cares about us. If we will just wake up and listen, we will hear His voice calling us back even above the howling of the wind and the crashing of the thunder. So, if we are facing a storm, maybe the first question we need to ask, is: “Am I running from God’s plans?”. In the end God will have his way – anyway. So, why not line up your way with God’s way? When you do, before you know it, He will calm the storm and lead you safely home!

Peace After the Storm

Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid. John 14:27 ESV

Last week we talked about having God’s peace in the storm. But we also need peace after a storm has passed. When things are calm and quiet we find the damage that the storm has left behind. Here in Florida today that means assessing damage, reopening roads so supplies can get in and beginning the very long road towards rebuilding.

Divorce, disability and death just to name a few of our spiritual storms also leave behind a wake of destruction. In those long weeks, months and years as we are being rebuilt, God will never leave us alone, but will join us in the work of restoration. If that is you this morning, listen carefully to the verse of this new rendering of a wonderful old hymn. “When all around my soul gives way, He then is all my hope and stay!” In that moment when our hearts fail us. When we survey the devastation after the storm, we can rest assured that the Carpenter of Galilee will take up His tools and rebuild us again according to His perfect blueprint!

Hurricane Peace

Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid. John 14:27 ESV

Though we lost power last night at around 7 pm, we made it through the night safe and sound. It’s funny how without lights or television that we were able to get to sleep early with no problems! Rather than being a fearful situation it was actually kind of peaceful. Of course we spent the time to text our kids and keep our close friends updated but then we just packed all our essential food in our big cooler with lots of icepacks and went to bed. Thank God also for our Youversion app on our phones that allowed us to read our Bibles in the dark, before praying and then peacefully drifting off to sleep.

Yes, Jesus left us peace…His peace and He adds to the promise a challenge. That is to not let our hearts be troubled. Notice, He gives the peace unconditionally, but He tells us that it is our job to manage our emotions. He will keep us always safely in His hands…no strings attached….but for us to enjoy the full benefit of His gift our part is to guard against fear. “Don’t let your hearts be troubled!” Like the command that stills winds and waves (and we had plenty in Florida yesterday!), the words of Jesus will calm our hearts. He has promised that when we ask, seek and knock, that He will give us all we need. Now Jesus is asking, seeking and knocking at our hearts. We mustn’t allow fear to keep the door bolted! If we just trust the voice that is asking for us to open, if we allow the one who is seeking after us to find us and when we open our door, He has promised that His peace will carry us through whatever Hurricane is shaking our world. Now that’s a peace we can use, not only in hurricanes but every day in everything we face. Have a blessed day all. Now if I could just find a way to make coffee!