Are you undergoing some
struggle in your life right now? If not then give it time, because you most
likely will at some time in your future. I'm not trying to be pessimistic, but
I've seen how the world (and living in it), works. Yes, I'm sure that some
folks have what we perceive to be "the perfect life," but I doubt
that is really the case.
I remember hearing a story
about our problems that went something like this: A man was deeply troubled
having a very serious problem in his life. He looked at those around him and
did not see anyone who seemed to suffer as he was. That night when he went to
bed he prayed to God to lift his problem from him. When he went to sleep he
began to dream. In the dream he saw people walking in a circle throwing their
problem in a pile in the center. Each person was then free to choose a problem
someone else had discarded to replace their own. He joined the circle and
walked around the pile of problems. As he circled searching for a problem he would
choose to bear he discovered that many people who he had thought had light
problems actually had heavy burdens. In the end he chose to pick up the problem
he had discarded and bear it once again. Sometimes it is true, the trouble we
know is better than the devil we don't.
How many times have you heard
someone say, "Just hold on a little longer," or "It's always
darkest before the dawn," or "It will get worse before it gets
better," or "God has a plan for you," or "You just have to
believe," or perhaps one of the thousands of other variations of these
sayings.
When you are dealing with a
deep hurt, a struggle that causes pain in your heart, those words often aren’t
of much comfort, are they? And yet if we claim to be Christians we face the
battle around the question of Faith don't we? One of passages which troubled me
for many years is Matthew 17:20
where Jesus said: "Because
you have so little faith. Truly I tell you, if you have faith as small as a
mustard seed, you can say to this mountain, 'Move from here to there,' and it
will move. Nothing will be impossible for you."
What Jesus is saying here is
that Faith is the most important thing we can have in our lives, it is central
to our relationship to God. Did Jesus literally mean that we are suppose to try
to move mountains with their minds? No, not at all; Jesus was using a common
phrase from their society which all Jews knew. A Rabbi would talk about
resolving difficulties as "uprooting or pulverizing mountains". Jesus
never meant for this to be taken literally, but the passage is talking about
the power of even just a little bit of faith to heal our lives.
Having even "Just a
little bit" of faith implies that you have a relationship with Jesus to
start with. It is impossible to "cast your cares (or burdens) on
him," (1 Peter 5:7), if you
have let the relationship with him slip away. He is not asking for a mountain
sized faith, he is begging you for have the faith of a mustard seed.
So where are you in dealing
with your problems? Where are you in your relationship to Jesus? You can't deal
with the problems without having faith, even just a little bit of it.
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