So do not
fear, for I am with you; do not be dismayed, for I am your God. I will
strengthen you and help you; I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.
(Isaiah 41:10)
We recently
spent 3 wonderful days at an in-door-water-park. The first few hours of the first day,
however, were a bit challenging. My
little 6-year-old, Dylan, was very reluctant to get in the water. “Mama, I don’t want to go in because it’s
going to sprinkle and make me wet…,” he’d say to my bewilderment. “But, Dylan!”
I would reply impatiently, “this IS a water park…of course you are going
to get wet!” “C’mon, be
reasonable!” I thought to myself. After we realized that Dylan wasn’t going to
just cheerfully dive in, I shooed my husband and my 9-year-old away, so I could
flex my persuading muscles alone. “Where
are Daddy and Grant going, Mama?” A very puzzled Dylan asked me when he saw
them leave for the water. To which
question I kindly replied, “to jump in the water, where else???”
Then, I took
him for a walk around the park. First,
we went into the kiddy area. There, I
pointed out that little kids were, not only surviving the water attractions,
but also having fun while at it! The
visit to kiddy land bore no fruit, so we moved on to another fun and shallow
play area. Within this site there where
twin slides sitting side by side. My
plan was to persuade him to try them by telling him that he would go in the
orange one and I would go in the blue one and we’d race to see who wins! He is very competitive, so it was a great
plan! Of course, it failed. It didn’t matter how I approached the
challenge. He wasn’t budging. I used forceful commands, like: “you are going down that slide, Dylan, and
that is that!” After all, I am the
authority figure, and he is supposed to obey me, right? WRONG!
I also used old-lame lines that parents around the world use when they
want to entice their boys to do something they don’t want to do, like: “look at that little girl, Dylan, she is
smaller than you and she is not afraid of the slide!” Like any parent at the brink of losing it, I
also used threats: “Dylan, if you don’t
go down that slide, you are NOT going to have any chocolate milk for a
week!” All these to no avail, of course.
Finally,
surrounded by other parents who were happily going down the slides with their
happy children, I sat down on the floor, looked him in the eye, and I said, “I
know you are afraid. It is OK to be
afraid, but I’m telling you that there is nothing to be afraid of. Nothing bad is going to happen to you. Trust me!
I am right here with you. I will
be with you all the time. I would never
send you to do something that would hurt you.
I will be right there when you come down, waiting for you. I will be seeing you all the way. You don’t have to be afraid.” “Besides,” I added, “remember, you’ve been
here before and you loved it! Don’t you
remember?”
Later, as I
thought about the incident at the water park, I was, once again, stroke by what
the Holy Spirit whispered in my ears.
“Where have I heard those words before?”
Well, I’ve heard them from our Father’s Holy Word, of course. He is our Father and we are His beloved
children. And, If we, “though [we] are
evil, know how to give good gifts to [our] children, how much more will [our]
Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!” He is our Father. He is our Good Father, who is always with us,
as we cry “Abba” in our hour of fear. As
our Father, He tells us “fear not” so many times throughout the Bible that we
could possibly have a Scriptural reference about not being afraid, but fearing
only God for each day of the year. He is
with us; and, unlike our earthly parents, He is perfect and He never let go of us. He never leaves us, “for the LORD your God, He is the One who
goes with you. He will not leave you nor forsake you.” (Deut. 31:6b)
He doesn’t even become impatient with us for our lack of faith, for He
is love and love is patient and love is kind.
The problem
is that we are quick to forget how great our God is. We have been “there” before, and He has, as
usual, gone with us, but we forget. We
have faced fiery trials, gone into the lion’s den, challenged giants; and
through it all, the Lord has delivered us.
He has surely done great things for us, and we do rejoice, for the
moment; but then we go back to our routine, unchanged. To our Father’s
bewilderment, we forget. Then,
inevitably, we face the hard times again, and we fear, again. We forget that He has always led us through
the desserts of our lives; and how He gives us exactly what we need when we
need it. We fear because we forget.
Let us
change course right here, right now, and pray that the Holy Spirit will never
let us forget. Let’s pray that He will
help us remember that He holds our hand always.
May we have a keen awareness that He will never leave us nor forsake
us. This truth we must remember in all
situations and rejoice in Him who upholds us with His righteous right
hand! Praise be to Him who goes with
us. Praise be to Him who “has not given
us a spirit of fear and timidity, but of power, love, and self-discipline,” (2
Timothy 1:7) In the scary hour, let us
all proclaim at loud, for the enemy to clearly hear and retreat, that: “The LORD is my light and my salvation; Whom
shall I fear? The LORD is the strength of my life; Of whom shall I be afraid”
(Psalm 27:1)
With teary
eyes and a frown on his forehead, Dylan finally let me lead him toward the
slide. With hesitation and often looking
back to make sure I was really “there” with him as I had assured him, he sat
down at the top of the slide and down he went.
I followed down on the one right next to his and we met up at the
bottom. I got up and grabbed him
tightly. Quickly, I carried him out of
there, since the lifeguard was already blowing his whistle prompting us to
vacate the area for the next sliders to be able to come down. “You did it!!” I said to him over and over
again. “I knew you could do it!” “See, you are OK, and it was fun too, wasn’t
it?” As we high-fived, I saw his face
torn between a frown and a smile, until he finally admitted that he had liked
it indeed. After that first “trial”
slide, Dylan was able to enjoy our visit to the water park. I was able to tell him later, as we wandered
around the lazy river, to remember that Jesus is always with us and that every
time we are scared, we can call on Him and He will hold our hand so we are not
afraid. I don’t know if he heard me,
since by then, Dylan was totally immersed in the fantasy of a watery vacation;
but as for me, I pray those words continue to echo in my mind forever.
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