My life 95

Stanislaw Barszczak, The week of faith’s gift, part3

Now let us see the main event. It could be that Jacob began to pray that night. In the agony of his soul, he cried out to God. He began perhaps for the first time in his life, to earnestly wrestle in prayer. It was as though he sensed that God was really present with him. God’s presence and purpose became more and more real to him until, suddenly, He was real! His uplifted arms were actually clinging to God, Himself! There God was, …flesh to flesh, …bone to bone, …in human form! Jacob in his desperation realized the precious opportunity before him. If he let go, then God would leave with his needs unmet, his prayers unanswered! So, Jacob WRESTLED WITH GOD, back and forth, a head lock here, an arm hold there, the struggle perhaps went on for hours. God in His grace and mercy allowed Jacob to wrestle, …to work out his fleshly nature and anxiety, …for in his struggle, …in his wrestling, his faith and understanding was growing! The turning point came when God touched Jacob in the hollow of his thigh dislocating the ball-and-socket joint of his thigh. Suddenly he was weakened and immobilized. Jacob yelled out in pain, “Ahhhhh,” as he stopped wrestling and started clinging! There is a difference between wrestling and clinging. To “wrestle” is to contend and fight for dominance. However, to “cling” is to hold on to, to grasp in desperation. Jacob was persistent in his prayer; persistent in his plea; serious in his request from God, even though his body was racked with pain. I believe God knew the change which had transpired in Jacob’s heart. Jacob was now holding on in faith, rather than wrestling in fear. God was moved by the persistence of Jacob. It is the same for us! We are to “wrestle” in prayer. God blessed Jacob, not because He had to or was forced to, but because Jacob was ready to receive the blessing. What a blessing! “What is your name?” God asked. What He was really asking Jacob was, “Who are you?” As Jacob hung on to Him in pain, he answered, “I’m Jacob, the schemer, the one who grabs from behind, the scared mama’s boy, the con-man, the self-centered, self- serving, self-sufficient one!” Then God said, “Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed.” God was saying, “This is who you were, from now on you are the one who prevails with God, not wrestles without Him!” God’s blessing to Jacob was a new name, a new nature. His name was not just a new label on the jar, but a whole new shape to the jar itself! From now on God would help Jacob fight and conquer the baser elements in his character. The old tendencies no doubt would assert themselves again, but with God’s help they would never dominate his life! God had touched Jacob to the bone, to the nerve, yea to the innermost part of his heart. As Jacob released God, he walked with a limp, a weaker man, yet stronger. And we hear the words of Paul in II Corinthians 12:9, “for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” He went on to say, “for when I am weak, then am I strong.”
You see, the struggle of Jacob is our own. We all have the name and nature of Jacob. We all have the tendency to wrestle with life, to take things in our own hands, to set our own agenda, and work things out in our own strength. The result? The result is much the same, we make a mess of things which drives us to the river gorge, the banks of our own Jabbok. Family problems, financial problems, relational problems, no purpose, no sense of destiny, fear about the future, all drive us to the end of ourselves and hopefully into the arms of a God who has revealed Himself in the person of a loving, caring Savior, Jesus Christ. But we must stop wrestling and start clinging! We must surrender our lives, our wills, our dreams and schemes, to the Lordship of Jesus Christ and let Him change us. In Jesus Christ, we can have a new name, a new nature, a new destiny, and a secure future. Right now, you may see yourself in Jacob. You are in the night of your struggle, feeling all alone, scared, and afraid. Are you tired of wrestling? Are you at the end of yourself? Are you ready to acknowledge your weakness, the futility of grabbing from behind? Can you see that when you wrestle with life you are indeed wrestling with God? Perhaps this is the day, bruised, tired, and lame, you will surrender your heart and life to Jesus Christ. Today there is another rebellion against to God. Why do so many people in the world hate the Jews? Why is there so much anti-Semitism in the world? Why do so many nations in the world seem to despise Israel? I think the answer is plain and clear. The answer is God. The root cause of the hatred of the Jews and the animosity toward Israel is none other than hatred for God Himself. I mean the one and only true God, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob – the God of Israel. The hatred of the peoples of the world for Israel is, in truth, simply a symptom. Those who hate rebel against being accountable to God, and against living by His righteous values and standards, presented to us in the Torah and the Bible. Today still often anti-God bias is reflected in the unfailing opposition among liberals to the clear teachings of God’s Word. In education, these liberals have succeeded in expelling God from public schools, along with the Ten Commandments, the entire Bible, and prayer. Think of how the news media handle the news of the Israeli-Arab conflict. The Jews are “God’s Chosen People”; there’s no way that the liberal media will treat them fairly. God does not promise that there will be any abatement of this hatred in the near future. In fact, the bible indicates it may even get worse. The prophets of the Tanach tell us that in the end times this process will culminate in a coalition of armies arraying themselves for battle with the intent to annihilate Israel. Current events indicate that this battle may be imminent. But the prophecy goes on to say that the God of Israel will destroy these armies before they can do any damage. The Bible tells me that God will bless those who bless Israel, and history has confirmed God’s word. It would seem that the enemies of Israel would do well to recognize this truth and embrace Israel rather than engage in what will prove to be self destructive behaviors.
the greatest problem in life is not our circumstances but our heart. Jacob felt his life was filled with problems. He was exhausted from fighting Laban and now worn out thinking about having to confront Essau. But what Jacob didn’t realize was that the greatest battle being waged was the one being waged in his heart. The ultimate issue was this: “Who will be in Charge?” Jacob wanted God’s blessing but did not want God’s ownership of his life. He wanted God to “bail him out” in the hard times but he did not want to submit to God in his living. Jacob had a surface faith in that he wanted the benefits of God but not a relationship with God. Jacobs problem was not his impending meeting with Essau. His real problem was his superficial relationship with the Lord of the Universe. Yes, there are a lot of horrible and tragic things going on in the world. They break our hearts. Hopefully they will also break our wills. Hopefully these things will show us our desperate need of God. We see that even though we resist God, He pursues us. This has been a devastating week for many of us . . . including me. There will be scars for a long long time. There are lots of questions that we have that will never be answered. But the most important can be answered. It is the most important question: “Who will you trust?” “Where will you turn?”. Will you hold to the Lord with everything you have and cry out in faith, “Bless Me!” or will you turn in silence and walk away? Will you continue to fight Him or will you allow Him to change your heart, to lead your life and to call you “a child of God?”

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