Anyone else need some help?Hello, friends. I haven’t meant to be a stranger. But with computer crashes, loaners, hibernating data, my library of blog posts and notes has been unavailable. That’s OK though because, really, outside of work, I’ve been so distracted by “the state of the world” [euphemism for barbaric murders abounding], nothing has seemed appropriate.
Have you ever experienced the temporary blindness when you step inside from walking through a snowy field on a sunny day? The momentary blindness after a camera flash goes off right in front of you?
Or the opposite, when you walk out of a pitch black cave into intense sunlight? Our eyes can’t catch up with the transitions immediately, and we’re unable to see clearly or keep our eyes open against the brilliance. That off-balance state is what I’ve been experiencing lately as I try to comprehend the state of our world. How about you?
In the 1930’s and early 1940’s, many people claimed they did not see the impact of Hitler’s advances through Europe. They did not see the systematic slaughter of millions of Jews and others deemed undesirable, “racially inferior” or enemies of the state.
What would I have done? What would you have done?
ISIS and other Islamic extremist groups are marching through the middle-east slaughtering thousands of “undesirables” such as Christians, Jews, opposing factions. The atrocities reported, even shown via video, is too awful to describe for me.
And too awful to ignore. Therein is the dilemma. I cannot go and fight. And who would I search out if I could? I can speak, write, … and others are doing that admirably. I cannot ignore it, wish it away. I cry, I rage. I turn down the volume. I work and read and distract.
Yet, what can I do to make an impact? To stop this evil, bloody tide? What could you do?
If it were next door to me, perhaps I could intervene. Protect. Help. Call attention. But the horror is thousands of miles away. (Yet as near as the next room! I can hear it on the news. Oh, I hate to hear it.) If I were a soldier, I could enter the fray. I am no soldier.
But I am a prayer warrior. So I pray. Though groaning and uttering words seem so paltry an effort.
One of my morning devotional books* continually urges me to:
Keep my eyes on God.
Rest in His Presence.
Hold His hand and follow Him step by step.
Immerse myself in His Presence.
Be still in His Presence.
So, as my word for this year ~ CHOOSE ~ calls me to do, I choose to obey. I continually pray and come back to His Presence, and trust that in obeying God’s guidance to me through His Word and His speaking to my heart, I am doing what I can.
I must say though, that turning from the brilliance of His Presence to attending to this world’s business, sometimes leaves me flash blind, and I am unable to see anything at all. Perhaps that is why faith is described in Hebrews 11:1 as “the substance of things HOPED for, the evidence of THINGS NOT SEEN.”
*JESUS CALLING, by Sarah Young, 2004
Flash blind is a good way to put it. We must pray, but we must be vigilant about what’s happening in our own country as well. Teach true history to the young. Counter ignorance with the truth.
So true, N Quinn. Speaking true history and countering ignorance of truth–great goals. I guess, just like sharing God’s truth, even if we don’t have a huge podium in front of a huge crowd, we have the opportunity to share it with those we encounter.
Thanks for the encouraging reminder.
You’re onto something. The violence, not just of ISIS, is increasing exponentially, as we’re told it would. Yet, we find refuge in God. He is our shield. Welders without the proper protection experience what you describe as flash blindness. Their eyes are burned by the flash. Their skin can also be burned by the heat of the arc. Like welders, as you said, we can’t see clearly at times of radical change. We need God’s protection. Thanks for the reminder.
Mary Kay, Good to see you up and running. Thanks for expressing the thoughts we often don’t give voice to.
Thanks, Peter. Appreciate your visit and encouraging words.