Wednesday, November 24, 2010
In a Dry and Thirsty Land
Part Five in a series of Thanksgiving Blogs...
Let's take a look at the first word-picture in Psalm 107:
"Some wandered in the desolate wilderness,
finding no way to a city where they could live.
They were hungry and thirsty;
Their spirits failed within them." (verses 4 & 5)
I can't think of too many things more depressing than for a man to be lost in a desert. How could they find a city? There were none! And they weren't just passing through. These people are actually wandering aimlessly, nowhere close to any path or any road that might lead them out.
It's easy to see how these verses would have resonated with the Pilgrims. They had been driven from their homes and were hounded from place to place. At one time escaping England for Holland before finally setting sail for the North American continent. According to William Bradford they were: "hunted and persecuted on every side...Some were taken and clapped in prison, others had their houses beset and watched night and day, and hardly escaped their enemies hands; and most were constrained to flee and leave their houses and habitations, and the means of their livelihood."
Their spirits failed within them. When your body is exhausted it sure is hard to have courage and to keep pressing forward. No food, no water, no streams in the desert. Nothing. Total despair.
"Then they cried out to the Lord in their trouble;
He rescued them from their distress.
He led them by the right path
to go to a city where they could live." (verses 6 & 7)
Did you notice there wasn't any praying happening until things got bad? But, in the midst of their trouble they finally did pray, and to the right person: The Lord. It was all that they could do. They couldn't help themselves, or find help in other people, and so they cried out to God. Many of us are never going to pray until we're half starved and desperate, and it's really in our best interests to be empty and faint than to be full and brave. Someone once said, If hunger brings us to our knees it is more useful to us than feasting; if thirst drives us to the fountain it is better than the deepest drink of worldly joy; and if fainting leads to crying out to God then it is better than the strength of the powerful.
So, God hears the people's prayer and not only does He find the right way for them to escape from their wanderings, but he made the way, and gave them the strength to walk upon it. He gives them a place of rest; a city where they may dwell.
"Let them give thanks to the LORD
for His faithful love
and His wonderful works for the human race.
For He has satisfied the thirsty
and filled the hungry with good things." (verses 8 & 9)
We would have to be criminally ungrateful to not honor a Deliverer who rescued us from the wilderness and from cruel death! As believers, we should be stirred to praise the Lord again and again. Lives characterized by Thanks-Living!
One of the really cool things about this first word-picture in Psalm 107 is that the themes of lostness, thirst, hunger, and exhaustion are all pictures that Jesus uses to describe Himself as the Way, the Bread and Fountain of Life, and the Giver of Rest. The scene in this word-picture unites all these parts of salvation and crowns them with that of a city to dwell in.
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thanksgiving
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