Don’t worry about the wicked or envy those who do wrong. For like grass, they soon fade away. Like spring flowers, they soon wither. Trust in the LORD and do good. Then you will live safely in the land and prosper. Take delight in the LORD, and he will give you your heart’s desires. Commit everything you do to the LORD. Trust him, and he will help you. He will make your innocence radiate like the dawn, and the justice of your cause will shine like the noonday sun. [Psalm 37.1-6]
O LORD, don’t rebuke me in your anger or discipline me in your rage! Your arrows have struck deep, and your blows are crushing me. Because of your anger, my whole body is sick; my health is broken because of my sins. My guilt overwhelms me— it is a burden too heavy to bear. My wounds fester and stink because of my foolish sins. I am bent over and racked with pain. All day long I walk around filled with grief. A raging fever burns within me, and my health is broken. I am exhausted and completely crushed. My groans come from an anguished heart. [Psalm 38.1-8]
Both these passages were written by the same man, David. How can that be?
Is David victorious or defeated? Does he have all his heart desires or is he filled with grief? Is his heart carefree or is he in anguish? Is he innocent or guilty? The contrast between these two passages is stark. It is almost as if David is two different people!
The apostle Paul described this conflict - this battle - the best...
I have discovered this principle of life—that when I want to do what is right, I inevitably do what is wrong. I love God’s law with all my heart. But there is another power within me that is at war with my mind. This power makes me a slave to the sin that is still within me. Oh, what a miserable person I am! Who will free me from this life that is dominated by sin and death? [Romans 7.21-24]
That answer to Paul's question, he answered himself:
Thank God! The answer is in Jesus Christ our Lord. So you see how it is: In my mind I really want to obey God’s law, but because of my sinful nature I am a slave to sin. [Romans 8.25]
Faith in Jesus Christ is not child's play. Although even a child can believe, for any person intent on pleasing God, this battle is real - even if it's simply the battle to believe like a child and not like an adult!
If David's and Paul's words offer any insight to us today, it should be that life is a challenge. Particularly when a person becomes intent on pleasing God, the battle begins. I truly believe anyone who declares they do not have struggles, is a person who is not genuinely pursuing God in God-pleasing faith. Jesus confirms this:
I have told you all this so that you may have peace in me. Here on earth you will have many trials and sorrows. But take heart, because I have overcome the world.” [John 16.33]
A person who chooses to live like Christ in dauntless faith will have troubles from the outside AND from the inside. Both David and Paul confirm this as well. What the enemy cannot do to us by the hand of others, he will do to us through our own indiscretions. The battle is real and the struggle to believe is ongoing. Living by faith is not an abstract part-time religious thing; it is relentless daily warfare. Some days we need to read Psalm 37 and other days we need to read Psalm 38. Sometimes we need them both in the same day or even the same hour!
The life of faith is not for lazy or apathetic people. The more we read and meditate on God's Word, the more He reveals to us from it. What confuses us at first, if we patiently continue to seek Truth from it, we will eventually find God's heart in and direction for our lives.
All the while, the deceiver of mankind works tirelessly to discourage us distracting us from what really matters. His most effective deception is to convince us to focus on ourselves (let that one soak in a while).
The point is, life happens to all of us. Emotion must be taken out of the equation and replaced with tenacious faith in Jesus Christ and operation of His indwelling Holy Spirit for the purpose of serving God in this world (not ourselves). As already stated, this indeed requires tenacity, but also humility. The coexistence of these two characteristics best describes the faith that pleases God - the faith that Paul spoke of in Romans 7. The goal is humble victory in Jesus Christ. There is neither place for condemnation nor arrogance but rather, steadfast circumstance-changing (not abstract) faith in the work of reconciling men unto God.
There is work to be done.
Father, help us to live humbly victorious in Jesus Christ. Like Jesus, help us 'keep it real' in the shadow of His Cross AND our own striving only to reconcile men unto You utilizing mountain-moving faith as it is needed for Your glory. So be it. Yes, so be it.