Regular Miracles

“Therefore you shall do my statutes and keep my rules and perform them, and then you will dwell in the land securely. The land will yield its fruit, and you will eat your fill and dwell in it securely. And if you say, ‘What shall we eat in the seventh year, if we may not sow or gather in our crop?’ I will command my blessing on you in the sixth year, so that it will produce a crop sufficient for three years.” – Leviticus 25:18-21 (ESV)

God clearly directed His people to acknowledge Him as the Provider and to allow the land to rest every seventh year. Though an agricultural people – depending on the field and the vine for sustenance – the Israelites were to cease from sowing and pruning every seven years (Leviticus 25:1-5). The continual cycle of six years of work followed by one year of rest demonstrated at the most basic level of life that God’s will is the number one priority.

Knowing some of the Israelites would ask the same question I would ask, God preempts their doubt with this stunning statement, “And if you say, ‘What shall we eat in the seventh year, if we may not sow or gather in our crop?’ I will command my blessing on you in the sixth year, so that it will produce a crop sufficient for three years. When you sow in the eighth year, you will be eating some of the old crop; you shall eat the old until the ninth year, when its crop arrives” (Leviticus 25:20-22, ESV). Yes, God knew many of His people would question the practicality of the plan. How would they have enough to eat if no planting or harvesting happens for an entire twelve months? (Remember, the Israelites had no Wal-Mart!) The resounding answer comes back, “God is both the Giver of the harvest and the Grower of the crops.”

Living for the Lord is not for the faint of heart – for those who do not grasp God’s sovereignty over the very essence of reality. Psalm 24:1 (ESV) comes to mind, “The earth is the LORD’s and the fullness thereof, the world and those who dwell therein.” If we believe this basic premise of God’s rightful ownership of all creation, the corollary follows that He can, therefore, dictate creation’s path. In other words, the Lord is fully able to require the land to yield three years of crop for one year of planting. He made the earth, and He sustains it. The land must follow the voice of God.

The question becomes, “Why?” Why would God require the land to yield a supernatural crop in the sixth year? Why would He faithfully provide sustenance during a season when no sowing occurred? This continual, rhythmic cycle of provision for the seventh year took place because of the continual, rhythmic obedience of those who love God. Leviticus 25:18 (ESV) makes clear, “Therefore you shall do my statutes and keep my rules and perform them, and then you will dwell in the land securely.”

God reveals to us a right and productive way to operate. He knows “the land” best. He knows our lives best. He understands the way things ought to function. Moreover, He has the power to interject regular miracles into the flow of life. With obedience comes the consistent provision of God. As we trust the Lord enough to obey Him – even when it does not appear to make sense – God persistently offers His miraculous intervention in the daily stuff of our lives. To the Israelites, food and drink were basic and necessary (as they are with us!) The Lord consistently provided – even in the seventh year following a season without planting. The rational man without belief in God cannot see how this would naturally happen. However, the man of faith and rationality who trusts in God can see this as a reaction of God to His child’s obedience. God moves heaven and earth for His people!

We may not always realize this rather rhythmic provision, but the Lord is giving us breath, food, love, sanity, and hope. Even in the Old Testament, God promises consistent miracles with consistent obedience. Can you imagine His provision fully realized in Jesus Christ? I am given opportunity to be God’s child through Jesus, and I am given the strength to obey by His Spirit. Let us seek to regularly obey and regularly watch God work supernaturally!

How Much Is Enough?

Keep your life free from love of money, and be content with what you have, for he has said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.” – Hebrews 13:5 (ESV)

In a culture of greed and reckless spending, each one of us must ask, “How much is enough?” A resounding answer comes directly from God’s own Word, “Whatever you have right now is enough.”

That’s right. Whatever we have at the moment shall be enough for us. Our hearts shall be at rest in this instant. Another car, a larger home, a stylish new outfit, one more of the latest electronic gadgets, a larger television screen, more expensive furniture – none of these things should increase our fulfillment one bit. The blessings in our possession at this moment should be enough to keep us content.

Why? How can we actually be satisfied, before we obtain something just a little better than what we have right now? This is how. This is why. God is with us and He will not walk away.

One way to know if I am in obedience to the first and greatest commandment as stated by Jesus in Matthew 22:37-38, is to ask myself if I am contented right now. Is there a joy in my heart and deepest satisfaction in my soul even though I do not currently possess things I might like to possess? Or is my mind often drifting to thoughts of what I could have? My mind should be focused on my Savior because He fills my heart so fully that joy overflows no matter the status of my list of material possessions.

God has commanded us to keep our character free from the love of money. He goes on to demand that we be content with what we have. But God does not ask this difficult thing of His people without informing us of the way to accomplish it. He says we ought to be satisfied with what we have because He will never leave us or forsake us.

As one great hymn proclaims, God is the fountain of all blessing. If I have God, I have everything that is possible for a human being to have. The One who made everything and owns everything is my Lord. He alone brings the joy that properly accompanies any blessing He gives. Even the wing of a butterfly or the petal of a flower or a beam of the sunlight can stir my heart with unspeakable joy and mystery. Just the bite of an apple or a gulp of cold water brings amazing satisfaction. The smile of a child or the hug of a friend is an experience never to be traded. I find I do not need more; I need Jesus to make what I have more than I could ever imagine.

Since God promises to never abandon me, I know that He will provide for me what is necessary in the next moment, next day, next year, or next decade. He is the Source of all existence, and He is the one responsible for His own children. If I am solely responsible to provide for myself, I know my devices and best efforts can fail; and – even if they don’t – someday I will finally fail when this body gives out in death. But, if I trust my God, He can bring to pass anything in any instant while I traverse this world. And, when I go to the next world, my eternal God will provide everything there!

We need not be worried about what we do not have. In fact, we are commanded by God to protect our hearts from the love of money and discontentment. We are admonished, rather, to focus on God’s presence with us. Let us make a commitment to refuse to sin against our God by a discontented, greedy heart. Let us make a commitment to focus on Him and His faithfulness. For, He is the Provider.