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Thursday, July 10, 2008
Marvin Olasky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Don't Waste Your Setback
by Marvin Olasky
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In my last column I wrote about applying pastor John Piper's admonition—"Don't waste your cancer"—to my recent double-bypass surprise, which pushed me to think about death, examine my own sinfulness, and cherish Christ. If open-heart surgery doesn't open hearts, it's a waste.

But that operation, hard as it was physically, was easy in some ways. I don't want to over-spiritualize what is, after all, a lot of physical yuckiness, yet I felt good as a survivor, riding a floodtide of love and able to leave the hospital on day five.

Then came a setback: I had to return the next night with fluid in my lungs and breathing problems. That left me depressed and got me thinking about why the Bible frequently has a ba-bum beat: Physical lows follow spiritual highs.

Elijah's story provides one clear example. The Exodus thunder and smoke must have been astounding, but if atheist Christopher Hitchens had been present he might have offered a naturalistic explanation. (The Red Sea crossing would have been harder.) Chapter 18 of 1 Kings, though, narrates Elijah's confrontation on Mount Carmel, one that ended with something akin to the stars lining up and spelling out G-O-D.

This was a test with a control group that would make any scientist proud: One bull, offered for sacrifice by the priests of Baal, left untouched on its altar. The second bull, offered for sacrifice on God's altar, consumed by fire, even after that altar had been wetted down three times—and, should anyone doubt, the fire ate up the stones and licked up the water.

When the Israelites, seeing that victory, finally took a stand for God, it seemed clear that they had not wasted their cancer. Maybe God had even given the Israelites a new heart, or at least bypasses surrounding the old heart of stone. But then pneumonia set in. Queen Jezebel told Elijah that she was still in power and he was a walking dead man. Deeply depressed, the prophet started running. He ran south to Beersheba. He kept running the next day, into the wilderness, and asked God to kill him.

God, instead, gave him communion, supplying a cake baked on hot stones and a jar of water. Elijah's expressed reason for dying was that "I am no better than my fathers," but when Elijah stated it that way he was forgetting that setbacks are often gifts from God, not tokens of our unworthiness. God in response sent Elijah 40 days further into wilderness, and at Mount Horeb gave him an understanding of God's subtlety.

This teaching was important for a man faithful to God yet frightened by Jezebel. Elijah had already seen the explicit sign of God's mercy at Mount Carmel, so this time God didn't speak to him in the way he probably expected: through a whirlwind, an earthquake, or a fire. God remained silent through all those roaring events, and then spoke in low decibels. Continued...

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About The Author
Marvin Olasky is editor-in-chief of the national news magazine World, provost of The King's College, and a professor of journalism at The University of Texas at Austin. For additional commentary by Marvin Olasky, visit www.worldmag.com.
 
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Subject: LET US CONSIDER
As we draw up our lists of things (usually bad things) that the Lord our God “could have prevented”, lets us pause to consider that, for the present, we have no way of knowing all the bad things that He HAS prevented! And as we consider the things that “He allowed to happen”, let us have the presence of mind to recognize that He allowed US to happen. This is why, whenever I am asked “Is the glass half empty or half full?”, my reply is “I just give thanks for the glass!”

God Does Cause Sickness

Harry

According to Ephesians 1:11, God “worketh all things after the counsel of his own will.” When Scripture says ALL things, it includes sickness and disease.

This is so obvious to Job (who fell ill to a very serious disease) that he says even the earth and all living creatures, including the beasts, fowls of the air and fish know that “in all these that the hand of the LORD hath wrought this.” Job 12:7-12.

Read Job 12. It’s a great testimony to the sovereignty of God and how He works. And through it all these words are repeated, “With him is strength and wisdom.”

Not only does God have the Strength, the Power to send earthquakes, fires, tornadoes, hurricanes and diseases, but He also has the Wisdom to do so. By Wisdom, it means that God is Just when He does this; for you cannot separate wisdom from justice.

So I’ll ask you as Job 13:7 does, “Will ye speak wickedly for God? and talk deceitfully for him?” For that’s what you do when you make God out to be something other than who He is.

Verse 8 says, “Will ye accept his person? will ye contend for God?” Then you have to portray Him as He has revealed Himself in His Word.

Gary Gordon
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