Weekly
Message
April 27,
2014
Tom Seymour
God is
always with us
Have you ever felt alone, as if God was not
around or perhaps had forsaken you? If you have, you are not unique. Most
everyone at some point in their life has these doubts.
Perhaps you even felt as if you were
sinning just because you had these thoughts. That, too, is something that
happens to many. But we can’t help such thoughts coming to us. We can, though,
help ourselves by discounting them out of hand. So it’s no sin to have unrighteous
thoughts, but it is a sin to allow them to dictate our actions.
But the real truth of the matter is that no
matter what the devil may put in our heads to try and confound us and harm our
relationship with God, it is all a lie. God is with us at all times. Remember
the story of the footprints on the beach? The one where two sets of footprints
turned into only one set? The person viewed this as God forsaking him. But God
answered and said, “That was where I carried you.”
Without this knowledge of God’s love and
constant presence in our lives, I truly don’t know how any of us could survive.
I know I couldn’t. Living alone now for the last 22 years, I have times when I
feel sorry for myself. I miss my loved ones, all gone. I miss friends who have
preceded me. And I know it’s natural to feel this way. I also know, however,
that I am not alone and am never alone. At the most desolate and lonely times,
I feel God’s presence the most. He is there and always will be. He is here with
me and He is there with you.
We must cultivate our relationship with
God, though, since He will not push himself upon us. Upon retiring and arising,
I acknowledge God. I constantly pray, not only for myself but for others. And I
thank God. We thank people for the smallest of kind gestures. Why should we not
thank God for the grandest kindness of all, the gift of His son Jesus, who took
our sins upon himself on the cross.
I know people often struggle with the
triune nature of God. I once had a pastor friend tell me that he knew God, but
had never encountered Jesus. This was a learned man, with a doctorate degree.
And he admitted to not really feeling or experiencing Jesus, as such, in his
life.
But in fact he had. Jesus and God and God’s
Holy Spirit are one. And they are three. By having God in his life, my friend
also had Jesus in his life.
The mystery of the Holy Trinity is not
something lightly approached and few of us ever wholly understand it. It is
something heavenly, above and beyond our realm and more than we can comprehend.
But we can believe. And when we believe that Jesus, God and God’s Holy Spirit
are one, we are doing all that we can.
When I pray I pray to God. I pray in the
name of Jesus. And I know Jesus hears me. And sometimes He sends His Holy
Spirit to minister to me. Do I try and lessen the beauty of this mystery by
making distinctions? No. Absolutely not.
God is our creator and He loves us. You,
me, everyone on earth. It’s hard for me to get my hands around this, since I
can think of mean, cruel people who I cannot imagine loving. But God loves them
too.
So take heart and find solace in the fact
that God is there and He is aware of you. He loves you and wants the best for
you. Enter into His glory. Accept the gift of Christ’s blood, shed on the
cross. And open your spiritual eyes and see evidence of God’s work in your
life. Ask God to be with you and He will be with you. God wants to hear from
you. He waits and has waited. So call upon him. He won’t fail you.
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