I’ve been thinking about wheat lately, probably because of a
comment one of our friends made to my wife a while ago. Specifically, I’ve been
pondering two occasions when Jesus mentions wheat in Scripture.
Our unpainted walls, with wires where lights might one day be installed |
The first is in the Lord’s Prayer, when He counsels us to
pray for “our daily bread” (Matthew 6:11 and Luke 11:3). Pastors and
commentators have long suggested that He is telling us, in this verse, to ask
God for what we need. Since God promises in many other places in Scripture
(like, for example, John 14: 13 – 14) to give us what we ask for, it makes
sense that Jesus would teach us to ask God for the things we need.
But how do you deal with that truth when you are standing in
the middle of the house that you went $28,000 into debt to be able to move in
to and you are staring at all the things that still need to be finished? When
you are looking at the unpainted walls, when you see the electrical wires
sticking out
Our bedroom door (and the hole next to it) |
carefully limit our water usage); remembering all these
things, what can you possibly make of Jesus’ promise in Scripture that He will provide all of our needs?
Seems to me that you have three options. First, you can
doubt God’s Word; maybe this promise is false and He really doesn’t always give
us what we need. But that assertion basically means that all of Scripture is
false; if God can’t be trusted to tell the truth in one Scriptural promise,
that throws into doubt everything that He promises and teaches is trustworthy and faithful, that His promises are true, that He does
provide us with what we need. So scratch option number one; there must be something
else.
Part of the security wall that is still standing |
So how about door number two: We don’t really need these
things that we’re praying for. Well, I suppose that’s a possibility. I take
another look around the house. That would mean God is saying we don’t need to
get out from under this crushing debt, a debt which, if not taken care of,
could ultimately lead to the end of our ministry in Cameroon. That would mean
that we are meant to continue living with and enduring the countless little
struggles and frustrations that come from living in an unfinished and
unrepaired house, struggles that have already begun to wear us down physically
and emotionally, pushing us all closer to the breaking point; even the dogs are
getting stressed out! Surely that can’t be right. Maybe some of these things
aren’t absolutely necessary; maybe we can live in a house without paint or
adequate lighting. But a roof that doesn’t leak and is secure enough that the
wind is not likely to tear it off? A security wall that is not in danger of
collapsing at any moment? A well that gives enough water to wash more than one
load of laundry without going dry? Surely these are not simply desires, simply
wants. I mean, we’re not asking for a mansion with a filled four car garage,
king-sized water beds for everyone and caviar to snack on; we’d just like to
lay down at night under a dry roof without having to wonder if that roof will
still be there when the morning comes. That just doesn’t seem like a luxury to
me. Don’t we actually need these things?
And the two sections of wall that have fallen down |
So I come to option three: We don’t need these things now. I think this option is the one that
troubles me the most, probably because it seems to be the only viable option
left. It means that these things we’re missing in our lives are genuine needs
and God’s promise is true: He will supply what we need. Just not yet. For His
good purpose (and no doubt for our ultimate good), He is calling us to live,
for this season, in need. To live without financial security and to live with
the frustrations of staying in a poorly constructed, partially damaged, half
finished home. The flippant, in some ways easy answer is to say, “Okay, God
knows better than I do; If He thinks this is what we need right now, then I
should just buckle down and learn to endure until this season passes.” And
that’s pretty much the attitude I’ve been striving for over the past few months.
But another part of my mind just won’t stop protesting. Why do we need to go
through this? How is it good for us to have to scrimp and save every penny of
our already low support so we can start to pay back this debt, especially when
the necessity of paying off that debt means throwing into doubt several future
plans (like the hope of our last family vacation here in Cameroon before Daniel
graduates, as well as the question of how many of us can accompany Daniel back
to the States in June after he graduates)? How can it be good for us to not
sleep soundly for the last four months because we’re worried about leaking
roofs, falling sections of walls and wind storms that could rip our roof
completely off? I know, you can cue the verses about suffering teaching us perseverance
(Romans 5:3) and rejoicing in suffering (James 1:2), but that really doesn’t
answer the basic question: How is enduring these seemingly unendurable trials
good?
The view of our side yard - nice landscaping, don't you think? |
Which brings me to the next statement about wheat that Jesus
makes. In Luke 22: 31 – 32, Jesus says, “Simon, Simon, Satan has asked to sift
you as wheat. But I have prayed for you, Simon, that your faith may not fail.
And when you have turned back, strengthen your brothers.”
This is the verse our friend mentioned, and my first
reaction was, “That doesn’t really fit.” In my mind, Jesus ought to have said,
“Satan has asked to thresh you as wheat.” Because that seems like it would be
the more painful part of the process. You take the newly harvested wheat, lay
it out on a flat surface and beat it vigorously and thoroughly with a heavy
stick until the protective covering, the chaff, is knocked away from the
kernels of wheat. That doesn’t sound like fun to me at all. If we’re going to
put ourselves in the position of wheat, it’s the threshing that I would want to
avoid.
One of our leaky walls, and the holes we've made trying to find and fix the leaks |
But rather unsurprisingly, when you think about it more
carefully, Jesus seems to have gotten the metaphor right. Though threshing is
probably more traumatic for the wheat, it is the sifting that is the important
part of the process. After the wheat has been threshed, it is still
contaminated; the chaff is still there, separated from each kernel but mixed up
with them. If you tried to grind threshed wheat into flour, you’d have some
pretty nasty flour because the chaff is hard and inedible; your flour would be
worthless. The process of sifting fixes this. In sifting, you take the threshed
wheat and either throw it into the air or shake it around in a short, round
basket with a mesh bottom. In both cases, the wheat is thrown around so that
the chaff is separated, blown away, leaving only the valuable, edible kernels
of wheat behind.
So it seems to me Jesus is saying that Satan wanted to test
the disciples, especially Peter, to see if they were kernels or chaff, to see
if they would blow away when faced with trials and difficulties or if they
would stand firm and endure. And that sounds exactly like it fits where we are
right now. I can see, in the trials and stress that we are facing, the hand of
God allowing Satan to test us with great
tribulations, to see if we will be blown away or if we will endure.
I get to this point
and have to pause, because I’m not sure if that idea is encouraging or
discouraging. On the one hand, it means these trials could be a good thing, a
time that God has allowed for the purpose of purifying us and helping us to be
more free of habits and attitudes and stuff that might be holding us back from
serving Him more fully and effectively. But on the other hand, as I look around
at our lives right now, there seems to be an awful lot of chaff blowing away;
I’m having trouble imagining what will be left when this storm finally blows
over.
And that’s where I got stuck for some time: torn between the
discouragement of our current circumstances and the hope that God had something
good planned for all of us in all of this, assuming we made it through in one
piece. But eventually it hit me: the important part is not the sifting. Satan
asks to sift us like wheat, and Jesus responds, “But I have prayed for you,
that your faith may not fail.”
Wow. The incarnate Son of God, my Lord and my Savior, is
praying for me. Not only in the midst of this trial, but because of this trial, He is praying for me. That, in itself, just
blows me away. I’ve always had trouble wrapping my mind around the idea that
someone as powerful and wonderful and glorious, someone as important as Jesus not only knows me, but loves me and cares for
me. And prays for me.
But as amazing as that concept is, I think the more
important point is not that He is
praying for me, but rather what He is
praying for me. Not (as I have been) that our circumstances would improve, that
the storm would pass and we would be comfortable again. Rather, that our faith
would endure in the midst of this storm.
Does it really all come down to faith? I have to admit, I
didn’t want that to be the conclusion. In fact, I stopped writing at this point
for more than a month, hoping to find some other conclusion. But I don’t think
there is one. All of my questions and doubts, my stress and anxiety, my
frustration and depression, my jealousy at others whose walk seems much more
smooth than ours; all of these things boil down to one common factor: at some
point, I stopped trusting God. Not that I stopped believing in Him. I know that
He doesn’t lie, that His Word is true, that He is faithful and powerful and is
working for my good and His glory; I know all of those things, at least in my
head. But my heart looked at the wind and the waves of the storm surrounding us
and my faith faltered. I know that He is able to save us from these
circumstances, that He can reach out his hand and do us good by pulling us back
into the boat. But fear whispered to my heart that maybe He won’t, maybe He
will leave us here. And of course, my head responds to fear with the assurance
that, if He leaves us here, it is for a good reason, for His glory and our
good. But my heart just can’t see it; my heart sees the waves closing over us
and absolutely knows that we can’t
endure this trial any longer, which makes His decision to leave us here feel like
a broken promise.
My heart isn’t too bright sometimes. Or, to be a bit more
generous, my heart is kind of forgetful; it needs to be reminded that God does
keep His promises, that His perspective is different from mine and that He has
my ultimate good in mind rather than my immediate comfort. It needs to remember
that sometimes God asks us to wait on Him, and that making us wait isn’t the
same as forsaking us. In other words, my heart needs more faith.
So, I guess in the end it does all come down to faith, to
being able to rest contentedly in God’s promises and God’s faithfulness and
God’s wisdom, even when my immediate difficult circumstances remain. Being able
to trust that He is working for our good and His glory, even when I can’t see His hand moving.
Well, I’m certainly not there yet, which makes it rather
comforting to know that Jesus is praying for me. Maybe that needs to be my
prayer as well, turning my cries from “How long, o Lord?” to “I believe; help
my unbelief.”
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