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I Have Seen My Redeemer!

12/18/2022

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There was also a prophetess named Anna, the daughter of Phanuel, of the tribe of Asher, who was well along in years. She had been married for seven years, and then was a widow to the age of eighty-four. She never left the temple, but worshiped night and day, fasting and praying. Coming forward at that moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the Child to all who were waiting for the redemption of Jerusalem. Luke 2:36-38 ​

      “Daddy’s home!” the high-pitched, jubilant cry of my little sister rent through the air of our larger, middle-class home. Pulling her nose and hands off the panes of the bay window overlooking our driveway, her cry was echoed by less than jubilation. The repeated phrase bore more the sound of a panic-stricken, pubescent middle-school boy. While the fun began with the advent of my father, so did the ensuing scramble of “pick-up time.” It was a time that Mom had tried to instill in us, and was supposed to initiate at 4pm so that my dad could come home to a clean house, a warm dinner, and an excited family waiting to welcome him, grateful for the long hours he had put in at the office. Quite honestly, it was a time that rarely began until we heard the familiar sound of his car in the driveway.  
      Beth reached as high as she could with her chubby fingers and swung the door open toward herself, backing up with it until the opening was wide enough to run through. She rushed out to greet him, heedless of the door standing open, the cold air springing to take advantage of osmosis, or the rush of adrenaline and activity behind her to make preparations. Legs and duplos must we swept off the floor, laundry and toys on the stairs taken up to the rooms, schoolbooks stuffed haphazardly into shelves, sometimes never to be found again, and a multitude of small items that no one knew where they belonged and would find their home in any stray crack or cranny, couch cushion or basket. If the item was too large, it would find its way to the basement ping-pong table, which was conveniently large enough to hold a massive amount of confused items. It is not always beneficial when kids are “helping” to clean, after all.  
      The fun would begin when Dad was home and all the boring work of the day was over. Perhaps he would play games with us, hide and seek in the dark, cards, or wrestle in a tickle battle on the floor. Surely he would read us a missionary story and a chapter from a fiction novel, using all the right voices and sound effects. Undoubtedly, he would pick out his stack of books to read and try to eat his cheerios in peace before bed. That was my favorite time. When everyone was else was gone, it was my turn to find any questions I could come up with to spark a conversation and gain one-on-one attention.  
     My mom used to say that she loved it when Dad would come home, because he would chase the demons away. All the frustration of dealing with us, all the mess and the work, the bad attitudes and the arguments—Dad would come home and make it all better. Every day we waited. Every day we listened for the sounds that meant life would be great again.  
     I imagine that in a very small way, this is a bit of the expectancy of the time in which Anna lived. While our difficulties were vastly more bearable with the love we experienced in our family, the darkness of the oppression that Anna lived under with the Roman occupation and extreme abuse of her rights she likely suffered because of her gender, her social status and her ethnicity would have greatly intensified the longing she and her fellow Israelites would have felt for the coming Redeemer.  
     Here we see a repeat of a name that we may be familiar with from the Old Testament—that of Hannah, the mother of Samuel. In Hebrew, her name is “Channah,” and in Greek it is “Anna.” Her name means to be favored by grace.  A more literal picture of the Hebrew word is that of a benefactor leaning toward someone who is coming with a humble request in order to bless and give to them their needs.  
     Anna’s name is meant to bring to mind the story of her namesake, Hannah, in 1 Samuel 1, who was bereft of children. In her grief, she fasted, prayed, and shed tears with loud groanings “to the one who could rescue” her in her situation, and she “was heard because of her obedience (Heb. 5:7).” Asking for a child, she vowed to dedicated him for a lifetime service as a Nazirite if the Lord would hear her request. Together with her husband, Elkanah, “God is Redeemer,” they kept their vow and dedicated their young son, Samuel, “Heard of God,” for a lifetime of Nazir, or sacred and set apart service to the Lord.  
     Luke tells us that Anna was the daughter of Phanuel, and does not list her husband. Phanuel’s (Peniel) name means “the face of God,” and is meant to bring to mind the story of Jacob wrestling all night with the angel of the Lord in order to blessed by God. At daybreak, Jacob is blessed and given a new name. Realizing at once that he had in fact been wrestling with the Lord Himself, Jacob “called the place Peniel, saying, “It is because I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared. The sun rose above him as he passed Peniel....(Gen. 32:30-31).” 
     Anna came from the tribe of Asher, which means “happy/blessed,” and “level/straight,” which refers us back to the story of Leah and her wrestling (Gen. 30:8) with her sister for her husband’s love and the favor of God. After giving birth to Asher, Leah named him “happy” or “blessed” because she believed that her happiness would be guaranteed now because she had been given children.  
     Luke informs us further that Anna was “χήρα,” which is to be bereft, sterile, barren, or stripped of inhabitants or riches. While she was a widow in our common vernacular, this word was also used of those who had no provision or protection for themselves, but relied solely on God’s provision for them. It also included women who were single and without family support, or those who had been set apart under a Nazir vow and were, therefore, bereft and dependent upon God for their needs (Ex. 38:8, 1 Sam 2:22). 
      Anna very well may also have served in the same capacity as a ministering woman at the tent of meeting, which likely included Nazirites as well as Kohathite Levitical women serving and ministering (Ezra 2:65-70, Neh. 7:66-73, 1 Chron. 25:5-6). This group of ministering women would have depicted an early form of what would later become the ministering women serving in the church in the order of the “χήρα,” mentioned in Acts 6 and 1 Timothy 5 with its lists of qualifications that rival that of the presbyteroi just mentioned in the book, as well as concluding with the payment given to them, or to those ministering in the word of God, that of double payment. Acts 6 men who were appointed to be sure to wait on tables were likely given the responsibility of administering the payments of currency to these ministering women, since the word for table also carried the idea of banking, and since the Hebraic law and current culture of the day dictated that those who served were to be paid daily.  
     Anna was married for seven years, the Biblical number of completeness. Since she was married a complete amount of time, one would assume that it was surely enough time to have had children of her own. The text, however, shares nothing with us of any children, but rather of her day and night living and ministering in the temple. This indicates that she was childless—bereft in more ways than one. Though the Luke’s account in chapters 1 and 2 show us two other bereft and childless women whom God impossibly blesses with children, one in her old age (Elizabeth) and the other in her youthful virginity (Mary), Anna, whose name would have constantly reminded her of her own hope for children, remained childless.  
     Additionally, being bereft of children after her husband’s death likely would have qualified her for the Levirate law (Deut. 25:5-10), where her deceased spouse’s brother would have been required to redeem her monetarily and then taken her and raised up children for her husband by her. This would ensure that both the widow and the deceased husband would maintain a portion in the land of the Promise. Their name would not be cut off from their people. We find an example of this law as Boaz acted in this capacity as a kinsman-redeemer in the story of Ruth. If Anna had consented to this Levirate arrangement, she would not have remained a widow or bereft, and it may be that though that was available, she instead devoted herself as a Nazirite to wait for her redemption from God, instead. 
 

We must prepare the way for our Redeemer! ​

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     Anna must have thought of the children her namesake had asked for and been given by God. Hannah was “heard of God.” No doubt Anna’s own lifestyle of fasting and prayer included not a few tears for her own lack.  She may not have felt “heard,” and given the fact that she remained single until old age, she likely had no more hope for being “heard of God” in this capacity. So where was God’s favor? Where was His grace on her life? Without children and as a widow, she would have been presumed by others to be cursed for sin of which perhaps only God knew.  And yet Luke makes it plain that she is a godly woman, ministering in the same way we see the apostles “ministering before the Lord” in Acts 13:2 in a liturgical sense.    
     However, just as her predecessor Hannah did not drown herself in sinful pleasures or addictions, but rather poured out her soul in faithful service and ministry to the Lord, we see Anna so doing. We don’t see her remain idle in her sorrow.  
     Instead, we see her invest in others and allow herself to be so filled with God that she regularly prophesied. We see her dedicating herself to the ministry, and spending her days and nights fasting and praying and proclaiming God’s Word. It is highly likely that the very people to whom she had prophesied regularly were many of the very ones whose hearts were waiting expectantly for the “redemption” to come. Just as her descendance from Asher suggests, we see her “preparing the way for the Lord, and making “straight paths for Him.  
     We may find ourselves in a situation similar to Anna.  Do you find a lack somewhere, a bereftness? A removal or stripping of your resources?  Does this cause you pain and grief?   
     What do we do when our resources are removed?  Do we spend our energies out in self-pity, “look anxiously about” us, or desperately search for ourselves the resources we think we must have in order to find ourselves rescued? Or do we start waiting upon the Lord as his servants, with praise, worship, fasting and prophesying the divine message of expectancy to a dark and waiting world? 
 

We must wait expectantly on the Lord!  ​

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     Familiar with her own need and lack of a redeemer for her bereft state, attuned and practiced to the voice of the Holy Spirit, Anna was ready to recognize the Redeemer when she saw Him through the power of the Holy Spirit. Anna knew that God gives his people a more lasting portion eternally, and she was happy to trade physical redemption for spiritual redemption by her Redeemer.  In the midst of Anna’s day-to-day service, she experienced a favor far greater than that for which she may have longed—that of seeing the face of her God and living to tell of it!  
     While this was true of Anna, it is also true of us. As we go about our daily ministry in our homes, our churches and our communities and most especially in our day and night ministry to the Lord Himself, He meets us in our day-to-day with His Living Presence. As we practice listening to the voice of the Spirit and walking in obedience, we become more and more attuned to the words that direct us into the situations He wants to use to bring us favor: 
 

Yet the Lord longs to be gracious to you; therefore, he will rise up to show you compassion. For the Lord is a God of justice. Blessed are all who wait for him! People of Zion, who live in Jerusalem, you will weep no more. How gracious he will be when you cry for help! As soon as he hears, he will answer you. Although the Lord gives you the bread of adversity and the water of affliction, your teachers will be hidden no more; with your own eyes you will see them. Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.” Isaiah 30:18-21 
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     Through His Word, His Spirit, the spiritual understanding He imparts to us and our situations, He enables us to “see Him” and live to tell about our experiences of His presence! He reveals Himself to us, and gives us the opportunity to participate with Anna in preparing the way of the Lord, of making straight paths for Him! 
    We are never too late, and never too old. As long as we are serving God right where we are, the Divine appointments and opportunities for sharing the good news of the Light of the World will be brought to us.  
     What about us? How can we practice listening and obeying the voice of the Holy Spirit in our daily lives? How have you noticed the encounters becoming sweet and divinely appointed in your day-to-day?  

We must tell the good news! ​

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     After a lifetime of “wrestling” with God night and day, as her father’s name suggests, Anna receives the blessing that showed the favor and grace God had extended to her—that of seeing her Redeemer with her own eyes and living to tell the story! Just as Hannah was enabled to prophesy of the future Messiah’s redemption (1 Sam 2) because she came to the Lord in her bereftness and ministered to the Lord in it, so Anna was enabled to prophesy of her present Messiah’s redemption because she came to the Lord in her bereftness, emptiness, and lack, and ministered to the Lord in it. In the process of their emptiness, God filled them with His Spirit.  God, who is rich in mercy, gave Anna the joyous opportunity to tell all who were waiting for their Redeemer that she had seen Him, and their long wait was over! 
     As we anticipate Christmas morning, we have a red Farmer’s truck with the numbers 1-25 on it. There is a little magnetic snowflake that marks off the days til Christmas has arrived. Above it are filled their stockings, the curvature of candy canes spilling out of the edges and mysterious and some no-so-mysterious bulges sticking out begging to be squeezed and guessed at. A little distance away, misshapen packages lay under our tree. Although the kids are not allowed to handle them, they do seem to keep realigning in strange and different piles. While they each are understandably excited to receive the unknown gifts, their anticipation is greatly increased by the fact that they each also earn and purchase gifts for one another, and they love to watch their siblings open the gifts they themselves have given. They are not only anticipating their own joy, but the joy that comes from bringing joy to people they love.  
      Anna shared the good news of the Redeemer to “all who were waiting for the redemption of Jerusalem.”   In the Greek, the word for waiting is most often used in the “middle” voice, meaning the subject is doing the action herself as well as receiving the benefit of the action. It carries the strong idea of waiting actively, expectantly, “ready and willing to receive all that is hoped for....” Those to whom Anna shared the good news of their redemption were anticipating in an active and eager readiness His long-awaited arrival.  
     While Anna spoke to those actively waiting for their Redeemer to come at the beginning of Luke, Jesus our Redeemer speaks to us at the end of the book, telling us to actively and eagerly wait for His return!  

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     Are we waiting for redemption? What can we be doing today that increases our anticipation and joy? What can we do for others that changes their outlook on what their tomorrow may hold for them? How can we find ways to share the unfailing hope and joy that we have with those who have none? 
     As you anticipate the joy and the sorrows of this Christmas season, with its good and painful memories, its bereavements and its abundance, I pray that you will find joy and delight in the grace and favor that God has given to you through the gift of His Son, Jesus.  As you learn to see the many ways in which He leans toward you in order to bless and give you every "good and perfect gift," may you overflow with a joy that radiates that goodness to the lives you touch!  


 

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Backward and Forward--God is Faithful!

4/25/2022

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 אַֽעַלְךָ֣  
’a-‘al-ḵā 
Verb: Imperfect Hiphil
"​I myself will continuously bring you up"​


       Have you ever felt yourself to be in a place of confusion, where it seems like the way that God is leading you and your family is backward or contrary to the purpose He has for you?  When perhaps where you are being led now is the direct opposite of where you know God has promised you that He wants for you—and yet His leading is undeniable in your circumstances.  Maybe you have prayed, been in the Word, and the two opposites of the direction in God’s leading just seem like they could never combine to make a positive in your life. 
       When God calls us to follow Him, sometimes we find ourselves going backward to go forward.  We can trust God’s faithfulness!  He has promised to continuously be working to bring us up to where He has His plan and purpose for us!

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Let’s Trust God with our Backward Steps.
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So they went up out of Egypt and came to the land of Canaan to their father Jacob. And they told him, “Joseph is still alive, and he is ruler over all the land of Egypt.” And his heart became numb, for he did not believe them. But when they told him all the words of Joseph, which he had said to them, and when he saw the wagons that Joseph had sent to carry him, the spirit of their father Jacob revived. And Israel said, “It is enough; Joseph my son is still alive. I will go and see him before I die.” Genesis 45:25-28 ESV
 
So Israel took his journey with all that he had and came to Beersheba, and offered sacrifices to the God of his father Isaac. And God spoke to Israel in visions of the night and said, “Jacob, Jacob.” And he said, “Here I am.” Then he said, “I am God, the God of your father. Do not be afraid to go down to Egypt, for there I will make you into a great nation. I myself will go down with you to Egypt, and I will also bring you up again, and Joseph’s hand shall close your eyes.”
​Genesis 46:1-4 ESV
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        In Jacob’s story, we find ourselves stepping into an intricately played out drama between jealous and now repentant and forgiven brothers who had sold Joseph away as a slave into Egypt and that of a heartbroken father who had just learned that his favored son was still alive after many years of mourning. 
        In God’s omniscient foreknowledge, He had known that there would be a seven-year, worldwide famine in Joseph’s time.  Using the jealousies of Joseph’s brothers, God had arranged for Joseph to arrive in Egypt in time to plan a massive food storage event and to save many from the impending death caused by the famine.
         After years in the pharaoh’s dungeon, Joseph was miraculously raised to power, takes the opportunity God provides him to confront his brothers about their hurtful actions, and walks through a powerful repentance and reconciliation with them. 
         It is at this point that we find ourselves back with Jacob: Joseph had just sent his brothers back to tell Jacob the good news that He was alive as if from the dead, and that Jacob and his family would all be able to stay in Egypt in the best of the Egyptian agricultural land. 
            But Jacob, though happy to hear of his son’s prosperity, is afraid to go to down to Egypt.  He was living in the land of the Promise—the area of Canaan that God would one day give to Abraham’s descendants.  And Jacob knew there was more to that prophesy.  It was “more” that filled him with dread: 
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As the sun was going down, a deep sleep fell on Abram. And behold, dreadful and great darkness fell upon him. Then the LORD said to Abram, “Know for certain that your offspring will be sojourners in a land that is not theirs and will be servants there, and they will be afflicted for four hundred years. But I will bring judgment on the nation that they serve, and afterward they shall come out with great possessions. As for you, you shall go to your fathers in peace; you shall be buried in a good old age. And they shall come back here in the fourth generation, for the iniquity of the Amorites is not yet complete.” Genesis 15:12-16

     Could Jacob trust God’s promise, that even if their family went into slavery, God would bring them back to Promised Land?  Could God take care of their family through many harsh years of slavery?  These are the questions that Jacob must have had as he contemplated such a drastic move back to Egypt.  
     What about you?  Have you ever wondered if God could possibly have a good plan when it seems like He's leading through back into something scary or away from the final goal and purpose that He has for you? 
      I know these things are difficult for me at times.  In these times, God's promise to Jacob brings me peace.  He will go down with us into these places and seasons.  He will never leave us alone: He will not abandon us.  As surely as He himself will go down with us, He also promises to continuously be bringing us back up!

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Let’s multiply while we wait.
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     In Exodus chapter 1 we find the story zooms back in on a greatly multiplied Israel under a new pharaoh—one who did not know of Joseph.  This pharaoh found himself greatly afraid of such a massive amount of a mighty group of people, and—just as God had foretold—he began to enslave and even kill their children in order to prevent their imagined revolt.  Rather than reduce their population, all of Pharaoh’s efforts to prevent the blessing and multiplication of the people resulted in greater blessings and multiplication!
     Do you find yourself in a place of waiting, when you cannot move yet into what you know God has for you?  You may find that you cannot make the changes you need to step out into freedom in a physical sense.  In these moments of waiting for God to work for us, there is something we can do:  we can trust God to do His work, and we can share the good news of Jesus to everyone around us! 
     We don’t need to passively wait on God, we may actively wait! In doing this, we are standing on the promise of His faithfulness to us.  God’s blessing and favor rest on us when we produce fruit in these seasons of waiting on God to do the work that only He can accomplish.

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Let’s watch God bring us Home.
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     It was during this time in the book of Exodus that God raised up Moses to deliver the people out of slavery, through the wilderness, and back into the Promised Land. At the very moment that their time in the place of preservation was over, God brought them out.  On the very day that fulfilled the end of the prophecy, the Israelites were delivered to freedom by the sovereign God on whose promises they could place their absolute trust: 
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The time that the people of Israel
lived in Egypt was 430 years. 
At the end of 430 years, on that very day,
​all the hosts of the LORD went out from the land of Egypt. 
​It was a night of watching by the LORD,
to bring them out of the land of Egypt…. 
Exodus 12:40-42a

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​            We can watch peacefully through the night in which God works because of this:  He Himself is watching out, keeping vigil, all the night while He works to accomplish this work for us. 
​      One thing that brings me comfort in the backward seasons is knowing that when it’s time for God to work, it is His power alone that does the job. When we are walking in the will of God, there is nothing and no one on earth that can prevent God’s plan from being accomplished in our lives.
 
​        In that moment, all that we need to do is stand in peace...                                                     
​                                                                      and watch
.  


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The Healing Power of Faith

11/17/2021

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pístis (from peithô, "persuade, be persuaded") – properly, persuasion (be persuaded, come to trust); 
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faith.
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    There she was: disheveled, dirty, her hair flying raggedly in the breeze.  She just wouldn't leave them alone.  It felt so frustrating. 
     And there was Jesus just ahead, moving silently along the road, each footstep raising small clouds of dust in the wind.  He was still ignoring her, his silence dramatically different from the crowd and marked by the absence of the slurs and racial epithets of the throng. Of course,  as a rabbi Peter wouldn't have expected any less of Him.  Esteemed rabbis didn't even speak to their own wives in public, but she was a Gentile woman. Jesus' toleration of her insolence without rebuke was angering.  
   Moving through the Gentile areas of what had once belonged to the Chosen People under King Solomon, and still yet was their inheritance by God, they were now walking in the region of Tyre and Sidon. Simon cringed again as she called out, her incessant voice rasping with overuse: “Lord, Son of David, have mercy on me! My daughter is miserably possessed by a demon.”
    Unclean, defiled-- in so many ways.  Like the small street dogs that ranged through the villages, rolling in excrement, eating rotting food. Every kind of Gentile sin marked her from her clothing and jewelry to her lack of a veil, with not even an attempt at keeping the Jewish law given them from God.  How dare she come now in all her perversity and call out the Messianic name of Jesus!  "Son of David"--The Jews' Messiah!  The anger and frustration kept mounting.  

     And still Jesus did not answer a word.

    Feeling a tap on his shoulder, Simon turned to face James and John.  Their eyes sparked as they leaned in to be heard above the crowd: "Peter, you tell Him!  He will listen to you!  You're the one he said had some faith for coming to Him on the water last week. If he listens to anyone, it will be you." 
    Simon wasn't so sure.  A wave of doubt washed over him.  He could clearly remember that stormy night, when he had yelled across the crash of the waves: he had challenged Jesus to tell him to come to Him on the water--if it was really Him.  Even after being invited, even after stepping closer and closer, he had still doubted and failed. 
  Swallowing nervously, Simon summoned his courage and caught up to Jesus, matching his long strides with Jesus' own.  "Master, send her away, for she keeps crying out after us.”         The look came into Jesus' eyes then, a look Simon had grown all too familiar with: a mixture of pain, sorrow, anger and incredulity.   A wave of guilt and shame washed over Simon as a memory came suddenly back to him. A memory of the Master, just yesterday, with them in the field.  Eating the grain. They'd been hungry, and there had been no food.  They'd been sleeping outdoors every night on their way that week.  They themselves had been dirty--it had been a full week since they've had even a foot wash.
    The Pharisees had come and watched them in disgust.  They had demanded that the Master rebuke Simon and the others for not having washed their hands first--they were defiled, unclean. They could be banned from worship at the Temple and synagogues for breaking the rules. 
   Jesus' face had carried that same look then as He had rebuked the Pharisees: “Don’t you see that whatever enters the mouth goes into the stomach and then out of the body? But the things that come out of a person’s mouth come from the heart, and these defile them. For out of the heart come evil thoughts—murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false testimony, slander. These are what defile a person; but eating with unwashed hands does not defile them.” 
   Tight-lipped, Jesus turned away from Simon without responding. Turning and looking toward the woman, her tears trailing in salt down her dirty cheeks, he called out to her, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.”
    Simon could see the waves of first pain, desperation and then determination spread over the woman's face. 
    The woman came to Jesus. The crowd fell deathly silent.  Simon could hear the breeze whistling through the shrubs behind them. Kneeling before Jesus in the dirt, she demanded persistently, “Lord, help me!” 
     All eyes followed the speakers back and forth, breaths held in.  Jesus looked up from the woman at the crowd.  Looking at Simon, the Master replied to the woman: “It is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to the dogs.”
     Pain welled up in Simon's heart at His words.  That's exactly what he had asked for. It's how he had felt.  It just sounded so terribly callous coming from the Master's mouth. The desperation in the woman's face flashed back to his mind.      But undaunted the woman was speaking again, lowering herself to even the worst of insults, lowering her body yet further to the ground: “Yes, Lord,” she said, “but even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.”
    Jesus' face broke into a wide grin as He threw back His head and laughed, His expression exultant: “O woman, your faith is great! Let it be done for you as you desire.” 
   Simon watched her face, now radiantly beautiful as she stood shakily to her feet, thanking the Master profusely before running off into the distance.

   "Your faith is great," Jesus had said. Incredibly, Simon realized with a sudden understanding, it had taken a greater faith to come to Jesus through a hostile crowd, facing the shame and insults, than to walk on water after being invited to come!  Simon had thought he had passed such a great test--doing the impossible, walking on the water. 
​   But the greater honor of a larger test had been reserved for this Gentile woman.  She had believed after being rejected and reviled. She had pursued Jesus after being turned away.  Simon's test had won him some modicum of respect among the disciples, but the woman's faith was one that brought redemption and healing to her household, transforming her very nature through one radical word from the Master.   

"And her daughter was healed at that very moment."
​Matt 15:28

Great Faith
chooses suffering, disgrace, and pilgrimage to seek and find Jesus

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   In so many ways, this concept drives counter to what we hope for in life.  I don't know about you, but I have always craved peace, security, stability, warmth, good food, the respect of my friends and family, and a home to delight in.  I'm sure this woman desired all of these as well With the Syro-Phoenician woman, however, it was undoubtedly her great love for her daughter that gave her the motivation to choose this painful and rewarding path.
     As we read In Hebrews chapter 11, we see a long chapter full of faith elders, heroes of the faith, both men and women, who are the "great cloud of witnesses" who have gone before us.  They witness to the transformation and salvation of lives through supernatural faith in God through Jesus.  In reading through the list, we see many examples of exciting faith adventures of which many of us are all too familiar--Abraham and Sarah, Moses, Noah, Joseph, Rahab and so many others. 
    Some stories, more than others, seem victorious and glorious, full of honor and heroism, and marked by a rise to wealth and power.  Others not so much.  If we read through some of their stories in the Old Testament, though, we come to find that suffering, disgrace and pilgrimage mark all of their stories in painful and profound ways. 
    Abraham, the first pilgrim, was called an "Ibri," (a Hebrew) because it means to "pass over," referring to the River that he had to pass over from his old life into a new life.  He went from a stable home, a planned future, and of pursuing whatever his appetites wanted to wandering as a stranger in a foreign land, totally reliant on God's protection and provision. 
   Moses too, had to "pass over" the Red Sea, rejecting the old life of promised and planned power in the kingdom of Pharaoh, and choosing instead to "suffer disgrace with God's people" (v. 25).
     For true Israelites, those that are Israelites through faith and not through physical descent (Rom. 3:28-30), we must all "pass over" from death into life, from our old way of seeking empty appetites, to a new life of being continuously satisfied in God, from enjoying "the pleasure of sin for a season (Heb. 11:25), to choosing rather to suffer disgrace and a metaphorical "homelessness" that comes with being a follower of Jesus, who "had no place to lay his head" (Matt. 8:20).

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    The Apostles Paul urges us in this way, "What I mean, brothers and sisters, is that the time is short. From now on those who have wives should live as if they do not; those who mourn, as if they did not; those who are happy, as if they were not; those who buy something, as if it were not theirs to keep; those who use the things of the world, as if not engrossed in them. For this world in its present form is passing away" (1 Corinthians 7:29-31). 
    Paul is not saying that we should necessarily leave these things physically, but that each of them should be dedicated to the Lord's use in a way that He may have full control over our hearts and choices.  We should be free to serve the Lord without being entangled with items.  
​

Great Faith
​is unafraid and unhindered by the power and scorn of others

​

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     Have you ever had a time where you were praying for something you knew was in the will of God, and yet saw no answers?  I certainly have.  In fact, many of the larger answers to prayer in my life have been after years of praying--fervently.  And still I have many others that I am still waiting on--and praying for.  
    God is a good father.  Not only does He want to give us good things, He also knows the best timing for these gifts.  Many times the ways or means that we would have chosen are not the best, and don't accomplish as full or complete a victory as God would desire for us. 
    Often too, the things we would choose to accomplish our goals--in our lives, in our spouse's, friends' or children's lives--are not actually building but rather shortcutting the system that the Lord is using to build that character quality into our lives.  More and more now I pray for not a specific action from God, though I do still ask for those, but rather specific character qualities and transformation in our souls, and leave just how He wants to do that to God Himself.  
     Usually, there are these same obstacles in our way:  people of influence or power that could make our lives harder (Pharaoh, King Herod, Pilate--a boss, a co-worker, a spouse or child).  They have a semblance of power over us because they can make manipulative or derogatory remarks.  They may have the power to slander or gossip about us to others.  Perhaps they may sabotage our efforts, or make our work more difficult. Even worse, sometimes they may try to physically or emotionally abuse us, like the demon did to the Syro-Phoenician's daughter.  
     But when we know that our all-powerful God can transform and change our lives, bring healing and restoration and save us from all evil, the ugly power that tries to block our efforts to reach the Lord becomes a small problem that the Master can easily choose to override.  This is what the woman knew about Jesus.  
    Jesus put it this way: “So do not be afraid of them, for there is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. What I tell you in the dark, speak in the daylight; what is whispered in your ear, proclaim from the roofs. Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who can destroy both soul and body in hell. Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? Yet not one of them will fall to the ground outside your Father’s care. And even the very hairs of your head are all numbered. So don’t be afraid; you are worth more than many sparrows. (Matt. 10:26-31) 
​

Great Faith
perseveres because we see the nature of the invisible God through spiritual eyes
​

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    In chapter 9, the sinful and forgiven tax collector Matthew gives us a crucial clue into Jesus' purpose in ministry: to show mercy and give healing and cleansing to the heart-sick, regardless of their outward appearance and physical birth or works: 

    While Jesus was having dinner at Matthew’s house, many tax collectors and sinners came and ate with him and his disciples. When the Pharisees saw this, they asked his disciples, “Why does your teacher eat with tax collectors and sinners?” On hearing this, Jesus said, “It is not the healthy who need a doctor, but the sick. But go and learn what this means: ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice.’  For I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matt 9:10-13).
     In fact, Matthew doesn't reflect on Jesus' Old Testament quote once, but twice.  In the passage of chapter 12, where the Pharisees are condemning the disciples for eating on the poor person's gathering of grain from the field on the Sabbath, Jesus once again quotes this phrase: "If you had known what these words mean, ‘I desire mercy, not sacrifice,’ you would not have condemned the innocent."  Matt 12:7
     A commonly used literary device in both the Old and New Testaments, as well as being commonly used in other ancient documents, is that of chiasm:  To build arguments and themes underscoring and leading to establish a main idea, and then retracing that point back with symmetrical arguments and themes to the conclusion. 
    In the book of Matthew, Jesus' teaching on defilement coupled with the visual demonstration of the Syro-Phoenician woman is at the very point of the chiasmic theme of the entire gospel:  Defilement and faith are a matter of the heart, not the outward appearance, and Jesus is here to heal and cleanse anyone who comes to Him in persevering faith.  

     This woman knew something in the very core of her being about Jesus that not even His disciples had fully comprehended:  That He was merciful and compassionate to all who sought Him. I don't really understand how she knew this.  Her genuine certainty that the Lord would help her goes past my own experience. 
     My experience is much more like Peter's: growing up in a Godly household, I have lived my whole life knowing that I was invited.  Stepping out on the water with Jesus in life's scary situations seems huge already to me. 
    But believing that He cares and hears and will answer my prayers when He seems to be ignoring me--and most especially when I hear the voice of the enemy telling me how unworthy I am, how my failure as a wife, a mother, a friend, a minister, has disqualified me from His help--those are the times when it is hardest to persevere and believe that He will help me.  
     But as we get to know Him intimately through His word, through prayer and conversations, through listening to His voice and receiving His good and gracious gifts, the more we get to know His true nature: that He never leaves or forsakes us; that He is full of compassion, gracious and abounding in mercy; and that He has "plans to prosper and not to harm us, plans to give us hope and a future" (Jer. 29:11).  Based on our relationship with Him, we can know that we will be heard.  
    As you and I grow in maturity in the Lord, we will find that our relationship with the Lord determines what we believe of Him rather than the circumstances surrounding our requests.  We will place less confidence in what we can see with our eyes and more in what we can see with our spirits:  That God is continuously working all things for our good (Rom 8:28).

Great Faith
welcomes the sanctifying and healing Spirit of God over our households
​

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    When Jesus had given her the word, she got up and went home because she knew that her prayer was answered and her daughter was healed without having yet seen it.  We never see her again in the gospels. 
   But we have a clue about the result of her encounter with Jesus.  Her daughter was healed by the Lord as a result of her desire: a desire which mirrored the Lord's desire for them.
    Contrary to what seemed to be, the Lord Himself desired to give her compassion, mercy, relationship and wholeness. Her very faith, the inbirthed persuasion given to her from the Lord, enabled her to desire what the Lord Himself desired for her and for her daughter.  
     When we walk in faith because we love others like He loves, then we will desire the very things that He desires for them, because through faith our inner nature is transformed to become like His.  So we may boldly come to His throne in our time of need in order to receive His mercy and grace for our needs, knowing with confidence that He hears us (Heb. 4:16).  
   What situation do you face today that requires a faith from God that defies your situation?  What steps will you take to seek God against all odds?  



You need to persevere so
that when you have done the will of God,
you will receive what he has promised.
  For,

“In just a little while,
    he who is coming will come
    and will not delay.”

 And,

“But my righteous one will live by faith.
    And I take no pleasure
    in the one who shrinks back.”

 But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have faith and are saved.
​(Heb. 10:37-39)


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    Halley Faville lives with her husband and children in their mountain home in Oregon. 

    ​As a homeschooling mother of 7 children, she enjoys spending her free time in  language arts, music, art, and outdoor activities.  

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