OUR LORD KEEPS US AWAKE, OUT OF HARM, AND EDUCATED
If we pay attention when reading God’s instructions in the Old
Testament, and some of the things Jesus says too, we see that some warnings and
instructions are way more curt and graphic than we’d really like. But graphic
warnings alert us, and God knows it. He does it to keep us awake, keep us out
of harm, and keep us educated.
There’s kind of a gross saying in Proverbs 26:11-12: “As a dog
returneth to his vomit, so a fool returneth to his folly.” But God is warning
us that we are not to trust our own thinking when it comes to some important
issues in life. I looked up the expression about a dog returning to its own
vomit and found that the Bible is talking about rabid dogs. In the East, troops
of fierce half-famished dogs, without masters, are often wandering around the
towns and villages.
They eat anything they can find. Anyone who has cats and dogs for
pets knows that the silly dog will find great treasures in the cat box, as
disgusting as that is! Dogs will eat poop. There I said it. A dog will eat its
own vomit if it’s hungry enough, as these rabid dog packs do. There are other
references to dogs in the Bible as well. These talk about the packs of dogs
eating a dead person. Disgusting, but true.
1 Kings 14:11: “Him that dieth of Jeroboam in the city shall the
dogs eat.”
1 Kings 16:4: “Him that dieth of Baasha in the city shall the dogs
eat.”
2 Kings 9:10: “And the dogs shall eat Jezebel in the portion of
Jezreel, and there shall be none to bury her.”
The Lord is using this example to make a point: Don’t be enticed
into going back into a bad situation. Let’s not let ourselves be bewitched by a
memory. Think about it: The fresh food the dog ate is no longer fresh when it
comes out – it’s waste. It’s dead and deadly. Toxic! It’s not what it used to
be!
We’ve all made the mistake of thinking we could go back to an old
job, an old relationship, a place we once lived, and think it will be better
this time around. But we really need to check it out with the Lord first before
we make this kind of decision. There may be good things about going back, but
remember, there was a reason we left in the first place. Jane grew up in
Chicago, so when we both returned from being missionaries in Africa, she
suggested we go to her hometown because she knew we would easily find work there.
But it wasn’t long until she discovered that she’d made a grave
mistake. Growing up in the Polish community, Jane remembers hearing the adults
talk. She said the two main subjects of conversation were sickness and death.
When she went back there to live, the spirit of death was always hovering over
her. She felt like she was suffocating and two years later she knew she had to
leave or she’d die. We left and only returned once to see my favorite Art
Museum and a Cubs game.
When Jane and I first moved to Las Vegas, she met a young girl at
work whose boyfriend was an ex-con. The girl would come to work bruised. He hit
her at home. One Monday she was scraped up and couldn’t move her fingers. He’d
thrown her out of a moving car. That was when Jane called a battered women’s
shelter. The counselor on the phone stopped the conversation and started
counseling Jane. She told her she shouldn’t even get involved at this point
because the average battered woman leaves 7 times before she leaves for good.
The counselor told Jane it was classic for a third party to get involved to try
to help and all that happens is that they get in the middle of the couple and
the woman defends the abuser. The counselor said it never does any good to get
involved until the woman seeks help for herself.
The packs of wild dogs will eat their own vomit and will eat what
is dead. Let’s not do that. Jane wanted to go back to Chicago because there was
good potential there, but it was too toxic for her. The good things didn’t
override the bad. Some relationships and associations from the past were dead
and weren’t to be resurrected.
Admitting we can’t go back to a person, place or situation, isn’t
failure; it’s deliverance!
God admonishes us: “In all thy ways acknowledge him [God], and he shall
direct thy paths. Be not wise in thine own eyes: fear [respect] the Lord, and
depart from evil. It shall be health to thy navel, and marrow to thy bones”
(Prov. 3:6-8).
“Health to thy navel.” This phrase in Hebrew is translated “refreshment
shall it be to thy nerves, in which is the seat of strength.” When we’re not being nervous, we can be strong!
In other words, when we do the first part of Proverbs 3:6-8, things go right.
We let God lead us, we respect Him, and we stop doing ungodly things, and the stress
goes away.
God’s will is that we are blessed, not stressed, so that’s why He
warns us about not being tricked into going back to things that are done or
decaying, but instead reach out to Him, because He will gladly direct us into
His ways, which make us much stronger and stress-free.
“For by thee I have run through a troop; and by my God have I
leaped over a wall” (Ps. 18:29).
Love, Carolyn
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