Darkness pursues him. Running, running, he can’t keep it
up. His feet stumble; you can see he’s
tired. Darkness will crush him. Darkness is gaining; the hero is tiring. His heart too; losing hope. Alone.
Not going to make it. Out of the shadows;
someone else coming. Running the same
direction. Running toward the hero. Running with the hero he shouts
encouragement. They gain strength;
darkness lags.
To persecuted, fearful, world-worn travelers God’s
consolation is this, “I am with you.” The
solution isn’t escape from the pain. It is supernatural accompaniment through
it. I don’t fully understand it. But one
can catch glimpses. In the Lord of the
Rings when Frodo tells Sam he is going to Mordor; Sam responds, "I know
that well enough, Mr. Frodo. Of course you are. And I'm coming with you.” During
my divorce I had some close friends that walked through the fire with me. Barad-dûr,
back-stabbing and bitter days are more easily faced when strength is encouraged
by---and borrowed from—friends.
We desire lives free from
trauma. That is not realistic Let’s face
it. The darkness comes. If it finds us
alone we despair. God’s heart is to draw
near. The Psalm says God draws close to
the broken-hearted. It is this knowing
that this is His heart that speaks to our heart. God who has a name for each
star that He created is moving with us through each situation we face. That is our solace and our delight. The creator of the cosmos is a refuge for
us.
“Though I walk through the
valley…Thou art with me.” The famous
Psalm. God is not aloof and we are not
alone. That is why it makes a
difference. There is a knowing that God
is with you and in Christ He has felt everything. The pain has a purpose. God is in your corner.
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