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Newly married, I sped home in my Pontiac Grand Am while rocking out to Alanis Morissette. Despite her depressing lyrics, I found myself in a chipper mood until I pulled into the driveway and noticed the look of terror on my husband’s face.
“What in the world happened?” Greg inquired.
Worried I had drove through a mud puddle and coated the car like a marshmallow in a chocolate fondue fountain, I spun around to observe the damage.
My shiny ride was still intact.
“Nothing!” I insisted.
My husband followed the trail of feathers surrounding my car and popped open the hood. Jammed up inside my engine was the humble remains of a turkey. I was cooking Thanksgiving dinner and didn’t even know it.
In my defense, I’m not the most observant person.
I run into walls, sideswipe mailboxes, and perpetually lose everything I own—only to blame it on my kids.
When it comes to my spiritual life, the same rules apply.
When life is good, I tend to ignore God.
When life is hard, I tend to look in every direction but upward. My initial response is to talk my husband’s ear off for two weeks straight. The next logical step is to complain to my friends and the innocent checkout attendant at WalMart. When this fails to produce results, I head to the Google search bar.
Why is crying out to God our last resort?
“I lift up my eyes to You, to You who sits enthroned in heaven.” (Psalm 123:1)
These lyrics are one of the fifteen songs the Jewish people sang while traveling to Jerusalem annually to worship. Some scholars believe this particular chorus was written after the Israelites were freed as slaves in Babylon.
Despite the loss and devastation they had faced, they Israelites LOOKED UP.
This song reminds us of the power of our eyes.
We can’t control what life sets before us, but we can control what we set our eyes on.
A friend once told me you can trap a bee in an open jar. They don’t have the ability to look up. That dang bee will run into the glass walls over and over again but never realize the solution was right above his head.
You and I aren’t much smarter than a bee sometimes.
I attended a six-year-old’s funeral this spring. He was the son of my college roommate. I was a blubbering mess but his dad, Robert, had a peace that defied logic. During the burial—each time I glanced at the tiny casket—my stomach churned and the tears flowed. His mom crouched on the ground sobbing, hugging the coffin, while his dad stared off into the distance.
Heading to the car, I offered my condolences. As I turned away, Robert grabbed my arm.
“Do you know why we picked this cemetery?” he asked.
“We picked this spot because of this…” he said as he lifted my chin upward. “He’s not in that hole. He’s up in the sky, enjoying this view.”
Stretched out before us was a beautiful stream swirling around rocks and passing by maples trees. The robins swooped in and out of their branches as they sang their cheerful melody, completely unaware of the grieving below.
There is no hole too dark for God.
When the enemy’s hot breath whispers in your ear, “There’s no hope” —Step outside, take a walk, breathe in the cool air, and look up.
God’s still on the throne.
And the solution to every problem you face is right above your head.