Stone of Help
For the longest time I thought “Ebenezer” was a cup. Not
just any cup, mind you, one of those old drinking vessels that might also be
called goblet or chalice.
My reasoning, you see, was all based on the hymn, “Here I
raise mine Ebenezer, hither by thy help I’m come.” To my little girl ears, it
sounded like someone was proposing a toast, glass in hand to having made it so
far.
I know better now, but I still feel as if I am far more
likely to toast how far I’ve made it than to set a large stone on end.
But truthfully, I’m not very likely to do either. Don’t get
me wrong. I’m not slighting the role God has had in bringing me as far as I am.
And it’s not a lack of gratitude that turns me into being one of the nine lepers
who never returned to thank Jesus for his healing. (At least, not always.)
Instead, I’ve found that many
times I don’t want to draw attention to what God has done for me because I
worry it will make others feel as if I am intimating that I am a favorite of
God’s. Instead of using stories of God’s care to encourage others (as the Bible
prompts us), I think it will just come across as one more instance of
condemnation. Instead of an attempt to affirm success as having nothing to do
with my efforts, maybe it will seem a shallow misguided soapbox on how the rest
of the world really just needs to let go and let God.
And then there’s a second layer of
worry. What happens if I broadcast God’s provision for me and then tomorrow
that method of provision dries up? Will it make me look foolish for having
believed God was helping me?
It’s taken me awhile to realize
that no one expects me to have been brought over the Jordan river on dry land.
No duh, right? But I can’t expect God to help me in the exact same way that He
helped Joshua or any of the other generations of Bible times or any of the
generations of modern times. So when I hear someone’s story about how God
worked it out for them to live in an apartment with their own washer and dryer,
I shouldn’t feel like three-day old milk-sogged Cheerios, forgotten in a
household too busy to catch up on dishes. Instead, I need to look back at the
ways God has helped me. And when I
reflect on those ways and get the little zippy high that invariably comes when
thinking about how awesome God has been to me, I need to remember that it
wasn’t because I use essential oils and get my children to bed on time and
always greet my tired husband with a spotless home (or whatever else I might
mistake my success to be caused by, because heaven knows those three aren’t
true).
No, when I take a few moments to
wrestle a stone upright (or more appropriately, wrestle words onto a page), I
am merely commemorating God’s help up to this point. And certainly, if He has
helped me until now, I can trust Him to help me still even if it may not look
the same. And if, by chance, you happen upon a place where I’ve piled words all
up on each other so you ask, What are these words here for? What did someone
mean by putting these words altogether like this?
Then I will say, this far the Lord
has helped me.
Here I raise my Ebenezer;Hither by Thy help I'm come;And I hope, by Thy good pleasure,Safely to arrive at home.
Comments
Amen.