Habakkuk 3:16-18
Everyone imagines what they would do if they had unlimited money or time. They fantasize of trips that they would take and shopping sprees that they would go on. Then reality kicks in and we see more bills than we do income, and not nearly enough hours in the day. We keep waiting for circumstances to change and for that golden opportunity to come along and make everything better. In short, we have no time to rest, for there is too much to do.
In light of these things, when we hear someone teaching or preaching on resting in the Lord, we often tune out because rest seems impossible. Jesus fell asleep in the boat with His disciples, and seemed content to snooze right through a terrible storm. It was not the circumstances that woke Him, but the panic of His beloved disciples. When He calmed the storm with a wave of His hand and a simple command, He asked where their faith had gone. The reprimand has more to do with their lack of rest in terrible circumstances than it does anything else.
Habakkuk writes that though the fig tree stop producing; though the vines yield no grapes; though the olive tree give no oil and the crops refuse to grow, “Yet I will rejoice in the LORD, I will joy in the God of my salvation” (Habakkuk 3:17). This is quite a resolve, to give God praise and glory even if everything around you fails. In troubled economic times, you and I can have a peace in our heart, for we know that all else may fail, but Christ Jesus cannot fail.
Notice the word ‘LORD’ and its capital letters. The author is using “Jehovah” in Hebrew, which means “covenant keeper”. It is his way of pointing the reader back to the one who drew up the Covenant. God is faithful even when we are unfaithful. God is good, even when things are not.
As you look around you today, you may not see much reason to rejoice. Rejoice anyway! God is good and His love endures forever. Your salvation is in Him, and when you labor to enter into His rest, the storm and the waves cease for you.
Everyone imagines what they would do if they had unlimited money or time. They fantasize of trips that they would take and shopping sprees that they would go on. Then reality kicks in and we see more bills than we do income, and not nearly enough hours in the day. We keep waiting for circumstances to change and for that golden opportunity to come along and make everything better. In short, we have no time to rest, for there is too much to do.
In light of these things, when we hear someone teaching or preaching on resting in the Lord, we often tune out because rest seems impossible. Jesus fell asleep in the boat with His disciples, and seemed content to snooze right through a terrible storm. It was not the circumstances that woke Him, but the panic of His beloved disciples. When He calmed the storm with a wave of His hand and a simple command, He asked where their faith had gone. The reprimand has more to do with their lack of rest in terrible circumstances than it does anything else.
Jesus knew how to rest, even when life was pressing Him. Habakkuk wrote of how believers should, “rest in the day of trouble” (3:16). If we are always waiting to rest in Christ until circumstances are perfect, then we will always be waiting. In the world we find rest when the waters are calm. In Christ, you rest and that calms the waters. Christ is not a responder; He is a Creator!
It takes a resolve to rest. The author of Hebrews encouraged the church to “labor therefore to enter into that rest” (Hebrews 4:11). When you arrive at this place, you can rejoice in God’s goodness no matter what happens around you.Habakkuk writes that though the fig tree stop producing; though the vines yield no grapes; though the olive tree give no oil and the crops refuse to grow, “Yet I will rejoice in the LORD, I will joy in the God of my salvation” (Habakkuk 3:17). This is quite a resolve, to give God praise and glory even if everything around you fails. In troubled economic times, you and I can have a peace in our heart, for we know that all else may fail, but Christ Jesus cannot fail.
Notice the word ‘LORD’ and its capital letters. The author is using “Jehovah” in Hebrew, which means “covenant keeper”. It is his way of pointing the reader back to the one who drew up the Covenant. God is faithful even when we are unfaithful. God is good, even when things are not.
As you look around you today, you may not see much reason to rejoice. Rejoice anyway! God is good and His love endures forever. Your salvation is in Him, and when you labor to enter into His rest, the storm and the waves cease for you.