By
Alison Andreasen
I
recently talked to a new mom who was overwhelmed with caring for her little
one. I suggested, “Just try something, and you’ll feel better because you are
at least trying.”
A
can-do attitude can help boost the feeling of control. Even if a given tactic
tried doesn’t work, we still feel a sense of control because we are trying.
This may be enough to get us through a “slump” and we soon find that things
aren’t quite as overwhelming anymore.
But
what about when you don’t even have the wherewithal to try? Have you ever been
there? The smallest tasks seem to take the most effort; getting out of
bed, fixing food for little mouths, or even just lying on the floor while
children run cars over your back seems like too much to ask. The word
“overwhelmed” doesn’t quite cover it. You also feel trapped, closed in on both
sides, and stuck. Thinking of something to do that might make the situation
better just adds one more thing to the to-do list. Even suggestions of “change
your outlook on the situation” or “be grateful for what you have” seem to add
to the sense of guilt you feel about not being able to be as resilient as you
think you should be.
What
then? What do you do when you’ve lost that can-do attitude?
Realize
that the world, Satan, and your sinfulness are trying to focus your attention
in the wrong place.
“Be
in control, don’t let life control you.” That is the message the world wants us
to believe. While this may be sound advice to avoid falling into a victim
mentality, it is not what everyone feeling overwhelmed and trapped needs to
hear. There are times when the last thing a person needs to hear is that she is
in control. When we look at ourselves, we see sinfulness, weakness and an
inability to do anything correctly. We desperately fear our future and fall
into despair. Or we blame others. Or we examine our recent history and try to
see when things went wrong, often longing to return to a time that is behind us
instead of living in the here and now.
The Israelites during the Exodus found themselves in a similar situation. They knew all too well what it was like to be trapped and closed in on both sides.
"When Pharaoh drew near, the people of Israel lifted up their eyes, and behold, the Egyptians were marching after them, and they feared greatly. And the people of Israel cried out to the Lord. They said to Moses, 'Is it because there are no graves in Egypt that you have taken us away to die in the wilderness? What have you done to us in bringing us out of Egypt? Is not this what we said to you in Egypt: ‘Leave us alone that we may serve the Egyptians’? For it would have been better for us to serve the Egyptians than to die in the wilderness.'" Exodus 14:10-12.
The
Israelites examined their situation and blamed Moses. If they had had their
way, they would have gone back to the imprisonment that they had been rescued
from.
Moses
gave the Israelites this advice. See how it compares to “Find your can-do
attitude.”
"And Moses said to the people, 'Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the Lord, which he will work for you today. For the Egyptians whom you see today, you shall never see again. The Lord will fight for you, and you have only to be silent.'" Exodus 14:13-14
Moses
commanded the Israelites to direct their attention outside of themselves and to
the Lord who said that He would act. And His action wasn’t like a gentle pat on
the back that said, “It will get better soon, pal.” This action was a fight! He
fought for His people and completely destroyed those who tried to imprison and
overpower them.
Those
mistakes in the past that imprisoned us? Gone! Satan who tempts us to question,
“Did God really say. . .?” Powerless. The world that continually throws
obstacles in our way? They are being renewed into the Creation that God
intended it to be and will be again. Thanks be to God for sending His one and
only Son, whose death won that fight for us.
When
the darkness creeps in and the world presses us to a point we can’t seem to
bear, what do we do? In light of Christ’s victory for us, and in great faith,
we take Moses’s advice: “Fear not, stand firm, and see the salvation of the
Lord, which he will work for you today.”
Let’s
break this down a little bit.
Fear
Not
God’s
words to the weary are “Fear not.” He knows all too well our human tendency to
worry about the future, often seeing the worse possible scenario as the one
that will most likely happen.
Stand
Firm
Note
that Moses didn’t tell the Israelites to go hide somewhere or to run further
into the desert. He told them to stand firm and to see the salvation of the
Lord. I encourage you, sisters, to stand, confident of the Lord’s work, and to
continue in your vocations wherever you are. When you are feeling uncertain and
overwhelmed, it is not the time to try something crazy or to make a drastic
life-altering decision. Just concentrate on your feet and the Rock on which you
stand.
See
and Be Silent
Being
quiet is not something the Israelites did very well. As discussed earlier, they
blamed Moses and thought of many other situations they would rather be in than
the one they were currently experiencing. We do the same. We blame others and
ourselves for our predicaments. We grumble and complain and make plans contrary
to what is God-pleasing. Here he advises that we stop doing that.
But
this silence is not a silence in which we don’t pay attention to what is going
on and tune out, choosing to be distracted by any number of devices. It is a
silence that also sees and watches. It isn’t just waiting for a sign that our
brain interprets as a sign from God whether that be a cool lyric in a song or a
leaf falling in a unique way on a walk. It is a silence that waits for the Lord
to act and trusts in His unfailing love above everything else. Watch and see
the salvation that has come and that will be complete at the last day.
Things
might not get better today, or tomorrow, or even next week, but we have a God
who promises to act and who does what He promises. He has promised to fight for
you. Fear not, stand firm, see the salvation coming, and be silent--for the
Lord will fight for you!
***
Alison is a wife of one, mother of three, and teacher of many. She lives in rural South Dakota where she enjoys life on the prairie as a dual parish pastor’s wife. A trained Lutheran school teacher and homeschooling mom, she has a passion for children’s education, especially education in the Christian faith. She is a brainstormer by nature and those who are close to her never know what new idea she will think of next. Recent adventures with her family have included tapping trees to make syrup; creating, expanding, and selling her own granola business; and learning to preserve fresh garden goodness for year-round use.
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