I am not a runner. Anyone who knows me will
know very well that my in-turned knees and mild asthma prevent me from being
the runner that I ought to be! Or maybe it’s just the fact that I don’t have
the discipline to train or get myself fit enough to be able to go for a run and
not wake up the next day paralysed with muscle ache! Nevertheless, I decided to
go for a run. We are away on holiday as I write this and are surrounded by
countryside and views that never seem to end. The beauty in this place makes me
feel near God somehow, but if I’m honest, even encapsulated by the wonder of
creation I still found myself searching and asking many questions. I think we
go through seasons in our lives and in this season, for me, there are lots of
questions. I don’t think it is wrong to ask questions sometimes and I also
don’t think it is wrong to argue things out with God, so I ran with purpose two
days in a row, looking for God’s attention and trying to give Him space to
speak to me amidst my rantings to Him. My heart felt heavy and I figure that if
God is my Father, as I know Him to be, He is happy for me to go to Him with my
issues and He will listen and He will respond in the way He thinks best.
Sometimes I am just angry and He takes it, but sometimes I hold Him to account over
the promises that I have over my life and say ‘I will pursue this, I will
overtake, I will recover it all’.
Anyway, back to my run, so I was half
running, half walking and saying to my Father in heaven ‘Reveal who You are!
Show me who You are! I want to see you! I want to see what You can do!’ And as
I ran I looked out onto the fields and shouted (in my spirit!) ‘Will You speak
to me Dad? I need to hear from You’. Then I stopped and waited and walked a
little further and then stopped again, and this is what I stopped in front of…
This cottage was called ‘Rose Cottage’. It
was idyllic. It had roses growing over the doorway, a tree in the garden and a
wooden front door. It was warm and had lamps in the window. It made me feel
inspired and full of hope again.
The phrase ‘The Cottage of Dreams’ came into
my mind and God said to me, “I have lead you to your cottage of dreams, why do
you think I wouldn’t open the door if you knock?” And I said, “Because I have
been knocking for so long and You haven’t opened it yet”. Then, I felt like God
said then to me, “Too many people walk up the path that I have led them to and
they get to the door and wait, without knocking or they knock once and if the
door doesn’t get opened straight away they leave…disappointed.” Something rose
up in me and I thought, “I am not someone that leaves, though I can understand
why people do, I will not leave without my dreams.” I had this overwhelming
sense that God was provoking me to claim the promises in His word.
We all have our own ‘Cottage of Dreams’.
Only you know what is found inside yours but there is a chance, a good chance,
that God gave you those dreams in the first place. I don’t understand why
sometimes we don’t seem to see them come to pass or why things go wrong but I
believe that if God gave you those dreams they will come to pass. Sometimes it
is worth waiting on God to determine whether He gave us those dreams in the
first place, and if He did you can be sure He will make them happen. If you can
find a promise in the Word of God to back you up, hold on to it with every
thing you have. Our Father will not let us down, His love never fails.
Having imagined myself going up to the door
of the house and knocking I was reminded of the verse in Matthew 7:7-8 that
says:
7 “Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you
will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 8 For everyone
who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door
will be opened.
And I thought I am going to hold God to the
‘knock and the door will be opened part’. He promised that, and I will knock
and knock until He opens the door for me to the Cottage of my dreams. I have
really been thinking about the idea of arguing with God, holding him to account
on the promises that He has made.
In his book, ‘Prayer, Does it make any
difference?’ Philip Yancey gives a perspective that I found helpful. In chapter
7 Wrestling Match, Yancey talks of
arguing with God. He uses Abraham as an example of someone who bargains with
God and he uses Moses as an example of someone who argues with God. He says, of
Moses, “But his example, like Abraham’s, proves that God invites argument and
struggle, and often yields, especially when the point of contention is God’s mercy.
In the very process of arguing, we may in fact take on God’s own qualities.’
Yancey also points out that the arguments
of Abraham and Moses are tame compared with the ‘rants’ of Job. I tell you what,
if I were Job, I would rant! But we see by the end of the story God seems to
side with Job’s ‘bare-all approach’. Jesus himself wrestled with God in the
garden of Gethsemane struggling with God’s will and asking if there was another
way. I think we can see in the Bible accounts that lead me to believe that it
is acceptable to argue with God. In fact Yancey asks these questions and I find
myself aligning myself with them. He says,
“Does God require the exercise as part of
our spiritual training regimen? Or is it possible that God, if I may use such
language, relies on our outbursts as a window onto the world, or as an alarm
that might trigger intervention? It was the cry of the Israelites, after all,
that prompted God’s call of Moses.”
It is an interesting point and one that I
cannot ignore. Do our ‘outbursts’ get God’s attention? Do they provoke Him to
action? Could it be that He is provoking us to battle for the promises over our
lives, to hold him accountable to the promises He made. I will continue to
knock until He opens the door. Some might say that is bold and irreverent, but
I think there are sufficient examples of this in the Bible that give us
permission to do the same.
I take heart from this final quote from
Yancey:
“Like Abraham, I approach God at first with
fear and trembling, only to learn that God wants me to stop groveling and start
arguing. I dare not meekly accept the state of the world, with all its
injustice and unfairness. I must call God to account for God’s own promises,
God’s own character.”
Of course we have to acknowledge that God
is God. He is in charge but He is also my intimate partner. If my husband
promised me something and didn’t do it I would remind him of what he said. With God too, my dearest friend and Dad, I
cannot sit still. I cannot keep wrestling so internally, I need to verbalise it.
When it comes to seeing dreams fulfilled I believe that if God gave us those
dreams we can hold Him to the promise from earlier:
8 For everyone who asks receives; the one who
seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
If we do not hold God to this promise it can become a
painful struggle. If we ask and we don’t receive, how can we find peace with
the verse unless we cling to it with everything we have and keep reminding God
of what His word says.
As I ran back to the place we were staying,
I felt lighter and focused on claiming the promises of God. I started to sprint
with determination and a sense of how I should battle for my ‘Cottage of
Dreams’ and as I looked there was a double rainbow in the sky. I started to
cry. I felt that at that moment God had sent this rainbow just for me to remind
me of His promises over us all, and that He wouldn’t let me go under.
When God first sent a rainbow in Genesis 9
He said this:
13 I have set my rainbow in the clouds, and it will
be the sign of the covenant between me and the earth. 14 Whenever I
bring clouds over the earth and the rainbow appears in the clouds, 15 I
will remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every
kind. Never again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life. 16 Whenever
the rainbow appears in the clouds, I will see it and remember the everlasting
covenant between God and all living creatures of every kind on the earth.”
We live in covenant with the living God,
our heavenly Dad, who has given us the Bible which is full of His promises to
us. This book is the ‘most valuable thing that this world affords’. It is our
window into who God is and I believe He is trustworthy and will keep His
promises. Sometimes we have to understand that we need to hold Him to His word.
So keep knocking. Keep claiming the
promises. Remind God of what He has said in His word and hold on to the hope
that at some point He will open the door. I believe in breakthroughs. I believe
in persistence and I believe that, more than anything, God is love and He loves
us more than we could ever know. We need to assume that God knows what need
more than we do and at some point He will open the right door into our ‘Cottage
of dreams’.
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