Skip to main content

Judges 4:1-9 and all of Exodus: Low Tide

I enjoy kayaking when I have the opportunity. This morning I had the opportunity. It was quite nice I saw cormorants, ducks, geese, a seal, and a number heron. I went out early in the morning, kayaked for a few hours and then returned before 10am.

When I left after 6am, it wasn't that difficult to set out. I had to carry the kayak over a few rocks but it wasn't that difficult. It was certainly manageable anyway. While I was admiring the birds and kayaking around the bays, however, something happened: the tide went out. The tide went way out. I have been kayaking in this area a number of times over the years and I have never seen the tide that far out before. I paddled around the corner from where I launched in order to land and I noticed that the beach had grown by quite a distance which meant that I had a long way to carry my kayak before I could put it away.

Kayaks are relatively light and light and I am not that heavy so I was able to paddle quite a way into the shallow water but when I had paddled as far as I could paddle there was still a long way that I needed to take my kayak.

I hopped out of the boat and immediately that wet sand ate both of my shoes. I pried them from the sand and put them in the boat. I then, barefoot, dragged the kayak as far as I could in the soft mud before I hit the rocks that I would need to lift the boat over. I tried to continue walking barefoot over the rocks: they were too sharp. I put on my muddy soggy footwear. They did not want to stay on my feet but, nonetheless, I managed to get my kayak to where it needed to go. I was more exhausted from 10-15 minutes of putting the boat away than I was from 3 hours of paddling.

This reminds me of Barak and the Exodus. God and Deborah instructed Barak to save the Israelites. Barak declined unless a certain condition of his was met. Because Barak declined the Lord's offer as it was, the Lord gave the glory to another. He still saved Israel. He still used Barak but he gave the glory to another.

In the book of Exodus the generation that the Lord led out of Egypt refused the opportunity God gave them to enter the Promised Land, as a result almost none of that generation entered the Promised Land. God still did what he said he was going to do: bring the people into the Promised Land, it is just that because the first generation refused to follow him there, it was a lot more difficult.

It is the same with us. God is sovereign. His will will be done, it is just a matter of whether we will be a part of it or not. If we listen to God and follow his lead, it is like having the sense to read the tide charts before you set out in your kayak. You get where you are going a lot nicer and easier than if you don't and the tide goes out well you are away. So let us resolve to seek and follow the Lord in all that we do today.
More daily blogs at
More articles, sermons, and papers at
www.sheepspeak.com 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Poor No More! Count me in! (Mt 26:11, Mk 14:7, Jn 12:8, Dt 15:11)

Matthew 26:11 (Mark 14:7, John 12:8) Jesus quotes Deuteronomy 15:11 in saying, “the poor will always be with you”   As this is the case, Ignacio Ellacuria says, in essence, the great salvific task is to evangelize the poor so that out of their poverty they may attain the spirit necessary first to escape their indulgence and oppression, second to put an end to oppressive structures, and third to be used to inaugurate a new heaven and a new earth, where sharing trumps accumulating and where there is time to hear and enjoy God’s voice in the heart of the material world and in the heart of human history. [3]   I think that is very important. We need to evangelize the poor. We know what the word evangelize means, right? It comes from the Greek word ‘euangelion’, which means ‘good message’ or ‘good news’. [4]  We need to share the good news with the poor. Jesus, as recorded in Luke 4:18, in his very early sermon in the synagogue in his very own hometown quoted the prophet Isaia...

Psalm 147:7-11: Does God Prohibit the Kilt?

  7 Sing to the Lord with grateful praise;     make music to our God on the harp.   8 He covers the sky with clouds;     he supplies the earth with rain     and makes grass grow on the hills. 9 He provides food for the cattle     and for the young ravens when they call.   10 His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse,     nor his delight in the legs of a man [or ‘the warrior’]; 11 the Lord delights in those who fear him,     who put their hope in his unfailing love.   Psalm 147:10 : “His pleasure is not in the strength of the horse, nor his delight in the legs of a man.” I thought this was an appropriate passage to look at on Robbie Burns Day. For Christmas one year Susan bought me some Bible Commentaries on Psalms. In one of these books the author, Peter C. Craigie, from Scotland, writes:   …. It was the custom in Scotland for boys to ...

Low Saturday (Genesis 3, Revelation 21)

  Hello, I am Major Michael Ramsay from TSA. As well as running The Salvation Army, the Bread of Life soup kitchen, shelter and The Salvation Army thrift store, I am a Christian pastor / teacher. This weekend is Easter. That is the most important time on the Christian Calendar. Christians acknowledge Jesus as God. Our teachings tell us that God, as creator, created the whole world. And when He did it was perfect. Not only did we not harm each other, ourselves or the earth; but we never got sick, we never got injured; and the earth itself – the trees did not fall to the ground and die. Animals did not eat animals. All of creation was in perfect harmony. The Creator even walked in this Garden He created with people He created. Then something happened. The first people created made a choice.   Because of this choice, death, decay, harm and hurt entered the world. Where there was none before, now there was illness, injury and death for all of creation. Plants, animals and al...