There’s a wall in front of you.
Behind you is a past you are running from. Beyond the wall awaits the promise of a new
life. But you’re not moving because
there is this “wall.” You feel trapped. No way out.
This is just the sort of situation in which God does some of his finest
work.
You need only ask the Israelites.
Behind them was a life of back-breaking work and slavery. Ahead of them was a life in the land of
Promise. Behind them was the fierce army
of a fanatical Pharaoh coming towards them.
Ahead of them was a wall. Their
obstruction was made of water.
Your “wall” may be a fear of failure.
Or maybe it’s a lack of confidence that has grinded your progress to a
halt. Or it could merely be too many
problems that have piled up in front of you at the same time. And you have no
clue which one to tackle first.
So you stopped. And you aren’t
sure if there is a way over, around, or under this imposing impediment.
At this point many people panic.
Anxiety courses its way through the body, atrophies the movement
muscles, and rigor mortis overtakes their resolve. Eyes which once had clear focus now only focus
on the wall just inches away.
But some look elsewhere. The
Israelites looked to Moses. They began
belting him with blame. Have you done
the same? Blame the boss. Blame a co-worker. Blame your dog. Blame God.
Maybe even blame yourself? Blame
all you want but the wall remains.
While the Israelites were body punching Moses, he opted to look
elsewhere. His options? He could have looked at the enemy’s
army. He could have looked at the
ungrateful people he led. He could have
looked at the wall of water spread out before him, sat down, and given up.
Instead he looked to God. And God
opened an unlikely route through the wall of water. Safely on the other side, the very wall that
had halted their steps closed in on and covered the sources of their
fears.
The very name of the book where we find this story serves as a reminder
when we face our “walls.” “Exodus” is a
compound Greek word meaning “the way out.”
And in case you might have missed it, the way out was not a better job,
a different spouse, or a victim mentality.
No, the way out is God. Next time
you find yourself up against a wall try looking to him.
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