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On a cloudy dreary
day when we take the breakfast tray into our 93 year old father-in-law's
room he will cheerfully say "even though we can't see
the sun, it is shining up there, it is always shining even
if we can't see it."
How true this is,
and what a wise observation. The sun may not be shining on
us, but it is shining. We tend to judge everything in its
relationship to us. It is almost as if we think the sun, moon
and earth all revolve around us. Of course from our view point
they do, but we need to stop and learn to view things from
God's point of view. Isaiah tells us that God will make Jesus
of quick understanding, and he shall not judge after the sight
of his eyes, neither reprove after the hearing of his ears:
But with righteousness shall he judge the poor, and reprove
with equity for the meek of the earth."
We take comfort
that our Master will not judge just by what he sees and hears,
and we need to learn that we also cannot always make wise
decisions based on merely what we see and hear. When the sun
stops shining on us, it simply means that there is something
in between us and the sun, not that it has ceased to shine.
It may be a cloud, or it may be that the earth has revolved
so that the sun is now shining upon another part of the world,
but the sun never sets and never stops giving off its healing
beams of light.
Sometimes there
is an eclipse of the sun when the moon gets in between us
and it. There is also an eclipse of the moon when the earth
gets in between the sun and the moon. When something comes
between us and the sun or moon, then the good effects of the
sun's rays or the moon's beams become lost to us temporarily.
Fortunately eclipses do not last long. We need to remember
that the light never really stopped shining, it only stopped
shining on us because something came between us and it.
Now there is a
scriptural lesson we can learn from this We all want "The
LORD to make his face to shine upon us." David cried out in
the Psalms, "God be merciful unto us, and bless us; and cause
his face to shine upon us."
The face of God,
just like the sun, is always shining, and if it does not shine
upon us it is because we have allowed something to come between
us and Him, just as there is an eclipse when something comes
between us and the sun or moon.
It is interesting
to remember that the moon has no natural light of its own,
only the reflected light of the sun. When the earth comes
between the sun and the moon, the light of the moon goes out
and does not return until the earth gets out of the way again.
If we allow the
son of God to shine upon us, then we can reflect that light
to others. Paul tells us that we are in a "crooked and perverse
generation among whom we shine as lights in the world."
Now we can only
shine if we bask in the light of the son of God. When we allow
worldly things to come between us and our saviour we can go
into eclipse and fail to reflect light.
What is it that
can cause us to have an eclipse so that we no longer shine?
Paul asks this same question when he says, "Who shall separate
us from the love of Christ? Shall tribulation, or distress,
or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?"
Paul's answer was a resounding "No." He says, "I am persuaded,
that neither death nor life, nor angels, nor principalities,
nor powers, nor things present, nor things to come, nor height,
nor depth, nor any other creature, shall be able to separate
us from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord."
Let us be wise
and resolve not to let anything come between us and the son
of God. Daniel tells us that the "wise shall shine as the
brightness of the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness
as the stars for ever and ever."
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