Mark 9:22-23 -"If Thou canst do anything,
have compassion on us, and help us. Jesus said unto him, If thou canst
believe, all things are possible to him that believeth."
During
Jesus short time on earth, there was no divorce between the life
hidden in God and His ready response and involvement to the call of
human need. As in Raphael's great painting
and depiction of the "Transfiguration" in 1520, he combines the scenes
of the mountain and the valley on the one picture, so must it always be
in true life. There must be the systole and the diastole pressure of
the heart that must drive the blood to be activated and aerated in
Heaven's ozone, and then pulsate to the extremities of hand and foot.
How
many there are who seem to be possessed with evil spirits which are
wrecking health and peace, and how many make the mistake of this man in
bringing their relatives or friends to disciples who as yet have not
been baptised with the power of the Holy Spirit, and have not entered
into the secret place of power. Of course it is not possible for such to
afford any real help, and the demon laughs them to scorn. We must learn
our own inability to deal with the forces of evil that are sweeping
through the world, unless we have received power from on high.
Notice the way in which our Lord casts back the responsibility on the father. He said: "If Thou canst do anything"; but Jesus answered: "the if is not with Me, but with you. It is not a question of My power but of your faith. Can you believe? " Then the father threw back the responsibility on the Master, saying in effect: "I fear that I have not faith enough, but I trust Thee to create it in me. Help Thou mine unbelief."
You
and I often fail in our faith because of ignorance and sin. There is
the mighty ocean of power all around us, but for some reason we cannot
tap it. It is like the electric current, which refuses to help us unless
we have instruments precisely adapted to transmit the driving-power.
Faith is absolutely necessary for the conveyance of God's power to meet
the need and sin and sorrow of the world. But when we find it deficient,
when our heart believes not, when we find ourselves face to face with
Jerichos that are closely shut, and with mountains that seem to mock the
tiny levers with which we propose to move them, then we must turn to
Christ and say: "I trust Thee for faith, I trust Thee to keep me
trusting: I believe, help Thou mine unbelief."
Amen
Taniela (aka) Lapai Fonua
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