Hi all,
Barb
was out on her shopping day, her weekly one afternoon break from caring
for 3 boys, and she relished her Friday afternoons alone. That meant
Friday dinner was up to me - since we used to own 2 pizza delivery
stores in the 1980's, making home made pizza was a natural choice, and
Friday became pizza night when the boys were young.
By
the time all things were set Barb had arrived home, we put away the
groceries, and I had the kitchen to myself. I decided to make cupcakes
for dessert and surprise everyone. Barb had recipes, so I set to work.
When the oven was preheated and the batter ready to be poured, I placed
the paper cupcake cups neatly how I thought they should be, and poured
batter into the first one.
It
completely flattened out, batter running all over the cookie sheet like
lava from a volcano. Cookie sheet you ask? Yes, I had never made
cupcakes before and I had arranged the paper cups on our biggest cookie
sheet, all ready to receive the batter. Hmmm, I thought, that first one
must be defective, too weak to hold the batter. So I poured the batter
into a 2nd one, and it too flattened out, and now I was totally
confused.
Was
the whole package of cupcake cups defective! Maybe you nest 2 cups or 3
to give them strength, but I can't recall Barb ever doing that. I read
and re-read the recipe...it said 'pour batter into cups'...simple
enough, that's what I was doing! Duh! What could possibly be wrong?!!?
"BARB!!!
I need your help!" I yelled, accepting defeat, realizing I must be
doing something wrong. I yelled I was making cupcakes so she arrived on
the scene like a 911 responder, took one look and started laughing so
hard I thought she'd pee her pants or bust a gut. She couldn't talk she
was laughing so hard, tears streaming down her face, then she'd start to
talk and then start laughing again. I was humiliated, confused, and didn't have a clue how I had missed it. My heart was to be a blessing, but I had messed up.
Gradually
her laughter settled down and she wiped away enough tears to reach into
a cabinet and through her laughter pull out a cupcake pan and put it on
the counter. "THIS!" she started laughing again, "is what you use!" She
turned on her heels still laughing and shaking her head, leaving me to
clean up the aftermath of the Vesuvius-like flows of batter slowly
making their way off the cookie sheet and onto the countertop.
Example #3: Moses, fear & revelation
If
you formed your theology from Hollywood or most sermons, you probably
think Moses received the call to deliver Israel from Egypt at the
burning bush - nothing could be further from the truth.
Steven says
in Acts 7: 22-25 when re-telling the history of his people: "And Moses
was educated in all the ways of the Egyptians, and was mighty in words
and deeds. And when he was full 40 years old it came into his heart to
visit his brethren, the children of Israel. And seeing one of them
suffer wrong, he avenged him that was oppressed and killed the Egyptian,
for he supposed his brethren
would have understood how God by his hand would deliver them from the
Egyptians, but they understood not."
The
confusion and fear Moses faced wasn't because his daughter had died
like Jairus, nor because Someone was walking on the water to him like
Peter, no, this fear and confusion was his own doing. He had the
revelation correct, that he was the deliverer, but he assumed others had that same revelation.
Not
only did he assume his brethren would know he was the deliverer, he
made decisions on that assumption. He thought they'd rally around and
start a civil war because all his education and life experience
said that was what to do. He applied a genuine revelation from God to his own education and ideas, planned in his mind how God would make it come to pass, and acted on it, missing God altogether.
Sound familiar?
That
assumption cost him 1/3 of his life. He was 40 when he killed the
Egyptian, and he was 80 when the Lord appeared to him and told him they
would be delivered not by armed conflict, but by signs and wonders.
Let
me put 1/3 of Moses' wasted life in perspective to our time. For a
person who would expect to live to 75, that means when he was 25 it came
into his heart to do God's will, but missed it, not getting back on
track until he was 50. Do you know someone like that?
We
are told when they rejected him, Moses 'fled at this saying'. The Greek
word 'fled' is 'pheugo', which means 'to run away as a fugitive', and
you can see the English 'fugitive' in the 'pheugo' root. Moses didn't
just casually walk away shaking his head. He was now a fugitive from
justice, rejected by the very people God had shown him he was to
deliver, and now a criminal being sought by the Egyptian king!
Moses
was confused, humiliated, and didn't have a clue how he had missed it.
He was sure he had a revelation from God, he thought he knew God would
use his education and training to start a civil war, but his effort at
entering God's perfect will and call on his life was rejected by all.
(My series this month, 'Why those wasted years weren't wasted', goes into more detail on that subject)
Why he was ok with launching a new career
Hebrews
11:24 reveals more: "By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused
to be called the son of Pharaoh's daughter, choosing rather to suffer
affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin
for a season."
Why would someone raised in Egypt's royal family make such a decision? Verses 26-27 answer that: "Esteeming the reproach of Christ as greater riches than the treasures of Egypt, for he was mindful of the reward. By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king, but endured as seeing Him who is invisible."
The word 'esteeming' means 'to lead before the mind' and 'to look away from all else to focus on one object'. It means 'to lead the mind with Christ so as to turn from all else to focus on Him'.
When
he knew he missed it but didn't know how, instead of submitting to
fear, instead of wallowing in self-pity and confusion, he turned away
from his mistake and focused on the inner value and esteem he placed in
Christ. Even though he missed it, he did so unto the Lord, and
that would not be wasted. "He endured as seeing Him who is invisible."
He didn't see Him except in his heart, but He endured as if looking at
Him.
At
this point he knew more about what WASN'T God's will than he did of
what WAS His will. We too must reject fear and confusion when we miss
it, and be about what we know to do for the time being, for in doing
what we know to do He can direct us. Even God can't steer a parked car.
Get moving.
Refuse fear
There
would one day be a 'payday' for him of doing God's will for his life,
and he held that 'payday' in higher esteem than anything on earth. With
that revelation held dear to his heart, he left Egypt, the land he was
called to, left the people he was called to help, and began another
career - that of a shepherd, and he did so for 1/3 of his life, always
wondering about that 'incident' when he was young and how it all fit
together.
We
have seen Jairus being told not to fear but be re-directed to what he
originally believed, and Peter not fearing because he focused on the
fact Jesus is the Christ, and so ignored the storm swirling around him.
Now we have seen Moses who refused fear and confusion based on internal
revelation and the value he placed on knowing Christ, and went about his business until the Lord gave him further revelation.
So
what if you made your cupcakes not knowing what you were doing - the
idea was right, the application was wrong. The right way to do it will
be revealed, and you can end up having cupcakes for dessert after all,
as we did that night.
More next week, until then, blessings,
John Fenn
cwowi.org and email me at cwowi@aol.com
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