Come

In the presence of God, speaking and being with the Righteous and Holy One, my tender Redeemer who has called me by name.

Prayer.

A command and a privilege.

A high calling.

An awesome responsibility.

While we can come as we are, He hears us not because of who we are but because of who He is and through His Son.

To come haphazardly is foolish.

To come with arrogance is dangerous.

To come casually and lazily is a complete dishonor to Him and a loss to us.

We come to the very throne room of the Almighty.

We come into the presence of our Creator, Savior, Redeemer, King.

We would walk into the presence of a honored human with some fear and trembling.

Yet too often we come to our Father and King with little more than a passing acknowledgement of His worthiness, little fear and, too often, pride exhibited in so many ways.

But Isaiah understood.

When God allowed Isaiah to see Him on His throne, high and lifted up, being praised as “Holy, Holy, Holy,” Isaiah wasn’t casual.

Isaiah wasn’t flippant about his sin and his unworthiness.

Isaiah was undone!

“Woe to me, for I am ruined! 

Because I am a man of unclean lips,

And I live among a people of unclean lips; 

For my eyes have seen the King, the LORD of armies.” Isaiah 6:5

As we approach Him in prayer or walk along the way, we, who are His, are to come with confidence but not with arrogance that makes light of our sin and is comfortable with it in the presence of the Holy One, our Creator and Savior!

We are to come as children loved by our Father but, in humility, desiring to honor and please Him out of our own growing love for Him.

Yes, He is tender and carries His children in our weakness.

Yes, He wants us to come with our concerns, our fears, and our hard places.

Yes, He sees our tears and wipes them.

Yes, we can boldly come before the throne of grace because of Jesus.

But we must never forget who He is.

And who we are.

Sinners in need of His redemption.

We come into His presence because of Jesus.

We come into His presence truly undone by our unworthiness and desiring to be renewed and made new, more like Him, more each day.

He says come before Him with thanks and then make our requests of Him.

We fear Him, are in awe of Him, so we ought to fear that which is in our lives by our own volition.

We should fear that which we allow in our lives, to permeate our eyes, ears, thoughts and imaginations.

We should fear the bitter root we allow to grow and rot our souls.

We should fear the anger we allow to smolder in our hearts.

“…the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.” James 1:20

All these and more hinder our prayers.

“If I cherish sin in my heart, The Lord will not hear…Psalm 66:18

And we are called, instead, to seek what is right and true and honorable, what glorifies Him, in our hearts and minds, so letting it pour out of our lives.

We are called to seek Him!

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied.” Matthew 5:6

That’s not legalistic.

That’s a loving response to who He is and what He has done through His Son.

That’s satisfaction and delight!

In that hunger and thirst for righteousness,

In that heart of true thanks for who He is and all He has done,

We come before His throne.

We come undone.

We recognize His glory.

And we wait on Him.

He is Good

The Lord is good. 

Even in tears.

He calls us to a humble persistence in prayer, watchful. (Colossians 4:2)

He calls us to boldly approach His throne of grace that we might find help in our time of need. (Hebrews 4:16)

He calls us to come expectantly as His little child and, with thanksgiving, make our requests known to Him. (Psalm 5:3, Philippians 4:6)

He calls us to faithfully trust Him even when trembling. 

We can ask persistently.

We can ask boldly.

We can bring our requests expectantly.

We can trust by faith.

It’s not arrogant to be specific in prayer, to know that God is more than able and so we ask.

Then He calls us to wait.

And we rest in Him.

In Who He is. 

Regardless of the answer.

For our faithful God hears every word.

He sees every tear.

He knows our every sigh. 

And He holds us, even carries us protectively.

His comfort is beyond our understanding. 

He is good.

He will answer according to His knowledge and wisdom. 

If that answer is all we hoped it would be, we will praise Him and give Him thanks with a glad heart and joy overflowing.

If that answer is far from our desires and is part of a hard providence from the hand of the God who loves His children immeasurably more than we can understand, we will praise Him and give Him thanks even through tears.

We will praise Him for Who He is even if the circumstances are heavy. 

And He will remain faithful. 

The Lord is good. 

Even in tears. 

“In the morning, LORD, You hear my voice. In the morning, I lay my requests before You and wait with expectation!” Psalm 5:3

“But this I call to mind, and therefore I have hope: The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; His mercies never come to an end; they are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness. “The Lord is my portion,” says my soul, “therefore I will hope in Him.”
‭‭Lamentations‬ ‭3:21-24‬

Turn Your Eyes

Sometimes we see clearly.

Sometimes we see through tears.

Sometimes the effects of the Fall on our bodies are deafening.

Sometimes the choices of others weary us.

Sometimes we are blinded by fear or disappointment.

Sometimes we are blinded to truth and goodness by our sin.

Sometimes we are deceived into thinking we have to hide, we must walk a road alone, we could never invite even our safest person into our hard place.

It’s all about the gaze.

Will we give into the spiral of fear that threatens to undo us, even when the circumstances are rightly fearful?

That is sure to increase the dread.

Will we turn inward and see only with our physical eyes?

That is sure to deceive.

Will we turn inward and see only our hurt and so shift blame off of us and on to anyone else for anything we have done or anything we do not have, onto whomever we care to thrust it?

That is sure to discourage and embitter.

Will we focus on our discontentment in any area of life which always bleeds over into other areas, leading to rationalizing all manner of choices that leave us wounded and wounding others.

That will lead to a hunger that is never satisfied.

Or will we:

“Turn our eyes upon Jesus; look full in His wonderful face. And the things of earth will grow strangely dim in the light of His glory and grace.”

“Jesus, to You we lift our eyes. Jesus, our glory and our prize. We adore You, behold You, our glory and our prize. O Jesus, we turn our eyes to You.” *

With eyes fixed on our Savior, in gratitude and in awe, we can shift our gaze from the things that weigh us, that ensnare us, that we believe are hopeless to the Truth, to where a change of affections, attitude, and gaze is possible in Christ and for Christ.

With eyes fixed on Jesus, we press in.

With eyes fixed on Jesus, if even through tears and trembling, we lean in.

We reset.

We shift our gaze and our gazes intentionally.

We see with new eyes.

We think with a renewed mind.

We learn to delight in His good gifts yet hold them loosely.

We turn off the noise.

We give thanks.

We rest.

*Turn Your Eyes – Sovereign Grace Music

Photo credits: Frank Laws