The Conversation

(3-minute read)

I am constantly praying to ask the Lord to lead me and draw me closer to him. When he starts the conversation, I very often think that the words are produced by my mind and ignore them. Since I continue asking for the Lord’s help, he usually continues the conversation by sending events. I typically start out by blaming those on the devil or just bad luck. To answer my prayers, the Lord turns up the heat and the danger of ignoring him. I usually catch on when the things I highly value are lost or about to be lost. Just as I’m about to make the decision to escape the effects of the events, the Lord asks me a question. Although it comes in varying forms, the question is always the same.

There’s a book of the Bible that tells the story of a man’s conversation with God. It’s the Book of Job. The main characters are God and Job. There are minor secondary characters, such as the devil and Job’s friends. In the story, Job loses a lot because Job has a lot. God is much better at speaking than we are at listening; he knows how to get our attention. God doesn’t violate our free will and always gives Job and me a way to escape even him. He gives us someone to blame (the devil) and an alternate source of advice (friends). He then asked Job the same question he always asked me, “Do you trust me?” Job is a good man and tells the Lord he does even if he kills him.

I recently had one of these conversations with the Lord. Many years ago, I made an off-the-cuff decision because of a lack of time; I took the easy way out rather than the right one. That decision snowballed far beyond my imagination and caused damage; I have regretted it and felt guilt ever since. I wanted to make it right, but I didn’t know how. The damage was not repairable.

In ancient Israel, the courts could order justice by creating equality. If a man put out the eye of another man, the court could order that the aggressor’s eye be put out to have an equality of a missing eye in both men. Although from the court’s point of view, this is justice, the first innocent man is still without an eye; it’s not justice for him because the court can’t give him his eye back.

The conversation was not about going to heaven, as that was already settled by Jesus on the cross. I ask the Lord to make it right. I said, “Lord, tell me what to do. Don’t leave it up to me; I might take an easy way out. Plainly tell me what to do, and I will do it, even unto death.”

My doctor had sent me to a specialist to figure out a problem I was having, which he couldn’t explain. The specialist had run a large number of tests, and later that week, I had an appointment for him to give me the results. It was more than an hour’s drive to the specialist’s office, and as we were about to get in the car, my wife said she would drive because I seemed unusually nervous. We arrived half an hour before the appointment, and while sitting in the waiting room, the Lord spoke to me and said, “You can’t make it right any more than you can be the agent of your own forgiveness. Do you trust me to give justice in the same way I give forgiveness?” There was a pause, and then he asked again, “Do you trust me?” I said, “I do.” The heaviness lifted. I immediately knew the doctor would not give me a death notice.

I have now discovered that after all these years, I have the habit of feeling guilty and must remind myself at least once a day that the Lord has taken care of it and that all will receive justice. Even as the Lord corrects me, he makes me feel loved.

18 responses to “The Conversation”

  1. Thank you for sharing your powerful personal testimony, Don. Like you, I find it difficult to know what are my thoughts or God’s words. Praise the Lord for a diagnosis that wasn’t devastating for you. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Wow!!! Yes, He does!!! Thank you for your sharing!! Needed and helpful.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Willie Torres Jr. Avatar
    Willie Torres Jr.

    Thank you for sharing such a wonderful and powerful message.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Trusting the Lord to give justice as well as forgiveness–powerful words. Thank you, Don.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Thank you for this encouraging post!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you for reading my post. You encourage me by your comment.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Thanks for the continuing inspiration, Don. His will, not ours. For me, sometimes it’s like the 6th grade — toughest three years of my life. Still, He doesn’t give up, as the God of many chances, and as you nailed it, we finally get to see things from His view. Such a relief, and glad you got an excellent report!

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    1. Thank you, Grant. That is funny about the 6th grade.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Lord, I trust You in spite of how I feel.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Good prayer, San. Thank you for sharing.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. A great testimony, Don! Thanks for sharing!

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Don, how the Lord led me here this morning is a Mystery although it surely helped that you left a trail of breadcrumbs. Thank you. These words are so healing to my own, still too often doubt-filled, guilty little heart. Your words are maybe the best gift I could have asked for this Christmas. They have taken me to Mary, and to Elizabeth who said, “Blessed is she who has believed that what the Lord has said to her will be accomplished.” And of course to Jesus Himself. ❤️
    Merry Christmas to you and yours!!🙏❤️🎄

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you, Deb. We tend to all go through common things, both good and bad. Through it all, the Lord is with us. It’s true even with unbelievers. His mercy is beyond my understanding.

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