All That We Can Leave Behind

What would happen if we turned our life upside down because God told us to?

Suppose God said: “Go from your country and your kindred and your father’s house to the land that I will show you….”

That’s exactly what God did tell Abraham in Genesis.

Abraham’s country, kindred and father’s house were everything to him. His known universe. His life orbited constantly among his kindred, in and out of his father’s house, forever in his own country. His place of comfort, safety and love.

But God told him to leave all of that behind.

Every day of his life, Abraham had awoken in his own country, among his kindred and his father’s house. He worked there. Laughed and cried there. He planted roots so deep that one can hardly imagine the effort required to pull them up and plant them somewhere else. Or, if the roots stayed put, the courage necessary to turn and leave them all behind.

But that is exactly what Abraham did.

Few of us will ever have to endure the total uprooting experienced by Abraham but there are times in our lives when it might have felt as if we’d left what had become our known universe behind. When we move to another community, or another state, when we change jobs, when we marry, when we become mothers and fathers for the first time—and so many other life experiences that are leaps of faith—we are leaving our known universe and journeying to a totally new way of life. In effect, a new country.

Leaps of faith aren’t straightforward journeys because they don’t come with roadmaps. We can’t Google or ask Siri for directions. We leap into the unknown.

Fortunately, however, we are hardly ever asked to make such leaps alone. Lot journeyed with Abraham. I have made most of my life journeys into the unknown with my wife, Kim, just as I have journeyed by her side.

But she has not been my only companion, nor I hers.

As all of us journey from one known universe to another, there may come a time when we question our ability to persevere. There surely must have been occasions when Abraham thought to himself—or spoke aloud—“Okay, God, you told me to leave everything behind: my country, my kindred and my father’s house. I obeyed but now I feel lost. Where are you?”

Asking that question is no sin, nor is it a lack of faith. Asking a question allows God to answer. Asking a question demonstrates faith that God will answer.

The key to everything that happens next on the journey is the direction taken by our eyes after we ask for help. Where do we look? If we look down all that we see is the mud and the rocky ground. But if, as described in Psalm 121, we raise them to the hills—that is, if we incline our heart and soul to a new horizon—then we more clearly feel the presence of God by our side.

When we look with hope through the eyes of God’s promise, dominoes of light spread out into the darkness. We notice something we didn’t sense before: God has been there the whole time.

“… The Lord himself watches over you;” Psalm 121 assures us.
the Lord is your shade at your right hand,
So that the sun shall not strike you by day,
nor the moon by night….
The Lord shall watch over your coming out and your coming in,
from this time forth for evermore.”

When we keep faith with God, God is able to keep faith with us. God is able to bless us and, crucially, make us a blessing to others. That was God’s promise to Abraham. That is God’s promise to us. When we make a leap of a faith in response to God’s call, a faithful landing awaits.

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