I received an iMessage the other day that may be common in the world we live in but one that no father wants to get from his daughter. “My school’s on lockdown. A convict is on the loose and has been seen on our campus.” My daughter goes to school over 500 miles away in that vast wilderness called “Texas.” Of course, there was nothing I could do to protect her, so I began to pray, but I was still trying to figure out what I could do. Maybe I could…no, that wouldn’t work…Maybe I should…no, that is impractical…Maybe I will…seriously, get ahold of yourself – if you are dad, you know how your emotions can spiral a bit out of control when it comes to protecting your children.
That is when God calmed my heart and reminded me of something He has been trying to teach me lately: I am not in control. This reminded me a passage of Scripture.
Yes, I am not in control. Why is this idea such an astonishing concept for me to grasp? I am not in control – never have been; never will be. I cannot control whether my daughter will be harmed when she is 500 miles away from me and I cannot control if she will be harmed if she is living in the same town I live in. I am not in control.
"Yours, O LORD, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty, indeed everything that is in the heavens and the earth; Yours is the dominion, O LORD, and You exalt Yourself as head over all. [12] "Both riches and honor come from You, and You rule over all, and in Your hand is power and might; and it lies in Your hand to make great and to strengthen everyone. [13] "Now therefore, our God, we thank You, and praise Your glorious name. (1 Chronicles 29:11-13, NASB)
In that
moment of praying, God gently reminded me of all the things in which I am not
in control. I have been at my current church for just over five months and
have been to five funerals, three of which I have presided over. I have no
control who dies and when. My wife had to have another back
surgery this month. While I wish I could take the pain from her and
heal her, I have no control over her pain or her healing. For me, the
realization that I am not in control is not exactly what I wanted to hear but I
am not even in control of what God wants to teach me! (Can you imagine!?)
God did not
leave me there, though. In addition to reminding me that I am not in control,
He reminded me that HE is – And He always has been! God being in control means that
my daughter was not left in the hands of an escaped convict; she was in the
hands of the Perfect Father, our Abba – and she always has been! God
controlling all things means that my wife is not in left the hands of a fallible
surgeon; She is in the hands of the Great Physician who never makes a mistake
and uses our weakness for his strength (2 Cor. 12:10) – and she always has been!
God being in control means that He will use what He wants to teach me what He
wants at the exact time He wants to teach it to me. Frankly, it is humbling,
but I could use some humbling on a regular basis to remind me I serve a Sovereign
Father who loves me deeply by reminding me I am not in control.
My daughter
was on lockdown for about five hours and then, when it was safe, all the
students were released. So she and eleven of her friends went to get pizza –
college students…always eating. She was safe and I praised God, not just
because my daughter was safe, although that was a major praise, but I praised
God because of who God is. The Sovereignty of our God means that He can do what
He wants, teach me what He wants, use what He wants, to accomplish what He
wants. Like 1 Chronicles 29:13 says, “Therefore”, because You are in COMPLETE control of ALL things, “we thank You and praise Your glorious name.” Thank You,
Lord, that I am not in control.