A Higher Place
Psalm 105:23-26 TPT
23 So you were fed up and decided to destroy them. But Moses, your chosen leader, stood in the gap between you and the people, and made intercession on their behalf to turn away your wrath from killing them all. 24 Yet they still didn’t believe your words and they despised the land of delight you gave to them. 25 They grumbled and found fault with everything and closed their hearts to your voice. 26 So you gave up and swore to them that they would all die in the desert.
Poor Moses! My mind cannot even begin to get wrapped around the thought of having to lead so many people, and not just people, but ungrateful, thankless, self-centered, miserable people. Even God got sick of them and decided to let them all die in the desert, that terrible grumbling generation. Yet I want to focus on Moses. Here they all are, shaking their fists at him and telling him off with their selfish demands, when he had put his life on the line to bring them out of slavery in Egypt. He had stood in the gap over and over again, going to the top of the mountain to hear what God had to say to them when they, themselves would not go, but said to him to go hear from God for them. He would go in the tent of meeting and wait on the Lord to receive the Lord’s direction and heart for this people. Remember when Moses was on the mountain seeking the face of God, and they built a golden calf and danced around it naked in some sense of worship to it? How dumb! How belligerently stupid! As we study the life of Moses, we find that he, even in their times of the dumbest stupidity and rebellion, would intercede for them, begging God to have mercy on them, even to the place of semi-rebuking God when God said He was so disgusted, even He was done with them. Moses told the Lord if He didn’t go with them, Moses wasn’t going to go without Him. Here’s the truth of our devotion today—there will be people in your life that will be very selfish and even poisonous to you and others; never reciprocating but only taking. The funny thing about them is that they will expect consistency and kindness from you but require nothing from themselves. Here’s the rub—we can choose to cut them off, or we can choose to take a higher, more mature road and love them unconditionally. Truly, it is a challenge, but a choice you can make to love them as you love the Lord, and truthfully, as He has loved you. Your choice. I believe life becomes a little less dramatic when that decision is chosen and lived by. Others may even judge you as being a little thick, yet Moses had made this kind of decision. I don’t believe God ever faulted him for it. Sometimes God takes us to places where others never will have to grow. That’s ok, for in those places is where you will learn and be drawn closer to him than possibly many others. Let Him lead you as you draw closer to Him.
What about you? Is the emotional roller coaster of others immaturity worth all the drama they may bring into your life? Can you take a posture of thinking and living on a higher place of thought in the Lord? Let God take you deeper in Him. You won’t regret it! Blessings on your day.